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Unit 5 SVN case studies. By Elizabeth Kelley Buzbee AAS, RRT-NPS RCP. Mrs. Mosby is a 45 year old who presents in the ER with c/o [complaints of ] SOB [shortness of breath]. She is wearing a pulse oximeter on her finger that says 99% How do you assess her?. answer.
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Unit 5 SVNcase studies By Elizabeth Kelley Buzbee AAS, RRT-NPS RCP
Mrs. Mosby is a 45 year old who presents in the ER with c/o [complaints of ] SOB [shortness of breath]. She is wearing a pulse oximeter on her finger that says 99% How do you assess her?
answer • Collect VS [vital signs] to assess her dyspnea • Interview her to discover her history of recent exposures or underlying lung disease • Observe her for retractions, and other signs of increased WOB • Listen to her breath sounds
Her HR is 120 bpm and her respiratory rate is 31 bpm. • She is a waitress who came into the ER after a kitchen fire. She has no history of lung disease and does not smoke. • She has nasal flaring and mild supraclavicular retractions and mild intercostal retractions. • She has inspiratory and expiratory wheezing in all lobes • What do you suggest?
answer • A bronchodilator to treat the wheezing • Remove the pulse ox, it is unhelpful at this point • Assess her HbC0 with a co-oximeter reading and get her started on supplementary 02 at 100% NRB to washout the CO.
Her HbCO is 5% so the doctor orders a NRM to washout to Carbon Monoxide • The doctor also orders Atrovent [Iprotropium bromide ] You suggest?
answer • Atrovent [iprotropium bromide] is a Cholinergic blocker. You might be better starting with the Beta II first because that stimulates bronchodilator rather than blocks bronchospasm. • You could keep the iprotropium bromide, but add Albuterol
The doctor orders .25mL of 5% Alupent [ Metaproterenol ] in 3 ml of normal saline. • You suggest?
answer • Agree, this is the correct dose, and this is a Beta II agonist
What other inhaled drug might be helpful with the inflammation one sees with thermal damage and chemical irritation
answer • Inhaled or IV steroids might be helpful in this case
Case study # 2 • Your patient is a 4 year old LAF who is admitted to the ER with respiratory distress. You suggest:
answer • Assess her VS • Assess her 02 status by pulse oximeter • Assess her breath sounds
Her VS shows a respiratory rate of 29 bpm [slightly respiratory rate for age] Her HR is 135 again slightly high • Her Sp02 is 98% • On auscultation, you hear scattered rhonchi to both lungs • What do you suggest?
answer • Continue to monitor her for hypoxemia but for now no 02 is indicated. She has no s/s of respiratory distress now—but something brought her to the hospital • Continue to assess
The doctor orders an X-Ray that shows areas of consolidation in the Right Middle Lobe. He orders 2 cc of 10 % Acetylcysteine. Why?
answer • He wants to mobilize the secretions by breaking up the chemical bonds of the mucus
You suggest what else might be necessary for this patient? • When you administer this aerosol, you will use what kind of device?
answer • She needs a Beta II bronchodilator with the mucolytic which irritates the lungs • Both of these drugs can be given with a pneumatic aerosol generator SVN
When you add this drug to the SVN you notice that is smells like rotten eggs and that it seems to have an oily sheen. • What is going on?
answer • Nothing, Acetylcysteine smells like rotten eggs and it has a sheen
When you administer this drug, the child starts to breath faster and her heart rate increases. • What do you do?
answer • Listen to her breath sounds. • Assess her pulse ox for increased hypoxemia
Her breath sounds have scattered inspiratory and expiratory wheezes • Her Sp02 has dropped from 95% to 89% • You suggest?
answer • Stop the treatment and give her a Beta II drug alone • Give the TX with 02 and the Sp02 should go back up. • Continue to monitor • Consider another mucolytic
Case study # 3 • Your patient is a 35 year old WM with a history of AIDS. He is admitted to the ER with increased respiratory distress • What do you suggest?
answer • Get VS • Assess 02 status with Sp02 • Listen to breath sounds • Get sputum culture to send to lab because AIDS patients get infections
His Sp02 is 89% on R.A • His respiratory rate is 31 bpm • He is retracting and flaring • You hear diffuse crackles • The doctor asks you to help collect the sputum using whatever tools you have. • You suggest:
answer • We could give him a combination of Albuterol and Acetylcysteine to mobilize secretions without stimulation of bronchospasm • We could also give him hypotonic or hypertonic saline to cause him to cough, but we need to monitor him for wheezing triggered by the hypertonic
The doctor performs a bronchoscopy and obtains sputum that is sent to the lab. • The lab diagnosis is a PCP infection of the lung. • You suggest?
answer • Pentamidine to control the parasitic infection • If the pentamidine causes bronchospasm you would like some Beta II drug ordered PRN
answer • The Respirgard II, because it has bacteria filters in the exhalation line to protect the RCP • It has baffles to reduce the particle sizes to less than 1 micron to enter the alveoli where it is needed
Case study # 4 • Your patient is a newborn who presents with increased respiratory distress. He is tachypnic and tachycardia. • You suggest:
answer • Assess hypoxia with pulse oximeter • Assess breath sounds
The Sp02 is 89% and the doctor orders a heated hood at 30% for the baby whose respiratory rate decreases. The Sp02 rises to 93% • You listen to breath sounds and hear diffuse wheezing and inspiratory stridor • You suggest:
answer • Give Beta II bronchodilator for wheezing • Give racemic epinephrine for stridor
answer • Via the pneumatic SVN
The doctor orders a nasal wash on this child because she suspects he has RSV pneumonia. • What do you suggest?
answer • Administer 6 grams of Ribavirin in 300 ml sterile water to run over 18 hours for three days. If the nasal wash is negative for RSV, we can just stop the TX, but we have to start within 24 hours of symptoms, otherwise Ribavirin is useless
answer • Via the SPAG unit into the baby’s heated hood.
Case study # 5 • Your patient comes into the ER in great respiratory distress. This 22 year old has a long history of severe asthma. • You suggest?
answer • Assess VS • Assess Sp02 • Assess breath sounds • If she is wheezing, and if she can handle it offer a PERF
Her respiratory rate is 34 bpm, her heart rate is 130 bpm • Her Sp02 is 88% on 2 lpm nasal cannula started by the EMT • Her breath sounds show diminished breath sounds in the Right middle lobe and scattered expiratory and inspiratory wheezes to all other lobes. • Her exhalation is prolonged • She refuses to even try the PERF • You suggest?
answer • She needs more 02, increase her from 2 lpm to 5 or 6lpm • Start her on 2.5 mg Albuterol now • Disregard the PEFR, it will only confirm what we already know—she is in bronchospasm
After the 2.5 mg of Albuterol, and getting a steroid IV started, the doctor orders another TX in 30 minutes. It does no good. • He decides to start continuous treatments. You set up what?