ARDS Flashcards
Hypoxemic respiratory failure vs. Hypercapnic respiratory failure
Hypoxemic: a PaO2 of less than 60 mm hg
Hypercapnic: a PaCO2 greater than 50 mm hg with acidemia
1) What is O2 therapy used to treat?
2) How to give O2?
3) What to monitor?
4) What is the risk?
1) Hypoxemia
2) Always give at the lowest FIO2 possible
3) Changes in mental status, RR, ABGs
4) O2 toxicity when exposed to FIO2 greater than 60% for longer than 48hours
What techniques are used to mobilize secretions?
- Positioning: elevated HOB 30 degrees or side lying
- Coughing: quad or huff coughing
- Hydration: Fluid intake of 2-3L a day to thin secretions
- Ambulation
1) What is PEEP used for?
2) Advantage
3) Types
4) Who should not get it?
1) For pts who don’t improve oxygenation and ventilation
2) Helps decrease WOB and avoids need for intubation
3) CPAP and BiPAP
4) Pts with decreased LOC, high O2 requirements, facial trauma, hemodynamic instability or excessive secretions
1) Function of corticosteroids
2) Examples
3) Disadvantage of ICS
4) What to monitor?
1) Reduce inflammation in the airways
2) Methylprednisone
3) Takes 4-5 days for optimum effects
4) Monitor potassium levels for hypokalemia
1) Function of bronchodilators
2) Examples
3) How to use?
4) Side effects
1) Reduce bronchospasms
2) Albuterol
3) Give in 15 or 30min increments until a response occurs
3) Tachycardia and HTN
1) What meds are used to relieve pulmonary congestion?
2) What to monitor?
1) Diuretics, morphine, or nitroglycerin
2) For changes in HR and decreases in BP
1) ARDS
2) What is this caused by?
1) The alveolar capillary membrane becomes damaged and more permeable to intravascular fluid
2) Direct injury: aspiration of gastric contents, bacterial/viral pneumonia, and sepsis
Indirect injury: Sepsis, severe massive trauma, TBI, and shock
1) What does ARDS result in?
2) Top 4 causes
1) Physiologic alterations: V/Q mismatch, decreased lung compliance, increased WOB
2) Sepsis, pneumonia, severe trauma, and aspiration of gastric contents
S&S of ARDS
- Acute resp. Failure
- Dry cough
- Fever
- Fine crackles
- Changes in mental status
- Refractory hypoxemia
- Tachypnea
- Retractions
1) What does CXR show?
2) Lab findings
3) What is used to evaluate the severity of hypoxemia?
1) White out: widespread infiltrates throughout the lung
2) Initially resp alkalosis and then acidosis
3) The PaO2/FIO2 ratio; normally is greater than 400 but ARDS causes it to be lower
Complications of ARDS
- Abnormal lung function
- VAP
- Barotrauma
- Stress ulcers
- VTE
- AKI
1) Risk factors for VAP
2) Prevention
1) Impaired host defenses, invasive monitoring devices, aspiration of GI contents, and prolong mechanical ventilation
2) Elevate HOB 30-45 degrees, hand hygiene, sterile technique during suctioning, and frequent oral care
1) How to minimize the risk of barotrauma
2) Prophylactic Tx for stress ulcers
3) Prophylactic Tx for VTE
4) What to monitor for AKI? Tx?
1) Provide ventilation with smaller and varying amounts of PEEP
2) Antiulcer drugs: pantoprazole and sucralfate
3) Compression stokings, heparin, and ambulation
4) Intake and output, daily creatinine and urea levels; Treated with continuous renal replacement therapy
Nursing Dx for ARDS
- Anxiety
- Impaired gas exchange
- Altered nutrition
- Depression
- Decreased cardiac output
- Knowledge deficit