Asthma
Chronic inflammatory airways. Exacerbation is intermittent and reversible.
Trigger -> inflammation and airway hyperresponsiveness -> bronchoconstriction and airway obstruction
Signs and Symptoms
- dyspnea
- wheezing
- chest tightness
- coughing
- tachypnea
- accessory muscle use
- prolonged expiration
- gasping
- inability to speak
- reduced LOC
- cyanosis
- neck vein distension
Diagnosis
- PEFR (highest of 3x attempts)
- ABG (decreased O2)
Treatment
- Bronchodilators — preventer (control) and reliever e.g. salbutamol
- Anticholinergic — relax airways e.g. ipratropium
- Steroids — reduce inflammation.g. prednisone, budesonide
- Oxygen
- Airvo
Heart Failure
Heart unable to fill with and pump blood effectively (cardiomyopathy, MI, HTN, AF, valve disease, infection).
Right-Sided
- Blood backs up into the body (systemic congestion) -> peripheral oedema, ascites, jugular vein distension, hepatomegaly
Left-sided
- Blood backs up into the lungs (pulmonary congestion) -> dyspnea, crackles, pink frothy sputum
BNP
BNP is a hormone released when cardiac muscle is stretched — hence elevated in HF.
Echocardiogram
Measures the ejection fraction (percentage of blood that is ejected from the ventricles during contraction). Normal LVEF: 55-70%. Indicative of HF: <55%.
Medications
- Diuretics — eliminate excess fluid to decrease workload
- Digoxin — improves efficiency of heart, stronger and slower contractions
- Antihyperensives
Care
- Weight
- FBC and fluid restriction
- Sit upright
- O2 or airvo
Respiratory Failure
Inadequate gas exchange impairing oxygen and carbon dioxide levels.
Hypoxemia — drop in oxygen
Hypercapnia — drop in carbon dioxide
Type 1
Hypoxeamia with normal or low carbon dioxide. T1RF is caused by conditions that affect oxygenation.
- Low ambient oxygen e.g. high altitude
- Ventilation-perfusion mismatch e.g. pulmonary embolism, ARDS, COPD, HF
- Alveolar hypoventilation e.g. neuromuscular disease
- Diffusion problem (oxygen cannot enter capillaries) e.g. pneumonia or ARDS
- Right-left shunt (oxygenated blood mixing with non-oxygenated blood) e.g. AVM, complete atelectasis, severe pneumonia, severe pulmonary oedema
Type 2
Hypoxemia with hypercapnia and pH <7.35. T2RF is caused by conditions that affect alveolar ventilation. There is a buildup of carbon dioxide generated by the body that cannot be eliminated.
- Increased resistance e.g. COPD, asthma, suffocation
- Decreased ventilation e.g. drug effects, brain stem lesion
- Decreased area of lung available for gas exchange e.g. chronic bronchitis
- Neuromuscular problems e.g. GBS, MND
- Deformed (kyphoscoliosis), rigid (ankylosing spondylitis), or flail chest