15 - COPD Flashcards
What is the definition of COPD?
- Airflow limitation that is not fully reversible. Persistent respiratory symptoms
- Encompasses emphysema and chronic bronchitis
- Airflow usually progressive and abnormal inflammatory response of lungs to nocious particles, usually cigarrete smoking
What is the aetiology of COPD?
- Smoking (90%)
- Air pollution (indoor cooking)
- Occupational exposure
- Alpha 1 Antitrypsin deficiency (early onset)
What are the pathology changes in the lung during COPD?
- Enlargement of mucus glands in central airways
- Increased number of goblet ells
- Ciliary dysfunction
- Breakdown of elastic so destruction of alveolar walls
- Large air spaces
- Vascular bed changes leading to pulmonary hypertension
What is the final outcomes in emphysema and chronic bronchitis?
- Emphysema: elastin breakdown so enlargement of airspaces
- Chronic Bronchitis: Excessive mucus secretion and impaired removal of secretions due to ciliary dysfunction
Why is there an increased airways resistance in COPD?
- Luminal obstruction by secretions
- Narrowing of small bronchioles as loss of radial traction
- Decreased elastic recoil so reduced expiratiory force and air trapping
LEADS TO HYPERINFLATION
Why can Cor Pulmonale occur with COPD?
- Hypoxia due to airway narrowing and loss of lung parenchyma
- Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and smooth muscle thickening so pulmonary hypertension
What would you see in a history of a patient with COPD?
- Gradual onset
- Older person with history of smoking
- Cough
- Shortness of breath (first on exertion then at rest)
- Sputum
What is the cough like in COPD?
- Usually initial symptom
- Starts as morning cough but becomes more persistent
- Usually productive and sputum quality varies with exacerbations
What are some things you may see on physical examination with a patient that has COPD?
- Tachypnoea
- Use of accessory muscles in respiration
- Barrel chest
- Hyperresonance on percussion due to hyperinflation
- Distant breath sounds
- Reduced air entry
- Wheezing
- Prolong expiration
- Late stages: central cyanosis, flapping tremors, signs of right sided heart failure
What are some signs of right sided heart failure due to COPD?
- Distended neck veins
- Hepatomegaly
- Ankle oedema
All due to pulmonary hypertension from hypoxic vasoconstriction
How do you diagnose COPD?
Spirometry with irreversible changes on administering bronchodilators. Obstructive pattern
How do you measure dyspnoea?
What are some investigations you may do to support your diagnosis of COPD?
- Spirometry: obstructive, ratio<70%, irreversible
- Decreased diffusing capacity of the lung for CO (emphysema)
- CXR for hyper inflated lungs so flattened diaphragm, hyperlucent lungs and increased AP diameter. May also show pneumonia and pneumothorax
- Pulse oximetry and ABG (for home oxyen therapy)
- Alpha 1 Anti Trypsin level
What is an acute exacerbation of COPD?
Event characterised by a change in the patient’s baseline dyspnoea, cough and/or sputum that is beyong normal day to day variations and is acute in onset
Infectious exacerbations are acute, severe SOB, fever and chest pain
Which COPD patients are at risk of COPD exacerbations?
- Previous exacerbations
- GORD
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Respiratory failure