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Published byClarissa Reed Modified over 9 years ago
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Weaning Failure
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Definitions Can’t get the tube out or Re-intubated within 48 hours 1/5 to 1/3 ventilated patients
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Whenever you intubate a patient, your main goal is to extubate him/her.
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Should we extubate..? Every patient should have a daily sedation hold AND ASSESMENT FOR EXTUBATION. Clinical feeling and various ‘tests’
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Rapid Shallow Breathing Index Minimal resp support (5/5, CPAP, T-Piece) Freq / Tidal vol (L) <80 Should be OK >105 Prob will fail extubation 81-104 ????????
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What are the causes of weaning failure?
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Airway & lung dysfunction Brain Cardiac Diaphragm & resp. muscles Endocrine
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Airway Blocked tubes (sputum) Tracheomalacia (only apparent after removal positive pressure and/or ett. Granulation tissue from suctioning Bronchospasm
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Lung Chest wall Oedema (1L fluid = 1kg) IAH Pleural fluid Lung Intrinsic PEEP Alveolar fluid / collapse / consolidation Interstitial disease
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Brain Delirium increases risk 4x Anxiety Depression
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Cardiac Largely due to intrathoracic pressure changes but also increased O2 demand from resp muscles. Weaning increases both left and right ventricular afterload, decreasing ejection fraction.
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Diaphragm & Resp Muscles Respiratory drive is not the problem. CIPMN ‘Wasting’ – Ventilation prevents fatigue but promotes weakness!
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Endocrine Adrenal insuffficiency Hypothyroidism Malnutrition Electrolytes – hypokalaemia, hypophosphataemia.
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Weaning Protocols Increase success (speed) Reduce variability Avoid delays
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