3) diseases of the lungs Flashcards

1
Q

Clinical evaluation of the respiratory tract

A
  • Can be extremely challenging
  • Evaluation and treatment on an emergency basis
  • Signalment
    • Juvenile patients
    ➢ Infectious disease
    ➢ Congenital abnormalities (brachycephalic breeds!)
    • Siamese cats: feline asthma
    • Old patients
    ➢ Chronic inflammatory disorders
    ➢ Tumour
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2
Q

History of lung disease

A

When did the owner obtain the animal?
➢ Adult/puppy
➢ Life history, vaccination
• Travel history (infectious or parasitic disease)
• Environment (exposure to toxins or infectious disease)
• Known hypersensitivities to dietary allergens or medications?
• Previous respiratory problems? Treatment? Examinations? Tests?

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3
Q

Physical examination of lungs

A

Varying degrees of respiratory distress, coughing, increased breathing, adventitial sounds (crackles or wheezes) upon auscultation
• Complete physical examination should be performed!
• Respiratory signs (dyspnoea, panting) without respiratory origin (metastatic tumour, gastric dilatation, metabolic acidosis: Kussmaul dyspnoea, encephalopathy, ARDS – Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, anaemia)
- → tentative diagnosis and treatment → ancillary diagnostics for definitive diagnosis

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4
Q

Laboratory diagnostics of lung diseases

A

Anaemia (hypoxia, toxicosis?), leucocytosis (infection, neoplasia), leukopenia (acute bronchopneumonia, sepsis), eosinophilia (eosinophilic broncho-pneumopathy, asthma, bronchitis, lungworm)

  • Hypoalbuminemia, pancreatitis → ARDS
  • Coagulopathy, thrombocytopenia
  • Hypercalcaemia (neoplastic, fungal disease)
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5
Q

Radiography of lungs

A

LL and VD/DV

  • Bronchial-, interstitial-, alveolar-, nodular pattern
  • Bronchitis, oedema, pneumonia, haemorrhage, granuloma (eosinophilic, fungal, parasitic, foreign body)
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6
Q

addtional diagnsostic methods

A

Ultrasonography
- Fine needle aspiration
CT
- Metastatic pulmonary lesions
- CT angiography: pulmonary thrombo-emboli
Bronchoscopy
- Direct visualisation (oedema, inflammation, foreign body, ulceration, tumour)
Respiratory sampling
- BAL, cytology brush
- TTL
- Biopsy (open-chest lung biopsy, transbronchial biopsy)
Arterial blood gas analysis
- PaO2 = 90-100 mmHg, PaCO2 = 36-40 mmHg, pH = 7.35 – 7.45
- Alveolar ventilation and oxygenation of pulmonary arterial blood

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7
Q

Canine chronic bronchitis

A

Middle-aged to older dogs, small breed > large breed
- Self-perpetuating disease process where inflammation leads to fibrosis and mucus which leads to further airway inflammation
- No identifiable cause, possibly due to airborne allergens (e.g. smoke)
- Clinical signs
• Daily cough for more than 2 months (productive / non-productive), exercise intolerance
• Good condition / overweight, tracheal sensitivity, inspiratory crackles, expiratory wheezes
• Prolonged expiration and an expiratory push
• Increased vagal tone → sinus arrhythmia (+/-)
- Diagnosis
• Radiography
➢ 3 views: +/- bronchial / interstitial pattern
➢ Doughnuts sign, right-sided cardiomegaly, cor pulmonale

BAL, TTL
➢ Bacteria +/-, cytology, culture and sensitivity, PCR for Mycoplasma
➢ Non-degenerate neutrophils, eosinophils
➢ Increased mucus

• Bronchoscopy
➢ Hyperaemic mucous membranes
➢ Mucoid or purulent secretions
➢ Fibrous nodules on the mucosa

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8
Q

Treatment of canine chronic bronchitis

A

Can be controlled but never cured! → goals: control inflammation, prevent worsening airway disease
• Short acting anti-inflammatories: prednisolone (goal: to achieve alternate day dosing)
• Bronchodilators worth a try: theophylline, terbutaline, albuterol
• Antitussives: if inflammation has been effectively treated! Otherwise mucus can trap in the bronchi and worsen clinical signs
• Antibiotics
➢ If BAL cytology and microbiology +
➢ Doxycycline for possible Mycoplasma
• Adjunctive therapy
➢ Reduce airborne allergens, cool clean area (no smoke, dust, heat)
➢ Coupage, nebulization
➢ Weight reduction
➢ Harness instead of collar

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9
Q

Bronchiectasis

A

Irreversible dilatation of bronchi, with accumulation of pulmonary secretions (cocker spaniels!)
- Histopathologic response to long-standing inflammation / irritation (CCB, primary ciliary dyskinesia, smoke, dust)
- History
• Chronic productive cough
• Frequent bouts of pneumonia (initially respond to antibiotics but the recur)

- Symptoms
• Loud bronchial sounds
• Nasal discharge +/- (pneumonia)
• Haemoptysis (= coughing up blood)
- Diagnosis
• Radiography
• Bronchoscopy
• CT
- Treatment
• Lobar bronchiectasis → lobectomy
• Antibiotics based on culture
• Bronchodilators
• Cough suppressants MUST BE AVOIDED!
  • Prognosis
    • Chronic recurrent infection
    • Resistance to AB treatment
    • Pulmonary hypertension, cor pulmonale
  • Prevention
    • Appropriate AB therapy in infectious disease
    • Prompt removal of foreign bodies
    • Appropriate management of CCB
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10
Q

Must be avoided in bronchiextasis

A

cough supressants

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11
Q

Feline bronchial disease/feline asthma aetiology

A
  • Inflammation of the conducting airways (bronchi and bronchioles)
  • Syndrome that encompasses
    • Chronic bronchitis
    ➢ Clinically seen as a chronic cough

• Asthma
➢ Caused by acute reversible narrowing of the airways due to bronchoconstriction, clinically seen as acute onset dyspnoea, triggered usually by airborne allergens
➢ Diagnosis is based on clinical presentation, response to bronchodilators, an inflammatory bronchoalveolar lavage (typically eosinophilic) and evidence of hyperplasia of the mucus glands and smooth muscle

  • Any age, Siamese cats!
  • Not all cats affected by bronchial disease will have asthma, and some cats will present in acute distress due to asthma without a history of coughing
  • Increased airway resistance (smooth muscle hypertrophy, bronchial wall oedema, glandular hyperplasia) → cough and respiratory distress
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12
Q

Feline asthma clinical signs

A

• Chronic cough more than 2 months
➢ Paroxysmal, dry, “hacking” cough, open mouth (loud) breathing, prolonged expiration
➢ Mild to severe respiratory distress usually obstructive expiratory dyspnoea
➢ Wheezing
➢ Auscultation: harsh lung sounds, crackles, expiratory wheezes or normal
➢ Percussion: increased resonance

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13
Q

Feline asthma diagnosis

A

• Blood test
➢ Eosinophilia in 30%, faecal examination (Paragonimus spp., Aelurostrongylus, Capillaria)
➢ Heartworm antibody tests (echocardiography)
• Radiography 3 views: +/- bronchial pattern and hyperinflation of lung fields
• Bronchoscopy: BAL cytology (eo, neu)
➢ PCR for Mycoplasma or culture
• Whole body plethysmography
➢ Airway reactivity to non-specific aerosol stimulant

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14
Q

Treatment of feline asthma in acute cases

A

• Acute stabilisation for emergency situation (cyanosis, open mouth breating!)
➢ Oxygen cage
➢ Sedation (butorphanol = anxiolytic and antitussive; acepromazine if certain that respiratory distress is not due to cardiac disease)
➢ Bronchodilator (terbutaline)
o If reduction in rate and effort, supportive of the diagnosis asthma
o If heart rate increases >200 bpm then drug is working
➢ Anti-inflammatories (glucocorticoids)

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15
Q

Treatment of feline asthma long term

A
Rule out parasitism as a cause of eosinophilic bronchoalveolar lavage by treating prophylactically with fenbendazole
➢ Glucocorticosteroids
o Prednisolone
o Inhaled fluticasone
o Methyl-prednisolone acetate (inhaled preparations)
➢ Bronchodilators
o Terbutaline: inhaled preparations
o Salbutamol: as needed
➢ Antibiotics
o Doxycycline
o Culture for Mycoplasma before starting
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16
Q

What should be avoided in feline asthma?

A

beta-blockers - propanolol, atenolol

17
Q

Prognosis of feline asthma

A

anti inflammatories and bronchdilators alleviate acute clinical signs
recureence of signs

18
Q

Airway foreign bodies

A

Due to
• Laryngeal paralysis, dental procedures (plant material, food, teeth)
- Clinical signs
• Acute or chronic cough (dry, unproductive), cyanosis, recurrent airway infection that partially responds to AB
- Diagnosis
• Radiography
• Bronchoscopy
• Culture for bacteria
- Treatment
• Foreign body removal + pulmonary abscess
• Bronchiectasis → lung lobectomy, long term AB

19
Q

bronchial neoplasia

A
- Clinical signs
• Cough, obstructive breathing pattern (loud respirations)
- Diagnosis
• Auscultation: harsh wheezing noises
• Radiography: solitary mass lesion
- Treatment
• See above: pulmonary neoplasia!
20
Q

bacterial pneumonia

A
  • Primary bacterial pneumonia is rare, more commonly secondary to:
    • Laryngeal dysfunction, viral pneumonia, aspiration, GI disease, encephalopathy
  • E. coli, Bordetella, Klebsiella, Pasteurella, Pseudomonas, Mycoplasma spp.
  • Protection mechanisms
    • Laryngeal function, coughing reflex, muco-ciliary clearance, epithelial barrier, IgA, alveolar macrophages, IgG
  • Symptoms
    • Lethargy, fever, dyspnoea, coughing (dog»cat) acute / chronic, exercise intolerance, mucopurulent nasal discharge, haemoptysis
    • Underlying disease (dysphagia, regurgitation, vomiting, muscular weakness)
    • Increased lung sounds and crackles or wheezes
  • Diagnosis
    • Haematology: WBC ↑↔
    • Radiography: focal or diffuse alveolar pattern (aspiration: cranioventral lung regions), bronchiectasis, megaoesophagus, mass
    • Bronchoscopy: TTL, BAL for culture or cytology, mass, foreign body, broncho-oesophageal fistula, lobar pneumonia (aspiration)
- Treatment
• AB
• Bronchodilators
• Lobectomy (focal pneumonia, abscess)
• Saline nebulization
• Underlying disease (foreign body, neoplasia, GI disease)
21
Q

Viral bronchpneumonia

A
  • Distemper, Morbillivirus (Paramyxoviridae family)
  • Exposure (inhalation, po. infected secretions) → replication in macrophages, tonsils → viremia (2 – 4 days: initial fever!) → several tissues (lung, bowel, skin, CNS) → bronchopneumonia, enteritis, encephalitis
  • Clinical signs
    • Mucopurulent oculo-nasal discharge
    • Fever
    • Lethargy
    • Neurological symptoms (50%)
  • Diagnosis
    • PCR (blood, urine)
    • Radiography (interstitial, alveolar pattern)
  • Treatment
    • Largely supportive
    ➢ AB, bronchodilators, fluid
    • Seizure control
    ➢ Diazepam, KBr, phenobarbital)
    • Antibodies
22
Q

Aspiration pneumonia

A
  • Aspiration of fluid, food, gastric contents results in pulmonary inflammation
- Causes
• Megaoesophagus
• Laryngeal and pharyngeal dysfunction
➢ Neuromuscular disease
➢ Anaesthesia, encephalopathy
➢ Brachycephalic airway conformation
➢ Forced feeding (contrast radiography)
- Severity of lung injury
• Volume, pH toxicity → obstruction, pulmonary haemorrhage, oedema, inflammation, necrosis, bronchoconstriction, infection (see bacterial pneumonia)
  • Clinical signs
    • Cough, tachypnoea, acute onset of respiratory distress, fever, lethargy, shock, cats: wheezes (bronchospasm)
  • Diagnosis
    • History of vomiting, regurgitation
    • Radiography: quite different (interstitial/alveolar, focal/diffuse), but interstitio-alveolar pattern in cranio-ventral and middle lung lobes
    • Complete blood count: leucocytosis
    • Bronchoscopy: BAL for culture, cytology
  • Treatment
    • Respiratory distress
    ➢ Oxygen therapy (mask, oxygen cage, intubation and positive pressure ventilation)
    ➢ Fluid therapy (but increased capillary permeability can lead to oedema!)
    • Antibiotics: after culture
    • Saline inhalation, coupage
    • Corticosteroids: CONTROVERSIAL!!!!
    • Prognosis: severity of lung injury and the underlying cause
23
Q

Eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy

A
  • Inflammatory disease, unknown aetiology (hypersensitivity to an environmental or endogenous antigen)
  • All breeds, Huskies
  • History
    • Coughing, gagging, difficulty breathing, nasal discharge (mucopurulent or serous), lethargy and anorexia
  • Clinical signs
    • Nasal discharge
    • Crackling sounds
    • Increased lung sounds (or normal auscultation)
  • Diagnosis
    • Rule out other causes!
    ➢ Migrating parasites
    ➢ Bacterial or fungal infections
    ➢ Heartworm
    ➢ neoplasia
    • Radiography
    ➢ Diffuse interstitial, alveolar, bronchial, or combination, nodules or mass-like lesions (eosinophilic granulomatosis)
    • Blood test: peripheral eosinophilia
    • Bronchoscopy: green, green-yellow mucus, mucosal thickening, BAL, mucosal brushing (large number of eosinophils)
  • Treatment
    • Glucocorticoids at immunosuppressive dosages lasting weeks to months
    • allergy testing, hyposensitization?
  • Prognosis: generally good
24
Q

Pulmonary edema

A
  • Fluid accumulation in the interstitium and alveoli
  • Causes
    • Vascular hydrostatic pressure ↑: left-sided congestive heart failure (CHF), excessive fluid administration (anuric renal failure!)
    • Plasma oncotic pressure ↓: hypoalbuminemia
    • Vascular permeability ↑: vasculitis, ARDS
    • Impaired lymphatic drainage: left-sided CHF, neoplastic process
    • Decreased transpulmonary pressure: upper airway obstruction
  • Non-cardiogenic oedema
    • Not as common as cardiac pulmonary oedema
    • Due to high protein fluid extravasation
    • Causes include
    ➢ Near drowning, aspiration, severe trauma, obstructive (acute upper airway obstruction – typically in young animals), neurogenic oedema (seizures, head trauma, electrocution), ARDS
  • Symptoms
    • Dyspnoea > cyanosis > (coughing: in severe cases bloody expectoration of blood-tinged fluid)
    • Auscultation

➢ Lung: crackles heard on inspiration and end-expiration (in dorso-caudal lung fields), in severe oedema quiet lung sounds in cats!
➢ Heart: murmur +/- (but mitral endocardosis, cardiomyopathy), arrhythmia, tachycardia
o Heart murmur without sinus tachycardia: pulmonary disease > cardiogenic oedema

25
Q

Smoke inhalation

A
  • Direct injury
    • Heat, particulate matter, combustion gases
  • Aetiology
    • Acute phase (0 – 36 hours)
    ➢ Tissue injury → capillary permeability ↑ → oedema, tissue hypoxia (CO gas inhibits oxygen binding to Hb!)
    • Later phase (2 – 4 days)
    ➢ Oedema ↓, mucosal secretion ↑, decreased muco-ciliary clearance, secondary bacterial colonization → tracheobronchitis, pneumonia
  • Clinical signs
    • Singed hair, smell of smoke, loss of consciousness, upper airway stridor (laryngeal oedema), ocular and nasal discharge, cyanosis
    • Some patients have minimal signs but 24 to 36 hours later! (ARDS, infection, laryngeal oedema)
  • Diagnosis
    • History, clinical signs, radiography (oedema, pneumonia), BAL for culture (later phase)
    • Carboxyhaemoglobin is not distinguished from oxyhaemoglobin with blood gas analysis or pulse oximetry!
  • Treatment
    • Observation for at least 24 – 48 hours
    • Tracheostomy: severe laryngeal oedema, obstruction
    • Oxygen cage: half-life of CO in room air 4 hours, in 100% O2: 30 minutes
    • Bronchodilators, antibiotics (after culture)
    • Fluid therapy (but oedema!)
    • Analgesics
    • Corticosteroids: laryngeal oedema / acute cardiovascular shock?
  • Prognosis: poor if severe respiratory distress, infectious pneumonia, neurologic signs and cutaneous burns
26
Q

Acute respiratory distress

A
  • Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure caused by lung injury and pulmonary capillary permeability ↑
  • Usually secondary to
    • Sepsis, pancreatitis, aspiration, shock, microbial pneumonia
  • Pathogenesis poorly understood
    • Early phase: proteinaceous fluid (capillary permeability ↑)
    • Later: inflammatory cells ↑, hyaline membrane formation, fibrosis → pulmonary hypertension
  • Clinical signs
    • Extreme anxiety, tachycardia, cyanosis, crackles (end-inspiration, expiration), wheezes, underlying disease
  • Diagnosis
    • Non-cardiogenic lung oedema
    ➢ Auscultation, radiography, echocardiography
    • Protein (oedema) / protein (plasma): 80 – 90%, in cardiogenic oedema 50%
- Treatment
• Oxygen therapy (intubation, PEEP)
• Fluid therapy (low-normal circulatory volume)
• Furosemide (early phase)
• Glucocorticoids?
• Blood gas analysis for control
- Prognosis: generally poor
27
Q

Lung lobe torsion

A
  • Large, deep-chested dogs (Afghan) > toy
  • Causes
    • Idiopathic, pleural effusion, surgery, trauma
  • Lung lobe torsion → venous congestion → exudation (bloody pleural effusion), necrosis, anaemia
  • Clinical signs
    • Respiratory distress, tachypnea, cough, hypotension, dyspnoea, fever, lethargy
  • Diagnosis
    • Deep-chested dog
    • Pleural effusion
    • Radiography: rounding of the lung lobe edges
    • Bronchoscopy?
    • Surgical exploration
  • Treatment
    • Removal of pleural fluid
    • Oxygen
    • Fluid/shock therapy
    • Surgery
28
Q

Pulmonary fibrosis

A
  • Interstitial lung disease (West Highland White, Staffordshire Bullterriers, (cats))
  • Pathologically: alveolar septal fibrosis, interstitial fibrosis, epithelial hyperplasia, focal calcification
  • Chronic and progressive pulmonary signs
    • Dyspnoea, exercise intolerance, +/- cough, cyanosis, crackles
  • Diagnosis
    • Radiography: diffuse interstitial pattern
    • Echocardiography: moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension
    • Biopsy
  • Prognosis: poor
  • Treatment: glucocorticoids?, bronchodilators?
29
Q

Pulmonary thromboembolism

A
  • Middle-aged to older
  • Usually secondary to:
    • Heartworm disease, immune-mediated hemolytic anemia (= IMHA), neoplasia, DIC, hyperadrenocorticism, PLE, PL-nephropathy etc
  • PTE: abnormal gas exchange, pulmonary infarction
  • Clinical signs
    • Sudden onset of respiratory distress
    • Tachypnea
    • Cyanosis
    Internal Medicine Final Small Animals 2018
    17
  • Diagnosis
    • Antithrombin III
    • Blood gas
    • Radiography
    • Echocardiography (located in the pulmonary artery?)
    • Pulmonary angiography is the gold standard
  • Treatment
    • Thrombolytic therapy (surgical, catheter, drugs: tissue plasminogen activator etc) + underlying disease
30
Q

Pulmonary neoplasia

A
  • Metastatic > primary (carcinoma, osteosarcoma)
  • Clinical signs
    • Chronic cough, exercise intolerance, respiratory distress, dyspnoea, weight loss, anorexia
  • Diagnosis
    • Origin of metastasis! (abdominal mass, effusion, lameness)
    • Auscultation, percussion
    • Radiography: is the key tool in the diagnostic approach! (LL 2x, VD/DV)
    ➢ False negative: size, obscured by the heart or liver, periosteal proliferation! (hypertrophic osteopathy)
    • Definitive diagnosis: BIOPSY (thoracoscopy) or fine needle aspiration
  • Treatment
    • Primary pulmonary neoplasia: lobectomy
    • Metastatic neoplasia: ???
    ➢ But pitfalls! (mycobacterial infections, eosinophilic granuloma
31
Q

aspiration pneumonia x ray pattern

A

interstitio-alveolar pattern in cranioventral and middle lung lobes