Resp Osce Flashcards

1
Q

What order do you present a resp exam?

A
  • The patient was (dyspnoeic / comfortable) at rest breathing air and was (cyanosed / not cyanosed)
  • The resp rate was ______ breaths per minute.
  • Always comment on clubbing, lymphadenopathy and mediastinal shift. Mention other positive findings.
  • Comment on percussion, breath sounds, added sounds and vocal resonance
  • Give differential diagnosis
  • Comment on presence / absence of cor pomunale in the context of chronic lung disease (COPD, ILD)
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2
Q

What are the causes of interstitial lung disease?

A

1) idiopathic
- Cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis
2) Due to inhaled antigen
- Bird fanciers lung
- Farmers lung
3) Due to an inhaled irritant
- Asbestosis / silicosis
- Coal worker’s pneumoconiosis (occupational lung disease that is restrictive caused by inhalation of dust often in mines)
4) Associated with systemic diseases
- SLE
- RA
- Sarcoid
- Systemic sclerosis
5) Drug induced
- Methotrexate
- Amiodarone (rate control)

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3
Q

Ddx for the causes of Horner’s syndrome

A

1) Central lesion
- Stroke / Tumour / Multiple sclerosis
- Syringobulbia
2) T1 root lesion
- spondylolysis
- Neurofibroma
3) Brachial plexus
- Pancoast tumour
- Cervical rib
- Trauma / birth injury (Klumpke’s)
4) Neck
- Tumour
- Carotid artery aneurysm
- Sympathectomy
5) With cluster headaches

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4
Q

What would you expect to find if you examined a patient with a lobectomy or a pneumonectomy and what are the indications for it?

A
Given away by a thoracotamy scars
It is indicated in 
    - Bronchogenic carcinoma, 25% of non-SCLC is                              resectable, 
    - Bronchiectasis
    - Trauma 
    - Old treatment for TB
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5
Q

What are the complications of a lobectomy and pneumonectomy?

A
  • Elevated diaphragm and lung
  • Fistula between pleural and oesophagus
  • Empyema
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6
Q

What pathology would cause a decrease in breath sounds and vocal resonance and how would you differentiate?

A
A collapse
   - mediastinal shift towards
   - dull on percussion
An Effusion
   - Mediastinal shift away if big
   - Stony dull on percussion
Pneumothorax
   - Away if tension
   - tympanic percussion
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7
Q

What are the expected clinical findings in a person who has undergone a pneumonectomy?

A
  • Mediastinal shift towards the resected lung
  • Dull on percussion
  • Absent breath sounds
  • Absent vocal resonance
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8
Q

Causes of pleural effusion

A
Transudate (protein < 30 g/L)
   - CCF
   - Volume overload
   - Hypoalbuminaemia
   - Meigs syndrome
Exudate (Protein > 30 g/L)
   - Infection (Pneumonia, TB)
   - Infarction (P.E.)
   - Inflammation (RA, SLE)
   - Malignancy (Bronchogenic or mesothelioma)
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9
Q

Differentials for bibasal crepitations

A
  • Pulmonary Oedema
  • ILD
  • Bronchiectasis
  • Cystic fibrosis
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10
Q

what does a bronchial breath sound indicate

A
  • Consolidation
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