Title: Capnography: The Ventilation Vital Sign
1CapnographyThe Ventilation Vital Sign
2Objectives
- Define capnography
- Discuss respiratory cycle
- Discuss ways to collect ETCO2 information
- Discuss non-intubated vs. intubated patient uses
- Discuss different waveforms and treatments of
them.
3So what is Capnograhy?
- Capnography- Continuous analysis and recording of
carbon dioxide concentrations in respiratory
gases ( I.E. waveforms and numbers) - Capnometry- Analysis only of the gases no
waveforms
4Respiratory Cycle
- Breathing - Process of moving oxygen into the
body and CO2 out can be passive or non-passive. - Metabolism - Process by which an organism obtains
energy by reacting O2 with glucose to obtain
energy. - Aerobic- glucoseO2 water vapor, carbon
dioxide, energy (2380 kJ) - Anaerobic- glucose alcohol, carbon dioxide,
water vapor, energy (118 kJ)
5Respiratory Cycle cont.
- Ventilation - Rate that gases enters and leaves
the lungs. - Minute ventilation - Total volume of gas entering
lungs per minute - Alveolar Ventilation - Volume of gas that reaches
the alveoli - Dead Space Ventilation - Volume of gas that does
not reach the respiratory portions ( 150 ml)
6Respiratory Cycle
Oxygen -gt lungs -gt alveoli -gt blood
Oxygen
breath
CO2
muscles organs
lungs
Oxygen
CO2
cells
energy
blood
Oxygen Glucose
CO2
7EtCO2 Monitoring
- Carbon dioxide is a colorless, odorless gas
- Concentration in air 0.03
- CO2 produced by cell metabolism
- Transported from cell in three forms
- 65 as bicarb following conversion
- 25 bound to blood proteins (hemoglobin)
- 10 in plasma solution
- PaCO2 reflects plasma solution
8EtCO2 Monitoring
The heart pumps freshly oxygenated blood
throughout the body to cells where oxygen is
consumed (metabolism). Carbon dioxide, produced
as a byproduct, diffuses out of cells into the
vascular system.
9EtCO2 Monitoring
- Carbon dioxide-rich blood is then pumped through
the - pulmonary capillary bed where the carbon dioxide
- diffuses across the alveolar capillary membrane
and - is exhaled via the nose or mouth.
10Respiratory Cycle
ALL THREE ARE IMPORTANT!
PERFUSION
VENTILATION
METABOLISM
11How is ETCO2 Measured?
- Semi-quantitative capnometry
- Quantitative capnometry
- Wave-form capnography
12 Quantitative Capnometry
- Absorption of infra-red light
- Gas source
- Side stream
- In-line
-
- Factors in choosing device
- Warm up time
- Cost
- Portability
13EtCO2 Monitoring
- In sidestream capnographs the exhaled CO2 is
aspirated via ETT, cannula, or mask through a
510 foot long sampling tube connected to the
instrument for analysis this method is intended
for the non-intubated patient. - Both mainstream and sidestream technologies
calculate the CO2 value and waveform.
14EtCO2 Monitoring
- Decreased EtCO2
- Increased CO2 Clearance
- Hyperventilation
- Decreased CO2 production
- Hypothermia
- Sedation
- Paralysis
- Decreased Delivery to Lungs
- Decreased cardiac output
- V/Q Mismatch
- Ventilating non-perfused lungs (pulmonary
edema)
15EtCO2 Monitoring
- Ventilation/Perfusion Ratio (V/Q)
- Effective pulmonary gas exchange depends
on balanced V/Q ratio - Alveolar Dead Space (atelectasis/pneumonia)
(V gt Q ? CO2 content) - Shunting (blood bypasses alveoli w/o picking up
o2) (V lt Q ? CO2 content) - 2 types of shunting
- Anatomical blood moves from right to left
heart w/o passing through lungs (congenital) - Physiological blood shunts past alveoli w/o
picking up o2
16EtCO2 Monitoring
17EtCO2 Monitoring
- Ventilation/Perfusion Ratio (V/Q)
- V/Q Mismatch
- Inadequate ventilation, perfusion or both
- Three types
- Physiological Shunt (VltQ)
- Blood passes alveoli
- Severe hypoxia w/ gt 20 bypassed blood
- Pneumonia, atelectasis, tumor, mucous plug
- Alveolar Dead Space (VgtQ)
- Inadequate perfusion exists
- Pulmonary Embolus, Cardiogenic shock, mechanical
ventilation w/ ? tidal volumes - Silent Unit (? V ? Q)
- Both ventilation perfusion are decreased
- Pneumothorax ARDS
18EtCO2 Monitoring
19EtCO2 Monitoring
More Air Less Blood V gt Q
Equal Air and Blood V Q
More Blood Less Air V lt Q
20EtCO2 Monitoring
- Components of the normal capnogram
21EtCO2 Monitoring
- A - B describes the respiratory baseline
- It measures the CO2-free gas in the dead space of
the airways
22EtCO2 Monitoring
- B-C is also known as the expiratory upstroke,
where alveolar air mixes with dead space air
23EtCO2 Monitoring
- C-D is the expiratory plateau, exhalation of
mostly alveolar gas (should be straight) - Point D is the EtCO2 level at the end of a normal
exhaled breath (35-45mmHg)
24EtCO2 Monitoring
- D-E is inspiration, inhalation of CO2-free gas,
and rapid return of waveform to baseline
25Waveform Capnometry
- Adds continuous waveform display to the ETCO2
value. - Additional information in waveform shape can
provide clues about causes of poor oxygenation.
26Interpretation of ETCO2
Excellent correlation between ETCO2 and cardiac
output when cardiac output is low. When cardiac
output is near normal, then ETCO2 correlates with
minute volume. Only need to ventilate as often
as a load of CO2 molecules are delivered to the
lungs and exchanged for 02 molecules.
27 Hyperventilation Kills
28EtCO2 Values
Normal 35 45 mmHg Hypoventilation gt 45
mmHg Hyperventilation lt 35 mmHg
Wave form
value
29Physiology
- Relationship between CO2 and RR
- ?RR ? ?CO2 Hyperventilation
- ? RR ? ? CO2 Hypoventilation
30Why ETCO2 - I Have My Pulse Ox?
- Pulse Oximetry
- Oxygen saturation
- Reflects oxygenation
- SpO2 changes lag when patient is hypoventilating
or apneic - Should be used with capnography
- Capnography
- Carbon dioxide
- Reflects ventilation
- Hypoventilation/
- apnea detected immediately
- Should be used with pulse oximetry
31What does it really do for me?
- Non-Intubated Applications
- Bronchospasms asthma, COPD, anaphlyaxis
- Hypoventilation drugs, stroke, CHF, post-Ictal
- Shock and circulatory compromise
- Hyperventilation Syndrome biofeedback
- Intubated Applications
- Verification of ETT placement
- ETT surveillance during transport
- Control ventilations during CHI and increased ICP
- CPR compression efficacy, early signs of ROSC,
survival predictor
32 The Normal Wave Form
33EtCO2 Monitoring
34EtCO2 Monitoring
- Tracheal vs- Esophageal Intubation
35Normal Wave Form
- Square box waveform
- ETCO2 35-45 mm Hg
- Management monitor patient
36Dislodged ETT
- Loss of waveform
- Loss of ETCO2 reading
- Management follow DOPE mnemonic and replace
ETT
37Esophageal Intubation
- Absence of waveform
- Absence of ETCO2
- Management re-Intubate
38 CPR
- Square box waveform
- ETCO2 10-15 mm Hg (possibly higher) with adequate
CPR - Management change rescuers if ETCO2 falls below
10 mm Hg
39Obstructive Airway
- Shark fin waveform
- With or without prolonged expiratory phase
- Can be seen before actual attack
- Indicative of bronchospasm (asthma, COPD,
allergic reaction) - Management bronchodilators (Albuterol, Atrovent,
or Epinephrine)
40EtCO2 Monitoring
- Asthma and COPD (Contd)
- Waveforms can indicate need for
bronchodilators (shark fin waveform)
41Obstructive Airway
- With or without prolonged expiratory phase
- Can be seen before actual attack
- Indicative of bronchospasm (asthma, COPD,
allergic reaction) - Management bronchodilators (Albuterol, Atrovent,
or Epinephrine) - Shark fin waveform
42EtCO2 Monitoring
43 CPR
- Square box waveform
- ETCO2 10-15 mm Hg (possibly higher) with adequate
CPR - Management change rescuers if ETCO2 falls below
10 mm Hg if no autopulse available
44Rising Baseline
- Patient is re-breathing CO2
- Management check equipment for adequate oxygen
flow - If patient is intubated allow more time to exhale
45Patient breathing around ETT
- Angled, sloping down stroke on the waveform
- In adults may mean ruptured cuff or tube too
small - In pediatrics tube too small
- Management assess patient, oxygenate, ventilate
and possible re-intubation
46EtCO2 Monitoring
- Pulmonary Embolus
- Note near normal waveform, but angled C-D
section (indicates alveolar dead space)
47EtCO2 Monitoring
48EtCO2 Monitoring
- Esophageal intubation with carbonated beverages
49EtCO2 Monitoring
Head Injury
- EtC02 is very useful in monitoring intubated
head- injured patients. - Hyperventilation Hypocapnea ? Cerebral
Ischemia - Target end tidal C02 value of 35-38 mmHg
50EtCO2 Monitoring
51Hyperventilation
- Ventilations are high and ETCO2 is high consider
other causes (DKA, sepsis, TCA overdose, acute
renal failure, methanol Shortened waveform. - ETCO2 lt 35 mm Hg
- Management if conscious gives biofeedback. If
ventilating slow ventilations - If ingestion, salicylate poisoning)
52EtCO2 Monitoring
53Hypoventilation
- Prolonged waveform
- ETCO2 gt45 mm Hg
- Management assist ventilations or intubate as
needed
54EtCO2 Monitoring
55Curare Cleft
- Curare cleft is when a neuromuscular blockade
wears off - The patient takes small breaths that causes the
cleft - Management consider neuromuscular blockade
re-administration
56EtCO2 Monitoring
- Spontaneous respirations in the paralyzed patient
(Curare cleft)
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58EtCO2 Monitoring
- EtCO2 and cardiac output
- Values lt20mmHg unsuccessful resuscitation
- Low (20-30mmHg) good CPR or recovering heart
59EtCO2 Monitoring
- EtCO2 and cardiac output
- Sudden increase in value ROSC
Cardiac arrest survivors had an average ETCO2 of
18mmHg, 20 minutes into an arrest while non
survivors averaged 6. In another study,
survivors averaged 19, and non-survivors 5.
60EtCO2 Monitoring
- Rapid Assessment Triage Tool
- Critically ill patients
- Victims of chemical terrorism
- Obtain ABCs in 15 seconds
- A waveform patent airway
- B waveform graphic representation of
breathing - C normal EtCO2 adequate perfusion
61EtCO2 Monitoring
- No motion artifact (uncooperative pt?)
- Reliable in low perfusion states
-
- Accurate reliable in seizing patients
- Apneic, seizing patient
- No waveform No chest wall movement
- Ineffectively ventilating seizing patient
- Low waveform low EtCO2
- Effectively ventilating seizing patient
- Normal waveform normal EtCO2
62EtCO2 Monitoring
- Capnography in Terror
- Common conditions diagnosed by capnography
- Apnea
- No waveform, no chest wall movement, no breath
sounds - Upper respiratory obstruction
- No waveform, chest wall moving, no breath sounds,
responsive to airway realignment maneuvers
(waveform returns) - Laryngospasm
- No waveform, chest wall moving, no breath sounds,
unresponsive to airway realignment, responds to
PPV - Bronchospasm
- shark fin waveform
- Respiratory failure
- Values gt 70 mmHg in pt w/o COPD
63EtCO2 Monitoring
64EtCO2 Monitoring
65EtCO2 Monitoring
- Metabolic States
- Diabetes/Dehydration
- EtCO2 tracks serum HCO3 degree of acidosis (?
EtcO2 metabolic acidosis) - Helps to distinguish DKA from NKHHC and
dehydration
66EtCO2 Monitoring
Troubleshooting
Sudden increase in EtCO2
Malignant Hyperthermia Ventilation of previously
unventilated lung Increase of blood
pressure Release of tourniquet Bicarb causes a
temporary lt2 minute rise in ETCO2
67EtCO2 Monitoring
Troubleshooting
EtCO2 values 0
Extubation/Movement into hypopharynx Ventilator
disconnection or failure EtCO2 defect ETT kink
68EtCO2 Monitoring
Troubleshooting
Sudden decrease EtCO2 (not to 0)
Leak or obstruction in system Partial
disconnect Partial airway obstruction
(secretions) High-dose epi can cause a decrease.
69EtCO2 Monitoring
Troubleshooting
Change in Baseline
Calibration error Mechanical failure Water in
system
70EtCO2 Monitoring
Troubleshooting
Continual, exponential decrease in EtCO2
Pulmonary Embolism Cardiac Arrest Sudden
hypotension/hypovolemia Severe hyperventilation
71EtCO2 Monitoring
Troubleshooting
Gradual increase in EtCO2
Rising body temperature Hypoventilation Partial
airway obstruction (foreign body) Reactive airway
disease
72EtCO2 Monitoring
- No motion artifact (uncooperative pt?)
- Reliable in low perfusion states
-
- Accurate and reliable in seizing patients
- Apneic, seizing patient
- No waveform No chest wall movement
- Ineffectively ventilating seizing patient
- Low waveform low EtCO2
- Effectively ventilating seizing patient
- Normal waveform normal EtCO2
73 Now what does all this mean to me?
- ETCO2 is a great tool to help monitor the
patients breath to breath status. - Can help recognize airway obstructions before the
patient has signs of attacks - Helps you control the ETCO2 of head injuries
- Can help to identify ROSC in cardiac arrest
74 How Do I Document All of This?
- The documentation burdens increase along with the
litigation - There should be no unrecognized esophageal
intubations at any time or place with all the
technology and cross checks available to the
provider - Hypoxic Brain Injury and or Permanent Disability
- OR
75DEATH
76 How Do I Document All of This?
- Death usually occurs long after EMS has
transported to the hospital. - When questions arise, who gets the blame?
- The Paramedics did it!
- In lawsuits with physicians, nurses and
hospitals, EMS is viewed as the least trained. - It is almost always easier for juries to believe
that the lowest trained person made the mistake.
77 How Do I Document All of This?
- Confirming Tube Placement
- Observational Methods
- Direct Visualization
- Tube passes the vocal cords
- Cuff inflation noted beyond the cords
- Observed chest wall movement
78 How Do I Document All of This?
- Confirming Tube Placement
- Observational Methods
- Auscultation
- Listen over epigastrum first
- Listen to apex l/r, bases l/r, sternal notch
Extras (1) Misting on exhalation (2) Absence of
gastric contents within the ET
79ABCDs of ET Documentation
- 2 Bs
- Breath Sounds
- Document type and quality of sounds
- Document BBS/CE
- Bowel Sounds
- Document as no sounds noted in epigastrum
- 2 As
- Watched it pass cords
- Cuff inflation pass the vocal cords observed
80ABCDs of ET Documentation
- Big Ds
- Doctor recheck his findings
- Document, Document, Document
- Do it over and over and recheck findings
- Every movement
- When pt does not improve
- Before you enter the ER
- 5 Cs
- Condensation in the tube-noted as misting in the
tube - Chest rise-noted as adequate chest rise
- CO2-note as co2 and or the reading
- Centimeter marking-noted as tube at 22mm
- Clinical signs-improvement or decline in patient
condition -
81Final Narrative Documentation
- Example
- Pt ventilated w/BVM 100o2 with ET intubated
following with passage visualized through the
cords and with inflation beyond. No breath
sounds over abdomen, clear and equal breath
sounds noted in apexes and bases, adequate chest
rise and misting present, CO2 noted. Tube
placement noted at 22cm and tube tamer in place
and secured ET.
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83- Many special thanks to
- JEMS Magazine www. jems.com
- Peter Canning, EMT-P emscaphography.blogspot.com
- Dr. Baruch Krauss baruch-krauss_at_tch.harvard.edu
- Bhavani-Shankar Kodali MD www.capnography.com
- Bob Page, AAS, NREMT-P, CCEMT-P
- Steve Berry www.IAmNotAnAmbulanceDriver.com/mm5/m
erchant.mvc? - Dr. Reuben Strayer reuben-strayer_at_mail.mcgill.ca
- UTSW/BIOTEL EMS SYSTEM www.utsouthwestern.edu
- Oridion Medical Systems www.oridion.com/global/en
glish/home.html - Blogborgymi blogorygmi.blogspot.com
- University of Adelaide, South Australia
www.health.adelaide.edu.au/paedanaes/talks/co2/cap
nography.html
84Now we are finished?
- Questions
- Comments
- Concerns
- Snide Remarks
- Applause