Restrictive Pulmonary Disease Flashcards

1
Q

define sarcoidosis

A

a multi-system granulomatous chronic disorder that induces widespread inflammatory changes and complications

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2
Q

causes of sarcoidosis

A

unknown trigger causes type IV hypersensitivity reaction that induces granuloma formation BUT NO NECROSIS

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3
Q

risk factors of sarcoidosis

A

african and caribbean descent
female sex
inheritance of HLA-DRB1 and DQB1 alleles
age 20-40

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4
Q

acute sarcoidosis features

A
fever
polyarthralgia 
erythema nodosum 
bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
bilateral diffuse ankle swelling
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5
Q

chronic sarcoidosis features

A

dry cough, dyspnoea, reduced exercise tolerance

fatigue, weight loss, arthralgia and low-grade fever

hepatomegaly and splenomegaly

erythema nodosum, lupus pernio

uveitis, conjunctivitis and optic neuritis

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6
Q

investigations of sarcoidosis

A

tissue biopsy - non-caseating granulomas
CXR/chest CT
bloods

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7
Q

common appearance of sarcoidosis staging on CXR (0-4)

A

stage 0 = no abnormalities

stage 1 = bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy (BHL)

stage 2 = BHL with peripheral infiltrates

stage 3 = peripheral infiltrates alone

stage 4 = pulmonary fibrosis

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8
Q

common bloods and results in sarcoidosis

A

FBC, LFTs, U+E, ESR, serum Ca and ACE

FBC - anaemia or ⬆️ WCC
LFTs - deranged 
ESR - often ⬆️
Ca - hypercalcemia 
ACE - raised in acute
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9
Q

management if stage 1 sarcoidosis

A

none, usually self-limiting

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10
Q

management if stage 2-3 sarcoidosis

A

NSAIDs or topical steroids

oral glucocorticoids (prednisolone)
- 40mg 4-6wks and decline dose over 1 year
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11
Q

management of severe sarcoidosis

A

immunosuppressants (e.g. TNF monoclonal antibodies or rituximab)

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12
Q

define pulmonary fibrosis

A

a group of disease that result in interstitial lung damage that progresses towards fibrosis and causes loss of lung elasticity

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13
Q

causes of pulmonary fibrosis

A
lung tissue damage
irritants 
diffuse parenchymal lung disease 
connective tissue disease
medications 
hypersensitivity
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14
Q

define idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

A

a progressive fibrotic lung disease of unknown cause that usually progresses slowly

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15
Q

clinical features of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

A

dry cough
progressive dyspnoea
fatigue
arthralgia

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16
Q

signs of IPF

A

cyanosis
clubbing
fine-end inspiratory crackles

17
Q

investigations of IPF

A

bloods - CRP, ANA and rheumatoid factor
CXR
CT chest
spirometry - restrictive deficit

18
Q

common appearances of IPF on CXR and CT

A

CXR:
- bilateral lower zone reticulo-nodular shadowing

CT:

  • reticulonodular shadowing
  • honeycomb lung
19
Q

conservative management of IPF

A
smoking cessation
pulmonary rehab/therapy
regular exercise
weight control 
annual flu vaccine
20
Q

medical management of IPF

A

long-term O2 therapy
anti-fibrotic drugs (e.g. pirfenidine)
PPI

21
Q

when is lung transplant considered in IPF

A

if medical therapy fails