CO poisoning Flashcards

1
Q

Oxygen

Common indications

A
  1. To increase tissue oxygen delivery in states of hypoxaemia
  2. To accelerate reabsorption of pleural gas in pneumothorax
  3. To reduce the half-life of carboxyhaemoglobin in CO poisoning
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2
Q

Oxygen

MOA

A
  • An abnormally low Partial pressure of oxygen (PO2) in arterial blood (PaO2), termed hypoxaemia, may be a consequence of a wide range of disease processes
  • Its effect is to reduce the delivery of oxygen to tissues (hypoxia), forcing them to use anaerobic metabolism for energy generation
  • Supplemental oxygen therapy increases the PO2 in alveolar gas, driving more rapid diffusion of oxygen into the blood
  • The resultant increase in PaO2, increase delivery of O2 to tissues, which in effect ‘buys time; while the underlying disease is corrected
  • In Pneumothorax, supplemental oxygen therapy has an additional benefit of reducing the fraction of nitrogen in alveolar gas
  • This accelerates the diffusion of nitrogen out of the body
  • Since pleural air is composed mostly of nitrogen, this increases its rate of reabsorption
  • In CO poisoning, oxygen competes with CO to bind with haemoglobin and thereby shortens the half-life of carboxyhaemoglobin, returning haemoglobin to a form that can again transport oxygen to tissues
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3
Q

Oxygen

Important adverse effects

A
  • The most common adverse effects are related to the delivery device (e.g. discomfort of the mask) or its lack of water vapour leading to dry mouth/throat
  • The latter can be improved by using a humidification system
  • Except in pneumothorax and CO poisoning, there is little to be gained from having abnormally high PaO2, there is some evidence that it may be harmful
  • However, this concern should not lead you to withhold oxygen in critical illness or states of severe hypoxaemia in which oxygen is lifesaving
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4
Q

Oxygen

Prescription

A
  • Oxygen therapy should always be guided by a written prescription except in emergencies when it may initially be administered without a prescription
  • The oxygen prescription is usually found on a dedicated section of the drug chart or a separate chart
  • Its key feature is the target oxygen saturation range, as measured by pulse oximetry (SpO2)
  • The target SpO2 should be 94-98% in most patients and 88-92% in those with chronic type 2 respiratory failure
  • For the initial delivery device, in general, prescribe a reservoir mask in critical illness and patients with SpO2 <85%; a venturi (28%) for patients in chronic type 2 respiratory failure, and nasal cannulae for everyone else
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5
Q

Oxygen

Monitoring

A
  • SpO2 monitoring is essential in all patients receiving oxygen for acute illness
  • The device and or flow rate should be adjusted as necessary to keep the SpO2 within the target range
  • In addition, arterial blood gas measurement is essential in patients with a critical illness, those with chronic type 2 respiratory failure or at risk of hypercapnia and those with hypoxaemia that is unexpected, progressive or disproportionate to their illness
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6
Q
A
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