Respiratory Lecture: Lower respiratory tract condition – COPD and Asthma b Flashcards

1
Q

Asthma

A

Asthma and allergies are closely linked

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2
Q

Risk of developing Asthma

A

•Indoor and outdoor pollution (including moulds, gases, chemicals, particles and cigarette
smoke) can increase the risk of developing asthma.
•Athletes can develop asthma after very intensive training over several years, especially
while breathing air that is polluted, cold or dry

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3
Q

Asthma types

A

Extrinsic

Intrinsic

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4
Q

Extrinsic

A
identifiable external
cause. Commonly occurs as a result
of allergic response with
development of IgE antibodies to
specific antigens. Tends to start in
childhood.
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5
Q

Intrinsic

A

no external cause can be
identified. Generally appears in
adults

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6
Q

Asthma: Diagnosis

A
Accurate patient history
-recognition of characteristic pattern of
symptoms and signs and the absence of an
alternative explanation
- History of atopy and allergic conditions
(e.g. eczema)
•Patient assessment
•Spirometry to assess for the
presence of airflow obstruction
•Serial peak expiratory flow
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7
Q
Management of Asthma
DRUG THERAPY (Most Common)
A
Short acting 2 agonist (SABA)
Salbutamol
Inhaled Corticosteroids (ICS)
Fluticasone, Budesonide
Leukotriene receptor antagonists
Montelukast (Singulair®)
Mast cell stabilizers (cromone)
Sodium cromoglycate, Nedocromil sodium
Long acting 2 agonist (LABA)
Salmeterol, eformoterol, indacaterol
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8
Q

Nursing Management

A

Assessment of respiratory function and detailed history (if patient not in
acute distress)
Care priorities
Education/patient teaching
• Asthma action plan
• Drug therapy and correct use of inhalers
• Peak flow meter

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9
Q

Living with Asthma

A

Impact on the individual varies with disease severity but it can impact physical, mental and
social aspects of life.
The greater the severity the higher the impact on the ADL’s

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10
Q

Impact on ADL for those with chronic asthma

A
  1. General health status – compromised energy levels due to difficulty breathing out and
    poor oxygen absorption…. Affecting strength, ability to talk. (interaction socially with
    peers potentially affected)
  2. Diet/activity restrictions – certain foods can trigger acute episodes
  3. Loss of certainty, predictability for day to day events – acute attack can be triggered by
    many things at any time… may affect ability to plan
  4. Loss of independence and self care ability – maintenance of independence requires
    more motivation as disease progresses… mental health.
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11
Q

Associated
Comorbiditie
s and risk
factors

A
Physical inactivity
smoking
weight
poeple with asthma 
has one more chronic condition, mental problems, like to report COPD, cardiovascular disease
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12
Q
Out of
pocket
healthcare
expenditure
and chronic
disease
A

more likely to forgo healthcare because of cost

skip healthcare

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13
Q

Respiratory
Failure
causes

A
airway obstruction
central drive
lung parenchyma
neuromuscular junction
peripheral nerves
other
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14
Q

Mechanism of arterial hypoxia

A
Low inspired PO2
Hypoventilation
Diffusion impairment
Ventilation-perfusiion mismtatching
Right to left shunt
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15
Q

Respiratory Failure

A

Type I Respiratory failure (Hypoxaemic respiratory failure)
Low arterial oxygen (PaO2 < 60mmHg) AND normal or low arterial carbon dioxide
(PaCO2 < 45mmHg)
Type II Respiratory failure (Hypercapnic respiratory failure)
Low arterial oxygen (PaO2 < 60mmHg) AND increased/high arterial carbon dioxide
(PaCO2 > 50 mmHg)

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16
Q

Respiratory Failure

can be

A

Respiratory failure can be ACUTE or CHRONIC

17
Q

Pathophysiology of Type I

respiratory failure

A
Numerous causes but broadly speaking
it is failure of oxygenation
1. Low inspired PO2
2. Alveolar Hypoventilation
3. Diffusion impairment
4. V/Q mismatch
5. Shunt
18
Q

Pathophysiology of Type II

respiratory failure

A
Failure of the respiratory muscle
pump or ventilatory failure.
This has three components;
•Neural respiratory drive
•Respiratory muscle pump capacity
•Increase in respiratory load that
cannot be overcome
19
Q

Common Causes of Respiratory failure type 1

A
Asthma
• Pneumonia
• Shock
• Anatomical shunt (VSD)
• Pulmonary oedema
• Pulmonary embolism
20
Q

Common Causes of Respiratory failure type 2

A
Type II
• Asthma
• COPD
• CF
• Drug Overdose
• Cystic fibrosis
• Sleep apnoea
• Chronic neuromuscular disorders
• Chest wall disorders
• Morbid obesity
21
Q

Signs of hypoxaemia

A

• Peripheral
• Cyanosis
• Cerebral
• Headache, nausea, agitation, restless and combative behavior, disorientation,
drowsiness, convulsions, coma (severe/late)
• Respiratory
• Dyspnoea, tachypnoea, inability to speak in sentences, use of accessory
muscles,  SpO2
• Cardiovascular
• Tachycardia, hypertension, skin cool clammy and diaphoretic, dysrhythmias,
bradycardia and hypotension (severe/late sign)

22
Q

Signs of hypercapnia

A
• Cardiovascular
• Headache, bounding peripheral pulses, hypertension, tachycardia, flushing,
warm peripheries
• Other
• Signs of hypoxaemia
23
Q

Investigations/diagnostic studies

A
Physical assessment
ABG
Chest X-ray
Pathology
FBC
Serum electrolytes
Blood cultures/sputum cultures
PFT (chronic respiratory failure)
Other diagnostic tests are aimed at diagnosing and/or treating underlying cause
24
Q

Management

A
Preserve oxygenation and ventilation
Direct treatment towards underlying cause
Respiratory support
• Oxygen therapy
• NIV (CPAP/BiPAP)
• Invasive ventilation
Mobilisation of secretions
• Hydration and humidification
• Chest physiotherapy
• Nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal suctioning