Title: Paramedic Curriculum Update
1Paramedic Curriculum Update
- Condell Medical Center EMS System
- Continuing Education
- August 2004
- Site Code 107200E1204
2Purpose of Curriculum Update
- Early EMS training included minimal hours with
minimal information - Change in Standard of Care - EMS provider now
responsible for increased knowledge base - more
in-depth information needed to understand disease
process more treatments and interventions being
performed in the field
3Process to Provide Curriculum Update
- 40 hours of information is to be conveyed to all
licensed paramedics over the next several years - This information will be incorporated during
routine CE programs offered by CMC - Each paramedic is responsible for completing
their resource hospital requirements
4- Completing the curriculum update will be the
responsibility of each individual EMT-P - CMC EMS office will be keeping records of
material completion - All components of the curriculum update are
mandatory - CMC will offer additional pertinent information
during the roll out of the curriculum update
sessions as dictated by needs of the CMC system
5Curriculum Update Content
- What can you expect?
- Material developed differs in length and depth of
content - Most of the material will not be an in-depth
review of the subject material - Update material is meant to fill in the blanks
of material not covered in previous training
curriculums
6- CMC is starting to roll-out the paramedic
curriculum update (also previously referred to as
the bridge course) - Todays session begins with updates in
Pathophysiology and Pharmacology - Activities will be incorporated into CE that will
enhance learning the updated material - We want to acknowledge representatives of NIEMSCA
who have prepared the bulk of the rollout
material - So, let us begin...
7General Principles of Pathophysiology
8Pathophysiology
- Understanding disease process is important for
the EMS provider to better understand,
anticipate, correct, and provide appropriate care.
9The Cell
- Fundamental unit of living things
- Building blocks
- Carries out bodys basic functions
- Human body composed of 100 trillion cells
- Cells are specialized to perform
specific functions such as - Heart cells
- Blood cells
- Muscle cells
10Building BlocksStructural Hierarchy of Body
Cell Tissue Organ Organ System
Human Body
11Homeostasis
- The human body is a dynamic organization where
cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems perform
functions essential for preservation of the
organism - The body has a natural tendency to keep the
internal environment and metabolism steady and
normal
12The Cell
- Each cell consists of specialized cell parts
called organelles. - The organelles are
bathed in a jelly like
material called
cytoplasm that gives - shape to cells
13All cells require various key components and
structures
14Major Functions of Cells
- Movement - skeletal, smooth, cardiac cell
- Conductivity - nerve cell
- Metabolic absorption - take in nutrients
- Secretion - performed by glands
- Excretion - nutrient break down
- Respiration - cells need to take in oxygen
- Reproduction - new tissue growth, healing of
wounds
15CELLULAR ENERGY
- ATP (Adenosine triphosphate)
- Common energy currency of cells
- ATP essential to all metabolic processes of cell
- Cells spend ATP when they require energy
- Cellular stores of ATP used up faster than they
can be replaced when - steps in process of glucose breakdown for energy
stops - oxygen levels in the body are low
16CELLULAR ENERGYAerobic Metabolism(in presence
of oxygen)
Glucose Oxygen Water Carbon Dioxide
Energy C6H12O6 6O2 6H2O 6CO2 ATP
(36 units) Primary source of energy for cells
is glucose energy provided after glucose taken
into and broken down in cell. Energy yielded is
higher if produced in the presence of oxygen.
17CELLULAR ENERGYAnaerobic Metabolism(without the
presence of oxygen)
- Glucose Lactate Acid Energy (2 units ATP)
- ? acidic levels of blood reduces
effectiveness of body functions
18Acid Destroys Cell Membranes
19Anaerobic Metabolism
- Cells will convert from normal processes and
break down fats and proteins to get energy - Use of fats proteins contributes to failure of
cells - Breakdown of proteins produces ammonia and urea
(toxic to cells) - Protein stores in body become depleted leading to
organ failure
20Cellular and Tissue Death
- In presence of harmful acids (primarily lactic
acid) - cell its organelles swell
- cells begin to breakdown
- cell membrane ruptures releasing harmful agents
into extracellular environment (outside the cell)
- cellular injury progresses from reversible to
irreversible and cell tissue death occurs
21Impaired Use of Oxygen Glucose
- Cellular death
-
- Tissue death
-
- Organ failure
-
- Death of
the person
22Tissue Types
- Tissue refers to a group
- of cells that perform
- similar functions.
- 4 basic types
- Epithelial
- Connective
- Muscle
- Nervous
23Epithelial Tissue
- Lines internal and external body surfaces
- Protects the body
- Some have specialized functions secretion,
absorption, diffusion, filtration - Examples skin, mucous membranes, lining of
intestinal tract
24Connective Tissue
- Most abundant tissue in body
- Provides support, connection, and insulation
- Examples bones, cartilage, fat
25Muscle Tissue
- Have capability to contract when stimulated
- Three types
- cardiac muscle - unique capability of spontaneous
contraction without external stimulation - smooth muscle - found within intestines and
around blood vessels generally under involuntary
control of nervous system - skeletal muscle - most abundant muscle type,
allows movement mostly voluntary control
26Nervous Tissue
- Specialized to transmit electrical impulses
throughout body - Examples brain , spinal cord, and peripheral
nerves
27Alterations In Cells and Tissues
- Cells try to maintain homeostasis - a constantly
balanced environment - Cellular adaptation
- Cells adapt to their environment to avoid and
protect themselves from injury - Adaptation may be a common response (ie growth
of uterus in pregnancy) as well as a part of a
response to a disease state
28Cellular Adaptation
- Atrophy- a decrease in cell size
- Hypertrophy- an increase in cell size
- Hyperplasia- excessive multiplying of normal
cells usually a response to ? workload - Dysplasia- abnormal development of tissue
- Metaplasia- conversion of one kind of tissue into
a form that is not normal for that tissue (ie
effects on respiratory tract from smoking)
29Mechanics of Cellular Injury
- Hypoxic injury - oxygen deficiency
- Chemical injury - common esp in kids
- Infectious injury
- Immunologic and inflammatory disease
- Genetic factors - ie sickle cell disease
- Nutritional imbalances
- Physical agents - temp variances, radiation,
noise, mechanical stresses, illumination (ie UV
rays)
30Systemic Manifestations Of Cellular Injury
- Fever
- Malaise - sense of feeling ill
- Loss of well-being
- Altered appetite
- Altered heart rate
- Leukocytosis (? white blood cells)
- Pain
- Cellular enzymes may be present in
extracellular fluid from injured cells or tissue
31Cellular Death/Necrosis
- A cell dies if it has been irreparably damaged
- Shortly after cell death, structural changes
begin to occur within the nucleus and cytoplasm
32Necrosis
- Death of cells or tissues through injury or
disease - Different types of necrosis tend to occur in
different organs or tissues - Necrotic changes take several hours to develop
- Necrotic changes are irreversible
33Acid-Base Balance
- A dynamic relationship in the body (always
changing) - Reflects the relative concentration of hydrogen
ions (H) in the body - Deviation in the H concentration in the body
adversely affects all biochemical events in the
body - Acid/base concentration in body measured by pH
scale (? pH below 7.35acidosis ?pH above
7.45alkalosis)
34Acid-Base Regulation
- Bicarbonate buffer system components
- bicarbonate ion (HCO3-)
- carbonic acid (H2CO3)
- H HCO3- H2CO3 H2O
CO2 - hydrogen bicarbonate carbonic
water carbon - ion ion
acid dioxide
35CARBONIC ACID
- A weak acid that is easily eliminated by an
enzyme called carbonic anhydrase - Carbonic anhydrase breaks down carbonic acid
into water and carbon dioxide - Carbonic anhydrase can work in the reverse order
too
ACID
36Acid-Base Problems
- Respiratory acidosis - (pH?) retention of CO2 tx
aimed at improving ventilation - Respiratory alkalosis - (pH ?) excessive
elimination of CO2 from increased ventilation tx
is to coach patient to reduce respiratory rate - Metabolic acidosis - (pH?) production of
metabolic acids or loss of bicarbonate ion
(diarrhea, vomiting) tx is to increase
ventilation (eliminate CO2) tx underlying cause - Metabolic alkalosis - (pH ?) usually caused by
diuretics, prolonged vomiting tx underlying cause
37ACID-BASE BALANCE
H HCO-3 H2CO3 H2O
CO2 Respiratory system eliminates excess
carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O)
Kidneys eliminates excess hydrogen ion (H),
water (H2O) and Bicarbonate (HCO-3)
38Factors Causing Disease
- May be classified as genetic or environmental
- Environmental factors act differently on
different people - Family history of disease may not actually be
genetic as families share environments and
life-styles that may contribute to the disease
more than family history
39Disease Risk
- Familial disease tendency -
- can still modify risk factors
- to prevent, delay, reduce
- impact of the disease
- Aging and age-related
disorders - witness - cumulative effects of
- genetics environment
-
-
40Environmental Causes of Disease
- Nutrition Obesity
- Physical Inactivity
- Stress
- Alcohol consumption smoking
- Environmental influence - air quality,
sanitation, disease-carrying insects, sunlight - Bacterial infection may play a role in some
diseases
41Common Familial Diseases
- Immunologic disorders
- Allergies - exposure to allergens
- Asthma - variety of triggering factors stimuli
- Rheumatic fever - inflammatory reaction to
infection - Cancer
- Breast - greatest risk factor is age (majority
occur gt60) - Colorectal - risk factors include age (risk rises
after 40) and gender (men gt women) - Lung - causes are overwhelmingly environmental
(ie smoking)
42Common Familial Diseases
- Endocrine disorders
- Diabetes type I and II - leading cause of
blindness, heart disease, kidney failure,
premature death - Hematologic disorders
- Hemophilia-clotting
- deficiency
- Hematochromatosis- ?
- iron accumulation in body
- Drug induced hemolytic
- anemia-RBCs destroyed
43Common Familial Diseases
- Cardiovascular
- Prolonged QT interval-delay between
depolarization repolarization of ventricles
causing unstable dysrhythmias - Mitral valve prolapse-blood easily regurgitates
into atrium - Coronary artery disease
- plaque build up on wall of coronary arteries
- risk factors diet, activity, hypertension,
stroke, congenital disease - Hypertension and Stroke-also risk for kidney
disease - Cardiomyopathies- disease affecting heart muscle
usually not genetic
44Common Familial Diseases
- Renal Disorders- Failure primarily from
hypertension - Gout-? level uric acid in body
- Kidney stones
- Gastrointestinal disorders
- Lactose intolerance-? lactase
- to break down lactose
- Ulcerative colitis- large
- intestine inflamed,
- ulcers develop
- Crohns disease- chronic
- inflammation of intestine
45Gastrointestinal Disorders Continued
- Peptic ulcers- normal protective structures
mechanisms break down stomach duodenum become
inflamed - Cholecystitis- inflammation of gallbladder
usually from blockage by gallstones - Obesity - defined as being more than 20 over
your ideal body weight
46Common Familial Diseases
- Neuromuscular
- Huntingtons disease - uncontrollable jerking
- Muscular dystrophy- progressive muscle weakness
- Multiple sclerosis - affects nerves (eyes, brain,
spinal cord) - Alzheimer disease - progressive mental
deterioration - Psychiatric disorders
- Schizophrenia - loses contact with reality
- Manic-depressive - bipolar disorder depression
mania
47Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS)
- Progressive failure of two or more organ systems
after a very severe illness or injury - Mortality rate 60-90
- Risk factors age gt65, malnutrition, preexisting
chronic disease - Clinical presentation is a downward spiral over a
period of time (ie weeks)
48Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS)
- Causes
- Trauma
- Burns
- Surgery
- Circulatory shock
- Acute pancreatitis
- Acute renal failure
- Most common causes sepsis septic shock
49Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS)
- Pathophysiology
- Injury occurs or there is release of an endotoxin
- Vascular endothelial damage (lining of blood
vessels, heart, various body cavities) - Neuroendocrine response (catecholamine release)
- Release of inflammatory mediators
- Activation of complement, coagulation,
kallikrein/kinin systems
50Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS)
- Pathophysiology continued
- Maldistribution of systemic and organ blood flow
- Hypermetabolism
- Oxygen supply/demand imbalance
- Tissue hypoxia
- Organ dysfunction
51MODS Cascade of Responses
- Increased vasodilation
- Vasopermeability
- Cardiovascular instability
- Endothelial damage
- Clotting abnormalites
52Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS)
- Cellular metabolism impairment
- Anaerobic metabolism
- Increased lactate
- Metabolic acidosis
- Decreased ATP (energy)
- Changes in cellular electrolytes
- Cellular edema
- Release of lysosomal enzymes
- Impaired glucose use
53Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS)
- Treatment goals
- Decrease O2 demands - decrease stress prevent
infections promote wound healing treat fever,
anxiety, shivering and pain - Increase O2 supply - Adequate ventilation,
support blood pressure, monitor urine output,
positive inotropic medications to support
contractility of heart (ie dopamine) - Nutrition for energy source
- Medication to support body functions
- Best defense is early recognition and early
intervention of supportive measures
54Inflammation
- The acute inflammatory response
- Triggered by
- Lethal cellular injury
- Non-lethal cellular injury
- Other microorganisms
55Functions of Inflammation
- Destroy and remove unwanted substances
- Wall off infected and inflamed areas
- Stimulate immune response
- Promote healing
56Mast Cells Activate Inflammation Through 2
Functions
- ? Degranulation - mast cells stimulated to move
into extracellular environment by - physical injury
- chemical agents
- immunologic responses direct processes
- Histamine serotonin released - influences blood
flow to injured site - Chemotaxis occurs - white cells attracted to site
572nd Function of Mast Cells For Activation of
Inflammation
- ? Synthesis - 2 substances constructed
- leukotrienes - cause vasoconstriction, vascular
permeability, chemotaxis (white cells to site) - prostaglandins - also increases vasoconstriction,
vascular permeability, chemotaxis. Additionally
cause pain to site, act to control inflammation
by suppressing release of histamine from mast
cells suppressing release of lysosomal
(digestive) enzymes from white cells
58Systemic Responses of Acute Inflammation
- Fever
- Leukocytosis - ? WBCs for fighting infection
- Increase in circulating plasma proteins or
acute-phase reactants - - act to inhibit and
- control inflammatory
- response
59Chronic Inflammatory Responses
- Defined as inflammation gt 2 weeks
- Causes
- Foreign body still in body
- Persistence of infection or antigen
- Characteristics
- Persistence of acute inflammation response
- Neutrophils 1st at injured site degranulate and
die - Lymphocyte and fibroblast activation - necessary
for wound healing - Pus formation - dead cells, dead tissue, tissue
fluid - Tissue repair possible scar formation final
stage
60Deficiencies in Immunity and Inflammation
- Congenital immune deficiencies - impaired
development of lymphocytes (type of WBC) - Acquired deficiencies - developed after birth
immune function affected by - Nutritional deficiencies
- Iatrogenic deficiencies - insult caused by
medical treatment (ie meds, spleenectomy) - Traumatic injuries destroying normal function
- Emotional stress
- AIDS - acquired immune deficiency disorder
61Stress Response
- During stressful events, there is a complex
interaction between nervous, endocrine, and
immune systems - Physiological stress - events affect body
- Psychological stress - unpleasant emotions
- Variety of hormones released in response
- catecholamines - ACTH
- cortisol - prolactin
- beta-endorphins - testosterone
- growth hormone
62Neuroendocrine Regulation Triggered by Response
to Stress
- Catecholamines (hormones) released when
sympathetic nervous system activated - Epinephrine (adrenalin)
- Norepinephrine (noradrenalin)
- Above hormones carried throughout body
- Above hormones act on hormone receptors to
prepare body to deal with stressful event
63Autonomic Nervous SystemControls involuntary
automatic functions.Two divisions that work
antagonistically
- Sympathetic NS
- Dominates during stress
- Fight or Flight
- Mobilizes the body
- Allows the body
- to function
- under stress
- Parasympathetic NS
- Dominates during rest
- Feed or Breed
- Conservation of body resources
- Restoration of
- body resources
64Sympathetic ReceptorsReceptors located around
body when stimulated cause response in organ or
organs they control. Types of receptors
- Alpha 1 receptors
- Located in vascular smooth muscle
- Causes peripheral vasoconstriction - increases
B/P - Mild bronchoconstriction
- Alpha 2 receptors
- Stimulation is inhibitory
- Prevent overrelease of norepinephrine
65Sympathetic Receptors
- Beta 1 receptors
- Located in the heart
- Increases
- Heart Rate
- Conduction
- Contractile force
- Automaticity
- Beta 2 receptors
- Located in the smooth muscle of the bronchi
- Bronchodilation
- Vasodilation
66Physiological Effects of CatecholaminesEffects
noted throughout the body
- Liver
- Skin
- GI/GU tracts
- Lymphoid tissue
- Adipose (fatty) tissue
- Brain
- Cardiovascular system
- Pulmonary system
- Muscle
- Skeleton
67Cortisol (hydrocortisone)
- Hormone produced in response to stress
- Circulates in the plasma
- Mobilizes substances needed for cellular
metabolism - Primary metabolic effect is stimulation of
gluconeogenesis - overall elevation of glucose - Enhances elevation of blood glucose level and
inhibits peripheral glucose uptake by cells in
effort to ? blood glucose - Also acts as an immunosuppressant
- Decreases migration of macrophages into the
inflamed area
68Cortisol Response
- Blocks generation of fever
- Inhibits substances critical to inflammatory
process - Causes poor wound healing
- Increases susceptibility to wound infection
- Increases gastric secretions (?ulcer formation)
- Suppresses release of sex hormones
- Although not well understood, it is beneficial to
body in its response during stress in spite of
all the negative effects
69Coping With Stress
- Coping abilities have direct and indirect effects
on stress and illness - Support networks are encouraged to assist persons
with illness or stressful life situations - both
which cause stress - Supporting persons ability to cope with stress
is just as important as following the medical
treatment for the illness
70Bibliography
- Bledsoe, B.E., Porter, R.S., Cherry, R.A.
- Paramedic Care Principles Practice.
- Brady. 2000.
- Sanders, M.J. Paramedic Textbook. Mosby.
- 2001.
- PowerPoint prepared by Brian E. Sobeck, EMT-P,
representative of Northern Illinois EMS
Coordinators Association (NIEMSCA), with
additions by Sharon Hopkins, RN, BSN, EMT-P
71Pathophysiology
Questions ??