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Anaesthesia & Respiratory System Dr Rob Stephens Thanks to Dr Roger Cordery Consultant in Anaesthesia UCLH Hon. Senior Lecturer UCL www.ucl.ac.uk/anaesthesia/people/stephens talk on page above and ‘Anaesthesia basics’ [email protected] Contents • Anatomy + Physiology revision • What is Anaesthesia? • Anaesthesia effects… – airway – ‘respiratory depression’ – FRC – Hypoxaemia – after Anaesthesia Introduction • Why learn?- intellectually interesting • Practical – understand – prevent problems • Practical – find new solutions Anatomy revision • Upper Airway above the vocal cords • Lower airway – below the vocal cords – Conducting vs gas exchange- • Muscles of respiration Airway • Airway is Lips to alveoli • Upper Airway: lips to vocal Cords • Lower Airway: Vocal Cords down Pharynx – Trachea – Conducting Airways – Respiratory Airways – gas exchange – pulmonary artery – capillaries – vein – heart Lower Airway • 23 divisions follow down 1-16 conduction of air from L +R main bronchus bronchi through to terminal bronchi bronchioles respiratory bronchioles alveolar ducts alveolar sacs or ‘alveoli’ 17-23 gas exchange Anatomy • Alveolus in detail – pulmonary capillary Bronchiole Alveolus Anatomy: Muscles • • • • External Intercostals Diaghram Internal Intercostals Accessory muscles Neck • Accessory muscles Abdomen Inspiration Inspiration Forced Expiration Forced Inspiration Forced Expiration Physiology revision • • • • • Spirometry- basic volumes How we breathe spontaneously Compliance / elastance Deadspace and shunt V / Q ratios Physiology: Spirometry ~6000ml Inhale At Rest ~2500ml Exhale 0 ml Physiology: Volumes • Tidal Volume, TV • Functional Residual Capacity, FRC Volume in lungs at end Expiration not a fixed volume - conditions change FRC • Residual Volume, RV Volume at end of a forced expiration • Closing Volume, CV Volume in expiration when alveolar closure ‘collapse’ occurs • Others Physiology: Closing Volume ~6000ml Inhale At Rest ~2500ml Exhale 0 ml Physiology: Normal Spontaneous breath Normal breath inspiration animation, awake Lung @ FRC= balance -2cm H20 Diaghram contracts Chest volume Pressure difference from lips to alveolus drives air into lungs ie air moves down pressure gradient to fill lungs Pleural pressure -5cm H20 Alveolar pressure falls -2cm H20 Physiology: Normal Spontaneous breath Normal breath expiration animation, awake -5cm H20 Diaghram relaxes Pleural / Chest volume Pleural pressure rises +1cm H20 Air moves down pressure gradient out of lungs Alveolar pressure rises to +1cm H20 Physiology: Compliance & Elastance Compliance = the volume change for a given pressure change A measure of ease of expansion ΔV / ΔP Normally ~ 200ml / 1 cm H2O for the chest Elastance = the pressure change for a given volume change The tendency to recoil to its original dimensions A measure of difficulty of expansion ΔP / ΔV eg blowing a very tight balloon Physiology: Compliance & Elastance Chest, Lung, Thorax (both) Lung Elastin fibres in lung - cause recoil Alveolar surface tension - cause recoil Alveolar surface tension reduced by surfactant For the chest as a whole, it depends on Lungs and Chest Wall Diseases affect separately eg lung fibrosis, chest wall joint disease Physiology: Deadspace and shunt Each part of the lung has Gas flow, V Blood flow, Q V/Q mismatching Ratio V/Q Perfect V/Q =1 Deadspace = Ratio: V Normal/ Low Q That part of tidal volume that does not come into contact with perfused alveoli Shunt = Ratio: V- low/ Normal Q That % of cardiac output bypasses ventilated alveoli Normally = 1-2% Normal ‘Shunt’ Air enters Alveolus V Pulmonary capilary Blood in contact with ventilated alveolus Q ‘Shunted’ blood 1-2% Venous Arterial Increased Shunt Not much air enters Alveolus V low Alveolus filled with pus or collapsed….. V/Q = low Pulmonary capilary Blood in contact with unventilated alveolus Q normal ‘Shunted’ blood 1-2% Venous Arterial Pulmonary Hypoxic Vasoconstriction A method of normalising the V/Q ratio Less air enters Inflammatory exudate eg pus or fluid V low V/Q = towards normal Q less Blood diverted away from hypoxic alveoli Venous Arterial Deadspace • That part of Tidal volume that does not come into contact with perfused alveoli Deadspace volume ~ 200ml Conducting airways ie trachea and 1-16 • Tidal volume Alveolar volume ~500ml Normal Air enters Alveolus V Pulmonary capilary Blood in contact with ventilated alveolus Q ‘Shunted’ blood 1-2% Venous Arterial Deadspace Classic = trachea! Air enters Alveolus V Pulmonary capillary low flow eg bleeding or blocked V/ Q Blood in contact with ventilated alveolus Q ‘Shunted’ blood 1-2% Venous Arterial Deadspace Trachea conduction of air Deadspace volume from L +R main bronchus bronchi through to terminal bronchi bronchioles respiratory bronchioles alveolar ducts alveolar sacs or ‘alveoli’ gas exchange Alveolar volume Physiology: V/Q What is Anaesthesia? • Reversable drug induced unconsciousness • ‘Triad’ – Hypnosis, Analgesia, Neuromuscular Paralysis • Induction, Maintainence, Emergence, (Recovery) • Spontaneous vs Positive Pressure Ventilation Anaesthesia • Hypnosis = Unconsciousness – Gas eg Halothane, Sevoflurane – Intravenous eg Propofol, Thiopentone • Analgesia = Pain Relief – Different types: ‘ladder’, systemic vs other • Neuromuscular paralysis – Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Antagonist Anaesthetic Machine Delivers Precise Volatile Anaesthetic Agents Carrier Gas Other stuff Volatile or Inhalational Anaesthetic Agents Eg Sevoflurane -A halogenated ether -with a carrier gas -ie air/N20 Intravenous Analgesia = Pain relief Systemic: not limited to one part of the body Analgesia = Pain relief Regional: limited to one part of the body Neuromuscular Paralysis Nicotinic AcetylCholine Channel Non competitive Suxamethonium Competitive Others eg Atracurium Different properties Different length of action Paralyse Respiratory muscles Apnoea – ie no breathing Need to ‘Ventilate’ Effects of Anaesthesia • • • • airway ‘respiratory depression’ FRC Hypoxaemia Anaesthesia Airway • • • • • • Upper: loss of muscular tone eg oropharynx Upper: tongue falls posteriorly ie back Need to keep it open to allow airflow! “Airway obstruction’ = no airflow Airway manoeuvres to open Airway devices – to keep it open • Into trachea = intubation • Other devices Laryngeal Mask Airway Anaesthesia ‘respiratory depression’ • • • • CO2 and O2 response curves of volatiles Opioids Resp. depression opposed by surgical stimulation No cough – good and bad – Caused by all 3 types of drug – Forced expiration: expands lungs, clears secretions, Anaesthesia ‘respiratory depression’ Volatiles response to CO2 Awake Increasing concentration of volatile V L/min 5.3 7 Arterial CO2 kPa 9 Anaesthesia ‘respiratory depression’ Volatiles reduce minute ventilation • Unstimulated volatiles – Reduce Vtidal and therefore V minute – Make you less responsive to the effects of CO2 – ie slope is more flat Anaesthesia ‘respiratory depression’ Volatiles response to hypoxaemia V L/min Awake Low concentration High concentration 5 8 PaO2 kPa 13 Opioids • • • • Opioids = a drug acting on Opioid receptor Morphine, Fentanyl Act in CNS Reduced respiratory rate, increase tidal volume, but still increase PaCO2 • Suppress cough Opioids Anaesthesia FRC Why important- closing Volume and O2 store Why would it change? FRC is decreased by 16-20% by Anaesthesia – Falls rapidly (seconds to minutes). – FRC remains low for 1-2 days • Weak but significant correlation with age • Less FRC reduction if patient is in the sitting position! Physiology: Closing Volume ~6000ml Inhale At Rest ~2500ml Exhale 0 ml Physiology: Closing Volume ~6000ml Inhale At Rest ~2500ml Exhale 0 ml Anaesthesia FRC What causes these changes? 1. 2. 3. 4. Cephalad movement of the diaphragm Loss of inspiratory muscle tone Reduced cross sectional rib cage area Gas trapping behind closed airways Anaesthesia Hypoxaemia Hypoxaemia – Low blood oxygen level • FRC changes- Closing Vol, collapse/atelectasis and shunt • Position also effects eg legs/laparoscopy/head down - Tidal volume • Hypovolaemia/vasodilation increases deadspace, – V/low Q areas ….mismatch • PHVC reduced volatiles – increases V/Q mismatch • No cough/ Yawn? Atelectasis Atelectasis is defined as the lack of gas exchange within alveoli, due to alveolar collapse or fluid consolidation CT scan of Diaphragm during awake spontaneous breathing CT scan of Diaphragm during anaesthesia: Atelectasis After Anaesthesia • Some changes persist – Collapse/Atelectasis abnormal 1-2 days – FRC abnormal 1-2 days – CO2 and O2 responses normal in hours – V/Q missmatch – PHVC (reduces V/Q mismatch) • Some new – Wound pain causing hypoventilation – Drug overdose causing hypoventilation Summary 1 • Airway – conducting and respiratory • Physiology • V/Q different as you go down lung • Extreme – no blood flow (Deadspace) • Extreme – no ventilation (Shunt) • Anaesthesia – Hypnosis, Analgesia, Paralysis Summary 2 Anaesthesia effects due to drugs! – Upper airway obstruction – Respiratory ‘depression’ – Hypoxaemia – collapse (FRC/Closing volume) = ‘shunt’ - pulmonary blood flow - deadspace - PHVC drugs Further reading • Pulmonary physiology Michael G. Levitzky • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respiratory_physiology • http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=bhxNUxOaYHkC&printse c=frontcover&dq=respiratory+physiology&hl=en&ei=jWtITYy wI9yShAfNiIX6BA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum= 10&ved=0CF4Q6AEwCTgU#v=onepage&q=respiratory%20phy siology&f=false • Pulmonary Physiology and Pathophysiology: an integrated, case-based approach John West mostly free on google books