Respiratory Distress and Failure Flashcard 1
Rationale
A. Rationale: Respiratory distress is a clinical condition characterized by increased work of breathing or respiratory rate in an effort to meet the body’s metabolic demands. Signs and symptoms include tachypnea, tachycardia, retractions, and abnormal breath sounds such as grunting, wheezes, or crackles.
Question
A 5-year-old boy presents to the ED with a fever. He is conscious but irritable. His vital signs include a temperature of 102°F, heart rate of 122 bpm, and respiratory rate of 36 breaths/min. On physical examination, he is pale and ill-appearing. Auscultation reveals crackles in the lower lung fields bilaterally. What is the respiratory status of the patient?
a. Respiratory distress
b. Respiratory failure
c. Respiratory arrest
d. None of the above
Answer
a. Respiratory distress
Rationale
B. Rationale: Respiratory failure is the inability to maintain adequate oxygenation and ventilation to maintain the body’s metabolic demands. Signs and symptoms include slow breathing, lack of respiratory effort due to fatigue, abnormal breath sounds, bradycardia, lethargy and lack of responsiveness, and cyanosis.
Question
A 3-month-old female infant is brought to the ED for a decreasing level of consciousness. She is lethargic and pale with cyanotic lips. Her vital signs show a heart rate of 70 bpm, a respiratory rate of 18 breaths/min, and oxygen saturation of 84%. What is the respiratory status of this patient?
a. Respiratory distress
b. Respiratory failure
c. Respiratory arrest
d. All of the above
Answer
b. Respiratory failure
Rationale
A. Rationale: Croup is a medical condition that causes inflammation of the trachea and larynx. The presence of stridor in a patient with croup signifies that there is an obstruction in the upper airway due to inflammation. Additional assessment of the patient is necessary to determine the severity of the obstruction. In mild croup, stridor may only be present when the child is crying or upset. In more severe croup, stridor may be present at rest.
Question
A 4-year-old girl is diagnosed with croup and presents with stridor. Which of the following is a potential respiratory problem in this case?
a. Upper airway obstruction
b. Lower airway obstruction
c. Lung tissue disease
d. Disordered control of breathing
Answer
a. Upper airway obstruction
Rationale
A. Rationale: Bronchial asthma is a disease that causes widespread narrowing of the conductive airways, causing increased airway resistance that ultimately reduces the amount of oxygen in the airways and leads to hypoxemia.
Question
A patient is being treated in the ED for bronchial asthma in acute exacerbation. What is the mechanism of respiratory distress in this patient?
a. Increased airway resistance
b. Decreased airway resistance
c. Increased lung compliance
d. Decreased lung compliance
Answer
a. Increased airway resistance
Rationale
B. Rationale: The antidote for heroin overdose is naloxone. Naloxone competes with the opiates and binds with opioid receptors, reversing the effects of drug overdose with heroin, a synthetic opiate.
Question
A teenager is brought to the emergency department for a drug overdose, and the emergency consultant recommends giving naloxone to the patient. Naloxone is the antidote for which of the following:
a. Cocaine
b. Heroin
c. LSD
d. Marijuana
Answer
b. Heroin
Rationale
D. Rationale: Children with breathing difficulties show signs of having to work hard to breathe or not getting enough oxygen, indicating respiratory distress. These include nose flaring, retractions seen in the thorax, marked tachypnea, increased respiratory effort, poor distal air movement, tachycardia, abnormal breath sounds such as wheezes, grunting, and stridor, hypoxemia despite oxygen supplementation, and cyanosis. Respiratory failure ensues if the problem is not addressed promptly. Absent respiratory effort or distal air movement and decreased level of consciousness in addition to the signs mentioned above are indicative of respiratory failure.
Question
All of the following are signs of respiratory distress EXCEPT:
a. Marked tachypnea
b. Increased respiratory effort
c. Tachycardia
d. Absent distal air movement
Answer
d. Absent distal air movement
Rationale
A. Rationale: Corticosteroids, such as methylprednisolone, can be administered to this patient. It can be injected intramuscularly, but some preparations make it possible to be inhaled. Corticosteroids are an adjunctive therapy that take time to be effective. Epinephrine should always be administered first when airway swelling is present due to anaphylaxis. Providing positive pressure ventilation after giving this medication can help the respiratory effort.
Question
An 8-year-old girl is experiencing anaphylaxis after eating strawberries. She is having difficulty breathing, likely due to swelling of the pharynx. Immediate intervention with epinephrine is provided. Severe swelling of the pharynx can be additionally managed by which one of the following treatment interventions?
a. Methylprednisolone
b. Atropine
c. Ibuprofen
d. Loratadine
Answer
a. Methylprednisolone
Rationale
A. Rationale: Respiratory acidosis is a disturbance in the acid-base balance that occurs when the lungs cannot remove the CO2 produced by the body, causing an increase in the PaCO2 and lowering the pH in the blood. In this case, there is insufficient gas exchange at the level of the alveoli and capillaries, increasing the amount of CO2 in the body and decreasing the oxygen in the blood. Respiratory alkalosis occurs when the lungs expel or remove CO2 at a faster rate, as in alveolar hyperventilation resulting in a reduced PaCO2. Metabolic acidosis occurs when the body produces too much acid or when the kidneys cannot remove enough acid from the body. Metabolic alkalosis is an acid-base imbalance brought about by a decrease in the body’s hydrogen ion concentration leading to an increased bicarbonate concentration or as a direct increase of bicarbonate.
Question
An arterial blood gas was requested, and the sample shows the following values:
pH: 7.30 (normal range 7.35–7.45)
PaCO2: 48 mm Hg (normal range 35–45 mm Hg)
HCO3: 24 mmol/L (normal range 22–26 mmol/L)
The likely acid-base imbalance is:
a. Respiratory acidosis
b. Respiratory alkalosis
c. Metabolic acidosis
d. Metabolic alkalosis
Answer
a. Respiratory acidosis
Rationale
B. Rationale: Capnography measures the amount of carbon dioxide in a patient’s breath as end-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2). It cannot measure the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) in the blood nor the oxygen saturation. PaCO2 is directly obtained through arterial blood gas analysis, while oxygen saturation is measured using a pulse oximeter.
Question
Capnography is used to measure which parameter in the body?
a. Arterial carbon dioxide
b. End-tidal carbon dioxide
c. Oxygen saturation
d. End-tidal oxygen
Answer
b. End-tidal carbon dioxide
Rationale
C. Rationale: To save time and provide the appropriate interventions to a pediatric patient in respiratory distress, the healthcare provider must identify the type and severity of the respiratory problem rather than the etiology of the disease. Determining the etiology will require more time-consuming tests. Immediately intubating the patient is also not recommended because it is invasive, and the severity of the disease has not yet been established. A crash cart is always present, but it is unnecessary at this point since the patient is not in cardiac arrest.
Question
For healthcare providers to immediately recognize and intervene to stabilize a pediatric patient in respiratory distress, the focus must be on:
a. The etiology of the respiratory problem
b. Immediately intubating the patient
c. The type and severity of the respiratory problem
d. Obtaining a crash cart in anticipation of a code arrest
Answer
c. The type and severity of the respiratory problem