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Tuesday, August 9, 2016

HAVE YOU SEEN PERSISTENT UNEXPLAINED HYPOXAEMIA IN ADULT PATIENTS ❓ ONE IMPORTANT D.D. IS PFO❗️


▪️Persistent unexplained hypoxaemia can result from the presence of a Patent Foramen Ovale (PFO)

▪️A quarter of young adults have a #PFO

▪️Actually there is no deficiency of atrial septal tissue per se, in such cases

▪️In the absence of left atrial dilation, the defect functions as a flap valve, only allowing right-to-left flow. 

▪️Normally, left atrial pressure exceeds right atrial pressure and no shunting occurs. 

▪️ However, if right-sided pressures increase, right-to-left shunting and therefore potential hypoxaemia can occur. 

▪️ Acutely, this may become evident in such patients 

✔️during #ventilator asynchrony 

✔️with maintenance of high positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEP) during mechanical ventilation   

✔️in #ARDS patients with acute cor pulmonale or with right ventricular systolic dysfunction, particularly as part of the right ventricular infarction syndrome. 

▪️The diagnosis should be considered in any intensive care patient in whom the degree of hypoxaemia appears disproportionate, and should be detectable by colour Doppler. 

▪️Management might include a counterintuitive decrease in positive end-expiratory pressure ( #PEEP ) and the re-establishment of spontaneous ventilation.

Reference: AAGBI Core Topics in Anaesthesia 2015 , Echocardiography and Anaesthesia, Jonathan H. Rosser and Nicholas J. Morgan-Hughes

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