Pulmonology Flashcards
1
Q
Describe the classical phases of ARDS pathogenesis
A
- Injury
- Exudative – alveolar capillary membrane disruption with inflammatory cell infiltrate and high protein exudate to form hyaline membranes
- Proliferative – proliferation of abnormal Type II alveoli cells and inflammatory cells
- Fibrotic – infiltration with fibroblasts which replace alveoli and alveolar ducts with fibrosis
- Resolution – slow and incomplete repair and restoration of architecture
2
Q
List conditions which commonly predispose to ARDS
A
- Direct
- pneumonia (46%)
- aspiration of gastric contents (29%)
- lung contusion (34%)
- fat embolism
- near drowning
- inhalational injury
- reperfusion injury
- Indirect
- non-pulmonary sepsis (25%)
- multiple trauma (41%)
- massive transfusion (34%)
- pancreatitits (25%)
- cardiopulmonary bypass
3
Q
What is the Berlin Definition of ARDS
A
- acute (<1 week)
- bilateral opacities consistent with pulmonary edema must be present (on plain x ray or CT)
- PaO2/FiO2 ratio <300mmHg (minimum of 5 cmH20 PEEP)
- must not be fully explained by cardiac failure or fluid overload, in the physician’s best estimation using available information — an “objective assessment“ (e.g. echocardiogram) should be performed in most cases if there is no clear cause such as trauma or sepsis
Source: doi:10.1001/jama.2012.5669
4
Q
What is the mortality of ARDS based on severity of PF ratio?
A
- Mild (200-300)
- 27%
- Moderate (100-200)
- 32%
- Severe (<100)
- 45%
5
Q
Describe the clinical effects of ARDS
A
- Hypoxaemia
- V/Q mismatch
- impaired hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
- Reduced ventillatory capacity (due to increased alveolar dead space)
- Decreased compliance
- increased dependent densities (surfactant dysfunction)
- collapse/consolidation
- Pulmonary hypertension
- vasoconstriction
- microthrombi
- fibrosis
- PEEP
6
Q
Management approach to ARDS
A
- Diagnose and treat cause
- Protective lung ventillation
- PaO2 55-80 or SaO2 88-95%
- Pplat ≤ 30
- pH 7.30-7.45
- I:E ≤ 1
- Strategies for refractory hypoxia
- prone posture (severe ARDS)
- recruitment manouvres (controversial)
- inhaled NO
- inhaled prostacycline
- ECMO
7
Q
What is the positive predictive value of generally accepted ARDS criteria?
8
Q
What is the rationale for protective lung ventillation in ARDS?
A
- low tidal volume ventilation reduces ventilator-associated lung injury (VALI)
- volutrauma (hyperinflation and shearing injury)
- barotrauma (alveolar rupture and pneumothorax)
- biotrauma (release of inflammatory mediators)
- hypercapnia may also have directly beneficial effects in ARDS
- clear evidence for benefit in ARDS in animals and humans
9
Q
What are the four targets for the ARDSnet lung protective ventillation strategy?
A
- Tidal volume 6mL/kg (predicted body weight)
- Plateau pressure ≤ 30mmH2O
- pH 7.3 to 7.45 (permissive hypercapnia)
- I:E ratio ≤ 1
10
Q
What are the three pathophysiological processes in ventillator-associated lung injury (VALI)?
A
- volutrauma (hyperinflation and shearing injury)
- barotrauma (alveolar rupture and sequelae)
- biotrauma (release of inflammatory mediators)