COPD Flashcards

1
Q

COPD

A
  • Airflow obstruction, progressive and not fully reversible
  • As opposed to reversible asthma
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2
Q

Causes

A
  1. Smoking
    - THE MAIN CAUSE
  2. Exposure to fumes and dust
    - Mainly from occupation
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3
Q

Who does COPD mainly affect?

A

Over 35

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4
Q

Symptoms

A
  • Increasing breathlessness
  • Chronic cough
  • Regular sputum production
  • Persistent wheeze
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5
Q

Asthma vs COPD

A

Asthma:
- often under 35
- Reversible
- Chronic productive cough is uncommon
- Breathlessness is variable
- Night time symptoms are common
- Atopy related

COPD:
- rarely under 35
- Irreversible
- Chronic productive cough is common
- Breathlessness is persistent and progressive
- Night time symptoms are uncommon
- Not atopy related

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6
Q

How do you know if someone has COPD rather than asthma based on response to a reliever inhaler?

A
  • Asthma - reversibility involved
  • COPD - only partially reversible
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7
Q

Diagnosis

A
  1. Spirometry
    - If FEV1/FVC ratio is < 0.7, then that indicates obstruction
    And
  2. Clinical observations
    - e.g. symptoms of COPD
    - As well as factors e.g. smoking, age
  3. Chest X-ray/CT scan to exclude other potential causes
    E.g. Infection, Heart failure
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8
Q

How to measure breathlessness

A

o Dysnoea score or mMRC
o CAT score (8 questions marked out of 5, less than 10 = not COPD. More than 10 = COPD)

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9
Q

STEP 1

A

SABA or SAMA
used for quick relief

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10
Q

STEP 2: what does it depend on

A
  • Still experiencing breathlessness
  • Depends on whether they show asthmatic features or steroid responsiveness
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11
Q

NICE: What do asthma features/steroid responsiveness mean?

A
  • Any previous, secure diagnosis of asthma or atopy
  • A higher blood eosinophil count
  • Substantial variation in FEV1
    over time (at least 400 ml)
  • Substantial diurnal variation in peak expiratory flow (at least 20%).
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12
Q

STEP 2: Non-asthmatic

A

LAMA + LABA
discontinue SAMA

SABA continued throughout

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13
Q

STEP 3: non-asthma

A

SABA
add on LABA and LAMA

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14
Q

STEP 2: Asthmatic

A

LABA + ICS
Discontinue SAMA

SABA continued throughout

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15
Q

Step 3: If pt has severe exacerbation or 2+ moderate ones in a year

A

LAMA + LABA + ICS

Trial for 3 months

SABA continued throughout

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16
Q

LAMA + LABA + ICS examples

A
  • Trimbow (beclomethasone, formoterol, glycopyronnium) SLOWLY AND DEEPLY
  • Trelegy (fluticasone, umeclidinium, vilanterol)
17
Q

If non-asthmatic feels no change after 3 months

A

Rever back to LAMA + LABA
Further treatment:
1. Oral MR Theophylline
2. Carbocisteine
3. Roflumilast
4. Oxygen

18
Q

What vaccines should all patients with COPD get and how often?

A

Annually:
1. Influenza
And
2. Pneumococcal (e.g. PPV or PCV)

19
Q

COPD Treatment - Rescue packs

A
  1. Amoxicillin
  2. Doxycycline
20
Q

PO steroids

A

Prednisolone
30mg daily for 1 week

21
Q

O2 alert cards

A

Hypercapnic respiratory failure
- too much CO2 in blood