ARDS Flashcards
1
Q
What is ARDS?
A
Berlin definition:
- Acute, diffuse, inflammatory lung injury
- Increased alveolar capillary permeability
- loss of aerated lung tissue
- hypoxia, decreased compliance, V/Q mismatch.
Berlin criteria:
- acute onset < 1 week
- bilateral opacities on imaging
- non-cardiogenic
- CPAP/PEEP 5cmH2O
- mild (200-300) (27%), moderate (100-200) (32%), severe (<100) (45%).
2
Q
What is the Murray score?
A
scoring 0-4 for 4 parameters (2Cs and 2Ps)
C- CXR quadrants affected (#=score)
C- Compliance (ml/H2O) >80, 80-60, 60-40, 40-20, <20
P- PaO2/FiO2 ratio 300, 225, 175, 100
P- PEEP 5, 8, 12, 15
Score >3 and failure to respond to conventional Tx ->refer to ECMO
3
Q
What is the pathophysiology of ARDS?
A
- Exudative phase (1-3d):
- Acute inflammatory insult to epithelium. Inflammatory cytokine cascade leads to neutrophil recruitment with destruction of pulmonary vascular bed and capillary leak leading to extravascular lung water and pulmonary oedema
- inflammatory exudate leads to inactivation of surfactant, leading to collapse and consolidation.
- V/Q matching impaired by inflammation causing dysregulation of vascular tone.
- Dysregulation of coagulation and fibrinolysis leading to microthrombus formation. - Proliferative phase (3-6d)
- proliferation of type 2 pneumocytes and fibroblasts. - Fibrotic phase (2nd week)
- Fibrosis of damaged lung tissue.
4
Q
What are the causes of ARDS?
A
Can be divided into:
- Pulmonary:
- Pneumonia
- Pulmonary contusion
- Aspiration pneumonitis
- Inhalational injury
- Pulmonary vasculitis
- Drowning - Extrapulmonary:
- Pancreatitis
- severe burns
- Sepsis
- Major trauma
- TRALI
- Pump lung