W2 Chronic Cough >8w (Review EOD Tuesday 25th) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the obstructive diseases? 5

A

Chronic Bronchitis
Emphysema
Bronchiectasis
Cystic Fibrosis
Asthma

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2
Q

What are the 3 types of airway obstruction ?

A

Increased resistance to airflow can be caused by conditions
(1) inside the lumen
(2) in the wall of the airway, and
(3) in the peribronchial region

  1. Inside the lumen
    —The lumen can be partially occluded by excessive secretions.
    —Partial obstruction can also occur in pulmonary edema or aspiration of a foreign body.
  2. In the wall of the airway
    —Airway wall can be compromised by contraction of bronchial smooth muscle (asthma), hypertrophy of mucus glands (chronic bronchitis), and inflammation/edema of the wall (asthma and bronchitis)
  3. In the peribronchial region
    —Outside of the airway, destruction of the parenchyma may cause narrowing because it tethers the alveoli open when it’s healthy (emphysema) or can be compressed by an enlarged lymph node or mass (cancer)
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3
Q

Chronic bronchitis
Defined as
Most important causative factor
5 other factors
Acute bronchitis causes by? Name the agents

A

⭐️chronic cough and sputum production for at least 3 months a year for 2 consecutive years.
—It is a clinical diagnosis.

Most important causative factor:
🚬cigarette smoke exposure 🚬, active/passive.

Other causes
—Inhaled irritants such as industrial pollutants and airborne chemicals
—Repeated viral infections🦠
—Associated with other respiratory illnesses like cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis
—Can co-exist with Emphysema
—GERD

Acute bronchitis
Viruses
—🦠influenza A & B

🧫Bacterial:
—Staph
—Strep
— Haemophilus influenzae
— Moraxella catarrhalis
— Mycoplasma pneumonia

repeated exposure = chronic bronchitis

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4
Q

Chronic bronchitis
Pathology
Common symptoms
S/S
PE
What does the patient look like?

A

PATHOLOGY
—Hypertrophy and hypersecretion of mucous glands (goblet cells) in the large bronchi and
—Chronic inflammatory changes in the small airways
—Exposure to the epithelial cells lining the airway to toxins/infections release inflammatory mediators.
—This results in increased mucus production and decreased mucociliary function.
Excess mucus narrows the airway, limiting airflow, and accelerating the decline in lung function causing COPD. Cannot exhale as forcefully

SYMPTOMS
—wheezing
—dyspnea
—tight chest
—cough
—and increased mucus production
—⭐️persistent cough for 3 months a year for 2 consecutive years

SPUTUM
—color may vary from clear > yellow/green or even blood tinged.
—Color can be related to a bacterial infection however sputum color can change due to peroxidase released by leukocytes in sputum and is not a definite indicator of bacteria.

PE
—Typically overweight and cyanotic appearing blue bloater
—Tachypnea
—Elevated JVD, peripheral edema
pulmonary vessels undergo vasoconstriction to shunt blood to areas with better gas exchange and away from blocked areas
*if a large portion… increase pulm resistance causing pulm HTN … RV enlargement…”cor pulmonary”
—Use of accessory muscles, prolonged expiration, wheezing, coarse rhonchi, decreased breath sounds
—secondary polycythemia vera d/t low O2 from chronic bronchitis, producing more RBCs

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5
Q

Chronic bronchitis
Diagnosis — what do you see on
PFTs
ABG — 2
Chem panel
CXR

A

PFTs
—Documentation of airflow obstruction by PFTs is helpful both to the diagnosis a swell as response to inhaled bronchodilator therapy
—Decreased FEV1 and FVC

ABG
—Hypoxemia with concomitant hypercapnia on the ABG

—Mild polycythemia (+++ RBC production)

Chem panel
—elevated serum bicarb to buffer the high CO2

CXR
—correlates poorly with symptoms but some findings include hyperinflation, diaphragmatic flattening, and peribronchial markings

Sputum culture

Procalcitonin
—new biomarker elevated in bacterial pneumonia
—not elevated in chronic bronchitis

FVC: how much you can blow out after a full inhale

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6
Q

Chronic bronchitis
Treatment 2 main, 1 step up or if refractory
Non-Pharm 3

A

GOALS
—relieving symptoms and slow the progression of disease
—reducing the production of mucous, controlling inflammation, and lowering the cough burden.

PHARMACOLOGY:
BRONCHODILATORS:
—short and long acting beta-adrenergic receptor agonists as well as anticholinergics increase the airway lumen, increase ciliary function, and increase mucous hydration

GLUCOCORTICOIDS:
—reduce inflammation and mucous production;
inhaled corticosteroids reduce exacerbations and improve quality of life

PHOSPHODIESTERASE-4 INHIBITORS:
—apremilast, crisaborole, roflumilast
—decrease inflammation and promote airway smooth muscle relaxation
—last line agent

ABX:
not indicated for the treatment of chronic bronchitis
—but if needed, according to Chu, in former smokers, Azithromycin

NONPHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS
—Smoking cessation
—Supplemental O2
—Physiotherapy: pulmonary rehab for patient education, improve exercise tolerance, and assist in sputum clearance
—Avoid Irritants

notes on algorithm below
Just threathlessness and exercise limitation: SABA
Then do PFT and see if > or < 50%
Short acting — as a rescue device
Short actin — maintenance therapy
If on LAMA, you discontinue SAMA
If persistent: LABA + steroid inhaler

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7
Q

Emphysema
How is it characterised
What are the two types?

A

—chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) with chronic bronchitis.
—an enlargement of the air spaces distal to the terminal bronchiole with abnormal permanent enlargement of air spaces with destruction of their walls.
—destruction of lung parenchyma with loss of elasticity.
—diagnosis is presumptive and based on radiologic and clinical findings
—increasing due to environmental pollution, increase in cigarette smoking, and decreasing mortality from cardiovascular and infectious diseases.

Types:
1. CENTRIACINAR:
—affects the alveoli and airways in the central acinus, destroying the alveoli in the walls of the respiratory bronchioles and alveolar ducts

2.PANACINAR:
—affects whole acinus
—excessive amounts of the enzyme ⭐️LYSOSOMAL ELASTASE⭐️ are released from neutrophils
—results in the destruction of elastin and subsequently a reduction in the surface area for gas exchange
—antiproteases, such as alpha1-antitrypsin reduce this activity (some people have alpha 1 anti trypsin deficiency so develop emphysema and have never smoked)

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8
Q

Emphysema
What are the causes —2
What can cause a pneumonthorax?
What is the presentation
PE — what does the patient look like?
Auscultation?
Percussion
Skeleton?

A

Causes:
Cigarette smoke: cause release of proteolytic enzymes (centriacinar change)
—⭐️Alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency ⭐️

paraseptal changes “bleb” occur in peripheral lungs and as alveoli balloon out, can rupture and cause pneumothorax

Presentation:
—Chronic cough with or without sputum production
—Chronic shortness of breath
—Wheezing
—Loss of weight secondary to inflammation and increased work of breathing, breathless while eating too so only eat a few bites
—Obtain smoking history (current and past) as well as exposure to environmental toxins

PE
—Cachexia
—Pursed-lip exhaling, trying to keep the alveoli open “pink puffers” (prevents airway collapse during expiration)
—Accessory muscle use
—Wheezing
—Hyperresonance to percussion (hyperinflation)
—Decreased breath sounds with poor air movement
—Increased AP diameter

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9
Q

Emphysema
Diagnostic studies
PFT will show?
CXR will show?
ABG will show?
What is FEV1 & for mild, moderate, severe, very severe?
What if panacinar, what are you testing for?

A

It is a structural disease, so studies diagnose, in comparison to chronic bronchitis which is a clinical diagnosis

PFT:
—mainstay of diagnosis with result of FEV1/FVC < 0.7;
—can stage severity based on GOLD criteria

Chest x-ray
—hyperinflation of the lungs with flattening of the diaphragm in severe disease;
—heart may seem tubular in shape

ABG
—hypoxemia and hypercapnia

If young, test for alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency

CT chest

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10
Q

[SKILLS OSCE]
What is this?

A

Emphysema
Flat diaphragm
Big back lung volume
Vertical heart
Patient SOB

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11
Q

[SKILLS OSCE]
What is this?

A

Emphysema

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12
Q

Emphysema
Treatment
Which medical therapy

A

NO TREATMENT to modify the disease process.

Goal is to slow progression of disease and improve quality of life via risk factor modification and management of symptoms.

Based on the SYMPTOMS and NUMBER OF EXACERBATIONS, emphysema is divided into 4 stages and treated accordingly.

MEDICAL THERAPY includes:
—using a bronchodilator alone or
—in combination with anti-inflammatory drugs (corticosteroids and phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors)

treatment is essentially the same as chronic bronchitis, but this algorithm is like a questionnaire for the patient to fill out, it doesn’t use FEV1. Then can treat according to what they report. But essentially you start with short or long acting bronchodilator, then corticosteroid, then phosphodiesterase inhibitor. All on MedCalc

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13
Q

Emphysema
Medical therapy
Supportive therapy 2 main ones

A

BRONCHODILATOR (1st line; inhaled)
—alter smooth muscle tone of airways improving FEV1 and exercise tolerance
¶ Beta-2 Agonist: SABA (short acting) and LABA (long acting):
•promotes smooth muscle relaxation
¶ Anticholinergic/antimuscarinics: SAMA (short acting) and LAMA (long acting)
•NT: ACh > bronchorestriction/mucous production

INHALED CORTICOSTEROIDS (ICS):
—reduce inflammation; add on therapy to bronchodilators

ORAL CORTICOSTEROIDS
—prednisone, 40mg 5-14d
—IV if in hospital or failed oral

ORAL PHOSPHODIESTERASE-4 INHIBITORS:
—reduce inflammation; add on therapy

TRIPLE INHALED THERAPY (LABA + LAMA + ICS)

Supportive Therapy:

Oxygen
—routine use does not improve clinical outcomes or quality of life in stable patients
—Recommended in patients with a PaO2 < 55 mmHg or SaO2 < 88%; oxygen therapy has been shown to increase survival of these patients with resting hypoxemia

Pulmonary Rehab
—Interventional Therapy:

Lung volume reduction surgery
—reduces hyperinflation and improves elastic recoil

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14
Q

Bronchiectasis
What is it?
What are the causes — 7

A

Abnormal, permanently dilated large airways characterized by ⭐️persistent bacterial infection⭐️ an excessive neutrophilic inflammation.

Causes
1. Bacterial Infections
—TB
—Haemophilus Influenzae
—Moraxella catarrhalis
—Streptococcus
—Pseudomonas aeruginosa
—staphylococcus
—HIV
—and mycoplasma)
2.Viral Infections
—RSV
—measles
3.Fungal Infections
4.Bronchial Obstruction
—foregin body
—tumor
—mucus plug
—hilar lymphadenopathy
5.Congenital
—cystic fibrosis
6.Rheumatic
—RA
—Sjogren syndrome
—ulcerative colitis
7.Pulmonary diseases
—COPD
—pulmonary fibrosis
—asthma
—bronchomalacia

Pathophysiology:
1. Recurrent infections
2. Airway obstruction
3. Peribronchial fibrosis

Neutrophils cause airway inflammatory cell infiltration and increased mucus and exudate.
Results in cartilage destruction, fibrosis, impaired mucociliary clearance, and bacterial colonization.

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15
Q

Bronchiectasis
Demographic
Presentation
PE findings

A

Patients have:
—⭐️daily copious sputum/cough ⭐️
—recurrent chest infections
—impaired health related quality of life
— +/- congenital (cystic fibrosis) or acquired
—most prevalent in women and > 60 y/o
—prevalence is increasing

PRESENTATION:
—⭐️Chronic cough (98%) with copious amounts of sputum (78%) ⭐️
—Wheezing, hemoptysis (56%)
—Shortness of breath (62%)
—Recurrent respiratory infections
—Weight loss and fatigue

PHYSICAL FINDINGS:
—nonspecific but can include
—crackles (75%)
—wheezing (22%)
—and clubbing (2%)

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16
Q

Bronchiectasis
Diagnostics — which one?
What are you measuring?
Defining characteristics

A

Diagnostics:
—⭐️ CT scan ⭐️
Internal diameter of a bronchus is > 1.5X the diameter of the pulmonary artery
Bronchial wall thickening

Tree in bud appearance:
1. Failure of bronchial tapering
2. Crowding of bronchi with lobar volume loss
3. Thickening and plugging of small airways
4. Cysts with definable borders

17
Q

[SKILLS OSCE]
What is this?
For the same disease, what would you see on CXR?
What is the gold standard DX? And what would you measure?
What is the treatment? (Abx)

A

Bronchiectasis
Notice lack of bronchial tapering where the arrows are
CXR: tram tracks or “plate-like” scarring
Gold standard = CT scan: internal diameter of bronchus 1.5x diameter of the pulmonary artery
ABX: augmenting/amoxi/doxi
Also: PT, bronchodilators, flutter, bronchoscopy etc

18
Q

Bronchiectasis
Diagnosis based on?
If no pathogen identified, which abx?
Which other therapies? Name 3

A

Antibiotics:
—Based on sputum culture results
—If no pathogen is identified, 2 weeks of amoxicillin, augmentin, doxycycline, or septra
—moderate-severe symptoms: parenteral abx: 3rd gen cephalosporin or fluoroquinolone

Daily chest physiotherapy and chest percussion to clear secretions

Inhaled bronchodilators

Hand held flutter devices to clear secretions

Bronchoscopy to remove retained secretions

Surgical resection if have localized bronchiectasis

19
Q

Cystic fibrosis
What is it?
What is the patho
Which organs affected and how

A

Autosomal recessive disorder that affects the CFTR protein (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, allows Cl- to exit and water so keeps mucous watery not sticky and viscous)
—resulting in diminished chloride secretion as well as increased sodium absorption.
—This removes water from secretions of EXOCRINE (mucus and sweat) glands; viscous mucus forms that then obstructs glands and ducts.
—Thick mucus results in obstruction: gland dilation, inflammation, infection, and tissue damage.
Most common cause of severe chronic lung disease in young adults
—Affects multiple organ systems:

Lungs
—Thick mucus is unable to clear debris from the airway; provides an environment ideal for bacterial growth
—Causes obstructive disease (inability to push air out of the lung) ….hyperinflation and bronchiectasis
—Chronically, destruction of lung tissue will occur resulting in a restrictive disease atop an obstructive one

Pancreas:
—Prevents enzymes from producing enzymes resulting in abnormal fat digestion …. weight loss, excess fat in stool (abnormal, putrid smell)
—difficulty absorbing protein and vitamins A, D, E K
—diabetes
—pancreatic damage, pancreatic and cyst formation (how it was named)

Intestines:
—Obstruction (meconium ileus)
—FTT

Infertility in men
—lack of vas deferens

20
Q

Cystic fibrosis
Presentation
PE

A

—Chronic or recurrent cough with sputum production
—Dyspnea and wheezing
—Recurrent infections
—Fatigue
—⭐️Salty tasting skin
—Poor growth and weight loss
—Steatorrhea, diarrhea, and abdominal pain
—Difficulty with bowel movements in first days of life

PE
—Clubbing
—Increased AP diameter
—Hyperresonance to percussion
—Crackles
—Sinus tenderness

21
Q

Cystic fibrosis
Diagnosis — main one
PFT shows?
CT shows?
ABG shows?
Treatment 3

A

⭐️Sweat (chloride) test ⭐️: reveals elevated chloride, and sodium, levels (> 60 meq/L); two tests on different days are required
Blood genetic testing for CFTR gene mutations
PFTs show a mixed obstructive and restrictive pattern
CT scan will show bronchiectasis
ABG : hypoxemia

TREATMENT — no cure, Refer to CF center
Clearance and Reduction of lower airway secretions
—Chest percussion and postural drainage
—Flutter valve
—PEP (positive expiratory pressure): mask worn that gives resistance to expiration and therefore splints open the airways with goal to get oxygen past mucus secretions
—Inhaled DNAse enzyme replacement therapy to thin the mucus and make it easier to expectorate

Reversal of bronchoconstriction
—Inhaled bronchodilators

Treatment of respiratory infections
—Antibiotics to treat active infections based on sputum culture results
—Inhaled aerosolized antibiotics for treatment of lower respiratory infections (reduce exacerbations)

Pancreatic enzyme replacement

Nutritional support

Lung transplant = only definitive treatment