Term
|
Definition
Cardio-pulmonary-cerebral-resuscitation |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Perfusion
- Cerebral
- Myocardial
- Life support
- Basic (ABC's)
- Advanced (DEF) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
- Drugs
- Electrocardiogram
- Defibrillation |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- tube selection
- size - grab 3; size depends on animal
- cuffed tubes
- laryngoscope (for insertion of endotracheal tube)
- suction - in cases of pulmonary edema
- patient positioning - so you can visualize before placing the tube
- emergency tracheostomy
- verification of tube placement
- secure tube (ambu bag is heavy...)
- inflate cuff |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Airway:
How do you verify the tube placement |
|
Definition
- direct visualization
- palpation - hard from the outside of dog; can palpate in mouth to make sure it went down the right tube (caution: potential bite injury)
- chest wall movement
- auscultation - listen for good lung sounds
- end-tidal CO2 - can use end-tidal or capnography |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Breathing:
What rate |
|
Definition
- 10-24 breaths/min (normal rate) (\/ in large dogs, /\ in small dogs)
- too fast can HARM patient
- normal chest wall motion
- airway pressure should not exceed 20 cmH2O |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Circulation:
Why, random info |
|
Definition
- Perfusion: heart & brain
- rapid institution of circulatory support (compressions)
- minimize interruptions (<30 sec, even between swapping compression people)
- cardiac massage
- external: closed chest
- internal: open chest |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Circulation:
Chest compressions:
rate, 2 kinds of compressions |
|
Definition
- Rate: 120 cpm
- higher perfusion pressures
- greater ROSC and survival
- Return of Spontanious Circulation
- Closed chest
- Open chest (through diaphragm or opening up chest) |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Circulation: Chest compresions:
Closed chest:
Positioning, pump theories, technique |
|
Definition
- Lateral or dorsal recumbency (hard bc they roll)
- Pump theories
- Cardiac pump - compressing heart (smaller animals)
- Thoracic pump - compressing the whole chest (lareger dogs in lateral recumbency)
- Technique
- compress chest by at least 25%
- allow recoil of chest
- a compression is 50% of 'duty cycle' (should be 1:1 ratio of time compressed and time relaxing w/ chest up)
- this results in less than 20% normal cardiac output
- Alternative techniques
- Simultaneous ventilation/compression (SVD)
- Active compression/decompression (ACD)
|
|
|
Term
CPCR: Routes for administration of drugs/fluids |
|
Definition
Intravenous - central & peripheral
Intratracheal
Intraosseus
Intracardiac |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Intracardiac injection |
|
Definition
- not recommended for closed-chest
- complications: hemopericardium, hemothorax, pneumothorax, intractable arrhythmias |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Intraosseus injections |
|
Definition
- Pediatrics & exotics
- Location:
- trochanteric fossa
- tibal crest
- proximal humerus
- rapid absorption!
- drugs OR fluids |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Intratracheal injections |
|
Definition
- Drugs: Atropine, epinephrine, vasopressin, lidocaine
- Red-rubber catheter into ET tube or just inject meds into tube
- Double dose
- Dilute to 5-6 mls
- Give 2 full breths
- Fast
|
|
|
Term
CPCR: Intravenous injections (2 modes) |
|
Definition
Central
- Jugular; blood sampling and fluids
- fastest circulation time
- Percutaneous (needle) or Cut-down (scalpel to visualize vessle)
- Requires greater technical expertise
Peripheral
- may already be present (ex anesthesia)
- less technical expertese
- slower to central circulation - flush drugs into central circ w/ 5-50 ml of a crystalloid solution
- percutaneous or cut-down (if vessel's collapsed or severly dehydrated)
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- use gel, NOT alcohol (could spark)
- ensure good contact (to detect asystole, pulseless electrical activity, V-fib)
- Asystole? Check your ECG leads!
- V-fib: ventricles tremor, no cardiac output
- Pulseless electrical activity (PEA)/ electrical mechanical disociation - you can have a normal ECG ~20-30 min after a horse is dead :-o
|
|
|
Term
Hyperkalemia (pertaining to CPCR) |
|
Definition
- VERY common reason for animals to arrest
- Iatrogenic - we give large amt of K, stops heart
- Feline urethral obstruction can cause this |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- What rate? shock doses, no fluids..it depends
- Hypovolemia - aggressive fluid resuscitation
- isotonic crystalloids
- hypertonic saline
- euvolemia (normal volume)
- may decrease myocardia and cerebral perfusion |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Anesthesia-related arrest
4 steps |
|
Definition
1. turn OFF inhalant, ON 100% oxygen
2. Check airway
3. CALL FOR HELP
4. Start CPCR, consider reversal agents |
|
|
Term
CPCR: Defibrillation:
Define
Types |
|
Definition
- conversion of Vfib to a perfusing rhythm
- electrical (generally used but chemical and mechanical also available)
- External
- Internal
Sidenote: 5.5% decline in survival with each min elapsed from time of collapse until delivery of shocks |
|
|
Term
CPCR: External electrical defibrillation |
|
Definition
- Hand-held defib paddles
- NEED good contact - saline soaked sponges, defib gel, +/- clipped hair
- NO ALCOHOL
- 3-5 J/kg
- 3 successive shocks across chest wall, increase energy in 2nd and 3 shocks
- pause ONLY to evaluate ECG and charge defibrillator |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Treat underlying cause of CPA (cardiopulmonary arrest)
- Cardiovascular support
- Respiratory support
- Neurological support |
|
|
Term
Causes of Tachycardia & solutions |
|
Definition
1. Pain - /\ analgesia
2. Awareness - /\ anesthesia
3. Atropine/Ketamine - be aware of it
4. hypercapnia - hyperventilate
5. hypoxia - /\ oxygen
6. hypotension - /\ fluids
7. hypovolemia - /\ fluids
8. tachyarrhythmias |
|
|
Term
Causes of bradycardia & solutions |
|
Definition
1. drugs: opioids, alpha2 agonists - give reversal
2. excessive vagal tone: eye, viscera, too light - give anticholinergic
3. hypothermia - warm up
4. hyperkalemia (K is stored in cells and released when HBC) - we correct it
5. sick sinus syndrome, conduction block, etc (slow arrhythmias) |
|
|
Term
Troubleshooting: how low is too low? (heart rate) |
|
Definition
- 60 bpm is the "magic" number
- weak pulse, low blood pressure
- pale mucus membranes
- prolonged CRT
- low urine output
- pre-existing organ disease |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Too light/too deep - panting will make too lite - you can hear valves clicking
- hypoxemia
- hypercapnia - eventually gets to brain stem and lows it down
- hyperthermia - rare cause
- pain
- awareness
- drug induced |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- drugs: thiobarbiturates/propofol
- overventilated
- too deep
- closed pop-off valve
- occluded airway - happens in cats with asthsma (mucus plugs tube) and kinked tubes
- cardiac arrest |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- hypoventilation
- pneumothorax
- decreased inspired oxygen - diagnose with pulse ox or arterial blood gas - fix: O2, intubate, ventilate
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- hypoventilation: too deep, intracranial or cervical disease, drugs
- restriction of resp movement: pneumothorax, surgeon's hands on chest
- exhausted soda-sorb, inspiratory valve stuck open, too long ET tube (rebreathing)
- excess CO2 production (rare b/c they are not exercising) |
|
|
Term
What to do if:
Patient is not breathing |
|
Definition
- treat underlying problem (drugs, too deep, open popoff)
- mechanical or manual ventilation
- doxapram respiratory effect is very short |
|
|
Term
What to do if:
Patiet wakes up |
|
Definition
- Use inhalant (if caught early)
- Inject more anesthetic (10-20% of induction dose) |
|
|
Term
What to do if:
MAP is too low |
|
Definition
- check anesthetic depth and decrease inhalant
- administer fluids (if possible)
- administer drugs to increase MAP |
|
|
Term
What to do if:
Patient regurges |
|
Definition
- protect airway
- protect esophagus (if really acidic, rinse w/ sterile water)
- remove esophageal stethescope
- suction oral pharynx & esophagus
- consider extubating w/ cuff inflated |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
protection
teaching
essential for survival! |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Response to a noxious stimulus on a nociceptor |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
specialized sensory receptors; small unmyelinated nerves
A fiber mechanoheat- first pain - localized
- ex: hit shin, it hurts immediately
C fiber mechanoheat - "second" or "slow pain"
- diffuse & persistent
- ex: wake up the next morning and it's throbbing and achey |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Visceral
- thoracic and abdominal viscera (organs)
- poorly localized (hurts all over)
- cramping/gnawing
Somtatic
- peripheral (skin, joints, muscle, skeletal)
- easily localized (it hurts here)
- aching, stabbing, or throbbing |
|
|
Term
Temporal aspect of pain (2) |
|
Definition
Acute
- soft tissue trauma
- inflammation (a little is good, too much retards healing)
- facilitates tissue healing
- post-op pain
Chronic
- persists beyond expected healing time (>3-6 months)
- MUCH more difficult to treat
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Nociception
- transduction
- transmission
- modulation
Perception - MUST be conscious
Response (behavior chagne) |
|
|
Term
Components of Nociception |
|
Definition
- Transduction - noxious stimuli at nociceptor (what hurts)
- Transmission - nerve impulse (signal goes to brain)
- Modulation - modify nociceptive transmission (can be upregulated or downregulated) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
pain is perceived as more painful than it should be |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
non-painful stimulus preceived as painful |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- corticosteroids = poor wound healing, delayed recovery
- weight loss, negative energy balance
- /\ incidence of post-op complication
- \/ efficiency of ventilation
- self mutilation/biting wound
- may become chronic and difficult to treat |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- observe without interacting
- respond favorably to extra attention
- vocalization stops when comforted
- buarding behavior, hunched posture
- unwillingness to move
- shivering or panting
- staring eyes
- physiologic sympathetic signs |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- turn away from humans, hide at back of cage
- refuse to change body position
- vocalization rare
- lack grooming
- aggressive when moved/touched
- squinted eyes
- physiologic sympathetic signs |
|
|
Term
Strategies for treatment of pain |
|
Definition
Preemptive analgesia - easier to prevent than treat
- limit "wind up"
- preop analgesics reduce anesthetic requirements
Multimoda analgesia (balanced) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
administration of 2 or more classes of analgesics |
|
|
Term
Formulating a plan for pain |
|
Definition
- treatment must match pain level
- source/type of pain (visceral, somatic, pathologic, mixed)
- duration of pain
- species specific issues
- everyone is different |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Undulations in capnogram that are synchronous with cardiac contractions (bumps with each heart beat b/c heart beat pumps out a little CO2 with each beat)
[image] |
|
|