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What can we do to Palliate Dyspnea? Steve Dupuis DO Faith Hospice Associate Medical Director

What can we do to Palliate Dyspnea? Steve Dupuis DO Faith Hospice Associate Medical Director. Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.... Anonymous. Objectives.

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What can we do to Palliate Dyspnea? Steve Dupuis DO Faith Hospice Associate Medical Director

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  1. What can we do to Palliate Dyspnea? Steve Dupuis DO Faith Hospice Associate Medical Director

  2. Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.... Anonymous

  3. Objectives • Review the common treatments that our colleagues have already tried • Explore more creative modalities that our colleagues expect of us • Share our expertise • Create an update for WMMD manual

  4. Dyspnea is not.... • Tachypnea which is rapid breathing • Hyperpnea which is increased ventilation in proportion to metabolism • Hyperventilation which is ventilation in excess of metabolic requirement • Comroe 1966

  5. Dyspnea is instead…. ….difficult, labored, uncomfortable breathing; it is an unpleasant type of breathing, though it is not painful in the usual sense of the word. • Comroe 1966

  6. Dyspnea • It is subjective, and like pain, it involves both the perception of the sensation by the patient and their reaction to the sensation…. • Comroe 1966

  7. Prevalence • Reported to occur in 21-70% of all terminally ill patients • National Hospice Study • 25% patients experiencing breathlessness did not have underlying pulmonary diseases

  8. Management

  9. Oxygen Should be offered in any circumstance of dyspnea but no studies that show it to be any more effective than…. Environmental changes: • Cool humidified air • Circulating fan • Fowler’s position • Pursed lip breathing

  10. Reassurance • Calming, relaxation techniques • Breathing exercises • Music therapy • Aromatherapy • Social Work • Chaplain

  11. Nebs • Duonebs q 3hrs & prn • Decadron 4mgs q 4hrs • For Pulmonary Edema • 4 mls 50% Ethyl Alcohol/Vodka • 3 treatments q 15 minutes & repeat 6-8 hrs

  12. Nebulized Furosemide • Bronchodilatory effects • Inhibition of irritant-receptors of the lung • Rocker, Horton 2010 • Inhibition of stretch receptors (vagal nerve) • Shimoyama, JPSM 2002 • Anti-inflamatory effect • Prandota, Am J Ther 2002 • 40 mgs IV soln dye free per neb prn

  13. Corticosteroids • Dexamethasone • Start 4 mgs bid and titrate up • 24 mgs to 96 mgs/day IVP • Solumedrol • IVP 550 mgs qid • Prednsone • Start 40 mgs/day and titrate up

  14. Benzos • Are they effective? • Breaks Anxiety-Dyspnea Cycle….prevalence of fear, anxiety, or panic? • Short Acting preferred….Versed is the shortest • No studies that show effectiveness in Advanced Cancer or ES COPD • Cause more drowsiness than Morphine • Use 2nd line or in combination with Opiods • Ativan Infusion 1-5 mg's/hr starts to accumulate in 3 days and may have to cutback

  15. Opiods Nebulized Morphine does not work…studies too small Oral opiods work but with the usual side effects Lack of adverse effect on blood gasses Jennings, Thorax 2002 Do decrease the perception of Air Hunger & ↓ventilatory response to ↓ O2 & ↑CO2 Cause vasodilation of pulmonary vessels: ↓ preload to the Heart Improve Dyspnea without causing Respiratory Depression Opiod Phobia

  16. Opiod Responsive Dyspnea • Parallels to opiod responsive and opiod non responsive type of pain • Dyspnea may have varying degrees of opiod responsiveness dependent on several specific factors

  17. Opiod Delivery

  18. Canadian Dyspnea Protocol

  19. Terminal Sectretions Non- pharmacologic Interventions – Reposition the patient first….basic Nursing Technique – Suction is rarely useful – Secretions re-accumulate rapidly & is overstimulating Anticholinergic / Antimuscarinics – 1% Atropine Opthalmic Gtts 4 gtts SL q 15mins X 4 then prn – Transdermal Scopolamine Patches – Robinol 0.2 mgs q 1 hr subQ/IVP If secretions become wet/rattling but not foamy -Atropine Aerosol 1mg with Albuterol 2.5 mgs q 4hrs prn

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