Respiratory- Phatology (2) Flashcards

1
Q

Sleep apnea

A

Repeated cessation of breathing > 10 seconds during sleep. confirmed by sleep study

Nocturnal hypoxia Ž systemic/pulmonary hypertension, arrhythmias, sudden death

Obstructive sleep apnea, Central sleep apnea, Obesity
hypoventilation syndrome (Pickwickian syndrome)
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2
Q

Pulmonary hypertension

A

Normal mean pulmonary artery pressure = 10–14 mm Hg; pulmonary hypertension ≥ 25

Course: severe respiratory distress Ž cyanosis and RVH Ž death from decompensated cor pulmonale.

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3
Q

Pulmonary hypertension types

A

Pulmonary arterial hypertension

Left heart disease

Lung diseases or hypoxia

Chronic thromboembolic

Multifactorial

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4
Q

Lung—physical findings

A

Pag. 662

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5
Q

Pleural effusions types

A

Transudate, Exudate, Lymphatic

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6
Q

Pneumothorax clinical manifestations

A

Dyspnea, uneven chest expansion. Chest pain, decrease tactile fremitus, hyperresonance, and diminished breath sounds, all on the affected side

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7
Q

Primary spontaneous pneumothorax

A

Due to rupture of apical subpleural bleb or cysts. Occurs most frequently in tall, thin, young males
and smokers

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8
Q

Secondary spontaneous pneumothorax

A

Due to diseased lung (eg, bullae in emphysema, infections), mechanical ventilation with use of high pressures Ž barotrauma.

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9
Q

Traumatic pneumothorax

A

Caused by blunt (eg, rib fracture), penetrating (eg, gunshot), or iatrogenic (eg, central line placement, lung biopsy, barotrauma due to mechanical ventilation) trauma.

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10
Q

Tension pneumothorax

A

any of the Pneumothorax. Air enters pleural space but cannot exit. Increasing trapped air Ž tension pneumothorax.

Trachea deviates away from affected lung. May lead to high intrathoracic pressure Ž low venous return
Ž low cardiac function.

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11
Q

Lobar pneumonia

A

S pneumoniae most frequently, also Legionella, Klebsiella

Intra-alveolar exudate Ž consolidation

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12
Q

Bronchopneumonia

A

S pneumoniae, S aureus, H influenzae, Klebsiella

Acute inflammatory infiltrates from bronchioles into adjacent alveoli; patchy distribution involving ≥ 1 lobe

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13
Q

Interstitial (atypical) pneumonia

A

Mycoplasma, Chlamydophila pneumoniae, Chlamydophila psittaci, Legionella, viruses (RSV, CMV, influenza, adenovirus)

Diffuse patchy inflammation localized to interstitial areas at alveolar walls; diffuse distribution involving ≥ 1 lobe

Indolent course (“walking” pneumonia)

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14
Q

Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia

A

Etiology unknown. Secondary organizing pneumonia caused by chronic inflammatory diseases or medication side effects (eg, amiodarone).

Formerly known as bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP).

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15
Q

Natural history of lobar pneumonia

A

Pag. 664

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16
Q

Lung cancer

A

pag. 665

17
Q

Superior vena cava syndrome

A

“facial plethora”, jugular venous distention, and upper
extremities edema.

Commonly caused by malignancy and thrombosis from indwelling catheters

18
Q

Pancoast tumor (superiro sulcus tumor)

A

ƒƒ Recurrent laryngeal nerve Ž hoarseness
ƒƒ Stellate ganglion Ž Horner syndrome ipsilateral
ƒƒ Superior vena cava Ž SVC syndrome
ƒƒ Brachiocephalic vein Ž brachiocephalic syndrome (unilateral symptoms)
ƒƒ Brachial plexus Ž sensorimotor deficits

19
Q

Lung abscess

A

Air-fluid levels often seen on CXR. Fluid levels common in cavities

Due to anaerobes (eg, Bacteroides, Fusobacterium, Peptostreptococcus) or S aureus.

2° to aspiration is most often found in right lung