Respiratory Failure Flashcards
Anaemia
condition of reduced red blood all quantity or quality resulting in reduced oxygen carrying capacity
Anoxia
absence of oxygen supply in the blood extremely low levels of oxygen
Asphyxia
absence of oxygen with carbon dioxide accumulation as a result of interruption to normal breathing
Hypoxaemia
refers to a correlation when oxygen in the arterial blood is low as is the partial pressure of oxygen in the arterial blood
Hypoxia
the deficiency of oxygen in some specific part of the body
HYPOXAEMIA
low oxygen content in arterial blood Results from: low VQ ration high VQ ratio diffusion impairment inadequate FiO2 Normal - PaO2 80-100 SaO2 >95 Mild Hypoxaemia - PaO2 60-79 SaO2 90-94 Moderate Hypoxaemia - PaO2 SaO2 75-89 Severe Hypoxaemia - PaO2 <40 SaO2 <75
HYPOXIA
deficiency of oxygen in some part of the body
Results From:
imbalance between availability of oxygen in the blood and the demands of O2 consumption
oxygen delivery is inadequate to meet cellular respiration/metabolic needs
Causes -
- reduced cardiac output
- low haemoglobin
- increased metabolic rate
- circulatory problems
HYPERCAPNIA
excess carbon dioxide in the blood Causes - VQ mismatch alveolar hypoventilation ventilatory pump failure reduced central drive muscle fatigue/weakness increased pulmonary workload increased CO2 production increased physiological dead space
Signs of Respiratory Distress
Respiratory Compensation
- tachypnoea (increased RR)
- accessory muscle use
- nasal flaring
- recession - increased work of respiratory muscles to increase ventilation causes soft tissues to be sucked into the thoracic cavity as well
Increased Sympathetic Tone
- tachycardia
- hypertension
- sweating
Signs of end-organ hypoxia
altered mental status fitting/seizures ECG changes desatruation late signs
Type 1 Respiratory Failure
hypoxaemic
PaO2 - below 60mmHg
PaCO2 - within or below normal limits
Type 2 Respiratory Failure
hypercapnic
PaO2 below 60mmHg
PaCO2 high >55mmHg
Acute/Chronic Respiratory Failure
Acute - sudden onset, abnormal pH
Acute on Chronic - acute exacerbation on top of chronic respiratory failure, abnormal pH
Chronic - long term respiratory failure, pH normal due to metabolic alkalosis compensation
CAUSES
anything that compromises pulmonary function so that adequate gas exchange can no longer be achieved Central - trauma - infections - tumours - medications - apnoea - raised ICP
Obstructive
- COPD
- asthma
- bronchiectesis
- mucous aspiration
- tumour
- bronchial oedema
Restrictive
- atelectasis
- pulmonary fibrosis
- pleural effusion
- ARDs
- pulmonary oedema
Clinical Implications
impaired gas exchange dyspnoea reduced exercise tolerance musculoskeletal dysfunction respiratory muscle dysfunction