Pleural Effusion Flashcards
What are the common causes of pleural effusions?
Congestive heart failure (bilateral)
Infection
Malignancy (unilateral)
What is the difference between transudate and exudate pleural effusions?
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.
Causes of exudate pleural effusions
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
Causes of transudate pleural effusions
Cardiac (CCF, PTE) Liver (ascities, cirrhosis) Renal (glomerulonephritis, nephrotic syndrome) Ovarian (Meigs syndrome) Autoimmune (sarcoidosis) Thyroid (myxoedema, hypothyroid)
What’s lights criteria
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
When should a chest tube be placed in patients with pleural effusion and pleural infection?
If the fluid is purulent or turbid,
Or
If the fluid is clear with a pH <7.2
A pleural pH of what indicates a complex parapneomonic effusion or empyema?
PH <7.2