Type 1 and Type 2 respiratory failure Flashcards
Define respiratory failure
It is when gas exchange is inadequate
Is is defined as PaO2 of <8kPa and is divided into 2 categories
What is Type I respiratory failure
It is defined as the PaO2 of <8kPa with low or normal PaCO2
It is caused primarly by ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) mismatch
Causes of Type I respiratory failure
Pneumonia - consolidation
Pulmonary oedema - fluid no gas exchange
PE - ischaemia
Athma - collapsed airways
Emphysema - collapsed airways
Pulmonary fibrosis
Acute respiratory distress syndrome ARDS
What is Type II respiratory failure
It is when PaO2 is <8pKa with hypercapnia (PaCO2 >6kPa)
It is caused by hypoventilation with or without V/Q mismatch
Causes of Type II respiratory failure
Pulmonary disease - Asthma, COPD, pneumonia, end stage pulmonary fibrosis, obstructive sleep apnoea
Reduced respiratory drive - sedative drugs, CNS tumour, or trauma
Neuromascular disease - myasthenia gravis, cervical cord lesion, guillian barree,
Thoracic wall disease - flat chest, kyphoscoliosis
Symptoms of respiratory failure
symptoms of underlying disease + hypoxia and/or hypercapnia
symptoms of hypoxia
Dysponea
Restless
agitation
confusion
central cyanosis
If long standing hypoxia - polycythaemia, pulmonary oedema, cor polmonale
symptoms of hypercapnia
Headache
peripheral vasodilation
tachycardia
bounding pulse
tremor/flap
papilloedema
confusion
drowsiness
coma
Investigating respiratory failure
Aim is to identify underlying cause
Bloods: FBC, U&E, CRP, ABG
CXR
Microbiology - sputum and blood culture (if febrile)
Spirometry - COPD, neurmusclar disease, guilleen barre
Management of type I respiratory failure
Treat cause
Give oxygen 35-60% by facemask to correct hypoxia
assisted ventilation if PaO2 <8kPa despite 60% O2
Management of type II respiratory failure
Treat cause
Controlled oxygen therapy here
start 24% oxygen with care but dont leave hypoxia not treated
Recheck ABG after 20min, if PaCO2 is steady or low increase Oxygen if PaCO2 risen >1.5kPa and still hypoxic consider assited ventilation
If this fails consider intubation and ventilation