Nitric oxide therapy in PHTN Basics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Nitric oxide therapy in PHTN Basics

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Trearting a patient with pulmonary hypertension – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nitric oxide therapy in PHTN Basics


1
Inhaled Nitric Oxide Therapy
  • Shams Ali Shah RT PSCCQ KSA

2
Point to Discuss
  • gt Pulmonary Hypertension
  • gt Nitric Oxide Types
  • gt Nitric Oxide structure
  • gt Dosage
  • gt Calculation
  • gt Calibrations
  • gt weaning from NO
  • gt Hazards of NO and NO2

3
Pulmonary hypertension
  • An elevation in pulmonary artery pressure or
    progressive increase in the blood pressure in the
    pulmonary vascular bed
  •  

4
Causes
  • Result of left heart failure, Congenital Heart
    Disease pulmonary parenchyma or vascular disease,
    thromboembolism, or a combination of these
    factors.
  •  

5
DEFINITION 
  • A mean pulmonary artery pressure of 8 to 20 mmHg
    at rest is considered normal,.
  •  mPAP gt 25 mm Hg at rest is considered PHTN
  • PWP lt 15
  • Normal LVEF
  • No left-sided valvular disease

6
How can be Classified the Severity of Pulmonary
Hypertension
  • Degree of disease
  • Mild
  • Moderate
  • Severe
  • Mean PAP (mmHg)
  • 25 - 40
  • 41 - 55
  • gt55

7
Symptoms of PH
  • Dyspnea is more reported
  • Fatigue
  • Near syncope/syncope
  • Chest pain
  • Palpitations
  • Leg edema

8
PHT Classification
  • Group I This group includes those with
    idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension,
    congenital heart defects causing systemic to
    pulmonary shunt (ASD, VSD).
  • Group II which is pulmonary hypertension due to
    left atrial, ventricular, or valvular heart
    disease.
  • Group III This is due to disorders of the
    respiratory system or hypoxemia (COPD, sleep
    apnea).
  • Group IV This is due to chronic thrombotic or
    embolic disease of the pulmonary vasculature
  • Group V This is due to inflammation,
    mechanical obstruction, or extrinsic compression
    of the pulmonary vasculature ( sarcoidosis, and
    fibrosing mediastinitis)

9
What is Nitric Oxide
  • Nitric oxide was first identified as a gas
    by Joseph Priestly in 1772
  • First time It was described in 1979 as a potent
    relaxant of peripheral vascular smooth muscle.
  • NO is a diatomic free radical consisting of one
    atom of nitrogen and one atom of oxygen
  • Lipid soluble and very small for easy passage
    between cell membranes
  • Short lived, usually degraded or reacted within a
    few seconds

10
  • Nitric oxide is a gas that is inhaled. It works
    by relaxing smooth muscle to widen (dilate) blood
    vessels, especially in the lungs.
  • Nitric oxide is used together with a breathing
    machine (ventilator) to treat respiratory failure
    in premature babies.
  • Your baby will receive this medication in a
    neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) or similar
    hospital setting.

11
INDICATION
  • iNO is used to treat pulmonary hypertension such
    as primary PHTN and persistent pulmonary
    hypertension of newborns (PPHN).
  • Neonates with hypoxic respiratory failure
    associated pulmonary hypertension.
  • NO therapy is often used with other forms of
    therapy including high frequency oscillatory
    ventilation and surfactant therapy, both of which
    are aimed at improving oxygen delivery and lung
    compliance.

12
Endogenous NO
  • Our bodies produce nitric oxide endogenously. In
    the lung, NO controls the vessels that surround
  • the alveoli. When nitric oxide is increased,
    the vessels dilate. When vasodilatation occurs,
    the
  • inside of a vessel gets larger and more blood
    flows through the vessel. The body is
    self-regulating.

13
Exogenous NO
  • In low concentrations, nitric oxide is given via
    inhalation (exogenously). A positive response may
    be indicated by an improvement in clinical
    markers such as SPO2, PaO2, or by a reduction in
    PVR. When inhaled NO is delivered to the patient,
    the NO travels down the airways and goes only to
    the areas of the lung where ventilation or gas
    exchange is taking place. It diffuses rapidly
    into the smooth muscle of the blood vessel where
    it causes vasodilatation.

14
NO Delivery Machine Consists of
  • NO Delivery Unit
  • NO Cylinder
  • NO delivery Line
  • NO2 and NO sampling line
  • NO2 absorbent
  • Calibration NO and NO2 Cylinders

15
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16
Calibration of NO Machine
  • Zeroing all gases sensors with room air
  • Calibrating NO sensor
  • Calibrating NO2 sensor
  • Calibrating O2 Sensor

17
Calculations for NO delivery
  • -initial NO flow vent flow (L/min) X desired
    NO ppm (L/min)
  • __________________________________________________
  • source tank NO ppm

18
Mechanism of action
  • Nitric oxide is a compound produced by many cells
    of the body. It relaxes vascular smooth muscle by
    binding to the heme moiety of cytosolic guanylate
    cyclase, activating guanylate cyclase and
    increasing intracellular levels of
    cyclic-guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate, which then
    leads to vasodilation.

19
Mechanism of action
  • When iNO is delivered to the patient,it travels
    down the airways and goes only to the areas of
    the lung where ventilation or gas exchange is
    taking place.
  • It diffuses immediatly into the smooth muscle of
    the blood vessel where it causes vasodilation.
  • After the NO passes into the capillary blood
    stream it is bound by hemoglobin in red blood
    cells. Once it is bound by hemoglobin, creating
    methb, it can no longer exert its vasodilator
    properties.
  • At clinically therapeutic applied NO levels, the
    blood that leaves the lungs cannot exert its
    vasodilator effects on the rest of the vessels in
    the body.

20
Dosage/ Administartion
  • Initial dosage was 20 ppm(particles per million).
  • Reduce inhaled nitric oxide dose by (20,15,
    10,5,2, 1 ppm).
  • Set NO level is stable over a wide range of flows
    and flow patterns, including spontaneous
    breathing modes.
  • Mostly the flow sensor placed in the outlet of
    the ventilator upstream from the humidifier
    measures minute ventilation (lpm).
  • Treatment should be maintained until the
    underlying oxygen desaturation has resolved.

21
Weaning of Nitric Oxide
  • Both the NO and the NO2 levels that are being
    delivered to the patient must be continuously
    analyzed.
  • High concentrations of NO may be toxic to the
    tissues. NO2 can possibly cause pulmonary edema,
    acid pneumonitis, and death.
  • When the NO is mixed in the patients breathing
    circuit, the FiO2 (fraction of inspired oxygen)
    delivered to the patient will be lower.
  • It is important to also monitor inspired oxygen
    levels at a point distal to the point of NO
    delivery.

22
Hazards and contraindications
  • N O when mixed with O2 produces (NO2)a toxic gas.
  • Because of its very minimal half life (0.1
    seconds 5 seconds), it is quickly inactivated
    once it combines with hemoglobin.
  • Although rare, the patients as well as health
    care providers can be adversely affected.
  • Factors influencing NO2 production are O2
    concentration, NO concentration and time of
    contact between NO and O2.
  • Patients most at risk include those receiving
    high oxygen concentration and low ventilator flow
    rates.

23
Hazards and Contraindication
  • A contraindication of this therapy is children
    who need a right-to-left shunt to survive
  • Nitric oxide is rapidly metabolized.
  • When NO combines with hemoglobin, NO can no
    longer exert its vasodilator effects and
    methemoglobin is created.
  • O2 carrying capacity can be decreased with high
    levels of methemoglobin. When higher
    concentrations of nitric oxide are used, more
    methemoglobin is created.
  • When administering NO to patients the
    methemoglobin levels must be measured
  •  

24
References
  • Kinsella JP, Truog WE, Walsh WF, Goldberg RN,
    Bancalari E, Mayock DE, et al. Randomized,
    multicenter trial of inhaled nitric oxide and
    high-frequency ventilation in severe, persistent
    pulmonary hypertension of the newborn. J Pediatr
    1997131 (1 Pt 155-62.
  •  
  • Rossaint R, Gerlach H, Schmidt-Ruhnke H, Pappert
    D, Lewandowski K, Steudel W, Falke K. Efficacy of
    inhaled nitric oxide in patients with severe
    ARDS. Chest 1995 107(4)1107-1115.
  •  
  • Dellinger RP, Zimmerman JL, Taylor RW, Straube
    RC, Hauser DL, Criner GJ, et al. Effects of
    inhaled nitric oxide in patients with acute
    respiratory distress syndrome results of a
    randomized phase II trial. Inhaled nitric oxide
    in ARDS Study Group. Crit Care Med 1998
    26(1)15-23

25
THANKS
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