1.Pulmonary Vascular Disease 2.Pleural Disease - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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1.Pulmonary Vascular Disease 2.Pleural Disease

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... Atheroma Right ventricular hypertrophy Extreme cases (congenital heart disease, primary pulmonary hypertension) plexogenic change/necrosis Pulmonary artery ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1.Pulmonary Vascular Disease 2.Pleural Disease


1
1.Pulmonary Vascular Disease2.Pleural Disease
  • Prof. Frank Carey

2
Pulmonary Circulatuion
  • Dual supply
  • Pulmonary arteries
  • Bronchial arteries
  • Low pressure system
  • Pulmonary artery receives entire cardiac output
    (a filter)

3
Low pressure system.
  • Thin walled vessels
  • Low incidence of atherosclerosis
  • At normal pressures

4
Pulmonary Oedema
  • Accumulation of fluid in the lung
  • Interstitium
  • Alveolar spaces
  • Causes a restrictive pattern of disease

5
Pulmonary Oedema (causes)
  • Haemodynamic ( hydrostatic pressure)
  • Due to cellular injury
  • Alveolar lining cells
  • Alveolar endothelium
  • Localised pneumonia
  • Generalised adult respiratory distress syndrome
    (ARDS)

6
ARDS
  • Diffuse alveolar damage syndrome (DADS)
  • Shock lung
  • Causes include sepsis, diffuse infection (virus,
    mycoplasma), severe trauma, oxygen

7
Pathogenesis of ARDS
  • Injury (eg bacterial endotoxin)
  • Infiltration of inflammatory cells
  • Cytokines
  • Oxygen free radicals
  • Injury to cell membranes

8
Pathology of ARDS
  • Fibrinous exudate lining alveolar walls (hyaline
    membranes)
  • Cellular regeneration
  • Inflammation

9
ARDS with hyaline membrane
10
ARDS cellular reaction
11
Outcome of ARDS
  • Death
  • Resolution
  • Fibrosis (chronic restrictive lung disease

12
Neonatal RDS
  • Premature infants
  • Deficient in surfactant (type 2 alveolar lining
    cells
  • Increased effort in expanding lung physical
    damage to cells

13
Embolus
  • A detached intravascular mass carried by the
    blood to a site in the body distant from its
    point of origin
  • Most emboli are thrombi others include gas,
    fat, foreign bodies and tumour clumps

14
Pulmonary Embolus
  • Common
  • Often subclinical
  • An important cause of sudden death and pulmonary
    hypertension
  • 95 of emboli are thromboemboli

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Source of most pulmonary emboli..
  • Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) of lower limbs

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Risk factors for PE are those for DVT.
  • Factors in vessel wall (eg endothelial hypoxia)
  • Abnormal blood flow (venous stasis)
  • Hypercoaguable blood (cancer patients, post-MI
    etc)
  • - Virchows triad

21
Effects of PE
  • Sudden death
  • Severe chest pain/dyspnoea/haemoptysis
  • Pulmonary infarction
  • Pulmonary hypertension

22
Effects of PE depend on
  • Size of embolus
  • Cardiac function
  • Respiratory function

23
Effect of embolus size
  • Large emboli
  • Death
  • Infarction
  • Severe symptoms
  • Small emboli
  • Clinically silent
  • Recurrent pulmonary hypertension

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25
Pulmonary Infarct (ischaemic necrosis)
  • Embolus necessary but not sufficient
  • Bronchial artery supply compromised (eg in
    cardiac failure)

26
Pummonary Embolus
27
Pulmonary infarct tumour embolus
28
Pulmonary Hypertension
  • Primary (rare, young women)
  • Secondary

29
Pulmonary Hypertension (mechanisms)
  • Hypoxia (vascular constriction)
  • Increased flow through pulmonary circulation
    (congenital heart disease)
  • Blockage (PE) or loss (emphysema) of pulmonary
    vascular bed
  • Back pressure from left sided heart failure

30
Morphology of pulmonary hypertension
  • Medial hypertrophy of arteries
  • Intimal thickening (fibrosis)
  • Atheroma
  • Right ventricular hypertrophy
  • Extreme cases (congenital heart disease, primary
    pulmonary hypertension) plexogenic
    change/necrosis

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32
Pulmonary artery intimal fibrosis
33
Plexiform lesion primary pulmonary hypertension
34
Cor Pulmonale
  • Pulmonary hypertension complicating lung disease
  • Right ventricular hypertrophy
  • Right ventricular dilatation
  • Right heart failure (swollen legs, congested
    liver etc)

35
Cardiomegaly due to right ventricular dilatation
36
Right ventricular hypertrophy and dilatation
37
The Pleura
  • A mesothelial surface lining the lungs and
    mediastinum
  • Mesothelial cells designed for fluid absorption
  • Hallmark of disease is the effusion

38
Pleural Effusion
  • Transudate (low protein)
  • cardiac failure
  • hypoproteinaemia
  • Exudate (high protein)
  • pneumonia
  • TB
  • connective tissue disease
  • malignancy (primary or metastatic)

39
Pleural effusion
40
Purulent Effusion
  • Full of acute inflammatory cells
  • Empyema
  • Can become chronic

41
Pneumothorax
  • Air in pleural space
  • Trauma
  • Rupture of bulla

42
Large bullae
43
Pleural Neoplasia
  • Primary
  • benign (rare)
  • malignant mesothelioma
  • Secondary
  • common (adenocarcinomas - lung, GIT, ovary)

44
Mesothelioma
  • Asbestosis related
  • Increasing incidence
  • Mixed epithelial/mesenchymal differentiation
  • Dismal prognosis

45
Mesothelioma
46
Pleural biopsy - mesothelioma
47
Metastases in Pleura
48
Differential diagnosis of malignant effusions..
  • Cytology, biopsy
  • Difficult
  • Immunohistochemistry for lineage specific
    antigens may help
  • Medicolegal importance

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