Resp Flashcards

0
Q

Acute exacerbation of COPD - tests (2) and results

A

CXR - hyperinflation

ABG - hypoxia, co2 retention, resp acidosis with metab alkalosis compensation

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1
Q

Acute exacerbation of COPD - Cardinal Sx (3)

A
Increased dyspnea
Increased cough (frequent & more severe)
Increased sputum production (change in colour and volume)
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2
Q

Acute exacerbation of COPD - management (6)

A
  • O2 (target sat 88-92%)
  • inh bronchodilators (eg albuterol) & anticholinergics (eg ipratropium)
  • Systemic glucocorticoids
  • antibiotics (eg levofloxacin) for: (a) pts with 2/3 Cardinal Sx, (b) mod-to-severe exacerbation, (c) mechanically ventilated pts
  • noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation (NPPV) for mod-to-severe exacerbation (if not contraindicated)
  • trach intubation if no improvement with NPPV & drugs OR if NPPV is contraindicated
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3
Q

ARDS characteristics (5)

A
  • follows significant lung injury (pneumonia, sepsis, trauma, burns, severe bleeding, toxic ingest ions)
  • acute resp failure (distress)
  • dyspnea, tachypnea, severe hypoxemia
  • diffuse alveolar damage due to inflamm mediators released due to tissue injury
  • pulmonary edema not due to heart failure or volume overload
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4
Q

Acute massive PE - presenting Sx (2) and exam findings (2)

A

Syncope, hemodynamic collapse

Accentuated P2, elevated CVP (high JVP)

[Usually, RV dilatation (RVH outflow obstruction) - septum gets pushed toward LV, causing deceased LV preload & CO]

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5
Q

Criteria for obstructive pattern

A

FEV1/FVC < 70% predicted

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6
Q

Obstructive pattern DDx based on DLCO (3)

A

Low DLCO: emphysema
Normal: Chronic bronchitis
Increased: Asthma

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7
Q

Criteria for restrictive pattern

A

FEV1/FVC > 70% predicted
FVC < 80% predicted
(low VC)

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8
Q

Restrictive pattern DDx based on DLCO (low 4, normal 2, increased 1)

A

Low DLCO: Interstitial lung diseases, sarcoidosis, asbestosis, heart failure
Normal: Musculoskeletal deformity, Neuromuscular disease
Increased: Morbid obesity

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9
Q

DDx for normal spirometry based on DLCO (3 low, 2 high)

A

Low DLCO: Anemia, PE, Pulm HTN

Increased: Pulm hemorrhage, Polycythemia

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10
Q

Criteria for predominant chronic bronchitis COPD subtype

A

Chronic productive cough (3 months or more) over 2 consecutive years not due to other causes (eg. bronchiectasis)

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11
Q

Pt shows obstructive disease on spirometry; next test?

A

Bronchodilator challenge (increased FEV1 = asthma; no change in FEV1 = COPD)

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12
Q

Pt shows restrictive disease on spirometry; how to differentiate interstitial lung disease vs chest wall weakness?

A

DLCO

Normal DLCO = chest wall weakness
Decreased DLCO = interstitial lung disease

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13
Q

What is blastomycosis & where is it endemic?

How to Dx/Tx?

A

Pulmonary fungal infection; can become systemic (skin and bone lesions) (skin lesions = well-circumscribed verrucous, crusted lesions; bone lesions = lytic)

Endemic to Great Lakes, Mississippi & Ohio River basins

Dx: CXR, sputum culture

Tx: Itraconazole or amphotericin B (for systemic disease)

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14
Q

What happens to pulmonary vasculature when alveoli are hypoxic?

A

Vasoconstriction

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15
Q

Causes of chronic hypoventilation (3)

What happens to pCO2 and pH?

A

COPD
Obesity hypoventilation syndrome
Neuromuscular cuases

pCO2 gradually increases = resp acidosis; kidneys compensate by increasing bicarb retention so pH remains low-normal or just below normal (pH never normalizes or gets overcorrected)

16
Q

Indicators of severity of an asthma attack (5)

A
Normal to increased pCO2 values (indicates CO2 retention due to severe obstruction and/or resp muscle fatigue)
Speech difficulty
Diaphoresis
Altered sensorium
Cyanosis
"Silent" lungs