Pulmonary pharmacology 2: Flashcards
how do you manage acute asthma attacks?
Quick relief = inhaled short acting beta 2 agonists
A&E= oxygen mask, nebulized beta 2 agonists(salbutamol), or oral prednisolone
Life threatening= magnesium sulphate through IV or IV aminiphylline, or intubation and ventilation
describe your management of asthma and the treatment steps
what is COPD?
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease = commonly a complication of cigarette smoking- damaged respiratory cilia and chronic colonization of lower airways by bacteria
- leads to persistant airflow limitation, progressive and largely irreversible
*COPD patients have sputum production, asthma patients do not
what is the difference between chronic bronchitis and emphysema?
CHRONIC BRONCHITIS
Decreased bronchial luminal diameter
–Wall thickening (increased mononuclear cells, increased muscle mass & interstitial fibrosis)
–Intraluminal mucus and mucus plugs (hypertrophy and hyperplasia of bronchial mucus secreting glands, increased goblet cells)
- hyperextention of the lungs
EMPHYSEMA
Enlargement of airways distal to terminal bronchioles
–Acinar distruction - loss of gaseous exchange
Loss of lung recoil – chest hyperexpansion
what are the stages of COPD?
stage 1 = 80% lung function - more frequent chest infections etc- aim is to keep it at this stage
stage 2= moderate COPD - 50-80% of lung function
stage 3= severe restratint of respiration, shortness of breath and frequent exacerbations
Stage 4= very severe and risky and decreased quality of life less than 30% lung function
what is the management for acut COPD?
- quick relief= inhaled beta 2 agonists -antibiotics for acute exacerbations with purulent sputum - course of oral prednisolone may be needed
- A&E= oxygen mask- antbiotics, nebulised beta 2 agonists , oral or IV steroids
- life threatening = add IV aminiphylline or salbutamol -
what are the management methods for chronic COPD?
- SMOKING CESSATION
- Avoid occupational inhaled pollutants
- Vaccinations
- Bronchodilator
- b2 adrenoreceptor agonists
- Muscarinic (M3) antagonists
- Xanthines
•Anti-inflammatory Drugs
- Inhaled Glucocorticoids
- Selective PDE4 inhibitors (Roflumilast, Cilomilast)
- Long-Term Oxygen therapy (24%)
- Pulmonary Rehabilitation / Nutrition / Air Travel
- Surgery
what is Alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency
- a1 antitrypsin, a serine protease inhibitor, has a major role in inactivating neutrophil elastase, and is a major defense against the elastolytic burden in the lower airways posed by neutrophil elastase.
- In addition to emphysema and bronchiectasis patients with a1-antitrypsin deficiency also at risk of liver disorders, skin disease and vasculitis
describe type 1 and type 2 respiratory failure
Type 1= ventilation-perfusion mismatching- so they have low plasma oxygen but their CO2 is normal or low - cuases include asthma, pulmonary embolism etc - hyper dose oxygen
Type 2= hypoventilation throughout lungs, PO2 is low and PCO2 is high causes include COPD and sedative overdose - give los dose oxygen
what are the reasons for a chronic cough?
- Acute respiratory infection (URTI, Pneumonia)
- Chronic respiratory infections (Cystic fibrosis, Bronchiectasis, Postnasal drip)
- Airways disease (Asthma, COPD)
- Parenchymal disease (Interstitial fibrosis)
- Irritant (cigarette smoke, inhaled foreign body)
- Drug-induced (ACE-inhibitors, inhaled drugs)
- Bronchopulmonary malignancy
what Antitussives can we use to suppress coughs?
codeine = good cough suppressnat but decreased mucociliary clearance and decreases secretions
dextromethorphan = synthetic opioid. does not cause addiction, decrease mucociliary clearance or constipation
peripherally acting drugs reduce sensitivity of cough receptors
- local anaethetics (used during bronchoscopy and nebulized for chronic cough)
- mentol vapor and lozenges impregnated with mentol or eucalyptus oil
what do expectorants do?
they increase the fluidity of secretions - most act as gastric mucosa irritants and reflex timulation of bronchial globlet cells and submucosal glands
*putting your head over a bucket of steam is a better expectorant than any of the expectorants you can buy from a pharmacy- boiling water and menthol vapor works better than the lot of them - the drug companies push them because they don’t have to prove efficacy, just safety to sell them
*the exception to this is mucolytics = which break disulphide cross-linking and reduce bronchial secretions viscosity= they actually breakdown cells themselves and the DNA - it’s not available over the counter