Respiratory Flashcards

1
Q

Resp exam - do not forget what?

Pleural effusion, pneumothorax, lung collapse, lung fibrosis, consolidation on resp exam?

A

Hands/arms:

  • CRT, clubbing (PF, lung cancer, CF, bronchiectasis, sarcoidosis/TB)
  • Co2-retention flap (T2RF) - check pulse while doing
  • RR (arm over chest while taking pulse)

Head/neck: JVP, tracheal assessment (3 fingers, palpate either side of trachea), cricosternal distance (<3 fingers = lung hyperinflation), cervical LNs

Chest:

  • Apex beat
  • Chest expansion (front/back)
  • Percussion, auscultation, vocal resonance (front/back incl. supraclavicular + axillae)
  • NOTE: make sure to auscultate in axilla

Other: peripheral oedema, DVT

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Reading an ABG?

A

Respiratory failure:

  • Low O2 = T1RF (PaO2 <8kPa)
  • Low O2 + High CO2 = T2RF (PaO2 <8kPa, PaCO2 >6kPa)

Determining acid: base balance:

  • Low pH + high CO2 = Respiratory acidosis (low CO2 = metabolic)
  • High pH + low CO2 = Respiratory alkalosis (high CO2 = metabolic)
  • NOTE: if bicarb is high in RA = chronic RA (compensation by bicarb is slow) –> this determines if should be on scale 1/2 O2 (scale 2 = 88-92%)

Causes of acid: base balance:

  • RA causes: COPD, ILD, hypoventilation, asthma (normally resp alkalosis but can be acidotic if severe)
  • MA causes: lactic acid, ketoacids (CO2 blown off to compensate –> Kussmaul breathing)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Asthma - def? Presentation? Ix? Severity? Short-term/long-term Mx incl. conservative? Mneumonic for conservative long-term Mx?

A

Def: chronic inflammatory airway disease characterized by reversible airway obstruction + airway hyperresponsiveness

Presentation

  • Dry cough, polyphonic wheeze ( worse@night/morning)
  • Triggers: cold air, pollen, pollution, exercise
  • Atopic features - eczema, nasal polyps

Ix:

  • Peak flow variability (in peak flow diary)
  • Spirometry (shows reversibility after bronchodilator)
  • FeNO (fractional exhaled nitric oxide - a marker of airway inflamme, in uncertain Dx)
  • On exacerbation:
    • ABG, peak flows (min x4/day), CXR
  • Other:
    • Allergy testing - total IgE, specific IgE (RAST), serum eosinophil count

Asthma severity:

  • Life-threatening: PEF <33% of baseline/SpO2 <92%/PaO2 <8/Normal or raised PaCO2 - should be low with resp alkalosis due to excess breathing only becomes acidotic when get tired
    • CHEST: Cyanosis, Hypotension, Exhaustion, Silent chest, Tachycardia
  • Acute severe: PEF <50% of baseline/RR >25/HR >110/can’t complete sentence without taking a breath
  • Moderate: PEF <75% of baseline

Short-term Mx:

  • A-E approach, seek senior support (call for help if life-threatening)
  • O2 - 15L NRM (if hypoxaemic)
  • Burst therapy:
    • SABA (spacer up to 10 puffs every 20 mins –> nebs)
    • Ipratropium Bromide (add to nebs if poor response/severe, every 4-6hrs)
    • Corticosteroids (min 5-day course, give within 1 hour, give IV if can’t take orally)
  • Other Tx options:
    • IV Magnesium sulfate (STAT dose if poor response above/severe) - consult senior before use
    • IV salbutamol (if on ventilation) - consult senior before use
    • IV Aminophylline - consult senior before use, requires ITU setting
  • If less distressed/more tired/shallow breaths/confused –> call critical care outreach team (CCOT) for ITU support

Long-term Mx (>16yrs):

  • Conservative: TAME
    • Technique
    • Avoid triggers
    • Monitor peak flow
    • Educate - formulate Personalised Asthma Action Plan (PAAP), Annual flu vaccine
  • Medical:
    1. SABA (reliever)
    2. SABA + ICS (preventer)
    3. SABA + ICS + LTRA (leukotrine receptor antagonist e.g. montelukast)
    4. SABA + ICS + LABA (+ LTRA stopped unless good response)
    5. SABA + MART (ICS + LABA COMBO) (+ LTRA)
    6. NOTE: maintenance & reliever therapy (MART) - used as preventer & maintenance inhaler
    7. Specialist input (e.g. for oral steroids)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

COPD - definition? Signs & Sx? New Dx & exacerbation Ix/Mx? Prognosis factors?

A

Def: chronic bronchitis (damaged to cilia in bronchi - blue bloater) + emphysema (damage to alveoli - pink puffer)

Presentation:

  • Cough (productive), SoB (starts on exercise)
  • RF exposure - smoking/pollution
  • Signs:
    • Barrel chest
    • Hyper-resonant (air trapping)
    • Reduced breath sounds
    • Widespread expiratory wheeze
    • Coarse crackles if exacerbation (mucus in airways)
    • Other - asterixis (CO2 retention flap), raised JVP (cor pulmonale)
    • NOTE: COPD does not cause clubbing –> cancer/bronchiectasis

New Dx Mx:

  • Ix:
    • Bedside - mMRC dyspnoea scale, O2 sats, ECG (cor pulmonale)
    • Spirometry - FEV1/FVC <0.7 (forced exp volume in 1s)
      • Mild - FEV1 ≥ 80%
      • Moderate - FEV1 ≥ 50%
      • Severe - FEV1 ≥ 30%
      • Very severe - FEV1 <30%
    • Bloods - FBC, ABG, eosinophil count, alpha1-antitrypsin level
    • Imaging - CXR, CT chest
    • Other: serial peak flows if asthma DDx, sputum culture (in freq exacerbation), pul funct tests
  • Mx:
    • Conservative - stop smoking, influenza + pneumococcal vaccine, inhaler device training
      • Persuade to stop smoking
      • Pul rehab
      • Prick them - influenza + pneumococcal vaccine
      • Psych issues
    • Medical - depends on severity - GOLD group –> solo/combo of:
      • SABA e.g. salbutamol
      • SAMA e.g. Ipratropium bromide
      • LABA e.g. salmeterol
      • LAMA e.g. tiotropium
      • ± ICS e.g. beclomethasone
      • Other: mucolytic e.g. acetylcysteine, O2 therapy, theophylline
    • Medical pathway:
      • 1 - SABA/SAMA
      • 2a - Steroid-responsive (eosinophilia/atopy): LABA + ICS
      • 2b - Not steroid-responsive: LABA + LAMA
      • 3 - LABA + LAMA + ICS
      • 4 - specialist input e.g. theophylline
    • Surgical - lung reduction surgery (large bullae)
    • Other: long-term O2 therapy
      • Only if non-smoker (smoker –> burns)
      • Only if <7.3 PaO2/<8 if also pul HTN
      • Only if PaCO2 does not rise excessively on O2

Acute Exacerbation Mx:

  • Ix: ABG, ECG, CXR
  • Mx:
    • 15L O2 NRM
    • Nebs - salbutamol + IpB
    • Steroids (PO pred/IV hydrocortisone)
    • Abx if infective –> prophylactic abx if persistent infections - azithromycin

Prognosis factors:

  • Body mass - worse if obese
  • Obstruction - worse if reduced FEV1
  • Dyspnoea
  • Exercise capacity - how far can you walk in 6 minutes?

Complication –> vasoconstriction to redirect blood flow to well-oxygenated areas of the lungs –> if widespread –> pul HTN –> cor pulmonale

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Pneumonia - def? Presentation? Types? Ix? Scoring? Mx?

A

Def: inflammation of lung caused by inf w/ visible radiographic changes

Presentation:

  • Decreased chest expansion, dull on percussion, increased sound vocal resonance
  • Coarse crackles
  • Bronchial breathing – bronchial airflow instead of alveolar airflow (due to transmission of sounds through consolidation) – check by listening to sound at the throat

Ix: ABG, CXR, sputum culture (mod/high severity)

Scoring for CAP: CURB-65 (confusion, urea ≥7mmol/L, RR ≥30, BP <90/60, ≥65yrs)

  • +1 = outpatient; +2 = outpatient/inpatient, +3 = inpatient ± ITU
  • NOTE: urea is no longer used

Types & Mx –> local abx guidelines

  • CAP:
    • Typical (S. pneumo, H. influenzae) –> Amox/Co-Amox
    • Atypical (Legionella, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia) –> Clari
      • ​Dry cough (instead of productive), myalgia, confusion, diarrhoea
    • NOTE: if not sure often given Co-Amox + Clari
  • HAP - pneumonia arising >48hrs after admission to hospital (S. pneumo, S. aureus, P. aeruginosa) –> Taxocin (pseudomonal cover)
  • Aspiration - RFs: swallowing dyfunct, reduced consciousness, reduced mental status –> elderly/frail

Goes into septic shock –> give IV fluid + senior help + check abx sensitivity (ring lab) –> ITU (intropic support - NA to increase PVR)

  • Other aspects of septic-6
  • NOTE: dobutamine is for cardiogenic shock to increase CO - this is not relevant here
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

PE - def? Sx? RFs? Scoring & Ix? Mx?

A

Def: occlusion of pulmonary vasculature characterized by sharp pleuritic chest pain

Sx: SYNCOPE, sudden SoB, pleuritic chest pain, haemoptysis

RFs: SICC - Surgery, Immobility, Cancer, COCP

Initial Tx:

  • DOAC (e.g. Apixaban) or unfractionated heparin (if bleeding risk, can be reversed easily)
  • Massive PE –> IV unfractionated heparin for hours before and after thrombolysis e.g. IV alteplase

Scoring & Ix: Well’s score

  • ≤4 = D-Dimer –sign raised–> CTPA
  • >4 = CTPA
  • ECG useful - sinus tachycardia, right heart strain, S1Q3T3
  • NOTE: Troponin = useful markers for PE severity (indicates right heart strain)

Ongoing anticoagulation - DOAC/Warfarin

  • Provoked - 3 months (SICC)
  • Unprovoked - >6 months + cancer & thrombophilia testing
    • Ix for cancer –> any Sx?
      • If yes - CT TAP
      • If no - FBC, U&E, LFTs, clotting, physical exam –> if concern –> CT TAP
      • Consider thrombophilia screen if no cancer for anti-phospholipid syndrome (anticardiolipin, lupus anticoagulant, anti-beta-2-glycoprotein)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Restrictive vs Obstructive lung conditions

A

Restrictive (belt around lungs) - reduced lung volume (restricted expansion) + FEV1/FVC ratio > 80% (normal/increased - from decrease in FVC)

  • Poor breathing mechanics - Myasthenia gravis, scoliosis, obesity
  • Interstitial lung disease - pulmonary fibrosis, sarcoidosis

Obstructive (hand choking airway) - increased lung volume (air trapped) + FEV1/FVC ratio < 80% (decreased - reduced expiratory volume)

  • Airway obstruction (from inflammation of airways & problem exhaling) - Asthma, COPD (chronic bronchitis, emphysema), Bronchiectasis
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What is FEV1 and FVC? WHat does FEV1/FVC ratio indicate?

A

FEV1 - total air expired forcibly in 1s (spirometry reading)

FVC - total air expired in a complete breath

FEV1/FVC ratio - decrease <80 indicates an obstructive condition

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Chronic bronchitis vs emphysema?

A

Chr bronchitis - defined by clinical features (productive cough for ≥ 3 months/yr for ≥ 2 yrs - excess mucus & less mobile cilia) - airflow blocked by mucus –> decreased O2, increased CO2 –> cyanosis = BLUE BLOATER

Emphysema - defined by structural changes (enlarged air spaces –> reduced gas exchange) - breath slowly through pursed lips to increase airway pressure = prevent collapse –> PINK PUFFER

  • Centriacinar - proximal alveoli affected, assoc w/ smoking, upper lobes
  • Panacinar - entire alveoli affected, assoc w/ alpha1-antitrypsin def, lower lobes
  • Paraseptal - distal alveoli affected, lung peripheries –> can rupture –> pneumothorax

NOTE: commonly co-exist

Both = COPD –> airway obstructed –> reduced FVC (air expired in complete breath) & very reduced FVC1 (air expired in 1s) –> low FVC1/FVC ratio (<0.7 for Dx)

  • COPD –> vasoconstriction to redirect blood flow to well-oxygenated areas of the lungs –> if widespread –> pul HTN –> cor pulmonale
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Bronchiectasis - definition? causes? presentation? Ix? Mx?

A

Def: obstructive lung disease characterised by permanent dilation of bronchi from the destruction of elastic & muscular components of the bronchial wall

  • Results from diseases causing chronic inflammation:
    • Primary ciliary dyskinesia - cilia don’t move –> mucus trapped in airways –> recurrent pneumonia –> chr inflammation
    • Cystic fibrosis - mucus thick & sticky –> recurrent pneumonia –> chr inflammation
    • Airway obstruction - tumour inside/outside airway or inhaled foreign body –> mucus can’t clear –> recurrent pneumonia –> chr inflammation
    • NOTE: worse with certain infections e.g. aspergillosis –> hypersensitivity response
  • Chr inflammation - has immune cells that release cytokines –> damage ciliated epithelial cells + destroys elastin –> airways dilated + clogged with mucus –> fibroblasts deposit collagen –> stiff lungs + mucus plug –> obstructive lung disease

Presentation:

  • RFs: CF, PCD, congenital disorders of airway, host immunodef (incl. HIV), recurrent lung inf
    • Less common - inhaled foreign body, connective tissue disease, IBD, alpha1-antitrypsin def
  • Productive cough (large amounts of sputum) ± haemoptysis - worse lying flat/one side
  • Dyspnoea (with increased severity)
  • Fever (on exacerbation)
  • Crackles, inspiratory squeaks & rhonchi, clubbing (from long-term hypoxia)

Ix: CXR (ring shadows, tramlines), high-res CT (signet ring sign), FBC + sputum culture & sensitivity (inf e.g. pseudomonas), pul function tests

  • Genetic testing (for possible RF causes): serum alpha1-antitrypsin, serum Ig lvls (ID), specific IgE for Aspergillus, sweat Cl test (CF), rheumatoid factor (CTD), HIV test, nasal nitric oxide (PCD)

Mx:

  • Conservative:
    • Persuade to stop smoking
    • Pul rehab
    • Prick them - influenza + pneumococcal vaccine
    • Psych issues
  • Medical:
    • Mucoactive agent (nebulised hypertonic saline)
    • Inhaled bronchodilator (SABA/SAMA/LABA/LAMA) - ONLY If co-existing asthma/COPD
  • Surgical: depending on primary cause e.g. IFB, tumour –> lobectomy/lung transplant
  • Exacerbation: short-term abx (azithromycin)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Sarcoidosis - def? presentation? Ix? Mx?

A

Def: a chronic multisystem disease characterized by the formation of non-caseating granulomas across various tissues

  • Physiologically granulomas are supposed to form around insulting body e.g. infection but in sarcoidosis form for no apparent reason

Presentation:

  • Profile - Afro-Caribbean, female, 20-40yrs
  • Lungs - SoB, dry cough
  • Skin - erythema nodosum & lupus pernio
  • Other - dry eyes (uveitis, conjunctivitis, optic neuritis), polyarthralgia, fever/fatigue/weight loss, cardiac (cardiomyopathy, conduction defects), neuro (cranial nerve palsies)
  • Lofgren’s syndrome = triad: erythema nodosum + bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy + polyarthralgia

Ix:

  • Bloods:
    • Serum ACE (high), serum soluble IL-2 receptor, ESR
    • Serum Ca (activated macrophages in sarcoidosis prod 1alpha-hydroxylase –> excess activated vitamin D)
  • CXR (bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy)
  • Gold-standard: transbronchial biopsy (non-caseating granulomas)

Mx:

  • Asymptomatic - NSAIDs/no Tx
  • Symptomatic:
    • Long-term steroids + bisphosphonates (osteoporosis protection)
    • Steroid-sparing agents - Methotrexate/Azathioprine
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

Interstitial lung disease - causes? presentation? Ix? Mx? Prognosis?

A

Interstitial lung disease

  • Refers to the tissue the gasses pass through e.g. surface of alveoli –> reducing gas exchange

Causes:

  • Upper zone fibrosis: PATEN (more occupational causes)
    • Pneumoconiosis (not asbestosis) - caused by inorganic dust (e.g. soot)
    • Aspergillosis/ABPA
    • TB
    • Extrinsic allergic alveolitis - caused by organic dust e.g. animal shedding
    • Negative seroarthropathies
  • Lower zone fibrosis: STAIR
    • Sarcoidosis
    • Toxins: B-MANS (Bleomycin, Methotrexate, Amiodarone, Nitrofurantoin, Sulfasalazine)
    • Asbestosis
    • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
    • Rheum: SLE, RhA etc
  • Signs of conditions associated w/ pulmonary fibrosis:
    • MCP swelling - RA
    • Malar rash - SLE​
    • Kyphosis - Ank Spond (apical fibrosis)
    • Lupus pernio - sarcoidosis
    • Thick skin/’bird beak’ nose - systemic sclerosis
    • Aphthous ulcers, abdo scars - Crohn’s
    • Grey skin - amiodarone

Main Sx: progressive SOBOE, dry cough, fatigue, weight loss

Signs: find end-insp creps, clubbing

  • Other: reduced chest expansion, normal/reduced percussion, normal vocal fremitus

Investigations: spirometry, high-res CT & lung biopsy

  • Bedside: spirometry (low FEV1, low FVC, FEV1/FVC>0.8 = restrictive lung disease), ECG (right heart strain), drug review
  • Bloods
    • FBC, U&E, LFTs, CRP, ESR, ABG (T1RF)
    • AI screen - Serology (CTD): ANA, RhF, anti-CCP
    • Serum ACE for sarcoidosis
    • TB testing
  • Imaging
    • CXR: reticulonodular shadowing (honeycombing) + rule out lung cancer
    • High-res CT: more detailed view of alveolar structure –> ‘honeycombing’ + lung biopsy
    • Echo (right heart strain/cor pulmonale)
  • Invasive
    • Bronchoscopy + lung biopsy (gold-standard)

Management:

  • Conservative (4Ps):
    • Persuade to stop smoking, reduce exposure (meds, EAA)
    • Pul rehab
    • Prick them - influenza + pneumococcal vaccine
    • Psych issues
  • Medical: anti-fibrotic e.g. pirfenidone +/- prednisolone ± O2 (if hypoxaemic)
  • Surgical: lung transplant if severe deterioration/impairment/oxygen dependent

Prognosis: 3-4yrs post-Dx (no Mx increases survival)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

Pleural effusion - signs? causes? Ix? Mx?

A

Signs (if fluid > 300ml):

  • Key:
    • Stony dull in lung base
    • If large: tracheal deviation away
  • Reduced chest expansion
  • Reduced breath sounds
  • Reduced vocal fremitus

Causes:

  • Transudative (<30g/L protein)
    • HEART FAILURE
    • Hypoalbuminaemia: liver disease, nephrotic syndrome, malabsorption
    • Hypothyroidism
    • Meig’s syndrome (benign ovarian tumor + ascites + pleural effusion)
  • Exudative (>30g/L protein)
    • Infection: PNEUMONIA, TB, subphrenic abscess
    • Connective tissue disease; RA (also low glucose), SLE
    • Neoplasia: lung cancer, mesothelioma, metastases
    • Pancreatitis: high amylase in pleural fluid
    • Pulmonary embolism

Ix:

  • Bedside: obs, urinalysis for protein
  • Bloods:
    • ABG, BC
    • FBC, U&E, LFTs, CRP
    • Clotting (before needle aspiration), albumin (nephrotic syndrome)
    • Mantoux/ELISPOT (TB)
  • Imaging:
    • CXR: meniscus sign, dense shadowing, pleural effusion if ≥300mL fluid
    • CT chest - identify the cause

Management: US-guided pleural aspiration = thoracocentesis (21G needle, 50ml syringe) - above rib to avoid NV bundle

  • LDH & protein in pleural fluid & serum + RBCs, WBCs, cytology, culture, pH & glucose of pleural fluid
    • MC&S
    • Biochemistry: PPALS
      • ​Protein (also serum)
      • pH
      • Amylase
      • LDH (also serum)
      • Sugar (glucose)
    • Cytology
    • Immunology - if indicated (RF, ANA, complement)
  • Findings:
    • Protein > 30g/L: exudate
    • Protein < 30g/L: transudate
    • Protein 25-35g/L: use Light’s criteria. An exudate is likely if at least 1 of:
      • Pleural protein/serum protein > 0.5
      • Pleural LDH/serum LDH > 0.6
      • Pleural LDH > 2/3 upper limits of normal serum LDH
  • Tx cause e.g. abx for infection, furosemide for HF
  • Management of recurrent pleural effusion
    • Recurrent aspiration (thoracocentesis)
    • Pleurodesis
    • Indwelling pleural catheter

Pleural fluid features:

  • Heavy blood staining - mesothelioma, TB, PE, trauma
  • Purulent/turbid/cloudy - empyema secondary to bacterial pneumonia –> insert chest tube to allow drainage
  • Milky - chylothorax via lymphatic obstruction secondary to malignancy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

Pneumothorax - Def? RFs? Causes? Ix? Mx? How do you identify a Tension Pneumothorax?

A

Pneumothorax = accumulation of air in pleural space (subdivided into primary and secondary)

RFs: pre-existing lung disease, Marfan’s, RA, smoking

Causes: cystic pathology, parenchymal necrosis, iatrogenic, trauma

Ix: CXR

Mx:

  • Primary (no pre-existing lung disease)
    • <2cm (betw lung margin & chest wall), no SoBobserve 4-6hrs ± supplemental O2
    • SoB/≥2cmneedle aspiration (16-18G) –> observe 4-6hrs
      • Do NOT repeat needle aspiration x2
    • Chest drain if above fails + ADMIT ± supplemental O2
      • NOTE: correct clotting before inserting if possible
    • Surgery
  • Secondary (pre-existing lung disease) - ADMIT all secondary pneumothorax (for at least 24hrs observation)
    • <1cm - high-flow O2 + ADMIT (24hrs observation)
    • 1-2cm - needle aspiration (16-18G) –> high-flow O2 + ADMIT (24hrs observation)
    • SoB/≥2cm/previous failed - chest drain + ADMIT ± supplemental O2
    • Surgery

Tension pneumothorax = pushes away the trachea to the opposite side

  • Non-traumatic:
    • IMMEDIATE peri-arrest call (2222)
    • Needle decompression = emergency Tx, 2nd ICS MCL (grey cannula) + high-flow O2
    • Follow-up = ADMIT + chest drain
  • Traumatic:
    • Open thoracostomy
    • Follow-up = ADMIT + chest drain
  • Traumatic non-tension pneumothorax:
    • High-flow O2 + ADMIT (24hrs observation)
    • If open pneumothorax/penetrating chest wound –> occlusive dressing + observe
    • Refer to thoracic surgeons - chest drain/thoracotomy

Location:

  • Needle aspiration = 2nd ICS, MCL
  • Chest drain = triangle of safety (axilla, pectoralis major, latissimus dorsi, 5th ICS) - 4th/5th ICS, MAL

Surgery:

  • Open thoracotomy (or video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery = VATS)
  • Follow-up surgery –> pleurodesis (mechanical abrasion/chemical irritation)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

Causes of different ABGs? Resp/Met Acidosis/Alkalosis

A

Resp acidosis (not breathing out enough) - asthma, COPD, GBS

Resp alkalosis - pain, panic attack, PE, pneumothorax

Metabolic acidosis - DKA, LA, diarrhoea, renal failure

Metabolic alkalosis - vom/diarrhoea, diuretics (loop/thiazide), Conn’s syndrome, liver cirrhosis, HF

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

T1RF vs T2RF causes?

A

T1RF: low/normal CO2 –> pul oedema, ARDS, collapse

T2RF: high CO2 –> opiate OD, COPD, neuromusc disease

23
Q

Respiratory causes of clubbing?

A

Lung cancer, bronchiectasis (& CF), pul fibrosis

NOT COPD (but if COPD is smoker with clubbing –> lung cancer)

24
Q

Cor Pulmonale Def? Dx? Mx?

A

Def? RHF secondary to lung disease

Dx: (clinical Dx –> confirm with ECHO)

  • Peripheral oedema
  • Raised JVP
  • Loud pul second HS
  • Sytolic parasternal heave

Mx:

  • Smoking cessation
  • Optimise COPD meds
  • If PaO2 <8 + features of Cor Pulmonale –> long-term O2 therapy (not if smoker)
    • If not above –> Sx control = diuretics
25
Q

Causes of lung consolidation? How do you know it is a consolidation?

A

Pus (infection)

Fluid (pul. oedema)

Cancer

Blood (pulm haemorrhage)

Protein (alveolar proteinosis = rare)

Consolidation has lung bronchograms

26
Q

Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) - def? presentation? Ix? Mx?

A

Def: results from T1 hypersensitivity reaction to Aspergillus spores (in exam often Hx of bronchiectasis + eosinophilia)

Presentation:

  • SoB, wheeze (bronchoconstriction), productive cough, recurrent chest infections
  • Coarse crepitations (if bronchiectasis)
  • RFs: asthma, CF, atopy

Ix:

  • Bedside - allergic skin-prick, spirometry, oxygen sats
  • Bloods - eosinophilia, raised total IgE (>1000), Aspergillus +ve IgE & G
  • Imaging - CXR, CT-chest (bronchiectasis, mucus plugging)

Mx:

  • Conservative - chest physio (if features of bronchiectasis)
  • Medical:
    • Oral glucocorticoids (low-medium dose tapered over 3-12 months)
    • 2nd line - Itraconazole
27
Q

Cystic fibrosis - def? presentation? Ix? Mx? Prognosis?

A

Def: hereditary AR disorder caused by a mutation in CFTR gene characterised by the production of thick sticky mucus

Presentation:

  • Commonly presents in infancy (Muconium ileus, genetic testing)
  • Multi-systemic:
    • Resp - recurrent chest inf
    • GI - weight loss, malnutrition
    • Endo - infertility, T1DM
    • MSK - poor muscle mass

Ix:

  • Bedside:
    • Immunoreactive trypsinogen test (IRT) - newborn screening, not diagnostic
    • Faecal elastase - abn pancreatic function
    • Sweat test (+ve if Cl >60mmol/L; -ve <30)
    • Sputum culture (pseudomonas)
    • Pul funct tests (obstructive pattern)
  • Lab:
    • Genetic testing - CFTR gene mutations, ciliary genetic defects after (kartagener’s)
    • Bloods - FBC, Ig, Aspergillus precipitins, nutrition status (vit, protein, Fe)
  • Imaging:
    • CXR/CT-chest - hyperinflation, bronchiectasis
    • Abdo USS - fatty liver

Mx: MDT approach

  • Conservative - airway clearance techniques (chest physio), GI nutritional support
  • Medical:
    • Nebs mucolytics (Dornase alfa, hypertonic saline)
    • Bronchodilator therapy (SABA/LABA)
    • Long-term abx (azithromycin)
  • Surgical: lung transplant (if FEV1<30% predicted, refractory haemoptysis, failure of medical therapy)

Prognosis:

  • No cure, mean survival = 40yrs (determinant of age is severity of lung disease)
  • Death from chronic resp failure, cor pulmonale (from pul HTN), resp complications (pneumothorax, pneumonia)
28
Q

Hypersensitivity pneumonitis aka extrinsic allergic alveolitis - Def? Ix? Mx & specific Mx of psittacosis?

A

Def: immune-mediated ILD precipitated by hypersensitivity to inhalation of micro-organisms

  • Examples: Mushroom worker’s lung (thermactinomyces vulgaris), Malt-worker’s lung (Aspergillus clavatus)
  • DDx: pulmonary fibrosis, pneumoconiosis

Ix:

  • Bedside - O2 sats, inflammatory markers
  • Imaging: CXR (90% have consolidation), CT chest (apical lung fibrosis)
  • Confirmation with serology (as part of atypical pneumonia screen)

Mx:

  • Conservative - avoidance
  • Acute - pred tapered for 6 weeks
  • Chronic - long-term low-dose pred
  • Psittacosis: Tetracycline e.g. Doxy (2nd line - Macrolide e.g. erythromycin)
29
Q

Lung cancer - epi? presentation? types? Ix? Mx?

A

Epi: Second most common cancer in UK

Presentation: chronic cough, haemoptysis, FLAWS

  • Monophonic wheeze, pleural effusion signs (dull on percussion, reduced BS), cachexia, SVCO (face swelling & engorged veins in venal-caval distribution), hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy (HPOA)
  • RFs: smoking, asbestos exposure, FHx

Types:

  • Non-small cell lung cancer (MOST)
    • Adenocarcinoma (MOST COMMON LC)
      • Non-smoking women (40% cases)
    • Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC)
      • Affects large airways of lungs (central)
      • Classically assoc w/ paraneoplastic hypercalcaemia, as tumour may release PTHrP
      • 2nd most common in non-smokers
      • Most common cause of Pancoast tumour
      • Keratinization (keratin pearls)
    • Large cell carcinomas (Dx of exclusion)
    • Alveolar cell carcinoma = ++sputum
    • Bronchial adenoma = mostly carcinoid
      • Carcinoid syndrome - flushing, diarrhoea, episodes of dyspnoea
      • Urinary 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic Acid (5-IAA) levels may be used to screen for carcinoid syndrome
  • Small cell lung cancer (15%)
    • Almost exclusively smokers
    • Can be assoc w/ neuroendocrine syndrome (SIADH, Cushing’s)
    • Early mets BUT chemo sensitive

Ix:

  • Bloods - FBC, haematinics, Ca
  • Imaging - CXR, CT chest (2WW referral), CT PET scan (staging, mets)
  • Interventional if suspicious CXR:
    • Endobronchial US-guided biopsy (EBUS) & biopsy
    • Video-assisted Tracheostomy & Biopsy (VATS - BIOPSY) of accessible nodes

Mx:

  • Conservative: lung cancer MDT
    • Smoking cessation
    • Psych support (McMillan Nurses, specialist lung cancer nurse involvement)
    • Palliative care (if terminal, Sx control & planning)
  • Medical:
    • Systemic chemo - esp. for small cell lung cancer (chemosensitive)
    • Adjuvant/radical radiotherapy
  • Surgical - if NSCLC
    • VATS-lobectomy
    • Open lobectomy/Pneumonectomy
30
Q

4Ps of respiratory conservative Mx?

A

Persuade to stop smoking

Pul rehab

Prick them - influenza + pneumococcal vaccine

Psych issues

31
Q

Resp scars? Lobectomy/Pneumonectomy DDx? Presentation?

A
  • Axillary thoracotomy scar - chest drains
  • Postero/anterolateral thoracotomy scar - lobectomy, pneumonectomy & oesophageal surgery
  • Radiotherapy-associated skin changes: dry, thickened, hypopigmented and telangiectasia

Lobectomy/pneumonectomy

  • DDx:
    • Lung cancer/mets
    • Bronchiectasis, lung abscess(s), TB
    • Sarcoidosis, COPD
  • Presentation: dull percussion & absent breath sounds over affected area
  • Complications:
    • Fluid - pul oedema
    • Bleed - haemothorax
    • Inf - wound infection
32
Q

Fine vs coarse creps?

Vesicular vs bronchial breathing?

A

FINE (inspiratory) – pulmonary oedema (HF), interstitial lung disease (pul fibrosis)

  • Best heard at base of lungs

COARSE (insp & exp) – bronchiectasis, COPD (chronic bronchitis), pneumonia

  • No specific area of lungs louder

Vesicular - inspiratory > expiratory

Bronchial - inspiratory = expiratory