Respiratory assessment Flashcards

1
Q

Resp Ass - General Appearance

A
  • dyspnoea
  • Pt positioning
  • pain/discomfort
  • evidence of COPD
  • cyanosis
  • cough
  • sputum
  • stridor
  • dysphonia (hoarseness)

Cough:
- Bovine cough; vocal cord paralysis
- muffled/wheezy/ineffective; suggests obstructive pulmonary Dx
- very loose, productive; excessive bronchial secretions - chronic bronchitis, pneumonia, bronchiectasis
- dry, irritating; chest inf, asthma, CA of bronchus, sometimes LVF or interstitial lung Dx; secondary to ACE inhibitors
- barking/croupy; upper airway problem, pharynx, larynx, or pertussis

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2
Q

Resp Ass - Hands

A

General
- peripheral cyanosis
- temp

Clubbing
- due to resp Dx in 80% of cases
- does NOT occur due to COPD - other causes; hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy (lung CAs or pleural fibromas)

Staining
- tar from cigarettes

Wasting & weakness
- wasting of small muscles in hand
- weakness of finger abduction may occurred through compression & infiltration by peripheral lung tumour (T1 nerve root compression)

Pulse
- Rate - tachy, pulses paradoxus in sever asthma
- tachy often accompanies dyspnoea or hypoxia
- full & bounding could indicate CO2 retention

Flapping tremors (asterixis)
- dorsiflexion wrists w arms outstretched & spread fingers
- flapping tremor, w 2-3 sec cycle, may occur w severe CO2 retention

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3
Q

Resp Ass - Face

A

Face
- red, leathery wrinkled skin (smoking) or other skin changes

Eyes
- inspect for pale conjunctiva (anaemia)
- Horner’s syndrome = constricted pupils, partial ptosis, & loss of sweating = can be due to apical lung tumour (Pancoast’s tumour) compressing sympathetic nerves in the neck

Sinuses
- tenderness over sinuses on palpation = sinusitis

Nose
- polyps (assoc w asthma), engorged turbinates (allergies), or deviated septum

Tongue
- central cyanosis, dehydration

Mouth
- evidence of URTI - reddened pharynx, enlarged tonsils
- broken/rotten teeth - predispose Pt to lung abscess/pneumonia
- crowding of pharynx - space between soft palate, tonsils & back of tongue = sleep apnoea

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4
Q

Resp Ass - Trachea & Chest

A

Trachea
- position of trachea (slight R sided displacement is normal) significant displacement = Dx of upper lobes
- tracheal tug = gross over-expansion of chest due to obstructive breathing

Chest
- inspect anteriorly & posteriorly; palpate, percuss, & auscultate (comparing side to side)

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5
Q

Chest shapes

A

Barrel shaped
- anteroposterior diameter > lateral diameter
= severe asthma, emphysema, more normal in elderly

Pigeon chest
- localised prominence & outward bowing of sternum & costal cartilages
= chronic childhood resp illness or Rickets

Funnel chest
- developmental defect involving localised depression of lower end of sternum
= usually aesthetic prob, but can limit lung capacity

Kyphoscoliosis
- may be idiopathic Or 2* to poliomyelitis or Marfan’s syndrome
= reduced lung capacity & inc WOB

Lesions if the chest wall
- scars, operations, chest drains, signs of radiotherapy, sub cut emphysema, prominent veins

Implantable devices
- pacemaker, ICD

Movement
- unilateral - localised lung fibrosis, consolidation, collapse, pleural effusion, pneumothorax
- bilateral - diffuse abnormality eg; COPD, diffuse interstitial lung Dx
- paradoxical inward motion of the abdo - diaphragmatic paralysis

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6
Q

Chest Palpation

A

General
- tenderness, crepitus, surgical emphysema
- tactile fremitus - palpable vibration caused by spoken word indicates consolidation

Chest expansion
- place hands on Pt’s chest wall (1st anteriorly, 2nd posteriorly) w thumbs meeting in the middle, & fingers extending around the sides of the chest: on deep inspiration, yr thumbs should move symmetrically & apart 5cms
- reduced expansion on one side = lesion or issue on that side

Apex beat
- any displacement should be noted;
- displacement toward lesion: collapse of lower lobe or my localised interstitial lung Dx
- displaced away from lesion: pleural effusion, tension pneumothorax
- impalpable: hyper-expanded chest due to COPD

Ribs
- gentle springing: localised pain suggestive of traumatic or spontaneous rib # (tumour, bone Dx, excessive coughing)
- tenderness over costochondral junctions: costochondritis

Regional lymph nodes
- axillary, supraclavicular, cervical (enlarged due to infection/malignancy)

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7
Q

Chest Percussion

A
  • percuss anterior, posterior & axillary regions

Sounds
- Dull - solid underlying structure, consolidation, collapsed lung
- Extremely Dull - fluid filled area; eg pleural effusion
- Resonant note - Normal lung
- Hyper-resonant - hollow underlying structure like bowel, or pneumothorax

Liver dullness
- upper level of liver dullness is determined by percussing down the R anterior chest in mid-clav line
- Normal 6th intercostal space
- if resonant below this level = hyper-inflation; emphysema/asthma

Cardiac dullness
- usually present on L side of chest; may be decreased in emphysema/asthma

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8
Q

Chest Auscultation

A

Sounds
- quality
- intensity; normal, reduced
- adventitious sounds; crackles, wheezes, pleural rub

Note:
Early Vs late crackles & density
Pleural rub indicative of pneumonia/pulmonary infarction
Vocal resonance over consolidation?! B’ee’ sounds more like B’a’y

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9
Q

Chest Other

A

Legs
- oedema, cyanosis, signs of DVT

RR under exertion
- ? Test w mild walking on spot

Temp
- fever indicates acute or chronic infection

Completing the exam:
- cover Pt & assist to redress
- thank Pt
- complete full set of vitals

Further tests?
- peak flow
- spirometry
- sputum specimen

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10
Q

Pulmonary function 2 Dx

A

Obstructive
- air has trouble flowing out of lungs; COPD, asthma

Restrictive
- chest muscles can’t expand enough; pulmonary fibrosis

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11
Q

Spirometry Assessment Info

A
  • identifies & quantifies defects in airway function
  • can measure the severity of obstruction/restriction & then allows for eval of effectiveness of Rxs

FEV: forced expiratory volume; vol of air expired during forced esp approx 1st second
FVC: forced vital capacity; total amount of air expelled during FEV test
VC: gentle expiration
[Note: VC > FVC in COPD]

Testing
- usually best out of 3 is recorded
- then calc FEV1/FVC ratio as a % = normal 70-80% (charts to help)

Low FEV1 w normal ratio = restrictive process

Low FEV1 & decreased ratio = obstructive process

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12
Q

Spirometry Indications

A
  • eval signs, symptoms or abnormal lab results
  • measure effects of disease on pulmonary function
  • screen Pt’s at risk of Pul Dx
  • assess health status before strenuous activity
  • assess therapeutic interventions
  • document the course of Dx affecting lung function
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13
Q

Spirometry Contraindications

A

Contraindications
- AMI within the last month
- conditions that lead to suboptimal test;
~ chest, abdo, facial, oral pain
~ stress incontinence
~ dementia/confusion

Cautions:
- spirometry alone may not be sufficient to define; extent of Dx, response to Rx, or level of impairment
- if Pt is compromised, then withhold this test until management completed First
- assess holistically, not just tests in isolation

Notes re test results:
- if Pt coughs, test is void
- recent meds affect results
- 3 attempts within 5% are req for it to be valid
- dizziness, SOB, coughing have all been reported side effects & can also precipitate an asthma episode

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14
Q

Aortic Stenosis

A

[S1, EC; crescendo-decrescendo murmur, S2]
EC - heard best over Apex

*systolic ejection murmur - sound between S1 & S2

{Pulmonic stenosis; similar sound but heard over Pulmonic area & nil radiation to neck!}

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15
Q

Mitral Regurgitation

A

[S1:murmur:S2]
- heard over Apex/mitral area
- flat murmur, no change in volume/intensity

{Tricuspid regurgitation: same but heard over tricuspid area, does not radiate to Apex}

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16
Q

Mitral valve prolapse

A

[S1, n-EC:murmur:S2]
- mitral valve billows into L atrium
- non-Ejection Click, the tensing of leaflets/cordae
- mid-systolic click & late murmur
- heard at Apex/mitral area

17
Q

Aortic Regurgitation

A

[S1, S2:decrescendo murmur]
- heard in L 3rd/4th intercostal space regions on L sternal border

{Pulmonic regurg: same, but heard along upper L side of sternum}

18
Q

Mitral Stenosis

A

[S1, S2:OS-decrescendo-presystolic accentuation,S1]
- Opening Snap when stenotic valve leaflets open late
- heard Apex/mitral area
- OS followed by mid-diastolic rumble

{Tricuspid Stenosis: heard in tricuspid area}

19
Q

S3

A

[S1_S3, S2]
- volume overload condition: too much volume during rapid filling & tensing of cordae tendonae

AKA: ventricular gallop

Normal in kid’s & adolescents
Older = CHF

20
Q

S4

A

[S2, S4_S1]
- pressure overload problem: LVH, sound heard when atria do last contraction into V stiff L Vent

AKA - Atrial gallop

Always Bad, pathological (hopefully rare)?!