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Published byElmer Henderson Modified over 9 years ago
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Mohammad Rezaei Fellowship of Pediatric Pulmonology
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Respiratory distress Respiratory distress is a clinical impression
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Respiratory failure inability of the lungs to provide sufficient oxygen (hypoxic respiratory failure) or remove carbon dioxide (ventilatory failure) to meet metabolic demands.
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Respiratory failure Pao 2 < 60 torr with breathing of room air and Paco 2 > 50 torr resulting in acidosis, the patient's general state, respiratory effort, and potential for impending exhaustion are more important indicators than blood gas values.
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Respiratory distress can occur in patients without respiratory disease, and respiratory failure can occur in patients without respiratory distress.
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Respiratory failure Acute Chronic
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The physiologic basis of respiratory failure determines the clinical picture. normal respiratory drive are breathless and anxious decreased central drive are comfortable or even somnolent.
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The causes: conditions that affect the respiratory pump conditions that interfere with the normal function of the lung and airways
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Respiratory Pump Dysfunction ● Decreased Central Nervous System (CNS) Input — Head injury — Ingestion of CNS depressant — Adverse effect of procedural sedation — Intracranial bleeding — Apnea of prematurity ● Peripheral Nerve/Neuromuscular Junction — Spinal cord injury — Organophosphate/carbamate poisoning — Guillian-Barre´ syndrome — Myasthenia gravis — Infant botulism ● Muscle Weakness — Respiratory muscle fatigue due to increased work of breathing — Myopathies/Muscular dystrophies
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Airway/Lung Dysfunction ● Central Airway Obstruction — Croup — Foreign body — Anaphylaxis — Bacterial tracheitis — Epiglottitis — Retropharyngeal abscess — Bulbar muscle weakness/dysfunction ● Peripheral Airways/Parenchymal Lung Disease — Status asthmaticus — Bronchiolitis — Pneumonia — Acute respiratory distress syndrome — Pulmonary edema — Pulmonary contusion — Cystic fibrosis — Chronic lung disease (eg, bronchopulmonary dysplasia)
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Arterial gas composition depends on : the gas composition of the atmosphere the effectiveness of alveolar ventilation pulmonary capillary perfusion diffusion across the alveolar capillary membrane
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Alveolar Gas Composition P A O2 = P I O2 – (PCO2/R) P I O2 = (BP – P H2O ). Fio2 P A O2 = [(BP – P H2O ). Fio2] – (PCO2/R)
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Hypoventilation V A = V T. RR low respiratory rate and shallow breathing are both signs of hypoventilation.
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Dead Space Ventilation Anatomical Physiological V D / V T = (P a CO2-P E CO2)/ P a CO2 = 0.33 Increases in decreased pulmonary perfusion: PHTN, hypovolemia, decreased cardiac output
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Alveolar Ventilation V A = (V T -V D ). RR
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Hypoventilation The Paco2 increases in proportion to a decrease in ventilation. Pao2 falls approximately the same amount as the Paco2 increases.
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Hypoventilation The relationship between oxygenation and hypoventilation is complicated by the shape of the Hb-dissociation curve Because of the dissociation curve, a patient who exhibits alarming CO2 retention might have a near normal oxygen saturation.
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1. PO2 100 mm Hg= SpO2 of 97% 2. PO2 60mm Hg= SpO2 of90% When Paco2 increases from 40 to 70 mm Hg, a dangerous level of hypoventilation, might have a Pao2 that has decreased from 100 to 60 mm Hg and, therefore, maintain an oxygen saturation of 90%.
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Thus: oximetry is not a sensitive indicator of the adequacy of ventilation. This is particularly true when a patient is receiving oxygen.
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Lung/Airway Disease Diseases of the lung or airways affect gas exchange most often by disrupting the normal matching of V/Q or by causing a shunt. usually can maintain a normal Paco2 as lung disease worsens simply by breathing more. hypoxemia is the hallmark of lung disease
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Ventilation-Perfusion Mismatch
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hypoxemia due to V/Q mismatch & hypoxemia due to shunt administering Oxygen
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Intrapulmonary Shunt
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Diffusion diffusion defects manifest as hypoxemia rather than hypercarbia. Examples : interstitial pneumonia, ARDS, Scleroderma, Pulmonary lymphangiectasia,…
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Monitoring a Child in Respiratory Distress and Respiratory Failure
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Clinical Examination Clinical observation is the most important component of monitoring.
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ABG & Oximetry ABG /CBG/ VBG Oximetry - Oximetry provides an invaluable and usually accurate measurement of oxygenation. - important to recognize its technical limitations
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ConditionLimitation Dark skin pigment Anemia Causes inadequate signal Bright external light Motion Decreased perfusion Venous pulsations — Severe right heart failure — Tricuspid regurgitation — Tourniquet or blood pressure cuff above site Results in low reading Abnormal hemoglobin concentration — Methemoglobin Unreliable reading (tends to read 80% to 85% saturation regardless of actual saturation) — SS hemoglobin Saturationaccurate, but hemoglobin dissociation curve shifted to right — CarboxyhemoglobinSpuriously high saturation readings
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Acute Respiratory Failure
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ARF most common cause of cardiac arrest in children. When presented with a child who has: a decreased level of consciousness, slow/shallow breathing, or increased respiratory drive, the possibility of ARF should be considered
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First: to assure adequate gas exchange and circulation (the ABCs). Oxygen Administration to maintain …. If Ventilation is or appears to be inadequate ….. Intubation ? Need ICU
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Chronic Respiratory Failure
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CRF is seen most commonly in children who have: Respiratory muscle weakness (muscular dystrophy, anterior horn cell disease) or severe chronic lung diseases (BPD, end- stage cystic fibrosis)
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usually has an insidious onset Most children do not have dyspnea. PH normal or near normal, unless….. Recognizing need careful monitoring of children at risk for CRF
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Disordered sleep Daytime hypersomnolence Morning headaches Altered mental status Increased respiratory symptoms Cardiomegaly Decreased baseline oxygenation CRF often presents first during sleep Develops an intercurrent illness, Fever
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