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Learn about oropharyngeal, nasopharyngeal, endotracheal tubes, & tracheostomy. Understand suctioning, manual ventilation, & mechanical ventilation. Test knowledge with relevant questions.
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Artificial Airways • Establish an airway • Protect the airway • Facilitate airway clearance • Facilitate mechanical ventilation
Types of Airways • Oropharyngeal airway • Nasopharyngeal airway • Endotracheal tube • Tracheostomy
Oropharyngeal Airway (cont.) • Hard plastic device • Inserted through the mouth extending to the pharynx • Prevents the tongue from occluding the airway • Nursing care • Monitor airway patency • Listen to breath sounds • Suction as needed *Never place an oropharyngeal airway in a conscious patient.
Nasopharyngeal Airway (cont.) • Flexible tube inserted nasally and extends to the base of the tongue • Can use in a conscious patient • Useful when frequent nasotracheal suction is needed • Nursing care • Assess the patient’s risk for epistaxis • Assess coagulopathy
Endotracheal Tube (cont.) • Semirigid tube inserted nasally or orally and extends into the trachea • Provides airway protection • Used with mechanical ventilation • Inserted by personnel with advanced training • Placement confirmed by auscultation, end-tidal CO2 device, bilateral chest rise, chest x-ray
Endotracheal Tube (cont.) • Nursing care • Confirm equipment and suction are working properly. • Preoxygenate the patient for intubation. • Administer medications for intubation. • Provide good oral hygiene. • Reposition the tube from side to side. • Suction when needed. • Note markings on the tube to ensure proper position is maintained.
Tracheostomy • Inserted directly into the trachea through a stoma in the neck • Improves patient comfort • Improved ability to communicate • Oral feeding is possible. • Indicated if greater than 3 to 7 days on a ventilator • Facilitates weaning
Tracheostomy (cont.) • Obturator and extra tracheostomy tube at bedside • Accidental decannulation in the first 7 days may need reintubation before emergency tracheostomy can be done. • After approximately 7 days, a tract is formed and tracheostomy tube can by reinserted into the stoma. • Clean site every 8 to 12 hours. • Replace inner cannula daily following facility policy. • Change tracheal ties as needed. • Suction as needed.
Question • Which type of artificial airway can never be used on a conscious person? • A. Tracheostomy • B. Oropharyngeal airway • C. Nasopharyngeal airway • D. Endotracheal
Answer • B. Oropharyngeal airway • Rationale: An oropharyngeal airway stimulates the gag reflex and can cause vomiting and aspiration.
Indications for Suctioning • Visualization of secretions in airway • Crackles, rhonchi, mucus plugs, or coughing • Increase in peak airway pressure • Decrease in tidal volume • Hypoxia
Suctioning • Oral suctioning • Removal of posterior oropharyngeal secretions • Nasotracheal suctioning • Sterile procedure using flexible red rubber catheter • Passed through nostril to nasopharynx • Endotracheal and tracheostomy suctioning • Inline suction catheters *Instillation of normal saline to facilitate removal of thick secretions is not recommended.
Manual Ventilation • Manual • Ambu Bag, bag-valve-mask device • Force of squeeze equals tidal volume. • Number of squeezes per minute equals respiratory rate • Force and rate equal the peak flow. • Ensure complete exhalation between breaths. • Observe chest rise. • Monitor for abdominal distention.
Question • When using a bag-valve-mask device, the nurse must do all of the following except: • A. Time breaths to coincide with spontaneous breaths • B. Allow time for complete exhalation • C. Squeeze faster to get more air in • D. Observe chest rise to ensure proper ventilations
Answer • C. Squeeze faster to get more air in • Rationale: Squeezing faster will cause hyperventilation and the patient will not receive air and will cause air trapping in the lungs, which can cause hypotension and lung injury.
Mechanical Ventilation • Indicated for respiratory failure • pH <7.25 • PaCO2 >50 mm Hg • PaO2 >50 mm Hg • Maintain alveolar ventilation. • Correct hypoxemia. • Correct respiratory acidosis. • Rest ventilatory muscles. • Maximize oxygen transport.
Modes of Positive-Pressure Ventilation • Volume ventilation • Preset volume of air delivered with each breath • Pressure ventilation • Preset driving pressure is delivered and sustained throughout the inspiratory phase of ventilation • High-frequency ventilation • Delivers small volume of air at a very fast rate (panting)
Lung Injury Risk with Positive-Pressure Ventilation • Barotrauma • Volutrauma • Atelectrauma • Biotrauma • Ventilator-associated lung injury (VALI) • Ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI)
Question • Which mode of ventilation delivers a preset volume of air with each breath? • A. Pressure ventilation • B. Volume ventilation • C. CPAP • D. High-frequency ventilation
Answer • B. Volume ventilation • Rationale: Volume ventilation—a preset volume of air delivered with each breath
Ventilator Settings • Fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) • Percentage of oxygen in the air delivered to the patient (room air is 21%.) • Tidal volume • Amount of air delivered with each breath (5-8 mL/kg of body weight is recommended.) • Respiratory rate • Number of breaths per minute
Ventilator Settings (cont.) • Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) • Pressure maintained in the lungs at end expiration • Peak flow • Velocity of gas flow per unit of time expressed as liters per minute • Inspiratory pressure limit (high pressure alarm) • Highest pressure allowed in the ventilator circuit (coughing, secretions, kinked tubing can cause high inspiratory pressures)
Ventilator Settings (cont.) • Sensitivity • Controls the amount of patient effort to initiate a breath • Inspiratory:expiratory (I:E) ratio • Normal is 1:2 or 1:3. • Allows time for air to passively exit • An inverse I:E ratio improves oxygenation by allowing longer inspiratory times and more opportunity for gas exchange.
Ventilator Modes-Volume Modes • Assist-control (A/C) mode • Respiratory rate and tidal volume are preset. • A preset tidal volume is delivered with each breath (preset and spontaneous breaths). • Synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation (SIMV) mode • Respiratory rate and tidal volume are preset. • Breaths initiated above the preset rate are at the patient’s own spontaneous tidal volume.
Ventilator Modes-Pressure Modes • Maximum peak inspiratory pressure is preset. • Ventilator delivers breath until pressure limit is reached and then stops. • Respiratory rate, inspiratory pressure limit, and I:E ratio are preset not tidal volume. • Tidal volume varies with each breath.
Pressure Modes • Pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV) • Delivers breaths at a preset pressure limit • Pressure support ventilation (PSV) • Assists spontaneous breaths with preset pressure level • Inverse ratio ventilation (IRV) • Inspiratory time is greater than/equal to expiratory time. • Airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) • High and low pressures are timed during the inspiration.
Pressure Modes (cont.) • Volume-guaranteed pressure options (VGPO) • Delivers a preset tidal volume by using pressure control mode • Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) • Provides pressure throughout respiratory cycle • Noninvasive bilevel positive-pressure (BiPAP) • Delivered through face mask, nasal prongs, or nasal mask • Provides an inspiratory pressure and an expiratory (PEEP) pressure
Nursing Care • Maintain airway • Monitor vital signs, arterial oxygenation saturation, mental status, respiratory status, and arterial blood gases • Monitor ventilator settings and alarms • Suction as needed • Psychosocial support • Nasogastric or orogastric • Check endotracheal tube cuff inflation • Head of the bed elevated 30 degrees • Oral hygiene • Nutritional support • Eye care
Question • Is the following statement True or False? • BiPAP, CPAP, and PCV are all volume modes of ventilation.
Answer • False • Rationale: BiPAP, CPAP, and PCV are all pressure modes of ventilation.
Weaning from Mechanical Ventilation • Successful weaning: • Multidisciplinary approach • Standardized weaning protocols • Critical pathways • Wean in the morning • Medicate for comfort • Raise the head of the bed • Support and reassurance
Methods of Weaning • T-piece trial (flow-by) • Breaths through endotracheal tube without a ventilator • SIMV • Gradually decrease the number of delivered breaths • CPAP • Decreases the patient’s work of breathing • PSV • Progressively decrease the amount of pressure support