Dyspnea
- DDx (5 major categories of disease to consider)
Pulmonary |
Pneumonia = fever, purulent vs dry cough, pleuritic chest pain |
Cardiac |
MI/ischemia = dyspnea can be an anginal equivalent CHF = common in elderly pts on IVF or due to ischemia Arrhythmia = can cause dyspnea with or without CHF/ischemia Tamponade = consider if signs of isolated right heart failure |
Metabolic |
Acidosis = pts become tachypneic to blow off CO2 in compensation |
Hematologic |
Anemia = easy to miss this by Hx/exam |
Psychiatric |
Anxiety = common, diagnosis of exclusion |
Evaluation of Patient
History |
- Learn about acuity of onset of dyspnea |
Physical exam |
- Start by asking nurse for vital signs HR, RR, BP, O2 sat). Ask for second set 15-30 minutes later. |
Labs/Studies |
- EKG, CXR, ABG, CBC |
III. Initial Management
A. Oxygen |
- Initial intervention for any patient with dyspnea. Even CO2 retainers need O2 and it takes longer than the few minutes you need to evaluate them for significant respiratory depression to develop. Your goal is a PO2 > 60 or O2 sat > 92%. if nasal cannula isn't working (max FIO2 is ~40%), try a simple mask (up to 50%), non-rebreather (70%) or high humidity mask (90%). Remember that respiratory therapist (RT) is your friend; call early if you’re having any trouble and they will help with nebs, suction, masks, ABGs, oral/nasal airways |
B. Diuretics |
- Consider Lasix in any patient with history or exam consistent with CHF; other processes associated with increased lung water (pneumonia, ARDS). |
C. β-Agonists |
- Bronchodilators will benefit patients with wheezing from any etiology |
D. Intubation |
- Assess potential to protect airway (see Pulmonary section); consider calling ICU |
E. Other |
- Once you stabilized patient and results of initial studies returned, you can initiate directed therapy at the specific etiology of dyspnea. |