Respiratory failure: causes and complications Flashcards
What can cause hypoxaemia and tissue hypoxia
Insufficient ventilation
Insufficient rate of gas exchange
Insufficient oxygen carrying capacity
Insufficient oxygen in atmosphere
Type 1 vs Type 2 respiratory failure
Type 1 - Decreased oxygenation, decreased PaO2
Type 2 - Decreased ventilation, decreased PAO2, PaO2, increased PaCO2, and decreased pH
A vs a
A = Alveolar
a = arterial
How to calculate PAO2
PAO2 = F1O2 x (PB - PH2O) - PaCO2 / RER
where
F1O2 = Fraction of oxygen present in inspired gas
PB = barometric pressure
PH2O = H2O vapour pressure
PaCO2 = Arterial CO2 pressure
RER = Respiratory exchange ratio
What is the respiratory exchange ratio
The relationship between CO2 elimination and oxygen consumption
RER = VCO2 produced / VO2 consumed.
Example of oxidation of carbohydrates
C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O
6 / 6 = 1
How to determine alveolar oxygen content
Alveolar oxygen content = Oxygen inspired - Oxygen consumed
PAO2 = (previous flashcard)
What is the A-a oxygen gradient
Difference between alveolar and arterial pressure: PAO2 - PaO2.
What does each variable in the alveolar gas equation and alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient represent
F1O2 = 0.21
PB = 100 kPa at sea level
PH2O = 6 kPa if at sea level
PaCO2 = Measured in patient
RER = assume 0.8 unless indicated otherwise
PAO2 = Calculated in formula
Clinical signs/symptoms of respiratory disease
Shortness of breath, tachypnoea, dyspnoea
Laboured breathing, audible lung sounds
Tiredness, drowsiness, loss of consciousness
Fatigue
Cyanosis
Causes of hypoventilation due to physical obstruction
Asphyxia, choking
Obstructive sleep apnoea
Bronchial obstruction (e.g. asthma)
Oedema, contraction of smooth muscle, excess mucus secretion
Hypoventilation even when the airway is clear is caused by
Drug overdose
Neuromuscular disease (motor neuron disease, dystrophy)
Stroke/trauma
Issue with lung mechanics (COPD, pulmonary fibrosis)
What is the dead space effect
Reduced perfusion of lung regions causing an increase in V/Q ratio
What is the shunt effect
Reduced ventilation or limited diffusion causing a decrease in V/Q ratio
Effects of insufficient O2 supply as a result of acute hypoxaemia nad hypercapnia
Dyspnoea, cyanosis, fatigue, coma, seizure
Tissue hypoxia, organ failure, death
Polycythaemia, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction -> Pulmonary heart failure