ARDS Flashcards

1
Q

What happens to respiration in airspace filling diseases in general?

A

(similar to atelectasis - collapsed alveoli)

  • Dec airspace that can actually participate in gas exchange = smaller effective volumes (dec FVC and TLC)
  • Less ventilation –> low V/Q areas (SHUNT) –> low PaO2, inc A-a gradient, hypoxemia
  • High V/Q area always co-occur (DEAD SPACE) & limited Vt = higher VD/VT
  • Compensate by inc RR (if weak muscles, fatigue, cannot comp –> hypercapnia)
  • Dec compliance (requires more pressure for same change in vol) - higher lung elastic forces
  • Inc work of breathing
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2
Q

ARDS Diagnosis (4)

A
  • 1- Bilateral alveolar opacities on chest X-ray
  • 2- Resp failure not explained by cardiogenic pulmonary edema (do echo - rule out CHF)
  • 3- Dec PaO2/FIO2 ratio < 300 (so dec oxygen transfer)
  • 4- ACUTE onset w/ apparent trigger (w/in 1 wk of clinical insult)
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3
Q

ARDS Risk Factors (6)

A
  • Pneumonia (**most common)
  • Extra-pulmonary sepsis
  • Aspiration of gastric contents (acid in airway or vomit –> aspirate)
  • Severe, acute pancreatitis
  • Major trauma/ burn
  • Emergency surgery
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4
Q

3 Phases of ARDS (+histo of ea)

A
  • Exudative Phase - (acute) - capillary endothelial injury/alveolar endothelium injury, inc permeability, inflammatory cels and protein-rich edema in alveoli and interstitium, hyaline membranes (homogenous, eosinophilic and right on alveolar septa - fibrin and RBC debris)
    • “DAD” - diffuse alveolar damage (all 3 layers - not all alveoli)
    • NO NEUTROPHILS
  • Proliferative Phase - (sub-acute) - cellular repair type II cells proliferate (see hyperplasia), fibroblasts and collagen deposition
  • Chronic Phase - (late) - resolution of acute inflammation; alveolar macrophages replace neutrophils, fibroblast proliferation FIBROSIS (+/-)
    • If fibrosis - then see honeycomb lung, traction bronchiectasis, possible bronchial squamous metaplasia
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5
Q

ARDS Prognosis

A
  • Usually recover baseline spirometry @ 6 mo but may not recover physical function
  • Gas diffusion impairments for 12 mo + if fibrosis
  • <50% return to work after 1 yr
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6
Q

Pathophysiology of ARDS

A
  • Non-hydrostatic edema in some alveoli and some atelectasis (surfactant protein damage) –> V/Q mismatch (shunt) –> hypoxemia
  • Unaffected areas of lung become high V/Q areas (dead space) - inc VD/VT
    • If cannot comp w/ inc RR –> hypercapnia
  • Interstitial edema and surface tension - dec compliance
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7
Q

How does mechanical vent affect ARDS?

A
  • Mech Vent - Inc FIO2
    • Improves low V/Q areas of partially affected lung
    • Does not improves areas of complete shunt (cannot accept any air)
  • PEEP - open atelectasis and dec fraction of lung w/ low V/Q
    • Pros - targeting the partially affected lung; recruit more alveoli for gas exchange by opening more alveoli previously collapsed; less V/Q mismatch and less VD/VT
    • Cons - barotrauma of normal lung areas (too much pressure) and can inc dead space here b/c more ventilation than perfusion here AND dec CO b/c less venous return
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8
Q

How do you deal w/ hypercarbia in ARDS?

A
  • Normally one would inc VT or inc RR but evidence of trauma from repeated opening–closing (inc mortality if high vent tidal volumes)
  • “permissive hypercapnea” - prioritize maintaining low tidal vol to correcting acidemia
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9
Q

4 Non-Vent Strategies for ARDS

A
  • 1- Neuromuscular Blockade (paralysis) to dec oxygen consumption; more venous oxygen content –> inc PaO2 for oxygen delivery to critical tissues
  • 2- Prone Position - put pt on stomach to change perfusion distribution - more blood flow to anterior/upper lobes
    • Makes sense b/c lower lobes have most shunt
  • 3- Fluid Restriction - avoid adding hydrostatic edema to already existing non-hydrostatic edema
  • 4- If severe … ECMO (extracorpeal membrane oxygenation) bypass
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