Respiratory Flashcards
Go through the Respiratory Short Case
Sitting over side of bed undressed to waist
Never forget asking to see sputum cup
Trachea
- deviation = concentrate on upper lobes (deviation toward in UL fibrosis)
Must ask the patient to cough
- do it after assessing position of the trachea
- loose, dry, bovine (RLN palsy)
FET/Peak flow
- normal FET <3sec
- normal peak flow 600L/min men, 400L/min women
Hoover’s sign
- paradoxical retraction of lateral costal margin
- occurs in those with flattened diaphragm (severe COPD)
What are the causes of bronchial breath sounds?
Prolonged expiratory phase with blowing quality
Causes
- lobar pneumonia
- localised fibrosis or collapse
- above a pleural effusion
- large lung cavity
What are the causes of reduced breath sounds?
Causes
- emphysema
- large lung mass
- collapse, fibrosis, or pneumonia
- effusion
- pneumothorax
What are the causes of transudate vs exudate in pleural effusion? How are they defined?
Transudate:
- Pleural:serum protein <0.5
- Pleural LDH <2/3 serumULN
- Pleural:serum LDH <0.6
Transudate
- cardiac failure
- liver failure
- nephrotic syndrome
- Meig’s syndrome (ovarian fibroma + pleural effusion)
- hypothyroidism (usually exudate)
Exudate
- pneumonia
- neoplasm (lung, metastatic, pleural)
- granulomatous (TB, sarcoid)
- pulmonary infarction
- subphrenic abscess
- pancreatitis
- CTD (RA, SLE)
- drugs (nitrofurantoin, methysergide, bromocriptine, SLE causing drugs, chemotherapy)
- radiation
What are the causes of wheezes? What about crackles?
Wheezes (rhonchi)
- inspiratory: asthma; upper airway extrathoracic obstruction
- expiratory: asthma; COPD
- fixed inspiratory (monophonic = no change with respiration): fixed bronchial obstruction (think carcinoma)
Crackles (crepitations)
- late/pan inspiratory
- fine: fibrosis
- medium: LVF
- coarse: bronchiectasis or retained secretions
- early inspiratory
- coarse: COPD
What are the findings in Lobectomy/Pneumonectomy?
General Inspection
- scar (thoracotomy scar
- asymmetrical chest expansion
- tracheal deviation to side of lobectomy (if UL)
Percussion
- dull
Auscultation
- absent or reduced BS
- reduced vocal resonance
What are the key differentials for pleural fluid analysis of the below:
- pH <7.2
- glucose <3.33mmol/L
- RBC >5000/mL
- Amylase >2000u/L
- decreased complement
- chylous
Causes of Bronchiectasis
Congenital
- Cystic Fibrosis
- Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia, including the immotile cilia syndrome (Young’s Syndrome)
- Congenital Hypogammaglobulinemia (especially igA and IgG def)
- Yellow Nail Syndrome
Acquired
- Childhood Infections (e.g. TB, Pneumonia, Measles, Whooping cough)
- Localised disease (e.g. bronchial adenoma, TB, foreign body)
- Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (proximal brochiectesis)
- RA, Sjogrens
- COPD
- Recurrent Aspiration
- Interstitial lung disease and pneumconiosis
- Idiopathic (up to 50%)
Causes of pulmonary fibrosis
Upper lobe predominant (SCHART)
- S = silicosis, sarcoidosis
- C = coal worker’s pneumoconiosis
- H = histiocytosis
- A = ankylosing spondylitis, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
- R = radiation
- T = tuberculosis
Lower lobe predominant (RASIO)
- R = rheumatoid arthritis
- A = asbestosis
- S = scleroderma
- I = idiopathic interstitial fibrosis
- O = other (drugs e.g. busulfan, bleomycin, nitrofurantoin, hydralazine, methotrexate, amiodarone), other collagen vascular diseases, acute allergic alveolitis, acute eosinophilic pneumonitis