It ain't easy being wheezy
I'm scarred
I'm nervous
Air today, gone tomorrow
You take my breath away
100

Status Asthmaticus is characterized by an acute onset, worsening expiratory air flow and is refractory to what treatment?

What is bronchodilator therapy?

100

Interstitial lung disease is a group of several disorders that causes this in your lungs.

What is scarring?

100

Neuromuscular disorders include a wide range of diseases affecting the peripheral nervous system, which consists of all the motor and sensory nerves that connect the ______ and ______ to the rest of the body.

What are the brain and spinal cord?

100
Are pneumothorax, blebs and bullae an absolute or relative contraindication for non invasive ventilation?

What is a relative contraindication?

100

Classify this blood gas result;

7.28/90/60/35/+8

What is acute on chronic respiratory acidosis
200

Changes in the airway can cause severe airflow obstruction, leading to premature closing of the airway on expiration. This leads to air trapping, which is also known as....

What is dynamic hyperinflation?

200

Patients with ILD experiencing acute respiratory failure have known poor outcomes. Studies have reported patients to have roughly what mortality rate in the first year?

What is 60%

200

Neuromuscular diseases are characterized by weakened inspiratory and expiratory muscles. A measure of maximal strength of the respiratory muscles can be done by the following 3 tests.

What are MIP, MEP and VC

200

Name a minimum of 2 radiographic findings that you would observe on CXR for a patient with a right sided tension pneumothorax.

What are left mediastinal shift, left tracheal shift, collapsed lung borders with no lung markings to periphery, deep sulcus sign.

200

Name 3 radiographic findings that you may see on a patient with COPD exacerbation secondary to pneumonia.

What are; large lung volumes, flattened diaphragms, increased opacities, hilar engorgement, thin elongated heart.

300

The primary pathophysiology of status asthmaticus is characterized by...

What is smooth muscle spasm, mucosal edema and mucous plugging?

300

ILD patients requiring mechanical ventilation are difficult to ventilate due to what key features? Provide a minimum of 2.

What are decreased compliance, decreased gas exchange and increased PVR?

300

This is a chronic autoimmune neuromuscular disease that causes weakness in skeletal muscles and often can cause ocular symptoms such as ptosis and diplopia.

What is myasthenia gravis?

300

Name 2 monitored ventilation parameters that could be affected by a pneumothorax and what would happen to those parameters.

What are Ppeak (increases), Pplat (increases), Compliance (decreases), Pmean (increases), Vte (decreases). 

300

Give 2 reasons why patients with AECOPD are difficult to ventilate.

What is; increased inspiratory a/w resistance, increased exp a/w resistance, dynamic hyperinflation, autoPEEP, respiratory muscle weakness, deteriorating gas exchange due to damaged membranes and increased secretions.

400

When ventilating a status asthmaticus patient, we allow for permissive hypercapnia. What are the blood gas goals when ventilating a status asthmaticus patient?

What is a pH >7.15 and SaO2 >0.90
400

List the ventilation settings when treating a patient with ILD in acute respiratory failure. Include all parameters.

What is... 

pH > 7.25

Vt 4-6ml/kg

RR 8-16

PEEP 5 cmH2O

SpO2 88-90%

Ti 0.6-1.0 sec

Waveform decelerating

400

This is an acute autoimmune disorder in which your body's immune system attacks your nerves causing demyelination leading to progressive paralysis. 

What is guillian barre syndrome?

400

Explain how hemodynamic compromise can occur when a patient has a pneumothorax.

What is; Large or increasing pneumothoraxes can increase intrathoracic pressure. This causes decrease in venous return to the heart, decrease in stroke volume, decreased cardiac output, cardiac index, blood pressure and tachycardia eventually leading to hemodynamic compromise.

400

Name 4 medications that can be used to treat patients experiencing AECOPD.

What are; ventolin, atrovent, methylprednisone IV, solumedrol IV, prednisone PO, antibiotics

500

What is the ventilation strategy to ventilate status asthmaticus? Include all parameters.

What is...

Mode AC

RR 10 bpm

Vt 6-8ml/kg

PEEP 0-5 cmH2O

Flow 60-80lpm 

Decelerating waveform 

Pplat <30cmH2O

500

Although the benefits may be unclear, ILD patients requiring mechanical ventilation for respiratory failure may occur. This could potentially be used as a bridge to what?

What is a bridge to lung transplant?

500

List the criteria for when we would consider intubation in respiratory failure secondary to neuromuscular disease. Name a minimum of 4.

Decreased LOC

Cardiorespiratory arrest

Shock

Arrhythmias 

Gas exchange abnormalities

Bulbar dysfunction

20/30/40 rule 

500

Your patient has a BP fistula. You are ventilating them on volume control with a set volume of 500ml. Your Vte is 350ml. Explain what is happening and how you could improve ventilation on a patient with BP fistula. Name a minimum of 5 things you could do.

What is the 150ml is leaking out of the fistula and not being returned to the ventilator in the exhaled breath. To fix this you would NEVER increase your set volume. You would want to ensure you are ventilating with the lowest possible pressures (peep, driving pressure, MAP etc.), that there is a chest tube that is patent and correctly working, position patient with the fistula side up, communicate to the MRP, discuss advanced options if ABGs worsening such as single lung ventilation (endobronchial blocker), arndt blockers depending on fistula location, ECMO

500

Your AECOPD patient is intubated but has been weaned to PSV. What ventilator settings could you change and optimize to improve ventilator synchrony?

What are Esens (higher may work better) and increasing PEEP to meet AutoPEEP. (Consider changing rise time and trigger sensitivity.)