Diagnostic Procedures for Respiratory Problems Flashcards

1
Q

Heartworm testing

A
  • dogs or cats presented for chronic cough or respiratory distress
  • Ag test in dogs
  • combine Ag and Ab tests in cats
  • echo for cats?
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2
Q

FeLV & FIV testing

A
  • infections with FeLV and FIV have not been directly linked to respiratory clinical signs
  • both diseases may cause immunosuppression and thus acquisition of opportunistic infections
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3
Q

parasite testing

A
  • multiple potential parasites
  • fecal exam should be performed for almost all patient with cough
  • float, Baermann
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4
Q

infectious disease testing

A
  • serology
  • PCR
  • isolation
  • culture
  • Ag vs Ab vs DNA vs live organism
  • exposure vs infection vs disease
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5
Q

blood gas evaluation

A
  • pulse oximetry
  • arterial blood gas (ABG)
  • capnography
  • can help determine severity, differentiate pulmonary dz from hypoventilation, determine need for intervention and monitor response to tx
  • respiratory compromise must be severe to detect abnormalities
  • Hgb-dissociation curve
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6
Q

pulse oximetry

A
  • relatively easy, non-invasive
    • confirm accurate reading
  • measures saturation, not total content
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7
Q

blood gas evaluation

A
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8
Q

radiographs

A
  • cannot provide specific dx in most cases (only pictures)
  • nasal, dental, thorax, cervical
  • fluoroscopy
  • angiography
  • scintigraphy
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9
Q

thoracic radiographs

A
  • rarely provide definitive dx
  • may help localize, narrow dx, direct further testing, alter prognosis…
  • high quality films necessary
    • 3 views
    • DV for pulmonary vessels
    • I vs. E
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10
Q

basic pulmonary patterns on thoracic radiographs

A
  • alveolar
    • fluid or tissue w/in alveolar spaces
  • intersitial
    • increased tissue in interstitium
  • bronchial
    • obvious bronchial markings- “train tracks” and “doughnuts”
  • nodular
  • pleural space evaluation
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11
Q

cross-sectional imaging

A
  • CT & MRI
  • visualization of internal structurse
  • direction of further dx and tx
  • expensive
  • requires general anesthesia
  • cannot provide specific dx
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12
Q

oropharyngeal exam

A
  • requires anesthesia
  • primary use is respiratory clinical signs localized to the URT
  • may identify palatal problems, oropharyngeal masses, dental or periodontal disease…
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13
Q

nasal cytology

A
  • 3 main types
    • FNA/impression smear of mass
    • FNA of regional lymph nodes
    • nasal flush samples
  • may be helpful for fungal rhinitis or neoplasia
  • bacteria are normal
  • very easy
  • usually of little or no benefit
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14
Q

rhinoscopy

A
  • direct visualization of nasal cavity
  • indications: suspect foreign bodies, nasopharyngeal dz, sample collection (+/- neoplasia, infections)
  • rigid vs. flexible instruments, otoscope?
  • general anesthesia
  • nasal tissue is highly vascular (hemorrhage)
  • only specific dx for foreign bodies and nasal mites
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15
Q

nasal biopsy

A
  • best test to get specific dx for most primary nasal dzs
  • general anesthesia
  • invasive
  • very little specialized equipment
  • cost is generally reasonable
  • if owners decline a more complete work up, blind nasal biopsies
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16
Q

nasal culture

A
  • nasal swab cultures from normal individuals yield multiple bacterial isolates
  • deep nasal cultures positive in ~50% of dogs
  • very high colony counts or single isolates associated with neutrophilic inflammation may be significant
  • consider other organisms as well (mycoplasma, fungi)
17
Q

bronchoscopy

A
  • direct visualization of airway interiors
  • facilitates sample collection from lower RT
  • general anesthesia
  • specialized equipment, skill
18
Q

tracheal washing

A
  • samples of fluid and cells from large airways
    • should bypass normal flora and debris from oral and pharyngeal cavities
  • useful for large airway and severe diffuse alveolar diseases
  • two main techniques
    • TTW
    • endotracheal lavage
19
Q

bronchoalveolar lavage

A
  • sample from the small airways and alveoli
  • two main techniques
    • bronchoscopy-guided
    • endotracheal lavage
20
Q

TW/BAL

A
  • TTW is only procedure that doesn’t involve anesthesia
  • transient hypoxemia
  • crackles may be auscultated for several hours
  • specimens should be processed rapidly
21
Q

TW/BAL cytology

A
  • large mononuclear cells should predominate in normal respiratory secretions
    • increase neutrophils may indicate inflammation or infection
    • increase eosinophils may occur in allergic and parasitic conditions
  • organisms contained w/in phagocytes are normally considered to be pathogens, esp if one species predominates
  • rare findings include parasite ova, larvae, fungus, and neoplastic cells
    • these are significant
22
Q

TW/BAL culture

A
  • require small volume of fluid
  • what to culture?
    • aerobes
    • anaerobes?
    • Mycoplasma?
    • fungal cultures?
23
Q

trans-thoracic aspiration

A
  • for cytology and/or culture
  • best in patients with solitary lung mass, or diffuse dz
  • sterile technique, adequate restraint/sedation
  • complications are fairly common, potentially serious (10% develop pneumothorax)
24
Q

thoracocentesis

A
  • useful diagnostic and therapeutic technique
  • remove as much fluid or air as possible
  • only contraindication is prsence of a known coagulopathy
  • reasons for a negative tap: no fluid or air present, fluid more ventral or deeper than needle, fluid walled-off..
  • always get cytology
  • culture when appropriate
  • +/- cholesterol and triglyceride levels
25
Q

lung biopsies

A
  • very invasive, often costly
  • may be necessary for definitive dx
  • thoracoscopy vs. thoracotomy
  • best way to sample interstitium