SA Lower Respiratory Diseases Flashcards
bacterial pneumonia
- most common in dogs than cats
- route of infection may be inhalation, aspiration, or hematogenous spread
- any age, breed, or gender
- chief complaint is usually coughing or dyspnea
- clinical signs may also include fever, nasal discharge, cyanosis, and/or auscultable crackles
diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia
- MDB- inflammatory leukogram?
- radiography- interstitial to alveolar pattern
- TTW/BAL or pulmonary aspirate
- positive culture provides diagnosis
- cytology/gram stain
treatment of bacterial pneumonia
- antibiotics
- antitussives are generally contraindicated
- supportive care
- oxygen if needed
- nebulization, coupage, and mild exercise 3-4x daiily
- abx tx should continue more than 2 weeks beyond complete resolution of all clinical/radiographic signs
prognosis of bacterial pneumonia
- generally fair to good
- influenced by
- severity and chronicity
- underlying condition(s)
- development of complications
viral pneumonia
- canine distemper, canine influenza
- rare complication of other respiratory viral infections
- esp. young, unvaccinated, highly exposed patients
- no specific treatment?
- supportive care
- tx of secondary bacterial infections
fungal pneumonia
- rare locally (FL)
- middle aged, male large breed dogs
- route of infection is commonly inhalation
- patients may have obvious signs of lower respiratory tract disease (cough, dyspnea…)
diagnosis of fungal pneumonia
- radiography
- diffuse miliary/nodular interstitial pattern
- hilar lymphadenopathy
- cytology/culture/histopathology
- TTW/BAL, pulmonary aspirate
- serology possible for several species
treatment of fungal pneumonia
- antifungal drugs >1-2 months beyond resolution
- oxygen therapy
- corticosteroids are controversial
- only short-term and only with antifungals
prognosis of fungal pneumonia
- fair to poor depending upon organism and other factors
- requires expensive long-term therapy
aspiration pneumonitis
- occurs when foreign material enters the lungs
- secondary to vomiting, dysphagia, megaesophagus, altered state of consciousness, force-feeding, incorrect placement of feeding tubes…
- severity of signs depends on nature and amount of material aspirated
diagnosis of aspiration pneumonitis
- radiography
- alveolar pattern in right middle lung lobe or dependent lobe
- +/- megaesophagus
- cytology/culture (TTW, BAL…)
- look for cause of problem!
treatment of aspiration pneumonitis
- symptomatic care
- oxygen, nebulization, coupage, mild exercise
- often sterile in acute phase (no bacteria in gastric fluid) so abx use is controversial
- may use abx in certain cases
prognosis of aspiration pneumonitis
- depends on underlying cause and severity of aspiration event
- may be mild/self-limiting to fatal
feline bronchitis (asthma)
- disease characterized by wheezing, coughing, and dyspnea due to spontaneous bronchoconstriction
- factors that may contribute to signs of dz:
- bronchospasm, inflammation in airway walls, fibrosis, emphysema, airway hypersensitivity…
clinical signs of feline bronchitis (asthma)
- young adult and middle-aged cats typical
- PE findings due to small airway obstruction
- often sudden onset of dyspnea
- increase expiratory time/effort
- slowly progressive pathology
- signs may be exacerbated by environmental changes
dx of feline bronchitis (asthma)
- hx, clinical signs, PE
- TXR
- TW/BAL cytology
- heartworm test (Ab and Ag)
- fecal analysis for parasites, esp in youngins
tx of feline bronchitis (asthma)
- emergency airway mgmt as needed
- environmental modification
- long-term orticosteroids
- bronchodilators
prognosis for feline bronchitis (asthma)
- poor for complete cure
- fair to good for control of clinical signs
- unless changes to pulmonary parenchyma or airways have occurred from chronic inflammation
- sudden death possible
canine chronic bronchitis
- long-term arirway inflammation (usually with irreversible damage)
- etiology unknown
- mostly small to medium breeds
- age is generally ≥ 5 years
- many are overweight
clinical signs of canine chronic bronchitis
- dry cough is most common
- exacerbated by excitement and exercise
- auscultatory findings variable, nonspecific
- wheezes and crackles may be heard
diagnosis of canine chronic bronchitis
- TXR
- tracheal wash
- bronchoscopy
treatment of canine chronic bronchitis
- damage to airways is irreversible
- tx is aimed at relieving clinical signs rather than cure
- options for tx:
- glucocorticoids, bronchodilators, cough suppressants, abx
pulmonary thromboembolism
- thrombosis or embolism
- respiratory function affected by
- local increase in V/Q
- release of various humoral factors and stimulation of neurogenic reflexes decreases CO, increases pulm. vascular R, bronchorestriction
- significantly worse with pre-existing respiratory dz
- no particular signalment
clinical signs of PTE
- sudden onset respiratory distress, dyspnea, tachypnea
- +/- increased breath sounds
- tachycardia
- also reported: shock, hemoptysis, syncope, collapse, death