Pleural disease Flashcards
Describe the structure of the pleura.
A single layer of mesothelial cells and sub-pleural connective tissue. 2 layers: visceral and parietal. There is a potential space between the pleural layers. Pleura is lubricated by 2-3 ml of pleural fluid and this has a dynamic turnover. Net fluid is pulled into the lungs and there is a negative pressure inside the lungs.
Where does the pleura start and end?
Pleura goes above 1st rib into subclavian fossa. It then extends down towards the liver spleen and kidneys. This is so that the lungs are protected as they expand.
Define pleural effusion.
An abnormal collection of fluid in the pleural space.
What are the symptoms of a pleural effusion?
Asymptomatic if effusion is small and accumulates slowly. As fluid begins to squash the lungs this causes symptoms. > breathlessness, pleuritic chest pain (inflammatory this may improve, malignant will get worse), dull ache, dry cough, weight loss, fever, malaise and night sweats.
What questions would you ask in history about pleural effusion?
Peripheral oedema, liver disease, orthopnea and PND.
What are the clinical signs of a pleural effusion?
Chest on affected side: less expansion, stony dullness to percussion, band of bronchial breathing and reduced vocal resonance. Clubbing, tar staining, cervical lymphoadenopathy, raised JVP, deviated trachea and peripheral oedema.
What are the causes of a pleura effusion?
Either transudates or exudates.
Define transudates.
An imbalance of hydrostatic forces influencing the formation and absorption of pleural fluid. Normal capillary permeability. Usually bilateral.
What are the common causes of transudates?
LVF, liver cirrhosis, hypoalbuminaemia and peritoneal dialysis (holes in diaphragm). LiPH.
Name some less common and rare causes of transudates.
LESS COMMON: hypothyroidism, nephrotic syndrome, mitral stenosis and PE (2/3 exudate).
RARE: constrictive pericarditis, ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (IVF), Meigs syndrome.
Define exudates.
An increased permeability of pleural surface and/or local capillaries. Usually unilateral. > 30g/L of pleural fluid protein.
What are the common causes of exudates?
Malignancy: lung, breast, mesothelioma or metastatic cancer. Parapneumonic: lung abscess, pneumonia or bronchiectasis.
Name some less common and rare causes of exudates.
LESS COMMON: PE, RA, autoimmune disease, benign asbestos effusion, pancreatitis, post-MI.
RARE: yellow nail syndrome, drug induced.
What are the steps from investigation to diagnosis of a pleural effusion?
CXR, CT, aspiration, biopsy, and thoracoscopy. These usually aren’t required for transudates as the clinical picture is normally characteristic.
Describe the different investigations for a pleural effusion.
CXR: confirm presence of effusion. Needs to be > 200 ml before it can be seen. CT thorax: usually differences between benign and malignant disease. ASPIRATION and BIOPSY: use lidocaine, Abrams’ needle blind and Tru-Cut CT guided. Take 4 biopsies, send 3 to cytology and 1 to microbiology if TB is suspected. LOOK: foul (anaerobic empyema), food (oesophygeal rupture), milky (chylothorax - lymphoma), blood (malignancy). BLOOD GAS ANALYSER: pH