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Diagnosis of Dyspnea. Vicken Y. Totten MD MS, FACEP FAAFP Associate Professor Emergency Medicine University Hospitals Case Medical Center. 2010-11. Dyspnea. Dyspnea – from Latin ‘dyspnoea’. Dyspnea (also SOB, air hunger ) subjective symptom of breathlessness .
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Diagnosis of Dyspnea • Vicken Y. Totten MD MS, FACEP FAAFP Associate Professor Emergency Medicine University Hospitals Case Medical Center 2010-11 Dyspnea DyspneaDyspnea
Dyspnea – from Latin ‘dyspnoea’ • Dyspnea (also SOB, air hunger) • subjective symptom of breathlessness. • normal in heavy exertion • pathological if it occurs in unexpected situations. DyspneaDyspnea
Definition • Dyspnea: unpleasant, subjective sensation of abnormal respiration. • Labored breathing - physical presentation of respiratory distress/ dyspnea • Many causes April, 99 2 DyspneaDyspnea
Descriptors of Dyspnea • Dyspnea on Exertion (DoE) • Dyspnea after Eating (PPD) • Nocturnal Dyspnea • Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea • Dyspnea in Pregnancy (hormonal, mechanical) DyspneaDyspnea
What is respiratory distress? • Vague term meaning “not breathing well”. A constellation of signs including: • using accessory muscles of respiration • tachypnea • Gasping • Panting • restlessness • Sometimes, also confusion (hypoxemia) • Somnolence (hypercarbia) DyspneaDyspnea
Respiratory Definitions • Eupnea - normal breathing • Bradypnea - decreased breathing rate • Tachypnea – breathing very fast. Pt not always aware of it. • Apnea – not breathing at all • Hyperpnea - faster and/or deeper breathing • Hyperventilation - rapid breathing with hypocarbia DyspneaDyspnea
Goals of this presentation • Discuss dyspnea & its differential diagnosis • Discuss pathophysiology • Discuss diagnostic tests for dyspnea April, 99 DyspneaDyspnea
My Philosophy of teaching: • Me: make it as simple as you can. No simpler. • You: Interact, ask questions. You will stay awake ;). • No question is dumb, and the answer will be just in front of you. DyspneaDyspnea
Principles of Emergency Medicine • “Air goes in and out.” • “Blood goes round and round.” • “All bleeding stops eventually.” • “All else is details.” • But…the devil is in the details. DyspneaDyspnea
What is NOT Dyspnea? • Not the O2 saturation of Hemoglobin • Not the total amount of O2 attached to Hemoglobin • Not the amount of O2 in solution in the blood (the PaO2) • Not the respiratory rate, (not all tachypnea is dyspnea) • But: a subjective sensation of air hunger. DyspneaDyspnea
Case 1 • 47 y/o man c/o dyspnea. SOB, worse on exertion • Also admits to mild left sided CP, maybe respirophasic. • Onset 5-7 days ago. Getting slightly worse • What else do you want to know? • What’s your current differential? • Admit or Discharge? DyspneaDyspnea
Case 1 – additional history • PMHx: none. No asthma • SHx: Tobacco Smoker. Social drinker. Occasional MJ. Married. No Children. Likes to jog, last 5 mi run yest. Works at a desk. • ROS: needs to see a dentist. No palpitations. No edema. No PND, nor orthopnea. Otherwise negative. • What else do you want to know? DyspneaDyspnea
Case 1 • V/S: T=36.9; P=85; RR=20; BP 128/79 • HEENT: nl • CHEST: WD, nl excursion, lungs hard to hear, but no rales, ronchi, wheezes. • Cor: RRR w/o RMG. • Abd: soft & NT, well muscled. • Extr/MS/Neuro/Skin: all wnl. • How will you approach this? DyspneaDyspnea
Approach to the patient with shortness of breath, or respiratory distress: the emergency approach. DyspneaDyspnea
1: Degree of urgency • Is the patient going to live long enough to give you a history? • If not, intervene. • If yes, try to make a diagnosis. DyspneaDyspnea
2. Assess patient. • Is the patient actively trying to breath? look for mechanical obstruction. Correct it. • Is patient hypoxic? If yes, increase FiO2 • Is the patient not able to breathe adequately? If no, supplement respiratory efforts. DyspneaDyspnea
3. Locate the problem • Causes of air hunger: • mechanical, • metabolic, • cerebral, • Psychological DyspneaDyspnea
4. Correct it • Topic for another lecture • After the (correct) diagnosis is made, treatment is (relatively) simple DyspneaDyspnea
Suspicion • You don’t have to know all the diagnoses, but you do have to evaluate threat to life • Know when & how to intervene. • Understand your tools. • Understand your available interventions. • Know when to get help DyspneaDyspnea
Ask (yourself) questions. • Can the chest wall support breathing? • Are there barriers preventing the air getting through the airway to the blood? • Are there metabolic reasons to increase respiratory rate? • Is enough blood, of good quality, going round and round? if not, assist circulation DyspneaDyspnea
What is the purpose of respiration: • Gas exchange • To assist in balancing blood (body) pH • Lesser extent: temperature regulation / cooling the body • Cellular respiration vs Organism respiration DyspneaDyspnea
Abnormal atmosphere • CO: even small amounts of CO can bind with hemoglobin in place of O2 and prevent O2 binding (competitive inhibition) 300 times more tightly than O2 • Methemoglobinemia occasionally causes dyspnea; usually just tachypnea • Heliox: helium instead of nitrogen as the inert gas. Helium molecules are smaller than nitrogen, slicker, less turbulent flow. DyspneaDyspnea
Other substances • can injure the airways directly • Noxious / toxic gases – work in many different ways and levels. • Allergens – immune system modulated • Particulates – “smothering” • Irritants – cause bronchospasm DyspneaDyspnea
Mechanical Airway Obstruction • External: gagging, strangulation, smothering • Internal: food bolus, other mechanical airway obstructions: peanuts, beads, • Internal growths: tumors, infections, abscesses • Encroachment on the airway • Internal substances: pus, blood, mucus, transudates DyspneaDyspnea
Muscular / Chest Wall system • Diaphragm • Chest wall muscles • Accessory muscles such as supraclaviculars, neck muscles. • Myesthenia, paralysis other muscular causes • Increased muscle tension. DyspneaDyspnea
Air to blood interface: • Mechanical filling of alveoli • Lack of surfactant: alveoli collapse with exhalation • Abnormalities (thickening) of alveolar membranes, • Interstitium (tissues between the alveolus and the capillary endothelium) • Capillary endothelium • Blood: enough of it, flowing well enough DyspneaDyspnea
Causes of dyspnea • Psychogenic • Hypoxic • Metabolic • Pulmonary • Cardiogenic • Hematologic • Any others? DyspneaDyspnea
Tools to evaluate dyspnea • Suspicion / Clinical knowledge. “If you don’t think of it, you will never find it.” • History • PE including • Vital Signs, pulse ox, PEF • Formal Studies April, 99 DyspneaDyspnea
What other tools? • PEF • ABG • Other blood tests • CXR • EKG • CT • UltraSound DyspneaDyspnea
Additional items of history • Cough • Vomiting • Temporal relationship What does that mean? • Circadian variations DyspneaDyspnea
Cough • What good is a cough? • What bad is a cough? • Central & peripheral triggers • Air travels in excess of 150 kilometers per second during a cough • can denude respiratory epithelium • exposed basement membranes stimulate future antigenic response DyspneaDyspnea
Aphorism • Coughing till you vomit is bronchospasm till proven otherwise. Consider cardiac. • Vomiting AND THEN coughing -> think aspiration DyspneaDyspnea
Vital Signs • What are the VS? • Normal vs Stable • How do they change over time? • What does this tell you? DyspneaDyspnea
Vital Signs • The meaning of each value depends on its context. • A slowing respiratory rate in a bad asthmatic may mean he is about to die. • A slowing respiratory rate in an anxious bystander may mean he is getting better. DyspneaDyspnea
Vital Signs: • Respiratory rate: Do it yourself! • Temp. Don’t trust the Triage Temps. • HR, BP. What do they tell you about the RR? DyspneaDyspnea
Pulse Ox • What is a dangerous level? Why? • When is the pulse ox normal and the patient about to die? Why? • When is the pulse ox bad and the patient is fine? Why? DyspneaDyspnea
VS - Combinations: • High RR, HR, BP • Discussion • Low RR, HR, BP • Discussion • High RR, HR, low BP • Discussion DyspneaDyspnea
Focused exam • Accessory muscles • Facial expression, color. • Chest wall, lungs, heart, abd & extr. • (Discussion) DyspneaDyspnea
Physical Exam • Observation • Auscultation – with and without a stethoscope. Where? • Palpation – what & where & why? • Scratch test • The REST of the exam – habitus, edema, muscle wasting, lots more. DyspneaDyspnea
Scratch Test • Place stethoscope on mediastinum, gently scratch the anterior chest wall alternate sides, equidistant from the stethoscope. One side may not transmit sounds as well as the other. • What would the scratch test tell you? April, 99 DyspneaDyspnea
Pathophysiology • chemoreceptors, mechanoreceptors, lung receptors • 3 components that contribute to dyspnea: afferent signals, efferent signals, and central information processing. • brain compares the afferent and efferent signals, and a "mismatch" results in the sensation of dyspnea. DyspneaDyspnea
Afferent neurons • chemoreceptors • carotid bodies, Various brain organs, juxtacapillary (J) receptors, • chest wall and its musclesMuscle spindles sense stretch • Lung parenchymal tissues, DyspneaDyspnea
Efferent signals • motor neurons of respiratory muscles. • Diaphragm, intercostal, abdominal muscles, accessory muscles. DyspneaDyspnea
Central Processing • Objective data • Subjective data • Psychiatric is a diagnosis of exclusion DyspneaDyspnea
Grade 0 1 2 3 4 Degree of dyspnea no dyspnea except with strenuous exercise Only when walking up incline or hurryingl Slow on level, or stops after 15 minutes stops few minutes of walking on the level minimal activity such as getting dressed, too dyspneic to leave the house MRC Breathlessness Scale The Modified Borg Scale April, 99 DyspneaDyspnea
Causes of dyspnea • 4 general categories: • cardiac, • pulmonary, • mixed cardiac or pulmonary, • Non-cardiac, non-pulmonary DyspneaDyspnea
Asthma Pneumonia Pleural effusion Pneumothorax Interstitial Lung disease COPD Psychogenic Pericardial effusion Cardiac ischemia CHF Dysrhythmia Mechanical obstruction Anemia Common specific disease entities DyspneaDyspnea
Blood tests • ABG • Vidas d-Dimer • BNP • Basic Metabolic Panel • Cardiac Enzymes • What else, and why? DyspneaDyspnea
Chest radiography (CXR) • Insufficient by itself • Do your own read: the radiologist may not know what you are looking for and may overlook the most important clue. • Look for pneumothorax, aortic dissection, pneumonia, pleural effusions, sub-segmental atelectasis, pulmonary infiltrates or an elevated hemi-diaphragm April, 99 DyspneaDyspnea
CXR 1 DyspneaDyspnea