Transcript 11a CPR
ANESTHETIC
PROBLEMS AND
EMERGENCIES
The Role of the Veterinary Technician
in Emergency Care
ANESTHETIC PROBLEMS AND EMERGENCIES
Anesthetic problems will inevitably occur at some
point in your career. No anesthetic experience is
the same, so beware of the false sense of security!
ANIMALS THAT WILL NOT STAY ANESTHETIZED
Animals won’t stay anesthetized
Check vaporizer setting
Check level of anesthetic in the vaporizer
Proper ET tube placement or air leakage around it
Patient apnea
Shallow respirations
Proper assembly of anesthetic machine with tight connections
Adequate oxygen flow
Anesthetic machine/vaporizer is working properly
Agonal breathing vs. light plane breathing
ANIMALS THAT ARE TOO DEEPLY ANESTHETIZED
Animals are too deeply anesthetized
<6 bpm; shallow respirations, dyspnea
Pale/cyanotic mucous membranes
Capillary refill time >2 seconds
Bradycardia
Weak pulse; systolic blood pressure <80 mm Hg
Cardiac arrhythmias; irregular QRS complexes or VPCs
Hypothermia
Absent reflexes
Flaccid muscle tone
Dilated pupils
TREATING EXCESSIVE ANESTHETIC DEPTH
ADJUST THE VAPORIZER:
NOTIFY THE VETERINARIAN:
BAG THE ANIMAL
1. Close the pop-off valve
2. fill the reservoir bag with oxygen
3. gently squeeze the bag until the patient’s chest rises slightly (15-20 cm H2O)
4. Repeat until animal shows signs of recovery
PALE MUCOUS MEMBRANES
Pale mucous membranes
Preexisting conditions
Blood loss during surgery
Anesthetic agent that causes vasodilation and hypotension
Hypothermia
Pain
TREATMENT OF PALE MUCOUS MEMBRANES
Ascertain the animal’s anesthetic depth:
HR, RR, pulse quality, CRT
Consult the veterinarian
Fluids, blood transfusion
ANESTHETIC PROBLEMS AND
EMERGENCIES (CONT’D)
Prolonged capillary refill time (>2 seconds)
Blood pressure cannot adequately perfuse superficial tissues
May result from conditions present prior to induction
May be secondary to blood loss during surgery
May be seen in animals in deep anesthesia
DYSPNEA AND/OR CYANOSIS
DYSPNEA: respiratory difficulty
CYANOSIS: bluish coloration of the mucous membranes
indicating inadequate tissue oxygenation
Assessment
Respiratory character and volume
Depth of anesthesia
Associated with pain
Proper ET tube placement
ET tube blockage
Oxygen saturation
Arterial or end-tidal CO2
TREATMENT OF
CYANOSIS/DYSPNEA
1. Check O2 flow meter
2. Turn off vaporizer and begin to bag the patient
(IPPV)
If the anesthetic machine is unavailable, an Ambu bag can
be used to deliver room air
3. Reintubate if necessary
4. Continue until patient improves
5. Close monitoring to ensure that cardiac arrest
does not occur
Radiographs and thoracocentesis might be needed
TACHYPNEA
TACHYPNEA: rapid respirations
CAUSES:
Surgical stimulation
Commonly seen with opioid use
Associated with light anesthesia accompanied by tachycardia and spontaneous
movement
May be seen in hyperthermic animals
TREATMENT OF TACHYPNEA
CHECK ANESTHETIC DEPTH
Is the animal too light?
CAPNOGRAPH READING
Obese patients
Assist or control ventilation
RESPIRATORY ARREST
Not all cases require immediate action by the anesthetist:
Cessation of respiratory efforts
Can lead to cardiac arrest
Temporary arrest
May follow injection of respiratory depressants or following a period of prolonged bagging
Evaluate other vital signs
HR/pulse quality:
MM:
ECG
Pulse oximeter reading:
Respiratory arrest (Cont’d)
True arrest
Requires immediate action
Can result from anesthetic overdose, cessation of oxygen flow, or preexisting respiratory
disease
May be preceded by dyspnea or cyanosis and abnormal vital signs
May use Ambu bag, mouth-to-ET tube, or mouth-to-muzzle resuscitation
USE OF AN AMBU BAG
TREATMENT OF TRUE RESPIRATORY ARREST
1. NOTIFY THE VETERINARIAN
2. Turn off the vaporizer
3. Place ET tube if not already done
Emergency tracheotomy?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3doQewrHdhQ
4.Monitor for cardiac arrest
5.Restore oxygen flow and begin bagging the patient
6. Continue bagging every 5 seconds until vital signs
improve
7. Administer shock fluids- Dr. can decide on Dopram or
reversal
8. Preserve warmth
CARDIAC ARREST
Cardiac arrest
No heartbeat is auscultated or palpated
Normal QRS complexes are absent
No arterial pulse and blood pressure <25 mm Hg
Gray or cyanotic mucous membranes
Widely dilated pupils, no corneal reflex
Agonal breathing
Some prior warning is usually present
Respiratory distress or arrest, cyanosis/dyspnea, prolonged
capillary refill time, arrhythmia
CPR
CardioPulmonary
Resuscitation
Updated with information from the
ACVECC-RECOVER Study 2012
http://www.acvecc-recover.org/
ANESTHETIC PROBLEMS AND
EMERGENCIES
Cardiac arrest with CPCR
(cardio-pulmonary cerebrovascular
resuscitation)
A = airway
B = breathing
C = circulation
D = drugs
E = ECG
F= Fluids
Circulation is the most important step so the correct order is CABDE
CPR
Human Medicine
Cardiac arrest: 330,000 people per year die
Survival to discharge:
Out-of-hospital arrest: <6.4%
Veterinary Medicine
Total arrest numbers unknown
Survival to discharge:
In-hospital-arrest:
Dogs 4%
Cats 4-9.6%
PREVENTION
The most successful CPR is one
that is averted!
Know which patients are risk.
Know the warning signs.
RISK FACTORS
Cellular hypoxia
Hypercarbia
Vagal stimulation
Arrhythmias
Severe anemia
Acid-base abnormalities
Electrolyte abnormalities
Anesthesia
Trauma
Systemic and metabolic diesease
WARNING SIGNS
Changes in respiratory rate and
character
Weak irregular pulses
Bradycardia
Hypotension
Cyanosis
Hypothermia
PREPAREDNESS/READINESS
Time is critical
To Increase chances of success…
Early recognition
Know patient’s code status
Personnel
Dedicated space
Equipment
RECOGNITION OF ARREST
Loss of consciousness
No respirations
No palpable pulses
Pupils fixed and dilated
CRT prolonged or absent
MM pale, grey, cyanotic
WHO SHOULD BE RESUSCITATED?
Patients with reversible disease
When doubts exist perform CPR
Discuss and educate client at admission!
PERSONNEL RESPONSIBILITIES
There is a critical 4 MIN window to restore oxygen
delivery to the brain!
Team Effort: Doctors and Technicians (5 techs 1 doctor)
Central person making decisions (DVM)
Chest compressions
Manual ventilation
Drug administration
Setting up monitoring equipment
Recording events
DEDICATED SPACE
Hard Surface
Oxygen source
CRASH CART
Cuffed endotracheal tubes
4-6 sizes
Laryngoscope
Syringes, needles of various sizes
Catheters: Intravenous, intraosseous, red rubber
Defibrillator
Drugs
Epinephrine, atropine, vasopressin
Naloxone
Small surgery pack
Suction unit
PHASES OF RESUSCITATION
Basic Life Support
ABC’S
Advanced Life Support
ABC plus D: Drugs & Defibrillation
Post-Arrest: Prolonged Life Support
ABC’S
Airway
Should have 4-6 sizes of cuffed ET
tubes available
Laryngoscope
Make sure airway is clear
Suction airway if necessary
Capture and secure airway!!
CARDIAC ARREST - ABCDEF
AIRWAY and BREATHING;
IMMEDIATELY CALL FOR HELP, NOTE THE TIME!
An Endotracheal tube must be placed!
Begin bagging at 1 breath every 10-12 seconds (1:5 breath to
compressions)
Do not overinflate
BREATHING
Utilization of ambu bag connected to
oxygen source
Provide manual ventilatory support
Ventilation of dogs and cats with CPA at a
rate of 10 breaths per minute with a tidal
volume of 10ml/kg and an inspiratory time
of 1 sec is recommended.
CIRCULATION
External chest compressions
Thoracic pump theory
Cardiac pump theory
Positioning
Lateral recumbency
Firm surface
Small dogs and cats
Medium and large dogs
CARDIAC ARREST - ABCDEF
CIRCULATION – cardiac compressions should be
initiated
Compressions manually force blood through the heart and into tissues
POSITIONING: right side down with legs toward the
compressor
LARGE DOGS: The heel of the compressor’s hand should compress
the chest against a firm object placed under the dog’s chest just
behind the elbow. Also, dog can be placed in dorsal recumbency and
compression applied to the caudal 1/3 of the sternum
CARDIAC ARREST - ABCDEF
Medium sized dogs: The chest is compressed between two hands, one
underneath the chest and the other at the 5th intercostal space over the
heart itself.
Small dogs or cats: compression applied using the thumb to compress
the chest against the fingers of the same hand.
CIRCULATION
Most important factor is return of spontaneous circulation
(ROSC)
Cardiac compressions
Each compression should produce a palpable femoral pulse
Rate of compressions : 100-120/ minute
Compressions should be continuous
Allow full chest wall recoil
30-50% chest compression depth
1:1 ratio compression/relaxation
Change compressor every 2 minutes
Circulation (Cont’d)
Bag the patient every 10-12 seconds
Simultaneously with compressions
Some results should be seen within 2 minutes
Internal compressions may be necessary
Resuscitation is unlikely to be successful after
15 minutes
Once spontaneous cardiac contractions are established,
continue bagging until spontaneous breathing is established
(several hours)
THESE PATIENTS ARE NOT ON THEIR
RIGHT SIDE- BOOOO
INDICATIONS FOR OPEN CHEST CPR
Owner wishes??
Thoracic trauma
Pericardial fluid
No response to CPR after 3-5 minutes
Chest or abdominal surgery
ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT
ABC plus D
Drugs
Defibrillator
Doppler
Veterinarian authorizes dosage, route, and
nature of drugs
DRUGS
Epinephrine – 0.01 mg/kg
Alpha 2-adrenergic stimulator: vasoconstriction
Give every 3 to 5 minutes during CPR
Atropine – 0.05 mg/kg
Anticholinergic parasympatholytic: Increases HR
Give every 3 to 5 minutes during CPR
Asystole and PEA
Vasopressin – 0.8 u/kg
Peripheral vasoconstriction
Dilation of cerebral vasculature
Asystole, prolonged arrest
Dopamine or dobutamine
Increase force and rate of cardiac contractions
DRUG DOSE CHART
From: www.ACVECC-RECOVER.org
DRUG ADMNISTRATION ROUTES
IV (intravenous)
IT (intratracheal)
Double dose of drug
Never give Na bicarb IT
IO (intraosseous)
IC (intracardiac) NOT RECOMMENDED
Risk of coronary vasculature laceration in closed-chest
OK in open-chest
ECG
Monitor/Assess
Rhythm
Electrical activity
COMMON INITIAL ARREST RHYTHMS
Ventricular fibrillation
PEA (pulseless electrical activity)
Asystole
ASYSTOLE
Most common arrest rhythm
NO drugs have proven effective
Vasopressin shows some promise
Continue CPR or stop
PULSELESS ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY
Electrical activity but no myocardial contraction
Formerly know as EMD (electrical mechanical dissociation)
NO drugs proven effective
Continue CPR or stop
VENTRICULAR FIBRILLATION
Two forms
Coarse
Higher amplitude more orderly appearance
Easier to convert with defibrillation
Fine
Lower amplitude, complete lack of organization
Carries poorer prognosis, more difficult to convert
Can be mistaken for asystole
Recommended treatment: Immediate defibrillation
ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT: CONT
Defibrillation
One shock
External:
4-6 J/kg Monophasic
2-4 J/kg Biphasic
Internal: 0.2-1 j/kg
No alcohol(ecg)
MONITORING
ETCO2
Doppler on cornea
~Cerebral blood flow
Auscultation, palpation of pulses
ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT: CONTFLUIDS
IV fluids (crystalloids)
IF EUVOLEMIC:
*DO NOT GIVE SHOCK DOSES*
Decreased CPP
Increased right atrial pressure relative
to aortic pressure
If hypovolemic
Shock dose: 90ml/kg dogs, 40-60ml/kg cats
Start with ¼ shock dose
Monitor cardiovascular and respiratory function
Blood pressure, blood gases, pulse oximetry, ECG, capnography
Drug and fluid therapy varies
Assess brain function
Repeat arrest within 24 hours is common
Following successful ROSC, other conditions may arise
Pulmonary or cerebral edema
WRAP UP
Prevention
Preparedness
Early recognition
Know patient’s code
status
Dedicated space,
personnel,
equipment
KNOW YOUR ABC’s!
OTHER OCCURRENCES DURING
SURGERY BUT NOT NECESSARILY AN
EMERGENCY
Regurgitation during anesthesia
A passive process under anesthesia
No retching, just fluid draining from animal’s mouth or nose
Stomach contents may be aspirated into respiratory tract
Most common occurrence in head-down surgical positions and in ruminants
Treatment
Immediate placement of cuffed ET tube
Clean out regurgitated material with suction
POST OP COMPLICATIONS
Vomiting during or after anesthesia
Common in brachycephalic dogs or nonfasted animals
An active process usually accompanied by retching
Usually occurs as the animal is losing or regaining consciousness
Signs
Airway obstruction leading to dyspnea/cyanosis, bronchospasm
Treatment
Intubation and suction if unconscious
Lower head and clean oral cavity if conscious
Seizures
Seen with ketamine administration, after diagnostic procedures (myelography), or
preexisting conditions
Signs
Spontaneous twitching; uncontrolled movements of head, neck, and limbs; opisthotonus;
triggered by a stimulus
Treatment
Reduce stimuli, postoperative analgesia, diazepam or propofol, monitor for hyperthermia
Excitement
Seen after barbiturate anesthesia or high opioid doses, as spontaneous paddling and
vocalization
Treatment may not be necessary
Sedatives may help
Naloxone can reverse opioids
Seizures should be differentiated from excitement
Dyspnea in cats
Dyspnea is usually caused by laryngospasm sometimes
triggered by removal of the ET tube
Laryngeal edema may result from repeated intubation
attempts
May breathe with an audible stertor (wheeze) during
inspiration
Differentiate from growling during expiration
May resolve itself or may need oxygen administration via
facemask, intubation, or a tracheotomy
Is easier to prevent than treat
Dyspnea in dogs
Breed-related
Brachycephalic dogs
Airway obstruction
Anatomy, foreign objects, postsurgical tissue swelling
Humidified oxygen can be delivered to an awake animal
By facemask, nasal cannula, E-collar, or oxygen cage/tent