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Pleural diseases: Case Studies. Dr. JM Nel Department of Pulmonology. Pleural effusions. Case Presentation 1: 68 year old lady Known with hypertension Presents with dyspnae Pleural effusion clinically WHAT SPECIAL INVESTIGATION NEXT ?. Pleural effusions. CXR
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Pleural diseases:Case Studies Dr. JM Nel Department of Pulmonology
Pleural effusions • Case Presentation 1: • 68 year old lady • Known with hypertension • Presents with dyspnae • Pleural effusion clinically WHAT SPECIAL INVESTIGATION NEXT ?
Pleural effusions • CXR • Curved shadow at lung base (meniscus) • Blunting of costophrenic angle
Pleural effusions WHAT NOW ??? • Pleural tap • Transudate • Exudate
Pleural fluid features A. Appearance of fluid B. Biochemical analysis C. Gram stain D. Predominant cells in fluid E. Other Pleural effusions
Pleural effusion: Investigations LIGHT’S CRITERIA • Pleural fluid is an exudate if one or more of criteria is met: • Pleural fluid protein: Serum protein ratio > 0.5 • Pleural fluid LDH: Serum LDH ratio > 0.6 • Pleural fluid LDH > 2/3 upper limit of normal s- LDH
Pleural fluid biochemistry: Protein: 20 Albumin: 10 LDH: 100 Serum biochemistry: Protein: 60 (60-80G/L) Albumin: 18 (35-52G/L) LDH: 200 (100-190U/L) Pleural effusions
Pleural effusions TRANSUDATE
Pleural effusion: Causes • Transudate • Increased hydrostatic pressure • Congestive heart failure • Decreased plasma oncotic pressure • Nephrotic syndrome • Cirrhosis • Movement of transudative ascitic fluid through diaphragm • Cirrhosis
Pleural effusions • Case Presentation 2: • 32 year old man • Presents with fever, pleuritic chest pain and dyspnae • Pleural effusion clinically WHAT SPECIAL INVESTIGATION NEXT ?
Pleural effusions • CXR • Curved shadow at lung base (meniscus) • Blunting of costophrenic angle
Pleural effusions WHAT NOW ??? • Pleural tap • Transudate • Exudate
Pleural effusion: Investigations LIGHT’S CRITERIA • Pleural fluid is an exudate if one or more of criteria is met: • Pleural fluid protein: Serum protein ratio > 0.5 • Pleural fluid LDH: Serum LDH ratio > 0.6 • Pleural fluid LDH > 2/3 upper limit of normal s- LDH
Pleural fluid biochemistry: Protein: 60 Albumin: 20 LDH: 150 Serum biochemistry: Protein: 80 (60-80G/L) Albumin: 30 (35-52G/L) LDH: 180 (100-190U/L) Pleural effusions
Pleural effusions EXUDATE
Pleural effusion: Causes • Exudate • Inflammatory • Infection • TB/ Pneumonia • Pulmonary embolus/ infarction • Connective tissue disease • RA/ SLE • Adjacent to subdiaphragmatic disease • Pancreatitis/ Subphrenic abscess • Malignancies
Pleural fluid biochemistry: Protein: 60 Albumin: 20 LDH: 150 Glucose: 1.8 pH: 7.0 Serum biochemistry: Protein: 80 (60-80G/L) Albumin: 30 (35-52G/L) LDH: 180 (100-190U/L) Pleural effusions
Pleural effusions EMPYEMA
Empyema: Investigations • Aspiration of pus • Confirmation of empyema • 1. Appearance of fluid: pus • 2. Neutrophils • 3. Positive gram stain • 4. Low pH < 7.2 • 5. Low glucose < 3.3
E. Other Low pH Infection/ Empyema RA/ SLE Malignancy TB Ruptured oesophagus Low glucose As low pH High ADA Pleural effusion: Investigations
Pulmonary Embolism:Case Studies Dr. JM Nel Department of Pulmonology
Pulmonary embolism • Case Presentation 1: • 64 year old male • Previous hip surgery 20 days ago • Sudden dyspnae • Pleuritic chest pain • Hypoxic • Clinically DVT
Pulmonary embolism DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS • Pulmonary embolism • Pneumonia • Pneumothorax • Musculoskeletal chest pain
Pulmonary embolism ASK 3 QUESTIONS • Is the presentation consistent with PE ? • Does the patient have risk factors for PE ? • Is there another diagnosis that can explain the patients presentation ?
Pulmonary embolism WHAT NOW ???
Pulmonary embolism • CXR • Exclude differential diagnoses • Heart failure • Pneumonia • Pneumothorax • High index of suspicion if normal CXR • Acute dyspnoeac and hypoxaemic patient
Pulmonary embolism • ECG • Exclude other differential diagnoses • Acute myocardial infarction • Pericarditis • Most common • Sinus tachycardia
Pulmonary embolism • Arterial bloodgas • Low PaO2
D- dimer POSITIVE Other causes for elevation Myocardial infarction Pneumonia Sepsis Pulmonary embolism
Heartsonar NORMAL Massive PE Acute dilatation of the right heart Pulmonary hypertension Thrombus can be seen Alternative diagnoses Left ventricular failure Aortic dissection Pericardial tamponade Pulmonary embolism
Pulmonary embolism • Duplex doppler of legs • DVT in leg
Pulmonary embolism • V/Q scan • PULMONARY EMBOLISM
Pulmonary embolism: Management • General measures • Oxygen for all hyoxaemic patients • Keep arterial oxygen saturation > 90% • Anticoagulation • Clexane 80mg bd sc • Give at least 5 days • Warfarin • Stop Clexane when INR is > 2
HOW LONG DO I TREAT THIS PATIENT WITH WARFARIN ??? 3 Months Duration of Warfarin therapy If underlying prothrombotic risk or previous emboli For life If identifiable and reversible risk factor 3 Months If idiopathic 6 Months Pulmonary embolism: Management
Pulmonary embolism • Case Presentation 2: • 28 year old lady • Oral contraceptives • 10 hour flight • Sudden dyspnae • BP 90/40 • Loud P2/ Increased JVP • Hypoxic
Pulmonary embolism DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS • Massive pulmonary embolism • Myocardial infarction • Pericardial tamponade • Aortic dissection
Pulmonary embolism ASK 3 QUESTIONS • Is the presentation consistent with PE ? • Does the patient have risk factors for PE ? • Is there another diagnosis that can explain the patients presentation ?
Pulmonary embolism • CXR • NORMAL
Pulmonary embolism • ECG • S1 Q3 T3 • RBBB • Arterial bloodgas • Low PaO2 • D- dimer • POSITIVE
Pulmonary embolism • Heartsonar • Right ventricular dilatation • Increased pulmonary pressure
Pulmonary embolism • CT pulmonary angiography MASSIVE PULMONARY EMBOLISM
Pulmonary embolism: Management • General measures • Oxygen for all hypoxaemic patients • Keep arterial oxygen saturation > 90% • Treat hypotension with IVI fluids • Thrombolytic therapy • RV dilatation • Low BP
Pulmonary embolism: Management • Complications of thrombolytic therapy • Intracranial haemorrhage • Haemorrhage at other sites • Anaphylaxis
Pulmonary embolism • Case Presentation 3: • 28 year old lady • Oral contraceptives • 10 hour flight • Sudden dyspnae • BP 130/80 • Loud P2/ Increased JVP • Hypoxic
Pulmonary embolism • CXR • NORMAL
Pulmonary embolism • ECG • S1 Q3 T3 • RBBB • Arterial bloodgas • Low PaO2 • D- dimer • POSITIVE
Pulmonary embolism • Heartsonar • Right ventricular dilatation • Increased pulmonary pressure
Pulmonary embolism • CT pulmonary angiography PULMONARY EMBOLISM
Pulmonary embolism • Patient has normal BP • Patient has RV strain SUBMASSIVE PULMONARY EMBOLISM
Confirmed PE ECHO RV dysfunction NO YES Hemodynamically Stable ? Low risk Non-massive PE NO YES Massive PE Anticoagulate Submassive PE UFH LMWH Thrombolysis if no contra-indication Anticoagulate