ARDS Flashcards
Form of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema that results from acute alveolar damage.
Characteristics: acute diffuse, infiltrative lung lesions, interstitial and alveolar edema, severe hypoxemia, and respiratory failure
Acute Respiratory Stress Syndrome (ARDS)
Per the Berlin Definition of ARDS, for it to be “acute”, you must develop signs within ___ of the primary cause
1 wk
Berlin Definition of ARDS
- must be within 1 wk of cause
- PaO2/FiO2 ratio ≤ 300 mmHg
- AP CXR shows bil infiltrates
PaO2/FiO2 = ratio of partial pressure of O2 in the blood vs fractional inspired air
ARDS
Pathophysiology
Lung injury → alveoli swell → disrupts surfactant → alveoli collapse (atelectasis) → O2 cannot perfuse (ventilation-perfusion rate uneven) → SHUNT -> blood in lungs backs up -> blood in pulm a. cannot go into lungs -> pulm HTN
CXR Findings: Alveolar infiltrates (cotton balls)
ARDS
ARDS WU
CXR
ABG
Blood & urine cultures
BNP - elev in HF
Lactate level - elev in sepsis
Trmnt
- High-flow O2 therapy
- Mechanical vent if O2 sat <90% despite trying #1
Purpose of PEEP?
- (PEEP) Positive end-expiratory pressure is given to patient’s to keep their alveoli from collapsing when inhaling AND exhaling
- PEEP should be set slightly lower than pt’s norm % pressure. Want it high enough to keep alveoli open but not TOO high -> rupture*
nasal cannula O2 flow:
anything greater than ____% FiO2 is useless
40%
only need enough to fill nasopharynx