Recognition of Impending Respiratory Failure
First Things First (assess & treat for the following):
First Things First (assess & treat for the following):
First Things First (assess & treat for the following):
- Definition
- Respiratory failure: inadequate oxygenation and/or ventilation OR failure to protect airway
- Respiratory failure can be physiologic or mechanical
- Physiologic: infection, mental status, systemic acid–base disturbance, acute coronary syndromes, etc.
- Mechanical failure: anatomic obstruction or disruption preventing adequate gas exchange (eg, angioedema, tracheal transection, neck hematoma) OR failure of respiratory musculature (eg, neuromuscular disease, spinal trauma)
- Oxygenation: measured by SaO2 or PaO2
- Ventilation: measured by PaCO2
- ABG is test of choice; VBG correlates, but higher PCO2 threshold value
- Airway protection: gag reflex is not helpful—clinical assessment is paramount; gag reflex does not accurately predict ability to protect airway
- Despite potential appearance otherwise, trauma patients with GCS < 8 should be considered to have impeding respiratory failure
- Treat hypoxemia aggressively and early
- Rule out acute cardiac failure as cause
- Rule out toxidrome by history
- Toxicology-focused labs generally not helpful in identifying life-threatening toxidrome with respiratory failure
- Identification
- Recognition of impending respiratory failure is a CLINICAL assessment
- Not done on the basis of laboratory or radiographic findings
- Findings that mandate airway management
- Significant hypoxia that does not improve with non-invasive O2 supplementation
- Expanding neck mass
- GCS 8 or less in acute trauma
- Inability to protect airway
- Anticipated worsening of clinical condition
There's more to see -- the rest of this topic is available only to subscribers.
© 2000–2025 Unbound Medicine, Inc. All rights reserved