Airway sampling PRACTICAL Flashcards
1
Q
Explain the process and how the epilgotts, soft palate and artenoids change when the horse swallows?
A
- Food bolus moved caudally by tongue
- Base of tongue pushes bolus caudally and dorsally
- Soft palate elevates to allow bolus to move dorsally from the oropharynx to nasopharynx
- Epiglottis retroverts (to cover the tracheal opening) with simultaneous adduction of arytenoid cartilages to close the laryngeal opening
- Oesophageal sphincter relaxes to accept the bolus
- Oesophagus contracts rostral to bolus and primary peristaltic waves carry bolus to cardia
2
Q
Explain the process and how the epilgotts, soft palate and artenoids change when the horse breathes?
A
- Horse is an obligate nasal breather - cannot breathe through its mouth
- Soft palate lies ventrally with epiglottis just overlying the caudal edge
- Arytenoid cartilages remain dorsal to cover the opening to the oesophagus
3
Q
What is the process of performing a broncho-alveolar lavage?
A
- Sedation
- Extend head
- Pass down trachea
- Opposite to NGT: would flex head and pass down oesophagus
- Feed down as far as you can
- Inflate cuff with air or saline/water
- Isolates section of lung
- Inject 250-300ml saline and withdraw ~70%
- Lavage cells for lab for cytology
- Differential count - proportion of different cells
- e.g. neutrophils:
- 5-10% = normal
- 10-20% = mild asthma
- >25% = severe asthma
- On lavage would expect fluid with mucus and soapy surfactant at the top - without this could be due to a cough and being in the wrong place (therefore inject LA before to avoid cough from irritation)
4
Q
What can samples from a broncho-alveolar lavage be used for?
What can the samples not be used for and why?
A
- Samples can be taken for cytology
- Not sterile - so cannot be used for pathology
- Good for confirming diagnosis e.g. asthma
5
Q
How can you perform a trans-tracheal wash and what can samples be used for?
A
- Can be done endoscopically through catheter
- Easy
- Most common in practice
- Sample taken from tracheal bifurcation
- 20-30ml saline injected and withdrawn
- Used for cytology and patholgy
6
Q
What are the different types of catheter that can be used for a trans-tracheal wash?
A
- Single lumen - for cytology, not pathology as can contaminate
- Triple lumen - one catheter inside another inside another, central catheter is therefore sterile
- Expensive
- Not contaminated
- Sterile
7
Q
Explain how you can perform a blind trans tracheal wash?
A
- Measure catheter to lower part of airway to ensure you know how far to go in
- Clip, scrub, LA
- Feel tracheal rings and go in between the cartilages
- Push whole thing into trachea
- Remove stylet
- Insert catheter in
- Risk of emphysema