Developmental aspects of lung disease Flashcards
common congenital anomalies affecting the respiratory tract
laryngomalacia, tracheomalacia, tracheal-oesophageal fistula, congenital pulmonary airway malformation, congenital diaphragmatic hernia
relationship between respiratory illness in childhood and adulthood
allergic diseases, individual causes eg sex height age, early life events and environment and lifestyle have an affect on the likelihood of developing respiratory illnesses
remodelling
alteration of airway structure following external influence - environmental exposures, chronic diseases of childhood, infection. leads to abnormalities due to interference of intercellular signalling. seen in asthma and chronic lung disease of prematurity
factors which influence tracking
smoking, early life events, environmental exposures, lifestyle, allergic disease, antenatal exposure
laryngomalacia,
common, present with stridor floppy larynx, worse when upset or excited or feeding, will improve in first year, concern if affects feeding growth or causes apnoeas
tracheomalacia
floppy trachea, can be isolated in healthy infants, genetic conditions associated, may be caused by compression by surrounding things, presents with barking cough, croup, breathlessness, stridor or wheeze, natural history resolution with Time but can get antibiotics when unwelll
tracheal-oesophageal fistula
abnormal connection between trachea and oesophagus, associated with genetic conditions, can be diagnosed antenatally or postnatally, presents with choking, colour change, cough with feeding, unable to pass NG, requires surgery
congenital pulmonary airway malformation
abnormal non functioning lung tissue, 80% detected antenatally, occur sporadically, may resolve spontaneously, possible risk of malignancy, surgical intervention sometimes
congenital diaphragmatic hernia
diaphragm develops from multiple tissues around 7 weeks and closes by 18 weeks, CDH affects 1 in 2500 births, different types by most common is bochdalek, usually left side more than right, most cases diagnosed antenatally but sometimes miss. if severe can be fatal