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LUNG HEMORRHAGE AND HEMOPTYSIS

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Coughing up of blood. Anywhere from blood-tinged sputum to massive bleeding ... Sputum resembles anchovy sauce in amebic lung abscess. CARDIOVASCULAR DISORDERS (I) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LUNG HEMORRHAGE AND HEMOPTYSIS


1
LUNG HEMORRHAGE AND HEMOPTYSIS
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2
HEMOPTYSISDefinition
  • Coughing up of blood
  • Anywhere from blood-tinged sputum to massive
    bleeding
  • Over 100 reported causes

3
OTHER POSSIBILITIES
  • Blood from nose, throat, or larynx
  • Blood from stomach
  • Dark
  • Acid pH
  • May contain food particles
  • Usually have GI complaints

4
HEMOPTYSISCharacteristics
  • Generally bright-red
  • Alkaline pH
  • Contains alveolar macrophages
  • Frequently mixed with frothy or purulent sputum

5
INITIAL EVALUATION
  • Airway patency
  • Vital signs
  • Adequate oxygenation

6
INITIAL MANEUVERS FOR MASSIVE BLEEDING
  • Trendelenburg position
  • Bleeding side down
  • Volume resuscitation prn
  • Intubation of the mainstem bronchus going to the
    non-bleeding lung (in extreme circumstances)
  • Consider small doses of codeine or morphine to
    blunt the cough reflex, but keep in mind risk of
    aspiration from central depression
  • CXR

7
LABORATORY EVALUATION
  • Platelet count, fibrinogen, thrombin time
    prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time,
    and sometimes bleeding time
  • Urinalysis, BUN, serum creatinine, antiglomerular
    basement antibodies (Goodpastures syndrome),
    antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (Wegeners
    granulomatosis), ANA, rheumatoid factor,
    complement, circulating immune complexes (SLE or
    other vasculitis), and cryoglobulin
    (cryoglobulinemia)

8
SURGICAL VS MEDICALTHERAPY
  • Immediate surgery considered for massive
    hemoptysis
  • Definition of massive varies, from 200-900 cc
    in 4-24 hr
  • No randomized, controlled study
  • One widely cited non-randomized study by Crocco
    et al. reported higher survival rate for surgical
    group (81 vs 22) but study limited by small
    number of medical treatment group and higher
    degree of disease severity

9
INITIATING THE SEARCH FOR A CAUSE
  • A search for the bleeding site is rarely needed
    in patients with acute bronchitis, pneumonia, or
    bronchopulmonary suppuration
  • Before middle age consider mitral stenosis,
    tuberculosis, pneumonia, or bronchiectasis
  • After 40 to 45 years of age consider bronchogenic
    carcinoma and tuberculosis
  • Consider pulmonary embolism in patients with a
    predisposing cause such as oral contraceptives or
    chronic heart failure

10
NEOPLASMS (I)
  • Hemoptysis very common in bronchogenic carcinoma
  • Likeliest possibility in patients between 40 and
    60 years of age
  • Likelihood greatly increased if there is a long
    history of cigarette smoking
  • Usually cough and vague chest pain precede and
    accompany the hemoptysis

11
NEOPLASMS (II)
  • Can be from an ulceration, pneumonic process, or
    an abscess caused by the tumor
  • Benign tumors can also cause hemoptysis, such as
    a bronchial carcinoid
  • Metastatic tumors rarely cause hemoptysis until
    the pre-terminal stage

12
INFECTIONS (I)
  • Not uncommon in the pneumonia that complicates
    bronchogenic carcinoma or in the pneumonia caused
    by staphylococci, influenza virus, or Klebsiella
  • Sputum rusty-looking or bloody in pneumococcal
    lobar pneumonia
  • Sputum mixed with blood and pus in staphylococcal
    pneumonia

13
INFECTIONS (II)
  • Currant jelly-like sputum in Klebsiella pneumonia
  • Brisk bleeding common in lung abscess, blood
    mixed with foul-smelling pus
  • Bloody sputum associated with necrotic lung
    tissue in lung gangrene

14
INFECTIONS (III)
  • Hemoptysis common in bronchiectasis, bleeding
    often brisk and recurrent, but rarely
    life-threatening
  • Most common fungal disorder associated with
    hemoptysis is a fungus ball in a cavity or
    cystic space
  • Aspergillus is the usual fungal agent

15
INFECTIONS (IV)
  • Tuberculous pneumonia or cavity can cause
    persistent hemoptysis
  • Right middle lobe syndrome is frequently
    associated with hemoptysis
  • Sputum resembles anchovy sauce in amebic lung
    abscess

16
CARDIOVASCULAR DISORDERS (I)
  • Pulmonary congestion and alveolar edema
  • Alveolar macrophages often laden with hemosiderin
    (heart failure cells)
  • Sputum often pink and frothy
  • Pulmonary embolism or thrombosis produce
    hemoptysis only when associated with infarction
  • Pulmonary infarction is usually associated with
    pleuritic pain and a small pleural effusion

17
CARDIOVASCULAR DISORDERS (II)
  • Tight mitral stenosis is sometimes manifested by
    brisk, bright-red hemoptysis that is difficult to
    control
  • Massive hemoptysis from mitral stenosis is an
    indication for surgical intervention
  • Other rare cardiovascular causes include
    penetrating aortic aneurysm and AV fistula
    communicating with a small airway

18
TRAUMA
  • Lung puncture
  • Lung contusion
  • Necrosis of tracheobronchial lining by inhaled
    fumes or smoke
  • Laceration or fracture of tracheobronchial tree
    from blunt trauma
  • After pneumonectomy

19
OTHERS (I)
  • Foreign body
  • Blood dyscrasias, such as thrombocytopenic
    purpura, hemophilia, or anticoagulant ingestion
  • Vitamin C deficiency
  • Goodpastures syndrome
  • Vicarious menstruation

20
  • Catamenial Hemoptysis Diagnosis with High
    Resolution Computer Tomography
  • Kun-Eng Lim, Chun-Hua Wang, Yon-Cheong Wong,
    Wen-Ching Hsu
  • Pulmonary endometriosis manifesting as
    catamenial hemoptysis is a very rare condition.
    We describe two additional cases of pulmonary
    endometriosis with hemoptysis during menses and
    which was localized with high resolution lung CT.
    High resolution lung CT shows consolidation or
    ground glass opacity.

21
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22
OTHERS (II)
  • Sarcoidosis
  • Immune complex-induced systemic vasculitis
    (cryoglobulinemia, polyarteritis, Wegeners
    granulomatosis, Churg-Strauss syndromeetc.)
  • Connective tissue diseases
  • Idiopathic
  • Hemosiderosis

23
BRONCHOSCOPY
  • Can often determine site of bleeding in
    hemoptysis
  • Can sometimes determine cause of bleeding
  • Early is better. Does not need to wait for
    bleeding to stop.
  • Fiberoptic bronchoscopy allows optimal
    visualization of the bronchial tree
  • Rigid bronchoscopy better in cases of brisk
    bleeding (ease of instrument passage)

24
BRONCHOSCOPY
  • Low yield in patients younger than 40 who are
    nonsmokers, have been bleeding for less than 1
    week, and have normal chest x-rays
  • Of only limited help in patients with pulmonary
    hemorrhage

25
OTHER DIAGNOSTIC APPROACHES
  • Rarely indicated, but include
  • Bronchography
  • Computed tomography
  • Pulmonary arteriography
  • Red blood cell scanning

26
CONSIDERATIONS FOR SURGERY (I)
  • Sufficient pulmonary reserve?
  • Cause of hemoptysis amenable to surgical
    correction?

27
CONSIDERATIONS FOR SURGERY (II)
  • Diffuse lung disease precludes surgery (e.g.,
    bronchiectasis attributable to cystic fibrosis,
    diffuse scarring from old tuberculosis, or lung
    cancer in a COPD patient with inadequate
    pulmonary function to tolerate resection)
  • Consider bronchial arteriography and possible
    embolization in patients with diffuse lung
    disease and massive hemoptysis who can not
    undergo parenchymal resection

28
PROGNOSIS FOR HEMOPTYSIS
  • Excellent if
  • CXR normal
  • Bronchoscopy normal
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