Pleural Effusion Flashcards

1
Q

What are the types of pleural effusion?

A

Transudate & exudate.
Transudate < 30g/L protein (generally bilateral)
Exudate > 30g/L protein (usually unilateral)

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2
Q

What causes a transudate effusion?

A

An imbalance of hydrostatic forces
Commonly:
LVF - Liver Cirrhosis - Hypoalbuminaema

Less Commonly:
PE - Mitral Stenosis - Hypothyroidism - Constrictive Pericarditis

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3
Q

What causes an exudate effusion?

A

An increase in capillary and/or pleural permeability:
Commonly:
Malignancy - Pneumonia - Bronchiectasis - Lung Abscess

Less Commonly:
PE/Infarction - Rheumatoid Arthritis - Autoimmune - Pancreatitis - Post MI syndrome - Medications

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4
Q

How does a pleural effusion present?

A
Increasing SOB
Pleuritic Chest Pain [starts early = inflammatory/steadily increases = malignant]
Dull Ache
Dry Cough
Malaise/Fever/WeightLoss/Night Sweats

Reduced Chest Expansion
Reduced Breath sound/Bronchial Breathing
Increased stony dullness to percussion
Reduced Vocal Resonance

Clubbing - tar staining - Raised JVP - Cervical Lymphadenopathy - Tracheal Deviation - Peripheral Oedema - Orthopnoea/Paroxysmal Nocturnal Dyspnoea

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5
Q

How do we investigate a pleural effusion?

A

CXR - To confirm
Contrast CT - to differentiate between malignant & benign
Pleural Aspiration & Biopsy (Blind or CT guided)
Thoracoscopy

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6
Q

How is a pleural effusion treated?

A

Drained with a chest drain then pleurodhesis.

Other rteatment directed at cause

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7
Q

How do we analyse a sample of pleural aspiration?

A
Look &amp; Smell:
Foul smell --- Anaerobic Empyema
Pus --- Empyema
Milky --- Chylothorax, Lymphoma
Blood Stained --- ~Malignancy
Bloody --- Haemothorax, Trauma
Food --- Oesophageal Rupture

Cytology:

  • Malignant Cells
  • Eosinophils
  • Lymphocytes

Microbiology:

  • Microscopy, Culture & Sensitivities
  • Gram & ZN staining

Biochemistry:

  • Protein
  • LDH
  • Amylase (rise indicates pancreatitis)
  • Glucose
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