Transcript Slide 1

Congestive Heart Failure
and
Pulmonary Edema
Nestor Nestor, MD
June 21, 2006
Goals and Outline
1. Pathophysiology of Congestive Heart
Failure (CHF)
2. Recognizing CHF and Pulmonary
Edema (PE)
3. Prehospital Treatment
1. Pathophysiology
Terminology
• Heart Failure: The inability of the heart to
maintain an output adequate to maintain the
metabolic demands of the body.
• Pulmonary Edema: An abnormal
accumulation of fluid in the lungs.
• CHF with Acute Pulmonary Edema:
Pulmonary Edema due to Heart Failure
(Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema)
The Heart is Two
Pumps in Series
O2
CO2
LA
RV
tissue
Like any pump:
• The heart
generates pressure
to deliver blood to
the body
• Therefore it also
must…
Pull blood out of the veins
Fluid (and some cells) from
stagnating blood leak out…
alveolus
capillary
lymphatic
Three Pathophysiological
Causes of Failure
• Increased work load (HTN)
• Myocardial Dysfunction (ASCVD)
• Decreased Ventricular Filling
(Valvular, cardiomyopathy, etc.)
Normal Heart
RV
LV
Myocardial Infarction
Hypertension
Dilated Cardiomyopathy
Heart Failure - Concepts
• Cardiac Output (L/min)
• Afterload (BP)
– Primarily arterial and systolic function
• Preload (volume)
– Primarily a venous and diastolic function
• Frank-Starling Length: Tension Ratio
– Why preload effects output
CHF: A Vicious Cycle
Low Output
Increased Preload
Increased Afterload
Norepinephrine
Increased Salt
Vasoconstriction
Renin
Angiotension I
Angiotension II
Aldosterone
Renal Blood Flow
Airway
no gas
exchange
Gas exchange
CO2
flow
O2
Infiltration of Interstitial Space
Normal
Micro-anatomy
Micro-anatomy with
fluid displacement
Perivascular cuffs in early pulmonary
edema
cuff
Normal
lung
Early pulmonary
edema
The ultimate insult: alveolar flooding
flow
Precipitating Causes
•
•
•
•
•
•
Non-Compliance with Meds and Diet
Increased Sodium Diet (Holiday Failure)
Acute MI
Arrhythmia (e.g. AF)
Infection (pneumonia, viral illness)
Pregnancy
2. Recognizing CHF and
Pulmonary Edema
Acute
Pulmonary
Edema
History, History, History
• Acute or chronic onset
• Prior episodes
• Weight gain
• Medications
Symptoms
• Fatigue
• GI Symptoms
• Nocturia
• Chest Pain
• DOE
• Orthopnea
• PND
• Profound Dyspnea
Vitals
• Tachypnic
• Tachycardic
• Hypoxic
• Hypertensive (even “normal” may be too
high)
• or Hypotensive in severe failure
Physical Exam
•
•
•
•
•
•
Anxious
Pale
Clammy
Confusion
Edema
Diaphoretic
•
•
•
•
•
•
Rales
Rhonchi
S3 Gallop
JVD
Pink Frothy Sputum
Cyanosis
Pitting Edema
JVD
3. Prehospital Treatment
EMS Management
•
•
•
•
•
•
Sit upright
High Flow O2
Nitroglycerine (If SBP > 100)
Morphine
Diuretics (furosemide)
Ventilatory Support
– CPAP
– BVM
– Intubation and ventilation
Pharmacological Treatment:
Nitroglycerine (NTG)
• Relaxes arteries and veins
• 0.4 mg sub lingual or 1 spray
• Repeat x2 every 5 min if SBP > 100
• Consider 1” NTG paste to CW
Pharmacological Treatment:
Morphine
• Also relaxes arteries and veins
• Reduces anxiety and O2 demand
• 2-4 mg IV
Pharmacological Treatment:
Furosemide (Lasix)
• A diuretic, reducing fluid overload
• Requires good enough cardiac output to reach
the kidneys
• 40mg IV
• May require more if already taking Lasix
Pharmacological Treatment:
Beta Blockers (Lopressor)???
• Not useful in acute CHF
• Decrease HR and output, worsening failure
• May cause/worsen bronchoconstriction
• However they are used in stable, compensated
failure so they may be on a pt’s med list
Ventilatory Support:
CPAP
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
CPAP is oxygen therapy in its
most efficient form.
 Simple Masks
 Venturi Masks
 CPAP
Why does oxygen pass into the blood?
The Pressure Gradient
Deoxygenated blood
has a lower partial
pressure of oxygen
so oxygen transfers
from the air into the
blood.
CPAP and Patient
Airway Pressure
‘The application of positive airway pressure throughout the whole
respiratory cycle to spontaneously breathing patients.
CPAP increases the pressure
gradient
• 7.5cm H2O CPAP increases the partial pressure of the
alveolar air by approximately 1%.
• This increase in partial pressure ‘forces’ more oxygen
into the blood.
• Even this comparatively small change is enough to
make a clinical difference.
Physiological Effects Of CPAP
• Increases the volume of gas remaining in lungs at
end-expiration
• CPAP distends alveoli preventing collapse on
expiration
• Greater surface area improves gas exchange
• Reduces work of breathing
Application
CPAP And Pulmonary Edema
 CPAP increases transpulmonary pressure
 CPAP improves lung compliance
 CPAP improves arterial blood oxygenation
 CPAP redistributes extravascular lung water
Redistribution Of
Extravascular Lung Water
With CPAP
CPAP And Acute Respiratory
Failure
 CPAP prevents airway collapse during
exhalation
 CPAP overcomes inspiratory work imposed
by auto-peep (pursed lip breathing)
 CPAP may avoid intubation and
mechanical ventilation
Caution
• COPD and Asthmatic
patients do not respond
predictably to CPAP
• Higher risk of
complications such as
pneumothorax
When Not To Use Mask CPAP

Pneumothorax (evolve into tension)

Hypovolemia (further limit preload)

Severe facial injuries

Patients at risk of vomiting
Common Complications With
CPAP
 Gastric
distension
 Pulmonary barotrauma
 Reduced cardiac output
 Hypoventilation
CPAP Flow Sheet
No Exclusion Criteria Present
-Respiratory/Cardiac Arrest
-Pt.unable to follow commands
-Unable tp maintain patent airway independently
-Major Trauma
-Suspicion of a Pneumothorax
-Vomiting or Active GI Bleed
-Obvious signs/Symptoms of Pulmonary infection
2 or more of the following Respiratory Distress
Inclusion Criteria
-Retractions of accessory muscles
-Brochospasm or Rales on Exam
-Respiratory Rate > 25/min.
-O2 Sat. < 92% on high flow O2
Administer CPAP using Max FIO2
Reassess Patient
-Continue CPAP
-Continue COPD/Asthma/Pulmonary Edema Protocol
-Contact Medical Control with a Report
Deteriorating
-Contact Medical Control with report
-Discontinue CPAP unless advised by Medical Control
-Continue Asthma/COPD/Pulmonary Edema Protocols
,
Stable or Improving
Ventilatory Support:
Intubation
• Definitive (but not first) treatment of pulmonary
edema
• Positive pressure redistributes edema fluid as in
CPAP but to a greater extent
• Mechanical ventilation greatly reduces O2 demand
• Sedation/paralysis also reduces O2 demand and
increases compliance
Ultimate Therapies
• If pt stabilizes: long term therapy with beta
blockers and ACE inhibitors
• If cardiac output remains unacceptable:
– Beta agonists
– LVAD
– Transplant
In Summary
1. Heart failure is the result of an acute event (MI,
AF) or chronic decompensation
2. Pulmonary edema frequently results from
cardiac failure but may also result from other
disease processes (ARDS) or direct insult
3. Correct diagnosis is crucial and depends on
good history and exam
4. Therapy is both pharmacological and
ventilatory support
Thank You