Respiratory Failure
What can cause the pulse oximetry to be inaccurate?
Compromised peripheral perfusion
True or false: you should rely on arterial blood gases in emergent settings.
False
Glasgow Coma Scale score of what indicates loss of protective airway reflexes and mandates intubation?
8 or less
What does a low paCO2 imply?
Respiratory compensation
What does an elevated paCO2 imply?
Respiratory failure
A 57 y.o. male presents with dyspnea. The ABG’s reveal a pH of 7.30, paCO2 of 55 mmHg, and a paO2 of 45 mmHg. What is the diagnosis?
Acute respiratory acidosis
A 57 y.o. male presents with dyspnea. He is one week post total hip arthroplasty. The ABG’s reveal a pH of 7.50, paCO2 of 25 mmHg, and a paO2 of 60 mmHg. What is the diagnosis?
•Acute respiratory alkalosis (P.E., pneumonia, CHF?)
A 57 y.o. male presents with dyspnea, hypotension and fever. UA reveals many WBC’s. ABG’s reveal a pH of 7.2, paCO2 of 20 mmHg, and a paO2 of 65 mmHg with an HCO3 of 10 mmol/L. What is the diagnosis?
•Acute respiratory alkalosis and metabolic acidosis.
A 57 y.o. male presents with dyspnea. SaO2 is 100%. ABG’s reveal a pH of 7.55, a paCO2 of 20 mmHg, and a paO2 of 92. What is the diagnosis?
•Acute respiratory alkalosis.
What are the clinical hallmarks of ARDS?
What are the pathologic hallmarks of ARDS?
See differential diagnosis of ARDS (slide 19)
What factor distinguishes ARDS from ALI?
Both:
What are the management strategies for ARDS?
PE/DVT
What score on the Modified Wells test indicates likely PE?
>4
Which method of D-Dimer assay is best? What does a positive assay indicate?
Where are most DVTs found? In which veins?
DVT is common in what type of cancer discussed in class?
Colorectal cancer
Pneumonia
What is used to determine how to treat pneumonia patients?
Demographics until the organism can be known
What defines pneumonia?
What is the test of choice to diagnose influenza?
Real-time reverse-transcriptase PCR