Respiratory System Symptoms (Internal Medicine)
Respiratory System Symptoms (Internal Medicine)
Breathing Pattern:
- Kussmaul Breathing: Deep, slow inspirations followed by expirations (30-second cycle).
- Cheyne-Stokes Breathing: Breathing cycle with: increasing amplitude – decreasing amplitude – apnea.
- Biot Breathing: Irregular breathing, alternating between slow and fast, shallow and deep breaths, with occasional periods of apnea.
- Expiratory Effort: Prolonged expiration, with straining of neck muscles, shoulders, intercostal spaces, and pursed-lip breathing.
- Inspiratory Effort: Signs of retractions of intercostal muscles and supraclavicular area when there is obstruction of large/small airways.
Chest Examination:
- Movement of Costal Angle: Normally, the costal angle opens around 90 degrees, and this angle widens during deep inspiration.
- Chest Ratio:
- Normal: Anteroposterior diameter / lateral diameter ~ 1/2-1/5.
- Barrel Chest: >~1/1.
- Vocal Fremitus:
- Comparison:
- Female: Vocal fremitus is weaker than male.
- Thin: Vocal fremitus is clearer than obese individuals.
- Children: Due to thin chest walls, vocal fremitus is clear even when speaking in a high voice.
- Clinical Examination:
- Increased Vocal Fremitus: May be found in pulmonary consolidation syndrome.
- Decreased Vocal Fremitus: May be found in pleural effusion, pneumothorax, and pneumatocele.
Auscultation of Lungs:
- Tracheal Breath Sounds: During inhalation, airflow through the nose into the trachea creates rough, loud breath sounds, clearly audible over the trachea.
- Tracheal Breath Sounds entering Bronchi: Clearly audible at the sternal notch, clearer during inhalation.
- Alveolar Breath Sounds: Clearly audible in the 1st and 2nd intercostal spaces in the scapular region.
- Vesicular Breath Sounds: Soft, low-pitched breath sounds, with a longer inhalation phase than expiration, sounding soft and gentle, with expiration often inaudible.
Dyspnea:
- Paroxysmal Nocturnal Dyspnea (PND):
- Characteristics: Increased pulmonary capillary pressure due to fluid redistribution from only when lying down, or reduced cardiac output (left ventricle no longer compensating).
- Cause: Sitting up or walking around for a while reduces dyspnea.
- Orthopnea: Increasing shunt between arterioles and venules in the pulmonary circulation leads to increased right-to-left shunting when standing, resulting in decreased blood oxygenation, causing dyspnea.
- Platypnea:
- Cause: Redistribution of peripheral fluid to the lungs, elevation of the diaphragm in obese individuals, abdominal distention, or weak muscles.
- Severity: Evaluated by the number of pillows the patient can lie on.
- Patient Bends Forward to Breathe: Dyspnea due to tracheal obstruction.
- Dyspnea on Expiration, Wheezing, Coughing, Pursed-Lip Breathing. Lung auscultation reveals wheezing and snoring: Dyspnea due to asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
- Biphasic Dyspnea, Rapid Shallow Breathing. Lung auscultation reveals crackles and rales: Dyspnea due to bronchopneumonia.
- Rapid Shallow Breathing, Auscultation of Cardiac Abnormalities, Hepatomegaly, Jugular Venous Distension: Dyspnea due to cardiac causes.
MRC (Medical Research Council) Classification of Dyspnea Severity in COPD Patients:
- Grade 1: Dyspnea with severe exertion.
- Grade 2: Dyspnea with brisk walking or walking uphill.
- Grade 3: Dyspnea more than others of the same age when walking on a flat surface, or needing to stop to breathe when walking on a flat surface.
- Grade 4: Dyspnea when walking slowly on a flat surface, approximately 100 meters.
- Grade 5: Dyspnea with even light movements (eating, speaking, bathing, dressing…).
Cough:
- Classification:
- Acute: 3 weeks.
- Subacute: 3-8 weeks.
- Chronic: > 8 weeks.
- Cough Center: Located in the medulla oblongata in the region of the fourth ventricle.
- Nerves Controlling Expiration: (1) Vagus Nerve, (2) Intercostal Nerves, (3) Phrenic Nerve, (4) Diaphragmatic Nerve.
Sputum:
- Mucus: Asthma, tuberculosis, COPD, pneumonia.
- Yellow-Green: Hemophilus.
- Dark Green, Brown: Pseudomonas.
- Rusty: Pneumococcal pneumonia.
- Red Currant Jelly: Klebsiella.
- Foul-Smelling: Anaerobic bacterial lung abscess.
- Sputum Sedimentation: 3 layers: upper layer – foam; middle layer – mucopurulent; lower layer – cloudy pus.
- Excessive Sputum:
- 500 – 1000 ml/24 hours, purulent sputum, sometimes foul-smelling due to anaerobic bacteria: Bronchiectasis.
- Morning sputum in small amounts, with color varying from opaque white, yellow, or green, lasting at least 3 months continuously/year or twice in a year: Chronic bronchitis.
Hemoptysis:
- Origin: Blood originates from the larynx downwards.
- Pathophysiology:
- Vessel rupture or ulceration.
- Red blood cell leakage.
- Allergies.
- Blood disorders.
- Severe: > 100 – 600 ml/ 24 hours.
- Emergency Indication: Patient at risk of suffocation => Death.
- 3 Primary Causes to Consider:
- Pulmonary tuberculosis 81%.
- Bronchiectasis 8.4%.
- Lung cancer, bronchial cancer 3.3%.
Wheezing:
- Upper Airways in the Thoracic Cavity: Tracheal stenosis, foreign body aspiration, tumors, thyroid goiter.
- Lower Airway Obstruction: Asthma, COPD, OAP, pulmonary embolism, Cancer, Bronchiectasis, Pulmonary Embolism,…
Cyanosis:
- Central: Disturbance in one of the four stages of gas exchange:
- Disturbance in ventilation.
- Disturbance in diffusion across the membrane.
- Disturbance in oxygen transport in blood.
- Disturbance in cellular oxygen metabolism.
- Peripheral:
- Shock.
- Reduced cardiac output (especially chronic heart failure).
- Vasoconstriction.
- Thromboembolism – Embolism of blood vessels.
Syndromes:
- Lung Abscess Syndrome – Sputum Stage: Coin-shaped sputum, purulent sputum.
- Clinical Signs of Lung Abscess Syndrome: Coughing up large amounts of purulent sputum, Cavity Syndrome.
- Syndrome of 3 Reductions: Pleural effusion.
- Galliard’s Triad: Vocal fremitus absent, percussion resonant, vesicular breath sounds absent: Pneumothorax.
Clinical Examination:
- Jugular Vein Distension (Internal Jugular Vein): 1. Right heart failure. 2. Pericardial effusion. 3. Pericardial adhesion.
- Right Lower Quadrant Pain – Infectious Fever – Hepatomegaly: Fontan’s Triad => Bacterial liver abscess.
- Ascites: One of the major causes is portal hypertension.
- Hepatic Congestion: Heart failure, constrictive pericarditis, Budd-Chiari syndrome (obstruction of the superior hepatic vein system).
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