ite review must know pulm angela pugliese md department of emergency medicine henry ford hospital

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ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

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Page 1: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

ITE ReviewMust Know PulmAngela Pugliese MDDepartment of Emergency MedicineHenry Ford Hospital

Page 2: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Resources

HFH outlines

Page 3: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Rosh Review• First quiz assigned• in tutor mode, complete by end of month

• Quizzes to be given prior to each topic• will be in test mode• attempt completion prior to topic

• Mock ITE assigned beginning of January• replaces In-class exam

Page 4: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Study Plans

• We’re here to help

• <90% of passing ABEM board will meet with Pugliese or Slezak to create personalized study plan

• All others welcomed to meetings, contact via email

Page 5: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Overview• Pneumonia• Legionnare’s/PCP• Tuberculosis• Effusions• Other infections• Hemoptysis• Pneumothorax• Asthma/COPD• Drowning• ARDS

Page 6: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia

Page 7: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia• Most common cause of pneumonia is children??

• Strep pneumo• Viral• Staph• Hemophilus• Mycoplasma

Page 8: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia• Pneumococcal pneumonia

• Most common cause of CAP• Still most common cause of pneumonia in HIV

• Gram positive lancet-shape• Most common cause of lobar pneumonia• Tx –

• Still sensitive to PCN and drug of choice• Mcrolides or doxy• Ceftriaxone (90% sensitivity) tx for inpatient

Page 9: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia

• Hemophilus

• Gram negative pleomorphic rod (encapsulated and unencapsulated)• 2nd most common cause of CAP• Classic patient is elderly and debilitated• Tx- zithromax, augmentin, ceftriaxone

Page 10: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia

• Klebsiella

• Plump encapsulated gram negative bacilli in pairs• THINK ETOH• Current jelly sputum• Upper lobe bulging fissure or abscess• Tx – IV cephalosporin + aminoglycoside

Page 11: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia• Staph

• Gram positive cocci in pairs or clusters• THINK IVDA, SNF, INFLUENZA• Empyema common• Tx – nafcillin or vanc

Page 12: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Atypical Pneumonia

Page 13: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

• Mycoplasma• Most common atypical, ‘walking pneumonia’• Cold agglutinin titers elevated 60%• tx - erythromycin

• Chlamydial• Staccato cough• Tx – 3 week doxy or erythromycin

• Psittacosis• PET BIRD or PET SHOP• Hyperexia, hemoptysis• Tx – 3 week tetracycline

Page 14: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumonia

• The Viruses

• RSV – most common etiology in children <6, winter• Parainfluenza – 2nd most common in kids (causes croup

too)• Varicella-Zoster- bad in pregnancy, IV acyclovir and

admit• Influenza – most common etiology in adults, Nov-April,

tamiflu• CMV – transplant and AIDS, ganciclovir• Hantavirus – RODENT, southwest US, severe

respiratory distress, IV ribavirin

Page 15: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Legionnaire’s Disease

• Gram negative facultative intracellular bacillus• WATER SYSTEMS• Inhalation of contaminated aqueous aerosols• GI SYMPTOMS – watery diarrhea• Hyponatremia• Dx – urinary antigen test• Tx – macrolides, cipro for transplant pts

Page 16: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

PCP

• Unicellular fungi, opportunistic• Most common opportunistic infection in HIV and leading

cause of death• CD4 < 200• CXR – normal, bilateral diffuse infiltrate ‘bat wing’• LDH increased• Tx – Bactrim and pentamidine• Alternative clindamycin and primaquine• Steroids paO2 < 70

Page 17: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Tuberculosis

• Think SNF, HIV, prisons, shelters and immigration

• AIDS defining illness

• Weakly gram positive obligate aerobe = acid fast

• Aerosolized droplet transmission

Page 18: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

TB• Clinical presentation• Inactive pulmonary – 90% asymptomatic, + PPD• Reactivation – most common clinical form• Fever, night sweats, malaise, weight loss, productive cough• 80 % pulmonary involvement, apical lungs

• Active pulmonary foci – insidious• Chronic cough with hemoptysis

• Extrapulmonary - any organ• Disseminated ( miliary)• Meningitis – CSF increased protein• Pleural – effusion is exudative• GU - hematuria

Page 19: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

TB• Diagnostic Studies• TB skin test – detects infection no active disease

• Don’t forget some people are anergic (HIV/AIDS)

• CXR –• Primary : Ghon complex, hilar adenopathy hallmark for kids• Reactivation : upper lobes• Miliary : small nodules scattered throughout both lung fields

• Micro –• Sputum test for AFB : ziehl-neelson or fluorescent, spec 98%• Confirm with culture which is gold standard

Page 20: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

TB• Treatment• ISOLATE – mask on patient, put in negative pressure

• 4 drugs – Isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide and streptomycin or ethambutol

• Side effects –• INH : hepatitis, peripheral neuropathy, intractable sz• Pyridoxine (vitamin B6)

• Rifampin : orange color secretions• Pyrazinamide :hyperuricemia, arthralgias• Ethambutol : optic neuritis• Streptomycin : nephrotoxicity

Page 21: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Effusions

Page 22: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Transudative

• CHF, nephrotic, cirrhosis• CHF most common cause

of effusions overall• Little protein

Exudative• Infection, CA, PE• Lots of protein• Pleural/serum protein >

0.5• Pleural LDH > 200• pH < 7.3 think infection• < 7 think empyema

Page 23: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Other Infections

Page 24: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Aspiration Pneumonia• Severity from specific substance • pH and volume are the big factors

• Risk factors – depressed cough or gag• FB aspiration – incomplete obstruction = cough, wheeze• CXR hyperinflation of affect side• Think new wheeze in kid

• Treatment• Supportive (ie intubate if hypoxic/airway concern)• Bronch to remove FB• Signs of infection or elderly/chronically ill

• Antibiotics, remember cover anaerobes

Page 25: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Lung Abscess

• Polymicrobial• Complication of aspiration• Halitosis, poor dentitia• CXR – cavitation with air fluid level, most

common RUL• Tx – clindamycin 6-8 week course

Page 26: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Empyema

• TB, staph, pseudomonas

• Treatment –• Must drain, ie chest tube required• Consult CT surgery• High dose broad spectrum antibiotics

Page 27: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

SARS• Highly infectious coronavirus, transmitted in resp. droplets

• Presentation• 2-10 day incubation then…• Fever with cough and hypoxia• URI symptoms uncommon

• Thrombocytopenia and lymphocytopenia

• Treatment - supportive

Page 28: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Hemoptysis

Page 29: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Hemoptysis• Massive – single expectoration of > 50 mL• Or 600 mL in 24 hrs

• Etiology : infection• Massive - Bronchiectasis, TB, abscess or neoplasm

• Treatment• Trendelenburg with affected lung down• Consult pulmonary and CT surgery

Page 30: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Pneumothorax• Primary (idiopathic)• Young healthy smoker (skinny male)

• CXR confirms diagnosis (don’t forget US)

• Treatment – • O2 for all patients• Observation vs. CASP vs. Chest Tube

• Tension – needle, NO XRAY

Page 31: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Asthma/COPD

Page 32: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Asthma• Chronic, non progressive with reversible airway obstruction

• Etiology – triggers URI/virus, NSAID, ASA, beta-blocker

• Diagnostic testing – peak flow, ABG• Treatment – beta agonists, anticholinergic agents, steroids• Mag, hydration, heliox, BIPAP, epi• Intubation increases morbidity/mortality

• Pregnant patients• Incidence rises in pregnancy• Treatment same, terb over epi

Page 33: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

COPD

• Most important risk factor smoking

• Progressive – • Can lead to right heart strain and even cor pulmonale

• Treatment – • O2 most important• Don’t forget about hypoxic drive

Page 34: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Drowning• 3rd most common cause of accidental death• Immersion syndrome• Sudden death with submersion in very cold water• Vagally mediated asystole or vfib

• Near drowning• Think metabolic acidosis from hypoxemia• Cerebral edema

• Treatment• Resuscitate• Don’t forget c-spine• rewarm

• Dispo – home if asymptomatic for 6 hours, O2 normal, CXR normal

Page 35: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

ARDS• Mortality 40-70 %, sepsis most common cause• Etiology – GRAM NEG bacteremia, acute neuro crisis, tox• Pathophysiology• Permeability pulm edema, severe hypoxemia unresponsive to O2• Ireversable if inciting event not controlled

• Diagnosis• Decreased PaO2 (PaO2:FiO2 < 200)• High airway resistance• CXR – pulmonary edema with small heart

• Treatment• Fix inciting event• Oxygenate = PEEP

Page 36: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

THE END

Page 37: ITE Review Must Know Pulm Angela Pugliese MD Department of Emergency Medicine Henry Ford Hospital

Announcements• Up Next Renal/GU

• ROSH!! Don’t forget Peer VIII• All outlines via email today, use for quick review