Stridor and sleep apnoea Flashcards

1
Q

What is stridor?

A

A predominantly inspiratory wheeze due to large airways (larynx/trachea/major bronchi) obstruction

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2
Q

What structures can cause stridor when they become smaller?

A

Extrathoracic

Supraglottis/larynx: laryngomalacia, supraglottic mass, glottic lesions, vocal chord paralysis

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3
Q

What can infections can cause stridor in children?

A
Croup - RSV
Epiglottitis
Pseudomembranous croup
Retropharyngeal abscess
Diptheria 
Infections mononucleosis (glandular fever)
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4
Q

What things other than infection can cause stridor in children?

A

Foreign body
Anaphylaxis
Other (burns)

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5
Q

What can cause stridor in adults?

A

Neoplasms - larynx, trachea, major bronchi
Anaphylaxis
Goitre (retrosternal)
Trauma (strangulation, burns, irritant gases)
Other (bilateral vocal chord collapse, wegener’s granulomatosis, cricoarytenoid arthritis (RA)
Most common cause of stridor in adults is a tumour around the carina

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6
Q

What is trachemalacia?

A

Any inflammatory condition that affects the cartilage rings in the trachea

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7
Q

What can cause changes to the voice?

A

Benign upper airway inflammatory polyp’s

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8
Q

How is stridor investigated?

A
Laryngoscopy 
Bronchoscopy 
Flow volume loop
CXR
CT, thyroid scan
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9
Q

How is laryngeal obstruction treated?

A

Underlying cause e.g. foreign body removal, anaphylaxis
Mask bag ventilation with high flow ocygen
Cricothyoidotomy
Tracheostomy - needs surgeon

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10
Q

When is the heimlich manoeuvre used and what is the mechanism?

A

Foreign body inhalation

Rapid upward thrust in epigastrium forces upward movement of diaphragm and forced expiration

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11
Q

How is a malignant airway obstruction treated?

A

Tumour removal: laser, photodynamic therpy, cryotherapy, diathermy, surgical resection
Tumour compression: intraluminal stent
Radiotherapy: external beam, brachytherapy
Chemotherapy
Corticosteroids

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12
Q

What type of reaction is acute anaphylaxis?

A

Type 1 (intermediate) hypersensitivity (IgE)

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13
Q

What are the symptoms of acute anaphylaxis?

A

Flushing, pruritus, uticaria, angioneurotic oedema (lips, tongue, face, larynx, bronchi)
Abdominal pain, vomiting
Hypotension (vasodilation and plasma exudation), circulation collapse (shock)
Stridor, wheeze and resp failure

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14
Q

What can cause anaphylaxis?

A

Foods - nuts, shellfish
Insect venom (bee, wasp)
Drugs (penicillin, asprin, anaesthetics)
Latex

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15
Q

How can anaphylaxis be treated?

A
IM adrenaline - NEVER IV
IV antihistamine 
IV corticosteroid - immunosuppresion 
High flow O2
Nebulised bronchodilator
Endotracheal intubation 
Allergen avoidance 
Densisitation (immunotherapy) 
Self-administered epi
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16
Q

What can happen if adrenaline is given IV not IM?

A

Induce ventricular tachycardia

17
Q

What is the epworth sleepiness scale?

A

The changes of dozing in certain situations

18
Q

What are some situations measured in the epworth sleepiness scale?

A
Sitting and reading 
Watching TV
Sitting inactive in pubilc 
Car passenger for 1hr 
Lying down to rest in the afternoon
Sitting talking
Sitting after lunch without alcohol
In car, stopped for few minutes in traffic
19
Q

What are the different scales on the epworth sleepiness scale?

A
0 = would never dose
1 = slight change of dozing 
2 = moderate chance 
3 = high change
20
Q

What is the normal number on the epworth sleepiness scale?

A

10-24

21
Q

What is snoring?

A

Relaxation of pharyngeal dilator muscles during sleep (esp. REM)
This causes airway narrowing, turbulent airflow and vibration of soft palate and tongue base

22
Q

What happens during the hypotonic state in sleep?

A

All the muscles relax. The throat can flop in the way which is fine for most people but in some people it will cause snoring

23
Q

What is obstructive sleep apnoea?

A

Intermittent upper airway collapse in sleep
Apnoeas or hypopnoeas cause hypoxaemia
This causes recurrent arousals/ sleep fragmentation

24
Q

What are the risk factors for sleep apnoea?

A
Enlarged tonsils, adenoids 
Obesity 
Retrognathia 
Acromegaly, hypothyroidism 
Oropharyngeal deformity 
Neurological: stroke, MC, myesthenia gravis, myotonic dystrophy 
Drugs: benzodiazepines, opiates, alcohol
Post-operative period after anaesthesia
25
Q

What are the cosequences of sleep apnoea?

A
Excessive daytime sleepiness
Personality change 
Cognitive /functional impairment 
Major impact on daytime function 
Independent risk factor for hypertension 
Activated sympathetic system 
Raised CRP 
Impaired endothelial function 
Impaired glucose tolerance
26
Q

What can improve sleep apnoea?

A

CPAP

27
Q

How is sleep apnoea diagnosed?

A

Snoring and EDS (raised Epworth score)
Overnight sleep study: Oximetry, domicillary recording (airflow, oximetry, thoracic/abdominal movement)
Full polysomnography

28
Q

How is obstructive sleep apnoea treated?

A

Remove underlying cause

CPAP (continous positive airway pressure) - this is the most effective therapy