100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Critical care final exam review $15.39   Add to cart

Class notes

Critical care final exam review

 415 views  3 purchases

This document contains ALL of the notes from the entire semester, including new material New material- shock/mods, spinal cord injury, ICP, intracranial hemorrhage, brain death,

Preview 4 out of 76  pages

  • December 20, 2020
  • 76
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Ann langan
  • All classes
All documents for this subject (4)
avatar-seller
zbarkow

remember for shock ○
Neurogenic shock= hypotension, bradycardia, warm peripheries ○
All other types of shock= hypotension, tachycardia, cold peripheries Respiratory- 12 questions Physical Assessment --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ABG application & Acid base balance Arterial blood gas ●
Measures arterial o2 and co2 and ph ●
Assesses adequacy of alveolar ventilation Compensated PH: ●
PH IS NORMAL ●
but the PAo2 or HCO3 are abnormal Ph

------------7.35-7.45 Pao2---------

80-100 Paco2

---------35-45 Hco3-------

22-26 Sao2-------

95-100% ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Respiratory function Pulmonary edema ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Acute Respiratory Failure (shunting, dead space) Perfusion without ventilation
​ (shunt) ●
Blockage that prevents oxygen from getting into the alveoli ●
There is perfusion (blood going through) but no ventilation (blood getting oxygenated) ●
result= no air exchange in that particular alveoli Ventilation without perfusion ​
(dead space) ●
Air is coming in and going into the alveoli (so there is ventilation) ●
There is an obstruction of ​
blood that is not circulating ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ARDS (complications) *severe form of acute lung injury with inflammation ARDS leads to: ● injury to alveolar capillary membrane ●
Severe ventilation/perfusion mismatch occurs ●
Alveolar collapse and crackles ●
Small airway constriction ●
Lung compliance decreased ●
shunting ●
Inflammation ●
Refractory hypoxemia- hypoxemia is not responding to treatment ●
Reduced lung compliance ●
Bilateral infiltrates on X Ray ●
Death from non pulmonary multi system organ failure with sepsis ●
Resembles pulmonary edema ○
Rapid onset dyspnea ○
Arterial unresponsive hypoxemia ○
ALI - fibrosing alveolitis with persistent severe hypoxemia ○
Decreased pulmonary compliance - stiff ●
Intercostal retractions -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hypoventilation (patient at risk, symptoms) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Effects of PEEP ●
PEEP- (positive end expiratory pressure) improve oxygenation ○
Improves arterial oxygenation ○
Keeps a certain amount of pressure and air in lungs at the end of exhalation instead of letting it all out ■
This keeps the alveoli filled so they don’t collapse ○
May lower FIO2 ○
Goal is to get PAO2 over 60 and SPO2 over 90 ○
**can cause systemic hypotension by putting pressure on the heart ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chest Trauma (flail chest) ■
Flail chest ​
(type of rib fracture where the rib is cracked in 2 or more places, creating a floating fractured piece) ●
When 2 different ribs crack in two different places ●
Results in retraction of chest on one side --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chest tubes (assessment) Airway Management ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Endotracheal intubation procedure Endotracheal tube (ETT) ●
Tube that goes into patient's mouth or nose and down the throat ○
Placement ■
Make sure the tube is going to the lungs, not the esophagus ●
Blue part is external ●
Markings on the tube mean ●
Cuff on the tube--what's the purpose? Why do we inflate it? ○
What are complications of the cuff? ●
Pilot balloon- how the cuff gets inflated (injected with 10cc syringe of air) ●
Reason for use ○
Patient is in respiratory failure ○
Surgery- this is how general anesthesia is given ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Tracheostomy-----

Surgical procedure that Bypasses upper airway ●
Allows removal of secretions ●
Permits long term mechanical ventilation ●
Prevents aspiration of secretions ●
Can replace ET tube ●
Temporary or permanent ●
Secured by ties around neck ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mechanical Ventilation (modes, assessment, management) ○
Assist control ■
Controlled mandatory ventilation ■
Provides full ventilator support ■
Preset tidal volume and RR ■
If patient initiates breath before the preset rate, the ventilator will deliver the preset volume and give an “assist breath” ○
Intermittent mandatory ventilation ■
Allows for combination of machine and regular breaths ■
Machine breaths are delivered at preset time and preset volume ■
Tidal volume is up to the patient ■
Allows patient to use their own muscles for ventilation ■
Potential increase to “buck” the ventilator ○
Synchronous ■
Machine delivers preset tidal volume and RR ■
Spontaneous breaths can occur ■
Machine senses patient breath and will not initiate machine breath ■
“Bucking the vent” is decreased ○
Constant positive airway pressure ○
Pressure support ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Suctioning Purpose of sedative, analgesic agents Cuff assessment and management ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Weaning (trials, failure to wean causes) Weaning ●
Process of gradual withdrawal from dependence on vent or o2 ●
Terminal wean ○
Removal of ongoing ventilator support if the patient or family wants ○
Patient wishes ●
Cpap trial ○
Spontaneous breathing trial ○
Patient must be able to take a breath on their own -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ECG Strips- 7 questions ●
Atrial flutter (saw tooth) ●
Atrial fib (uncoordinated, no P, but QRS is seen ●
V tach (tombstones) ●
V fib (uncoordinated, no P or QRS) ●
First degree (prolonged PR interval, greater than 5 tiny boxes) ●
Second degree type 1 (longer and longer PR interval followed by drop QRS) ●
Second degree type 2 (constant PR interval with drop of QRS) ●
Third degree heart block (P waves not related to QRS, QRS is wide and bizarre) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cardiac- 12 questions Symptoms of ventricular rhythms --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cardioversion ●
Used for persistent tachyarrhythmias WITH a pulse ●
Synchronized with patients HR When to do Cardio version ●
Persistent tachy ​
with a pulse ●
Causes hypotension, altered mental status, shock, ischemic chest pain ●
A fib ●
V tach with a pulse ●
A flutter ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Defibrillation ●
Used for tachydysrhythmias WITHOUT a pulse ●
Unsynchronized with patients HR When to use Defibrillation ●
No pulse ●
V fib ●
V tach without a pulse ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Pacemaker ●
Pacemaker is Indicated for ○
Slow pulse formation ○
AV or ventricular conduction disturbance ○
NASPE-BPEG ​
code for pacemaker functions ■
First letter- which chamber is being paced (V-ventricular A- atria D-duel) ■
Second letter- which chamber is being sensed by the pacemaker (V,A,D or O-off) ■
Third letter- type of response made by the pacemaker (I-inhibited, T-triggered, D-duel, O-off) ○
Complications of pacemakers ■
Infection ■
Bleeding or hematoma ■
Dislocation of lead ■
Cardiac tamponade ■
Skeletal muscle stimulation ■
Pacemaker malfunction ■
Pneumothorax or hemothorax ■
Script from irritation of electrode ○
Fixed vs Demand ■
Fixed ●
•Pacemaker is set to pace but not to sense ●
•Paces at a constant rate, independent of the patient’s intrinsic rhythm ■
Demand ●
•Pacemaker is set to to sense and respond to intrinsic activity ●
•Fires only when the patient needs it ○
Capture- ●
Term used to denote that the appropriate complex following the pacing spike -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CABG Heart failure Pulmonary edema ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller zbarkow. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $15.39. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

71184 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$15.39  3x  sold
  • (0)
  Add to cart