1 / 36

Clinical Correlation: Lung Disease

Clinical Correlation: Lung Disease. Mark Bixby, M.D. | October 22, 2013. Lung Disease. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) Chronic Bronchitis Emphysema Asthma Tuberculosis. Lung Disease. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) Chronic Bronchitis Emphysema.

deanna
Download Presentation

Clinical Correlation: Lung Disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Clinical Correlation: Lung Disease Mark Bixby, M.D. | October 22, 2013

  2. Lung Disease • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) • Chronic Bronchitis • Emphysema • Asthma • Tuberculosis

  3. Lung Disease • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) • Chronic Bronchitis • Emphysema

  4. COPD: Definition • Chronic airflow limitation; not fully reversible • Two major diseases: • Chronic bronchitis • Emphysema • Overlapping symptoms • Distinct entities or disease progression

  5. Chronic Bronchitis Signs and Symptoms • Onset phase: years • Chronic cough, copious sputum • >3 months • 2 consecutive years • “Blue bloaters”: sedentary, overweight, cyanotic, edematous, breathless • Severity based on spirometry

  6. Interpreting Spirometry - definitions

  7. Severity of COPDBased on Spirometry

  8. Emphysema: Signs and Symptoms • Severe exertional dyspnea, minimal cough • Prolonged expiratory phase • “Barrel-chested”, weight loss • “Pink puffers”: pursing of lips, non cyanotic

  9. pink puffer blue bloater

  10. COPD: Lab Tests • Spirometry • ↓ maximum expiratory flow rate – not reversible • Chest x-ray: • Chronic bronchitis: prominent vascular markings • Emphysema: over distention of lungs, flattening of diaphragm, emphysematous bullae

  11. COPD: Medical Management • No cure, but can improve quality of life • Early management • Smoking cessation, ↓ exposure to pollutants • Regular exercise, good nutrition, prevention of respiratory infections, adequate hydration • Oxygen therapy when SpO2 ≤ 88 • Beta agonists, anticholinergics, inhaled corticosteroids, ±theophylline

  12. COPD: Dental Management • Encourage quitting smoking • Reschedule appointment if: • Short of breath worse than baseline • Productive cough worse than baseline • Acute upper respiratory infection • Oxygen saturation <91% (by pulse oximeter)

  13. COPD: Dental Management of Stable Patient • Treat in upright chair position • Use inhalers prior to treatment • Use pulse oximetry • Use low-flow oxygen when O2 sat <95% unless baseline is lower • May use low-dose oral diazepam • Supplemental steroids may be required Things to do

  14. COPD: Dental Management of Stable Patient • Rubber dam use (in severe cases) • N2O sedation (in severe or very severe COPD) • Barbiturates and narcotics • Antihistamines and anticholinergics • Macrolide and ciprofloxacin antibiotics • If the patient is on theophylline • Outpatient general anesthesia Things to avoid

  15. COPD: Oral Manifestations • Halitosis • Extrinsic tooth stains • Nicotine stomatitis • Periodontal disease • Oral cancer

  16. Lung Disease • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) • Asthma

  17. Airway Inflammation and Clinical Symptoms Inflammation Airway Hyperresponsiveness Airway Obstruction Clinical Symptoms

  18. Precipitating or Aggravating Factors Drugs: Aspirin Beta blockers Viral respiratory Infections Endocrine factors Exercise Weather changes: cold air Exposure to irritants and occupational chemicals ASTHMA PATIENT Allergens Environmental changes Emotional expression: anger, laughing Food additives: sulfites

  19. Asthma: Signs and Symptoms • Predominant symptoms • Cough • Breathlessness • Wheezing • Chest tightness • Flushing • Increased heart rate and prolonged expiration • May be self-limiting, but severe episodes may require medical assistance

  20. Severity & Control 4 Severe Persistent 3 Moderate Persistent 2 Impairment Mild Persistent 1 Mild Intermittent Well Controlled Risk Not Well Controlled Very Poorly Controlled

  21. Classifying Asthma Severity (age ≥12)

  22. Asthma: Lab Tests • No one diagnostic test • Chest xray, skin testing, sputum smears and blood counts (for eosinophilia), arterial blood gases • Spirometry (peak expiratory flow meter) before and after bronchodilator

  23. Stepwise Therapy for Asthmafor people 12 years of age and above Intermittent Asthma Persistent Asthma Therapy Preferred Alternative Step 6 High Dose ICS + LABA + OCS AND Consider omalizumab for patients with allergies Step 5 High Dose ICS + LABA AND Consider omalizumab for patients with allergies Step 4 Medium Dose ICS + LABA Medium-dose ICS + LTRA, theophylline or zileuton Step 3 Low Dose ICS + LABA or theophylline or medium-dose ICS Low-dose ICS + LTRA, theophylline or zileuton Step 2 Low Dose ICS Cromolyn, LTRA, nedocromil or theophylline Step 1 SABA prn

  24. Asthma: Dental Management • Schedule late-morning appointments • Use rescue inhaler before procedures • Use pulse oximeter during procedures • Provide stress-free environment • good rapport and openness • may use N2O or oral benzodiazepine Things to do

  25. Asthma: Dental Management • Precipitating factors • Barbiturates and narcotics • Aspirin, NSAIDs • Antihistamines (or use cautiously) • Macrolide & ciprofloxacin antibiotics • If the patient is on theophylline Things to avoid

  26. Asthma: Managing an attack • Warning signs • Frequent cough • Inability to finish sentence in one breath • Bronchodilator ineffective • Tachypnea • Tachycardia (>110) • Diaphoresis • What to do • Use short-acting beta-adrenergic agonist inhaler • Positive-flow oxygenation • If severe: subcutaneous epinephrine, call EMS

  27. Asthma: Oral Complications • Mouth breathing complications • Increased gingivitis and caries secondary to beta agonist inhaler use • Oral candidiasis secondary to steroid inhaler use

  28. Lung Disease • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) • Asthma • Tuberculosis

  29. TB: Definition • Pulmonary and systemic disease • Most common cause: M. tuberculosis • Spread by respiratory droplet

  30. TB: Signs and symptoms • Most patients with 1°infection: no symptoms • Progressive Primary Infection or Re-activation • Cough (scanty, mucoid sputum; later purulent) • Systemic symptoms: malaise, unexplained weight loss, night sweats, fever • Extrapulmonary manifestations: lymphadenopathy, back pain, GI or renal disturbances, heart failure, neurologic deficits

  31. TB: Lab Tests • Positive tuberculin (Mantoux) skin test (does not mean infection is clinically active) • X-ray findings • progressive primary TB: patchy infiltrates, cavitation, hilar lymphadenopathy • healed primary TB: calcified peripheral nodule, calcified lymph node • Sputum smear positive for acid fast organisms • Confirm with culture and/or molecular tests

  32. TB chest xray

  33. TB: Medical Management • Drugs chosen based on health of patient, likelihood of resistant strain • Patients become non-infectious in 3-6 months • Prophylactic drug treatment for certain close contacts (young, HIV infected, diabetic)

  34. TB: Dental Management • New, active TB: treat only urgently and in a hospital isolation room • After 2-3 weeks of treatment: treat normally • History of TB: treat normally if no active disease • Positive TB test: treat normally if no active disease • Clinical signs suggestive of TB: do not treat

  35. TB: Oral Complications • Painful, deep tongue ulcers (infrequent) • Cervical, submandibular lymphadenitis (scrofula)

  36. Lung Disease • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) • Asthma • Tuberculosis

More Related