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Pulmonary%20Conditions

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Title: Pulmonary%20Conditions


1
Pulmonary Conditions
  • Medical and Psychosocial Aspects of Disability
  • RCS 6080

2
Description Definitions
  • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is
    characterized by decreased expiratory airflow
  • Reduction in expiratory airflow has 2 causes
  • Decreased expiratory air flow pressure (decrease
    in driving pressure)
  • Increased resistance to expiratory air flow
    (resulting from narrowing of airways)

3
Descriptions/Definitions
  • Emphysema chronic bronchitis are often
    considered together under the term COPD because
    most people with one of these conditions has the
    other. Thus most people with COPD with have both
    airway alveolar disease.
  • COPD affects as many as 30,000,000 Americans
  • COPD is the 5th leading cause of death

4
Etiology, Pathophysiology Clinical Features
  • Several factors are involved in the pathogenesis
    of COPD, but smoking is the most important
  • Other factors include occupational exposure to
    dust, fumes air pollution.
  • Aside from these factors, the development and
    progression of COPD is largely related to genetic
    disposition.

5
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6
Emphysema
  • Emphysema is an enlargement of air spaces caused
    by destruction of alveolar walls. Air spaces
    greater than one cm are bullae. This photo shows
    apical bullous disease with relatively little
    involvement of the rest of the lung.

7
Emphysema
  • Emphysema can be a result of obstruction caused
    by chronic bronchitis. It occurs when there is
    back pressure on the alveoli. This increased
    pressure tends over time to make their walls
    break down, and instead of having lots of tiny
    air sacs functioning well, you end up with large
    cavities consisting of alveoli that have
    coalesced, and which do not adequately perform
    the task of gas transfer.

8
Chronic Bronchitis
  • The lungs essentially comprise lots of tubes and
    tubules (called bronchi and bronchioles) of
    gradually diminishing size, which end in little
    collections of air sacs called alveoli. It is
    across the walls of the alveoli that the gases
    are exchanged, oxygen being taken into the
    bloodstream and carbon dioxide passing into the
    alveoli to be exhaled. Chronic bronchitis is an
    inflammation or irritation of the airways in the
    lungs which is associated with
  • Scarring or fibrosis of the walls of the
    bronchioles making them less pliable
  • Thickening of their lining causing narrowing of
    the airway
  • Production of excessive quantities of thick mucus
    which further plugs the tubules and compromises
    breathing

9
Categories of COPD
  • Type A - Pink Puffer
  • Considered to have predominantly emphysema
  • Type B - Blue Bloater
  • Considered to have predominantly chronic
    bronchitis.

10
Functional Disabilities
  • Earliest manifestations of COPD may be relatively
    mild, but as time goes on, dyspnea becomes the
    most limiting factor
  • Years may pass before the degree of dyspnea is
    severe enough to limit routine ADLs such as
    walking.
  • As time progresses, activities such as dressing,
    bathing, speech and even eating cannot be
    accomplished without severe shortness of breath

11
Functional Disabilities
  • Until the disease is extremely advanced,
    sedentary activities may be accomplished without
    much difficulty.
  • Driving may be possible, but walking - even
    limited distances - may not be feasible,
    particularly is there is an incline or stairs.

12
Functional Disabilities
  • Assessment of a given persons functional
    capabilities may be difficult to determine based
    solely on pulmonary function studies and blood
    gases.
  • Depression, fear, anxiety are potent factors
    that may further exacerbate the persons physical
    limitations.
  • Preparation of sedentary occupation is useful
    even when COPD is mild because the rate of
    progression is variable.

13
Treatment of COPD
  • Many people with COPD might be able to have some
    reversibility through proper medical
    management.
  • Adequate fluid intake and use of expectorants are
    needed to clear the respiratory tract of
    secretions.
  • Oxygen therapy

14
Treatment of COPD
  • Chest physical therapy and pulmonary
    rehabilitation programs are useful to
  • Learn how to expel mucus from respiratory tract
  • Learn breathing exercises and relaxation
    techniques (useful in ADLs)
  • Do exercise reconditioning that can help increase
    endurance improve work capacity

15
Psychological Implications
  • Counseling often helps the person deal with the
    anxiety/stress associated with diseases that can
    cause shortness of breath limitations of
    activity.
  • Learning to deal effectively with problems make
    satisfactory lifestyle can reduce feelings of
    desperation.

16
Vocational implications
  • People may have to change employment goals
  • The American Thoracic Society
  • Mild impairment usually not correlated with
    reduced ability to perform most jobs.
  • Moderate impairment correlates with a decreased
    ability to meet the demands of many jobs
  • Severe impairment pulmonary function is so
    impaired that a person cannot meet the demands of
    most occupations.

17
Asthma
  • Asthma is considered an inflammatory disease of
    the airways
  • Reversible airway obstruction
  • Bronchial hyper-reactivity
  • Frequency, duration, severity of asthma attacks
    varies from person to person.
  • Asthma attacks are characterized by shortness of
    breath wheezing.

18
Asthma
  • Mainly a bronchial disease, asthma is
    characterized by features in the following 3
    images
  • Mural inflammation (eosinophils, mast cells,
    lymphocytes)
  • Wall thickening by edema, hyperemia, fibrosis
  • Smooth muscle thickening (arrow)
  • Mucous plugs
  • Epithelial slough

19
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20
Pathology of Asthma
Normal Lungs
Asthma
Source What You and Your Family Can Do About
Asthma by the Global Initiative For Asthma
Created and funded by NIH/NHLBI
21
Asthma Prevalence by AgeUnited States 19801996
Under 18
Total
18
Source National Health Interview Survey
12-month prevalence
22
Asthma Prevalence by SexUnited States 19821996
Female
Total
Male
Source National Health Interview Survey
12-month prevalence
23
Asthma Prevalence by RaceUnited States
19821996
Black
White
Source National Health Interview Survey
12-month prevalence
24
Asthma Prevalence by RaceAges 5-34, United
States 19801996
Black, 5-34
White, 5-34
Source National Health Interview Survey
12-month prevalence
25
Age-Adjusted Asthma Mortality Rates by Sex,
United States 19791998
Female
Total
Male
Source Underlying Cause of Death dataset by the
National Center for Health Statistics
Age-adjusted to 2000 U.S. population
26
Age-Adjusted Asthma Mortality Rates by Race,
United States 19791998
60
50
Black
40
Other
30
20
Rate per million
White
10
0
Year
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
Source Underlying Cause of Death dataset by the
National Center for Health Statistics
Age-adjusted to 2000 U.S. population
27
Asthma Mortality Rates by RaceAges 5-34, United
States 19791998
Black
White
Other
Source Underlying Cause of Death dataset by the
National Center for Health Statistics
Unreliable (lt 20 deaths) 19791995
28
Costs of AsthmaUnited States, 19801998Projectio
n for the Year 2000
Source Weiss, et al. 1992 Weiss, et al.
2001
29
Risk Factors for Development of Asthma
  • Genetic characteristics
  • Environmental exposures
  • Contributing factors

30
Risk Factors for Development of AsthmaGenetic
Characteristics
  • Atopy
  • The bodys predisposition to develop an antibody
    called immunoglobulin E (IgE) in response to
    exposure to environmental allergens
  • Can be measured in the blood

31
Clearing the AirCategories for Associations of
Various Elements
  • Sufficient evidence of a causal relationship
  • Sufficient evidence of an association
  • Limited or suggested evidence of an association
  • Inadequate or insufficient evidence to determine
    whether an association exists
  • Limited or suggestive evidence of no association

32
Clearing the AirIndoor Air Exposures and Asthma
Development
  • Biological Agents
  • Sufficient evidence of a causal relationship
  • House dust mite
  • Sufficient evidence of an association
  • None found
  • Limited or suggestive evidence of an association
  • Cockroach (in preschool-aged
    children)
  • Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
  • Chemical Agents
  • Sufficient evidence of a causal relationship
  • None found
  • Sufficient evidence of an association
  • Environmental tobacco smoke (in
    preschool-aged children)
  • Limited or suggestive evidence of an association
  • None found

33
Clearing the AirIndoor Air Exposures and Asthma
Exacerbation
  • Biological Agents
  • Sufficient evidence of a causal relationship
  • Cat
  • Cockroach
  • House dust mite
  • Sufficient evidence of an association
  • Dog
  • Fungi/Molds
  • Rhinovirus
  • Limited or Suggestive Evidence of an Association
  • Domestic birds
  • Chlamydia and Mycoplasma
  • pneumoniae
  • RSV
  • Chemical Agents
  • Sufficient evidence of a causal relationship
  • Environmental tobacco smoke (in preschool-aged
    children)
  • Sufficient evidence of an association
  • NO2, NOx (high levels)
  • Limited or suggestive evidence of an association
  • Environmental tobacco smoke (school-aged, older
    children and adults)
  • Formaldehyde
  • Fragrances

34
Medications to Treat Asthma
  • Medications come in a variety of forms.
  • Two major categories of medications are
  • Long-term control
  • Quick relief

35
Medications to Treat AsthmaLong-Term Control
  • Taken daily, over a long period of time
  • Used to reduce inflammation, relax airway
    muscles, and improve symptoms and pulmonary
    function
  • Inhaled corticosteroids
  • Long-acting beta2-agonists
  • Leukotriene modifiers

36
Medications to Treat AsthmaQuick-Relief
  • Used in acute asthma episodes
  • Generally they are short-acting beta2-agonists

37
Medications to Treat AsthmaHow to Use a Spray
Inhaler
Health-care provider should evaluate inhaler
technique at each visit.
Source What You and Your Family Can Do About
Asthma by the Global Initiative For Asthma
Created and funded by NIH/NHLBI
38
Medications to Treat AsthmaInhalers and Spacers
Spacers can help patients who have difficulty
with technique and can reduce potential side
effects.
Inhalers
Spacers
39
Medications to Treat AsthmaNebulizers
  • Uses compressed air machine to deliver medicine
    as a mist
  • Good for small children or for severe asthma
    episodes

40
Managing AsthmaAsthma Management Goals
  • Control symptoms
  • Prevent exacerbation
  • Maintain lung function as close to normal as
    possible
  • Avoid adverse effects from medications
  • Prevent irreversible airway obstruction
  • Prevent asthma mortality

41
Managing AsthmaAsthma Management Plan
  • Develop with a physician
  • Tailor to meet individual needs
  • Educate patients and families on all aspects of
    the plan
  • Recognizing symptoms
  • Medication benefits and side effects
  • Proper use of inhalers and peak expiratory
    flow (PEF) meters

42
Managing AsthmaIndications of a Severe Attack
  • Breathless at rest
  • Hunched forward
  • Talking in words rather than sentences
  • Agitated
  • Peak flow rate is less than 60 of normal

43
Resources
  • National Asthma Education and Prevention Program
  • http//www.nhlbi.nih.gov/about/naepp/index.htm
  • Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America
  • http//www.aafa.org
  • American Lung Association
  • http//www.lungusa.org
  • American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and
    Immunology
  • http//www.aaaai.org

44
Resources
  • Allergy and Asthma Network, Mothers of
    Asthmatics. Inc.
  • http//www.aanma.org/
  • American College of Allergy, Asthma, and
    Immunology
  • http//allergy.mcg.edu
  • American College of Chest Physicians
  • http//www.chestnet.org
  • American Thoracic Society
  • http//www.thoracic.org

45
Cystic Fibrosis
  • CF is a hereditary disease that causes some
    glands to produce abnormal secretions that
    results in tissue and organ damage. Lungs and
    digestive tract appear to be affected the most.
  • Most common inherited disease leading to a
    shortened life among white people in the US
  • 13,300 white infants
  • 115,300 black infants
  • Rare in Asians
  • Found equally in boys and girls

46
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Currently, there is no cure for CF, but there are
    many promising new treatments in use and even
    more on the horizon.
  • The median life expectancy for a person with CF
    is now 32
  • thirty years ago, a CF patient was not expected
    to reach adulthood. Many people even live into
    their fifties and sixties.

47
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Cystic fibrosis results when a person inherits
    two defective copies of a particular gene. This
    gene controls the production of a protein that
    regulates the transport of chloride and sodium
    across cell membranes. Worldwide, about 3 of 100
    white people carry one defective copy of the
    gene. About 3 of 10,000 white people inherit two
    defective copies of the gene thus, they develop
    cystic fibrosis. In these people, chloride and
    sodium transport is disrupted and dehydration and
    increased stickiness of secretions occur.

48
The key to Cystic Fibrosis is clogging. The
affected areas of the body are the airways,
liver, pancreas, intestine, and reproductive
tract.
49
CF - Symptoms
  • The lungs are normal at birth, but breathing
    problems can develop at any time afterward. Thick
    secretions eventually block the small airways,
    which leads to inflammation and thickening of
    their walls. As larger airways fill with
    secretions, areas of the lung collapse and
    contract (a condition called atelectasis) and the
    lymph nodes enlarge. All these changes make
    breathing increasingly difficult and reduce the
    lungs' ability to transfer oxygen to the blood.
    Respiratory tract infections occur because of
    bacterial growth in the bronchial secretions and
    walls of the airways.

50
CF Symptoms (cont)
  • The blockage of pancreatic ducts and intestinal
    glands leads to digestive problems, including
    poor absorption of fats, proteins, and vitamins.
    This, in turn, can lead to nutritional
    deficiencies, and slower than expected growth.
    Some people may have episodes of intestinal
    obstruction when abnormal stool contents block
    the bowel.
  • About 15 to 20 of newborns who have cystic
    fibrosis have meconium ileus, a serious
    obstruction of the small intestine

51
CF - Symptoms
  • About half the children with cystic fibrosis are
    first taken to the doctor because of frequent
    coughing, wheezing, and respiratory tract
    infections. Coughing, the most noticeable
    symptom, is often accompanied by gagging,
    vomiting, and disturbed sleep. As the disease
    progresses, the chest becomes barrel-shaped, and
    insufficient oxygen may make the fingers clubbed
    and the nail beds bluish. Polyps may form in the
    nose. The sinuses may fill with thick secretions,
    leading to chronic or recurrent sinus infections.

52
CF - Symptoms
  • When a child or adult with cystic fibrosis sweats
    excessively in hot weather or because of a fever,
    dehydration may result because of the increased
    loss of salt and water. A parent may notice the
    formation of salt crystals or even a salty taste
    on the child's skin.
  • Adolescents often have slowed growth, delayed
    puberty, and declining physical endurance. As the
    disease progresses, lung infection becomes a
    major problem. Recurrent bronchitis and pneumonia
    gradually destroy the lungs.

53
CF - Complications
  • About 15 of adults with cystic fibrosis develop
    insulin-dependent diabetes because the scarred
    pancreas can no longer produce enough insulin.
    The blockage of bile ducts by thick secretions
    can lead to inflammation of the liver and
    eventually to scarring of the liver (cirrhosis)
    in about 5 of adults with cystic fibrosis

54
CF Complications (cont)
  • People with cystic fibrosis often have impaired
    reproductive function. Almost all men have a low
    sperm count (which makes them sterile) because
    one of the ducts of the testis (the vas deferens)
    has developed abnormally and blocks the passage
    of sperm. In women, cervical secretions are too
    thick, causing decreased fertility. Otherwise,
    sexual function is not affected. Women with
    cystic fibrosis have a higher likelihood of
    complications during pregnancy (such as
    developing a lung infection or diabetes), but
    many women with cystic fibrosis have given birth.
  • Other complications may include arthritis, kidney
    stones, and inflammation of the blood vessels
    (vasculitis).

55
CF - Treatment
  • Advances in antibiotic therapy, nutritional
    support, and chest physiotherapy have markedly
    increased survival in people with CF
  • Heart-lung transplantation has been applied to
    people with CF
  • 5-year survival rates has reached more than 50
    in some centers
  • People with CF require daily chest physiotherapy
    to loosen secretions and prevent stagnation and
    secondary infections
  • Antibiotics are essential in treating infection,
    often given intravenously
  • Nutritional support can also be given
    intravenously in people who are malnourished

56
CF Voc Psych Implications
  • People with CF have excellent educational success
    and are typically productive individuals
  • The counselor will have to work with employers to
    provide the support mechanisms that will allow
    the person to remain in the workplace
  • This may include the provision of time for chest
    physiotherapy or antibiotic treatment during the
    workday
  • The work environment must be reviewed to ensure
    the absence of irritants that might exacerbate
    the disease

57
CF Voc Psych Implications
  • Supplemental oxygen may be necessary to allow the
    person the continue to be productive and
    ambulatory
  • Psychological outcome in people with CF appears
    to depend on factors such as altered physical
    appearance, loneliness, and family strife that
    the person may attribute to his or her illness
  • The counselor can also work with the person's
    family to improve support at home that will allow
    the person to increase social and vocational
    activities

58
References
  • American Thoracic Society
    (www.thoracic.org) American Lung Association
    (www.lungusa.org) American Lung Association of
    Florida (www.lungfla.org) American Association
    of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation
    (www.aacvpr.org) Asthma and Allergy Foundation
    of America (www.aafa.org) Allergy and Asthma
    Network (www.aanma.org) COPD-Support, Inc.
    (www.copd-support.com) Cystic Fibrosis
    Foundation (www.cff.org) Cystic Fibrosis
    Research, Inc. (www.cfri.org) Cystic Fibrosis
    Resources (www.cysticfibrosis.com)
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