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Clinical Management Respiratory Diseases

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Title: Clinical Management Respiratory Diseases


1
Clinical Management Respiratory Diseases
  • Judith Coombes
  • University of Queensland
  • Brisbane, Australia

2
Pathology
  • major international cause of morbidity and
    mortality
  • In Australia single biggest cause of days lost
    from work
  • generate largest number of GP visits

3
Objectives
  • Be able to interpret Spirometry as a lung
    function test and monitoring tool
  • Be able to interpret Peake Expiratory Flow rate
    (PEFR) as a monitoring tool
  • Understand goals of treatment and be able to
    communicate pharmaceutical care plan in asthma
  • Understand goals of treatment of and be able to
    communicate pharmaceutical care plan in COPD
  • Not discussing infections, neoplasms or TB

4
The Lungs
Trachea Bronchus(LR) Bronchi Bronchiole Alveoli
Trachea
5
Respiratory Symptoms
  • cough
  • sputum production/haemoptysis
  • dyspnoea
  • wheezing
  • chest/lung pain

6
Measurement of ventilatory function
  • Spirometry
  • PEFR
  • Blood Gas
  • Exercise test-6 min
  • chest Xray- normal is asthma and COPD

7
Spirometry
  • Spirometer
  • FVC Forced Vital Capacity
  • FEV1 Forced Expiratory Volume over 1 second
  • FEV1/FVC is forced expiratory ratio
  • should be gt75
  • useful for diagnosis
  • accurately measures degree of impairment

8
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9
Normal
10
PEFR
  • Peak Flow Meter
  • maximum flow rate which can be forced during an
    expiration
  • may differ between meters
  • Submaximal effort invalidates reading
  • Not a substitute for spirometry
  • most useful for regular monitoring to detect
    variation
  • warning signs
  • sustained reduction
  • gt20-25 diurnal variation

11
Chest X ray
  • Diagnosis is uncertain (PE, pneumonia, heart
    failure)
  • symptoms may not be explained by asthma or COPD
  • physical evidence of complications-pneumothorax,
    atelectasis (lung collapse)
  • failure to respond to treatment

12
Blood Gas (arterial)
  • H rises with Pco2
  • In acute hypoventilation CO2 rises and so does H
    causing respiratory acidosis
  • In acute hyperventilation CO2 drops as does H
    causing respiratory alkalosis
  • (in acute no time for metabolic process so
    bicarbonate is not changed)

13
Oximetry
  • Measure oxygen saturation
  • Non invasive
  • Light emiting diodes
  • Expressed as where normal is 100

14
Asthma
  • a chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways in
    which many cells and cellular elements play a
    role, in particular, mast cells, eosinophils, T
    lymphocytes, macrophages, neutrophils and
    epithelial cells. In susceptible individuals this
    inflammation causes recurrent episodes of
    wheezing, breathlessness, chest tightness and
    coughing, particularly, at night or in the early
    morning. These episodes are usually associated
    with widespread but variable airflow obstruction
    that is often reversible either spontaneously or
    with treatment. The inflammation also causes an
    associated increase in the existing bronchial
    hyperresponsiveness to a variety of stimuli. USA97

15
Airflow obstruction (Excessive airway Narrowing)
  • Smooth muscle hypertrophy and hyperplasia
  • Inflammatory cell infiltration
  • Oedema
  • Goblet cell and mucous gland hyperplasia
  • Mucus hypersecretion
  • Protein deposition
  • Epithelial desquamation

16
Asthma Diagnosis-1
  • No Gold Standard
  • Consensus of respiratory physicians
  • History, physical examination, supportive
    diagnostic testing
  • History
  • Wheeze
  • Chest tightness
  • Shortness of breath
  • cough

17
Asthma Diagnosis-2
  • Physical examination
  • Expiratory wheeze suggests asthma (not
    pathonomonic)
  • Absence of physical signs doesnt exclude asthma
  • Crackles indicate concurrent or alternate
    diagnosis

18
Asthma diagnosis -3
  • Diagnostic testing Spirometry
  • Pay Attention to technique
  • Pre and post bronchodilator
  • Baseline FEV1gt1.7L and increase of 12 post
    bronchodilator is significant
  • Or 200ml greater than baseline
  • Or same rules for FVC
  • Also predicted from tables in the Asthma
    guidelines

19
Spirometry for asthma management
  • Assessment of severity
  • Severe acute attack lt50 predicted or lt 1litre
  • Back titration of medication
  • Check symptomatic assessment
  • Maintain best lung function

20
Asthma
21
PEFR with asthma
  • Diagnosis-not a substitute for spirometry
  • PEF increases gt15 with bronchodilator
  • PEF in adult varies gt20 for 3 days in a week
    over several weeks
  • Severe Acute
  • lt50 predicted or lt 100 L/min
  • Useful for daily home measurement
  • Useful in action plan
  • gt80 OK, 60-80 increase preventer, 40-60 oral
    steroids, lt40 no relief 000

22
Asthma treatment
  • National Asthma Council in Australia
  • www.nationalasthma.org.au/cms/index.php
  • Reduce mortality morbidity of asthma
  • Education
  • Patient self monitoring
  • Appropriate drug therapy
  • Regular medical review
  • Written asthma action plan

23
Asthma management
  • Acute asthma management
  • Treatment depends on severity
  • Mild, moderate, life threatening
  • Requires emergency care
  • Hospital admission
  • Long term asthma management-chronic
  • Minimise symptoms and need for reliever
  • No exacerbations
  • No limitation on physical activity
  • Normal Lung Function

24
Asthma Management
  • Medications to treat bronchospasm
  • ACUTE
  • RELEIVERS
  • Short acting ß2-adrenergic agonists eg salbutamol
  • terbutaline
  • Anticholinergic eg ipratropium

25
Relievers
26
Asthma Management
  • Medications to treat bronchospasm
  • Chronic
  • SYMPTOM CONTROLLER
  • Inhaled long acting ß2-adrenergic agonists eg
    salmeterol
  • Also use
  • Theophylline
  • Oral ß2-adrenergic agonists (salbutamol syrup)

27
Asthma Management
  • Medications to treat inflamation
  • PREVENTERS
  • Inhaled sodium cromoglycate
  • Inhaled nedocromil sodium
  • Inhaled cortocosteroids eg beclomethasone
  • Oral corticosteroids eg prednisolone
  • Leukotrienne receptor antagonists eg montelukast

28
Beclomethasone dipropionate
29
Asthma Action plans
  • Developed by doctor with patient
  • Added role for pharmacist to give advice to
    patient
  • Individualised Action for Deterioration in asthma
  • ? in frequency, severity of symptoms
  • ? use of bronchdilator
  • Drop in peak flow

30
Misuse of Home Nebulizers High Among Inner-City
Children with Asthma
October 25, 2006 (Salt Lake City) A study of
asthma-related deaths among inner-city children
and young adults shows that only about half use
their home nebulizers as prescribed and rarely
have an asthma action plan to manage disease
exacerbations, or if they do have a written plan
in the home, they rarely use it. The findings
were presented here yesterday at CHEST 2006, the
72nd annual meeting of the American College of
Chest Physicians.
31
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32
COPD
  • smoking is major cause but susceptibility is
    variable
  • directly related to exposure to tobacco smoke
  • pack yearscigarettes/day x years of smoking /20
  • relatively fixed airway obstruction with minimal
    reversibility from bronchodilators

33
COPD
  • Chronic bronchitis- productive cough for gt3
    months in 2 successive years
  • emphysema-abnormal permanent enlargement of
    air-spaces distal to terminal bronchioles caused
    by destruction of alveolar walls.
  • Most have a combination of both
  • Elderly with reversibility has all 3

34
COPD shaded bit
35
Diagnosis of COPD
  • symptoms
  • breathlessness doesnt occur until obstruction is
    advanced (unless intercurrent infection)
  • physical examination
  • little until disease is severe-over inflated
    chest
  • chest x rays
  • over inflation, enlarged heart, bullae
  • spirometry
  • mild check FEV1/FVClt75
  • moderate check FEV1 of predicted

36
COPD
37
Show ceases smoking figure
38
Progression
39
COPD Management
  • Acute exacerbations
  • Bronchodilators
  • Oxygen
  • Corticosteroids
  • Antibiotics
  • Long term treatment- chronic
  • Stop smoking
  • Bronchodilators
  • Corticosteroids
  • Immunisation-Pneumonia and flu
  • Pulmonary rehabilitation

40
Bronchiectasis
  • defined as dilation of the bronchi-
  • bronchial walls become inflamed, thickened and
    irreversibly damaged.
  • Mucociliary transport is impaired-bacterial
    infections
  • cough productive of sputum

41
Cystic Fibrosis
  • dysfunction of exocrine glands -abnormal mucus
    production
  • recurrent bronchopulmonary infection
  • finger clubbing
  • haemoptysis

42
Interstitial lung disease
  • heterogeneous group involving alveolar walls and
    peri alveolar tissue
  • insidious onset, chronic disease
  • inflammatory process probably initiated by an
    antigen
  • eventual interstitial fibrosis will cause a
    restrictive pattern

43
Restrictive
44
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45
Severe Obstructive Sleep Apnoea
  • 2 women , 4 men
  • Recurrent episodes of airway occlusion in sleep
  • Apnoea
  • Arousal
  • Daytime sleepiness
  • Increased CO2
  • Sleep lab
  • Weight loss, CPAP
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