Emergency Procedures Flashcards

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1
Q

Respiratory Acidosis indicates what two features in the patient?

A

Hypoventilation and hypoxemia

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2
Q

What is the preferred sample type when evaluating respiratory status?

A

Arterial sample, however venous blood samples are helpful to evaluate the status of the patient at the cellular level.

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3
Q

What are physiological consequences of respiratory acidosis?

A

Sympathetic activation, increased cardiac output, tachyarrhythmias. As PaCO2 increases, intracranial pressure and cerebral blood flow increases.

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4
Q

What could you see clinically in patients with extremely high PaCO2 levels (60-70 mmHg)?

A

Disorientation, narcosis, and coma

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5
Q

Causes of respiratory acidosis include what?

A

Depression of the respiratory center
Neuromuscular disease
Obstruction of large airways

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6
Q

One of the causes of respiratory acidosis is depression of the respiratory center, what things are associated with this?

A

Medications (inhalant anesthesia, opioids, barbiturates)

Neurologic disease: cervical spinal cord lesion, brainstem lesion

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7
Q

One of the causes of respiratory acidosis is neuromuscular disease, what things are associated with this?

A

MG, botulism, tetanus, tick paralysis, severe hypokalemia, organophosphates, aminoglycosides

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8
Q

One of the causes of respiratory acidosis is obstruction of large airways, what things are associated with this?

A

Aspiration, kinked, or plugged ET tube, Tracheal collapse, brachycephalic syndrome, laryngeal paralysis, mass lesions, infiltrative lower airway disease (COPD, asthma)

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9
Q

Primary treatment modality of respiratory acidosis is what?

A

Ventilation, oxygen, establishment of airway, reversals of drugs

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10
Q

Key features of a respiratory acidosis?

A

pH low, PCO2 high, HCO3 High or Normal

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11
Q

Key features of a respiratory alkalosis?

A

pH high, PCO2 low, HCO3 low or Normal

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12
Q

Key features of a metabolic acidosis?

A

pH low, PCO2 low, HCO3 low

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13
Q

Key features of a metabolic alkalosis?

A

pH high, PCO2 high, HCO3 high

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14
Q

What does a respiratory alkalosis (hypocapnia) indicate?

A

hyperventilation

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15
Q

During a respiratory alkalosis at what point does vasoconstriction occur?

A

PaCO2 decreases to less than 25 mmHg and when arterial pH increases to 7.6

This results in a reduction in myocardial and cerebral blood flow.

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16
Q

Causes of respiratory alkalosis?

A
Fear, excitement, anxiety or pain
Hyperventilation (either by the patient or by mechanical ventilation)
Diseases such as pneumonia, pulmonary edema, pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary thromboembolism
CHF
Severe anemia
Hypotension
Hepatic disease
Cushings
Heat stroke
sepsis
17
Q

What is treatment aimed at during respiratory alkalosis?

A

decreasing fear or anxiety
decreases mechanical ventilation
correcting hypoxemia

18
Q

Causes of metabolic acidosis?

A
EG, salicylate, lactic acidosis, DKA
Dilutional acidosis (increased free water associated with hyponatremia)
Hyperchloremic acidosis: renal failure, Addisons, diarrhea
Hyperphosphatemic acidosis: renal failure, urethral obstruction. uroabdomen
19
Q

Causes of metabolic Alkalosis?

A

hypochloremic alkalosis: vomiting of stomach contents, administration of loop diuretics, thiazides
Concentration of alkalosis from pure water loss, associated with hypernatremia- water deprivation, vomiting or diarrhea
Low albumin: PLE, PLN, hepatic failure

20
Q

What are the five causes of hypoxemia?

A

Hypoventilation
Decreased partial pressure of inspired oxygen
Ventilation (perfusion mismatch V/Q mismatch)
Diffusion impairment
Right to left shunt

21
Q

Examples of hypoventilation?

A

Cervical spinal cord lesion above the 5th cerical vertebrae or brainstem lesion
Tetnaus, botulism, tick paralysis, polyradiculoneuroritis, MG,
Inhalants
Fractured ribs, flail chest, pleural space disease
Aspiration, brachycephalic syndrome, tracheal collapse, largyneal paralysis, mass, plugged ET tube

22
Q

Causes of decreased partial pressure of inspired oxygen (FiO2)?

A

High altitude,

Inadequate minute ventilation, failure of CO2 filter

23
Q

Causes of ventilation issues - perfusion mismatch?

A

Asthma, bronchitis, COPD, PE

24
Q

Causees of diffusion impairments?

A

diffuse pulmonary interstitial disease, vasculitis, emphysema, pneumoina, severe pulmonary edema

25
Q

Causes of right to left shunts?

A

Atelectasis

Anatomic shunt with right to left blood flow (PDA, ventricular septal defect, atrial septal defect, tetrology of fallot