Pleural Effusion Flashcards
occurs when systemic factors that influence the formation and absorption of pleural fluid are altered. The leading causes of are left ventricular failure and cirrhosis
transudative pleural effusion
occurs when local factors thatinfluence the formation and absorption of pleural fluid are altered. The leading causes are bacterial pneumonia,malignancy, viral infection, and pulmonary embolism.
exudative pleural effusion
Exudative pleural effusions meet at least one of the Following criteria, whereas transudative pleural effusions meet none:
- Pleural fluid protein/serum protein >0.5
- Pleural fluid LDH/serum LDH >0.6
- Pleural fluid LDH more than two-thirds the normal upper limit for Serum
These criteria misidentify ~__% of transudates as exudates.
~25%
If one or more of the exudative criteria are met and the patient is clinically thought to have a condition producing a transudative effusion, the difference between the protein levels in the serum and the pleural fluid should be measured. If this gradient is >___, the exudative categorization by these criteria can be ignored because almost all such patients have a transudative pleural effusion.
> 31 g/L (3.1 g/dL)
The most common cause of pleural effusion is
left ventricular failure
In heart failure, diagnostic thoracentesis should be performed if the effusions are
not bilateral and comparable in size,
if the patient is febrile,
or-if the patient has pleuritic chest pain
A pleural fluid N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide(NT-proBNP) value of ____ is virtually diagnostic that the effusion is-secondary to congestive heart failure.
> 1500 pg/mL
The effusion is usually right-sided and frequently is large enough to produce severe dyspnea. Pleural effusions occur in ~5% of patientswith cirrhosis and ascites.
Hepatic Hydrothorax
Efffusion that are associated with bacterial pneumonia, lung abscess, or bronchiectasis and are probably the most common cause of exudative pleural effusion in the “United States. “
Parapneumonic Effusion
refers to a grossly purulent effusion
Empyema
Patients with pleural effusion that presents with an acute febrile illness consisting of chest pain, sputum production, and leukocytosis.
aerobic bacterial pneumonia
Patients with present with a subacute illness with weight loss, a brisk leukocytosis, mild anemia, and a history of some factor that predisposes them to aspiration
anaerobic infections
If the free fluid separates the lung from the chest wall by >__ mm, a therapeutic thoracentesis should be performed
> 10mm
Factors indicating the likely need for a procedure more invasive than a thoracentesis or CTT (in increasing order of importance) include the following: increasing order of importance
- Loculated pleural fluid
- Pleural fluid pH <7.20
- Pleural fluid glucose <3.3 mmol/L (<60 mg/dL)
- Positive Gram stain or culture of the pleural fluid
- Presence of gross pus in the pleural space