TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Anesthesia for Patients with Respiratory Disease A1 - Butterworth IV, John F. A1 - Mackey, David C. A1 - Wasnick, John D. PY - 2022 T2 - Morgan & Mikhail’s Clinical Anesthesiology, 7e AB - KEY CONCEPTS In a patient with an acute asthma attack, a normal or high PaCO2 indicates that the patient can no longer maintain the work of breathing and is often a sign of impending respiratory failure. A pulsus paradoxus and electrocardiographic signs of right ventricular strain (ST-segment changes, right axis deviation, and right bundle-branch block) are also indicative of severe airway obstruction. Asthmatic patients with active bronchospasm presenting for emergency surgery should be treated aggressively. Supplemental oxygen, aerosolized β2-agonists, and intravenous glucocorticoids can dramatically improve lung function in a few hours. Intraoperative bronchospasm is usually manifested as wheezing, increasing peak airway pressures (plateau pressure may remain unchanged), decreasing exhaled tidal volumes, or a slowly rising waveform on the capnograph. Other causes can simulate bronchospasm: These include obstruction of the tracheal tube from kinking, secretions, or an overinflated balloon; bronchial intubation; active expiratory efforts (straining); pulmonary edema or embolism; and pneumothorax. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is currently defined as a disease state characterized by airflow limitation that is not fully reversible. The chronic airflow limitation of this disease is due to a mixture of small and large airway disease (chronic bronchitis/bronchiolitis) and parenchymal destruction (emphysema), with the representation of these two components varying from patient to patient. Cessation of smoking is the long-term intervention that has been shown to reduce the rate of decline in lung function. Preoperative interventions in patients with COPD aimed at correcting hypoxemia, relieving bronchospasm, mobilizing and reducing secretions, and treating infections may decrease the incidence of postoperative pulmonary complications. Patients at greatest risk of complications are those with preoperative pulmonary function measurements less than 50% of predicted. Restrictive pulmonary diseases are characterized by decreased lung compliance. Lung volumes are typically reduced, with preservation of normal expiratory flow rates. Thus, both forced expiratory volume in the first second of exhalation (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) are reduced, but the FEV1/FVC ratio is normal. Intraoperative pulmonary embolism usually presents as sudden cardiovascular collapse, hypoxemia, or bronchospasm. A decrease in end-tidal CO2 concentration is also suggestive of pulmonary embolism but is not specific. SN - PB - McGraw-Hill Education CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2024/10/10 UR - accessanesthesiology.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1190606672 ER -