ards management

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ARDS MANAGEMENT SAMIR EL ANSARY ICU PROFESSOR AIN SHAMS CAIRO

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Page 1: Ards management

ARDS MANAGEMENT

SAMIR EL ANSARYICU PROFESSOR

AIN SHAMSCAIRO

Page 2: Ards management

Global Critical Carehttps://www.facebook.com/groups/1451610115129555/#!/groups/1451

610115129555/ Wellcome in our new group ..... Dr.SAMIR EL ANSARY

Page 3: Ards management

Pulmonary capillary leak

Inactivation of surfactant

Interstitial & alveolar edema

Severe & refractory hypoxemiaSHUNTING - Stiff lungs

Alveolar atalectasis

Damage to alveolar capillary membrane

DIFFUSE lung injury

CAUSES

Page 4: Ards management

Early pathologic features of ARDS • Diffuse alveolar damage (DAD)

• There is minimal alveolar septal thickening, hyperplasia of pneumocytes

• Eosinophilic hyaline membranes present

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Links Between VILI and MSOF

Biotrauma and Mediator Injuries

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What does surfactant do?

Alveoliwithout

surfactant

Alveoliwith

surfactant

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Cyanosis

Pao2 / Fio2 < 200REFRACTORY HYPOXEMIA

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Gas Extravasation Barotrauma

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1

A Portal for Gas & Bacteria?

Microvascular Fracture in ARDS

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Excessive PEEP, particularly in combination with hypovolemia, can decrease cardiac output and

oxygen delivery, and increase the risk of barotrauma

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Subcutaneous emphysema

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CT scan showed Severe surgical emphysema and pneumomediasteum

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Diseased Lungs Do Not Fully Collapse,Despite Tension Pneumothorax

…and

They cannot always be fully “opened”

Dimensions of a fully Collapsed Normal Lung

Page 21: Ards management

Tension Cysts

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Spectrum of Regional Opening Pressures (Supine Position)

Superimposed Pressure Inflated 0

Alveolar Collapse(Reabsorption) 20-60 cmH2O

Small AirwayCollapse

10-20 cmH2O

Consolidation Lung Units at Risk for Tidal Opening & Closure

=

OpeningPressure

Page 23: Ards management

How Much Collapse Depends on the Plateau

R = 100%

20

60

100

Pressure [cmH2O]20 40 60

Tota

l Lun

g C

apac

ity [%

]

R = 22%

R = 81%R = 93%

00R = 0%

R = 59%

Some potentially recruitable units open only at high pressure

More Extensive Collapse But Lower PPLAT

Less Extensive Collapse But Greater PPLAT

Page 24: Ards management

Mechanical Ventilator

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PRESSURE VOLUME CURVE

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Recruitment Maneuvers (RMs)

Proposed for improvingArterial oxygenation

Enhancing alveolar recruitment

All consisting of short-lasting increases in intrathoracic pressures

Page 27: Ards management

Recruitment Maneuvers (RMs)

–Vital capacity maneuver (inflation of the lungs up to 40 cm H2O,

maintained for 15 - 26 seconds)

–Intermittent sighs–Extended sighs

Page 28: Ards management

Recruitment Maneuvers (RMs)

–Intermittent increase of PEEP–Continuous positive airway pressure

(CPAP)–Increasing the ventilatory pressures to a

plateau pressure of 50 cm H2O for 1-2 minutes

Page 29: Ards management

Other manoeuvres

• Prone positioning ventilation• Prolonged inspiration

• Inverse ratio ventilation

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Limit of open lung strategy

• To minimise VILI

to the less damaged alveoli

Max insp pressure

(plateau pressure 30-32cm H20)

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Limit of open lung strategyMax pressure remains unchanged

TV will decreaseAlveolar ventilation will decrease

Alv V: dead space vent ratiowill decrease

Page 32: Ards management

Increasing PaCO2

• Management options

Increase resp rateMinute volume

Delivered TV TV ml/kg Resp rate

6.4 L 640 ml 8 10

6.4 L 480 ml 6 14

6.4 L 320 ml 4 20

6.4 L 160 ml 2 40

Anatomical dead space 150ml

Page 33: Ards management

Increasing PaCO2

• Permissive hypercapnia

• Tracheal gas insuflation

•Reduce•dead space

Page 34: Ards management

Increasing PaCO2As alveolar ventilation decreases

will require increasing FIO2

Otherwise will result

in alveloar hypoxia and arterial hypoxaemia

Page 35: Ards management

Liquid Ventilation

More clinical trials are req. to demonst. efficacy.

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• Inert• No odor• No color• Low surface tension• Carry large amount of O2 & CO2

Perfluorocarbon (PFC)

Page 37: Ards management

Medication: Morphine sulfate

(0.1mg/kg/dose), pavulon (0.1 mg/kg/dose)

Rimar (30 ml/kg)Ventilation settings:

Ti 5 sec, hold 10 sec, Te 5 sec (3-6 cycles/min)

CO2 eleminated by increase tidal volume

O2 managed by change O2 content and FRC

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ON START OF GAS VENTILATION

ONE HOUR AFTER PLV

48 HOUR AFTER PLV 3 WEEKS AFTER PLV

Partial liquid ventilation with perflubron in premature infants with severe respiratory distress syndrome

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High-frequency Oscillatory Ventilation

• Active expiration Pressurised circuit

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High-frequency Ventilation

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35cm H20 90 cm

3-9 hz0.1-3ml/kg

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43

Pressure transmission HFOV

P

T

proximal

trachea

alveoli

Due to the attenuation of the pressure wave

by the time it reaches the alveolar region

it is reduced down to .1 - 5 cmH2O

Page 44: Ards management

BRONCHOTRONVENTILATOR

CONVENTIONAL ( = LOW FREQUENCY )

VENTILATION UNIT

PULSATION ( = HIGH FREQUENCY )

VENTILATION UNIT

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However …Risks of barotrauma and hemodynamic compromise with high frequency ventilation can approximate those of conventional ventilation

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KINETIC THERAPY

MEDISCUS AIR CUSHION BED PULMONAIR

MEDISCUS TRAUMA BED ROTOREST

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APPLICATION OF SURFACTANT

CUROSURF - SURVANTA

ALVEOLFACT50 – 200 mg/kgBW

BY ENDOTRACHEAL OR ENDOBRONCHIAL ROUTE

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APPLICATION OF SURFACTANT

• PREVENT END-EXPIRATORY COLLAPSE OF ALVEOLI

• RECRUITMENT OF ATELECTATIC LUNG AREAS

• IMPROVED COMPLIANCE• IMPROVED OXYGENATION• IMPROVED VENTILATION /PERFUSION

RATIO

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SECRETION ELEMINATIONVIA IPPB

• BETTER DISTRIBUTION OF MEDICATED AEROSOLS

• BRONCHOSPASMOLYTIC• IMPROVED OXYGENATION• SECRETOLYSIS

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JET THERAPY

• SECRETOLYSIS ( SECRETION MOBILISATION )• DISSOLUTION OF RESORPTIVE ATELECTASES• IMPROVED OXYGENATION• INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE REDUCTION

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CLINI – JET HIGH FREQUENCY JET VENTILATION

HFJV

HANDY INSTRUMENTPRODUCES SHORT

GAS PULSES

FOR SECRETOLYSIS

DISSOLVE SECRETIONS ( KETCHUP EFFECT )

Page 53: Ards management

INCENTIVE SPIROMETRYSUSTAINED MAXIMAL INSPIRATION

• ALVEOLAR RECRUITMENT• PREVENTION OF ATELECTASES• MUSCLE TRAINING• COUGH PROVOCATION• IMPROVED OXYGENATION AND VENTILATION

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Dilates pulmonary blood vessels and

helps reduce shunting

REDUCTION IN INTRAPULMONARY R-L SHUNT

Nitric Oxide

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GOOD LUCK

SAMIR EL ANSARYICU PROFESSOR

AIN SHAMSCAIRO

[email protected]

Global Critical Carehttps://www.facebook.com/groups/1451610115129555/#!/groups/145161011512955

5/ Wellcome in our new group ..... Dr.SAMIR EL ANSARY