Lecture 1 Flashcards
Define Respiratory Failure
- Patient loses the ability to ventilate adequately
2. Patient can’t deliver enough O2 to the blood and organs
Define hypoxaemic RF with regards to:
- PaO2
2. PaCO2
Type 1
O2 movement impairment
PaO2 < 60 mmHg
PaCO2 < 42 mmHg
Define hypercapnic RF with regards to:
- PaCO2
2. The respiratory pump
- PaCO2 > 50 mmHg
2. Respiratory pump is inadequate and cannot maintain ventilation to eliminate CO2 produced by metabolism
Define the following types of RF:
- Acute
- Chronic
- Acute on Chronic
Acute
- rapid, short course, pronounced symptoms
Chronic
- long duration with poor ABGs, has metabolic compensation
Acute on Chronic
- acute exacerbation of chronic COPD
Mechanisms of Hypoxaemic RF
- REDUCED going to areas with perfusion (LLV)
- NO GAS going to areas with perfusion (atelectasis)
- Diffusion impairment (pulmonary fibrosis)
- Gas going to area with reduced perfusion (PE)
Mechanisms of Hypercapnic RF
Impairment of the PUMP
- reduced drive (opiate overdose, brainstem injury)
- impairment neuromuscular function (eg. cord injury, myopathy, respiratory fatigue)*
*i.e issues wth spinal cord, motor units, mm tissue itself
Impairment of the LOAD
- increased airway resistance
- reduced chest wall compliance (kyphoscoliosis)
- reduced lung compliance (collapse)
Hypoxaemia - S/Sx
- Reduced mental acuity (if PaO2 < 40-50 mmHg)
- Agitation -> somnolence
- Dyspnoea
- Increased RR
- Organ failure
Hypercapnia - S/Sx
*depends on rate of CO2 rise and amount of compensation!
- Dyspnoea
- Increased RR
- Agitation/Confusion
- Coma
- Increased ICP, HA
What are the reasons for intubation?
- Keep the airway open (things like swelling can close off the airway)
- Protect LRT
- Allows to clean out excessive secretions (adequate trachiobronchial toilet)
- Ventilatory support (mechanical ventilation during paralysis/sedation; O2 therapy - CPAP/PEEP)
What is minute ventilation and how to calculate?
- amount of gas going into lungs/min
- Ve x RR
What is dead space ventilation and how to calculate?
- the amount of gas not participating in gas exchange
- Vd x RR
What is alveoloar ventilation and how to calculate?
- the amount of air reaching the alveoli for gas exchange
- Ve - Vd = Va
- MINUTE VENTILATION - DEADSPACE VENTIALTION = ALVEOLAR VENTILATION