Bronchiectasis Flashcards

1
Q

What is bronchiectasis?

A

Abnormal dilation of bronchi due to destruction of elastic/muscular components of bronchial wall - often consequence of recurrent/severe infections secondary to an underlying disorder, majority present with chronic cough + sputum production

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2
Q

When does bronchiectasis mainly occur?

A

Initially in childhood, incidence has decreased with antibiotic use

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3
Q

Describe the aetiology of bronchiectasis

A
  1. Chronic lung inflammation leads to fibrosis and permanent dilation of the bronchi
  2. Pooling of mucus - predisposes to further cycles of infection, damage and fibrosis of bronchial walls
  3. Inflammation leads to bronchial wall oedema and more mucus production
  4. Inflammatory cells recruited to airway releasing cytokines, proteases and reactive oxygen mediators implicated in the progressive destruction of airways.
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4
Q

What are causes of bronchiectasis?

A
  1. Idiopathic - 50%
  2. Post infectious - H. influenzae, S. pneumoniae, S. aureus, P. aeruginosa
  3. Congenital - CF, A1AD, Ciliary dyskinetic syndromes (Kartagener’s)
  4. Obstruction of bronchi - foreign body, enlarged lymph nodes, tumour
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5
Q

What are symptoms of bronchiectasis?

A
  1. Productive cough with purulent sputum and ocassional haemoptysis
  2. Paroxysms of cough in morning
  3. Breathlessness/dyspnoea
  4. Chest pain
  5. Malaise
  6. Fever
  7. Weight loss
  8. Usually begin after an acute respiratory illness
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6
Q

What are signs

A
  1. Early inspiratory coarse crackles and squeaks - crepitations at lung bases which shift with coughing
  2. Wheeze
  3. Clubbing
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7
Q

What investigations are carried out for bronchiectasis?

A
  1. High resolution CT - gold standard
    Shows dilated bronchi with thickened walls, tram tracks and signet ring sign
  2. FBC - WBC identifies superimposed infection and eosinophilia can suggest allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillus
  3. Sputum - most common organism is H. influenzae
  4. Test for underlying causative condition
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8
Q

What is maintenance therapy for bronchiectasis?

A
  1. Conservative
  2. Airway clearance - oral hydration, chest physiotherapy (postural drainage), nebulised hyperosmolar agents like hypertonic saline/mannitol
  3. Inhaled bronchodilators - salbutamol/ipratropium
  4. If frequent exacerbations, prophylactic antibiotics like long-term macrolides like erythromycin
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9
Q

How does an exacerbation present and how is it managed?

A

Presents with change in sputum colour, increase in volume, worsening cough, fever and malaise
Outpatient care - 14 day oral antibiotics (amox/clarith/trimeth)
If pseudomonas/severe infection - IV aminoglycoside/fluoroquinolone for 14 days minimum

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10
Q

What are other management options for bronchiectasis?

A

Annual flu vaccine
Bronchial artery embolisation - if life-threatening haemoptysis
Surgical - localised resection, lung/heart transplant

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11
Q

When is a lung transplant considered for a bronchiectasis patient?

A

If FEV <30%, recurrent refractory pneumothorax or haemoptysis not controlled by embolisation

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12
Q

What are possible complications?

A
  1. Life threatening haemoptysis
  2. Persistent infection
  3. Empyema
  4. Resp failure
  5. Cor pulmonale - pulmonary hypertension
  6. Multi-organ abscesses
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