Title: Lecture Title: Equipments
1Lecture Title Equipments Measurements Stations
- Lecturer name Prof. Abdulhamid Al-Saeed,
- Lecture Date
2Lecture Objectives..
- Students at the end of the lecture will be able
toknow - Monitors non-invasive blood pressure , ECG ,
pulse oximetry capnography (CO2 monitor) and
oxygen analyzer , temperature probe nerve
stimulator - Specialized monitors arterial line (invasive
blood pressure) central venous line (cvp
monitoring) pulmonary artery flotation catheter (
monitors function of right and left side of the
heart) BIS monitor (depth of anesthesia)
3Pulse Oximetry
4Physical Principle
Within the probe are two light emitting diodes
(LED's), one in the visible red spectrum (660nm)
and the other in the infrared spectrum (940nm).
The beams of light pass through the tissues to a
photodetector. During passage through the
tissues, some light is absorbed by blood and soft
tissues depending on the concentration of
haemoglobin. The amount of light absorption at
each light frequency depends on the degree of
oxygenation of haemoglobin within the tissues
Microprocessor can select out the absorbance of
the pulsatile fraction of blood Within the
oximeter memory is a series of oxygen saturation
values obtained from experiments performed in
which human volunteers were given increasingly
hypoxic mixtures of gases to breath. The
microprocessor compares the ratio of absorption
at the two light wavelengths measured with these
stored values, and then displays the oxygen
saturation digitally as a percentage and audibly
as a tone of varying pitch. As it is unethical to
desaturate human volunteers below 70, it is
vital to appreciate that oxygen saturation values
below 70 obtained by pulse oximetry are
unreliable.
5- Describe the principles involved in pulse
oximetry. - What are its limitations in clinical practice?
- Is it fast or slow as a monitor of oxygen
saturation?
6- A pulse oximeter gives NO information on any of
these other variables - The oxygen content of the blood
- The amount of oxygen dissolved in the blood
- The respiratory rate or tidal volume i.e.
ventilation - The cardiac output or blood pressure
7Incomptencies
- Critically ill with poor peripheral circulation
- Hypothermia VC
- Dyes ( Nail varnish )
- Lag Monitor Signalling 5-20 sec
- PO2
- Cardiac arrhythmias may interfere with the
oximeter picking up the pulsatile signal properly
and with calculation of the pulse rate - Abnormal Hb ( Met., carboxy)
8Capnography
- What is the physical principle?
- Discuss the end-tidal CO2 trace with rebreathing.
- What are the types?
- Clinical Applications?
9Capnography
- Capnography is the graphic display of
instantaneous CO2 concentration versus time (Time
Capnogram) - Or expired volume (Volume Capnogram) during a
respiratory cycle. - Methods to measure CO2 levels include infrared
spectrography, Raman spectrography, mass
spectrography, photoacoustic spectrography and
chemical colorimetric analysis
10Physical Principle
- The infrared method is most widely used and most
cost-effective. - Infrared rays are given off by all warm objects
and are absorbed by non-elementary gases (i.e.
those composed of dissimilar atoms), while
certain gases absorb particular wavelengths
producing absorption bands on the IR
electromagnetic spectrum. - The intensity of IR radiation projected through a
gas mixture containing CO2 is diminished by
absorption this allows the CO2 absorption band
to be identified and is proportional to the
amount of CO2 in the mixture.
11Types
- Side stream Capnography
- The CO2 sensor is located in the main unit itself
(away from the airway) and a tiny pump aspirates
gas samples from the patients airway through a 6
foot long capillary tube into the main unit. - The sampling tube is connected to a T-piece
inserted at the endotracheal tube or anaesthesia
mask connector Other advantages of the side
stream capnograph - No problems with sterilisation, ease of
connection and ease of use when patient is in
unusual positions like the prone position
12- Main stream Capnograph
-
- Cuvette containing the CO2 sensor is inserted
between the breathing circuit and the
endotracheal tube. - The IR rays traverse the respiratory gases to an
IR detector within the cuvette. - To prevent condensation of water vapour, which
can cause falsely high CO2 readings, all main
stream sensors are heated above body temperature
to about 40oC. - It is relatively heavy and must be supported to
prevent endotracheal tube kinking. - Sensors window must be kept clean of mucus and
particles to prevent false readings. - Response time is faster
13- The Alpha angle
- The angle between phases II and III, which has
- increases as the slope of phase III increases.
- The alpha angle is an indirect indication of V/Q
- status of the lung.
- Airway obstruction causes an increased
- slope and a larger angle.
- Other factors that affect the angle are the
response time of the capnograph, sweep speed, and
the respiratory cycle time.
- The Beta angle
- The nearly 90 degrees angle between phase III and
the descending limb in a time capnogram has been
termed as the beta angle. - This can be used to assess the extent of
rebreathing. During rebreathing, there is an
increase in beta angle from the normal 90
degrees.
14Clinical Applications
15(No Transcript)
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20Monitoring NMJ
- Discuss neuromuscular monitoring
- What is double burst?
- What is train-of-four (TOF)?
- Can you differentiate between depolarising and
non-depolarising agents?
21Monitoring NMJ
- DEPOLARISING BLOCK
- Fasiculation
- No tetanic fade
- No post-tetanic potentiation
- Anticholinesterases increase block
- Potentiation by other depolarisers May develop
Phase 2 block
22- NON-DEPOLARISING BLOCK
- No fasiculation
- Tetanic fade
- Post-tetanic facilitation
- Anticholinesterases decrease block
- Antagonism by other depolarisers No change in
character of block
23(No Transcript)
24- Train of four (TO4)
- Fade is prominent with non-depolarising blockers
and at 0.5 Hz is greatest by the 6th twitch.
Using four twitches at 0.5 second intervals (TO4)
was popularised by Ali and from these the ratio
of T4/T1 (the "TO4 Ratio") can be derived. The
degree of paralysis is estimated from the number
of twitches present, or if four are present the
TO4 ratio. - Counting the number of palpable twitches is quite
a good guide to deeper levels of paralysis two
or more twitches usually implies reasonably easy
reversal and some return of muscle tone, while
virtually no response suggests difficulty with
reversal, weak cough at best, and very little
muscle tone. - TO4 ratios around 0.25 are commonly estimated at
between 0.1 and 0.7, while at 0.5 some 40 of and
at 0.7 fewer than 10 of observers can reliably
detect any fade at all. Consequently the presence
of any detectable fade indicates the presence of
some paralysis and furthermore even if all four
twitches appear normal many patients are in fact
partly paralysed. - It cannot be used to assess very deep levels of
block (no T1!) and is not very sensitive to
assessing adequacy of reversal.
25- Dual Burst Stimulation (DBS)
- 50Hz train of 3 repeated 0.75 seconds later by an
identical train of three. Each group of three
twitches results in one twitch, and hence only
two twitches available for comparison. Since the
first twitch sums T1, T2 and T3, while the second
sums T4, T5, and T6, it is easy to see how the
presence of fade would be easier to notice and
there is data to support this. As the level of
block increases, response to the second burst is
lost as the third twitch of TO4 is lost the
first burst is retained until a little after you
lose all response to TO4. Surgical paralysis is
generally OK if only one response is present the
patient is reversible if two are present,
particularly if the second is strong. TO4 is
better for quantifying the intensity of
"surgical" paralysis, whereas DBS is better for
noting persistance of fade after reversal. If you
use NMB's so that there is just no response to
DBS, the patient will be a little more paralysed
than if there was just no response to TO4.
26- Tetanic stimulation
- Continuous stimulation at either 50 or 100 Hz is
so painful as to preclude its use in conscious
patients, and is difficult to quantify, but is
probably the most useful and emulates
physiological maximal responses. Tetany is more
sensitive to both residual and deep paralysis
than any other form of monitoring. The presence
of any persisting strength during tetany is a
good indicator of the patient's ability to
maintain muscle tone. - Comparing two bursts of tetany (each 3-5 seconds
long) with a gap of 3 seconds results in
post-tetanic potentiation of the response to the
second burst. When assessing adequacy of reversal
the initial part of the second response
(potentiated) can be compared to the last part of
the first (faded). - If fade is present it is becomes more obvious
with this rather than any other method.
27- Post-Tetanic Count (PTC)
- This consists of counting 1 Hz twitches 3 seconds
after 5 seconds of 50Hz tetany and can give an
approximate time to return of response to single
twitches and hence permits assessment of block
too deep for any other technique. A Post-Tetanic
Count (PTC) of 2 by palpation suggests no twitch
response for about 20-30 minutes, PTC of 5 about
10-15 minutes. - This is clearly the best method for monitoring
paralysis for patients in whom you seek to
prevent diaphragmatic movement, ie
micro-neurosurgery it is best to use infusions
of drugs and aim for PTC of 2.
28Arterial Blood Pressure
- Discuss arterial traces (including
damped/resonant). - What is Fourier analysis?
- What is bandwidth?
- What is a transducer, and when might this be used
in clinical practice?
29Arterial Blood Pressure
30- Damping is the tendency of the system to resist
oscillations caused by sudden changes - Overdamping? The waves tend to faltten thus
underestimating systolic reading and
Overestimating diastolic reading - Underdamping? magnify the waves with
overshooting, thus overestimating systolic
reading and underestimating diastolic reading
31- Factors causing Overdamping
- 1- Narrow tubing
- 2- Long elastic tubings(Compliant )
- 3- High density fluid
- 4- Air bubbles
- 5- Clot formation
32Central Venous Pressure
33(No Transcript)
34Pulmonary Artery Catheter
35(No Transcript)
36Haemodynamic Profiles Obtained from PA Catheters
- SV CO / HR (60-90 mL/beat)
- SVR (MAP CVP) / CO ? 80
(900-1500 dynes-sec/cm5) - PVR (MPAP PCWP) / CO ? 80
(50-150 dynes-sec/cm5)
37- O2 delivery (DO2)
- C.O. ? O2 content
- Arterial O2 content (CaO2) ( Hb ? 1.38 ) ?
(SaO2) - Mixed venous O2 content (CvO2) ( Hb ? 1.38 ) ?
(SvO2) - O2 consumption (VO2) C.O. ? (CaO2-CvO2)
- SvO2 SaO2 VO2 / (Hb ? 13.8)(CO)
38ECG
- 1.How does an ECG machine work?2. What are
amplifiers?3. Define bandwidth and gain.4.
What is differential amplification?5. What is
the frequency of the ECG?
39ECG
40Electrocardiogram
- Displays the overall electrical activities of the
myocardial cells - Heart rate dysrhythmias
- Myocardial ischaemia
- Pacemaker function
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Drug toxicity
- Does NOT indicate mechanical performance of the
heart - Cardiac output
- Tissue perfusion
41- Full (12)-lead ECG
- Standard limb leads (bipolar)
- Precordial leads (unipolar)
- 5-lead system
- Unipolar bipolar
- RA, LA, RL, LL, C
- 3- lead system
- Bipolar with RA, LA, LL
- V5 usually used
- Best compromise between detecting ischaemia and
diagnosing arrhythmia - May come with ST-segment analysis
42ECG
Standard Limb Leads Unipolar Chest Leads
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45Artifacts in ECG Monitoring
- Loose electrodes or broken leads
- Misplaced leads
- Wrong lead system selected
- Emphysema, pneumothorax, pericardial effusion
- Shivering or restlessness
- Respiratory variation and movement
- Monitor Pulse Oximetry, Invasive ABP
46(No Transcript)
47(No Transcript)
48(No Transcript)
49(No Transcript)
50(No Transcript)
51(No Transcript)
52Reference book and the relevant page numbers..
53Thank You ?