Respiratory failure Flashcards
What is cytotoxic hypoxia
- reduced ability to utilise O2
Intrapleural pressure
- slightly more negative at the bottom of the lungs
Why and how does ventilation vary where you are in the lungs?
- at the apex of the lung, the perfusion (Q) is lowest
- moving up the lung ventilation progressively increases
- ventilation highest at the base
How and does perfusion vary at the lungs?
- perfusion at the apex of the lungs is really low: PA >Pa>Pv
- in the middle of the lung, perfusion is sporadic: Pa>PA>Pv
- at the base of the lungs, perfusion is constant: Pa>Pv>PA
What is the V/Q ratio at the apex of the lungs?
- greater than 1
- ventilation > perfusion
the watershed effect in zone 2 of the lungs
- Alveolus pressure is similar to arterial pressure which allows perfusion to occur
- when they reach the venule end the alveolar pressure is greater than venule pressure
- occludes the blood way until arterial pressure builds enough to overcome it
Explain Hypoxemia due to reduced PiO2 (partial pressure of inspired oxygen)
- decreased atmospheric pressure results in decreased PiO2 even though the concentration of oxygen in the air is the same
- therefore…
Explain Hypoxemia due to Hypoventilation
- inadequate alveolar ventilation
- leads to low alveolar PO2
- Hypoxaemia accompanying a reduced PIO2 or hypoventilation is characterised by normal A-a gradient (DA‐aO2).
Explain Hypoxemia due to diffusion limitation
- pressure of oxygen in the blood increases
- due to a thicker membrane
- higher risk of not equilibrating
- increasing the pressure gradient between the alveoli and the arterial pressures
Explain Hypoxemia from V/Q mismatch
- blood from areas with a high VA/Q mixes with blood from low Va/Q areas
- this leads to low pulmonary venous PO2
What is the V/Q ratio in the middle of the lungs?
- 1
- ventilation is the same as perfusion
What is the V/Q ratio at the base of the lungs?
- less than 1
- ventilation < perfusion
Explain Hypoxaemia due to right-to-left shunt
- shunted blood fails to undergo gas exchange
- intrapulmonary shunt: arteriovenous malformations, lung consolidation (pneumonia)
- Intracardiac shunt: congenital or acquired heart defects
- it mixes with pulmonary capillary blood→ low pulmonary venous/left ventricular PO2
- therefore decreased oxygenated blood goes around the body
- giving oxygen does not fix the issue
What is hypercarbic respiratory failure? also what is the cause
- increased PCO2
- due to weakness or increased dead space
- increasing VE (ventilation) can compensate however patients are at risk of respiratory failure due to fatigue or developing pneumonia