DIT review - Pulmonary 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main reason to differentiate between small cell and non-small cell lung cancer

A

Treatment:

Small cell = chemo

Non-small cell = surgery

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2
Q

Describe location and other diseases that can be caused by small cell lung cancer (what substances does the tumor produce)

A
  • “S” = smokers, central, secreting
  • Poorly differentiated small cells (high nucleus: cytoplasm ratio)
  • Arise from neuroendocrine cells
    • Chromogranin A positive
  • May produce:
    • ADH = SIADH
    • ACTH = Cushing’s
    • Antibodies against pre-synaptic Ca2+ channels = Lambert-Eaton
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3
Q

Location and histology of squamous cell lung cancer (non-small cell)

A
  • “S” = smokers, central, secreting
  • Often presents as a hilar mass
  • Keratin pearls and intercellular bridges
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4
Q

What hormone may be produced by squamous cell carcinoma

A
  • May produced PTH = hypercalcemia
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5
Q

Location and populations associated with adenocarcinoma of the lung

A
  • Non-smokers and female smokers
  • Located in lung periphery
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6
Q

Describe Bronchioalveolar lung cancer (what it is and histology)

A
  • Subtype of Adenocarcinoma
    • X-ray shows hazy infiltrates similar to pneumonia
    • Columnar cells grow along pre-existing alveolar septa = apparent “thickening” of alveolar walls
    • Excellent prognosis
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7
Q

Describe large cell lung carcnioma

A
  • Smokers
  • Located in lung periphery
  • Anaplastic and undifferentiated tumor
  • Process of elimination – no keratin pearls, intercellular bridges, glands, or mucin
  • Poor prognosis (poorly differentiated cells)
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8
Q

Type of cell that comprises carcinoid tumor

A
  • Well-differentiated neuroendocrine cells
    • Chromogranin A positive
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9
Q

Common locations of carcinoid tumor

A
  • Lung = Classically presents as a polyp-like mass in the bronchus
  • GI tract = only causes carcinoid syndrome if metastasis to liver
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10
Q

Presentation of carcinoid tumor

A
  • Bronchospasm and wheezing
  • Flushing
  • Diarrhea
  • R-sided heart lesions
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11
Q

Complications associated with Pancoast tumor

A
  • Hoarseness = recurrent laryngeal nerve
  • Horner syndrome (ptosis, miosis, anhydrosis) = superior cervical ganglion
  • SVC syndrome = superior vena cava
    • Facial plethora
    • Jugular venous distension
    • Edema and blue discoloration of arms and face
  • Sensorimotor deficit
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12
Q

Risk factors associated with mesothelioma

A
  • Malignancy of pleura
  • Associated with asbestos
  • No associated with smoking
  • Psammoma bodies
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13
Q

Most common places for lung cancer to metastasize to

A
  • Adrenals, brain, bone, liver
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14
Q

Most common locations for lung cancer to have metastasized from

A
  • Breast, colon, prostate, bladder
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15
Q

What is pneumonia?

A

Inflammation in the alveoli

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16
Q

What will you see on CXR in the 3 types of pnuemonia:

  • Lobar
  • Bronchopneumonia
  • Interstitial
A

Lobar = consolidation of an entire lobe

Broncho = scattered, patchy consolidation centered around bronchioles

Interstitial = diffuse infiltrate with increaed lung markings

17
Q

Common pathogens in lobar pneumonia

A
  • Strep pneumoniae, Klebsiella, Legionella
18
Q

Phases of lobar pneumonia

A
  • Congestion = red-purple; exudate with mostly bacteria
  • Red hepatization = red-brown; exudate with bacteria, RBC, WBC, fibrin
  • Gray hepatization = gray; exudate with WBC and fibrin; RBCs are degraded
  • Resolution = components of exudate are digested
19
Q

Common pathogens in bronchopneumonia

A
  • Strep pneumoniae, Staph aureus, H. influenzae, Klebseilla
20
Q

Common pathogens in interstitial pneumonia

A
  • Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella, viruses (RSV, CMV, influenza, adenovirus)
21
Q

Treatment for lung abscesses

A

Clindamycin

22
Q

What is a pleural effusion

A
  • Fluid between the two pleural layers
  • Can lead to restricted lung expansion during inspiration
23
Q

Describe transudate pleural effusions (content and causes)

A
  • Low protein content
    • THINK: Transudate is more transparent
  • Due to increased hydrostatic pressure (e.g. CHF or fluid overload) or decreased oncotic pressure (e.g. cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome)
24
Q

Describe exudate pleural effusion (content and causes0

A
  • High protein content, cloudy
  • Due to malignancy, pneumonia, trauma, connective tissue disease
  • Must be drained due to risk of infection
25
Q

What is a chylothorax

A

Lymphatic pleural effusion

Milky fluid high in triglyerides

26
Q

Causes of lymphatic pleural effusion

A
  • Due to thoracic duct rupture or occlusion