Title: RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
1RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- AN OVERVIEW
- Martha Richter, MSN, CRNA
2RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- OBJECTIVES
- The student will
- Describe basic principles for this diagnostic
group - Compare 2 differences with this group and those
with obstructive disease - List 2 desired outcomes of Anesthetic care
3RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- An interstitial disease with inflammatory and
fibrotic changes in interstitium/interalveolar
septum - Characterized by dec lung compliance, normal
airway resistance, decreased diffusion capacity,
dec LV, varying degrees of hypoxemia
4RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- THEORY
- There is a common pathogenesis
- Injury to alveolar epithelium-inflam process
involves alveoliinterstitium-accum of inflam and
immune cells continues lung tissue
damage-normal tissue is replaced with fibrous scar
5RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- INTRINSIC
- Pulmonary edema-fluid accumulates in interstitium
alveoli by hydrostatic, cardiogenic or
non-cardiogenic mechs. - Pulmonary Interstitial Disease-inflam/fibrosis of
interstit., alveoli or vasc. Beds. (may lead to
PH Cor pulmonale) Sarcoid, radiation fibrosis,
chronic hypersensitivity pneumonia
6RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Acute intrinsic
- pulmonary edema(movement of intravasc fld into
lung interstit alveoli secondary to inc pulm
vasc press) - Chronic intrinsic
- Pulmonary fibrosis caused by radiation injury,
cytotoxic and noncytotoxic drug reaction, O2
toxicity, autoimmune disease, Sarcoidosis
7RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Chronic extrinsic
- Disorders that inhibit normal lung excursion.
Includes flail chest, pneumothorax, pleural
effusion, ascites, obesity, pregnancy,
neuromuscular disease
8RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- EXTRINSIC
- Pleural disease-fibrosis/effusion
- Chest wall deformity-kyphoscoliosis,pectus
excavatum, trauma or burns - Diaphragmatic compression-obesity, ascites,
pregnancy, retraction during surgery - Surgical removal lung tissue
9RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Other causes include
- Diminished generation of expiratory force
- CNS diseases, peripheral nerve diseases
neuromuscular diseases, - Muscles of respiration have diminished muscle
tension-dec expir flow rates-atelectasis - ANY CONDITION THAT INTERFERES WITH NORMAL LUNG
EXPANSION DURING INSPIRATION.
10PFTS RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Flow volume loopappears to be miniature normal
loop b/o dec LV - MeF25-75normal
- TLC dec
- FEV1 dec
- FRC dec
- FEV1/FVC normal
11RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Diagnosis treatment
- Hx of exposure CXRs used to follow progression.
BX lavage via bronchoscope to confirm dx. Lung
scans to quantify alveolitis.
12RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Goals of treatment
- Identify remove injurious agent
- Suppress inflammatory response
- Prevent progression
- O2 in late stages
13ANESTHETIC CONSIDERATIONS
- Because this class of patients notoriously have a
dec FRC, they will desaturate quickly this will
be seen prior to intub (period of apnea) and
after extub if O2 isnt maintained. - PEEP will help increase FRC
- PIPs will be inc b/o stiff lungs
- Low Vt with inc RR will dec possibility of
barotrauma, but inc risk of atelectasis - Best goal is to have pt ambulating as quickly as
possible
14PULMONARY EDEMA
- Starling equation
- Primary determinents that balance fluid across
the semipermeable capillary membrane 1.pulm
interstit fld press (hydrostaticPif and osmotic
if) - Hydrostatic press in pulm caps (Pc)
- Osmotic press of plasma ( p)
15STARLING EQUATION
- Qk(Pc-Pif)-( p- if)
- Qtotal amt fluid crosses membrane
- Kfld filtration coefficient which describes
permeability of membrane - Peforce favoring fld movement out of membrane
this is in direct opposition to Pif. - Pif forces fld inward - P forces flds out
- p keeps fld in capillary if pulls fld
into interstitium
16STARLING FORCES
- The balance of forces favors fluid filtration
into the interstitial space, where lymph remove
filtered fld -gtreturn to systemic circ - Pulmonary edema occurs when any variables are
altered. - Most important components inc pressure and inc
permeability
17PULMONARY EDEMA
- Cardiogenic inc. pressure, hydrostatic
- Most common. Occurs when Pc inc.
- Initiated by LV dysfunc/failure
- PCP 20-25fld transudate rate overwhelms the
lymphatic ability to drainalveolar flooding. - Normal PCP 10-16
- CAD, HTN, cardiomyopathy, MR, MS
18PULMONARY EDEMA
- Non-cardiogenic
- Insult that disrupts barrier function of
blood-tissue interface, increases permeability. - PCWP lt12
- Assoc with fld and protein leak
- Pulmonary emb., ARDS, aspiration syndrome,
inhaled toxic fumes gases, near drowning,
anaphylaxis, pancreatitis, DIC, trauma, altitude,
fibrosing mediastinitis, head trauma
19PULMONARY EDEMA-POST AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Forced inhalation against closed glottis
- Most common causelaryngospasm after extubation
- Inc (-) intrathor press, transpleural and alv
press -gtenlarges pulm vasc vol insterstit fld
vol -gtoverwhelms lymphatics -gtinterstit fld moves
into alveoli-gthypoxia-gtmassive sympathetic
discharge-gtsystem vasoconstrict-gtinc bld to pulm
vasculature-gthypoxia inc-gtdec myocard activity,
LVF
20PULMONARY EDEMA-POST AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Not everybody develops pulm edema!
- Predisposing young males, long periods of
obstruction, high amts perioperative flds,
pre-exist cardiac/pulm conditions
21PULMONARY EDEMA-POST AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Treatment
- Prompt recognition
- Secure the airway
- O2 support
- diuretics
22PULMONARY EDEMA-POST AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Onset is usually immediate, but can occur up to
several hours later - Observe 60-90 min
23PULMONARY EDEMA-POST OBSTRUCTED AIRWAY
- Differentiate cardiogenic/noncardiogenic
- HP
- Tachypneia not relieved with O2
- Retraction
- Htn/diaphoresis/tachycardia
- Pink frothy sputum
- Basilar crackles
- CVP inc with cardio
- Enl cardiac silhouette with cardio
- S3-S4 gallop with cardio
- CXR-pl effusions, white out areas
- ABG-hypoxemia hypocarbia (hypervent) progressing
to hypercarbia (tired patient) pH related to
PaCO2
24PULMONARY EDEMA-POST AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Anesthesia management
- Medical emergency-treat the underlying cause,
support organs, optimize O2 delivery - May require high FIO2, ETT, PPV, PEEP/CPAP
- Pharm support
- Inotropes, vasodilators, steroids, diuretics
25RADIATION THERAPY INDUCED RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- After Rx for lung, breast, esophogeal, lymph
node, mediastinal tumors - Severity re directly to volume lung irradiated,
rate of delivery, total dose, quality of
radiation, concomitant chemo, prior courses
radiation to same area, current use
corticosteroids - Cause of pneumonitis is unknown
26RADIATION INDUCED RESTRICTIVE DISEASE
- Cardinal symptom cough
- Interstit edema may resolve/progress to fibrosis
- Leads to cor pulmonale, resp failure b/o fibrosis
of large lung volume
27RADIATION INDUCED RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Lung compliance decs-gtinc work of breathing-gtdec
lung vol (rapid resp rate with sm Vt) -gt dec
diffusing capacity
28RADIATION INDUCED RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- PFTS
- Dec VC
- Dec IC
- Dec TLC
- Dec RV
- Dec FEV1
29RADIATION INDUCED RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Potential complications of rad Rx
- Pneumonitis
- Rib fractures
- Pleural effusion
- Spontaneous pneumothorax
- Infection
- Acute/chronic pericarditis
30RADIATION INDUCED RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- Indirect consequences of tumors
- TE fistula
- Bronchial obstruction
31RADIATION INDUCED RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- RX
- antibiotics
- anticoagulants
- steroids
- Supportive
- O2 with close monitoring-prev O2 toxicity
- cough suppression
32RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- May be
- Idiopathic
- Neuropathic (polio, CP, syringomyelia)
- Myopathic (MD, amyotonia)
- traumatic
33RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- SCOLIOSIS lateral spinal curve
- KYPHOSIS affects posterior curves
- KYPHOSCOLIOSIS lateral bend and rotation of
vertebral column - Respiratory dysfunction related to degree
(severity) of curves
34RESTRICTIVE DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- IDIOPATHIC
- Most common 80
- Infantile (rare)
- Adolescent (common)
- Cervical scoliosisdifficult airway
35RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- Kyphosis affects pulm function if curve is severe
- Scoliosis affects pulm function in all forms.
- Resp failure predicted by VC and magnitude of
angle
36RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- SCOLIOSIS
- Dec PF with curves gt60 deg
- Pulm sx develop with curves gt70 deg
- Signif gas exchange with curves gt100 deg
- Mechanical ventilation is inefficient
37RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- SCOLIOSIS
- Early
- Dec VC, TLC, FRC, RV, chest wall compliance
- Late
- V/Q mismatch with hypoxia, inc PAP, inc PaCO2,
abn response to CO2, inc work breathing, cor
pulmonale, resp failure
38RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- KYPHOSCOLIOSIS
- Creates skeletal chest wall deform
- Dec LV pulm vasc bed
- Vent failure b/o lung size (30-65 normal)
- As pt ages-gtchest compliance dec-gtinc work of
breathing-gtdec vent-gtmuscle weakness
39RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- Assoc conditions
- MVP common
- MR
- Inc PVR (response to hypoxemia,chest wall
compression) - PH -gtRVH
40RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- Medical management
- Observe, no Rx
- Nonoperative Rx braces, electrical stimulation
- Surgical Rx AP fusions, instrumentation
41RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- Anesthetic management
- Preop-thorough review incl eval severity of
degree of curve - CBC,PT,PTT,lytes, BUN,Cr
- PFT,ECG,CXR
- ABG if PFT abn
42RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASE AND SCOLIOSIS/KYPHOSIS
- Intraop considerations-standard
- No N20 (inc PVR)
- Ventilator to maintain SaO2 and normocarbia
- Positioning considerations
- Heat humidify gases
- Remember sensitivity to narcs!
43RESTRICTIVE LUNG DISEASES
- The principals of management follow similar
considerations - Assess the degree of compromise
- Know where to get information
- Make an informed plan
- Thank you.