resp notes good 3 Flashcards
hydrothorax
- what is this?
- major mechanisms?
- Think of this as “edema of the pleural space”
- Clear fluid (transudate) fills the pleural cavity and compresses the lungs
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The major mechanisms of fluid transudation (and their common causes) are: - Increased venous pressure (right heart failure in all species, plus left heart failure in cats; excessive intravenous fluids; lung lobe torsion)
- Reduced oncotic pressure: (hypoproteinemia)
- Lymphatic obstruction (eg by a tumor, abscess, granuloma)
- Increased vascular permeability: but, this causes an exudate rather than transudate; thus, the fluid is usually cloudy rather than clear & watery
- Finally, if there is ascites, some of the peritoneal fluid can leak into the pleural cavity through tiny pores in the diaphragm
chylothorax
- what is this?
- major causes?
- Milky opaque pleural fluid, rich in triglyceride and lymphocytes, arising from loss of lymph fluid into the pleural space
<><><><> - The major causes are:
- Heart failure. Increased central venous pressure prevents drainage of lymph from the thoracic duct into the vena cava.
- Lung lobe torsion.
- Many cases are idiopathic.
- Uncommonly due to obstruction of the thoracic duct by tumours, or other masses, or rarely due to traumatic rupture of thoracic duct.
hemothorax
- causes
- trauma (e.g. fractured ribs)
- ruptured tumours (especially hemangiosarcoma)
- idiopathic hemothorax in dogs
- anticoagulant rodenticide toxicity
- thymic hemorrhage syndrome in young dogs
pleuritis
- what is it? common causes?
- Inflammation of the pleural cavity usually represents bacterial infection
<><><><> - bacteria arrive via 3 routes:
- External penetrating injury
- Extension from bacterial pneumonia or rupture of a lung abscess (common in adult horses)
- Hematogenous spread
pneumothorax - external vs internal
- External pneumothorax: penetrating injury that allows air into the pleural space
- Internal pneumothorax: rupture of a pulmonary bulla, or penetrating injury that punctures the lung
pleural neoplasms, how they cause clinical signs
- lung tumours may invade the pleura and spread widely in the pleural space
> metastatic tumour leaks fluid into the pleural cavity, which is the basis for clinical signs of respiratory distress
Pneumonic pasteurellosis
- what is this?
- who is affected?
- agents? where are they found?
- how does disease arise?
- bronchopneumonia caused by any bacteria of the family Pasteurellaceae
- affects cattle of various ages; dairy and veal calves, adult dairy cows, and “shipping fever” in beef calves
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The major causes are bacteria of the family Pasteurellaceae: - Mannheimia haemolytica
- Bibersterinia trehalosi
- Histophilus somni
- Pasteurella multocida
<><><><> - These bacteria carried in the nasopharynx of normal calves
- Disease is thought to require a predisposing cause, such as stress or viral infection
Histophilus somni causes what conditions?
- bronchopneumonia
- bacteremia and vasculitis that result in encephalitis (ITEME), polyarthritis, myocarditis, pleuritis, uveitis, and endometritis
Mannheimia haemolytica toxin, effects
- leukotoxin
> causes necrosis of ruminant macrophages and neutrophils
pneumonic pasteurellosis clinical signs
- acute onset and mainly reflect the acute phase response: fever, depression, anorexia, lack of rumen fill, and holding back from the feed bunk
- Other clinical signs result from local effects within the respiratory tract: coughing, mucopurulent nasal discharge, tachypnea, dyspnea.
shipping fever gross lesions
- cranioventral bronchopenumonia
> consolidation and reddening, as a result of fibrinopurulent exudate in the alveoli
> palpably hard
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Acute cases often have:
1. Hemorrhagic purple-black lobules, giving a red/tan checkerboard pattern
2. Loosely adherent fibrinous exudate on the pleural surface
3. Interlobular septa distended by edema and fibrin
4. Foci of necrosis visible on the cut surface
Chronic cases of shipping fever may develop what lesions?
- tough fibrous adhesions on the pleura
- abscessation of lung tissue
- bronchiectasis
- sequestrum formation.
Pneumonic pasteurellosis diagnosis
- by far the most common cause of respiratory signs in cattle
- cranioventral and mostly symmetrical gross lesions
Cranioventral bronchopneumonia with concurrent necrosis of tracheal epithelium suggests:
infectious bovine rhinotracheitis, with a fatal secondary bacterial pneumonia
Cranioventral bronchopneumonia in which the consolidated lung contains multifocal white circular crumbly foci of necrosis indicates:
Mycoplasma bovis