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NCLEX RN Preparation Program. Respiratory Disorders Module 5, Part 3 of 3. Emphysema + Chronic Bronchitis = COPD Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. Chronic Airflow Limitation.
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NCLEX RN Preparation Program Respiratory Disorders Module 5, Part 3 of 3
Emphysema + Chronic Bronchitis = COPD Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Chronic Airflow Limitation Photo Source: National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/Copd/Copd_WhatIs.html
Emphysema • Loss of lung elasticity • Hyperinflation • Air trapped in lungs • Alveoli over-stretched bullae
Chronic Bronchitis • Recurrent inflammation Vasodilation, Congestion, Edema, Spasm • Excessive thick mucus blocks air flow • Hypoxemia, CO2 retained
Causes of COPD • Smoking • Alpha1-Antitrypsin Deficiency • Air pollution • Secondary smoke Photo Source: National Cancer Society, http://visualsonline.cancer.gov/details.cfm?imageid=1997 and http://visualsonline.cancer.gov/details.cfm?imageid=2740
Signs of COPD • General • Breathing • Sputum • Sounds • Skin • Finger tips
Assess • LOC • Airway status and breathing • Pulses • RR, depth • BP, Heart Rate • SpO 2 level on room air • Color, temperature & capillary refill
Is this an emergency? • Dyspnea scale 0-10 • Oxygen saturation < 90% • Peak flow < 300 ml
Diagnostic Tests • Arterial Blood Gases • Oxygen Saturation • Chest x-ray • Labs • Pulmonary Function Tests (PFTs)
Goal: Patent Airway • Position • Secretions • Mucolytics • Expectoration • Hydration • Humidifier
Teach Effective Breathing • Diaphragm • Pursed-lips • Controlled cough • Orthopneic position http://emphysemafoundation.org/pulhthex.jsp
Bronchospasm • Bronchodilators • Cholinergic antagonists • Theophyllins
Inflammation Infection • Inhaled steroids • Systemic steroids • Prevent pneumonia • Influenza vaccination yearly • Pneumovax q 5 years
Conserve Energy • Schedule activities • Don’t rush • Supplemental oxygen • Avoid arm raises
Mealtime Strategies • Rest • 4-6 small meals • Bronchodilator ac • Easy chewing • Supplements • Avoid gas-producing foods
Stepped Therapy • Combivent (ipratropium + albuterol) • Add beta2 agonist (Albuterol) • Add theophyllin • Add Prednisone
Control Anxiety = Dyspnea • Develop a plan • Develop support network • Join support group
Complementary/Alternatives • Ask about non-prescribed methods used • Teach relaxation techniques
Pneumonia Photo Source: Centers for Disease Control, Wikimedia Commons, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Pneumonia_x_ray.jpg
Categories • Viral • Fungal • Bacterial • Aspiration Photo Source: USDS, http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/graphics/photos/sep01/k9606-20.htm]
Classification • Causative agent (Streptococcus pneumoniae) • Anatomic location of the infection (lobar pneumonia) • By where it was acquired (community vs. hospital/nosocomial)
Major Organisms • Community-acquired: • Streptococcus pneumoniae (gram +) • Staphylococcus aureus (gram +) • Nosocomial: • Staphylococcus aureus (gram +) • MRSA
Who is at greatest risk? Photo Source: National Camcer Society, http://visualsonline.cancer.gov/details.cfm?imageid=1994 and http://visualsonline.cancer.gov/details.cfm?imageid=2193
Community Prevention Pneumovax Wash hands Don’t smoke Wear mask: dusty, moldy areas Avoid crowds Eat healthy diet Exercise
Nosocomial Prevention • Prevent aspiration - How? • Prevent cross-contamination • Vaccinate inpatients • Education • Mouth care??
Signs & Symptoms • Fever, chills • Dyspnea, RR, shallow breathing • Coughing, crackles, wheezing • Pleuritic pain • Anorexia • Hypoxemia • Sputum: purulent, blood-tinged, rusty
Diagnosis • Sputum C&S • Leukocytosis • ABG’s • Blood C&S • Chest x-ray • Oxygen saturation
Goal: Improve Gas Exchange • Oxygen • Antibiotics • Rest • Incentive spirometry • Raise head of bed • No smoking
Goal: Clear Airway • Enhance cough strength • Bronchodilators • Rest • Mucolytics • Corticosteroids
Goal: Control Pain and Fever • Pain • Fever control • Adequate volume
Pulmonary Tuberculosis Photo Source: Centers for Disease Control (CDC) / Wikimedia Commons, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Mantoux_tuberculin_skin_test.jpg and http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:TB_CXR.jpg
Tuberculosis: What is it? • Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes inflammation in upper lungs • Bacillus colonies form a lesion (tubercle) • When the colonies die, they cause necrosis & scar tissue (consumption of tissue) Photo Source: Centers for Disease Control (CDC) / Wikimedia Commons, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Mycobacterium_tuberculosis_8438_lores.jpg
How do I know I have it? • Cough that will not go away • Feeling tired all the time • Weight loss • Loss of appetite • Fever • Coughing up blood • Night sweats
Diagnosis • Initial Screening – skin test • Positive if >10mm induration • Chest x-ray • Sputum for AFB
Skin Testing • Mantoux • 0.1 ml PPD • 48-72 hours • induration • False-positive • False-negative Photo Source: Centers for Disease Control (CDC) / Wikimedia Commons, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Mantoux_tuberculin_skin_test.jpg
Chest X-ray • To confirm positive PPD • When PPD cannot be done • Cavitation • Caseation
Sputum Testing • First morning specimen • 3 days • Acid-fast Bacilli • Tb C & S Photo Source: Centers for Disease Control (CDC) / Wikimedia Commons, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:TB_Culture.jpg
How is it treated? • Initial Therapy may include: • Isoniazid (INH) • Rifampin • Pyrazinamide (PZA) • Ethambutol or Streptomycin • After two months: • Isoniazid • Rifampin
Isoniazid • Precautions: • Take on empty stomach, avoid antacids • LFTs if liver disease • Warnings: • Increases Dilantin & Tegretol levels
Rifampin • Precautions • Body secretions turn orange • May ruin contact lenses • Warnings • Reduces contraceptive, methadone effect • May interact with anti-retrovirals
Rifapentine • Precautions • Probably discolors body secretions • Warnings • Decreased potency diabetes meds, barbs, antibiotics, contraceptives
Ethambutol • Precautions • Decreased visual acuity • Decreased red-green color discrimination • Warnings • Optic toxicity is dose related • Increased toxicity with renal insufficiency
Pyrazinamide • Precautions • Hepatotoxicity • Nausea/vomiting • Polyarthralgias • Hyper-uricemia • Transient rash • Photo-sensitive dermatitis
Hospitalization • Isolate all patients with active pulmonary TB in negative-pressure rooms with high-volume air replacement and circulation • Continue isolation until combined drug treatment has been administered for 2 weeks, and three consecutive sputum smears have tested negative.
Transplant Recipients • Immune suppressed • Donor organ with latent TB • Reactivate pt’s latent infection • Diagnosis difficult • Decreased PPD reaction
HIV positive • Increased risk: Why? • Interactions with protease inhibitors • Decreased CD4 cell count anergy (impaired or absent ability to react to common antigens administered through skin) • PPD testing early in HIV infection • Use control to rule out anergy • ?? INH prophylaxis
Drug Toxicity • Hx of liver disease • Consuming alcohol daily • Baseline + repeat LFTs • Watch! • Dark urine • Light stools • Fatigue
Drug Resistance • Multi-drug resistant TB (MDRTB) • Second-line drugs • Increased time of treatment
Non-compliance • Failure of treatment • Resistant bacilli • Intermittent dosing? • Arrest the patient?
Patient/Family Teaching • Prevention • Phone contact • Test entire family • Use precautions • Follow-up sputum cultures • Diet