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Book review: Harrison Ch.254 COPD
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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) airflow limitation that is not fully reversible Emphysema: anatomical destruction and enlargement of the lung alveoli chronic bronchitis: clinically defined condition with chronic cough and phlegm Small airways disease: condition in which small bronchioles are narrowed
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Risk factors Cigarette smoking Major risk factor Decline FEV1
dose-response relationship to the intensity of cigarette smoking pack-years of cigarette smoking is the most highly significant predictor of FEV1 Cigar, pipe smoking (?)
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Airway Responsiveness and COPD
COPD also share this feature of airway hyperresponsiveness increased airway responsiveness is clearly a significant predictor of subsequent decline in pulmonary function
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Respiratory Infections
important causes of exacerbations of COPD development and progression of COPD: unproven Occupational Exposures Ambient Air Pollution Passive, or Second-Hand, Smoking Exposure Exposure of children to maternal smoking:reduced lung growth In utero tobacco smoke exposure :reductions in postnatal pulmonary function passive smoke exposure reduction pulmonary function Development COPD(?) alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency
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Natural history Pulmonary function
Steady increasing pulmonary function with growth during childhood and adolescence Gradual decline with againg Effect of cigarette smoking Intensity , timing, baseline lung function
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Pathophysiology COPD Persistent reduction in forced expiratory flow rates: most typical finding Increased RV RV/TLC ratio Nonuniform distribution of ventilation Ventilation-perfusion mismatching
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Airflow obstruction Chronically reduced FEV1, FEV1/FVC FEV1 responsiveness to inhaled bronchodilator Common improvement up to 15%
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Gas exchange FEV1~50% : PaO2 nearly normal FEV1<25%: elevation of PaCO2 FEV1<25% with chronic hypoxemia: Pulmonary HTN ( cor pulmonale and RHF) Nonuniform ventilation, VQ mismatching Heterogenous disease nature Hypoxemia major cause Effectiveness of elevation inspiratory O2 Incorrected hypoxemia to O2 therapy?
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Pathology Cigarette smoke Large airways : cough,sputum
small airways, alveolar space: physiologic alteration
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Large airways Mucous gland enlargement, Goblet cell hyperplasia Cough, mucus production chronic bronchitis Not relation to airway limitation Bronchial squamous metaplasia Carcinogenesis, disruption of mucociliary clearance Smoothmuscle hypertrophy, bronchial hyperreactivity Neutrophil influx
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Small airways Major site of increased resistance <2mm diameter Goblet cell metaplasia Replacement of surfactant-secreting Clara cells with mucus secreting and mononuclear inflammatory cells Reduction surfactant
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Clinical presentation
History Gradual process Symptoms (C/S, DOE) for months or years Physical findings In early stage: normal More severe disease: prolonged expiratory phase, expiratory wheezing, hyperinfilation Advanced disease: systemic wasting—poor prognostic factor
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Lab findings Pulmonary function Exercise performance, dyspnea, body mass index: better predictor of motality than PF alone ABGA: pH ventilator failure CT: emphysema Serum D1 AT level
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Treatment Stable phase Influence the natural history of COPD
Only 3 intervention Smoking cessation Oxygen therapy in chronically hypoxic Pt Lung volume reduction therapy in selected patients with emphysema Current suggestion: inhaled corticosteroids may alter mortality (not lung fuction)
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Pharmachotherapy Bronchodilator: symptomatic Pt, inhaled route Anticholinergic agents Ipratropium bromide Tiotropium : improved symptoms and reduce exacerbations Beta agonist Addition to inhaled anticholinergic
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Inhaled glucocorticoids
Regular inhaled CS fail to effect to decline of lung fuction, FEV1 oropharyngeal candidiasis, osteoporosis Reduce exacerbation frequency by ~25% (?) Reduce motality by ~25% (?) Trial of ICS in Pt with frequent exacerbation ( 2 or 3/year)
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Oral glucocorticoids Chronic use of oral CS : Not recommendation Theophylline modest improvement in expiratory flow rates and vital capacity, improvement PaO2, PaCO2 Oxygen only pharmachologic Tx to decrease mortality in COPD resting hypoxemia with cor pulmonale N-acetyl cystein mucolytic and antioxidant properties IV d1AT augmentation therapy
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Nonpharmachological therapys
General medical care influenza vaccine annually, polyvalent pneumocaccal vaccine Lung volume reduction surgery mortality benefit and symptomatic benefit in certain patiens with emphysema Lung transplantation COPD is the single leading indicaton for lung transplantation
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Flow diagram for the management of stable COPD
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Treatment Exacerbation of COPD
Increased dyspnea and cough Change in amount and character of sputum May or may not other signs Frequency of exacerbations increases as airflow obstruction increases GOLD III, IV: 1-3 episodes per year
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Streptococcus pneumonia, Haemophilus influenza, Moraxella catarrhalis
Bronchodilator Antibiotics Streptococcus pneumonia, Haemophilus influenza, Moraxella catarrhalis Mycoplasma pneumonia, Chlamydia pneumonia “rotating” antibiotics: not beneficial in COPD VS bronchiectasis Low risk amoxicillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 10 days High risk newer macrolides (azithromycin, 500 mg on day 1, 250 mg on days 2 to 5) fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin, 500 mg/day) 7 to 10 days
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Glucocorticoids Inpateints, CS Reduce the length of stay Hasten recovery Reduce the chance of subsequent exacerbation or relapse for a period of up to 6 months GOLD : 30-40mg of oral prednisolone or its equivalent for days
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Oxygen Mechanical ventilatory support NIPPV with repiratory failure Reduction in motality, need for intubation, complications of therapy, hospital length of stay Contraindication Cardiovascular instability, impaired mental status, inability to cooperate, copius secretions, inability to clear secretins..
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Invasive mechanical ventilation
Life-threatening hypoxemia, severe hypercapnea, acidosis, impaired mental status, repiratory arrest, hemodynamic instabillity Sufficient expiratory time : severe obstruction or auto-PEEP
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