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Oxygen Therapy and Respiratory Failure

BTS Guideline for oxygen use in adults in healthcare and emergency settings. Published: May 2017.

Background Information

Definition

There are 2 main types of respiratory failure:

  • Type 1 respiratory failure: hypoxia (PaO2 <8 kPa) with normal PaCO2
  • Type 2 (hypercapnic) respiratory failure: hypercapnia (PaCO2 >6 kPa) irrespective of oxygen level (PaO2 is usually low but can be normal)

Type 2 Respiratory Failure Risk Factors

  • COPD – main risk factor
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Bronchiectasis
  • Severe chest wall or spinal disease (e.g. kyphoscoliosis)
  • Neuromuscular disease (e.g. ALS)
  • Severe obesity

Oxygen Delivery Devices

Device Flow Rate Indications Advantages Disadvantages / Cautions
Nasal Cannulae 1-6 L/min (FiO2 ~24% to ~50%).
  • Low-concentration oxygen therapy for mild hypoxaemia
  • Viable alternative to venturi for patients at risk of hypercapnia
  • No risk of CO2 rebreathing
  • Comfort
  • Easy to use
  • May cause nasal irritation/soreness (Avoid >4 L/min to reduce this risk)
  • Reduced efficacy if the nose is severely congested or blocked
  • Does NOT deliver fixed FiO2
Simple face mask (aka ‘Hudson mask’) 5-10 L/min (FiO2  40-60%)
  • Suitable for patients with T1RF who require medium-concentration oxygen therapy
  • Easy to use
  • Higher oxygen delivery (vs nasal cannulae)
  • Not suitable for type 2 respiratory failure
  • Risk of rebreathing CO2  at flow rate <5 L/min
  • Does NOT deliver fixed FiO2
Non-rebreather mask (reservoir mask) Up to 15 L/min (FiO2 60-90% at 15L/min)
  • Critical illness
  • Severe hypoxaemia (<85%)
  • High oxygen concentration
  • Reservoir bag stores oxygen for nearly 100% O2 delivery
  • Not suitable for patients at risk of type 2 respiratory failure, unless critically ill
Venturi mask Refer to individual mask packaging for flow rate and FiO2
  • Precise oxygen delivery for patients at risk of type 2 respiratory failure
  • Precise oxygen delivery
  • Range of oxygen concentrations available
  • Not suitable for high-flow oxygen needs

Further options (if patients remain hypoxic on 15 L/min of non-rebreather mask):

  • High-flow nasal cannulae
  • CPAP / NIV
  • Endotracheal intubation + mechanical ventilation

Guidelines

Oxygen Therapy in Critical Illness

Initial oxygen therapy (ALL patients):

  • Device: non-rebreather (reservoir) mask
  • Flow rate: 15 L/min
  • SpO2 target: 94-98% (unless in carbon monoxide poisoning where the target is 100%)

BTS defined the following conditions as ‘critical illness’:

  • Cardiac arrest or resuscitation
  • Shock
  • Sepsis
  • Major trauma
  • Anaphylaxis
  • Status epilepticus
  • Major head injury
  • Carbon monoxide poisoning

In patients who are at risk of type 2 respiratory failure and are critically ill the same initial oxygen therapy (15 L/min via non-rebreather, targeting 94-98%) should be given (instead of the controlled oxygen therapy, aiming for 88-92%, as “hypoxia kills”).

 

Urgently perform a blood gas and adjust oxygen therapy accordingly:

  • If blood gas shows acidotic hypercapnia (↓ pH and ↑ pCO2) or chronic CO2 retention (↑ HCO3) → adjust target to 88-92% and use controlled oxygen therapy
  • If none of the above → maintain target as 94-98%

Oxygen Therapy in Non-Critical Illness

Oxygen therapy depends on whether the patient is at risk of type 2 respiratory failure (see above for risk factors).

Patients at Risk of Type 2 Respiratory Failure

The most important investigation in these patients are ABG to guide oxygen therapy, as it definitively gives information on whether the patient is a chronic retainer and if hypercapnia exists.

Initial Oxygen Therapy (Prior ABG Results Available)

SpO2 target: 88-92%

Device:

  • Venturi mask (preferred), or
  • Nasal cannulae

Flow rate:

  • Venturi mask: 24% (2-3 L/min) or 28% (4 L/min)
  • Nasal cannulae: 1-2 L/min

If the patient’s SpO2 remains <88% respite a 28% (4 L/min) Venturi mask, escalate with either of the following:

  • Nasal cannulae up to 6 L/min, or
  • Simple face mask at 5 L/min

NB that the SpO2 target remains the same (88-92%).

Specifically applying to COPD exacerbation, escalation to 15 L/min via non-rebreather (reservoir) mask is indicated in ANY of the following:

  • Profound hypoxaemia (SpO2 <85%) – due to the high immediate risk of death (“hypoxia kills”)
  • Peri-arrest situations
  • Failed nasal cannulae or simple face mask

But one should still aim for SpO2 88-92% (the only reason the aim for 94-98% from the start in someone at risk of type II respiratory failure, is if they are critically ill – see definition above).

Oxygen Therapy Based on ABG Results

  • ↑ PCO2 (>6.0 kPa) +/- low pH → maintain 88-92% target with venturi mask (24-28%) or nasal cannulae (consider NIV if there is respiratory acidosis)
  • Normal PCO2 and pH → increase target to 94-98% (no restriction on the oxygen delivery device)

Patients NOT at Risk of Type 2 Respiratory Failure

SpO2 target: 94-98%

Oxygen delivery device:

  • SpO2 <85% → 15 L/min via non-rebreather (reservoir) mask
  • SpO2 ≥85% → nasal cannulae at 2-6 L/min or simple face mask at 5-10 L/min

References

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