Respiratory Management of the Surgical Patient Flashcards

1
Q

Pulmonary Ventilation

A
  • Inspiration occurs due to the contraction of muscle that cause a negative intrathoracic pressureFlow is generated due to pressure gradient from atmosphere to alveoli
  • Expiration is passive after intrathoracic (specifically intra-alveolar) pressure is greater than the atmosphere
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2
Q

Compliance

A

Extent to which lungs expand per unit increase in transpulmonary pressure or stretchiness

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3
Q

Bronchospasm

A
  • Airways (bronchial tubes) go into spasm and contract. This makes it hard to breathe

Clinical manifestations

  • Wheeze
  • Tachypnoea
  • Hypercapnia
    • Histamine release causing mast cells degranulation
    • Reflex bronchoconstriction due to tracheal stimulation from secretions

Treatments
- Remove cause, beta 2 agonist

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4
Q

Dyspnoea

A
  • Subjective sensation of uncomfortable breathing
  • Common symptom of respiratory disease
  • V/Q mismatches
  • Lung diseases
  • May related to stretch receptor
  • Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea (sudden attack) - acute shortness of breath
  • Posture-induced dyspnoea
  • Orthopnoea: lying position - characteristic of heart failure
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5
Q

Atelectasis

A
  • complete or partial collapse of the entire lung or area (lobe) of the lung. It occurs when the tiny air sacs (alveoli) within the lung become deflated or possibly filled with alveolar fluid.
  • one of the most common breathing (respiratory) complications after surgery
  • Pathophysiology
    § Decreased diaphragmatic expansion - lung compliance
    § Retained airway secretion
    § Postoperative pain
  • Clinical manifestation
    § Can be asymptomatic, minor to severe symptoms, dependent on magnitude of lung collapse
    § Cough and dyspnoea common

Hypoxaemia, tachycardia, hypotension or pneumonia

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6
Q

Treatment of atelectasis

A
  • Early mobilisation and incentive spirometry
  • nebulised bronchodilators
  • positive pressure ventilation
  • oxygen and antibiotics
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7
Q

Hypoxaemia/Hypoxia

A

Low blood or tissue oxygen level
- common condition in postop

Causation

  • hypoventilation
  • V-Q mismatches
  • decreased alveolar diffusion

Pathophysiology

  • depression of minute ventilation/CO2 relationship
  • shunting of gas volume from under ventilated diffusion
  • decrease in gas volume to under perfused alveoli

Clinical Manifestations

  • tachypnoea
  • dysponea
  • cognitive changes
  • vasodilation and hypotension
  • cyanosis and coma
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8
Q

Pleural effusion

A
  • build-up of excess fluid between the layers of the pleura outside the lungs
  • The pleura are thin membranes that line the lungs and the inside of the chest cavity and act to lubricate and facilitate breathing
  • Causation
    • Imbalance between fluid production and removal
    • Inadequate lung expansion
    • Disruption of pleural membrane

Clinical manifestations
- Cough, dyspnoea, pleural friction rub, decreased breath sounds

Diagnosis

- Clinical examination
- Chest x ray
Treatment
	- Often nothing as resolves once patient is active
	- Chest physiotherapy
	- Oxygen therapy of severe
	- Can need drainage: thoracentesis
				□ Drainage is removal of fluids
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9
Q

Pneumonia

A

Infection of the lungs, alveoli are filled with fluid or pus making it harder to breathe

Difficult to diagnose because many other conditions similar - atelectasis, pulmonary oedema

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10
Q

Respiratory acidosis

A

Condition that occurs when the lungs can’t remove enough of the carbon dioxide (CO2) produced by the body

PaCO2 + HCO3 elevated

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11
Q

Metabolic acidosis

A

Electrolyte disorder characterized by an imbalance in the body’s acid-base balance. Metabolic acidosis has three main root causes: increased acid production, loss of bicarbonate, and a reduced ability of the kidneys to excrete excess acids

PaCO2 + HCO3 decreased

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12
Q

Respiratory alkalosis

A

occurs when you breathe too fast or too deep and carbon dioxide levels drop too low.

PaCO2 + HCO3 decreased

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13
Q

Metabolic alkalosis

A

Occurs when your blood becomes overly alkalin

PaCO2 + HCO3 increased

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14
Q

Pulse Oximetry

A

Relative measure of percentage of bound oxygen to haemoglobin

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