Title: SEP Module Review Miscellaneous Questions
1SEP Module ReviewMiscellaneous Questions
- Jonathan Warren, MD
- July 16, 2006
2Question 01A
- 18 y/o female 45 minutes post-partum
- Acute SOB, tachycardia, hypotension
- Intubated
- T 38.5c, HR 140, RR 40, BP 70/50
- CXR diffuse bilateral alveolar infiltrates
3Question 01A
- Abnormal labs
- PTT 34 sec
- Fibrinogen 75 mg/dL
- Hemodynamics
- PAOP 10 mmHg
- C.I. 1.9 L/min/m2
4Question 01A
- What should be done next?
- Emergency hysterectomy
- Administer norepinephrine
- Administer furosemide
- Administer intravenous saline
- Administer methylprednisolone
5Q01A Amniotic fluid embolism
- Syndrome usually occurs with labor and delivery,
may also occur with uterine manipulation or
uterine trauma - Believed to be caused by amniotic fluid and
particulate matter entering the circulation by
uterine tears or via the endocervical veins.
6Q01A Amniotic fluid embolism
- Clinical presentation
- Sudden dyspnea leading to ARDS
- Hypoxemia
- Cardiovascular collapse
- Seizures
- DIC in mother or fetus
7Q01A Amniotic fluid embolism
- Disorders to be excluded
- Septic shock
- Pulmonary embolism
- Myocardial infarction
- Tension pneumothorax
- Abruptio placentae
- Aspiration pneumonia
- HELLP syndrome
8Q01A Amniotic fluid embolism
- Treatment is supportive
- Mechanical ventilation/oxygen
- Intravenous fluids
- Pressors
- Inotropes
- Corticosteroids and hysterectomy are of no proven
benefit
9Question 06A
- The fiduciary relationship between physician and
patient is based upon the ethical principles of
autonomy, beneficence, and - A. Altruism
- B. Entitlement
- C. Distributive justice
- D. Non-maleficence
- E. Risk management
10Q06A Principles of Medical Ethics
- There are five basic principles of biomedical
ethics - Beneficence promotion of benefits over burdens.
- Non-maleficence do no harm
- Patient autonomy patient independence.
- Justice impartiality, equal distribution of
resources (this is a societal role). - Fidelity faithfulness, keeping promises.
11Question 07A
- Hemodynamic data
- RA 6 mmHg
- PAP 23/12 mmHg
- MPAP 15 mm Hg
- PAOP 7 mmHg
- C.O. 5 L/min
- PVR 128 dynes.sec/cm5
- MAP 86 mmHg
- SVR 640 dynes.sec/cm5
12Question 07A
- Data most compatible with
- A. RV infarction
- B. LV infarction
- C. Sepsis
- D. Pulmonary embolism
- E. Calculation error
13Q07A Hemodynamic Data Errors
- All values are within normal limits EXCEPT the
SVR. - Normal range SVR 770-1600.
- SVR (MAP-RA)x80
- CO
- (86-6)x80
- 5
- 1280
- SVR calculated incorrectly !!
14Question 08A
- Which complication is most likely to follow from
prolonged saline flush of radial artery catheter
when pressurized vascular flushing device is
used? - (A) Volume overload
- (B) Hemolysis
- (C) Retrograde embolization
- (D) Excess anticoagulation
- (E) Sepsis
15Q08A Arterial catheter complications
- Three primary complications of arterial
catheters - Bleeding
- Distal ischemia
- Thrombosis
- Embolization
- Mechanical obstruction
- Infection
- Less common peripheral nerve injury,
arteriovenous fistula, pseudoaneurysm
16Q08A Bleeding complications
- Aggravated by
- Coagulopathy
- Poor technique
- Extreme hypertension
17Q08A Ischemia
- Aggravated by
- Poor catheter selection (too large)
- Thrombosis/embolism due to use of non-heparin
flush solutions (Caution HIT) - Air embolism due to excessive flushing
- Use of end-artery (e.g. brachial artery)
18Q08A Infection
- Incidence 2-8
- Aggravated by
- Poor insertion technique
- Prolonged catheter placement
- Poor site care
- Contaminated flush solutions
- Frequent stopcock manipulations and blood
sampling from catheter. - Superficial infections are more common than
episodes of catheter-related sepsis
19Q08A Which complication most likely?
- Look carefully at question Which complication
is most likely to follow from prolonged saline
flush. - Volume overload hard to rationalize
- Hemolysis could occur with hypotonic flush
solution, not usually used - Retrograde embolization is possible
- Excess anticoagulation is unlikely unless pt had
a problem with heparin clearance, or erroneous
preparation of heparin flush solution - Sepsis unlikely to result from excessive flushing
alone
20Question 20A
- 65 year old female
- history of advanced COPD
- acute respiratory failure
- intubated on mechanical ventilation
- Height 157 cm
- weight 70kg
- moderately obese
21Question 20A
- Daily nutritional support?
- 1200 Kcal and 70 g protein
- 1200 Kcal and 140 g protein
- 1800 Kcal and 90 g protein
- 2500 Kcal and 120 g protein
22Q20A Nutritional Support in the ICU
- Nutrition requirements in critically ill patients
are estimated by a number of methods - (1) Empiric methods (e.g. ACCP or ASPEN
guidelines) - (2) Calculations (e.g. Harris-Benedict equations)
23Q20A Nutritional Support in the ICU
- EMPIRIC METHOD
- Caloric requirements
- Minimal stress 25 kcal/kg/day
- Single organ failure, uncomplicated trauma, small
burns - Moderate stress 30 - 35 kcal/kg/day
- Severe sepsis
- Severe stress 40 - 45 kcal/kg/day
- Extensive burns, multiple trauma
24Q20A Nutritional support
- Protein requirements
- Minimal stress 1.3 g/kg/day
- Moderate stress 1.5 - 1.7 g/kg/day
- Severe stress 2.0 g/kg/day
25Q20A Nutritional support
- This patient would be classified as minimally
stressed, having a single organ failure (lungs)
and the absence of hemodynamic instability. - Caloric requirements
- 25 kcal/kg/day x 70 kg 1750 kcal/day
- Protein requirements
- 1.3 g/kg/day x 70 kg 91 g/day
26Q20A Nutritional support
- Harris-Benedict equations estimate basal caloric
requirements (protein, CHO, fat), modified by a
stress factor (usually approximately 20 for
ICU patients). - Men
- BMR 66 13.7(W) 5(H) - 6.8(A)
- Women
- BMR 655 9.6(W) 1.7(H) - 4.7(A)
- In this patient, estimated total energy needs by
H-B - BMR x 1.2 (655 672 267 306) x 1.2
- 1546 total calories (pro CHO
fat)
27Question 28A
- previously healthy 50 year old male
- sepsis
- fever (39.1oC)
- lethargic, poorly responsive
- normal CT brain
- normal CSF
28Question 28A
- Most likely EEG findings?
- Classic sleep-stage architecture with normal
distributions of non-REM and REM stages - Normal REM activity with circadian temperature
correlation and progressive duration in the
second half of the night - Distinguishable sleep transients such as sleep
spindles and K complexes interspersed throughout
the 24-hour circadian period - Slowing with intermittent theta and delta
waveforms and no definable sleep or wake periods
29Q28A Normal sleep architecture
- Five recognized sleep stages
- REM sleep muscle atonia, characteristic eye
mvmts, low-voltage mixed frequency EEG. No sleep
spindles or K-complexes. - Stage I low-voltage mixed frequency EEG no
sleep spindles, K-complexes, or delta waves. - Stage II mixed voltage/frequency EEG sleep
spindles, K-complexes delta waves
record. - Stage III/IV higher voltage/lower frequency EEG
sleep spindles, K-complexes delta waves 20 of
record.
30Q28A Normal sleep architecture
- REM sleep alternately cycles with non-REM sleep
every 90 minutes on average - Stage III/IV sleep most prominent during first
1/3 of sleep - REM sleep most prominent during last 1/3 of sleep
- Stage III/IV sleep is generally considered the
restorative sleep - Role of REM sleep uncertain, but may act in
memory and learning consolidation and/or serve a
memory housekeeping function
31Q28A Sleep in Critical Illness
- Four early studies looked at sleep in critical
illness - Richards K, Bairnsfather L. Heart Lung, 1988
- Broughton R, Baron R. Electroenceph Clin
Neurophysiol, 1978 - Aurell J, Elmquist D. BMJ, 1985
- Hilton B. J Adv Nurs, 1976.
32Q28A Sleep in Critical Illness
- Altered sleep architecture
- predominance of Stage I and II sleep
- decreased or absent Stage III, IV, and REM sleep
- shortened REM periods
- sleep fragmentation
- Abnormal sleep distribution
- up to 50 of total sleep time occurred during the
day
33Q28A Sleep in Critical Illness
- Freedman et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2001
- Studied critically ill patients with primarily
medical illnesses - Patients were excluded if heavily sedated, if
stuporous or comatose, or if prior history of
dementia
34Q28A Sleep in Critical Illness
- Freedman et al
- Abnormal sleep architecture
- predominance of stage I sleep
- decreased or absent stage II, III, IV, and REM
sleep - Sleep was equally distributed between day and
night
35Q28A Sleep in Sepsis
- Freedman et al
- Five patients had sepsis, and all had similar EEG
findings - low voltage mixed frequency EEG
- intermittent and variable amounts of theta and
delta waves - same EEG pattern present whether eyes were open
or closed - no evidence of definable sleep no sleep
spindles, K-complexes, or REM activity
36Q28A EEG in Sepsis Encephalopathy
- These findings are consistent with the EEG
abnormalities of sepsis-induced encephalopathy. - Young et al (J Clin Neurophysiol 1992).
37Question 55A
- 50 y/o male
- Altered mental status
- Livedo reticularis
- Acrocyanosis
- Chronic CHF due to idiopathic dilated
cardiomyopathy.
38Question 55A
- Temp 40c
- BP 95/60
- Hgb 10 g/dL
- Serum bicarb 10 mEq/L
- Venous lactate 3.6 mEq/L
- ABG pH 7.20, pCO2 24, pO2 60
- PA catheter
- PAOP 30 mmHg, C.O. 2 L/min
39Question 55A
- Most effective means of improving tissue
- hypoxia?
- Reducing body temp to 37c
- Increasing Hgb to 14.0 g/dL
- Increasing arterial pO2 to 120 mmHg
- Sodium bicarbonate to increase arterial pH to
7.45 - Dobutamine to increase C.O. to 3 L/min
40Q55A Oxygen delivery and consumption
- Oxygen delivery determined by
- rate of oxygen supply (C.O.)
- oxygen content of blood (Hgb, pO2)
- ease of release of oxygen from Hgb (pH, temp)
- Oxygen consumption determined by tissue demands
(metabolic rate, accumulated deficits) - temperature
- muscle activity
41Q55A pH and Temp effects on Hgb
- pH and temperature both have an effect of the
affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen. - Lower pH reduced oxygen affinity
- Higher temperature reduced oxygen affinity
- Thus lowering patients temp and increasing pH
would improve oxygen content of Hgb but reduce
its release at the tissue level (Hgb has higher
oxygen affinity). - These effects are generally small.
42Q55A Temperature effects on oxygen demand
- Lowering body temperature reduces oxygen
consumption by reducing metabolic rate. - This effect can be substantial, but are generally
unquantified.
43Q55A Oxygen Delivery
- DO2 CaO2 x CO x 10
- DO2 oxygen delivery
- CaO2 arterial oxygen content
- (1.34 x Hgb x SaO2) (0.0031 x PaO2)
- CO cardiac output
44Q55A Oxygen Delivery
- DO2
- (1.34 x Hgb x SaO2) (0.0031 x PaO2) x CO x 10
- Changes in Hgb, SaO2 and CO result in relatively
large proportional changes in oxygen content. - Changes in PaO2 result in relatively small
changes in oxygen content.
45Q55A Oxygen Delivery
- DO2
- (1.34 x Hgb x SaO2) (0.0031 x PaO2) x CO x 10
- An increase in Hgb from 10 g to 14 g results in a
40 increase in oxygen (content and) delivery. - An increase in CO from 2 L/min to 3 L/min results
in a 50 increase in oxygen delivery. - An increase in PaO2 from 60 torr to 120 torr
results in a negligible increase in oxygen
delivery.
46Question 58A
- 45 year old male
- small cell ca, undergoing treatment
- acute SOB and chest pain
- CXR tumor markedly reduced in size
- Hypoxemia, respiratory alkalosis
- large bilateral pulmonary emboli
47Question 58A
- morphine given for pain management
- pt develops respiratory failure and now needs
intubation/mechanical ventilation - Patient states he does not want heroic measures
despite reversibility of condition - appears mentally competent
48Question 58A
- What next?
- A. Administer addl morphine and oxygen
- B. Discontinue morphine
- C. Discontinue oxygen and other support
- D. Restrain patient and proceed with intubation
and mechanical ventilation - E. Obtain psychiatric consultation
49Q58A Patient Autonomy and End-of-Life
Decision-Making
- Current medical practice operates largely under
the Enhanced Patient Autonomy Model - It is a compromise between
- Paternalism (patient is a recipient of care).
- Patient independence (pure autonomy).
- There is collaborative decision-making
- Patient goals and values are identified.
- Physician knowledge and expertise is shared with
patient - Ultimately, a competent patient makes his/her own
decisions. - Patient comfort is always a priority
50Q58A Patient Autonomy and End-of-Life
Decision-Making
- The determination of competence does not
- usually require a psychiatric evaluation or
- court hearing.
51Question 20B
- 82 year old female nursing home resident
- bedridden
- aphasic following stroke 2 years ago
- contractures, decubitus ulcers
- apnea following aspiration of tube feedings
- complete heart block, HR 45 bpm
52Question 20B
- patients son states everything should be done
for her - admitted to ICU, temporary pacemaker placed
- develops progressive renal failure and
intermittent apneas with associated hypoxemia - son continues to insist that everything be done
for his mother
53Question 20B
- What next?
- Transfer patient to another hospital
- Ask the patients son for permission to implant a
permanent pacemaker, intubate, and perform
hemodialysis - Tell the son that more aggressive interventions
are unlikely to be of medical benefit and are not
advisable for his mother - Do not offer to implant a permanent pacemaker,
intubate, or perform hemodialysis, and tell the
son that everything is being done - Obtain a court order not to attempt resuscitation
for this patient
54Q20B Autonomy vs. Futility
- Few therapies or interventions are truly
physiologically futile. Rather, they may be of
only temporary benefit, or have a low probability
of success. - Patients or substitute decision-makers have the
right of autonomy, that is, the right to choose
among therapies and to refuse any treatment.
55Q20B Autonomy vs. Futility
- Given the clinical situation, the physician might
conclude that the primary goal in this situation
is non-maleficence, that is, do no harm. This
may translate into a desire to limit therapeutic
modalities that may prove of limited clinical
value but may cause additional pain or suffering. - If the physician takes this position, yet the
patient or substitute decision-maker wishes
aggressive therapy, then the principles of
patient autonomy and physician non-maleficence
are in conflict.
56Q20B Autonomy vs. Futility
- At this point, the physician has an obligation to
determine the basis of the sons treatment
requests. Once done, the following may occur - Education, clergy input, social services input,
and/or ethics committee consultation may prove
useful in modifying the sons understanding of
the situation and his choices for therapy. - Alternatively, the physician may move towards the
sons position.
57Q20B Autonomy vs. Futility
- Transfer to another facility or to another
physicians care should be considered only after
all other avenues have been exhausted and there
remains a conflict between the requested
treatment and the physicians ability to comply
with these requests on moral or ethical grounds.
58Q20B Autonomy vs. Futility
- The need to involve the courts in these matters
is rare. - During the time that attempts are being made to
resolve the conflict, it is the physicians
responsibility to continue to provide all
reasonable medical care, and to avoid abandoning
the patient and surrogate(s). - In addition, the physician must remain honest and
forthright with the patient/surrogate(s)
regarding the plan of care.
59Question 48B
- Which of the following contributes most to the
cost of care in the ICU? - (A) Personnel expenses
- (B) Pharmaceutical agents
- (C) Diagnostic testing facilities
- (D) Supplies
- (E) Admission and discharge control
60Q48B Cost control in the ICU
- ICUs have historically consumed disproportionate
amounts of hospital budgets. - Labor, capital, pharmaceutical, and supply costs
are high, and are likely to grow higher as the
general population ages, the nursing labor force
shrinks, salaries increase, and technology grows
in both power and scope.
61Q48B Cost control in the ICU
- ICU directors and managers must undertake careful
cost-benefit analyses and encourage the practice
of evidence-based medicine. - New drugs and technologies will be even more
expensive than todays options, yet may
ultimately prove cost-effective by reducing
morbidity and mortality, reducing errors, and
reducing the need for invasive procedures, and
reducing length of stay.
62Q48B Cost control in the ICU
- Historically, the three largest contributors to
ICU cost have been labor, capital expenses, and
pharmaceuticals and supplies, with labor
consistently leading the list. - Because of this, ICU nurse staffing has often
been the first area to feel the budgetary axe. - This has frequently proven counter-productive,
especially in terms of patient safety, quality of
care, and long term costs.
63Q48B Cost control in the ICU
- It is important that ICU directors and managers
view personnel costs in the context of a larger
picture of patient safety and quality of care.
64Question 50B
- 55 y/o previously healthy male
- Acute anterior MI
- Diaphoretic and lethargic
- HR 110/min
- BP 85/65 mmHg
- Crackles, no murmur
- Hgb 14 g/dL
- Urine output 20 mL/hr
65Question 50B
- Pulmonary artery catheter data
- Right atrial pressure 10 mmHg
- Pulmonary artery pressure 50/30 mmHg
- PAOP 25 mmHg
- C.I. 4.6 L/min/m2
- PaO2 65 torr
- PvO2 27 torr
66Question 50B
- Explain the findings?
- (A) Severe tricuspid regurgitation
- (B) Right-to-left shunt
- (C) Left-to-right shunt
- (D) Injectate volume for C.O. too large
- (E) Injectate volume for C.O. too small
67Q50B Hemodynamic Data Errors
- Question What is the clinical diagnosis?
- Answer Cardiogenic shock.
- Question Does the observed hemodynamic data
support the diagnosis? - Answer No.
- Question What is the problem?
- Answer Cardiac index is too high.
68Q50B Hemodynamic Data Errors
- Choice (A) Severe tricuspid regurgitation
- would cause high right atrial pressure, here
measured as normal. - would not cause high cardiac index.
69Q50B Hemodynamic Data Errors
- Choice (B) Right-to-left shunt
- would cause low PaO2, here measured as normal.
- may lower cardiac index
70Q50B Hemodynamic Data Errors
- Choice (C) Left-to-right shunt
- would cause high PvO2, here measured as low.
- could cause high right atrial pressures,
(depending upon location of shunt), here measured
as normal. - may lower cardiac index.
71Q50B Hemodynamic Data Errors
- Choice (D) Injectate volume too large
- Choice (E) Injectate volume too small
- Examine how the thermodilution cardiac output is
determined.
72Q50B Hemodynamic Data Errors
- Thermodilution cardiac output
- Thermister at tip of PA catheter dynamically
measure the decrease in blood temperature as a
known volume of injectate at known temperature
passes by. - The area under the injectate temperature curve
correlates with cardiac output. - Large area indicates low cardiac output
- injectate too large or too cool can mimic this
- Small area indicates high cardiac output
- injectate too small or too warm can mimic this
73Question 52B
- Continuous rotational (kinetic) bed therapy in
critically ill patients - Decreases the incidence of nosocomial pneumonia
in high-risk patients? - Decreases lower respiratory tract colonization by
resistant G(-) bacilli? - Decreases systemic oxygen consumption in septic
shock? - Increases systemic oxygen delivery in acute
respiratory failure? - Decreases incidence of ARDS in patients with two
or more risk factors?
74Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- Benefits and efficacy of kinetic bed therapy are
controversial. - Four large prospective, randomized, controlled
trials published to date evaluating benefits and
efficacy. - Three less powerful studies also published.
75Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- Fink et al, Chest 1990.
- 99 critically ill blunt trauma patients
- Significant decrease in lower respiratory tract
infection in treated patients as compared to
control group.
76Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- de Boisblanc et al, Chest 1993.
- 124 medical ICU patients
- Significant reduction in development of pneumonia
within the first five ICU days as compared to
control group.
77Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- Clemmer et al, Critical Care Med 1990.
- 40 critically ill severe head injury patients
- No advantages with rotational therapy over
conventional therapy - No significant difference in mortality, CNS
morbidity,hospital or ICU length of stay, or
pulmonary pathology.
78Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- Traver et al, Journal Critical Care 1995.
- 103 critically ill med/surg ICU patients
- No significant difference in ventilator days,
hospital length of stay, or incidence of
pneumonia. - Strong trend toward improved survival in treated
patients with APACHE II scores 20. Trend
appeared to be unrelated to pulmonary status.
79Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- Studies by
- Gentilello et al, Crit Care Med 1988.
- Whiteman et al, Am J Crit Care 1995.
- Kelley et al, Stroke 1987.
- Two found reduction in lower respiratory tract
infection with kinetic therapy no reduction in
morbidity or mortality. - One found a reduction in all hospital acquired
infections.
80Q52B Kinetic bed therapy
- No studies published to date have shown an
advantage with kinetic therapy in - preventing lower respiratory tract colonization
with antibiotic-resistant organism - improving oxygen delivery or consumption
- reducing the incidence of ARDS
81Question 54B
- Which statement is correct regarding measurement
of D-dimer? - ELISA is a more sensitive method than latex
agglutination. - Latex agglutination is a multiple-step method
that takes several hours to yield results. - Pulmonary embolism can be reliably excluded if
D-dimer level is normal by latex agglutination. - A D-dimer level above 500 ng/mL has a negative
predictive value of 99 for pulmonary embolism.
82Q54B Quantitative D-dimer and Thromboembolic
Disease
- Fibrin is the glue of blood clots, and is
stabilized through covalent cross-linking by the
action of activated Factor XIII. - Plasmin is an enzyme that lyses cross-linked
fibrin, releasing soluble fragments into the
plasma. One of these fragments is the D-dimer. - Because the coagulation process is a dynamic
balance between clot formation and clot lysis,
D-dimer levels serve as an indirect indicator of
thrombotic activity.
83Q54B Quantitative D-dimer and Thromboembolic
Disease
- Quantitative D-dimer assays have been shown to
have sufficient sensitivity to have a negative
predictive value for thromboembolic disease, and
can be used to exclude DVT and PE if levels are
normal and clinical suspicion is low. - On the other hand, if the D-dimer level is
elevated, a clotting process is documented.
However this finding is non-specific, and may
indicate either thromboembolic disease or other
clinical condition such as DIC, trauma,
pregnancy, cancer, post-surgery, etc.
84Q54B Quantitative D-dimer and Thromboembolic
Disease
- The enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) has
been shown to have a higher sensitivity than
latex agglutination, and thus is more reliable in
ruling out thromboembolic disease. - Latex agglutination has a higher specificity than
ELISA, thus more strongly predicts active
thrombolysis.
85Q54B Quantitative D-dimer and Thromboembolic
Disease
- The ELISA requires specialized equipment and
training, and the assay is time-consuming. - Latex agglutination is a rapid test that has been
evaluated for rapid screening of thromboembolic
disease. It is not sensitive enough as a single
test to exclude disease. - Some newer rapid immunofiltration tests have
shown relatively high reliability in excluding
thromboembolic disease. - Kline et al, Chest 2006
86Q54B Quantitative D-dimer and Thromboembolic
Disease
- The most commonly studied D-dimer cut-off value
for excluding thromboembolic disease is 500
ng/mL. Levels below this as measured by ELISA
virtually exclude DVT and PE when clinical
suspicion is low. - Rathbun et al, Chest 2004
- Druip et al, Ann Int Med 2003
- Stein et al, Ann Int Med 2004
87Question 60B
- 50 y/o male
- Severe pneumonia and respiratory failure
- Mechanical ventilation
- Extensive invasive monitoring in place
- Other monitoring tools available
- Sustains cardiac arrest, CPR initiated.
88Question 60B
- Which most useful in monitoring the adequacy of
circulatory support during CPR? - Blood pressure
- Arterial PO2
- Arterial PCO2
- PA systolic pressure
- End-tidal CO2
89Q60B Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
- The adequacy of circulation is correlated with
the adequacy of cardiac output and systemic blood
flow. - Cardiac output is determined mainly by heart rate
and the difference between right atrial and
aortic diastolic pressures.
90Q60B Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
- During CPR, the aorta and right atrium experience
the same intrathoracic pressures. Hence systemic
and pulmonary arterial pressures correlate poorly
with cardiac output during CPR, even during high
compression pressures.
91Q60B Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
- Even with the best CPR, cardiac output is
suboptimum. Metabolic by-products accumulate at
the tissue level, including lactic acid and CO2. - As cardiac output improves, lactic acid and CO2
are washed out of the tissues into the venous
circulation. These can be detected as elevated
arterial and venous lactate levels, and elevated
exhaled (end-tidal) CO2.
92Q60B Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
- Arterial PO2 and PCO2 do not reflect the adequacy
of cardiac output. - Arterial PO2 is a reflection of the adequacy of
oxygen exchange in the lungs, and is poorly
affected by oxygen flux at the tissue level. - Arterial PCO2 is a reflection of the adequacy of
carbon dioxide elimination in the lungs
(ventilation), and is not greatly affected by
carbon dioxide flux at the tissue level.
93Question 09R
- 30 y/o male
- Stab wound to chest with hemoptysis and
pneumothorax - Admitting physician comes across information that
the patient likely committed a serious crime
(murder) - Police arrive at hospital without court order or
search warrant
94Question 09R
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) permits release to police of which
patient information? - HIV status
- Results of DNA analysis
- Blood specimens for evidentiary purposes
- Name, type of injury, date and time of treatment,
and description of physical characteristics
95Q09R HIPAA
- In 1996 the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) was signed into law. - Set up Federally mandated health industry data
standards that were enacted to help reduce
healthcare costs.
96Q09R HIPAA
- The Privacy Rule section of HIPPA established
Federal protection of certain health information.
This protection included, in part, the adoption
of security and privacy standards appropriate for
individually identifiable healthcare information.
The Privacy Rule did not replace more strict
Federal and State laws that granted greater
privacy protections.
97Q09R HIPAA
- In 2002 the Privacy Rule was modified to allow
the flow of information needed to provide and
promote high quality health care and to protect
the publics health and well-being. - Current Privacy Rule protects all individually
identifiable health information that relates to - the individuals past, present, or future
physical or mental health or condition - the provision of healthcare to the individual
- the past, present, or future payment for the
provision of healthcare to the individual
98Q09R HIPAA
- The Privacy Rule also protects any information
for which can be used to identify the individual
(name, address, SS, birth date, etc.).
99Q09R HIPAA
- Exceptions to Privacy Rule
- When requested by the individual or their
personal representative - When requested by DHHS for compliance or
enforcement actions - To treatment, payment and Health Care Operations
- Public Interest and Benefit Activities
- Limited information for the purposes of research
or the public health. - Entities may rely upon professional ethics and
best judgment in decisions on disclosure - Written consent is not required for these
exceptions.
100Q09R HIPAA
- 12 Public Interest and Benefits exceptions
- As required by law
- Public Health activities
- Victims of abuse, neglect, or domestic violence
- Health oversight activities
- Judicial and administrative proceedings
- Law enforcement purposes
- Decedents
- Organ or tissue donation
- Research if IRB waiver
- Serious threat to health or safety of person or
public - Essential government functions
- Workers compensation
101Q09R HIPAA
- Law enforcement purposes (details)
- Court orders, subpoenas, warrants, etc.
- To identify or locate a suspect, fugitive,
material witness, or missing person - In response to law enforcement officials request
for information about a crime victim - When protected information is evidence of a crime
that occurred on the premises - By a covered health care provider in a medical
emergency not occurring on the premises and if
necessary to inform law enforcement about the
commission and nature of a crime, location of a
crime or crime victim(s), and the perpetrator of
the crime
102Question 12R
- Which central venous catheter site has the lowest
combined risk for infection and thrombosis? - Femoral vein
- Internal jugular vein
- Subclavian vein
103Q12R Complications of Central Venous Catheters
- Central venous catheters are associated with a
significant incidence of complications such as
local and blood stream infections, bleeding, and
thrombosis. - These complications can be minimized by using
appropriate catheters, insertion sites, insertion
techniques, and post-insertion site care. - The relative risks of infection and thrombosis
with respect to insertion site have been
evaluated in a number of clinical studies.
104Q12R Complications of Central Venous
Catheters
- Catheters inserted into the internal jugular vein
have been associated with a higher risk of
infection than those inserted into the subclavian
or femoral veins. - Mermel et al, Am J Med 1991
- Heard et al, Arch Int Med 1998
- Richet et al, J Clin Microbiol 1990
105Q12R Complications of Central Venous
Catheters
- Femoral venous catheters have shown relatively
high colonization rates in adult patients. - Goetz et al, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 1998
- Merrer et al, JAMA 2001
106Q12R Complications of Central Venous
Catheters
- Femoral venous catheters have been associated
with a higher risk of deep venous thrombosis than
with internal jugular or subclavian sites. - Merrer et al, JAMA 2001
- Joynt et al, Chest 2000
- Mian et al, Acad Emerg Med 1997
- Durbec et al, Crit Care Med 1997
- Trottier et al, Crit Care Med 1995
107Q12R Complications of Central Venous
Catheters
- Therefore, in adult patients the subclavian site
is preferred for central venous catheter
insertion because it has the lowest combined risk
for infection and thrombosis.
108Question 59R
- 51 y/o male
- 80 kg
- Ruptured diverticulum with colonic resection 5
days ago - Sepsis, MOSF
- Receiving standard enteral nutrition at 10 mL/hr
(has 1 kcal/mL)
109Question 59R
- What should you order next?
- Advance current nutrition preparation as
tolerated - Change to an enhanced preparation of glutamine,
arginine, antioxidant, and omega-3 fatty acids - Begin supplemental total parental nutrition
- Add daily parenteral administration of lipid
suspension
110Q59R Nutrition in the Critically Ill
- The early and adequate replacement of nitrogen
and caloric requirements by the enteral route in
critically ill patients has repeatedly been shown
to decrease morbidity (but not mortality). - Peter et al, Crit Care Med 2005
- Barr et al, Chest 2004
- Merik PE, Zaloga GP, Crit Care Med 2001
- In general, enteral nutrition is preferred over
parenteral nutrition because PN has been
associated with increased complications such as
catheter-related infection and thrombosis.
111Q59R Nutrition in the Critically Ill
- The risks of gastric aspiration can be minimized
by using prokinetic agents (metoclopramide), and
by keeping the HOB elevated 30. - Heyland et al, JPEN 2003
- Parenteral nutrition is acceptable when the
enteral route is unavailable.
112Q59R Nutrition in the Critically Ill
- Immunonutrition has not shown benefits in
critically ill patients, except in select groups
(such as burns). - Kieft et al, Intensive Care Med 2005
- Heyland et al, JAMA 2001
- Immunonutrition increased mortality in one study.
- Bertolini et al, Intensive Care Med 2003
113Q59R Nutrition in the Critically Ill
- Essential fatty acid and other lipid requirements
are generally satisfied by standard commercial
preparations. The use of intravenous lipid
supplements is therefore not necessary when the
enteral route is available.