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Kevin M. Creamer M.D. Pediatric Critical Care Walter Reed AMC. PICU Primer II. Physiology Hypoxia / Hypoxemia ABG’s and Acidosis Sodium and H 2 O metabolism Hemodynamics and Cardiopulmonary interactions. ICU Care Postoperative issues Mechanical Ventilation Common Problems
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Kevin M. Creamer M.D. Pediatric Critical Care Walter Reed AMC PICU Primer II
Physiology Hypoxia / Hypoxemia ABG’s and Acidosis Sodium and H2O metabolism Hemodynamics and Cardiopulmonary interactions ICU Care Postoperative issues Mechanical Ventilation Common Problems Head trauma Toxicology The Primer Outline
Postoperative Issues • Borrowed in part from Akron syllabus • Know the surgery • what can you expect from a posterior spinal fusion is different than a tracheal reconstruction • Know the patient • Age, PMHx, Syndromes • Be there when they get out of the OR
Postoperative Evaluation • ABC’s • Look at the breathing pattern • Listen to the chest--breath sounds, stridor? • Listen to the heart--gallop, murmur? • Feel the pulses--strong, weak, thready? • Cap refill?, Extremity warmth?
The Anesthesia Report • “History of present illness” for surgical patients • Difficulties with induction or intubation? • Drugs used during case • Regional techniques employed? • Extubation-problems? • Vital signs- BP, HR, RR, SaO2, temp • Patients are frequently cold!
The Anesthesia Report • Ventilation parameters/difficulties • Fluids--ins and outs • Any “events”? • Lines and tubes
Intraoperative Fluids • Pediatrician: “Why do they always get so much fluid?” • Anesthesiologist: “Because they need it” • maintenance + replacement of “third space” losses • “third space” losses can be 15 cc/kg/hr + replacement of 3 X blood loss
Anesthesia and Fluid Balance • General anesthesia produces vasodilation and some decrease in myocardial contractility. • Increased intrathoracic pressure, and stress response to surgical stimulus, may lead to increased ADH production and decreased urine output
BLOOD loss and replacement • Blood loss isestimated • Transfusion Criteria - it depends • Check Hct, HR, UOP, pH, ongoing loss, Hemodynamics … • When do you need Component Tx? • after a “massive” transfusion or ( 0.75-3.0 blood volumes)
Blood Products - How much? • PRBCs - 4cc/kg of will Hb 1gm/dl • Platelets - 1unit/5kg will count by 50000 • FFP - 10 ml/kg round up/down to closest unit • Cryoprecipitate - 1bag/every 5-10kg Surgeons get extremely persnickety if you transfuse THEIR patient without letting them know ahead of time!
The Surgical Report • Since we are not surgeons we need to know what they anticipate and worry about • Amount of pain • Third spacing • Possible complications • Their wish list: • Extubate tomorrow, MRI at midnight • Special meds: antibiotic and stress ulcer prophylaxis
The Surgical Report • What to touch and not to touch? • NG, foley, chest tube, rectum, etc. • Check all their orders for appropriate dosing and fluids • mg/kg/dose is not in surgical vocabulary • Who is in Charge? (Us vs. Them) • Surgical POC? • Interface with surgeons before they return to the OR in AM regarding the plan
Assessment of Fluid Balance: • Vital signs (HR/BP) • Urine output • Extremity warmth, CRT • Acid-base status • Occasionally invasive monitoring • Remember the Liver!
Extubation Time? • Adequate airway (edema? ,Leak?) • Maintain oxygenation and ventilation • Neurologically able to protect the airway and maintain adequate drive. • Small/young infants are at increased risk of apnea • Especially if post-conceptual age < 50weeks
Sedation and Analgesia • Analgesia for painful diseases and procedures • Compliance with controlled ventilation and routine intensive care • Sedation for amnesia for the periods of noxious stimuli • Reduce the physiologic responses to stress
Sedation and Analgesia • The idea of titrating drugs to effect--there is no “dose”. • Keep in mind what the “target” response is. • Consider Round-the-clock Tylenol for 24-48 hours as adjunct • First PR dose may be 30-40 mg/kg • Anesthesia service manages Epidurals • Consider a continuous drip
BP: hypotension, H: Histamine, A: Apnea, CWR: chest wall rigidity
Muscle Relaxants • They provide ZERO sedation/analgesia. • Indications (always relative) • Mechanical ventilation where risk of extubation is great, or risk of baro/volutrauma is high • Procedures such as central line placement or biopsy in the intubated patient • Intractable intracranial hypertension (IF ICP being monitored)
Problems with Blockade • Fluid retention • Long term weakness • continuous infusions • most commonly the steroid based NMBs • myopathy associated with Atracurium • consider using cis-Atracurium • Consider Train of Four testing • FREQUNTLY OVERUSED
Questions ? • NEXT UP • Mechanical ventilation This is not the NICU!
Lesson Learned:VALI –Predisposing Factors • High lung Volumes • With high peak pressure and alveolar overdistension • Repeated alveolar collapse and reopening • High inspired oxygen Concentrations • Preexisting lung injury Slutsky Am J Resp CCM, 1999, Dreyfuss Am J Resp CCM 1998
Mechanical Ventilation • Do’s and Don’ts • Avoid Overdistension and High Pressure by limiting Tv • Avoid Hyperoxic Lung damage by turning FIO2 down (Sat 90% okay) • Avoid cyclic collapse by using PEEP to recruit FRC and keep it above Closing volume • Infant high risk 2° high elastic recoil and complaint chest wall
Getting Started (Settings) • FIO2 - 50%, if sick 100% • It - minimum .5 sec, older kids 1 sec • Rate - age appropriate 15 -30 to start • Tv - 10ml/kg to start • Look / Listen / Ask • PEEP - 4cm, higher if FRC compromised
IT and Time Constants Full equilibration • The time to fill each alveolus is determined by its time constant • TC= Resistance X Compliance • A Short IT decreases TV, or increases PIP
Mechanical Ventilation • First hour • CXR and “Blood Gas” • Watch peak pressures as compliance estimate • PP << 20 ideal • PP 20-30 moderately compliance • PP >> 30 severely compliance • PP >> 35 high risk for VALI, DO SOMETHING
Mechanical Ventilation • Change Tv only for inappropriate chest rise or for elevated inspiratory pressures (Don’t WEAN Tv) • Sedation to allow patient - ventilator synchrony (Paralytics aren’t required)
Monitoring adjuncts • Pulse oximeter • End tidal CO2 - can use for Dead space estimate • ABG’s and CBG’s • Calculate Compliance, A-a gradient, Oxygenation Index (OI), check for Autopeep • Graphics - PV and flow-volume loops
Equations • Dead Space = 1 - (EtCO2/PaCO2) • Static Comp. = Tv/ (Pplat- PEEP) • A-a gradient = • (Pb-PH2O) x FIO2 - (PCO2/.8) - PaO2 • OI = (Paw x FIO2 x 100)/ PaO2
When things go wrong • Don’t be a DOPE • Hypoxemia - PEEP to FRC, to allow FIO2 wean to < 50% • Elevated peak pressures - suction, adopt Permissive hypercapnia, consider changing to pressure mode • Check circuit size • an inappropriately large circuit can gobble up lots of tidal volume
Paw (Area Under Curve )increases with increasing: • PIP, PEEP, TI/TE Ratio, Rate, and Flow PIP Pressure Flow Rate TI PIP PEEP PEEP Time TI TE
Circuit compliance • When using volume ventilation the ventilator circuit or tubing will stretch • Neonatal 0.35 ml / cm H2O • Pediatric 1.4 ml / cm H2O • Adult 2.8 ml / cm H2O • This means the stiffer the lung the more volume is lost in the circuit
Mechanical Ventilation • First day and beyond • Watch for fluid overload • all patients on positive pressure ventilation retain lung water • Assist patient efforts • Pressure support or volume support • Trigger sensitivity (age and disease appropriate) • Treat underlying condition • Feed patient
Weaning • Get condition under control • Stop paralytics (PEEP < 8) • Encourage patient’s efforts • Rate (slow then fast) • add Pressure support (2/3 P) • Wean PEEP and PS slowly in 1-2 cm H2O increments • Wean FIO2 to 30% if possible
Signs of weaning failure • Increased Work of breathing • fast spontaneous RR • small spontaneous Tv • Increased FIO2requirement • Hemodynamic compromise
Time for Extubation? • Think SOAP • Secretions / Sedation / Spontaneous Tv (>5ml/kg) • Oxygenation <35% • Airway - Maintainable?, Leak? , Steroids? • Pressures - PP <25, PEEP < 5
Extubation success predictors Khan, CCM 1996
Special situations I • Obstructive Diseases • Asthma and RSV Bronchiolitis • Watch for air trapping / breath stacking • Low rate, larger Tidal volume, long Expiratory time • check Autopeep • preserve I-time • Consider Heliox, Ketamine, Halothane
Special situations II • ARDS • Limit Tv accept hypercapnia • Increase PEEP for FRC • Prone positioning • CaO2 and tolerate lower Sat % • consider High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation>>> Surfactant>>> Nitric Oxide
Volutrauma 861 patients 6ml/kg vs 12ml/kg Tv ARDS Study Group, NEJM, 2000
Biotrauma Organ Failure • RCT 44 adults with ARDS • TV 7.6 vs. 11.1 • PP 24 vs. 31 cm H2O • At 36° patients in low TV group had significantly lower levels of TNF and IL-1ra in both plasma and BAL fluid Ranieri, JAMA,1999; Ranieri JAMA, 2000
Special situations III • Head Trauma • Avoid Hypercarbia (PCO2 < 35) • Avoid Hypoxemia • PEEP may adversely effect venous return and ICP • Coughing/gagging extremely bad (Use paralytics)
Special situations IV • HFOV Indications • ARHF with OI > 13 for 6 hours • Contraindicated in High airway resistance, ICP, unstable hemodynamics • Part of an Open lung strategy with Mean airway pressure and Tv < dead space
HFOV vs. CMV • Crossover study acute hypoxemic respiratory failure in children • HFOV 17/29 responded, 0/17 died • CMV 10/29 responded, 4/10 died • X-over to HFOV 11/19 survived • X-over to CMV 2/11 survived Arnold, CCM 1994
Ventilation Simulator • Not for the weak of heart
The End Mind what you have learned. Save you it can.