Shortness of Breath with Dr. Johns Part II Flashcards

1
Q

What is dyspnea?

A

abnormally uncomfortable awareness of breathing

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2
Q

What is on the differential diagnosis for dyspnea on exertion?

A
CHF
angina
obstructive lung disease
pleural effusion
anemia
hypohtyroid
metabolic acidosis
anxiety with hyperventilation
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3
Q

What is COPD’s rank in cause of death in the US?

A

4th

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4
Q

How is COPD defined?

A

disease state characterized by airflow limitation that is not fully reversible

progressive and associated with an abnormal inflammatory response of the lungs ot noxious particles or gases

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5
Q

What is chronic bronchitis defined as?

A

chronic productive cough for three months in two successive years

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6
Q

What is emphysema defined as?

A

enlargement of airspaces with destruction o bronchiole walls

actually a pathological term

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7
Q

How is asthma defined?

A

inflammatory disease of airways with significantly REVERSIBLE narrowing

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8
Q

What is the main difference between asthma and COPD?

A

COPD is permanent and asthma is reversible - but you can have combinations of the two

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9
Q

Who usually gets COPD?

A

patients who have smoked at least 20 cigarettes per day for 20 or more years

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10
Q

How does COPD usually start symptomatically? When does the dyspnea develop?

A

chronic cough

dyspea typically doesn’t start until 10-20 years after the cough

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11
Q

What is the main way to establish a diagnosis of COPD?

A

spirometry

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12
Q

As COPD proresses, what are some symptoms you can expect?

A
chronic clear sputum production
weight loss
morning headache
hypercapnia with hypoxemia
cor pulmonale
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13
Q

IN general, what happens to FEV1 as a person ages normally, ages with asthma and ages with COPD?

A

FEV1 decreases for all of them, but normal and asthma don’t really differ while people with COPD have a significant decline in FEV1 as they age

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14
Q

What are some physical exam findings you’ll see in COPD?

A
prolonged expiration
hyperinflation - barrel chest
hyperresonant percussion
depressed diaphragm
decreased breath sounds
wheezes
use of accessory muscles
pursed lips
cyanosis
enlarged liver
asterixis
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15
Q

How can you differentiate a pulmonary funtion test abnormality due to asthma from that of COPD?

A

give a bornchodilator and retest - asthma will improve and COPD won’t

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16
Q

What are some of the findings you would see on CXR for COPD?

A
hyperlucent lung fields
vascular crowding with curvilinear pattern
increased anteroposterior diameter
flattening of diaphrgm
increased retrosternal air space
17
Q

What happens to FEV1 and FEV/FVC do in COPD?

A

both go down

18
Q

What’s the number one thing to do for management of stable COPD?

A

get them to stop smoking - it can slow the decline in FEV1

19
Q

What are the two main drugs we use in COPD?

A

beta-2 agonist bronchodilators (albuterol inhaler prn)

anticholinergic agents (inhaled ipratropium)

20
Q

What COPD drug is controversial due to high risk of toxicity?

A

theophylline

21
Q

When should you use corticosteroids in COPD?

A

some studies show inhaled corticosteroids may slow the rate of FEV1 decline

consider short term oral use for exacerbations. long term ONLY if all other meds are at maximal therapy

22
Q

When should you prescribe supplemental oxygen in COPD?

A

if O2 aturations goes below 88% room air or falls below 85% with exertion

or if cor-pulmonale present

23
Q

What are the three types of COPD?

A

asthma, emphysema and chronic bronchitis

24
Q

What’s been happening to the prevalence of asthma?

A

increaseing

25
Q

What’s the classic triad of symptoms in asthma?

A

persistent wheeze
chronic cough
chronic dyspnea

26
Q

What will you see on physical exam in asthma?

A

widespread, high-pitched wheezes

accessory muscle use

pulsus paradoxus (greater than 10 mmHg fall in systolic pressure during inspiration)

27
Q

What pulmonary function test parameter is used to check an asthmatic’s percent from personal best?

A

the peak expiratory flow rate

28
Q

What are the color designations for the peak expiratory flow rates?

A

red - less than 50% of personal best
yellow - 50-80%
green - over 80%

29
Q

When you’re doing pulmonary function testing before and after bronchodilators, what is the percent improvement required for it to be considered responsive?

A

12% or more is considered responsive

30
Q

What provocative test can we use to establish an asthma diagnosis in someone with symptoms but normal spirometry?

A

methacholine challenge - it’s a bronchoconstrictor

31
Q

What are the 4 severity categories of asthma?

A

mild intermittent
mild persistent
moderate persistent
severe

32
Q

What is the stepwise approach for manageing asthma in patients aged 12 years or older?

A

step 1: short acting Beta agonist
step 2: low dose inhaled corticosteroid
stpe 3: low dose inhaled corticosteroid and a long acting beta agonist (or medium dose inhaled corticosteroid alone)
step 4: medium dose and LABA
step 5: high dose ICS and LABA
step 6: high dose ICS, LABA and corticosteroid

33
Q

Based on the new treatment guidelines, what hsould asthma treatment be based on?

A

base initially on asthma severity and subsequently on asthma control as assessed serially by validated test

34
Q

What is the only adjunctive therapy to demonstrate efficancy when added to high-dose inhaled corticosteroids plus long-acting beta agonists in patients with severe persistent allergic asthma?

A

omalixumab - a monoclonal antibody against immunoglobulin E

35
Q

What should you test for with severe asthma?

A

do allergy skin testing