respiratory Flashcards
which lung cancer is most associated with smoking?
small cell carcinoma
which lung cancer is assoc. with paraneoplastic syndromes. and what are they?
SCC. SIADH, cushing’s, lambert eaton,
indication for cPAP treatment in OSA
symptomatic w/ daytime dysfunction
cardiovascular risk factors
severe OSA determied by lab polysomnography
what are some common complications of OSA?
CVS events - MI
daytime hypertension
cerebrovascular risk and mortality - stroke
motor vehicle accidents
pregnancy related hypertension and pre-eclempsia
what are the risk factors of OSA?
male
obesity
smoking
craniofacial abnormalities - adenotonsillar hypertrophy
certain medical conditions - pregnancy, congestive heart failure, end stage renal failure, chronic lung disease, stroke, acromegaly, hypothyroidism, PCOS
what are the non pharmacological treatment of OSA?
behavioural modification:
- weight loss and exercise
- change of sleeping position to the lateral recumbent position
- alcohol avoidance and smoking cessation
- avoidance of certain medications such as benzodiazepines
- stop driving and operating machinery until sx are stabilized by physician
what are the investigations for latent TB vs active TB?
latent TB: tuberculin skin test OR quantiferon gold test
active TB: chest x ray and 3 x sputum samples w/ ziehl neelson stain (acid fast bacillli stain) in culture and molecular assay
what are the limitations of tuberculin skin test?
cannot differentiate between latent or active disease
can have false positives if BCG is taken, reptitive manoutx test can cause false positive
what are the features of primary TB?
gradual onset low grade fever
pleuritic chest pain
retrosternal/dull interscapular pain which may be worse with swallowing (enlarged bronchial lymph nodes)
what are the features of reactivation TB?
cough, weight loss, fatigue, fever, night sweats (more severe TB)
yellow green sputum that may be blood streaked
anorexia, wasting and malaise
what are the imaging features of primary TB?
tuberculoma in the lower lobe
unilateral adenopathy and pleural effusion
what are the imaging features of secondary TB?
cavitary lesion in the apical posterior segment of the upper lobe
absence of lymphadenopathy
cavitatory lesions
complete lobar opafication if severe
what is the treatment for TB (both latent and active)
latent TB treatment = isonazid therapy active TB treatment = initial phase (8 weeks) RIPE + continuous phase (18 weeks) rifampiciin/isoniazid
pathogenesis of TB and route of transmission
M tuberculosis - strict aerobe, acid fast gram positive bacilli
transmitted through AEROSOLS and not droplets (hence require negative pressure room, and other precautions such as protective face masks)