Lower respiratory tract infections Flashcards

1
Q

What is classed as lower respiratory tract

A

Anything below the trachea (including the trachea)

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2
Q

Name the lower respiratory tract infections

A

Acute bronchitis
Acute exacerbation of COPD
Pneumonia
Tuberculosis

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3
Q

What causes acute bronchitis

A

Usually a virus

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4
Q

What are presenting symptoms of acute bronchitis

A

wet cough

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5
Q

When should you see GP with acute bronchitis

A

If symptoms are severe or have been going on for more than 3 weeks.

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6
Q

What is the main indication of an acute exacerbation of COPD

A

Change in the colour of sputum (yellow or brown)

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7
Q

What is the usual cause of acute exacerbation of COPD

A

viral Infection (most common)

Bacterial infection

  • —-Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • —-Moraxella cararrhalis
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8
Q

What is Pneumonia

A

Inflammation of the lung parenchyma and consolidation due to cellular exudate which impairs gas exchange

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9
Q

What are the three types on pneumonia

A

Bronchopneumonia - inflammation of tubes
Lobar pneumonia - inflammatory exudate in alveoli
Interstitial pneumonia - rare and doesnt arise from infection

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10
Q

What are the presenting symptoms for Pneumonia

A

Fever, rigors and myalgia
Cough and Sputum
Sharp pleuritic chest pain
S.O.B

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11
Q

What are the clinical signs of pneumonia

A
Dull percussion 
Reduced expansion 
increased vocal resonance
Coarse breathing sounds  (brochial breath sounds)
Visible consolidation on CXR
Fine Coarse Crackles
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12
Q

What other illness increases your chance of getting pneumonia

A

FLU

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13
Q

What investigations should be done if suspect pneumonia

A
Chest X-ray 
FBC (FBC and CRP) 
Sputum culture 
Viral throat swab 
Blood cultures
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14
Q

What are the differentials to pneumonia

A
Tuberculosis 
Lung cancer
Pulmonary Vasculitis (destruction of blood vessels) 
PE
Pulmonary oedema
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15
Q

What is used to score the severity of Pneumonia

A

CURB65

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16
Q

What is curb 65

A
C- confusion 
U - Blood urea >7mmol
R- respiratory rate >30
B - Systolic BP <90 and diastolic <60
65 - >65? 

Get score out of 5.

0-1 - low risk
2 - moderate risk
3-5 - severe risk

17
Q

What is the treatment for pneumonia if Curb 0 or 1

A

Amoxacillin or clarythromycin (If allergic) - 5 days

18
Q

What is the treatment for pneumonia if Curb 2

A

Amoxacillin and clarythromycin or Levofloxacin (if allergic)

- 5-7 days

19
Q

What is the treatment for pneumonia if Curb 3-5

A

Co-amoxiclav + clarithromycin or Levofloxacin/

co-trimoxazole (if allergic) - 7-10 days

20
Q

What can happen in pneumonia is left untreated

A

Sepsis
Kidney injury
ARDS
Parapneumonic effusion

21
Q

What TYPICAL pathogens cause pneumonia

A

Pneumococcal pneumonia

Haemophilus influenzae

22
Q

What ATYPICAL pathogens cause pneumonia

A

Legionella pneumophilia
Chlamydia pneumonia
Viruses

23
Q

In the hospital, what pathogens can cause cavatating pneumonia

A

Staph Aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae

24
Q

What does the CURB65 scale not take into consideration

A

young people
Hypoxia
Multi-lobal consolidation

25
Q

What is bronchiectasis

A

Long term consolodation where the airways of the lung become abnormally widened, building up mucous and increasing the chances of infection.

26
Q

What does the patient present with in bronchiectasis

A

Chronic wet cough
S.O.B
Frequent Lower respiratory tract infections
HAEMOPTOSIS

27
Q

What are the clinical signs of bronchiectasis

A

Finger clubbing
coarse voice
wheeze
Obstructive spirometry (reduced ratio)