Anaesthetics - Critical Care Flashcards

1
Q

what is critical care?

A
  • Organ system support
  • Single vs multiple

Can be a bit murky — respiratory failure needing oxygen can be managed on wards, for instance

Closed admissions — not everyone will get in, needs to be on need/benefit

Level 1 care – ward based care

Level 2 care – high dependency unit

Level 3 care – intensive care, multiple different organs needing supported

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2
Q

what is respiratory failure and what types of them is there?

A

Respiratory failure is a condition in which your blood doesn’t have enough oxygen or has too much carbon dioxide. Sometimes you can have both problems.

  • Type 1: oxygenation failure
  • Type 2: oxygenation and ventilation failure (In type 2 there is 2 problems, cant clear CO2 which is their ventilation)
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3
Q

what is the treatment/management of respiratory failure?

A

Can give only a certain amount of oxygen on a ward

Can give it nasal cannily

Can get a normal face mask

If really struggling then you will get a trong mask, reservoir bag hanging off it

These are all ward based therapy

In high flow nasal cannula you can give more as you are warming and humidifying the air first so the patient can have more – we use this for type 1 respiratory failure

Treatments for respiratory failure may include oxygen therapy, medicines, and procedures to help your lungs rest and heal

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4
Q

a non-invasive ventilator can also be used to treat respiratory failure, what is it?

A

Non-invasive ventilator – NIV

Apply pressure to patients airways to keep them open and reduce their work of breathing

Applying positive pressure to open up alveoli and improve respiratory failure

NIV is mainly for type 2 respiratory failures e.g. COPD patients that are retaining CO2

Use as a means to avoid invasive ventilation

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5
Q

what is shown here? it is another way to treat respiratory failure

A

Invasive ventilation

Intubate patients

Endotracheal tube

Tube that sits in trachea and the cuff inflates and forms a seal and means any pressure of gas going into lungs can come back up through the patients mouth and also protects the patients airways, e.g. patients has secretions or vomits and sits into the oropharynx then it can go down into the lungs causing more problems

Creates large amounts of pressure

Inspiratory failure or infection can get better or long term the patient requires prolonged ventilation and therefore cant eat so need nasogastric tube, cant talk, take medication

Get a tracheostomy put in neck if long term and therefore bypasses problem with eating and sedation

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6
Q

what is cardiovascular failure?

A

Shock is acute circulatory failure with inadequate or inappropriately distributed tissue perfusion resulting in cellular hypoxia

Inability of body to get oxygen from outside world to bodily tissues

These are the many different types of causes

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7
Q

what are the types of cardiovascular failure?

A
  • Distributive (septic) – blood vessels have abnormally dilated and blood going wrong place
  • Hypovolaemic – not enough blood to go around
  • Anaphylactic – blood vessels abnormally dilated and degree of pump failure aswell
  • Neurogenic - trauma to spinal cord and destruction of sympathetic system leads to incorrect distribution and dilation of vessels
  • Cardiogenic - pump failure, heart itself is the issue
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8
Q

Cardiovascular failur - what do you Need to think about when deciding on what drugs to use

A
  • Cardiac Output = Heart Rate x Stroke Volume
  • Stroke Volume = Preload / Contractility / Afterload

BP is not fundamental to your CO

HR easy to measure but SV is harder to physically quantify

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9
Q

cardiovascular failure - what is shown here?

A

an arterial line – introductory needle, guide wire and a canula that slides over the guide wire into the vessel

Get an instant measure of the patients BP

Can do repeated blood sampling without need of further needling of the patient

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10
Q

cardiovascular failure - what is shown here?

A

picture of essential line in an essential vein, able to give number of different potent drugs right into circulation and if gave peripherally would be dangerous

Also can aspirate from it and check central venous pressure

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11
Q

what drugs are used for cardiovascular failure?

A

Most common drugs we use in critical care to support cardiac failure:

•Vasopressors:

  • Metaraminol
  • Noradrenaline

•Inotropes:

  • Adrenaline
  • Dobutamine

Vasopressors - vasocontraction, improve preloads, reduce venous volume

If patients main issue is pump dysfunction and need support for contractibility then use an inotrope

Vasopressors are a powerful class of drugs that induce vasoconstriction and thereby elevate mean arterial pressure (MAP). Vasopressors differ from inotropes, which increase cardiac contractility; however, many drugs have both vasopressor and inotropic effects

an agent that alters the force or energy of muscular contractions

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12
Q

what types of fluids is there?

A

Colloids or crystalloids

There are two main types of volume expanders: crystalloids and colloids. Crystalloids are aqueous solutions of mineral salts or other water-soluble molecules. Colloids contain larger insoluble molecules, such as gelatin; blood itself is a colloid. There is no evidence that colloids are better than crystalloids in those who have had trauma, burns, or surgery. Colloids are more expensive than crystalloids. As such, colloids are not recommended for volume expansion in these settings

Colloids and crystalloids are types of fluids that are used for fluid replacement, often intravenously (via a tube straight into the blood). Crystalloids are low-cost salt solutions (e.g. saline) with small molecules, which can move around easily when injected into the body

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13
Q

what is a colloid?

A

large osmotically active particles and molecules in to, idea is that the molecules will stay in the vascular tree and not move into tissue as easy, increases risk of renal failure

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14
Q

what are crystalloids?

A

use more commonly, small molecules in them, e.g. saline, some fluid stays in intravascular tree but a lot does leak out into tissue and cells and gets distributed in the body

The most commonly used crystalloid fluid is normal saline, a solution of sodium chloride at 0.9% concentration, which is close to the concentration in the blood (isotonic).

Crystalloid fluids function to expand intravascular volume without disturbing ion concentration or causing significant fluid shifts between intracellular, intravascular, and interstitial spaces

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15
Q

what may fluids be given for?

A

Maintenance or resuscitation

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16
Q

what is a good indicator of fluid status?

A

Urine output is a good indicator of fluid status and haemodynamics, it’s a very useful marker

17
Q

how are fluids used in septic shock?

A

Sepsis is an infection associated with haemodynamic compromise

Septic shock – given someone fluid resuscitation and despite that till in shock and require vasoactive support

18
Q

how much fluids can you give someone?

A

30 ml/kg “limit”

19
Q

what are some concrning features that may suggest neurological failure?

A

There are concerning features: uneven pupils, cushing’s reflex, failure to maintain airway (GCS ~8)

Normally this causes patients ability to breath and protect airway

20
Q

what are the different causes of neurological failure?

A
  • Metabolic - severe sepsis or inflammation can cause this and many other things
  • Trauma - traumatic head injuries
  • Infection - CNS infections like meningitis and encephalitis patients
  • Stroke