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52 Year oldFormer smoker 2 ppdMild dyspnea on exertion
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1. SOB, DOE, COPD, PFT, WHAT?? Underwriting Pulmonary Disorders
2. 52 Year old
Former smoker 2 ppd
Mild dyspnea on exertion
“COPD”
Severent, albuterol
3. Physicians think they do a lot for a patient when they give his disease a name.
Immanuel Kant
4. Asthma ? Reversible obstructive airways disease
? Inflammatory response
5. Bronchiectasis ? A disease of the lungs characterized by dilation of the bronchi, principally the peripheral branches, with obstruction, infection, and destruction of the involved bronchial walls
? Consider:
• Hospitalization
• CT Scan
• PFT’s
6. COPD
Emphysema
Chronic Bronchitis
Bronchiectasis
Asthma clinical assessment
7. Evaluation History
Symptoms
Smoking
Meds
Steroid use
Hospitalizations
Status asthmaticus
Ventilator
8. Pulmonary Function Test Spirometry
Lung volumes
Diffusions capacity
Oxygen saturation
9. Indications Pulmonary Function Test
10. PFT’S
11. Forced Expiratory Volume (FEV)Maneuver
12. Obstructive vs. Restrictive Spirograms
15. Smoking
16. Diffusing capacity Measurement of the single-breath diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) is quick, safe, and useful in the evaluation of both restrictive and obstructive disease. It requires use of a piece of equipment that costs $20,000. In the setting of restrictive disease, the diffusing capacity helps distinguish between intrinsic lung disease, in which DLCO is usually reduced, from other causes of restriction, in which DLCO is usually normal. In the setting of obstructive disease, the DLCO helps distinguish between emphysema and other causes of chronic airway obstruction.
17. Oxygen desaturation during exercise The six-minute walk test (6MWT) is a good index of physical function and therapeutic response in patients with chronic lung disease such as COPD or idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. A fall in Sp02 of more than 4 percent (ending below 93 percent) suggests significant desaturation.
19. Asthma Our Manual
21. Hazards
22. Continued smoking in a patient with airways obstruction often results in an abnormally rapid decline in FEV1 (90 to 150 mL/yr). On the other hand, smoking cessation often results in an increase in FEV1 during the first year, followed by a nearly normal rate of FEV1 decline (30mL/yr).
23. Caution Flat diaphragms by X-ray
Reduced oximetry
Status asthmaticus
Chronic Steroids
Frequent hospitalizations
Poor compliance
Low diffusion capacity
24. All who drink of this remedy will recover…
except those in whom it does not help, who will die.
Galen
27. Case Study # 1 55 Year Old
Former smoker
No dyspnea
CT - Biapical blebs 2° to emphysema
FEV = 1.88
FVC = 3.15
28. 53 Year Old
Smoker
Intermittent cough, wheezing
CXR – Mild hyperinflation, flattened diaphragrams and COPD
Case Study # 2
29. 48 Year Old
SOB, mild on exertion, intermittent
½ PPD smoker
Advair, Spiriva, Albuterol
FVC = 106 % 104%
FEV1 = 78 % 62% Case Study # 3
30. 50 Year old
Smoker, COPD
Mild DOE
Azmacort, Albuterol
Spirometry – mild obstruction, low vital capacity
FEV1 = 86%
FVC = 82%
Case Study # 4
31. The End