1 / 20

Respiratory failure

Respiratory failure. The term respiratory failure is used when pulmonary gas exchange fails to maintain normal arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide levels It is a failure of the process of delivering O 2 to the tissues and/or removing CO 2 from the tissues.

rebbecca
Télécharger la présentation

Respiratory failure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Respiratory failure

  2. The term respiratory failure is used when pulmonary gas exchange fails to maintain normal arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide levels • It is a failure of the process of delivering O2 to the tissues and/or removing CO2 from the tissues

  3. Acute respiratory failure often is defined in practice as occurring when the Pao2 is less than 55 mm Hg • Classified into types I and II depending on absence or presence of hypercapnia (raised PaCO2)

  4. Pathophysiology • When disease impairs ventilation of part of a lung (pneumonia), perfusion of that underventilated region results in hypoxic and CO2-laden blood entering the pulmonary veins

  5. Increased ventilation of neighbouring regions of normal lung can increase their CO2 excretion, correcting arterial CO2 to normal, but cannot augment their oxygen uptake because the haemoglobin flowing through these normal regions is already fully saturated • Significant hypoxemia is nearly always present in pts with acute respiratory failure

  6. Causes of Hypoxic ARF(typeI) • Acute lung injury/ARDS •    Pneumonia •    Pulmonary thromboembolism •    Acute lobar atelectasis • Cardiogenic pulmonary edema

  7. Causes of Hypercapnic-Hypoxic ARF (type II ) Pulmonary disease •    COPD •    Asthma: advanced acute severe asthma •    Drugs causing respiratory depression   

  8. Neuromuscular • Guillain-Barré syndrome   •   Acute myasthenia gravis •    Spinal cord tumors Musculoskeletal • Kyphoscoliosis

  9. Clinical Manifestations • Patients are typically dyspneic and tachypneic • Neurologic dysfunction may be present • Myocardial ischemia or even infarction may be precipitated by the hypoxemia

  10. Clinical Evaluation • Clinical history and physical examination • Physiologic abnormalities • Chest radiographic findings • Other tests aimed at elucidating specific causes

  11. The presentation often reflects one of three clinical scenarios • Effects of hypoxemia and/or respiratory acidosis • Effects of primary (e.g., pneumonia) or secondary (e.g., heart failure) diseases involving the lungs • Nonpulmonary effects of the underlying disease process

  12. Clinical effects of hypoxemia and/or respiratory acidosis on CNS are • Irritability • Agitation • Changes in personality • Depressed level of consciousness, or coma

  13. Effects on cardiovascular system are • Arrhythmias • Hypotension • Hypertension

  14. In some patients, the clinical picture is dominated by the underlying disease process, particularly with diseases that cause acute lung injury, such as sepsis, severe pneumonia, aspiration of gastric contents

  15. Treatment • The management of acute respiratory failure depends on cause clinical manifestations patient's underlying status

  16. Certain goals apply to all patients • Improvement of the hypoxemia to eliminate or reduce markedly the acute threat to life • Improvement of the acidosis if it is considered life-threatening • Maintenance of cardiac output • Treatment of the underlying disease process • Avoidance of predictable complications

  17. Mechanical Therapy to Improve Oxygenation • A Pao2 of greater than 60 mm Hg to produce an Sao2of 90s is usually adequate • The Pao2 can be increased by administration of supplemental O2 by continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or by mechanical ventilation

  18. Supportive Measures Prevent deep venous thrombosis Prevent gastric stress ulceration Maintain the head of the bed at a 45-degree angle to reduce aspiration

  19. Ensure a normal day/night sleep pattern, including minimizing activity and reducing direct lighting at night • Patient should change position frequently

  20. THANK YOU

More Related