5 - General Respiratory and Respiratory Emergencies Flashcards
What is the MRC dyspnea score?
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What is the WHO performance status?
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How do you take a respiratory history? (importance of occupation history)
- PC: dyspnea, chest pain, wheeze, cough, sputum, haemoptysis
- HPC: see image
- PMHx: asthma, COPD, DVT, previous lung infections, surgery, CVS illness, cancer, childhood infections
- DHx and allergies: inc adherance
- FHx: resp and cardo disease, cancer, CF
- SHx: smoking, alcohol, occupational history (birds), travel, immobility, pets, asbestos exposure, ADLs, performance status
- Systems review
- ICE
- Summarise
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What are the 6 respiratory features to ask about in a respiratory history?
- Dyspnea
- Chest pain
- Wheeze
- Cough
- Sputum
- Haemoptysis
ALSO CHECK ABOUT FEVER AND WEIGHT LOSS
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How do you perform a respiratory examination?
- General inspection
- Hands
- Face
- Neck
- Chest inspection
- Chest expansion
- Chest percussion
- Chest auscultation
- Vocal resonance
- Complete exam
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What are some tests you should offer to do at the end of a respiratory exam?
- Check oxygen saturations and temperature
- Sputum sample
- Peak flow assessment PEFR
- Chest X-ray
- ABG
- CVS exam
What are some bedside and special tests in chest medicine?
Bedside:
- Sputum sample
- PEFR
- Pulse oximetry
- ABG
- Spirometry
Special: lung function tests, CXR, CTPA, bronchoalveolar lavage, lung biopsy, rigid bronchoscopy
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What is stridor and what does this mean?
Inspiratory sound due to partial obstruction of the upper aiways
Within lumen: foreign body, tumour
Within wall: oedema from anaphylaxis, tumour
Extrinsic: goitre, lymphadenopathy
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What do each of the following coughs indicate?
- Loud brassy cough
- Bovine cough
- Barking cough
- Chronic cough
- Dry chronic cough
- Pressure on trachea e.g tumour
- Laryngeal nerve palsy
- Croup
- Pertussis, TB, asthma
- Acid irritation from GORD or ACEi
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What are some causes of haemoptysis and how should you manage a patient in hospital with this?
- IVI
- CXR
- Blood gases
- FBC
- INR/APTT
- Cross match
- IV morphine
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What are some causes of dyspnea?
- Lung disease e.g asthma
- Cardiac disease e.g heart failure
- Anatomical e.g diseases of chest wall, muscles, pleura
- Shock
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What are some causes of the following breath sounds:
- Bronchial breathing
- Diminished breath sounds
- Crackles
- Pleural rub
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What are some signs of respiratory distress?
- Tachypnea
- Nasal flaring
- Tracheal tug (pulling of thyroid cartilage to sternum on inspiration)
- Use of accessory muscles
- Intercostal and subcostal recession
- Pulsus paradoxus
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What are the causes of Kussmaul respiration and Cheyne-Stokes breathing?
Kussmaul: deep sighing breaths in severe metabolic acidosis to blow off CO2. DKA, Alcoholic ketoacidosis, renal impairment
Cheyne-Stokes: breathing gets deeper and deeper and then shallower in cycles. Due to brainstem lesions or compression (e.g strok)
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What should you send a sputum sample for and what do the following sputum colours indicate?
- Black specks
- Yellow/green
- Pink frothy
- Red
- Clear
Send for gram stain, culture, cytology
- Smoking
- Infection
- Pulmonary oedema
- Haemoptysis (TB, malignancy, PE)
- Saliva
How do you report on a chest x-ray?
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- Name and Age of patient
- Date and Time taken
- Type of x-ray e.g erect or mobile, AP or PA
- Quality of film (RIP)
- ABCDE using zones and cardiothoracic ration
- Say what you see e.g blunting of costophrenic angle which could mean pleural effusions
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What is vital capacity, forced vital capacity (FVC), and forced expiratory volume (FEV1)?
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VC is not forced
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How do FEV1 and FVC values change in obstrutive and restrictive lung disease?
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What are the causes of hypoxia (low PaO2)?
- Hypoventilation
- Diffusion impairment
- Shunt
- V/Q mismatch
What happens to the pH, PaCO2 and HCO3- when there is metabolic acidosis/alkalosis and respiratory acidosis/alkalosis?
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What are some causes of respiratory acidosis?
- Alveolar hypoventilation e.g COPD
- Hypoventilayion e.g neuromuscular disease
What is the A-a gradient and what can it be used for?
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PAO2 - PaO2
where (arterial) PAO2 = PIO2 - PaCO2/0.8
Gradient should be <2kPa in the young and <4kPa in elderly.
If >4kPa this implies lung pathology
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What is the AA gradient for this case and what is the conclusion from the gradient?
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What is the AA gradient for this case and what is the conclusion?
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What are the signs and symptoms of anaphylaxis?
- Pruitis
- Urticaria
- Angiooedema
- Hoarseness progressing to stridor and bronchial obstruction
- Wheeze and chest tightness from bronchospasm
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When can someone be discharged after an anaphylactic reaction?
Need referral to allergy clinic and an interim adrenaline auto injector before discharge
What is the emergency management for anaphylaxis?
- Remove trigger
- Maintain airway and 100% O2
- Lie flat and fluid resuscitation
- IM 0.5mg adrenaline
- IV chlorphenamine 10mg
- Measure serum tryptase
- Treat bronchospasm with NEB salbutamol
- Treat laryngeal oedema with NEB adrenaline
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How do you rate the severity of an asthma attack?
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