Respiratory failure

194,266 views 46 slides May 12, 2016
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About This Presentation

Respiratory failure types,
shunt
dead space


Slide Content

RESPIRATORY FAILRE
VIJAY

DEFINITION
Respiratory failure can be defined as a syndrome in which the
respiratory system fails to meet one or both of its
gas exchange functions,
Oxygenation
Carbondioxide Elimination

3
TYPES OF RESPIRATORY FAILURE
TYPE 1 (HYPOXEMIC ): PO2 < 60 mmHg on room air.
TYPE 2 (HYPERCAPNIC / VENTILATORY): PCO2 > 50 mmHg
TYPE 3 (PERI-OPERATIVE): This is generally a subset of type 1
failure but is sometimes considered separately because it is
so common.
TYPE 4 (SHOCK): secondary to cardiovascular instability.

Type 3 (Peri-operative) Respiratory Failure
Residual anesthesia effects, post-operative pain,
and abnormal abdominal mechanics contribute to
decreasing FRC and progressive collapse of
dependant lung units.
Causes of post-operative atelectasis include;
*Decreased FRC *
Supine/ obese/ ascites
*Anesthesia
*Upper abdominal incision
*Airway secretions

Type 4 (Shock) Type IV
Describes patients who are intubated and ventilated in
the process of resuscitation for shock
*cardiogenic
*hypovolemic
*septic

Type 1respiratory failure

Type 1 respiratory failure is defined as a low level of
oxygen in the blood (hypoxemia) without an
increased level of carbon dioxide in the blood
(hypercapnia), and indeed the P
a
CO
2
may be normal
or low.

It is typically caused by a

ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) mismatch; the volume of
air flowing in and out of the lungs is not matched
with the flow of blood to the lungs.

TYPE 1 RESPIRATORY FAILURE

The basic defect in is failure of oxygenation
characterized by

P
a
O
2
decreased (< 60 mmHg )

P
aCO
2normal or decreased (<50 mmHg)

P
A-a
O
2
increased

Hypoxic Respiratory Failure

Low ambient oxygen (e.g. at high altitude)

V/Q mismatch (parts of the lung receive oxygen but not
enough blood to absorb it, e.g. pulmonary embolism)

Alveolar hypoventilation (decreased minute volume due to
reduced respiratory muscle activity, e.g. in
acute neuromuscular disease); this form can also cause
type 2 respiratory failure if severe

Diffusion problem (oxygen cannot enter the capillaries due
to parenchymal disease, e.g. in pneumonia or ARDS)

Shunt (oxygenated blood mixes with non-oxygenated blood
from the venous system, e.g. right-to-left shunt)

LOW INSPIRED OXYGEN [ PI O2 ]

Examples-

A decrease in barometric pressure [e.g. breathing at high
altitude].

A decrease in FIO2 – accidental [e.g. anesthetist does not
supply enough oxygen or improper installation of oxygen
supply lines or a leak in the breathing circuit].

P(A-a)O2 normal

PaCO2 is decreased. This reduction in PaCO2 (hypocapnia) is
due to hyperventilation in response to hypoxemia.

Peripheral chemoreceptors sense the low arterial PO2 and
initiate an increase in ventilation through their input to the
medullary respiratory centre

RIGHT TO LEFT SHUNT

Shunt refers to the entry of blood into the systemic arterial
system without going through ventilated areas of lung.

Shunt may be anatomical or physiological.

P(A-a)O2 is elevated.

PaCO2 is normal.

RIGHT TO LEFT SHUNT

Anatomic shunt: when a portion of blood bypasses the
lungs through an anatomic channel.

In healthy individuals

i) A portion of the bronchial circulation’s (blood supply to the
conducting zone of the airways) venous blood drains into the

pulmonary vein.

ii) A portion of the coronary circulation’s venous blood drains
through the thebesian veins into the left ventricle.

note: i & ii represent about 2% of the cardiac output and
account for 1/3 of the normal P(A-a)O2 observed in health.

RIGHT TO LEFT SHUNT

Congenital abnormalities

i) intra-cardiac shunt [e.g. Tetralogy of Fallot: ventricular
septal defect + pulmonary artery stenosis]

ii) intra-pulmonary fistulas [direct communication between a
branch of the pulmonary artery and a pulmonary vein].

RIGHT TO LEFT SHUNT

Physiologic shunt: In disease states, a portion of the
cardiac output goes through the regular pulmonary vasculature
but
does not come into contact with alveolar air due to filling of
the alveolar spaces with fluid [e.g. pneumonia, drowning,
pulmonary edema]

An important diagnostic feature of a shunt
is that the arterial Po
2
does not rise to the
normal level when the patient is given 100%
oxygen to breathe.

RIGHT TO LEFT SHUNT

Examples of
intrapulmonary shunt.
(a) Collapsed and
fluid filled alveoli are
examples of
intrapulmonary shunt.

(b) Anomalous blood
return of mixed
venous blood
bypasses the alveolus
and thereby
contributes to the
development of
intrapulmonary shunt.

Ventilation Perfusion ratio VA/Q
The overall V/Q = 0.8 [ ven=4lpm, per=5lpm]
Ranges between 0.3 and 3.0
Upper zone –nondependent area has higher ≥ 1
Lowe zone – dependent area has lower ≤ 1
VP ratio indicates overall respiratory functional
status of lung
V/Q = 0 means ,no ventilation-called SHUNT
V/Q = ∞ means ,no perfusion – called DEAD SPACE

The overall V/Q = 0.8 [ V=4Lper min, P=5L per min
Ranges between 0.3 and 3.0
Upper zone –nondependent area has higher ≥ 1
Lowe zone – dependent area has lower ≤ 1
VP ratio indicates overall respiratory functional status of
lung
V/Q = 0 means ,no ventilation-called SHUNT
V/Q = ∞ means ,no perfusion – called DEAD SPACE
Ventilation Perfusion ratio VA/Q

19

SHUNTS have different effects on arterial PCO
2
(PaCO
2
) than on arterial
PO
2
(PaO
2
). Blood passing through under ventilated alveoli tends to retain
its CO
2
and does not take up enough O
2.

Blood traversing over ventilated alveoli gives off an excessive amount of
CO
2,
but cannot take up increased amount of O
2
because of the shape of
the oxygen-hemoglobin (oxy-Hb) dissociation curve.

2
from the
over ventilated alveoli to compensate for the under ventilated alveoli.

Thus, with Shunt, PACO
2
-to-PaCO
2
gradients are small, and PAO
2
-to-PaO
2

gradients are usually large.

20
VENTILATION PERFUSION INEQUALITY

PaCO2 is normal

P(A-a)O2 is elevated

VA/Q inequality is the most common cause of hypoxemia in
disease states

VENTILATION PERFUSION INEQUALITY

The distribution of ventilation varies with common events,
such as changes in body posture, lung volumes, and age.

Increasing age produces a gradual increase in the degree of the
VA/Q inequality.

Ventilation–perfusion imbalance exists even in the normal
lung, depending on the region, but remains fairly tightly
regulated when assessing normal lung aggregate function

VENTILATION PERFUSION
INEQUALITY

TYPE 2 RESPIRATORY FAILURE

Hypoxemia with hypercapnia

The basic defect in type 2 respiratory failure is
characterized by:

P
a
O
2
decreased (< 60 mmHg )

P
a
CO
2
increased (> 50 mmHg )

P
A-a
O
2
normal

Ph decreased

Type 2 respiratory failure is caused by
inadequate alveolar ventilation; both oxygen and
carbon dioxide are affected.
Defined as the buildup of carbon dioxide levels
(P
a
CO
2
) that has been generated by the body but
cannot be eliminated. The underlying causes include:


Increased airways resistance (chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, asthma, suffocation)

Reduced breathing effort (drug effects, brain stem lesion,
extreme obesity)

A decrease in the area of the lung available for gas
exchange (such as in chronic bronchitis)

Neuromuscular problems (Guillain-Barré syndrome,motor
neuron disease)

Deformed (kyphoscoliosis), rigid (ankylosing spondylitis),
or flail chest.

26
HYPOVENTILATION

Hypoventilation is used here to refer to conditions in which
alveolar ventilation is abnormally low in relation to oxygen
uptake or carbon dioxide output.

Alveolar ventilation is the volume of fresh inspired gas going
to the alveoli (i.e. Non–dead space ventilation).

Hypoventilation occurs when the alveolar ventilation is
reduced and the alveolar Po
2
therefore settles out at a lower
level than normal. For the same reason, the alveolar Pco
2
, and
therefore arterial Pco
2
, are also raised

HYPOVENTILATION

P(A-a)O2 is normal.

PaCO2 is elevated (hypercapnia)

Increasing the fraction of inspired oxygen (FIO2) can alleviate
the hypoxemia and the hypercapnia can be corrected by
mechanically ventilating the patient to eliminate CO2.

HYPOVENTILATION

The relationship between the fall in Po2 and the rise in Pco2
that occurs in hypoventilation can be calculated from the
alveolar gas equation if we know the composition of inspired
gas (PIo2) and the respiratory exchange ratio (R).

A simplified form of the alveolar gas equation is –

CAUSES OF HYPOVENTILATION
1.depression of the respiratory center by drugs, such as
morphine derivatives and barbiturates.
2.diseases of the brain stem, such as encephalitis.
3.abnormalities of the spinal cord conducting pathways, such
as high cervical dislocation; anterior horn cell diseases,
including poliomyelitis.
4. affecting the phrenic nerves or supplying the intercostal
muscles;

CAUSES OF HYPOVENTILATION
5.diseases of the myoneural junction, such as myasthenia
gravis;
6.diseases of the respiratory muscles themselves, such as
progressive muscular dystrophy; thoracic cage
abnormalities (e.g., crushed chest);
7. diseases of nerves to respiratory muscles (e.g., Guillain-
Barrý syndrome);
8.upper airway obstruction (e.g., thymoma);
9. hypoventilation associated with extreme obesity
(pickwickian syndrome)
10. miscellaneous causes, such as metabolic alkalosis and
idiopathic states.

CAUSE OF HYPO VENTILATION

Shunt versus Dead space

Anatomic shunt cause deoxygenated blood to
transfer into the systemic circulation without passing
through the pulmonary circulation:

Bronchial and Thebesian Veins

Accounts for 75% of the difference between alveolar
O
2
and arterial O
2
.

37
DEAD SPACE
Not all inspired gas participating in alveolar gas
exchange
DEAD SPACE – VD
Some gas remains in the non respiratory airways
ANATOMIC DEAD SPACE
Some gas in the non per fused /low per fused
alveoli
PHYSIOLOGIC DEAD SPACE

38
DEAD SPACE
Means – Wasted Ventilation
Dead Space estimated as ratio Vd/Vt
Dead space expressed as a fraction of total tidal volume Vd/Vt
Vd = PACO2-PECO2
Vt PACO2
Normal dead space ratio < 33%
Q
V
V/Q= ∞

39

3. ALVEOLAR – ARTERIAL O2 GRADIENT : PAO2-PaO2
Varies with FiO2 & age
7-14 to 31-56mm Hg

4. ARTERIAL – ALVEOLAR RATIO : PaO2/PAO2
FiO2 independent
>0.75 -normal
0.40-0.75-acceptable
0.20-0.40– poor
< 0.20 –very poor

Alveolar–arterial gradient

The Alveolar–arterial gradient ( A–a gradient
is a measure of the difference between
the alveolar concentration (A) of oxygen and
the arterial (a) concentration of oxygen.
It is used in diagnosing the source of hypoxemia.
It helps to assess the integrity of alveolar capillary unit.
For example, in high altitude, the arterial oxygen [[PaO
2
]]
is low but only because the alveolar oxygen (PAO
2
) is also
low. However, in states of ventilation perfusion
mismatch, such as pulmonary embolism or right-to-left
shunt, oxygen is not effectively transferred from
the alveoli to the blood which results in elevated A-a
gradient
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