Resp - Bronchiectasis Flashcards
1
Q
Pathophysiology + bugs
A
- Chronic infection of bronchi/bronchioles leads to permanent dilatation
- Get retained inflammatory secretions and microbes, which damage airway and cause recurrent infection
- Organisms: H influenza, Pneumococcus, S aureus, pseudomonas
2
Q
Causes: what types + 1 example for each?
A
- idiopathic 50%
- Congenital: CF
- post-infectious: measles, pertussis, pneumonia, TB, bronchiolitis
- immunodeficiency: hypogammaglobulinaemia
- other: bronchial obstruction (lymph nodes, foreign body)
3
Q
Symptoms
A
- Persistent cough with purulent sputum
- haemoptysis (may be massive)
- Fever and wt loss
4
Q
Signs
A
- clubbing
- coarse inspiratory creps
- Wheeze
- purulent sputum
5
Q
Symptoms
A
- Persistent cough with purulent sputum
- Haemoptysis
- fever and wt loss
6
Q
Complications
A
- pneumonia
- pleural effusion
- pneumothorax
- PHTN
- cerebral abscess
7
Q
Ix:
A
- Sputum: MCS
- Bloods: serum Ig, aspergillosis precipitins, alpha 1 AT levels + test response to pneumococcal vaccine.
- CXR: thicket bronchial walls
- CT: will show dilated/thickened airways + saccular dilatations in clusters with pools of mucus.
- Bronchoscopy + mucosal biopsy
- CF sweat test
8
Q
Rx
A
- Chest physio: expectoration, drainage and pulmonary rehab
- ABX for exacerbation
- Bronchodilators: nebuliser B agonists
- Surgery may be indicated in severe localised disease
- Treat underlying cause: eg immune deficiency give IV Ig