COPD Flashcards

0
Q

Define emphysema. What are the pathological features?

A

Pathological destruction of terminal bronchioles and distal airspaces leading to a loss of alveolar surface area and impaired gas exchange

  • development of large, redundant airspaces (bullae)
    (reduced diffusion capacity)
  • destruction of supporting tissue surrounding small airways due to increased mucus secretion & cilia dysfunction due to smoke
    (so airways close during expiration -> airflow obstruction)
  • loss of elastic tissue due to inflammation (lungs cannot resist expansion of rib cage during inspiration, causing hyperinflation of lungs —> reduced diffusion capacity)
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1
Q

What is the definition of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease?

A

Disease characterised by airflow obstruction that is progressive, not fully reversible, and does not change markedly over several months.

Predominantly caused by smoking.

Encompasses emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

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2
Q

Define chronic bronchitis. What are the clinical features?

A

Chronic inflammation of bronchioles leading to chronic mucus hypersecretion
(inflammation -> proliferation of goblet cells -> excessive mucus secretion)
Results in remodelling and narrowing of the airways, causing airflow obstruction (fibrosis + inflammatory infiltrate + mucus)

  • chronic productive cough
  • frequent upper resp. tract infections
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3
Q

Give some examples of causes of COPD.

A

SMOKING (15% of smokers get COPD - even after stopping smoking)

  • alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (chemical protective against neutrophil elastase)
  • occupational exposure e.g. coal dust
  • pollution

+ low birth weight
+ adenovirus/HIV infection

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4
Q

What are the key signs and symptoms of COPD?

A

Older patient, onset of symptoms in later life

  • cough & sputum production
  • breathlessness (persistent & progressive & associated with exacerbations e.g. infection)
  • “purse lip” breathing (increases pressure within airways, so reduces/delays airway closure)
  • tachypnoea
  • use of accessory muscles (including neck muscles)
  • barrel chest (hyperinflation of lungs)
  • wheeze/quiet breath sounds on auscultation
  • advanced: cyanosis, O2 retention, right heart failure (cor pulmonale), oedema
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5
Q

How is the degree of breathlessness assessed?

A

Breathlessness graded via MRC dyspnoea score:

  1. Not breathless except on strenuous exercise
  2. Short of breath when hurrying/walking up a slight hill
  3. Walks slower on level ground or has to stop for breath
  4. Stops for breath after ~100m/few minutes on level ground
  5. Too breathless to leave the house/breathless when dressing
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6
Q

How is COPD diagnosed?

A

!Measurement of airflow obstruction necessary for diagnosis!

  • FEV1 < 80% = limitation of flow of air during expiration + collapse of airways
  • FEV1/FVC < 70%

note: FEV1 decline can be slowed by stopping smoking
note: symptoms not always worsen with reduced FEV1

  • CXR (to exclude other causes)
  • HRCT (high resolution computed tomography): assess the degree of macroscopic alveolar destruction in emphysema - helpful when considering surgery
  • ABG (assess resp. failure)
  • alpha-1-antitrypsin blood test (young patient with symptoms to check for deficiency)
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7
Q

What is the management for stable COPD?

A
  • SMOKING CESSATION
  • pulmonary rehabilitation (exercise, nutritional advice, education, peer support)
  • bronchodilators (symptomatic relief by reducing hyperinflation)
  • antimuscarinics e.g. ipratropium, tiotropium
  • steroids (reduce inflammation)
  • mucolytics e.g. carbocysteine (reduce thickness of sputum so it is easier to clear airways)
  • methylxanthines e.g. theophylline, aminophylline: inhibit phosphodiesterases (increased c.AMP causes bronchodilation, increased resp. drive, increased strength of resp. muscles, anti-inflammatory)
  • education on inhaler technique
  • long term O2 therapy (non-smokers who do no retain CO2)
  • surgery: lung transplant (if <60yrs), lung volume reduction
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8
Q

Give some examples of some side-effects of beta-2-agonists.

A
Tachycardia (atrial beta-2 receptors)
Tremor (skeletal beta-2 receptors) 
Anxiety 
Palpitations 
Hypokalaemia (K+ uptake in skeletal muscle)
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9
Q

Give some examples of side-effects of anticholinergics.

A

LOCAL: dry mouth/cough, sore throat, pharyngitis, upper resp. tract, infection, bitter taste, nausea, acute glaucoma

SYSTEMIC: supraventricular tachycardia, AF, urinary difficulty/retention, constipation

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10
Q

Give some examples of side effects of methylxanthines.

A

Tachycardia, supraventricular tachycardia, nausea, seizures

measure conc. of drug in blood when using

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11
Q

Give some examples of side effects of steroids (above 800ug/oral).

A

Thin skin, bruising, cataracts, adrenal insufficiency (reset of adrenal axis -> prevent by slowly reducing steroid dose instead of stopping completely), osteoporosis, diabetes, fluid retention, mental disturbance, GI symptoms, proximal myopathy

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12
Q

What is deconditioning in the context of COPD?

A

Breathlessness -> avoid exercise -> weakened muscles -> increased breathlessness -> depression -> avoid exercise etc.

Hence why pulmonary rehabilitation is so important

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13
Q

What are the diagnostic criteria for prescribing long term O2 therapy for COPD?

A

Only improves survival if pO2<8kPa + cor pulmonale

Only for non-smokers (O2 canister is combustible)

Prevents cardiac & renal damage due to extended hypoxia

Reduces independence & activity

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14
Q

What is the management for acute exacerbation of COPD?

A
O2 therapy to increase O2 sat. to 88%-92%
Bronchodilators 
Oral/IV steroids 
Antibiotics (if caused by infection) 
?IV aminophylline 
Repeat ABG 
?BIPAP
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15
Q

What is BIPAP? What are the contraindications?

A

Non-invasive ventilation/bi-level positive airway pressure = provision of ventilatory support through upper airway using mask

PATIENT MUST BE CONSCIOUS (patient breathes in sync with BIPAP)

Contraindications:

  • untreated pneumothorax
  • impaired consciousness
  • upper airway secretions
  • facial injury
  • life-threatening hypoxia
  • vomiting
  • agitated