Obstructive Airways Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What are some symptoms of obstructive airway syndromes?

A

Asthma
Chronic bronchitis
Emphysema - over-inflation of alveoli

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2
Q

What is asthma?

A

An airway inflammation of both the large and small airways

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3
Q

What does the bronchial tree consist of?

A

23 levels of branching

First 16/17 branches play no part in gas exchange and therefore are referred to as the conducting zone

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4
Q

What is the conducting zone used for?

A

To transport inhaled air into the remaining 6/7 branches

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5
Q

What is the acinar zone?

A

Includes the bronchioles, alveolar ducts and alveolar sacs and they take part in gas exchange

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6
Q

What are the airways like in COPD?

A

Thick alveolar wall, thin layer of smooth muscle, a thick layer of mucosa and a relatively small lumen diameter

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7
Q

What terms can be used to describe asthma?

A

Early/late onset
Atopic/non-atopic
Extrinsic/intrinsic

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8
Q

What is the asthma triad?

A

Reversible airflow obstruction
Airway inflammation
Airway hyper-responsiveness

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9
Q

What is the dynamic evolution of asthma?

A

Bronchoconstriction = brief symptoms
Chronic airway inflammation = exacerbations
Airway remodelling = fixed airway obstruction

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10
Q

What are the histological hallmarks of airway remodeling in asthma?

A

Thickening of basement membrane
Collagen deposition in the submucosa
Hypertrophy of the smooth muscle

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11
Q

What is the inflammatory cascade in asthma?

A

An inherited or acquired factor is needed to set of eosinophilic inflammation. TH2 cytokines and mediators are then released that cause the smooth muscle to become twitchy and hyper-reactive

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12
Q

What can be used to treat the inherited or aquired part of the inflammatory cascade?

A

To avoid the precipitant such as an allergen that activates the inflammation cascade and triggers asthma in the patient

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13
Q

What can be used to treat eosinophilic inflammation?

A

Anti-inflammatory medications such as:
Corticosteroids
Cromones
Theophyline

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14
Q

What can be used to prevent the mediators or TH2 cytokines from acting?

A

Antileukotrines or antihistamines
Monoclonal antibodies such as:
Anti-IgE
Anti-interleukin-5

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15
Q

What can be used to treat the twitchy smooth muscle hyper-reactivity?

A

Bronchodilators such as:
Beta2-agonists
Muscarinic antagonists

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16
Q

What is the clinical syndrome of asthma?

A
Episodic symptoms and signs 
Diurinal variability 
Non-productive cough 
Triggers 
Associated atopy - increased IgE 
Blood eosinophils above 4% 
Responsive to steroids or beta-agonists 
Family history of asthma 
Wheezing due to turbulent flow
17
Q

What attracts eosinophils to the airways?

A

IL-5

18
Q

What do mast cell release when IgE binds to them?

A

Histamine which causes excess mucus secretions and vasoconstriction

19
Q

What do basophils release when IgE binds to them?

A

Leukotrine D4 which induces bronchoconstriction

20
Q

How is asthma diagnosed?

A
History and examination 
Diurinal variation of peak flow rate
Reduced FEV1/FVC ratio
Reversibility to inhaled salbutamol 
Provocation testing - bronchospasm such as exercise or histamine/methacholine/mannitol
21
Q

What are the components of COPD?

A

Mucociliary dysfunction
Tissue damage
Inflammation

22
Q

What is the disease process in COPD?

A

Exposure to inhaled noxious particles (smoking) which causes inflammation of the lungs that can lead to COPD is the normal protective and repair mechanisms are overwhelmed

23
Q

What can cigarette smoke activate in airways?

A

Macrophages and airway epithelial cells in the resp tract which will release neutrophil chemotactic factors such as IL-8 and leukotrine B4

24
Q

What do neutrophils and macrophages release?

A

Proteases that break down connective tissues in the lung parenchyma and also stimulates mucus secretion. They are usually counteracted by protease inhibitors such as SLPI and tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases

25
Q

What characterizes chornic bronchitis?

A
Chronic neutrophilic inflammation 
Mucus hypersecretion 
Mucociliary dysfunction 
Altered lung biome 
Smooth muscle spasm and hypertrophy
26
Q

What charcterizes emphysema?

A

Alveolar destruction
Impaired gas exchange
Loss of bronchial support
It is irreversible

27
Q

How do you assess COPD?

A

Assess symptoms
Assess degree of airflow limitation using spirometry
Assess risk of exacerbations
Assess comorbidities
Two exacerbations or more within the past year or a FEV1 <50% than predicted are indicators of high risk

28
Q

What is the clinical syndrome of COPD?

A
Progressive fixed airflow obstruction 
Impaired alveolar gas exchange 
Respiraotry failure : Reduced PaO2 and increased PaCO2
Pulmonary hypertension 
Right ventricular hypertrophy/failure
Death
29
Q

What are the non-pharmacological managements of COPD?

A

Smoking cessation
Immunisation against influenza and pneumococcal
Physical activity
Oxygen

30
Q

What are the pharmacological managements of COPD?

A

LAMA or LABA
LABA/LAMA combo
ICS/LABA combo
ICS/LABA/LAMA combo