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Potentially life-threatening emergency
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed
Potentially life-threatening emergency

Acute respiratory distress syndrome

Contributors: Karna Sarin MD, Ryan R. Walsh MD, Joshua J. Jarvis MD, Alastair Moore MD, Paritosh Prasad MD
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Synopsis

Acute respiratory distress syndrome, commonly known as ARDS, is a life-threatening inflammatory condition of the lungs. It presents with the hallmark findings of acute hypoxic respiratory failure, including dyspnea, tachypnea, tachycardia, confusion, diaphoresis, and cyanosis as well as lung crackles, and a chest radiograph showing bilateral patchy pulmonary infiltrates that are not due to a cardiac cause or volume overload. It is usually seen after exposure to a clinical stressor or within 1 week of such a stressor.

Clinically, ARDS is characterized by decreased compliance in the lungs ("stiff lungs"). On a microscopic level, it involves alveolar edema due to increased permeability from membrane destruction ("leaky capillaries") as well as neutrophil infiltration, which can lead to activation of a localized inflammatory response. Once the alveoli are damaged, they will start to collapse, leading to atelectasis derecruitment of the lung. Although mechanical ventilation is the mainstay of treatment, it can be challenging and must be done carefully and within specific parameters, as repetitive re-expansion and collapse of the alveoli can lead to mechanical injury known as atelectrauma and the elevated mean airway pressures or excess tidal volumes in the setting of decreased lung compliance result in alveolar barotrauma / volutrauma.

The Berlin Definition of ARDS was published in 2012, identifying specific criteria for diagnosis.

Related topics: respiratory distress syndrome in the newborn, respiratory failure

Codes

ICD10CM:
J80 – Acute respiratory distress syndrome

SNOMEDCT:
373895009 – Acute respiratory distress

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References

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Last Reviewed:03/21/2023
Last Updated:03/22/2023
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.
Potentially life-threatening emergency
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
A medical illustration showing key findings of Acute respiratory distress syndrome : Cyanosis, Hypoxemia, Dyspnea, HR increased, Bibasilar crackles, Increased work of breathing
Imaging Studies image of Acute respiratory distress syndrome - imageId=8346315. Click to open in gallery.  caption: '<span>Single portable recumbent AP  view of the chest. A second radiograph obtained 8 hours after initial  radiograph demonstrates diffuse, bilateral airspace opacities, left  greater than right (straight black arrows). In the left hemithorax,  where fewer airspace opacities obscure the periphery of the lung, there  is no convincing evidence of Kerley B lines or pleural thickening (as  one might see in hydrostatic pulmonary edema).</span>'
Single portable recumbent AP view of the chest. A second radiograph obtained 8 hours after initial radiograph demonstrates diffuse, bilateral airspace opacities, left greater than right (straight black arrows). In the left hemithorax, where fewer airspace opacities obscure the periphery of the lung, there is no convincing evidence of Kerley B lines or pleural thickening (as one might see in hydrostatic pulmonary edema).
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.