Respiratory- Common PC Chest Pain Flashcards
1
Q
When can it arise
A
- chest wall, parietal pleura, mediastinal structures, tracheobronchial tree, pericardium, oesophagus, sub diaphragmatic structures (liver and gallbladder)
2
Q
Important feature of the pain to distinguish
A
- site
- severity
- character: sharp suggests pleural pain
- onset: gradual or rapid
- exacerbating or reliving factors
- associated Sx: breathlessness, fever and cough suggest infective cause
3
Q
PE chest pain
A
- a large PE can cause angina-like chest pain
- due to increase R ventricular work together with reduced coronary O2 supply
- this can be caused by hypotension, hypoxaemia resulting in right ventricular ischaemia
4
Q
Define pleuratic chest pain
A
- worse on inspiration and coughing
- often described as sharp/stabbing
- usually sited away from the midline
- can be localised or affect a wide area of the chest wall
5
Q
Disease causes of pleural chest pain
A
- pneumonia and pulmonary infarcts- either direct pleural inflammation or adhesions with pleural traction on respiratory movements
- pneumothorax: mechanical distortion of pleura with lung collapse
- lung ca- pleural distortion by infiltration, although constant pain is more typical
6
Q
MSK chest pain
A
- is common and may occur in with chest trauma, forceful coughing or connective tissue disorders
- the chest is characteristically tender to palate and the pain can be reproduced by respiratory movements and or movement of spine/shoulder muscles
- there may be soft tissue injury or rib #
- a detailed Hx is vital as injury can be overlooked
7
Q
Bornholm disease and costocondritis
A
- Bornholm disease is an infection with an enterovirus
- This causes acute but self-limiting inflammation of intercostal muscles.with episodes of severe unilateral intercostal myalga lasting a few days.
- Costocondritis is idsopathic inflammation of the costochondral cartiages adjoining the sterum (causing pain and tenderness). The pain is eased by simple aralgesia and settles spont
8
Q
Herpes zoster chest pain
A
- Herpes zoster infection (shingles) may start with superficial itch or burning pain in a thoracic dermatome
- followed by the appearance of a vesicular rash (a ‘belt of roses from hell’).
- Pain and altered sensation may persist long after the rash has resolved, often with scarring in the affected dermatome (area of skin affected by nerves from a single spinal root)
9
Q
Oesophagitis chest pain
A
- Burning retrosternal pain may indicate oesophagitis but also occurs with myocardial ischaemia.
- Worsening of oesophageal discomfort after eating or relief after antacids helps to distinguish it from cardiac pain.
10
Q
Medistinal chest pain
A
- Central, constant, progressive, non-pleuritic chest pain may represent mediastinal disease, particularly malignancy.
- Similarly, chest wall pain (without trauma) that is constant,progressive and non-pleuritic suggests chest wall invasion by malignancy.
- Sleep disturbance is a feature of such malignant pains.