Equipment in Anaesthesia: Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the significant benefit of high frequency jet ventilators over low frequency manual jet ventilators

A

Low frequency jet ventilators cause significant movement of the the vocal cords, making airway surgery difficult.
High frequency jet ventilators produce small tidal volumes at high frequencies, producing minimal vocal cord movement.

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2
Q

Uses for low frequency jet ventilation

A
  1. short duration airway surgery, especially bronchoscopy
  2. prior to the initiation of high frequency jet ventilation
  3. rescue ventilation in a can’t intubate, can’t ventilate situation.
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3
Q

Disadvantages of low frequency jet ventilation

A
  1. causes significant movement of the vocal cords
  2. limited to short periods of time
  3. cannot humidify or warm inspired gases
  4. TV and FiO2 are variable and impossible to measure
  5. risk of baro/volutrauma
  6. cannot deliver volatile anaesthetics
  7. unable to monitor CO2 accurately
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4
Q

What settings are adjustable on high frequency jet ventilators

A
  1. driving pressure: typical starting value in adult 150kPa
  2. frequency: typical starting value in adult 100 cycles/minute
  3. FiO2: adjusted with oxygen/air blender. Entrains air, so final value hard to predict
  4. pause pressure: approximates mean airway pressure. Ideally <20cmH2O
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5
Q

How does high frequency jet ventilation theoretically achieve adequate gas exchange, despite very small tidal volumes?

A

a. convective streaming: high velocity inspiratory jet travels down centre of airway, while exhaled gas simultaneously exits around the edge of the stream
b. simple diffusion: passive oxygenation
c. “pendelluft”: highly compliant alveoli are inflated first, which then empty into less compliant alveoli; this augments ventilation even at the end of inspiration
d. resonance: when the frequency of ventilation is close to the natural frequency of the lung, the amplitude with which air moves in the distal segments of the lung increases
e. cardiogenic oscillations: the vibration of the heartbeats exert a force on the lungs, which may augment gas exchange

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6
Q

How does high frequency oscillatory ventilation differ from high frequency jet ventilation

A

In high frequency oscillatory ventilation:
1. inspiration and expiration are active
2. ventilation takes place in a sealed breathing system, and doe not involve jet airway devices
3. there is no entrainment of air

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7
Q

What might be beneficial of oscillatory ventilations compared to standard ventilators (in critical care)

A
  1. causes less alveolar distension, therefore less shearing forces on the small airways
  2. minimises leaks through bronchopleural fistulae
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8
Q

Settings that can be adjusted on high frequency oscillatory ventilators

A

MEAN AIRWAY PRESSURE: 3-5cmH2O above mPaw observed during conventional ventilation. Serves same purpose as PEEP. Will vary with other settings’ adjustments.
BIAS FLOW: flow of fresh gas through the ventilator, usually 25-40l/min. Required for adequate removal of CO2.
POWER: controls amplitude of oscillations. Set until adequate “chest wiggle” seen.
INSPIRATORY TIME: 33% of resp cycle
FREQUENCY: 3-7Hz (180-420 breaths per minute!)
AIRWAY PRESSURE ALARM: alarms is mPaw deviates more than e.g. 5cmH20

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9
Q

What is the concept of “chest wiggle”

A

High frequency oscillatory ventilation is noisy, and ventilation cannot be assessed via regular auscultation.
Instead, the clinician looks for clear symmetrical vibration of the chest wall and shoulders, down to the abdomen.

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10
Q

Disadvantages of high frequency oscillatory ventilation

A
  1. noisy
  2. not portable
  3. staff training required
  4. vibrations may displace ETT
  5. deep sedation required, often with muscle relaxation
  6. no clear mortality benefit, and may even exacerbate mortality
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11
Q

What are non-interchangeable screw thread connectors

A

a probe and nut used to connect gas pipelines to an anaesthetic machine, with a gas-specific probe diamete

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12
Q

What is a Bodok seal

A

a neoprene washer surrounded by a steel reinforcing ring;
it provides a gas-tight connection between a gas cylinder and its yoke.

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13
Q

Why are rubber seals not used for sealing a gas cylinder and its yoke

A

frequent changes of cylinders, and heat produced by expansion of gas, create wear and tear.

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14
Q

What is a pin index system

A

pins on the yoke which mate with the holes on the cylinder block; they are gas specific

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15
Q

What is the pressure and flow rate of oxygen delivered via the O2 flush

A

400kPa
35-75l/min

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16
Q

Why should one be careful in using the O2 flush

A
  1. may cause baro/volutrauma
  2. does not pass through vapourisers, and will dilute any volatile in the system
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17
Q

How might one classify different vapourisers

A
  1. mechanism for adding anaesthetic vapour to the fresh gas flow
  2. internal resistance of the vapouriser
  3. temperature compensation
    [4. other information]
18
Q

What are the mechanisms that vapourisers can use to add anaesthetic vapour to the fresh gas flow

A

a. variable bypass vapourisers: split FGF into two streams; fully saturate the vapourisation stream, then reunite both streams (e.g. most modern vapourisers)
b. measured flow vapourisers: use a separate heated and pressurised vapour stream, precisely injected into FGF. (e.g. TEC6 desflurane vapouriser)

19
Q

Classify vapourisers according internal resistance

A

a. draw-over vapourisers have low internal resistance; uses patient’s inspiratory effort to draw fresh gas through the vapouriser; in practice not used in circle systems
b. plenum vapourises have high internal resistance and rely on pressurised gas flow; are used outside the breathing system. (e.g. Tec5, Aladdin casettes, Boyle’s bottle, copper kettle

20
Q

Disadvantages of the Tec5 vapouriser

A
  1. high internal resistance
  2. heavy due to heat sink
  3. no alarms to indicate low level of liquid anaesthetic
  4. temperature compensation only reliable within reasonable ambient temperatures
21
Q

What is the boiling point of Desflurane

A

23C

22
Q

What temperature is Desflurane heated to by the Tec6 vapouriser

A

42C

23
Q

What are disadvantages of the Tec6 vapouriser

A
  1. requires electrical power supply
  2. requires time to warm up
24
Q

What methods may be used to measure temperature

A

A. electrical
- resistance thermometer
- thermistor
- thermocouple
- infrared thermometer
B. non-electrical
- liquid expansion thermometer
- gas expansion thermometer
- bimetallic strip
- liquid crystal thermometer

25
Q

What methods are used to measure oxygen in vivo:
1. arterial
2. venous

A
  1. pulse oximeter, transcutaneous
  2. fibreoptics
26
Q

What methods are used to measure oxygen in a gas

A

fuel cell
paramagnetic analyser
mass spectrometer

27
Q

What method is used to measure oxygen in a blood sample

A

Clark electrode

28
Q

Explain briefly how a fuel cell works

A

A fuel cell measures the partial pressure of gas entering the breathing system.
Positive anode made of lead;
Negative cathode made of gold.
The electrodes are immersed in a liquid of KOH, separated from oxygen by a membrane that is selectively permeable to oxygen.
A series of chemical reactions causes a flow of electrons (current).
Magnitude of electric current is measured with an ammeter.
The current is directly proportional to the partial pressure of oxygen, which can then be calculated.

29
Q

What do pulse oximeters calculate

A

The amount of oxyhaemoglobin as a percentage of the total haemoglobin in arterial blood. It measures the saturation of pulsatile blood only.

30
Q

Which two laws are used for the pulse oximeter

A
  1. Beer’s law
  2. Lambert’s law
31
Q

State Beer’s law

A

the absorption of radiation as it passes through a substance increases exponentially as the concentration of the substance increases

32
Q

State Lambert’s law

A

the absorption of radiation as it passes through a substance increases exponentially as the distance it travels increases

33
Q

What are the wavelengths of the LEDs in a pulse oximeter,
and what form of Hb absorbs them best

A

940nm: HbO
660nm: Hb

34
Q

Why must pulse oximeters use two waves, rather than just one

A

If only one wave is used, the cause of a change in reading cannot be interpreted.

35
Q

Uses of arterial blood pressure monitoring

A
  1. the use of inotropic drugs
  2. expectations of large fluctuations in intravascular volume or pressure
  3. frequent sampling of arterial blood is required
  4. non-invasive measurements are likely to be inaccurate, e.g. morbid obesity, atrial fibrillation
36
Q

What is natural frequency

A

the frequency at which an object oscillates or vibrates after something causes it to move

37
Q

What is resonance

A

amplification of the amplitude of oscillations if an energy wave applied to an object is equal to the natural frequency of that object

38
Q

What is the minimum natural frequency an invasive arterial blood pressure measuring set should have

A

40Hz

39
Q

What is the damping coefficient

A

the property that dictates how much an object resists oscillation;
i.e. it measures the frictional forces in the system

40
Q

What is the damping coefficient in:
critical damping
underdamping
overdamping
optimal damping

A

1
less than 1
more than one
0.64

41
Q

What is the result of an underdamped system

A

exaggerated signal detection
over-estimation of SBP

42
Q

What is the result of an overdamped system

A

does not overshoot zero
misses finer detail
over-estimated DBP, under-estimated SBP