ARDS Flashcards
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a clinical syndrome leading to respiratory failure. What is the diagnostic criteria:
severe dyspnea of rapid onset =ACUTE
hypoxemia
diffuse pulmonary Infiltrates (bilateral alveolar infiltrates)
Pao2/fio2 <200mmhg
No evidence of increased left atrial pressure
ARDS DIRECT LUNG INJURIES
Pneumonia Aspiration of gastric lavage Pulmonary contusion Near drowning Toxic inhalation injury
Value of MILD ARDS
Pao2/fio2 200-300mmhg
Chest radiograph of ARDS
Bilateral opacities consistent With PULMONARY EDEMA
Value on severe ARDS
Pao2/fio2 <100mmhg
Last diagnostic criteria of ARDS
Absence of left atrial hypertension
ARDS severity of Pao2/fio2 100-200 mmHg
moderate ARDS
most frequently reported surgical conditions in ARDS are
pulmonary contusion,
multiple bone fractures,
and
chest wall trauma/flail chest,
Trauma patients with an Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation(APACHE) II score ≥ ___ have a 2.5-fold increased risk ofdeveloping ARDS.
≥ 16
In this phase, alveolar capillary endothelial cells and type I pneumocytes (alveolar epithelial cells) are injured,with consequent loss of the normally tight alveolar barrier to fluid and macromolecules
Exudative phase
Chest X-ray in exudative phase 1
Alveolar and interstitial opacities ≥ 3/4 of the lung fields
What phase:
- recruitment of leukocytes (especiallyneutrophils) into the pulmonary interstitium and alveoli
- dysfunctional pulmonary surfactant to form hyaline membrane whorls
Exudative phase
in addition to severe hypoxemia, _____ secondary to an increase in pulmonary dead space can beprominent in early ARDS.
hypercapnia
This phase of ARDS usually lasts from day7 to day 21. Most patients recover rapidly and are liberated from mechanical ventilation during this phase. Despite this improvement,many patients still experience dyspnea, tachypnea, and hypoxemia
Proliferative phase
In proliferative phase, Histologically, the first signs of resolution are often evident in this phase, with the initiation of lung repair, the organization of alveolar exudates, and a shift from neutrophil- to
lymphocyte-predominant pulmonary infiltrates