KCP: Breathlessness 2 Flashcards

Electric Boogaloo

1
Q

What does FVC stand for?

A

Forced Vital Capacity

This is the total volume you can forcibly exhale after you have forcibly inhaled

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2
Q

What does FEV1 stand for?

A

Forced expiritory volume after 1s

This the is the volume you can forcibly exhale in 1s

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3
Q

How does a spirometry graph look different for someone with asthma and COPD?

A
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4
Q

What can fractional exhaled nitric oxide tell you?

A

Nitric oxide is produced by the respiritory epithelium in response to inflammation

Asthma cause airway inflammation

Therefore by measuring nitric oxide in exhaled breath this can tell us if someone has asthma

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5
Q

Asthmer treatment

A
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6
Q

What is Brain-type Natriuretic Peptide (BNP)?

A

It is released from the atria in response to stretch.

Is a marker of heart failure.

Hint: Heart failure bad, BNP bad

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7
Q

What is echocardiography?

A

It is an ultrasound scan used on the heart

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8
Q

What is echocardiography ejection fraction?

A

This is the ratio of stroke volume to end diastolic volume

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9
Q

What is finger clubbing a sign of?

A

Low blood oxygen

Presents as enlarged distal fingers, loss of nail bed angle and increased nail curvature

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10
Q

What is VC, TV, ERV and IRV?

A
  • Vital capacity
  • Tidal volume
  • Expiritory reserve volume
  • Inspiritory reserve volume
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11
Q

When would you be looking for troponin and performing and ECG?

VS

When would you be looking for natriuretic peptide and performing an echocardiagram?

A
  1. Myocardial infarction / ischemic heart disease (heart failure due to lack of blood supply)
  2. Heart failure due to other reasons
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12
Q

You have listened to someones lungs and heard bilateral late inspiritory crackles in lower part of the chest. He has finger clubbing and is cyanosed. FEV1 is low however FEV1/FCV ratio is normal indicating a restricted pulmonary defecit. You perform a chest X-Ray and suspect pulmonary fibrosis. What extra investigations should you order?

A

A CT chest scan

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13
Q

Please correctly label this graph:

Obstructive
Restrictive
Normal

A
  • A - Normal
  • B - Restrictive
  • C - Obstructive
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14
Q

ILD - interstitial lung disease aka fibrosis

A
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15
Q

Type 1 vs Type 2 respiratory failure

A

Type 1 respiratory failure affects 1 value (PaO2 ↓)
Type 2 respiratory failure affects 2 values (PaO2 ↓ and PaCO2 ↑)

In type 1 there is V/Q missmatch, lowering oxygen and increasing co2, the hypercapnia results in an increased respiritory rate, this birng the co2 to normal however what blood is perfusing is already fully oxygenated therefore no more oxygen can get in so o2 remains low.

Examples:
Reduced ventilation and normal perfusion (e.g. pneumonia, pulmonary oedema, bronchoconstriction)
Reduced perfusion with normal ventilation (e.g. pulmonary embolism)

In type 2, either respiritory rate can not be raised (opiate induced reduced respiritory drive) or raising respiritory rate won’t result in any more air getting through (obstructive) therefore co2 can’t be expelled

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