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Respiratory Care Procedures

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Preemies are especially prone to atelectasis because of surfactant deficiency. Indications ... Clapping of the chest wall to mobilize secretions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Respiratory Care Procedures


1
Respiratory Care Procedures
  • Chapter 6

2
Airway Clearance
  • Relies on effective mucociliary clearance
  • Traditional treatment is CPT
  • Goals
  • Mobilize secretions
  • Improve ventilation
  • Preemies are especially prone to atelectasis
    because of surfactant deficiency

3
Indications
  • Retained secretions
  • Excessive secretions
  • Aspiration
  • prophylaxis

4
Classic Procedure
  • Auscultation
  • Listen to breath sounds
  • Try to determine if the problem is atelectasis or
    excess secretions
  • What will the BS be in each situation?
  • Postural drainage
  • Uses gravity to enhance secretion movement
  • Should drain each segment 2-5 mindepends on the
    segments to be drained how long you spend on
    each
  • Total time should not exceed 20 min

5
Classic Procedure, cont
  • Percussion
  • Clapping of the chest wall to mobilize secretions
  • Most babies too small for you to use your hands
    need an infant percussor (or you can make one of
    your own)
  • Vibration
  • Rapidly shaking the chest wall during exhalation
  • A bit tricky on babies due to the high RR

6
Removal of Secretions
  • Older peds patients can be encouraged to
    coughmake a game out of it and you are more
    likely to get cooperation. Like, cough and see
    if you can get this paper to move
  • Infants and neonates may need to be suctioned if
    they dont have a spontaneous coughuse -50 to
    -80 for infants and -80 to -100 for small children

7
PEP
  • Positive expiratory pressure (10-20 cm H2O)
    dilates the airways, allowing air to get behind
    secretions to the alveoli distal
  • Improves oxygenation and ventilation because it
    opens collapsed alveoli
  • Improves secretion mobilization because there is
    now air behind the secretion to move it with
  • Patient should to about 10 PEP breaths, then stop
    and huff cough (FET)they repeat this cycle for
    about 10-15 minutes if they have the stamina

8
Active Cycle Breathing
  • Combines postural drainage with FET
  • Developed in the UK and much more popular in
    Europe than the US

9
Autogenic Drainage
  • A multiphase breathing exercise that allows
    clearance of the lungs from the bottom up
  • Phase 1 from low lung volumes the person does a
    forced exhalation to move secretions from
    peripheral airways to larger ones
  • Phase 2 from mid lung volumes the person does a
    forced exhalation to move secretions from midsize
    airways to larger airways
  • Phase 3 from high lung volumes the person does
    a forced exhalation to move secretions from the
    large to the mainstem/tracheal area to be coughed
    out

10
Flutter Valve
  • The original flutter was a heavy plastic cone
    with a steel ball that moved up and down during
    exhalation to produce vibrations that transmitted
    back to the airwaysnow we use a disposable one
    the Acapella
  • The airway oscillations shake secretions loose
    from the inside
  • Green is for adultsblue is for peds (and adults
    with very low air flow)
  • These devices provide both oscillation and PEP

11
The Vest
  • Uses high frequency chest wall oscillations to
    vibrate secretions loose
  • Improves gas distribution and mobilizes
    secretions
  • Procedure
  • Fit the vest properly
  • Start with low frequency for a few minutes, then
    turn to mid for a few minutes, then high
  • Total time is about 15-30 min, depending on
    patient tolerance

12
Contraindications to airway clearance techniques
  • Need to dramatically increase FiO2 during therapy
  • Feeding within the last hour
  • Reflux
  • Very young preemies (lt32 wks)
  • History of intraventricular hemorrhage

13
Hazards to airway clearance techniques
  • HYPOXEMIA!!!
  • Emesis
  • Aspiration
  • Injuries from percussion (too hard on delicate
    skinpercussing the wrong tissue)

14
Aerosolized Drug Therapy
  • Can be delivered one of 3 ways
  • Small volume nebulizer can be used on all ages
    and on uncooperative patients
  • MDI can be used even on infants, but best
    results with kids who are a bit older and can
    cooperate
  • DPI can be used on children who are
    cooperative, but usually not lt3 yrs old

15
Small Volume Nebulizer
  • Advantages
  • Doesnt really require cooperation
  • Can adjust dosage
  • Can use any liquid drug
  • Effective even if there is no breath hold
  • Disadvantages
  • Expensive
  • Less easily transported
  • Bacterial medium
  • Requires cleaning
  • Not very efficient
  • Dose delivered varies according to breathing
    pattern

16
MDI
  • Advantages
  • Portable
  • Efficient drug delivery
  • No prep required
  • Disadvantages
  • Have to coordinate breathing with delivery
  • Limited drug choice
  • Limited to dosage in MDI
  • Propellants may cause a reaction
  • Aspiration of foreign body (eg-gum)

17
DPI
  • Advantages
  • All of those for MDIs
  • Easier to coordinate
  • No propellants to react to
  • Disadvantages
  • Very few drugs available
  • Airway irritation
  • Requires high flow rate for best results
  • Available DPIs are mainly maintenance drugs, not
    rescue drugs

18
Indications for aerosols
  • Bronchodilators
  • Presence of bronchoconstriction
  • Decreased chest expansion
  • Wheezing
  • Retractions, flaring, grunting
  • Tachypnea
  • Decreased air movement
  • Increased FiO2 needs
  • Mucolytics
  • Presence of thick secretions
  • Steroids
  • inflammation
  • History of BPD or asthma

19
Equipment needed
  • SVN
  • Need a nebulizer and an interface
  • Blow-by is commonly used for infants
  • Servo makes its own USN to use with their
    ventilators
  • MDI
  • For younger children, use the spacer/mask
  • Can also bag in an MDI on an infant
  • DPI
  • Need capsule for some of them
  • Special canister to deliver the med

20
Hazards of Aerosol Therapy
  • Infection
  • Medication side effects
  • Drug reconcentration
  • Ventilator malfunction
  • Excessive noise

21
SPAG
  • Used to deliver ribavirin (Virazole) to patients
    with RSV
  • Delivers molecular ribavirin
  • Not used much anymore b/c ribavirin is really
    expensive
  • Attaches to a ventilator, hood, croup tent, or
    aerosol maskusually used on the sickest of the
    sick, so generally through a ventilator
  • Use 12-18 hrs/day for 3-7 days

22
Pentamidine
  • Need a special nebulizer that filters expiratory
    gasRespiragard II
  • Used for prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii
    pneumonia
  • Not approved for use in infants/children

23
Suctioning
  • Indications
  • Remove secretions
  • Maintain patency of ETT
  • Obtain a sample for lab analysis
  • When you suctioning depends on when the patient
    needs itgo by BS and clinical condition (drop in
    sat, increased distress, after CPT)

24
Procedure to suction an intubated infant
  • You could just feed the catheter down the tube
    until you hit the carina and stimulate a
    coughbut this causes airway breakdown and babies
    are more susceptible to this than adults
  • So, what you do is add 4 to the cm marking at the
    adapter of the ETTthis corrects for the length
    of the adapter so the sx catheter will just be at
    the tip of the tube and not impacting the airway
  • To lavage, use a few drops of saline, not the
    entire vial
  • Preoxyenate, postoxygenate with each pass of the
    catheter babies will desaturate much more
    quickly than adults

25
Hazards to Suctioning
  • Bradycardia vagal response as well as hypoxemia
    response
  • Hypoxemia keep sx time/P at recommended levels
  • Mucosal damage measure from adapter
  • Atelectasis/lung collapse watch sx T/P
  • Airway contamination sterile technique
  • Accidental extubation uncuffed tubes come out
    easily!!

26
Oxygen Therapy
  • Indications
  • Hypoxemia (lt50 for a preemie/neonatelt80 for a
    child)
  • Signs and symptoms of hypoxia
  • Hazards
  • ROP only takes about 20 min for this to start
    usually shoot for PaO2 50-70 in babies
  • O2 toxicity leads to BPD (baby COPD)
  • Cerebral vasoconstriction reduces brain
    perfusion
  • Fire hazard

27
Blenders
  • Connect to 50 psi source
  • Mixes air and O2 to the concentration you set on
    it
  • Can do 21-100
  • Blended gas is delivered by flowmeter or a 50 psi
    DISS threaded connection
  • Can power respiratory equipment

28
Flowmeters
  • Bourdon gauge
  • Measures pressure really
  • Can be used in any position
  • Backpressure increases reading while decreasing
    flow to the patient
  • Thorpe tube
  • Uses a ball or pin to measure flow
  • Must be upright to be accurate
  • Compensated ones are calibrated to 50psi and are
    still accurate as long as the back pressure to
    them is lt50 psi
  • Uncompensated ones read lower than actual flow
    with back pressure
  • There are special flowmeters for peds and infants

29
Analyzers
  • Monitor O2 percent
  • Calibrate to room air and 100 prior to use
  • Measure as close to the baby as possible

30
Humidifiers
  • Add molecular water to dry gas
  • Bubble humidifiers are used with low flow oxygen
    systems
  • Passover humidifiers are used with high flow and
    ventilator systems (eg-Fischer Paykel)
  • Jet nebulizers also add humidity

31
Oxyhood
  • Clear plastic hood that fits over the head
  • Generally used for FiO2 lt 0.50
  • Need to use at least 7 lpm to prevent CO2 buildup
    in the hood
  • Make sure its not too tight around the neck
  • Air is heatedcold air blowing on a babys head
    causes increased heat loss (what type??)

32
Cannulas
  • Dont use flows gt4 lpm in neonatesthe usual is 1
    lpm or less
  • FiO2 depends on Vt and RR
  • Approximate FiO2s for cannulas
  • 0.25 lpm 24-27
  • 0.50 lpm 26-32
  • 1.00 lpm 30-35
  • Can cut off the prongs of a cannula for babys
    whose nares are too smallposition the holes
    under the nares
  • Must tape to the face to keep in placethey make
    special tape you can use or use paper tape

33
Masks
  • Masks are not well tolerated by infants and
    children
  • For neonates, simple masks will deliver
  • 60-80 at 5 lpm if tight to the face
  • 40 at 5 lpm if loosely held to the face
  • For children
  • Simple maskss deliver 35-45 at 6-8 lpm depending
    on respiratory pattern and size of the child
  • NRB can provide 70-100 at 6-15 lpm
  • Peds sized venturi masks are also available
  • Hazards to masks
  • Aspiration
  • Skin necrosis
  • CO2 retention

34
Oxygen Tents
  • Plastic enclosures that cover the entire crib
  • Provide a cool mist
  • Used for croup, bronchiolitis, airway swelling
  • Usually cooled to 5-10 degrees below room temp,
    but can get quite cold if the baby is very small
  • Monitor the FiO2 near the face at mattress level
    b/c oxygen layering occurs inside the tent
  • Hard to get much more than 35 in the tent
  • Hazards
  • High mist output obscures the patient
  • Fire dangerno metal toys at all!!
  • Overhydration of infants
  • Lose FiO2 when tent is opened for care giving
  • Toddlers can asphyxiate on the tent itself

35
Incubators/Isolettes
  • Provide a temperature controlled environment
  • Also can use the incubator for oxygen delivery,
    although its far more common to use a different
    O2 device inside the isolette and just use it for
    temp control
  • Red flag up means FiO2 gt40...O2 attachment is on
    the back side
  • Hazards
  • Must open for care, losing FiO2 and temp control
    each time

36
Resuscitation Bags
  • Self-Inflating
  • Reinflate automatically following compression
  • Reinflation entrains air/O2 into the bag
  • Can achieve 80-100 with a reservoir
    attachedalso can attach to the flowmeter of a
    blender to deliver a specific FiO2 to the bag
  • Most bags you will use will be this type
  • Flow-Inflating
  • Whatever is used to power the bag is the FiO2 of
    the bag
  • Adjust flow rate so the bag reinflates between
    breathsthe faster the rate, the more flow needed
  • Use a pressure manometer to monitor ventilation
    pressures when baggingonly use enough pressure
    to see chest movement
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