One Lung Ventilation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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One Lung Ventilation

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Title: One Lung Ventilation


1
One Lung Ventilation
  • Llalando L. Austin II, MHSc, AA-C, RRT
  • Nova Southeastern University

2
Objectives
  • Describe One Lung Ventilation
  • Understand the methods for securing one lung
    ventilation
  • Learn the indications and contraindications for
    each procedure
  • Understand hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
    (HPV)
  • Understand commonly associated surgical
    procedures that require one lung ventilation
  • Common techniques and supplies for one lung
    ventilation
  • Understand the case setup and patient preparation
    for the procedure

3
(No Transcript)
4
Thoracotomy
5
Thoracotomy with Lung Deflated
6
VATS
7
VATS
8
VATS
9
What is One Lung Ventilation (OLV)?
  • It is the intentional collapse of a lung on the
    operative side of the patient which facilitates
    most thoracic procedures.
  • Requires much skill of the anesthesia team
  • Difficult to place lung isolation equipment
  • Ability to overcome hypoxic pulmonary
    vasoconstriction
  • Patient population is comparably sicker

10
Definition of Terms
  • Dependent Lung or Down Lung
  • The lung that is ventilated
  • Non-dependent Lung or Up Lung
  • The lung that is collapsed to facilitate the
    surgery

11
Methods of Lung Separation
  • Bronchial blockers
  • Single-lumen tracheal tubes w/ a bronchial
    blocker (Univent)
  • Arterial embolectomy catheter (ie Fogarty)
  • Single-lumen endobronchial tubes
  • Gordon-Green tube (carinal hook)
  • Double-lumen endobronchial tubes
  • Robert-Shaw (R or L), Carlens (R), White (L)
  • Carlens and White both have carinal hooks
  • From 35Fr to 41Fr (35, 37, 39, 41)
  • 26Fr smallest size
  • Used for children as young as 8 years
  • 28Fr and 32Fr used for pediatric patients 10 and
    older

12
Double Lumen Tubes
13
Patient Monitoring Considerations
  • Direct arterial catheterization (a-line)
  • essential for nearly all thoracic cases
  • Allows for beat-to-beat blood pressure analysis
  • Sampling for determination of ABG
  • Central venous pressure monitoring (central line)
  • essential for measuring right atrial and right
    ventricular pressures
  • Useful in monitoring
  • large volume shifts
  • hypovolemia
  • need for vasoactive drugs
  • Pulmonary artery catheterization
  • left sided filling pressures, cardiac output
  • Calculation of derived hemodynamic and
    respiratory parameters and clinical use of
    Starling curve
  • Most PA catheters (more than 90) float to and
    locate in the right lung due to increased
    pulmonary blood flow
  • Create inaccurate reading for R thoracotomies

14
Patient Monitoring Considerations
  • Oxygenation and Ventilation
  • Monitoring inspired oxygen
  • Sampling of arterial blood for ABGs
  • Pulse oximetry
  • Transcutaneous oxygen tension
  • for neonates
  • Qualitative signs
  • chest expansion
  • observation of reservoir bag
  • auscultation of breath sounds
  • EtCO2 measurement, capnograph

15
Indications for One-Lung Ventilation
  • Absolute
  • Isolation of one lung from another to prevent
    spillage or contamination (infection, massive
    hemorrhage)
  • Control of distribution of ventilation
  • Bronchopleural fistula
  • Surgical opening of major conducting airway
  • Unilateral bronchopulmonary lavage
  • Ex pulmonary alveolar proteinosis

16
Indications for One-Lung Ventilation
  • Relative
  • Surgical exposure- high priority
  • Thoracic aortic aneurysm
  • Pneumonectomy
  • Upper lobectomy
  • Surgical exposure- lower priority
  • Middle lobe lobectomies
  • Esophageal resection
  • Thoracoscopy
  • Thoracic spine procedures
  • Post-removal of totally-occluding chronic
    unilateral pulmonary emboli

17
Double Lumen Endobronchial Tubes
18
Double Lumen Endobronchial Tubes
19
Advantages
  • Relatively easy to place
  • Allow conversion back and forth from OLV to
    two-lung ventilation
  • Allow suctioning of both lungs individually
  • Allow CPAP to be applied to the non-dependent
    lung
  • Allow PEEP to be applied to the dependent lung
  • Ability to ventilate around scope in the tube

20
Disadvantages
  • Cannot take patient to PACU or the Unit
  • Must be changed out for a regular ETT if post-op
    ventilation
  • Correct positioning is dependent on appropriate
    size for height of patient
  • Length of trachea

21
DLT Placement
  • Prepare and check tube
  • Ensure cuff inflates and deflates
  • Lubricate tube
  • Insert tube with distal concave curvature facing
    anteriorly
  • Remove stylet once through the vocal cords
  • Rotate tube 90 degrees (in direction of desired
    lung)
  • Advancement of tube ceases when resistance is
    encountered. Average lip line is 29 2 cm.
  • If a carinal hook is present, must watch hook go
    through cords to avoid trauma to them.

22
DLT Placement
  • Check for placement by auscultation
  • Inflate tracheal cuff- expect equal lung
    ventilation
  • Clamp the white side (marked "tracheal" for
    left-sided tube) and remove cap from the
    connector
  • Expect some left sided ventilation through
    bronchial lumen, and some air leak past bronchial
    cuff, which is not yet inflated
  • Slowly inflate bronchial cuff until minimal or no
    leak is heard at uncapped right connector
  • Go slow- it only requires 1-3 cc of gas and
    bronchial rupture is a risk
  • Remove the clamp and replace the cap on the
    tracheal side
  • Check that both lungs are ventilated
  • Selectively clamp each side, and expect visible
    chest movement and audible breath sounds only on
    the right when left is clamped, and vice versa

23
DLT Placement
  • Checking tube placement with the fiberoptic
    bronchoscope
  • Several situations exist where auscultation
    maneuvers are impossible (patient is prepped and
    draped), or when they do not provide reliable
    information (preexisting lung disease so that
    breath sounds are not very audible, or if the
    tube is only slightly malpositioned)
  • The double-lumen tube's precise position can be
    most reliably determined with the fiberoptic
    bronchoscope
  • In patients with double-lumen tubes whose
    position seemed appropriate to auscultations, 48
    had some degree of malposition. So always check
    position with fiberoptic
  • After advancing the fiberoptic scope thru the
    tracheal tube you should see the bronchial
    blue balloon in a semi lunar shape, just peeking
    out of the bronchus

24
DLT Placement
25
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
26
Advantages
  • Quickly and precisely navigate the airway
  • The guide wire loop couples the pediatric
    fiberoptic bronchoscope and the wire-guided
    endobronchial blocker
  • yet both remain able to move independently of
    each other and the pediatric fiberoptic
    bronchoscope may navigate the airway independent
    of its role in carrying the endobronchial blocker
  • The pediatric bronchoscope acts as a guide,
    allowing the endobronchial blocker to be advanced
    over it into the correct position
  • In addition, the wire-guided endobronchial
    blocker allows one-lung ventilation with a
    single-lumen endotracheal tube
  • Thus, one-lung ventilation is not dependent on
    installing a special device in the airway, such
    as a double-lumen tube or a Univent endotracheal
    tube
  • Allows one-lung ventilation in the critically ill
    patient in whom reintubation may be difficult or
    impossible and in patients with a known difficult
    airway requiring fiberoptic intubation with a
    conventional endotracheal tube
  • Unnecessary to convert from a conventional
    double-lumen endotracheal tube to a single-lumen
    tube at the end of surgery

27
Disadvantages
  • Satisfactory bronchial seal and lung separation
    are sometimes difficult to achieve
  • The blocked lung collapses slowly (and
    sometimes incompletely)
  • The balloon may become dislodged during surgery
    and enter the trachea proper, causing a complete
    airway obstruction
  • In situations of acute increases in airway
    pressure, the endobronchial blocker balloon
    should be immediately deflated and the blocker
    re-advanced
  • It will then re-enter the correct segment (as the
    tip remains in the correct bronchus and only the
    proximal balloon portion has entered the trachea)
  • In this case, a pediatric fiberoptic bronchoscope
    should be re-introduced into the airway and the
    balloon re-positioned
  • In order to prevent barotrauma, the initial
    balloon inflation volume should not be exceeded
  • It is important that the balloon be fully
    deflated when not in use and only be re-inflated
    with the same volume used during positioning and
    bronchoscopy.

28
Indications for Wire-Guided Endobronchial
Blockers vs. DLT
  • Critically ill patients
  • Rapid sequence induction
  • Known and unknown difficult airway
  • Postoperative intubation
  • Small adult and pediatric patients
  • Obese adults

29
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
30
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
31
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
  • Available sizes
  • Adult 9 Fr
  • Pediatric 5 Fr

32
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
33
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
34
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
35
Wire-Guided Endobronchial Blockers
36
Fogarty Embolectomy Catheters
37
Fogarty Embolectomy Catheter
  • Single-lumen balloon tipped catheter with a
    removable stylet
  • In the parallel fashion, the Fogarty catheter is
    inserted prior to intubation
  • In the co-axial fashion, the Fogarty catheter is
    placed through the endotracheal tube
  • Both techniques require fiberoptic bronchoscopy
    to direct the Fogarty catheter into the correct
    pulmonary segment
  • Once the catheter is in place, the balloon is
    inflated, sealing the airway
  • Clinical limitations to the Fogarty technique
  • Difficult to direct and cannot be coupled to a
    fiberoptic bronchoscope
  • No accessory lumen for either removal of gas from
    the blocked segment or insufflation of oxygen to
    reverse hypoxemia
  • Ventilate w/ 100 O2 prior to balloon inflation
    to aid in gas removal

38
Univent Tubes
39
Univent Tubes
  • Endotracheal intubation can be performed in the
    conventional manner, just like a single lumen
    endotracheal tube
  • One-lung ventilation can be achieved by placement
    of the blocker to either the left or right lung,
    or to lung segments
  • Insufflation and CPAP can be achieved through the
    lumen of the blocker shaft
  • Blocked lung can be collapsed by aspirating air
    through the lumen of the blocker shaft
  • The blocker can be retracted into its pocket to
    facilitate post-operative ventilation
  • Improved "torque control" bronchial blocker-
    Easier to direct by twisting than previous nylon
    catheter- High torque control malleable shaft
    for smooth intubation- Flexible blocker shaft
    with softer open lumen tip- Latex-free

40
Comparison of Various Tube Diameters
41
Complications of One Lung Ventilation
  • All difficult airway complications
  • Injury to lips, mouth, teeth
  • Injury to airway mucosa from stylet
  • Bronchial Rupture
  • Decreased saturation
  • HPV
  • Inability to isolate lung

42
Complications - Bronchial Rupture
43
Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction
  • Hypoxia is a powerful stimulus for pulmonary
    vascular constriction
  • Bodys mechanism to divert blood flow away from
    areas of no ventilation to areas of ventilation
  • Vasoconstriction that decreases blood flow from
    alveoli that are not ventilated to alveoli that
    are ventilated
  • Bodys way to decrease the shunt that was created
    by change
  • Position
  • V/Q mismatch

44
HPV
  • Bodys compensatory mechanism for hypoxia
  • Clinical Notes
  • Direct acting vasodilators inhibit HPV response
  • Volatile agents at higher concentrations inhibit
    HPV response
  • No HPV
  • Increases shunt
  • Decreases PaO2

45
Management of Hypoxia in One Lung Ventilation
  • 100 FIO2
  • 10 mL/kg tidal volume
  • Do not change the tidal volume from 2 lung
    ventilation
  • Maintain normocapnia
  • Maintain correct tube position
  • Suction both lungs
  • Apply PEEP to dependant lung
  • Apply CPAP to non-dependant lung
  • Re-inflate collapsed lung at various intervals
  • Extreme cases
  • Clamp the pulmonary artery to collapsed lung

46
Case Setup for DLT OLV
  • MSMAID
  • Preferred blade and handle
  • Airway Have standard supplies assortment of
    sizes for DLT or other OLV choice equipment
  • Fiberoptic cart
  • Hemostats or clamps to clamp off lumens of the
    tube
  • Suction!!

47
References
  • http//ourworld.cs.com/_ht_a/doschk/onelung.htm
  • Finucane and Santora
  • Morgan and Mikhail
  • Barash, Cullen, Stoelting
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