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Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

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Page 1: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP

Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P

Director, EMS EducationAultman Health Foundation

Canton, Ohio

Page 2: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

What is CPAP

CONTINUOUS

POSITIVE

AIRWAY

PRESSURE

Page 3: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Review of Respiratory Emergencies

Respiratory System Anatomy and Physiology

Respiratory Medical Terminology

Respiratory Emergencies / Pathophysiology

Page 4: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio
Page 5: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio
Page 6: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Normal Process

Page 7: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Chest Wall

Page 8: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

VentilationVentilation refers to the process of air movement in and out of the lungs

The following must be intact for ventilation to occur:Functional diaphragm and intercostal

musclesA patent upper airwayAlveoli that are functional

Page 9: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Diffusion

Diffusion – the movement of gas from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration In the respiratory cycle this refers to the

movement of oxygen and carbon dioxide

Page 10: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Diffusion

In order for diffusion to occur, the following must be intact:Alveoli and capillary walls are functional Interstitial space between the alveoli and

capillary wall that are not enlarged or filled with fluid

Page 11: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Perfusion

Refers to the process of circulating blood through the pulmonary capillary bedIn order for perfusion to occur, the following must be intact:A properly functioning heart (pump) Proper vascular “size”Adequate blood volume / hemoglobin

Page 12: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Respiratory Emergencies

Asthma – Bronchitis – Emphysema

Pneumonia – CHF / Pulmonary Edema

Page 13: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Asthma

A chronic inflammation disorder in the airways

Acute episodes “triggered” by somethingcauses release of histamine, leukotrienes

causes obstruction of airflow

Page 14: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pathophysiology

Bronchial smooth muscle constriction

Bronchial plugging from mucus secretion

Inflammation changes

Page 15: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pathophysiology

Increased resistance to airflow!Hypoxemia and carbon dioxide retention

Stimulates hyperventilationLeads to…respiratory fatigue

Page 16: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

AssessmentTripod Position

Wheezing

A silent chest is an ominous sound!Flow rates are too low to generate breath

sounds

Inability to speak

Pulse > 130, Respirations >30

Page 17: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Differential Diagnosis

“All that wheezes is not asthma”PneumoniaCOPDForeign body aspirationHeart failurePneumothoraxPulmonary embolismToxic inhalation

Page 18: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

COPD

Page 19: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Bronchitis

Can be chronic or acute

Inflammation of the bronchioles with large amounts of sputum present

SOB because of mucus in alveoli

Page 20: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Signs and Symptoms

History of resp. infection

Productive cough of large quantity of sputum

SOB

Cyanosis

Page 21: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Mucus Mucus

Inspiration – Air Can get in…

Expiration – Air Can’t get out…

Page 22: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

The Mucus Obstruction

Leads to trapping of air

Hyperinflation occurs permanent damage

Is the reason chronic bronchitis is classified at COPD

Page 23: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

“Blue Bloater”

Diagnosed by several findings including a productive cough 3 months of the year for 2 consecutive years

Page 24: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Emphysema

Chronic disease

Result of destruction of the alveolar wallscigarette smokingexposure to “unfriendly” environment

Page 25: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Signs and Symptoms

Skinny!

SOB all the time

SOB worsens with any activity

Barrel chest

Long expiratory phase – Pursed lip

Pink in color (polycythemia)

Page 26: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

“Pink Puffer”

Page 27: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pneumonia

Infection of the lung (in the alveoli)

Bacteria or virus invade the lung and multiply

Body sends WBC to fight infection

Causes “consolidation” in alveoli

Page 28: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pneumonia Assessment

Patient looks “ill”

History of fever

Productive cough with yellow tan green

Localized wheezing / rhonchi in affected lobe, breath sounds may be diminished

Page 29: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pneumonia Assessment

ELDERLY

Altered mental status / confusionmay be only symptom

Fever

Cough

Page 30: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pneumonia Management

Supportive

Bronchodilators may provide some symptomatic relief if bronchospasm is present

Page 31: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

“Heart Failure”

Page 32: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Pathophysiology

Left ventricle cannot effectively pump forward

Left atrial pressure rises

Back pressure of fluid into pulmonary circulation

Page 33: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Signs and Symptoms

Respiratory DistressOrthopnea (must sit or stand to breath

comfortably)Spasmodic coughing (pink frothy sputum)Paroxysmal Nocturnal Dyspnea

Severe Apprehension, Confusion, “Smothering Feeling”Due to hypoxia

Page 34: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Signs and Symptoms

Cyanosis – due to poor exchange of O2 at alveoli level

Diaphoretic

Pulmonary CongestionCrackles Wheezing??

JVD

Page 35: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Signs and Symptoms

Vital SignsSympathetic NS discharge Blood pressure early BP later as pt. tires… bad sign!TachycardiaResp rate early (40’s) resp rate as pt. tires

Page 36: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Signs and Symptoms

Chest Pain Incident may have started with chest pain

(AMI)May not C/O chest pain because too busy

working to breath

Page 37: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Management Goals

Improve oxygenation

venous return to the heart

myocardial oxygen demand

Page 38: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Assessment

IF YOU CAN’T TELL WHETHER A PATIENT IS MOVING AIR ADEQUATELY, THEY AREN’T THE NEED TO INTUBATE IS NOT THE SAME AS THE NEED TO VENTILATE!IF YOU THINK ABOUT GIVING O2, GIVE IT!

Page 39: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Continuous Positive Airway Pressure

Measured in cmH2O Pressure

Page 40: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

CHF

Page 41: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Benefits/Advantages of CPAP

CPAP reduces work of breathing by keeping the “wet” alveoli open

If the alveoli are open at the end of expiration, energy is not consumed on the next inhalation

Work of breathing is reduced relieving respiratory muscle fatigue

Page 42: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Benefits/Advantages of CPAP

A higher alveoli pressure will result in a stoppage of fluid movement into the alveoli

Increase in airway pressure results in improved gas exchange

Page 43: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

What about the Asthma Patient?

Page 44: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Asthma

CPAP will facilitate the delivery of oxygen and medication

Albuterol through the CPAP mask

Page 45: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

What About Patients With Bronchitis and Pneumonia?

Page 46: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Bronchitis / Pneumonia

CPAP will facilitate the delivery of oxygen and/or medication

Albuterol through the CPAP mask if indicated

Page 47: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

What about the Emphysema Patient?

Page 48: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Important Point

Emphysema patients do not respond predictably to CPAP

Page 49: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

As a general rule…

The larger the “barrel chest” and the more pronounced the accessory muscles, the more caution we should use with CPAP

Page 50: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

CPAP Protocol Review

Page 51: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

CPAP Study Results

Page 52: Prehospital Treatment of Dyspnea with CPAP Mark Marchetta, BS, RN, NREMT-P Director, EMS Education Aultman Health Foundation Canton, Ohio

Skills Lab

It is recommended that this lecture is followed by a skills lab to demonstrate CPAP use.

The vendor who sells the CPAP product can provide the demonstration.