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Arterial Blood gas interpretation pH PaCO2 PO2 on FIO2 =…. pH then PCO2 for acid-base balance for an acute change in PCO2 of 10, the pH goes 0.08 units in the other direction. PCO2 and PO2 and FIO2 for gas exchange

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Arterial Blood gas interpretation. pH PaCO 2 PO 2 on FIO2 =…. pH then PCO 2 for acid-base balance for an acute change in PCO 2 of 10, the pH goes 0.08 units in the other direction. PCO 2 and PO 2 and FIO 2 for gas exchange. Examples of Acid-Base Imbalance:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Arterial Blood gas interpretation

pH PaCO2 PO2 on FIO2 =….

pH then PCO2 for acid-base balance – for an acute change in PCO2 of 10, the pH

goes 0.08 units in the other direction.

PCO2 and PO2 and FIO2 for gas exchange

Page 2: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Bicarbonate is never measured, it is calculated from the Henderson-Hesselbach equation using measured pH and paCO2

Examples of Acid-Base Imbalance:

Page 3: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Describe the Acid-Base Imbalance (1):

pH=7.42, PCO2=48

PaCO2 is slightly high pH is on the alkaline side of normal This is most probably a

compensated metabolic alkalosis

Page 4: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Describe the Acid-Base Imbalance (2):

pH=7.36, PCO2=52

PaCO2 is high

pH is normal, but on the acid side of 7.40

This is most probably a compensated

respiratory acidosis

Page 5: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Describe the Acid-Base Imbalance (3):

pH=7.20, PCO2=52

pH is quite acid PaCO2 is less high than you expect

for a pure respiratory acidosis, (PCO2 up by 12, pH should go down by ~ .10 units)

this is a mixed acidosis

Page 6: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Assessment of Gas Exchange:

Question: While breathing room air, a comatose hyperpneic youth arrives in the ER. He is pink. An ABG shows:– pH=7.15; PCO2=20, PO2=95

Acid-base status? Acute Metabolic Acidosis

Are his lungs normal? NO as A-a DO2 is

Page 7: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

The Flow-Volume loop

A. Normal

– Identify

» 1 Peak flow rate

» 2 RV

» 3 TLC

What is B?

1

23

Page 8: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

The Flow-Volume loop

A. Normal

B. Restrictive

C. Large airway fixed

obstruction

D. Small airways

variable obstruction

E. Extra-thoracic

variable obstruction

Page 9: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Exercise Testing: Stage I Screening

Quantitate exercise capacity c.f. predicted

Assess oxygen saturation on exertion Factors limiting Exercise

– Pulmonary Mechanics– Pulmonary Vascular– Cardiac or peripheral (including unfitness)– Anxiety

Page 10: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Inhaler Devices:

Dry powder inhalers (DPI) - (Diskus or Turbuhaler or Handihaler)

Pressurized Metered Dose Inhalers- (Freon-free) (HFA MDIs) eg Advair 250, Qvar,Salbutamol, Mometasone– pulmonary deposition may be improved– side-effects decreased

Patients still need careful instruction in the use of any inhaler device

Page 11: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Inhaled Steroids: (IS)

Fluticasone (Flovent) , Budisonide (Pulmicort), Ciclesonide (Alvesco)

all have similar local side effects - sore throat, thrush, dysphonia ( try a spacer and do a swish, gargle and spit) (Ciclesonide may be exception)

Enough absorption to cause bruising

Page 12: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Inhaled Steroids (IS): Potential side-effects if long-term, high dose therapy:

Cataracts, Osteoporosis

– osteoporosis prevention may be important with children on high dose IS, but not adults.

– Inactivity due to uncontrolled asthma promotes osteoporosis also

Delayed growth Adrenal insufficiency

Page 13: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Long-lasting B2 Agonists (LABAs):

Examples:– Salmeterol (Serevent) 25 ug p ii bid – Formoterol (Oxeze) 12 ug p i bid

Second-line drug for ongoing acute bronchospasm despite optimal inhaled steroids

Decreases nocturnal exacerbations Does not eliminate the need for short-acting

B2-agonists Not a rescue medication

Page 14: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Combination IS/LABA: Examples:

– Advair discus(fluticasone + salmeterol– Symbicort turbuhaler (budisonide +

formoterol Indication in Asthma:

– When IS in doses of 500-1000 ug/day are insufficient to eliminate frequent rescue with SABAs

Indication in COPD: – May increase interval between AECB .

Page 15: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Leukotriene Antagonists

Montelukast (Singulair) 10 mgm qhs Block leukotriene-derived mediators

(SRS-ALTC4 and LTD4, but not prostaglandins

Montelukast is accepted for children down to age 6 years (5 mgm strength)

It is helpful in a minority of asthmatics

Page 16: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Leukotriene Antagonists Role:

– a second line drug– If inhaled steroids are insufficient to control

symptoms or are contra-indicated – May help:

» ASA-sensitive individuals» restore sense of smell (Systemic distribution)» may be useful to prevent progressive asthma

Side effects - None

Page 17: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

IgE Antagonists: Omalizumab (Xolair)

Monoclonal antibodies block action of IgE on mast cell

Effective if IgE levels are only slightly elevated (500-1200)

Monthly injection Extremely expensive ?$45,000/year Use if frequent need for oral steroids

despite optimum conventional Rx and patient has drug plan or $$$

Page 18: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Acute asthma, ER management

Mild: B2 agonist; start IS Moderate: add O2, oral steroids Severe: add continuous B2 aersols,

Ipatropium, 100% O2 Near death: add intubation, ventilation,

kitchen sink (Theophylline, MgSO4, Halogenated anesthetic) Discharge criteria: track record,

response to B2 agonists, prior steroids, compliance

Page 19: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Chronic asthma management

Minimal: B2 agonist prn. Mild: add inhaled steroids Moderate :

– Leucotriene antagonist– long lasting B2 agonist– Short course oral prednisone

Severe:– add oral steroids dose large enough, duration long

enough to return patient to “personal best”– “Bronchial barbecue”- bronchial thermoplasty

Page 20: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Environmental Control and Education

Short-acting ß2-agonist on demand

0 250 500 1000- 1500

µg *

**

* ß2 agonist need < 3 times/week (excluding 1 dose/day before exercise)

** ICS dose required > 400-500 mcg/day (as beclomethasone equivalent)

PR

ED

NIS

ON

E

Inhaled Corticosteroid

Asthma Consensus Guidelines Treatment Continuum

Additional Therapy

SevereModerately Severe

ModerateMildVery Mild

Next edition?2009

LABAs,LTRAs?Pred.

Dose Lower

Preclinical Intermittent Persistent

Page 21: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD

4% of Canadians 4th leading cause of death Over 40 years of age Mortality rate rising, especially for females Occasionally occupation causes COPD

Page 22: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD Guidelines

Do not screen asymptomatic smokers Assess with spirometry if symptomatic

– Cough – SOBOE– wheeze – persisting colds

FEV1/ FVC< .7

Do ABG if FEV1 <40% predicted

Page 23: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD-Assesment: (FEV1/ FVC< .7)

Mild-– SOBOE if hurrying

Moderate– Stops after walk of few

minutes Severe

– SOB on ADL– Resp failure– R CHF

Very Severe– SOB at rest

FEV1% predicted>80%

50%<80%

30%<50%

<30%

Page 24: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Continuum of COPD Management

CTS guidelines, Canadian Respiratory J 2008;SuppA 15:1-8

Page 25: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD- Management

Education Smoking cessation Pharmacotherapy Regular exercise is part of therapy-

Education! Inhaled steroids only for repeated

AECB responding to prednisone

Page 26: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Smoking Cessation

Counseling If patient is motivated to quit :

+/- Nicotine replacement (patch, gum, etc) -(doubles success)

+/- Bupropion (Zyban) start 1week prior to quit day (doubles success)

+/- Combination =4x as successful-(40%non smokers after 1 year, c.f. 10%)Champix (varenicline tartrate) –a

pseudonicotine new kid on the block

Page 27: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Champix (varenicline tartrate)

Pseudonicotine ..more effective than Bupropion initially Side efect nausea 15-30% Dose: (half in renal disease)

– .5 mgm qd x 3d– .5mgm bid x 4 d then D/C cigarettes– 1 mgm bid x 12 weeks

Cost: $3.37/day (~ to “patch”; c.f. $1.84/day for Zyban)

Page 28: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Inhaled Anti-Cholinergics: Tiotropium (Spireva)

Useful in COPD– significant increase in Vital Capacity

– may help FEV1

Supplants Ipatropium (Atrovent) as DPI No side effects (?glaucoma

exacerbation) Dose: 18 ug tablet DPI inhaled qAM via

Handihaler Not a limited use drug

Page 29: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD long-term management - continued

Bronchodilators – B2 (SABA-> LABA) – and/or Ipatropium/Tiotropium

Steroids: only 10% respond - document response! Combination IS/LABA may increase time between

exacerbations Theophyllines: popularity fluctuates Annual Influenza vaccination ? Pneumovax q 5-10 years

Page 30: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD long-term management - continued

Long-term O2 prolongs life:– if PaO2= or<55 mmHg– if SpO2= or<88%– if pulmonary hypertension,

polycythemia, nocturnal desaturation PaO2<60, SpO2<90

– Palliative grounds allowed Antibiotics for purulent bronchitis –

Trimethoprim, Tetracycline, Clavulin, Cefuroxime, Clarithromycin, respiratory quinolone

Page 31: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

COPD long-term management - continued

Rehabilitation- exercise! (GOYA to complex)

Breathing exercises (? unproven) Surgery:

– Lung Volume reduction » extra 2 years survival

– Lung transplantation» No longer smokes» Even if alpha 1 pt.» Patient not on a ventilator» Median survival 2-4years

Page 32: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

AECB= Acute exacerbation of Chronic Bronchitis

Over 50% associated with infections Average of 2 AECBs/year Diagnose if patient has 2 or 3 of the

following symptoms: – Increase in Dyspnea – Increase in sputum volume – Purulent sputum

Page 33: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Management of AECB

Usual bronchodilator Rx Prednisone 25-50 mgm x 7-14 days Antibiotics will attenuate the AECB

– Faster resolution of clinical criteria and Peak Flow Rates, reduced LOS*

– Choice based on antibiotic hx and local factors

*Anthonisen NR, et al.: Ann Intern Med 1987; 106(2):196-204.

Page 34: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Microbiology of AECB:Most Common Pathogens by Class

Mild COPD– H. influenzae, other Haemophilus species,

S. pneumoniae, M. catarrhalis Moderate COPD with risk factors

– Class I pathogens– Klebsiella sp.– Increased likelihood of beta-lactam-resistance

Severe COPD, – needs hospitalization– Class I and II pathogens– Increased risk of P. aeruginosa

Page 35: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

AECB: Antibiotic Therapy

Simple– COPD mild-moderate; FEV1 >50% pred– RX: Tetra, Amoxi, Cephalosporin GI or GII, Macrolide GII

or GIII (clarithromycin or telithromycin)

Complicated– COPD severe; FEV1 <50% pred– Any of

» <4 AECB/year, Chronic O2 rx, Recent antibiotics, CAD, other chronic illness

– RX: Respiratory quinolone, (Gemflox, Levoflox, Moxiflox)

Page 36: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Acute on chronic respiratory failure

Determine cause– ?Pneumonia– ?AECB– ?CHF– ?Sedatives

Assess with spirometry and ABG Oxygenate temperately: avoid greed Drugs: as per asthma, plus Ipatropium

(Atrovent)

Page 37: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Outpatients Inpatients Nursing Home

S. Pneumoniae S. pneumoniae S. pneumoniae

H. Influenzae H. Influenzae H. Influenzae

Atypicals (2)* Atypicals (3)** Atypicals (3) **

GNR GNR**

* Atypicals (2) = M. pneumoniae, C. pneumoniae

** Atypicals (3) = M. pneumoniae, C. pneumoniae, Legionella spp.

GNR = Gram negative rods

–Pathogens in CAPPathogens in CAP

** Negated in EU guidelines

Page 38: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

CAP: Selecting Treatment

2nd-gen. cephalosporin + macrolide

Respiratory fluoroquinolone alone or amox/clav + macrolide

S. pneumoniae, enteric Gram-negative rods (?), H. influenzae

Nursing-home residents in nursing home

Doxycycline

Amox/clav + macrolide or 2nd-gen. cephalo-sporin + macrolide

3rd-gen cephalosporin + clindamycin or metronidazole

Macrolides

Respiratory fluoroquinolone

Amox/clav +/- macro-lide, or 4th-gen. cephalosporin

– COPD (no recent anti-biotics or oral steroids within past 3 months)

– COPD (recent antibiotics or oral steroids within past 3 months)—H. influenzae & enteric Gram-negative rods

– Suspected macroaspiration—oral anaerobes

Outpatient w/ modifying factors

DoxycyclineMacrolide—Outpatient w/out modifying factors

Second-choice therapy

First-choice therapyModifying factors and/or pathogens

Type of pneumonia

Mandell LA, et al.: Can J Inf Dis 2000; 11(5):237-47. Adopted by the CIDS and the CTS

Page 39: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

CAP: Selecting Treatment (cont’d)

Resp. quinolone

plus B-lactam/B-l inhibitor or cefotaxime

Cipro plus antipseudomonal B-lactam

– Pseudomonas negative

Pseudomoonas positive

ICU

Resp quinolone—Inpatient ward

AlternativeFirst-choice therapyModifying factors and/or pathogens

Type of pneumonia

Mandell LA, et al.: Can J Inf Dis 2000; 11(5):237-47.

–Cephalosporin + Macrolide

–Macrolide plus –ceftriaxone or B-lactam/B-l inhibitor

–Antipseudomonal B-lactam plus–aminoglycoside plus–macrolide

Page 40: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension - Classification

Ideopathic -includes Collagen vascular disease, portal hypertension, HIV, anorexogens

Secondary to Pulmonary venous hypertension - esp CHF

Hypoxemic related PAH

Thrombo-embolic PAH

Page 41: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension:Diagnosis

Unexplained exertional dyspnea Isolated impairment of DCO Exercise test Echocardiogram Specialized tests (one or more of):

– Spiral CT– V/Q scan– Pulmonary angiogram

Page 42: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension:Therapy of Primary PHtn

Refer to specialty clinic Oxygen if indicated Medications

– …Calcium channel blockers– Epoprostenol (prostacycline analog)– Bosentan (endothelin antagonist)– Sildenofil (PDE5 inhibitor)

Lung transplantation

Page 43: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Dyspnea management in palliation:

Reverse what can be reversed Oxygen for hypoxemia or pre-emptive Opiates -

– Morphine oral »15-120 mgm q12h »s/c route 5-10 mgm q1-6h.

– Dilaudid s/c .5-1.0 mgm q1-6h

Page 44: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome

Heavy snoring Daytime hypersomnolence Obesity Other manifestations:

– Hypertension– Unexplained Cor Pulmonale– Nightmares– Impotence– Depression

Page 45: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome

Diagnosis:

Sleep study or Polysomnography– EEG to stage sleep– Electro-oculography– EKG– Oronasal airflow– Respiratory effort– SpO2

Page 46: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome

RDI= Respiratory disturbance index

= # of apneas or hypopneas/hrMild OSA- RDI 5-15

Moderate OSA RDI 16-30

Severe OSA RDI >30 Therapy:

– Weight reduction– CPAP / BiPAP– Mandibular Prosthesis, Tracheostomy

Page 47: Arterial Blood gas interpretation

LMCC topics understressed

Hemoptysis:– Refer if major (>200 ml / 24 hours)– Treat the cause– Antibiotics

Pleural effusion– Treat the cause– Drain if pus– Pleurex indwelling catheter if chronic– Pleurodesis if cancer prognosis>3 months and

pleurex support not available