Week 4- Worsening Dyspnoea Flashcards
Mr. P.Z. is a 62 year old male. He presents to the Emergency at TTH with worsening shortness of breath.
Take a history of this patient.
HPC:
• Worsening shortness of breath for 2 days and ‘sweating so much’ (suspect fever).
• Previously SOB after exertion, gradually worsening over the years, now SOB at rest (chronic problem).
• Cough usually in the winter if he gets an URTI - cough lingers and can go for months (cough in winter is indicative of chronic bronchitis).
• Sputum chronic clear white but light brown today (rusty sputum).
• L. chest pain worse with breathing today, fever, sweaty.
• Smoked 1 pack/day for 35 years; quit 5 years ago.
• Foreign travel - nil.
HPC:
• How long have you been short of breath?
• Did it come on quickly/what were you doing?
• Character? i.e. tightness, pain, difficult to get a satisfying breath.
• Alleviating factors?
• Experienced it before? How long does it usually last?
• Exacerbating factors?
• Severity?
• Associated symptoms? i.e. fever, wheeze, cough/sputum, chest pain.
• Effect on lifestyle?
- Do you smoke?
- Weight loss, loss of appetite?
- Orthopnoea, PND?
- Haemoptysis, night sweats?
- Recent illness or travel?
PMHx:
• Past history of any heart or lung problems, cancer?
PSHX:
• Any past surgeries?
Medications:
• Any regular medications?
Allergies:
• Agent, reaction, treatment?
Immunisations:
• E.g. Fluvax, pneumococcal?
FHx:
• Family history of any heart or lung problems, cancer?
SHx: • Background? • Occupation? • Education? • Religion? • Living arrangements? • Smoking? • Nutrition? • Alcohol/recreational drugs? • Physical activity? i.e. tolerance to exercise (how much can you do before SOB stops you or slows you down?)
Systems Review:
• General - weight change, fever, chills, night sweats?
• CVS - chest pain, palpitations, orthopnoea/PND?
• RS - dyspnoea, cough, sputum or wheeze?
• GI - change in bowel habits, heartburn, dysphagia?
• UG -
• CNS - nausea, headaches?
• ENDO -
• HAEM -
• MSK - painful or stiff joints, muscle aches or rash?
Perform an exam on this patient
- Introduction, explanation, consent, wash hands. Patient properly positioned, seated, chest exposed.
- General inspection: dyspnoeic, use of accessory muscles, pursed lip breathing, tripod position, cyanosis, cough, wheeze, stridor, hoarseness, body habitus (wasting, cachexia). Check patient surroundings (sputum cup, oxygen mask).
3. Vital signs: • HR - tachycardia • RR - tachypnoeic. • BP - normal/hypotensive. • Temp - febrile. • O2 sats, BGL, BMI
- Hands:
• Warm/cool, dry/sweaty.
• Pallor, peripheral cyanosis.
• CRT, clubbing (cancer not COPD).
• Tar staining of fingers.
• Palms - wasting of small muscles of hand, finger weakness with abduction.
• Wrists - flapping tremor, wrist tenderness.
• Pemberton’s sign - flushing, plethora, cyanosis, inspiratory stridor, elevation of JVP when arms in full abduction for 1 minute. - Face:
• Thick leathery skin.
• Eyes - sub-conjunctival haemorrhage, Horner’s syndrome (ptosis, miosis, anhydrosis).
• Nose - discharge, swelling, nasal polyps/enlarged turbinates.
• Mouth - cyanosis. - Neck:
• Trachea - tracheal tug, tracheal deviation.
• Cervical/axillary lymph nodes. - Chest/back:
• Inspection - shape/symmetry (barrel shaped - COPD), scarring/deformity, chest expansion (may be reduced bilaterally - hyperinflated chest with reduced expansion).
• Palpation - chest expansion (reduced bilaterally, Hoover’s sign anteriorly), tactile fremitus (may be increased on affected side), chest wall tenderness (may be pleuritic chest pain).
• Percussion - hyper-resonance (COPD), dullness to percussion over any masses/affected side.
• Auscultation - may be bronchial breath sounds, reduced intensity, crackles. Vocal resonance (may be increased on affected side).
8. Legs: • Temperature. • Oedema. • Clubbing. • CRT. • Peripheral pulses.
- CVS:
• JVP, auscultation.
What is your provisional and differential diagnosis
Provisional diagnosis: infective exacerbation of COPD. • DDx: - LRTI i.e. pneumonia. - COPD. - CCF. - Lung cancer. - Asthma exacerbation. - TB.
What IX would you perform
ECG. • CXR. • FBC, U+Es, LFT, CRP. • ABG. • Blood/sputum culture. • Urinalysis.
What treatment does this patient require
The most important aspects of management are oxygenation, fluid balance and antibiotic therapy (treat the chest infection and maintain good hydration).
• Oxygen - aim for ≥94%.
• Start IV fluids.
• Antibiotics - orally if not severe and not vomiting, severe given by IV.
• Simple analgesia may be needed if pain arises e.g. paracetamol 1g/6h.
• Influenza and pneumococcal vaccination.
• Bronchodilators/corticosteroids.
Outline CURB-65 and SMART-COP for pneumonia severity
CURB-65/CORB: • Confusion. • Urea >7 mmol/L or O2 sats <90%. • RR >30 bpm. • BP <90 mmHg (systolic) or <60 mmHg (diastolic). • Age >65y.
Total: /5
• 0-1 - outpatient care (low risk - home treatment).
• 2 - short inpatient hospitalisation or closely supervised outpatient treatment (intermediate risk).
• ≥3 - inpatient admission with consideration for ICU admission with score of 4 or 5 (severe - high risk).
• Severe CAP is defined as the presence of at least two of these features (CORB).
SMART-COP: CAP confirmed on CXR. • Systolic BP <90 mmHg - 2 points. • Multilobar CXR involvement - 1 point. • Albumin <35g/L - 1 point. • RR ≥25 bpm (≤50y) or ≥30 bpm (>50y) - 1 point. • Tachycardia ≥125 bpm - 1 point. • Confusion - 1 point. • O2 sats ≤93% (≤50y) or ≤90% (>50y) - 2 points. • pH <7.35 - 2 points
Total: /11
- Severe CAP = a SMART-COP score of 5 or more points.
- Additional severity scores: PSI (pneumonia severity index).