Pleural Effusion Flashcards

1
Q

What are the common causes of pleural effusions?

A

Congestive heart failure (bilateral)
Infection
Malignancy (unilateral)

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2
Q

What is the difference between transudate and exudate pleural effusions?

A

Transudate: low protein <30g. Systemic illness causing a imbalance between oncotic and hydrostatic pressures.

Exudate: high protein >30g/L. Local disease effecting accumulation or clearance of fluid.

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3
Q

Causes of exudate pleural effusions

A
Malignancy (lung breast pleural)
Infection (pneumonia, empyema, pleuritis, viral)
Autoimmune (rheumatoid, SLE)
Vascular (PTE) 
Cardiac (pericarditis, CABG)
Resp (haemothorax, chylothorax)
Abdominal (subphrenic abcess, pancreatitis)
Yellow nail syndrome
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4
Q

Causes of transudate pleural effusions

A
Cardiac (CCF, PTE)
Liver (ascities, cirrhosis)
Renal (glomerulonephritis, nephrotic syndrome)
Ovarian (Meigs syndrome)
Autoimmune (sarcoidosis)
Thyroid (myxoedema, hypothyroid)
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5
Q

What’s lights criteria

A

Used to distinguish between transudate and exudate protein 25-35g/L. Requires total protein and lactate dehydrogenase from blood and pleural fluid.

Exudate :

  • pleural fluid protein to serum protein ratio >0.5
  • pleural fluid LDH to serum LDH ratio >0.6
  • pleural fluid level >2/3 of upper limit of normal serum LDH
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6
Q

When should a chest tube be placed in patients with pleural effusion and pleural infection?

A

If the fluid is purulent or turbid,
Or
If the fluid is clear with a pH <7.2

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7
Q

A pleural pH of what indicates a complex parapneomonic effusion or empyema?

A

PH <7.2

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