Pleural effusion Flashcards
1
Q
Pleural effusion
A
This patient has been breathless for 2 weeks. Examine his respiratory system to elucidate the cause.
2
Q
Clinical signs
A
- Inspection: Asymmetrically reduced expansion
- Trachea or mediastinum displaced away from side of effusion
- Palpation: Absent tactile vocal fremitus
- Percussion: Stony dull percussion note
- Auscultation: Reduced breath sounds and bronchial breathing above (aegophony)
3
Q
Signs that may indicate the cause
A
- Cancer: clubbing; lymphadenopathy; mastectomy (breast cancer being a very common cause of pleural effusion)
- Congestive cardiac failure: raised JVP; peripheral oedema
- Chronic liver disease: leuconychia, spider naevi gynaecomastia
- Chronic renal failure: arteriovenous fistula
- Connective tissue disease: rheumatoid hands; butterfly rash of SLE
4
Q
Causes of a dull lung base
A
- Consolidation: bronchial breathing and crackles
- Collapse: tracheal deviation towards the side of collapse and reduced breath sounds
- Previous lobectomy = reduced lung volume
- Pleural thickening: signs are similar to a pleural effusion but with normal tactile vocal fremitus; may have three scars suggestive of previous VATS pleuradesis
- Raised hemidiaphragm ± hepatomegaly
5
Q
Causes of pleural effusion
A
-
Transudate (protein<30g/L)
Congestive cardiac failure
Chronic renal failure
Chronic liver failure -
Exudate (protein >30 g/L)
Neoplasm: 1° or 2°
Infection
Infarction
Inflammation: RA and SLE
6
Q
Pleural aspiration (exudate)
A
- Protein: effusion albumin/plasma albumin >0.5 (Light’s criteria)
- LDH: effusion LDH/plasma LDH >0.6
- Empyema: an exudate with a low glucose and pH <7.2 is suggestive
7
Q
Empyema
A
- Definition: A collection of pus within the pleural space
- Most frequent organisms: anaerobes, staphylococci and Gram‐negative organisms
- Associated with bronchial obstruction, e.g. carcinoma, with recurrent aspiration; poor dentition; alcohol dependence
8
Q
Treatment
A
- Pleural drainage and IV antibiotics intrapleural DNAse plus TPA (MIST 2 Trial)
- Surgical decortication