Case 17 - Lung Cancer Flashcards
What are the red Flag symptoms for lung cancer?
Haemoptysis Weight loss Persistent Cough Persistent Breathlessness Clubbing Hypertrophic oesteoarthropathy (pain in limbs)
What are the main non metastatic manifestations of lung cancer? (Where another disease presents itself secondary to underlying cancer)
Easton lambert syndrome Myasthenia gravis SIADH - tumour secretion of ADH Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy Cushings - due to tumour secretion of ACTH Hypercalcaemia
What type of lung cancer is more likely to present with a non metastatic manifestation?
Small cell lung cancer
What are the risk factors for developing lung cancer?
Tobacco smoke
Asbestos exposure
Fibrotic lung disease
COPD (2-5x greater than someone without COPD)
What are the two types of lung cancer?
Small Cell (24%) Non small cell (76%) - squamous cell - adenocarcinoma - large cell
What is a pancoast tumour?
Cancerous growth at the apex (top of lungs)
Leads to destructive lesions of the thoracic inlet, and involvement of brachial plexus and cervical sympathetic nerve
What is horners syndrome and how can lung tumours cause it?
Miosis (constriction of one pupil)
Ptosis (drooping of the upper eyelid)
Caused by damage to sympathetic nerves to the face
This can occur in a pancoast tumour - malignancy of lung tumour
What are the local complications of lung tumours?
Recurrent laryngeal palsy Phrenic nerve palsy Superior venal caval obstruction Horners syndrome Rib erosion Pericarditis
What is the stepwise diagnosis of lung cancer?
History Exam Bloods (FBC, LFTs, Bone Profile) Chest X Ray CT scan Bronchoscopy with ultrasound guided sampling of subcranial nodes PET scan - check for distant mets
Where do lung cancers metastasise to?
Brain
Bone
Liver
Adrenal gland
What hormones can small cell lung cancers produce?
ADH - resulting in SIADH
ACTH - resulting in secondary cushings
How can squamous cell lung cancer cause an hypercalcaemic emergnacy?
Squamous cell lung cancers typically release parathyroid hormone
PTH causes bone to breakdown releasing calcium into the body
Calcium levels >2.6mmol/L is an emergency
What are the signs of a hypercalcemic emergency
Cognitive changes, lethargy
Muscle cramping
GI symptoms
Tachycardia
What is the treatment for a hypercalcemic emergency?
Bisphosphonates
Denosumab
Before using any CT scan with contrast what blood test must you do and why?
U&Es
The contrast can cause kidney damage