Chapter 76
Acute Respiratory Failure Due to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Acute respiratory failure resulting from severe exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is commonly encountered in the intensive care unit (ICU) and is a major source of morbidity and mortality from COPD. Acute exacerbation of COPD (AECOPD) is defined as a sustained worsening of the patient’s condition from the stable state and beyond normal day-to-day variations that is acute in onset and may warrant additional treatment in a patient with underlying COPD. The cardinal symptoms of AECOPD are increased dyspnea, increased cough and sputum volume, or increased sputum purulence. In the ICU setting, AECOPD typically involves severe dyspnea, gas exchange abnormalities with or without respiratory acidosis, and the potential need for mechanical ventilatory support (see Box 76.1 for indications for ICU admission). As most cases of AECOPD are caused by reversible factors, attentive management can result in favorable outcomes.
Etiology and Pathophysiology
Noninfectious agents contributing to AECOPD may include sedative overdose, aeroallergens, and air pollutants, such as sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter, and ozone. Lastly, comorbid conditions such as congestive heart failure and pulmonary embolism may mimic AECOPD or may directly induce acute respiratory failure by raising ventilatory demands above the level that can be sustained by a patient with underlying COPD (Chapter 1, Figures 1.2 and 1.5, and Appendix B, Figure B2).
AECOPD is an acute inflammatory event, marked by increased numbers of neutrophils, macrophages, and, in the case of viral infection, eosinophils in the sputum. Defects in innate immunity may predispose patients with COPD to infections, which then induce acute airway inflammation. This inflammation increases mucus secretion, airway edema, and airway hyperresponsiveness, thereby narrowing airway luminal diameter and producing the airflow obstruction, dynamic hyperinflation, and ventilation-perfusion mismatch that characterize AECOPD. Increased serum levels of fibrinogen, C-reactive protein, and inflammatory cytokines and chemokines during AECOPD suggest that these episodes may also have systemic manifestations.
Respiratory failure in AECOPD may be multifactorial, with infection and inflammation superimposed upon the loss of alveolar volume (caused by emphysema) and impaired respiratory mechanics (e.g., flattened or inverted diaphragms) characteristic of COPD (in contrast to asthma; see Chapter 75). Infection and inflammation may evoke additional reductions in elastic recoil, further impairing ventilation and oxygenation that is generally compromised even at baseline. Elevated residual volume in patients with COPD compromises inspiratory capacity and breathing reserve. As a consequence, patients compensate for hypoxemia with tachypnea, which promotes air trapping by decreasing expiratory time, further increasing the work of breathing, leading to respiratory muscle fatigue and eventually respiratory failure.
Clinical Evaluation
Routine laboratory studies, an arterial blood gas (ABG), and an electrocardiogram should be obtained, as well as a chest radiograph and a sputum culture with antibiotic sensitivities if the patient can produce a sample. Although predictive of outcomes during AECOPD, spirometry is generally impractical in the ICU, where respiratory distress and frequent coughing typically prevent valid and reproducible maneuvers.
Interpretation of the ABG in a patient with COPD can be challenging because some patients have abnormal blood gases at baseline. Typical baseline abnormalities in a patient with severe COPD are mild to moderate hypoxemia and variable degrees of chronic respiratory acidosis. The latter is well compensated by renal bicarbonate retention, so that the pH may be near normal despite significant hypercapnia. It is helpful to compare the results of an ABG determination during an AECOPD with those obtained when the patient was in a stable baseline condition, if available. However, a simple rule of thumb can help differentiate acute from chronic respiratory acidosis (see Table 75.1 and Chapter 1, Table 1.2). The presence of acute respiratory acidosis, particularly with a pH < 7.30, is concerning and suggests the need for mechanical ventilatory support (discussed further later in the chapter).
Medical Management
The goals of therapy for severe AECOPD include improving airflow and relieving symptoms of bronchospasm, reducing acute airway inflammation, correcting hypoxemia and acute respiratory acidosis (but not overcorrecting the pH; see Appendix B), managing respiratory secretions, identifying and treating precipitating factors, and avoiding iatrogenic complications such as nosocomial infection or venous thromboembolism. To achieve these many goals, a multimodality approach is generally used that involves medications (see Table 76.1), controlled oxygen administration, nutritional supplementation, respiratory and physical therapy, and mechanical ventilatory support.
TABLE 76.1
Pharmacologic Management of Severe Acute Exacerbation of COPD in the ICU setting
Drug Class/Drug | Dosing Regimen | Notes |
Short-Acting Beta-Agonists Albuterol (spontaneous breathing) Albuterol (ventilated patient) | 2.5 mg/3 mL saline via nebulizer q 1–4 hours prn 2–4 puffs via ventilator circuit q 1–4 hours prn | Higher dose (e.g., 5 mg) and continuous nebulizer treatments have not been shown to improve treatment efficacy and should not be routinely used; monitor for tachyarrhythmias and hypokalemia |
Short-Acting Muscarinic Antagonists Ipratropium | 500 mcg/5 mL saline via nebulizer q 4 hours prn | The addition of ipratropium to albuterol has not been shown to improve bronchodilation in the setting of AECOPD, but it is safe and often used |
Antibiotics (examples) Uncomplicated∗ (alphabetical order) Amoxicillin/clavulanate Azithromycin or clarithromycin Doxycycline Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole Complicated∗ (alphabetical order) Cephalosporin, third or fourth generation Fluoroquinolones Piperacillin/tazobactam | Dosing variable by antibiotic and adjusted for renal function as necessary Intravenous route preferred if hemodynamic instability or other issues with enteral absorption Duration approximately 5–7 days | Antibiotics most effective if purulent sputum; optimal antibiotic regimen unknown; no antibiotic class has been shown superior in any setting; choice should always cover H. influenzae, S. pneumoniae, and M. catarrhalis based on local sensitivities; in complicated patients, consider covering pseudomonas and Enterobacteriaceae (e.g., E. coli, Klebsiella); narrow coverage based on sputum culture and sensitivities |
Glucocorticosteroids MethylprednisolonePrednisone | 0.5–1.0 mg/kg IV every 6 hours for 24 hours, then tapering as tolerated to every 12 hours for 24 hours, then once daily 60 mg po daily, then taper | Optimal dosing unknown, but a total duration of less than 2 weeks is recommended; IV and PO steroids are likely equivalent, but IV regimen is generally used in the ICU; initial high doses of steroids should be rapidly tapered as tolerated to reduce the risk of adverse effects |
Oxygen | Titrated to an oxygen saturation of 90%–93%. In hypercapnic patients, check arterial blood gas after 30 minutes | Venturi mask provides more accurate and consistent delivery of oxygen than nasal cannula, but it is more likely to be removed by the distressed patient |
∗Complicated patients include those with age ≥ 65 years, forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) ≤ 50% predicted, ≥ 3 exacerbations in the previous year, concomitant cardiac disease, history of endotracheal intubation, hospital admission or antibiotics in the previous 3 months, or residence in a nursing home or other institutionalized setting.