ILD (Raf) Flashcards
1
Q
What is the differential diagnosis of a pulmonary hemorrhage?
A
- Pulmonary versus non-pulmonary (GI, sinus)
- Upper airway
- Lower airway (Bronchial circulation)–infection, bronchiectasis, neoplasm, foreign, vascular to bronchial tree fistula
- Alveolar focal–eg. pneumonia
- Diffuse alveolar–immune versus non-immune
- pulmonary vascular disease–>in particular, increased pulmonary venous pressure
- bleeding disorder
- trauma
(Box 61.1 in Kendig’s for more details)
2
Q
Investigations for pulmonary hemorrhage?
A
- CT chest with contrast to look for PE, AVM
- Test for coagulation defects
- Bronchoscopy to look for foreign body, airway hemangioma, tumor, presence of hemosiderin laden macrophages
- Infection: blood and sputum cultures, TB testing with purified protein derivative
- If diffuse alveolar opacities—>echo to look for cardiac disease, CT with contrast, cardiac cath
- If systemic involvement (eg. renal disease, rash, joint disease)—>ANA, ANCA, CBC, ESR, CRP, urinalysis, metabolic panel, d-dimer, von willebrand factor, anti-phospholipid antibody, lupus anticoagulant
- If DAH and no cardiac, renal or systemic disease with negative antibodies (ANA, ANCA, anti-GBM)—>transthoracic biopsy either through open approach (mini-thoracotomy) or VATS
3
Q
What is orthodeoxia and what are some causes?
A
- Desaturation in oxygen saturation of >2-5% when moving from supine to upright
- Causes:
- pulmonary AVM (predilection for lower lobes)
- hepatopulmonary syndrome (since there are intrapulmonary vascular dilatations which are preferentially in dependent position)
- Inter-atrial shunt like PFO
4
Q
What is a pulmonary AVM?
A
Abnormal vessel, Direct connection between pulmonary artery and vein, without capillary bed in between
“aneurysmal”, dilated, tortuous
Usually 1 single arterial vessel and 1 single venous vessel