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1. Respiratory diseases can cause various symptoms including cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, cyanosis, and hemoptysis due to conditions like hypoventilation, hypoxemia, and infections or inflammation in the lungs and respiratory tract. 2. Common respiratory diseases include asthma, COPD, pneumonia, and pulmonary edema. COPD involves chronic bronchitis and emphysema leading to a narrowing of the airways. Asthma is characterized by hyperresponsive airways. 3. Respiratory failure occurs when the lungs can no longer effectively oxygenate the blood or remove carbon dioxide. It can be caused by problems with ventilation, gas exchange, or pulmonary blood flow and circulation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views6 pages

5 Documents Health

1. Respiratory diseases can cause various symptoms including cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, cyanosis, and hemoptysis due to conditions like hypoventilation, hypoxemia, and infections or inflammation in the lungs and respiratory tract. 2. Common respiratory diseases include asthma, COPD, pneumonia, and pulmonary edema. COPD involves chronic bronchitis and emphysema leading to a narrowing of the airways. Asthma is characterized by hyperresponsive airways. 3. Respiratory failure occurs when the lungs can no longer effectively oxygenate the blood or remove carbon dioxide. It can be caused by problems with ventilation, gas exchange, or pulmonary blood flow and circulation.

Uploaded by

Abdiwali Ahmed
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Respiratory Pathophysiology 1-3

Respiratory diseases terminology


Hypo-perfusion: inadequate blood flow to pulmonary capillaries
Hypo-ventilation: inadequate air flow to alveoli
Hemoptysis: blood in sputum
Productive cough: mucus (sputum) producing or secretion expelled out with cough
Non- productive cough: cough is not productive of sputum
Tachypnea: increase in respiratory rate
Dyspnea: difficulty in breathing
Respiratory diseases signs & symptoms :
Cough : is a reflex response to clear mucous, or fluids accumulated in lower respiratory tract
Tachypnea: rapid breathing, increase in respiratory rate
Dyspnea: is shortness of breath
• It indicates hypoventilation
• Can associated with wheezing; whistling sound of air being forced through narrowed airway
Cyanosis: bluish appearance of skin/ mucous membrane due to un- oxygenated blood. It indicates hypoperfusion
Peripheral cyanosis: due to peripheral causes like vasoconstriction
Central cyanosis: inadequate blood oxygenation from lungs

Diseases of upper respiratory tract


Common cold:
◦ Mostly viral etiology

◦ Acute inflammation of mucosa of upper respiratory tract; leads to copious secretion of mucous

Tonsillitis/ Pharyngitis/ Laryngitis


• Acute inflammation of mucosa of respiratory passages
• Pathogens: mostly Viral, but bacteria can be involved
• Cough, pain in throat, difficulty in swallowing, hoarseness of voice
Obstructive Lung Disease
• Diseases that block or affect the airways, so the lumen become narrow and can interfere entry of oxygen into &
removal of carbon dioxide out of lungs
• Lung airway obstruction typically produce Hypoventilation
• Obstruction may be due to excessive secretion, foreign body, or inflammation of airways which reduce the lumen of
an airway
The principal pulmonary obstructive conditions are:
• Asthma
• Emphysema
• Chronic bronchitis
Emphysema and chronic bronchitis are combined as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD )


A disease state characterized by the presence of airflow obstruction due to chronic bronchitis or emphysema; the
airflow obstruction is generally progressive, may be accompanied by airflow hyperactivity, and may be viewed as
partially reversible

Types of COPD
Emphysema
• Permanent and destructive enlargement of airspaces distal to the terminal bronchioles without obvious fibrosis and
with loss of normal architecture
• Always clinically significant airflow limitation
• “pink puffer”
Chronic Bronchitis
• Presence of a cough productive of sputum not attributable to other causes on most days for at least 3 months over
2 consecutive years May be present in the absence of airflow limitation
• “blue bloater”

Risk Factors
• Cigarette Smoking, dominant factor
• Occupational or air pollutants
• Gender: More common in men

Emphysema
• Abnormal enlargement of airways beyond terminal bronchioles, due to destruction of alveolar septa
• With septal damage airways merge to form enlarged sacs
• Alveolar septa have elastic tissues which keeps lung open in expiration
• Loss of alveolar septa means less surface area for gas exchange (hypoventilation) & loss of elastic recoil so small airways collapse
during exhalation
Etiology of emphysema
• Smoking
• Atmospheric pollution
• Genetic factors
• High rate of emphysema in the rare genetic condition of alpha - 1- antitrypsin deficiency

Pathogenesis in emphysema
• Damage of alveolar septa due to decrease quantity of a 1 antitrypsin which acts as an anti-elastase
• Elastases (enzymes produced by neutrophils and macrophages in response to infections and irritants like smoking) which degrade elastic
tissue in walls of alveoli
• Decrease a 1 antitrypsin and increase Elastases by smoking predisposes to destruction of elastic alveolar walls (emphysema)

Morphologic types of Emphysema


Centriacinar :
• Focal destruction limited to the respiratory bronchioles and the central portions of acinus
• Associated with cigarette smoking
• Most severe in the upper lobe

Panacinar:
• Involves the entire alveolus distal to the terminal bronchiole
• Most severe in the lower lung zones

Clinical presentation of COPD


• Dyspnea
• Cough (usually worse in morning, sputum production)
• Wheezing
• Cyanosis
• Right heart failure
• Weight loss, anorexia

Treatment of COPD
• Quit smoking
• Bronchodilators
-Relaxes muscles around airways
• Steroids
- Reduces inflammation
• Antibiotics
Asthma
Bronchial Asthma
Asthma is defined as reversible obstruction of large and small airways due to hyper-responsiveness to various immunologic and non
immunologic stimuli
CLASSIFICATION
A) Allergic or extrinsic asthma
• IgE mediated
B ) Intrinsic or non-allergic asthma
• Temperature changes
• Cold air
• Odor
• Irritants
• Smoke
• Virus
C) Exercise induced asthma

Treatment of asthma
• Bronchodilators
• Steroids

Cystic fibrosis
• Genetic systemic disease that involve exocrine glands - defective secretions of exocrine glands (mucous, sweat)
• Inherit a defective gene on chromosome 7 called CFTR
• Defect in membrane channels produce thick viscous secretions from glands of lungs, pancreas, liver, intestines, salivary glands
• Mucus is thick and sticky , block the airways leading to dyspnoea, and recurrent chest infections and lung damage

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) Pulmonary edema


• Characterized by damage to pulmonary capillaries which increase their permeability, so fluid, proteins and blood enter into the alveoli
causing diffuse alveolar damage, and non- cardiogenic pulmonary edema (collection of fluid in alveoli)

Causes of ARDS
Common causes of ARDS are:
> Aspiration/Acute pancreatitis/Air embolism
> Radiation
> Drug overdose/DIC/Drowning/Diffuse lung disease ( pneumonia)
> Shock/Sepsis/Smoke inhalation
Clinical diagnosis (ARDS)
• Onset is rapid after some injurious event
• Lung become stiff, non- expansible and due to fluid in alveoli, surface area for gas exchange is decreased, resulting hypoventilation
• Patient complaints of Tachypnea, dyspnea, cough, cyanosis
Chronic intrinsic restrictive lung diseases (CIRLD)
• Chronic changes or damage in lung interstitium so lung become stiff with reduce expansibility
• Causes:
• Occupational irritants (also known as Pneumoconiosis)
• Infections
• Idiopathic
• Pathogenesis: deposition of irritants induce inflammatory cell infiltration in lung interstitium, leads to fibroblast proliferation and fibrosis
• Treatment:
• Stop exposure of irritant
Pneumonia
- Reversible acute inflammation of lung parenchyma
Causes:
• Pneumonia can be caused by infectious agents such as bacteria and viruses
• Noninfectious agents such as gastric secretions that are aspirated into the lungs
• Pneumococcus is most common bacteria
• Fever, cough with sputum, chest pain
• X-Ray: consolidation (infiltration of inflammatory cells produce solidification of affected area)
• Treatment: Antibiotics

Pulmonary Tuberculosis
• Chronic infection and inflammation of lung parenchyma due to Mycobacterium Tuberculosis can
lead to caseous necrosis and fibrosis
• Transmits by contaminated sputum (aerosol) and unpasteurized milk
• Chronic productive cough, hemoptysis, and systemic symptoms i.e. weight loss, fever, lymph nodes
enlargement
• Treatment: anti-tuberculous therapy

Respiratory failure
Inability to maintain adequate pulmonary function OR Failure in one or both gas exchange functions, oxygenation and carbon dioxide
elimination
• Respiratory failure is defined as PaO 2 <60 mmHg while breathing air, or a PaCO 2 >40 mmHg
• Two types of respiratory failures
◦ Hypercapnic

◦ Hypoxemic respiratory failure

Respiratory failure (causes)


• Ventilation defects (CNS haemorrhages, brain tumors, neuromuscular defects, drugs)
• Perfusion defects (cardiac failure, pulmonary emboli)
• Gas exchange defects (fibrosis, pneumonia, ARDS emphysema, COPD)
> Lead to hypoxia and hypercapnia
> Often more than one factor operate

Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure (Type II)


HYPOXIC RESPIRATORY FAILURE(TYPE 1)
• When PaCO 2 is more than >40 mmHg
• When PaO 2 is less than <60mmHg with normal or low PaCO
• Hypoxemia is always present
• Most common form of respiratory failure
Causes
Causes
• Hypoventilataion from CNS, Neuromuscular disease, and
>Chronic bronchitis
Chest wall/Pleural diseases
>Emphysema
• Upper airways obstruction
>Pneumonia
>Restrictive lung diseases
>ARDS
Respiratory Failure Symptoms
• CNS:
• Headache
• Visual Disturbances
• Memory Loss
• Pulmonary:
• Cough
• Chest pains
• Sputum production
• Dyspnea

Pulmonary hypertension
• Abnormal elevation in pulmonary artery pressure
Causes:
• left heart failure (most common)
• pulmonary diseases (COPD, interstitial lung disease)
• vascular disease, thromboembolism,
Cor pulmonale indicate right heart failure or ventricular (RV) enlargement secondary to any underlying pulmonary
disease.
-Pulmonary hypertension is the most common cause of cormpulmonale.

Diseases of pleura
Pleuritis: inflammation of pleural membrane resulting from infection, trauma and tumor
Hydrothorax/ pleural effusion: fluid in pleural cavity
Pneumothorax: air in pleural cavity/ pleural space resulting in lung collapse
◦ Pneumothorax results from trauma, fractured ribs, bullet wound, rupture of emphysema bulla

Basmah
Telegram: https://t.me/BasmaAlDrees

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