ARDS and osbtructive airway disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are the most common causes of ARDS?

A

A: aspiration, acute pancreatitis, air/amniotic fluid embolism
R: radiation
D: drug overdose, diffuse lung disease, DIC, drowning
S: shock , sepsis, smoke inhalation

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2
Q

What are the key labs that suggest ARDS?

A

ABG showing respiratory alkalosis, decr. O2, decreased CO2, tachypnea,
wedge pressure

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3
Q

What is the significance of a normal CO2 during an acute asthma exacerbation?

A

signals impending respiratory failure and requires additional beta agonists, O2, and potentially ventilation

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4
Q

What are potential side effects of theophylline?

A

interactions with other drugs, tachycardia, seizure

still occasionally used as adjuvant tx

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5
Q

What is the definition of mild intermittent asthma? Tx?

A

less than 2X/wk, nocturnal awakening

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6
Q

What is the definition and tx of mild persistent asthma?

A

bronchodilator use more than 2X/wk
nocturnal awakening more than once every 2 wks
for long-term control, give inhaled low dose corticosteroid. consider mast cell stabilizer (omalizumab), leukotriene inhibitor, or theophylline

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7
Q

What is the definition of moderate persistent asthma? what is the long term control strategy?

A

dialy sx, daily bronchodilator use, sx that interfere with activity, or nocturnal awakening more than 1X/wk
give inhaled low-medium dose corticosteroid and long-acting beta 2 agonist; consider leukotriene inhibitor or theophyline

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8
Q

What is the definition of severe asthma?

A

sx with minimal activity, awake multiple times per night, require multiple meds on a daily basis.
give inhaled high dose corticosteroids and long acting beta2 agonist and consider systemic steroids

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9
Q

What is the diagnosis of chronic bronchitis?

A

history of productive cough for 3 months of the year for more than 2 yrs

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10
Q

What is the treatment for a pt with chronic bronchitis?

A

smoking cessation, abx for URI becasue of greater incidence of bacterial etiology, and bronchodilators

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11
Q

Who do you tell the difference between chronic bronchitis and emphysema?

A

diffusion. it is normal in chronic bronchitis but decreased in emphazema.
Also- chronic bronchitis pts tend to be “blue bloaters” because they develop cor pulmonale, which causes cyanosis and edema. emphysema pts are pink puffers- they have pursed lip breaths, dyspnea, and barrel chests

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12
Q

What is the difference in the distribution of emphysema caused by smoking vs. alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency

A

smoking: centrilobar distribution

A1AT deficiency- panlobar distribution

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13
Q

What are the CXR findings that suggest emphysema?

A

flat diaphragm, hyperinflated lungs, subpleural blebs and bullae, decr. vascular markings

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14
Q

What is the tx for emphysema?

A

smoking cessation, O2 (home O2 program needed for resting SaO2

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15
Q

What are the causes of bronchiectasis?

A

chronic airway obstruction, chronic tobacco use, TB, CF, fungal infections, severe PNA

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16
Q

What are the H/P of a patient with bronchiectasis?

A

productive cough, hemoptysis, freq resp infections, dyspnea, copious sputum,

17
Q

What is the tx for bronchiectasis?

A

pulmonary hygiene, chest PT, abx if sputum increases, inhaled beta 2 agonists and corticosteroids may reduce sx; resection of severely diseased lungs for hemorrhage or substantial sputum production

18
Q

What are the complications of bronchiectasis?

A

cor pulmonale, massive hemoptysis, abscess formation