Thoracic Anesthesia Flashcards
What are some lung isolation techniques?
DLT, Bronchial Blocker, Endobracheal Tube
What are the cases that you would ALWAYS need one lung ventilation?
Bronchopleural fistula, Bronchocutaneous fistula, intrapulmonary bleed, unilateral infection, giant unilateral bullae, & tracheobronchial disruption.
What are contraindications for one lung ventilation?
patient refusal, endobroncheal lesion on one side, bronchial compression from aortic aneurysm, pulmonary artery compression from ant mediastinal mass
What DLT is most commonly used and why?
Left sided DLT because the left side’s tracheobronchial tree anatomy makes it easier to place.
What are the common sizes used for DLT?
Female: 35 (160cm) French
Male: 39 (170cm) French
The depth when placing a DLT is determined by?
29 cm for female/male that is 170cm. For every 10cm increase/decrease in height, change depth by 1cm.
How do you check to see if a DLT is placed correctly?
auscultations and fiberoptic bronchoscopy
What is Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction?
It’s initiated by alveolar hypoxia during one lung ventilation. The upper lung is not being ventilated now so it becomes hypoxic which increases vascular resistance leading to lower perfusion.
What are the physiologic changes during one lung ventilation?
Ventilation best in nondependent areas (usually on top) b/c it’s not being compressed by the other lung
Perfusion best in dependent areas (usually on bottom) due to gravity. V/Q mismatch.
CO2 minimally effected.
How do you treat hypoxemia during one lung ventilation?
- CPAP to nonventilated lung
- PEEP to ventilated lung
- Increase FiO2
- Intermittent OLV
- Clamp pulmonary artery of nonventilated lung (rare)
What is dyspnea?
Dyspnea is an imbalance between the amount of ventilation required by the body and the patient’s ability to respond to this requirement
What are the most common complications in thoracic anesthesia?
Respiratory, cardiac, and vascular.
What are the minimal criteria for a pt to undergo thoracic anesthesia?
i. FEV1 > 2 liters
ii. FEV1/FVC (forced vital capacity) > 50%
iii. MVV (maximal voluntary ventilation: tests motor strength and motor reserve) > 50% predicted
iv. RV/TLC < 50%
What does the pulmonary assessment consist of?
Respiratory mechanics, gas exchange, and cardiorespiratory interaction
What ppoFEV1 would suggest a pt could tolerate extubation in the OR?
ppoFEV1 > 40%