Pathology - respiratory Flashcards

1
Q

Bacterial rhinosinusitis superimposed on viral URI

A

S. pneumo
H. flu
Morazella catarrhalis

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2
Q

Keisselbach plexus vs. posterior segment of nostril

A

Benign vs. life-threatening hemorrhages (which come from sphenopalatine artery, a branch of the maxillary artery)

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3
Q

Origin of DVTs

A

proximal deep veins of lower extremitiy

dorsiflexion of foot = calf pain

use heparin for short term ppx and tx, then warfarin/rivaroxaban for long term tx

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4
Q

Pathophysiology of pulmonary emboli

A

V/Q mismatch –> hypoxemia –> respiratory alkalosis

Lines of Zahn - interdigitating lines of pink (platelets/fibrin) and red (RBCs) found only in thrombi formed BEFORE death (indicates a pre-mortem thrombus)

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5
Q

6 types of emboli in PE

A

Fat, Air, Thrombus, Bacteria, Amniotic fluid, Tumor (FATBAT)

fat - long bone injury
amniotic fluid - seen w/ DIC
air - ascending divers

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6
Q

PFTs in obstructive lung disease

A

decr. FEV1/FVC ratio***

decr. FEV1 (airways close prematurely at high lung volumes)

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7
Q

Hyperplasia of mucus-secreting glands in bronchi

A

Chronic bronchitis (b = blue bloater)

Reid index = thickness of bronchial wall, >50%

cough: 3 mos/yr, for >2 yrs

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8
Q

Enlargement of air spaces, decr. recoil, decr. diffusion capacity for CO, destruction of alveolar walls

A

Emphysema (p = pink puffer)

incr. elastase activity = loss of elastic fibers

exhalation through pursed lips = incr. airway pressure, prevent airway collapse

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9
Q

Two main aspects of asthma

A

Bronchial hyperresponsiveness –> bronchoconstriction

Smooth muscle hypertrophy

Look for mucus plugging, pulsus paradoxus, decr. I:E ratio

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10
Q

Chronic necrotizing infection of bronchi

A

Bronchiectasis

Permanently dilated airways, purulent sputum, recurrent infections, hemoptysis

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11
Q

PFTs in restrictive lung disease

A

normal FEV1/FVC ratio

decr. FVC

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12
Q

Etiologies of restrictive lung disease

A
  1. ) poor breathing mechanics (normal A-a gradient)

2. ) interstitial lung disease (decr. diffusion capacity, incr. A-a gradient)

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13
Q

Hypersensitvity pneumonitis

A

Type III/IV rxn

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14
Q

Cor pulmonale, Caplan syndrome (RA + intrapulmonary nodules)

A

signs of pneumoconioses

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15
Q

Supradiaphragmatic and pleural plaques

A

Asbestosis

incr. risk of cancer (bronchogenic carcinoma > mesothelioma)

absestos bodies = golden-brown rods that look like dumbbells, found in sputum

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16
Q

Macrophages laden with carbon, inflammation and fibrosis

A

Coal workers’ pneumoconiosis

Upper lobes affected

anthracosis - similar, but found in urban people with pollution

17
Q

Mechanism of silicosis

A

Macrophages respond to silica and release fibrogenic factors, leading to fibrosis. Eggshell calcification of hilar lymph nodes

Affects upper lung lobes

Silica may disrupt phagolysosomes and impair macrophages, incr. susceptibility to TB! also, incr. risk of bronchogenic carcinoma

18
Q

Therapeutic O2 in neonatal RDS complications

A
  1. ) retinopathy
  2. ) intraventricular hemorrhage
  3. ) bronchopulmonary dysplasia
19
Q

Risk factors for neonatal RDS

A

Prematuriy, maternal diabetes, C-section delivery

Lecithin:sphingomyelin ratio <1.5

Persistently low O2 levels can lead to risk of PDA

20
Q

Damage mediators in ARDS

A
  1. ) neutrophils
  2. ) activation of coagulation cascade
  3. ) oxygen-derived free radicals

lead to diffuse alveolar damage, leading to incr. alveolar capillary permeability, then protein-rich leakage into alveoli and pulmonary edema

21
Q

Vascular changes in pulmonary hypertension

A

Arteriosclerosis
Medial hypertrophy
Intimal fibrosis of pulmonary arteries

22
Q

Causes of pulmonary artery hypertension

A

***hereditary: BMPR2 gene, normally inhibits vascular smooth muscle proliferation

23
Q

Increased fremitus

A

consolidation!

lobar pneumonia, pulmonary edema

24
Q

Hyperresonant breath sounds

A

Pneumothorax

25
Q

TGs in pleural fluid

A

Lymphatic pleural edema (chylothorax)

thoracic duct injury from trauma or malignancy

26
Q

Atypical pneumonias

A

Viruses, mycoplasma, legionella, chlamydia

diffuse patchy inflammation localized to interstitial areas at alveolar walls

27
Q

Two causes of lung abscess

A

Aspiration of oropharyngeal contents

Bronchial aspiration

28
Q

Face/arm edema, JVD, swollen collateral veins on chest, shortness of breath, coughing

A

SVC syndrome, sometimes seen with Pancoast tumor

Medical emergency, can lead to headaches, dizziness, rupture of aneurysm/intracranial arteries (incr. ICP)

29
Q

Lung cancer complications

A

SPHERE: SVC syndrome, Pancoast tumor, Horner, Endocrine, Recurrent laryngeal nerve compression, Effusions

30
Q

Two centrally located lung cancers

A

Squamous cell

Small cell

31
Q

Three main neoplastic syndromes with small cell lung cancer

A

ACTH - Cushing syndrome
SIADH
Abs against pre-synaptic Ca channels - Lambert-Eaton

Look for neuroendocrine cells - Kulchitsky cells

32
Q

Lung cancer assoc. w/ clubbing, glandular pattern on histology

A

Adenocarcinoma

activating mutations: KRAS, EGFR, ALK

33
Q

Lung cancer w/ cavitation, cigarettes, hypercalcemia (PTHrP)

A

squamous cell carcinoma

hilar mass arising from bronchus

look for keratin pearls and intercellular bridges

34
Q

Highly anaplastic undifferentiated lung cancer

A

Large cell carcinoma

pleomorphic giant cells, can secrete b-hCG

35
Q

Phases of lobar pneumonia

A

congestion –> red hepatization –> gray hepatization –> resolution

36
Q

Progression of tuberculous infection

A

Granulomatous with caseous necrosis

Caseous: T-cell mediated delayed hypersensitivity (Th1 stimulation of macs and CD8 T cells)