COPD Flashcards

1
Q

COPD definition

A
  1. Airway obstruction: FEV1 <80%, FEV1:FVC <0.70
  2. Chronic bronchitis: cough and sputum production on
    most days for 3 months of 2 successive years.
  3. Emphysema: histological diagnosis of enlarged air
    spaces distal to terminal bronchioles.
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2
Q

Causes of COPD

A

Smoking
Pollution
alpha1 antitrypsin deficiency

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3
Q

Signs of COPD

A
Tachypnoea
Prolonged expiratory phase
Hyperinflation
↓Cricosternal distance (normal = 3 fingers)  Loss of cardiac dullness
Displaced liver edge
Wheeze
May have early-inspiratory crackles
Cyanosis
Cor pulmonale: ↑JVP , oedema
Signs of steroid use
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4
Q

Respiratory failure in COPD

A

Pink Puffers - emPhysema - type 1 respiratory failure

Blue bloaters - Chronic Bronchitis - type 2 resp failure

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5
Q

mMRC dyspnoea score

A
  1. Dyspnoea only on vigorous exertion
  2. SOB on hurrying or walking up stairs
  3. Walks slowly or has to stop for breath
  4. Stops for breath after <100m / few min
  5. Too breathless to leave house or SOB on dressing
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6
Q

Complications of COPD

A
Acute exacerbations ± infection
Polycythaemia
Pneumothorax (ruptured bullae)
Cor Pulmonale
Lung carcinoma
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7
Q

Investigations for COPD

A
  1. BMI
  2. Bloods: FBC (polycythaemia), α1-AT level, ABG
  3. CXR - Hyperinflation (> 6 ribs anteriorly), Prominent pulmonary arteries, Peripheral oligaemia, Bullae
  4. ECG: R atrial/ventricular hypertrophy
  5. Spirometry: FEV1 <80%, FEV1:FVC <0.70, ↑TLC, ↑RV  6. Echocardiogram
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8
Q

Severity of COPD

A

Mild: FEV1 >80% (but FEV/FVC <0.7 and symptomatic)
Mod: FEV1 50-79%
Severe: FEV1 30-49%
Very Severe: FEV1 < 30%

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9
Q

Treatment of COPD

A

Stop smoking
Mucolytics: carbocisteine

1) Breathlessness and/or exercise limitation
SABA and/or SAMA (ipratropium) PRN

2) Exacerbations or persistent breathlessness
- FEV1 ≥50%: LABA or LAMA (tiotropium) (stop SAMA)
- FEV1 <50%: LABA+Inhaled corticosteroid(ICS) combo or LAMA

3) Persistent exacerbations or breathlessness
- LABA+LAMA+ICS
- Roflumilast / theophylline (PDIs) may be considered
- Consider home nebs

4) Long term O2 therapy
Aim: PaO2 ≥8 for ≥15h / day (↑ survival by 50%)

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10
Q

Surgery for COPD

A

Recurrent pneumothoraces
Isolated bullous disease
Lung volume reduction

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11
Q

Causes of acute exacerbation of COPD

A
Viral URTI (30%)
Bacterial
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12
Q

Investigations of acute exacrbation

A
PEFR
Bloods: FBC, U+E, ABG, CRP , cultures
Sputum culture
CXR: infection, pneumothorax
ECG
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13
Q

Differentials of acute exacerbation

A

Pneumothorax
Pulmonary oedema
PE
Asthma

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14
Q

Treatment of acute exacerbation

A
  1. Controlled O2 therapy: SpO2-88-92%
  2. Nebulised bronchodilators: salbutamol or ipratropium
  3. Steroids: hydrocortisone IV and prednisolone PO
  4. Abx if sign of infection doxycycline
  5. Non invasive ventilation if no response
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