Pleural Effusion Flashcards

1
Q

What are some physical exam findings for pleural disease?

A
  • Observation: Tachypnea, orthopnea, overt difficulty breathing, classic/rapid shallow breathing, marked abdominal effort
  • Auscultation: muffled heart/lung sounds
  • Underlying disease process: heart murmur/gallop sound, palpation of mediastinal mass, fever, trauma
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2
Q

If you localized to the pleural space, what kind of respiratory signs would you see?

A
  • Mild muffling or heart sounds
  • Decreased lung sounds
  • Increased RR and effort with rapid/shallow breathing
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3
Q

What are some differentials for pleural space disease?

A

Pleural effusion, pleural space/mediastinal mass, diaphragmatic hernia, pneumothorax

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4
Q

This is defined as the free air in pleural space that results in loss of negative pressure

A

Pneumothorax

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5
Q

What are causes of pneumothorax?

A

Leaking air from lung or thoracic wall penetration

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6
Q

This is defined as the displacement of abdominal viscera through the diaphragm

A

Diaphragmatic hernia

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7
Q

What are some signs indicating a diaphragmatic hernia?

A

Respiratory signs (tachynea, respiratory distress, cyanosis), GI signs, Fluid accumulation

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8
Q

What kind of masses do you see in the pleural space?

A

Mediastinal and thoracic wall masses

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9
Q

What kind of imaging will help refine a differential list for pleural diseases?

A

Radiography and ultrasound (TFAST for trauma)

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10
Q

What type of pleural effusion is described and what are the causes for it?

  • Protein < 2.5 g/dL, low cell count < 1500 nucleated cells/uL)
  • Macrophages, some neutrophils and lymphocytes
  • Color: colorless to light yellow and transparent
A

Pure Transudate

Causes: Increased venous pressure, lymphatic hypertension, low oncotic pressure

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11
Q

What type of pleural effusion is described and what are the causes for it?

  • Protein 2.5-2.7 g/dL, 1,000-7,000 nucleated cells/uL
  • Macrophages, some neutrophils and lymphocytes
  • Color: light to moderate yellow, maybe blood-tinged and transparent to slightly cloudy
A

Modified Transudate

Causes: Increased venous or lymphatic pressure, inflammation of pleural vasculature

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12
Q

What type of pleural effusion is described and what are the causes for it?

  • Protein > 3 g/dL, cell count > 7,000 nucleated cells/uL)
  • Neutrophils predominate, low numbers of macrophages and few lymphocytes
  • Color: purulent appearance, foul odor
A

Exudate

Causes: multiple infectious causes

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13
Q

What type of pleural effusion is described and what are the causes for it?

  • Protein > 2.5 g/dL, variable cell count
  • > 0.5-1 million/uL RBC with a measurable PCV
  • Many RBCs
  • Color: hemorrhagic appearance
A

Hemorrhage

Causes: Coagulopathy, bleeding neoplasia, trauma

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14
Q

What type of pleural effusion is described and what are the causes for it?

  • Protein > 2.5 g/dL, variable cell count
  • High triglycerides
  • Small lymphocytes, macrophages and neutrophils
  • Color: grossly white to pink, opaque
A

Chylous

Causes: Cardiac disease, idiopathic, neoplasia, heartworm, cranial vena caval thrombus or mass

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15
Q

What are some diagnostics you should run for pleural effusion?

A
  • CBC/chem, thoracic rads, thoracocentesis with fluid analysis
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16
Q

Where do you perform a thoracocentesis?

A

7th-8th intercostal space at level of or just above costochondral junction

17
Q

What are medical and surgical treatment options for chylothorax?

A

Medical: periodic thoracocentesis, low fat diet, rutin
Surgical management: ligate the thoracic duct, pericardectomy with ligation of thoracic duct, cisterna chyli ablation with ligation of thoracic duct

18
Q

What can be evaluated/measured on a TFAST in a pleural effusion case?

A

LA:At ratio

19
Q

What are causes of modified transudate effusion?

A
  • Increased hydrostatic pressure
  • Decrease colloid osmotic pressure
  • Lymphatic obstruction
  • Neoplasia