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Acute presentation of breathlessness. Ammad Mahmood. Medicine at a Glance. Medicine at a Glance; 2 nd edition, pg20. Acute breathlessness. 4 cases of acute breathlessness: Typical presentation Investigations Acute management.
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Acute presentation of breathlessness Ammad Mahmood
Medicine at a Glance. Medicine at a Glance; 2nd edition, pg20
Acute breathlessness • 4 cases of acute breathlessness: • Typical presentation • Investigations • Acute management
A 30 year old woman with a history of asthma is admitted to the medical receiving ward with a 24 hour history of increasing SOB and wheeze…
Acute asthma – Typical features • History of asthma – ask about PEF and previous admissions (ITU?) • Normal between attacks • Exacerbating stimulus – exercise, pollen, cold, drugs, infection, emotion • Severe attack: • Unable to complete sentences • Respiratory rate >25/min • Pulse rate >110 beats/min • Peak expiratory flow <50% of predicted or best
Typical features • Life threatening attack • Peak expiratory flow <33% of predicted or best • Silent chest, cyanosis, feeble respiratory effort • Bradycardia or hypotension • Exhaustion, confusion, or coma • Arterial blood gases: • normal/high PaCO2 >4.6kPa (32mmHg) • PaO2 <8kPa (60mmHg), or SaO2<92% • Low pH <7.35
Investigation • Peak expiratory flow measurement if well enough • CXR to exclude pneumothorax and infection • Bloods – FBC, U+E • Arterial blood gases
Management BTS/SIGN Guideline - http://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/guidelines/asthma-guidelines.aspx
Management BTS/SIGN Guideline - http://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/guidelines/asthma-guidelines.aspx
A 74 year old woman is admitted having collapsed at home. Her daughter tells you she has been treated for ‘bronchitis’ for several years. She has become increasingly drowsy over the last few days and has a productive cough with green sputum.She smokes 20 cigarettes per day. She is centrally cyanosed, tachycardic, pyrexialand restless.
Exacerbation of COPD – Typical features • Increasing cough • Wheeze unrelieved by inhalers • Progressive dyspnoea on background SOB (‘pink puffers’) or… • Respiratory failure without dyspnoea (‘blue bloaters’) • Decreased exercise capacity • Confusion • Smoker • Usually triggered by viral or bacterial infection
Investigations • Peak expiratory flow (PEF) if well enough • Arterial blood gases • CXR – infection, pneumothorax • FBC, U&E, CRP • ECG • Blood cultures (if pyrexial) • Send sputum for culture
Management • Look for a cause – infection, pneumothorax • Plan discharge – smoking cessation, oxygen therapy, vaccinations, steroids
A 21 year old previously fit and well medical student who returned by plane yesterday from Australia presents with a 12 hour history of severe breathlessness, haemoptysis and pleuritic chest pain. On examination he is cyanosed, hyperventilating, tachycardic, hypotension and apyrexial.
Pulmonary Embolism – Typical features • Risk factors – immobility, surgery, OCP, malignancy, previous thromboembolism • Acute dyspnoea • Pleuritic chest pain • Haemoptysis • Syncope • Tachycardia, hypotension
Investigations • CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA) is sensitive and specific in determining if emboli are in pulmonary arteries • If unavailable, a ventilation–perfusion (V/Q) scan • ECG – sinus tachycardia, right axis deviation, Q waves and inverted T waves in V3 • Serum D-dimer: high sensitivity but low specificity • FBC, U+E, baseline clotting • CXR • ABG
Management • SIGN guidelines: • Suspected PE should be managed with heparin and fondaparinux until the diagnosis is deemed unlikely • Moderate-risk PE patients should not receive thrombolytics • Long term they should receive warfarin (or LMWH in cancer patients or patients with poor compliance) for at least 3 months with target INR 2.5 • Compression stockings should be worn following DVT for 2 years
A 72 year old lady is admitted with a 48 hour history of worsening shortness of breath. On examination you find her to be severely unwell, coughing pink frothy sputum, with a marked tachycardia and profuse fine crackles at both lung bases. No murmurs are audible.
Pulmonary Oedema – Typical Features • Usually due to left ventricular failure, other causes – fluid overload, trauma, malaria, drugs, head injury • Distressed, pale, sweaty • Dyspnoea • Orthopnoea • Pink frothy sputum • Tachycardia • Tachypnoea • Raised JVP • Fine basal lung crackles
Precipitants of acute decompensation of heart failure • Inappropriate reduction in management eg drugs, fluid restriction • Uncontrolled hypertension • Arrhythmias • MI • Valvular disease • Systemic illness eg sepsis • High output states eg anaemia, thyrotoxicosis
Investigations • CXR – cardiomegaly, signs of pulmonary oedema (bilateral shadowing, small effusions at costophrenic angles, fluid in the fissures, Kerley B lines, batwing opacities) • Bloods – FBC, U+E, ABG, cardiac enzymes, BNP • ECG – look for MI, arrhythmias • Consider echocardiography
Management • Long term: • ACEI / ARB • Beta-blocker • Aldosterone antagonist • Diuretics • Digoxin • Nitrates
Other Causes of Acute Breathlessness Pneumothorax Respiratory Infection Airway obstruction Anaphylaxis
Any Questions? • Resources: • Medicine at a Glance • OHCM Emergencies Section • Kumar and Clark • emedicine.medscape.com