Critical Care Flashcards
The SAPS score system is not disease-specific but rather incorporates three underlying-disease variables:
AIDS, metastatic cancer, and hematologic malignancy.
Signs of shock with low cardiac output
Narrow pulse pressure
Cool extremities
Delayed capillary refill
Signs of shock with high cardiac output
Widened pulse pressure (usually reduced diastolic pressure)
Warm extremities with bounding pulses
Rapid capillary refill
Most common cause of hypotension in patients with high cardiac output
Sepsis
causing decreased systemic vascular resistance
Respiratory failure with alveolar flooding and intrapulmonary SHUNTING
Type 1 RF. ACUTE HYPOXEMIC RESPIRATORY FAILURE
Management of Respiratory failure with alveolar flooding and intrapulmonary SHUNTING
Low tidal volume ventilation plus fluid conservative management strategy
Mechanism of type 2 respiratory failure
Alveolar hypoventilation with inability to eliminate carbon dioxide effectively
Aka hypercarbic respiratory failure
Type of respiratory failure sec to LUNG ATELECTASIS of perioperative respiratory failure
Type III
Type of respiratory failure sec to hypoperfusion of respiratory muscles in patients sec to SHOCK
Type 4
Screening criteria for respiratory function in the ICU for spontaneous breathing trials
- Oxygenation is stable (PAO2/fio2>200 and peep=5 cmh2O)
- Intact cough and airway reflexes
- No vasopressor agents
- No sedatives
Criteria for failure to do spontaneous breathing trial
RR>35 for 5 mins Sao2<90% hr>140bpm or a 20% increase or decrease from baseline SBP <90 or >180mmhg Increased Anxiety or diaphoresis
Extubation is considered is none of the failure criteria is present plus
RR TO TV ratio is <105
No benefit of blood transfusion if the trigger hgb <10g/dL compared to a trigger hgb of
7g/dL
Most common underlying pathology of acute renal failure in icu due to hypoperfusion and nephrotoxic drugs
ACUTE TUBULAR NECROSIS ATN
This condition is common after cardiac arrest and often results in severe and permanent brain injury in survivors
anoxic cerebral injury
Certainly patients suffering cardiac arrest shouldhave a temperature targeted to no higher than
36°C.
Most effective treatment of status epilepticus
LORAZEPAM
+phenytoin or fosphenytoin due to short half life of lorazepam
irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brainstem,even if circulatory and respiratory functions remain intact on artificial life support.
Brain death
Diagnosis of brain death
diagnosis requires demonstration of the absence of cerebral function (no response to any external stimulus) and brainstem functions (e.g., unreactive pupils, lack of ocular movement in response to head turning or ice-water irrigation of ear canals, positive apnea test [no drive to breathe]).