Bronchiectasis and Chronic Lung Infection Flashcards

1
Q

Shadow on x-ray, weight loss, persistent sputum production, chest pain, increasing dyspnoea

A

Lung cancer (not very likely), empyema, intrapulmonary abscess, bronchiectasis, cystic fibrosis

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2
Q

Risk factors for developing chronic pulmonary infection

A

Abnormal host response - Immunosuppressed or immunodeficient
Abnormal innate host defence
Repeat insult

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3
Q

What can cause a damaged bronchial membrane

A

Smoking, recent pneumonia, malignancy

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4
Q

Abnormal ciliary function diseases

A

Kartenager’s syndrome -
Impaired ciliary function leading to absent or reduced mucus clearance.
Young’s syndrome -
Lungs have normal function but mucous is abnormally viscous

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5
Q

How can pneumonia cause intrapulmonary abscess

A

Staphylococcus pneumonia can cause cavitating pneumonia that leads to formation of abscess

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6
Q

How can IV drug users get septic emboli

A

IV drug users inject drugs into their groin or veins. A formed DVT may be infected causing pneumonia. This can lead to an abscess or septic emboli

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7
Q

What is primary empyema

A

Empyema which may be iatrogenic or idiopathic

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8
Q

Major cause of empyema

A

Pneumonia

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9
Q

Progression of effusion to empyema

A
Simple paraneumonic effusion - 
Clear fluid, pH > 7.2, LDH < 1000, Glucose > 2.2
Complicated paraeumonic effusion -
pH < 7.2, LDH > 1000, Glucose < 2.2
Empyema - Pus
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10
Q

Aerobes or anaerobes in pneumonia

A

Aerobes are more common, anaerobes usually if poor dental hygiene or severe pneumonia

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11
Q

Most common organism of pneumonia post-operative or nosocomial

A

Staphylococcus aureus

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12
Q

Diagnosing empyema

A

Clinical - Slow to resolve pneumonia
CXR - Lateral and AP, persisting effusion especially with loculations
Ultrasound testing - Simple, bedside testing
CT - Differiate from abscess

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13
Q

Preferred diagnostic tool for empyema

A

Ultrasound testing

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14
Q

Antibiotics for empyema

A

Yes, broad spectrum IV such as Amoxicillin and Metronidazole initially. Oral antibiotics directed towards cultured bacteria for 14 days

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15
Q

Uncomplicated vs complicated paraneumonic effusion

A

Uncomplicated - Mainly exudative with predominant neutrophilic effusions reflecting increasing passage of interstitial fluid due to inflammation. No infection yet
Complicated - Bacterial infection of pleural space resulting in a cloudy fluid. Requires drainage for resolution

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16
Q

What are paraneumonic effusions

A

Pleural effusions due to pneumonia, lung abscess or bronchiectasis

17
Q

Does uncomplicated pneumonia need draining

A

No but complicated does

18
Q

What is bronchiectasis

A

Localist, irreversible dilation of bronchial tree due to inflammation. Obstructs airway and impairs clearance of secretions

19
Q

How does bronchiectasis present

A

Recurrent chest infection, short lived response to antibiotics and persistent sputum production

20
Q

Chronic bronchial sepsis vs bronchiectasis

A

Same symptoms as bronchiectasis but chronic bronchial sepsis doesn’t show up on high resolution CT

21
Q

Treatment for chronic bronchial sepsis or bronchiectasis

A

Stop smoking
Flu or pneumococcal vaccine
Reactive antibiotics specific to most recent culture
Prophylactic broad spectrum antibiotics such as nebulised Gentamicin or Colomycin. Can also pulsed IV or alternating oral