Oxygen and Ventilator Management Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards

1
Q

Acute respiratory failure

A

Inability of respiratory system to meet oxygenation, ventilation, or metabolic requirements of the patient, either hypoxemic (PaO2<50mmHg), hypercapnic (PaCO2>50mmHg), or mixed

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2
Q

Hypercapnia

A

Elevated CO2 levels in the blood, unable to be compensated with minute ventilation (increased physiologic dead space)

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3
Q

Components of the respiratory system include many things beyond the lungs including… (5)

A
  • CNS
  • PNS
  • Neuromuscular system
  • Thorax and pleura
  • Cardiovascular system
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4
Q

5 pathophysiological mechanisms of hypoxemic respiratory failure

A
  • V/Q mismatch
  • Shunt
  • Hypoventilation
  • Diffusion abnormalities
  • Decreased FiO2
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5
Q

Normal A-a gradient and what it means, what does an elevated one mean?

A

10-20mmHg, if normal then hypoventilation is source of hypoxemic respiratory failure, increased in V/Q mismatch and shunt

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6
Q

Normal V/Q ratio, what does an elevated and decreased one mean?

A

Between .8-1, increased ratio indicates dead space ventilation, decreased indicates intrapulmonary shunt

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7
Q

Having blood but no air indicates what about V/Q ratio?

A

Decreased V/Q ratio

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8
Q

Having air but no blood indicates what about V/Q ratio?

A

Increased V/Q ratio

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9
Q

What can cause increase in physiologic dead space? (3)

A

Emphysema, COPD, or asthma exacerbation

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10
Q

What can cause mixed venous with arterial blood (5)

A

ASD/VSD, pulmonary edema, atelectasis, pneumonia, pneumothorax

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11
Q

Shunt fraction

A

Fraction of cardiac output that represents intrapulmonary shunt (perfused but not ventilated space)

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12
Q

3 measures to determine hypoxic respiratory failure

A
  • A-a gradient
  • Mixed or central venous PO2
  • Inspiratory pressure
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13
Q

In all situations except a shunt we see a response to increased FiO2 causing ____ to rise

A

PaO2

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14
Q

Signs and symptoms of acute respiratory failure (5)

A
  • Altered mental status
  • Increased work of breathing
  • Bradypnea
  • Cyanosis
  • Diaphoresis
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15
Q

Modes of oxygenation and ventilation (6)

A
  • Nasal cannula (should not go above 6L which is FiO2 44%)
  • Non-rebreather (used in emergency delivery)
  • High flow nasal cannula (used for hypoxia)
  • Bag valve mask device (Emergency settings, squeezed bag with one way valve, has to be hooked up to oxygen)
  • CPAP (continuous airflow creating positive pressure to stent open airways, used in sleep apnea)
  • Bipap/NIPPV - IPAP/EPAP (ratio must be maintained if increasing, provides positive pressure without intubation)
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16
Q

Who benefits from NIPPV/Bipap (4)

A
  • acute exacerbations of COPD
  • Alert and cooperative patients
  • Increased work of breathing
  • sleep apnea
17
Q

Contraindications to NIPPV/Bipap (5)

A
  • Cardiac or respiratory arrest
  • Aspiration risk
  • Facial trauma
  • Hemodynamic instability
  • Inevitable intubation
18
Q

How to decide when to intubate a patient (3)

A
  • When there is failure of airway maintenance or protection
  • Failure to achieve desired goals with current respiratory support
  • Illness expected to worsen
19
Q

Low PaO2 below 60% is at high risk for sudden ____ because of the ____

A

desaturation, oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve

20
Q

Indications for mechanical ventilation (intubation) (4)

A
  • Failure of NIPPV
  • Loss of ventilatory drive
  • Chest trauma
  • Unstable mental status
21
Q

Intubation procedure steps (8)

A
  • Preoxygenation
  • Sedative and paralytic administration
  • visualize tubes passing thru cords
  • listen for breath sounds bilaterally but no sounds over stomach
  • condensation in tube should accumulate
  • End tidal CO2 strip inserted should change blue to yellow
  • Get CXR
  • Chest should rise
22
Q

Potential issues with initiation of mechanical ventilation (3)

A
  • Increased intrathoracic pressure and decreased venous return/cardiac output
  • Orolaryngeal damage
  • Nosocomial infection after prolonged intubation
23
Q

Ventilator settings (4)

A

Tidal volume: set corresponding to ideal body weight 6-8cc/kg
Respiratory rate: usually 16-18
FiO2: starts at 100% and then weaned to 40%
PEEP (positive end expiratory pressure): Generally started at 5mmHg (don’t want to overdistend for fear of pneumo)

24
Q

Assist control ventilator vs pressure support

A

Assist control is either volume controlled (patient gets same volume with every breath, but can initiate more breaths but will always get that tidal volume) or pressure controlled (inspiratory pressure is set for every breath taken, but get to pick tidal volume which is more comfortable for patient to allow to take bigger breaths) but in both scenarios rate of respiration is automated but can be controlled by patient. While pressure support is a pressure assisted but patient determines rate of breath and tidal volume, requiring only setting a PEEP and pressure above a PEEP similar to a Bipap, has backup apnea alarms and is often used as a weaning mode before removing intubation

25
Q

SIMV ventilation

A

Hybrid of assist control and pressure support, ventilator delivered breaths with tidal volume and respiratory rate set, and every breath taken gets those, but if they initiate their own breath get their own tidal volume they want

26
Q

Mechanical ventilation adverse effects (2)

A
  • Volutrauma such as pneumothorax

- Hemodynamic compromise

27
Q

Peak airway pressure

A

Sum of pressure required to overcome airway resistance and pressure required to overcome elastic properties of the lung and chest wall

28
Q

Plateau pressure

A

Pressure required to overcome elastic recoil within the lung and chest wall

29
Q

How can we determine that the etiology of hypoxemia is due to intrapulmonary shunt?

A

By administering 100% FiO2 for 15 min, we should see an increase in PaO2 indicating that we have a V/Q mismatch or minor shunt, but if PaO2 doesn’t increase this is a severe intrapulmonary shunt

30
Q

Auto-PEEP

A

Occurrs when expiratory time is too short for full exhalation when on ventilator resulting in lung hyperinflation, fixed by either performing expiratory hold maneuver or decreasing RR or tidal volume