Respiratory Medicine: Pleural Disease Flashcards
What is dyspnoea?
Difficult or laboured breathing
What are the three factors that can result in pleural effusion?
- Rate of pleural fluid production increases
- Rate of drainage is decreased
- Increased vascular permeability
What are the two causes of increased fluid production in the pleural space
- Hydrostatic pressure increases- CHF
- Plasma oncotic pressure is decreased- hypoalbuminaemia
This results in transudate ( increased pressure/decreased oncotic)
Exudate- increased vascular perm (protein)
What caused a modified transudate in the pleural space?
Chronic transudate results in some pleural inflammation- protein and cell content mildly increase
What can cause exudate in the pleura?
- Inflammed/infected pleura
- Neoplasia
- Increases vascular perm
- Coagulpathy- haemothorax
- Chylothorax- ruptured thoracic duct
What are the clinical signs of pleural effusions?
- Rapid shallow respirations- progressing to dyspnoea
- Decreased persussion- ventrally especially
- Decreased breath sounds ventrally and muffled heart sounds
- Decreased thoracic compressibility
- CHF- jugular vein distension (can be cranial mediastinal mass)
When is thoracocentesis not indicated with a pleural effusion severly compromising resp function?
Possibly: In an active haemorrhage
How can effusions be detected?
What should be done after throacocentesis?
Thoracic radiography is non-informative
Brief thoracic ultrasound (T-fast) is sensitive
Effusions should be drained prior to radiography or other investigations
Radiography after thoracocetentesis- identify any pulmonary masses
Describe thoracocentesis?
- Usually sternal recumbancy
- Site- avoid heart/liver- US guidance- blind 7/8th intercostal space at costochondral junction
- Surgically prepare the area
- Wear gloves and follow aseptic precautions
- ± sedation, ± local
- Cats- use butterfly catheter (21G)
- Dogs- diagnostic- needle, drainage use large bore (16/14G) IV catheter, three way tap and syrinfe and extension tubing
- Store samples in plain and EDTA tubes
Describe transudates, modified transudates and exudated?
- Transudate- uncommon, very clear, cell count <1.5 x 10 ^9
- Modified transudates- most common, CHF usually- straw coloured, TP > 25g/l, cell count <5 x 10^9
- Exudates- classified to their types
What are the two primary causes of pyothorax?
- Penetrating injuries
- Secondary to migrating vegetable matter
How should a pyothorax be treated?
- Antibiotic selection based on sensitivity results
- Bilateral chest drains and thoracic lavage carried out (20ml/kg warm saline) until clear
- When does chyle not appear very milky in appearance?
- What does cytology of chyle show?
- Patient is on a low fat diet
- High cellularity, mainly small lymphocytes
What my chylothorax be associated with?
- Right sided/biventricular CHF
- Any lesions resulting in obsctruction/raised vena cava pressures
- Rupture of thoracic duct
- Lung lobe torsions
- Idiopathic
- Constrictive pericardial disease
What does chylothorax result in?
- Stimulates inflammatory response
- May resilt in fibrosing pleuritis