Bronchiectasis Flashcards
Define bronchiectasis
the permanent dilation of bronchi due to the destruction of the elastic and muscular components of the bronchial wall with frequent bacterial infections
What are the causes/risk factors of bronchiectasis?
• Idiopathic (50%)
• Post-infection e.g. pneumonia, whooping cough, TB
• Genetic e.g. Kartagener’s syndrome (ciliary dyskinesia, situs invertus, chronic
sinusitis), cystic fibrosis, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency
• Connective tissue disorders e.g. RA
• Inflammatory bowel disease e.g. UC, Crohn’s
• Bronchial obstruction e.g. foreign body, tumour
What are the presenting symptoms of bronchiectasis?
- Productive cough
- Purulent sputum
- Haemoptysis
- SOB
- Pleuritic chest pain
- Malaise
- Fever
- Weight loss
What are the signs of bronchiectasis?
- Clubbing
- Coarse crepitations – high-pitched inspiratory squeaks and pops
- Wheeze
- Signet ring sign
- Tram tracks
What are the investigations for bronchiectasis?
- CXR - characteristic volume loss, hemidiaphragm, tram lines, tubular/ovoid opacisites
- High res CT - thickened, dilated airways with or without air fluid levels; varicose constrictions along airways; cysts and/or tree-in-bud pattern
- FBC - high eosinophil count in bronchopulmonary aspergillosis; neutrophilia suggests superimposed infection or exacerbation
- sputum culture and sensitivity
- serum alpha-1 antitrypsin phenotype and level
- serum immunoglobulin - decreased IgG, IgM, and/or IgA with inappropriate titres to Pneumovax
- sweat chloride test - >60 mmol/L (>60 mEq/L) cystic fibrosis is likely; 40 to 59 mmol/L cystic fibrosis is possible; <39 mmol/L cystic fibrosis is very unlikely
- rheumatoid factor
- aspergillus fumigatus skin prick test
- serum HIV antibody
- nasal nitric oxide - low (<100 parts per billion) NNO level in primary ciliary dyskinesia; high NNO level excludes a diagnosis of PCD
- pulmonary function test - reduced FEV1, elevated RV/TLC
What is the management plan for bronchiectasis?
What potential complications can arise?
maintenance therapy and treatment of acute exacerbations, with attention to the specific organism involved
For a select group of patients, surgery may be indicated
Patients with severe disease or a resistant organism (typically Pseudomonas) are likely to require IV antibiotics during acute exacerbations
For severe, progressive disease lung transplantation should be considered
complications:
- massive haemoptysis - variable timeframe and low likelihood
- respiratory failure - variable timeframe and low likelihood
- cor pulmonale - variable timeframe and low likelihood