Title: Respiratory Emergencies
1Respiratory Emergencies
- Eileen Humphreys PA-C, EMT-I
2Respiratory Cycle
- Inspiration
- Active process that uses contractions of several
muscles to increase the size of the chest cavity - Diaphragm lowers and ribs move up and out
- The expanding size of the chest cavity pulls air
in
3Respiratory Cycle
- Expiration
- Passive process that uses relaxation of muscles
to decrease chest cavity size and allow air to
move out - Diaphragm moves up and ribs move down and in
4Respiratory Cycle
- Oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged in the
alveoli and capillaries of the lungs as well as
the capillaries of the body - Critical to support life
5Respiratory Emergencies
- May be a result of head/neck/chest injuries
- Emotional distress
- Obstruction to the upper or lower respiratory
tract - Fluid or collapse of the alveoli
- Cardiac compromise
- Allergic reaction
6Respiratory Emergencies
- Dyspnea
- shortness of breath
- difficulty breathing
7Respiratory Emergencies
8Respiratory Emergencies
- Hypoxia
- inadequate supply of oxygen
9Bronchoconstriction
- Bronchioles of the lower airway are significantly
narrowed - Also called bronchospasm
- Usually results in wheezing
10Bronchoconstriction
- Can be opened up by use of a bronchodilator such
as Albuterol - Relaxes the bronchioles
- Called a Beta 2 agonist
11Respiratory Emergencies
- Scene size-up may give important clues
- Look for oxygen tanks,tubing, masks
12Initial Assessment
- General impression
- usually in a tripod position
- patient lying in a supine or reclining position
may be in mild distress or in such distress that
they have become too exhausted to stay upright
13Initial Assessment
- Frightened or confused facial expression may
indicate severe distress - Speech-usually limited or absent
- If speech is normal-airway is open and clear with
minimal distress
14Initial Assessment
- Restlessness, agitation, combativeness,
confusion, and unresponsiveness can be caused by
inadequate oxygenation to the brain
15Initial Assessment
- Listen for crowing, snoring, stridor, or gurgling
- Indicates partial airway obstruction
- Look for adequate rise and fall of chest,
exchange of oxygen, volume exchanged
16Initial Assessment
- Skin
- Cyanosis to the neck or chest indicates severe
respiratory distress
17Respiratory Emergencies
- All patients in respiratory distress are priority
transport - Decline very rapidly
18- SAMPLE history for responsive patients
- Use OPQRST to gather information of symptoms
19- Rapid trauma assessment for unresponsive patients
20Physical Exam
- Assess the skin for discoloration
- Assess the neck for tracheal deviation,
retractions, JVD (jugular venous distention) - Assess the chest for retractions of the
intercostal spaces, asymmetrical chest rise,
subcutaneous emphysema - Auscultate the lungs for equal breath sounds
21- Wheezing- musical sound caused by bronchospasm or
fluid in the lungs - Rhonchi-snoring or rattling sounds
- Crackles-bubbling or crackling noises heard on
inhalation. Associated with fluid and heard first
at bases
22Assessing Adequate Breathing
- Patient does not appear to be in distress
- Can speak in full sentences without stopping to
catch their breath - Color will be normal
- Mental status and orientation (person, place,
time) will be normal
23Assessing Adequate Breathing
- Rate
- Adult- 12 to 20 per minute-12
- Child- 15 to 30 per minute-20
- Infant-25 to 50 per minute-20
- Rhythm
- Regular and even
- Inspiration and expiration usually last about the
same length of time
24Assessing Adequate Breathing
- Quality
- Breath sounds will be present and equal
bilaterally - Both sides of chest should rise and fall equally
and adequately - Unlabored-should not require effort
25Treatment of Adequate Breathing
- If patient is breathing at a slightly abnormal
rate but it is adequate - 15 lpm via NRB
- Monitor closely
- Be on the lookout for beginnings of inadequate
breathing or respiratory arrest - Intervene quickly if condition worsens
26Assessing Inadequate Breathing
- Not adequate to support life and will progress to
death unless there is intervention - Rate-can be too fast or slow
- Agonal respirations-dying respirations which are
sporadic, irregular breaths seen just before
resp. arrest. Shallow, gasping - Rhythm-may be regular or irregular
27Assessing Inadequate Breathing
- Quality
- Breath sounds may be diminished or absent
- Depth (tidal volume) will be shallow, inadequate
- Chest expansion-may be unequal or inadequate
- Respiratory effort may be increased
28Assessing Inadequate Breathing
- Quality
- Accessory muscle use seen
- Skin may be pale or cyanotic
- Skin may be cool and clammy
- Snoring or gurgling in unresponsive patients or
patients with diminished responsiveness
29Treatment of Inadequate Breathing
- Inadequate breathing with abnormal rate
- Begin artificial ventilations with either the
pocket mask or BVM - Ventilate 12 times per minute for adults
- Ventilate 20 times per minute for
children/infants
30Treatment of Inadequate Breathing
- You may have to treat a patient with inadequate
breathing who is awake enough to fight artificial
ventilations - In this case contact medical direction and
transport immediately
31Patient Care for Inadequate Breathing
- If properly performed, pulse rate will return to
normal (in adults pulse usually increases in
resp. distress) - If pulse stays high re-evaluate the technique
- Color will return to normal if ventilations are
adequate
32Patient Care
- If pulse does not return to normal re-evaluate
airway, ventilations, O2 canister (empty), tubing
(kinked) - If chest does not rise or pulse does not return
to normal, increase ventilation force after
assuring proper technique
33Respiratory arrest
- Confirm unresponsiveness
- Open airway by jaw thrust or chin-lift
- Look, listen, feel for 3-5 seconds
- If not breathing
- Give 1 full breath lasting 2 seconds and allow
patient to exhale
34Respiratory arrest
- If the air goes in, give breaths every 5 seconds
with each breath lasting 2 seconds and allow to
passively exhale between breaths - If no air goes in, reposition head
- Check pulse frequently to monitor cardiac status
35COPD
- Chronic obstructed pulmonary disease
- Chronic Bronchitis
- Emphysema
36Chronic Bronchitis
- Usually has a productive cough for 3 months out
of the year for 2 years - Edema, inflammation and excessive mucus
production of the bronchioles/bronchi - Restricted air movement
- Gas exchange is compromised
- Retained CO2
37Chronic Bronchitis
- Overweight
- Productive cough
- Rhonchi
38Emphysema
- Loss of elasticity of the alveolar walls
- Distention of the sacs causing air trapping
- Air movement is restricted and patient retains
carbon dioxide
39Emphysema
- Thin, barrel chest
- Non-productive cough
- Prolonged exhalation
- Pursed lip breathing
- Wheezing and rhonchi
40Treatment of COPD
- Ensure open airway, adequate breathing,
supplemental oxygen, position of comfort
41Hypoxic Drive
- COPD patients
- Low levels of oxygen in the body stimulate
breathing - In theory too much oxygen can cause the body to
reduce or stop breathing - Usually occurs with high concentrations of O2
over 24 hours
42Hypoxic Drive
- Not normally a problem in prehospital
environments - Always give high flow oxygen to those who need it
43Asthma
- Reversible narrowing of the lower airways
- Edema, bronchospasm, and increased mucus
production - Mucus production block smaller airways and causes
air to be trapped in the alveoli
44Asthma
- Exhalation becomes difficult and patients must
force air out past constricted airways - This causes wheezing on exhalation
- Exhalation becomes an active process
45Asthma
- Lack of wheezing or lung sounds in a patient
suffering from an asthma attack is ominous - Status asthmaticus-prolonged attack which does
not respond to oxygen or medication
46Pneumonia
- Viral or bacterial disease infecting the lower
respiratory tract - Causes lung inflammation
- Poor gas exchange
47Pneumonia
- Signs/symptoms
- fever/chills
- cough
- dyspnea
- chest pain-localized, sharp, worse with breathing
- rhonchi/crackles
48Pulmonary Embolus
- Sudden blockage of blood flow through a pulmonary
artery or branches - Due to blood clot, air bubble, foreign body, fat
particle - Decrease in gas exchange
- Hypoxia
49Pulmonary Embolus
- Risk factors
- recent surgery
- prolonged immobilization
- multiple fractures
- thrombophlebitis
- chronic atrial fibrillation
- medications (OCPs)
50Pulmonary Embolus
- Suspect if sudden onset of unexplained dyspnea,
hypoxia, tachypnea, and stabbing chest pain - Will have normal breath sounds and adequate
volume
51Acute Pulmonary Edema
- Excessive amount of fluid between alveoli and
capillary space - Disturbs gas exchange
- Causes hypoxia
- Cardiogenic and non-cardiogenic
52Acute Pulmonary Edema
- Signs/symptoms
- dyspnea worse with exertion
- orthopnea
- blood tinged sputum
- tachycardia
- pale, moist skin
- swollen lower extremities
53Respiratory-Pediatric Patients
- Remember the most common cause of cardiac
problems in pediatrics is---??? - Respiratory intervention must begin quickly and
be monitored at all times - Know the difference in structures from adults
54Inadequate Pediatric Breathing
- Early signs
- accessory muscle use
- retractions
- tachypnea
- tachycardia
55Inadequate Pediatric Breathing
- nasal flaring
- coughing
- cyanosis to the extremities
- grunting (Bad Bad Sign)-seen in infants during
exhalation signaling imminent failure
56Pediatric Respiratory Failure
- Altered mental status
- Pulse rises early then drops fast
- Bradycardia
- Hypotension
- Irregular breathing pattern
57Pediatric Respiratory Failure
- Seesaw pattern-abdomen and chest move in
different directions - Limp appearance
- Head bobbing with each breath
58Pediatric Problems
- Distinguish whether the airway problem is upper
or lower
59Pediatric Problems
- Stridor and crowing indicate upper airway
obstruction - Usually due to edema or foreign body obstruction
- Wheezing is sign of lower airway problem
60Epiglottis
- Inflammation of the epiglottis
- History of sore throat, fever, stridor
- Child sits upright leaning forward, sits the neck
out, drooling - Life-threatening emergency
- Do not inspect the airway as bronchospasm may
completely obstruct the airway
61Croup
- Swelling of the larynx, trachea, and bronchi
- Sore throat and fever worse at night
- Seal-like cough
- Cool night air usually helps
62Patient Care-Pediatrics
- Monitor airway and breathing constantly
- Nothing is more important than adequate airway
care - Ensure adequate breathing
- Intervene quickly and appropriately when
necessary - If in doubt-Treat as inadequate breathing
63Patient Care-Pediatrics
- If pulse remains low or breathing inadequate
re-evaluate airway, ventilations, O2 canister
(empty), tubing (kinked) - If chest does not rise or pulse does not return
to normal, increase ventilation force after
ensuring proper technique
64Treatment
- Oxygen is a drug
- It must be administered correctly and monitored
65MDIs
- Metered dose inhalers
- Delivers a precise dose of medication each time
canister is depressed
66MDIs
- Bronchodilators
- Albuterol- Proventil, Ventolin
- Atrovent
- Serevent
- Steroids
- Vanceril
- Aerobid
- Azmacort
67MDIs
- Before using
- patient must have signs symptoms of breathing
difficulty - has a physician prescribed MDI
- approval from medical control
68Contraindications
- Not responsive enough to follow directions
- Medication out of date
- Not prescribed for the patient
- Permission not granted by medical control
- Patient has already taken the maximum allowed
dose prior to arrival
69Administration
- Check name of medicine, date, and name prescribed
to - Obtain medical control order
- Shake canister for 30 seconds
70Administration
- Have patient
- exhale fully
- wrap lips around opening
- inhale slowly as you depress canister (5 seconds)
- hold breathe for 10 seconds
- exhale slowly
71MDIs
- Side effects include
- tachycardia
- arrhythmia
- anxiety
- nervousness