ARDs
Chest Trauma
Mechanical Ventilation
Mechanical Ventilation Complications , don't forget to discuss stress ulcers
ABGs
interpretations and causes
100

What Clinical Manifestations can a client with ARDS exhibit?

Tachypnea- in attempt to increase O2, tachycardia, restlessness/irritability, dyspnea-increased work of breathing, decreased lung expansion-decreased compliance

Breath sounds- initially no abn. d/t edema occurring first.  LATER- crackles and decreased breathsounds and SpO2 despite supplemental O2

100

Flail chest treatment

Humidified O2, pain and anxiety management,

encourage deep breathing and coughing to clear secretions, possible administration of nerve block for severe pain, mechanical ventilation

100

Assessment

Evaluate placement of tube, document as XXcm at lips/gums/teeth, speech should not be heard

assess pt. response to ventilation ( appearance, VS, LOC)

100

Barotrauma - leads to air being introduced into the pleural space or other body cavity, results in pneumothorax, pneumoperitoneum, pneumomediastinum.  

What is causes and s/s?

decreased/absent lung sounds on affected site, SQ emphysema/crepitus, respiratory distress

100

PH: 7.18

PCO2: 40

HCO3: 8

Uncompensated Metabolic Acidosis

Cause DKA

200

What are some Diagnostic findings of ARDs?

CXR-diffuse haziness " white out"

ABG-hypoxemia refractory to high levels of O2, respiratory and metabolic acidosis, CO2 retention and lactic acid build up from decreased O2 levels

200

Treatment of Pulmonary Contusion

Maintain O2 w/supplemental O2

Mechanical ventilation if respiratory failure develops

200

Suctioning

Perform when needed (coughing, gurgling, increased anxiety/restlessness)

Observe/document sputum & culture if necessary

Preoxygenate

200

VAP (Ventilator Associated Pneumonia)-

Cause: secretions pooling on tip of the balloon become infected then ooze down around the balloon into the lungs, silent gastric aspiration.

What are the prevention strategies?

Hand washing

mouth care q2h or more if needed, suction back of throat w/mouth care, suction deep secretions,

keep HOB >30 degrees

200

PH: 7.45

PCO2: 74.3

HCO3: 30.2

Compensated 

Metabolic alkalosis

cause: unmonitored HCO3 infusion, excessive antacid use

300

What are the Mechanical Ventilation Goals for ARDs and complications to watch for?

Keep SpO2 88-95% or PaO2 55-80mmHg

Complications: For FiO2 up to 100%  O2 toxicity

                      For PEEP hypotension or barotrauma

300

Treatment of Tension Pneumothorax

High flow O2-up to 100% if pos

Emergent needle compression

Chest tube placement following decompression

300

Mouth Care

Perform as often as needed q2h minimum d/t decreases VAP, mouth drying occurs, mouth secretions difficult to control

Endotracheal tube must be repositioned at least every shift to prevent skin breakdown esp. on lips

300

Observe for Cardiovascular complication- intrathoracic pressure decrease preload and activate RAA system.

What will we see?

Hypotension, s/s of fluid retention

300

PH:7.07

PCO2: 11.4

HCO3: 3.1

Partially compensated Metabolic acidosis

cause: DKA

400
What is the rationale behind the prone position?

60% of lung surface is dependent in supine position & 40% supine, fluid moves by gravity to dependent lung fields. Prone position allows for fluid shift and exposure of alveoli

400

Treatment of Pneumothorax & hemothorax

 Pneumothorax -High flow O2

Chest tube- if 15% or greater lung area affected

Hemothorax- Chest tube

400

Reduce anxiety

Speak to not over pt. explain monitors, procedures, alarms. Encourage family interaction.

Let pt. and family know someone is always near

Follow Riker agitation scale for sedation medication titration.

400

Let's talk about pt. weaning off of Vent

When does it occur, what assessments and actions need completed?

Trials begin as soon as pt. is stable & underlying reason for vent has been addressed. Sedation needs to be decreased.

Ongoing assessment to ID s/s of poor pt. response

(tachycardia, tachypnea, decreased SpO2, increased BP, anxiety/restlessness, abdominal breathing

400

PH: 7.17

PCO2: 69.3

HCO3: 28

Partially compensated respiratory acidosis

Cause: COPD exacerbation/respiratory failure, Pneumonia

500

Pharmacologic treatments for ARDs

Versed, fentanyl, ativan, propofol- sedation/antianxiety

vecuronium, rocuronium- paralytics

ABX if infection present

Fluid management balance with diuretics

Dopamine, norepinephrine, vasopressin (vasopressors)- maintain CO and perfusion

Steroids (still controversial) only in early ARDs

ECMO- complication ; heparin induced thrombocytopenia

Nitric Oxide-dilate pulmonary blood vessels

500

Findings of pneumothorax

Findings of Hemothorax

Pneumothorax-Resp distress (tachypnea, tachycardia, hypoxia, cyanosis, dyspnea, increased work of breathing), decreased O2 sats, decreased or absent breath sounds on affected side, asymmetrical chest wall movement, pleuritic pain, subcutaneous emphysema/crepitus

Hemothorax- decreased breath sounds, respiratory distress, perhaps hemodynamically unstable (tachycardia, hypotensive -s/s of poor perfusion)

500

Nutrition

Pt. on ventilator need nutritional supplement, need strength to be weaned off of vent, feed gut if bowel sounds present, otherwise TPN/Lipids if no bowel sounds or contraindications

500

How do we conduct the post-extubation assessment?

VS and Respiratory q5minutes, then every hour

assess LOC, work of breathing, cardiac rhythm, voice and swallowing evaluation

COMPLICATIONS:

Decreased O2 levels , vocal cord damage, Bronchial/laryngeal spasm (life-threatening)

500

PH: 7.45

PCO2: 27

HCO3: 19.1

Compensated Respiratory alkalosis

cause: anxiety, hyperventilation, pain

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