790 likes | 934 Views
Respiratory Module. C.O.P.D. COPD - overview. COPD? Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease COLD? Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease Broad classifications of disease. COPD. Characterized by airflow limitation Irreversible Dyspnea on exertion Progressive
E N D
Respiratory Module C.O.P.D.
COPD - overview COPD? • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease • COLD? • Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease • Broad classifications of disease
COPD • Characterized by • airflow limitation • Irreversible • Dyspnea on exertion • Progressive • Abn. inflammatory response of the lungs to noxious particles or gases
Pathophysiology • Noxious particles of gas • Inflammatory response • (occurs throughout the airways, parenchyma and pulmonary vasculature) • Narrowing of airway
Pathophysiology • Injury Repair • Injury repair • Injury repair • Injury Repair • Injury repair scar tissue • Narrowing of lumen
Pathophysiology • Inflammation • Thickening of the wall of the pulmonary capillaries • (Smoke damage & inflammatory process)
COPD • Includes • Emphysema • Chronic bronchitis • Does not include • Bronchiectasis • Asthma
COPD - FYI • COPD 4th leading cause of death in the US • 12th leading cause of disability • Death from COPD is on the rise while death from heart disease is going down
COPD Risk Factors for COPD • Exposure to tobacco smoke • 80-90% of COPD • Passive smoking • Occupational exposure • Air pollution
COPD risk factors • #1 • Smoking • Why is smoking so bad?? • ↓ scavenger cell ability • ↓ cilia function • Irritates goblet cells & Mucus glands • ↑ mucus production
Chronic Bronchitis • Disease of the airway • Definition: • cough + sputum production • > 3 months • 2 consecutive years
Chronic Bronchitis Pathophysiology • Pollutant irritates airway • Inflammation + h secretion of mucus • h goblet cells + • h mucus secreting glands + h Mucus • i ciliary function
Chronic Bronchitis • Plugs become areas for bacteria to grow and chronic infections which increases mucus secretions and eventually, areas of focal necrosis and fibrosis
Chronic Bronchitis • Bronchial walls thicken • Bronchial Lumen narrows • Mucus plugs airway • Alveoli/bronchioles become damaged • ↑ alveolar macrophages • ↑ susceptibility to LRI
What do you think? Exacerbation of Chronic bronchitis is most likely to occur during? • Fall • Spring • Summer • Winter
Emphysema Pathophysiology • Affects alveolar membrane • Destruction of alveolar wall • Loss of elastic recoil • Over distended alveoli
Emphysema Pathophysiology • Over distended alveoli • Damage to adjacent pulmonary capillaries • h dead space • Impaired passive expiration • Impaired gas exchange
Emphysema • Impaired gas exchange • impaired expiration • Hypoxemia • h CO2 • Hypercapnia • Respiratory acidosis
Emphysema • Damaged pulmonary capillary bed • h pulmonary pressure • h work load for right ventricle • Right side heart failure (due to respiratory pressure) • Cor Pulmonale
COPD Compare and contrast • Chronic Bronchitis is a disease of the ___________? • Airway • Emphysema is a disease affecting the ___________? • Alveoli
C.O.P.D. • Risk factors, S&S, treatment, Dx, Rx - same for Chronic Bronchitis & Emphysema
C.O.P.D. Clinical Manifestation (primary) • Cough • Sputum production • Dyspnea on exertion (Secondary) • Wt. loss • Resp. infections • Barrel chest
C.O.P.D.Nrs. Assessment • Risk factors • Past Hx / Family Hx • Pattern of development • Presence of comobidities • Current Tx • Impact
C.O.P.D.Diagnostic exams/procedures • Pulmonary function test • Tidal Volume • i • Functional residual • h • Spirometry / FEV (force of expired vol.) • i
C.O.P.D.Diagnostic exams/procedures • Bronchodilator reversibility test • Check FEV • Give Bronchodilator • If improved FEV = Asthma • If no improvement FEV = COPD
ABG’s • Baseline PaO2 • Rule out other diseases • CT scan • X-ray
C.O.P.D. Medical Management • Risk reduction • Smoking cessation! • (The only thing that slows down the progression of the disease!)
C.O.P.D. Rx. therapy Primary • Bronchodilators • Corticosteriods Secondary • Antibiotics • Mucolytic agents • Anti-tussive agents
Bronchodilators • Action: • Relieve bronchospasms • Reduce airway obstruction • ↑ ventilation • Route • Metered-dose inhaler • Nedulizer • Oral
Bronchodilators • Frequency • Regularly throughout the day • & PRN • Prophylactically
Bronchodilators • Examples • Albuterol (Proventil, Ventolin, Volmax) • Metaproterenol (Alupent) • Ipratropium bromide (Atrovent) • Theophylline (Theo-Dur)* * Oral
Glucocorticoids • Action • Potent anti-inflammatory agent • Route • Inhaled • Systemic • (oral or intravenous)
Endocrine Flashback Which of the following is an iatrogenic event secondary to prolonged use of corticosteroid medications? • SIADH • Diabetes Insipidus • Cushing disease • Addison’s disease • Acromegaly
What electrolyte imbalance is assoc with Cushing Syndrome? • Hypercalcemia • Hypocalcemia • Hypernatremia • Hyponatremia • Hyperkalemia • Hypokalemia
Corticsteriods • S/E • Cushing • Moon face • Na+ & H20 retention • Never discontinue abruptly
Glucocorticoids • Examples • Prednisone • Methyprednisone • Beclovent
C.O.P.D. Medical Management • Treatment • O2 • When PaO2 < 60 mm Hg • Pulmonary rehab • Breathing exercises • Pulmonary hygiene
Nursing Management • Impaired gas exchange • Ineffective airway clearance • Ineffective breathing patterns • Activity intolerance • Deficient knowledge about self-care • Ineffective coping
Nursing Management • Impaired gas exchange • Bronchodilators • Corticosteroids • Monitor for side effects • Measure FEV (force of expired volume) • Assess dyspnea • Smoking cessation
Nursing Management • Ineffective airway clearance • Eliminate pulmonary irritants • Directed cough • Chest physiotherapy • Fluids • Aerosol mists
Nursing Management • Ineffective breathing patterns • Teach and encourage breathing exercises…
Nursing Management • Breathing exercises • (usually have shallow, rapid, inefficient breathing) • Diaphragmatic breathing • ↓rate • ↑ventilation • ↑expelled air • Pursed lip breathing • Slows respiration • Prevents collapse of small airways • Helps control rate and depth • Relax (↓ anxiety)
Nursing Management • Activity intolerance • Activity pacing • More fatigued in AM • Plan activities for “best times” • Physical conditioning • Exercise training • ↑tolerance • ↓dyspnea • ↓fatigue • Graded exercise • Regular vs. sporadic
Nursing Management • Deficient knowledge about self-care • ↑participation (ĉ ↑ improvement) • Coordinate diaphragmatic breathing with activities • Avoid fatigue • Fluids always available
Knowledge Deficit • O2 therapy • Flow rate • # hours required • No smoking • Regular blood oxygenation levels • Regular ABG’s
Knowledge Deficit • Set realistic goals • Modify life style • Avoid temperature extremes • Heat • ↑ O2 demand • Cold • ↑ bronchospasms
Nursing Management • Ineffective coping • Set realistic goals • Listen • Empathy • Refer
C.O.P.D.Nursing Management • Imbalanced Nutrition: Less than Body requirement • (frequently weight loss and protein breakdown) • Monitor weight • ↑Protein • Nutritional supplements
Question? A patient is getting discharged from a SNF facility. The patient has a history of severe COPD and PVD. The patient is primarily concerned about their ability to breath easily. Which of the following would be the best instruction for this patient? A. Deep breathing techniques to increase O2 levels. • Cough regularly and deeply to clear airway passages. • Cough following bronchodilator utilization • Decrease CO2 levels by increase oxygen tank output during meals.