Asthma, D Kinder DSA Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 distinct components of asthma

A

1- recurrent airway obstruction: resolves spontaneously or with Tx
2- Airway hyper-responsiveness: exaggerated bronchoconstriction in response to stimuli with little or no effect on non-asthmatic patients
3- airway inflammation

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2
Q

What cahracterizes mild asthma

A

edema and hyperemia of the mucosa plus mucosal infiltration with mast cells, eos and lymphocytes

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3
Q

what characterizes moderate asthma

A

chemokines, eotaxin, RANTES, macrophage inflammatory protein 1alpha, IL8 with sm m constriction

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4
Q

what characterizes severe asthma

A

hypertrophy and hyperplasia of airway glands and smooth muscle lead to severe airway thickening

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5
Q

airway obstruction in asthma is a combination of what

A

constricion of sm mm
thickening of epithelium
liquids in airways

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6
Q

What are triggers for asthma

A

atopy, allergy, cold air, smoking, pollution, climate changes, emotion, medications, occupational, food

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7
Q

What are the asthma chemical mediators

A

ACH
histamine
leukotrienes
NO

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8
Q

Describe how Ach contributes to asthma

A

released from intrapulmonary motor nn to stimulate M3 causing airway smooth mm constriction

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9
Q

describe how histamine contributes to asthma

A

released from mast cells- minor role

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10
Q

describe how leukotrienes and lipoxins contribute to asthma

A

derived by the lipoxygenation of AA released from target cell membrane phospholipids during cellular activation

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11
Q

describe how NO contributes to asthma

A

produced by airway epithelial cells and by inflammatory cells found in the asthmatic lung. High levels found during asthma attack

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12
Q

What is key in Hx that points towards asthma

A

dyspnea, cough, wheezing, anxiety
exercise induced, aspirin ingestion, extrinsic allergen induced
inability to sleep
tapid changes in temperature leading to attack

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13
Q

What is Ddx for asthma

A

COPD, CHF, pneumothorax, pulmonary embolism, large airway obstruction, vocal cord dysfunction

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14
Q

describe mild intermittent asthma

A

symptoms present for <2 nigh/mo

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15
Q

describe mild persistent asthma

A

symptoms present for >2days/week 2nights/mo

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16
Q

describe moderate persistent asthma

A

symptoms present daily or >once/night

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17
Q

describe severe persistent asthma

A

Sx are continual during the day and frequent at night

18
Q

what do vital signs look like during asthma attack

A

tachypnea with RR 25-40, tachycardia and pulsus paradoxus

19
Q

what are ominous signs of sthma

A

inability to speak or drink, fatigue, drowsiness, confusion and cyanosis

20
Q

What does ABG look like in asthma

A

hypocapnea, if PaCO2 normalizes during severe attack may indicate impending respiratory failure

21
Q

what will CBC show with asthma

A

eosinophilia and elevated IgE

22
Q

What will CXR look like in asthma

A

normal, hyperinflation

sometimes severe hace have pneumothorax or pneumomediastinum

23
Q

What does EKG look like with asthma attack

A

sinus tachy, RAD sometimes with RBBB, P pulmonale, ST-T changes in severe attack

24
Q

what is Tx for intermittent asthma

A

no daily medication

short acting beta 2 agonist

25
Q

Tx for mild persistent asthma

A

short acting beta 2 agonist as needed
inhaled corticosteroid
alternate Tx with mast cell stabilizer, leukotriene R antagonist or theophylline

26
Q

What is Tx for moderate persistent asthma

A

SABA as needed
low to medium dose inhaled corticosteroid
LABA

27
Q

Tx for severe persistent asthma

A

SABA
high dose corticosteroid and LABA
if persistent 2mg/kg/day prednisone

28
Q

what gene has been traced to asthma

A

locus on chrom 17q21 for ORMDL3 which encodes ER TM proteins

29
Q

What occurs in response to the inflammatory mediators released in asthma

A

deposition of type III and V collagen below true BM

30
Q

what are the most potent contractile agonists for airway smooth m

A

LTC4 and LTD4

31
Q

what drives RR in asthma attack

A

stimulation of intrapulmonary R with subsequent effects on central resp centers

32
Q

how can asthma cause hyperventilation with low arterial PCO2

A

decrease in the ventilation to perfusion ratio

33
Q

pulse paradoxus of 15 mmHg indictes how severe of asthma attack

A

moderate

34
Q

PErcussion of thorax during asthma attck would present how

A

hyperresonance with loss of normal diaphragmatic movement

diminished tactile fremitus

35
Q

rales heard during PE of asthma patient suggest what

A

raise suspicion of alternative Dx like localized infection or heart failure

36
Q

At onset of asthma attack what type acid base may be present

A

pure respiratory alkalemia

37
Q

a normal PaCO2 in asthma patient is concern because what

A

mechanical load on resp system is greater than can be sustained by ventilatory muscles

38
Q

What blood serum [ ] could be elevated during severe asthma attcks

A

aminofransferase, lactac dehydrogenase, muscle creatinine kinase, ornitine transcarbamylase and ADH

39
Q

What is an easy way to Dx asthma

A

SOB with elevated FENO

40
Q

What is Mepolizumab

A

monoclonal Ab directed against IL5

41
Q

What is Samters triad

A

patient with asthma who takes ASA and develops chronic rhinosinusitis, nasal polyps and severe bronchial asthma