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Pulmonology — Disease Index + Criteria

ICC-1 finals revision · 25 diseases + 39 criteria · Compiled from StudyFix deck

C/P
Inves
Mng
Special — pathognomonic

Obstructive airway

4 entries
1

Bronchial Asthma

C/P
  • Variable cough, SOB, wheeze, chest tightness
  • Worse at night and on waking
  • Triggered by viral infection, exercise, cold air, allergens, NSAIDs
  • Childhood onset, family history of atopy
  • Examination often normal between attacks; nasal polyps if Samter's
  • Acute severe: silent chest, RR >30, SpO₂ <90%, confusion, hypotension
Inves
  • Spirometry: pre-BD FEV1/FVC <80%, FEV1 <80% predicted
  • Reversibility: FEV1 ↑ ≥200 mL AND ≥12% post-salbutamol 200–400 mcg
  • PEF diurnal variability >10%
  • Bronchial challenge (histamine / methacholine): fall in FEV1 ≥20%
  • ↑ FeNO, ↑ blood / sputum eosinophils
Mng
  • ICS controller (Budesonide, Fluticasone) ± LABA (Formoterol, Salmeterol)
  • LAMA add-on (Tiotropium bromide); LTRA Montelukast 10 mg/d
  • Reliever: as-needed ICS-Formoterol (GINA 2025 MART)
  • Exacerbation: OCS Prednisolone 40 mg/d × 5–7 d; SABA + SAMA + ICS nebs; IV MgSO₄ 2 g over 20 min if FEV1 <25–30%
  • Severe: Omalizumab (anti-IgE), Reslizumab (anti-IL5), Dupilumab (anti-IL4); Azithromycin; bronchial thermoplasty
  • Discharge: SpO₂ >94% RA, PFT >60–80% predicted, step-up + review 1–2 wk
Special
  • Variability defines asthma (vs persistent COPD)
  • Samter's triad: asthma + rhinitis / nasal polyps + NSAID sensitivity
  • Late-onset = neutrophilic, ICS-unresponsive → LTRA / macrolide
  • Exercise-induced: ICS-Formoterol prophylaxis before exercise
  • Occupational: PEF ↓ on workdays, ↑ on holidays → change job
  • ACOS: persistent limitation, ICS mandatory ± LABA/LAMA
  • LABA monotherapy contraindicated
2

COPD (Emphysema + Chronic Bronchitis)

C/P
  • Onset middle age (40s), persistent + progressive dyspnoea
  • Cough + sputum in ~30%, "winter colds"
  • Hyperresonance, flat diaphragm, prolonged expiration, wheezes
  • Clubbing absent → if present, think bronchiectasis or cancer
  • Pink Puffer: cachectic, barrel chest, pursed-lip, pink, no oedema (emphysema)
  • Blue Bloater: obese, cyanosis, cor pulmonale + oedema (chronic bronchitis)
  • Acute exacerbation: worsening over <14 d, usually infection
  • AATD: early-onset COPD, panacinar emphysema
Inves
  • Spirometry mandatory: post-BD FEV1/FVC <70% (not fully reversible)
  • GOLD 1 ≥80% / GOLD 2 50–80% / GOLD 3 30–50% / GOLD 4 <30%
  • Plethysmography: ↑ RV, ↑ TLC, ↑ RV/TLC; ↓ DLCO in emphysema
  • CXR: hypertranslucency, flat diaphragm, ribbon heart, rapid tapering vessels
  • CT: dilated air spaces / bullae
  • ABG: ↓ PaO₂ ± ↑ PaCO₂ (Type II)
  • Secondary polycythaemia; eosinophils >300 predicts ICS benefit
  • WHO: screen all COPD patients once for AATD
Mng
  • Smoking cessation, vaccinations (influenza, pneumococcal, COVID-19, pertussis), rehabilitation
  • Bronchodilators are cornerstone — SABA Salbutamol, LABA Formoterol/Salmeterol, Ultra-LABA Indacaterol
  • SAMA Ipratropium, LAMA Tiotropium (LAMA > LABA for exacerbation prevention)
  • Group A: single BD; B/E: LABA + LAMA; add ICS if eosinophils ≥300
  • ICS: Beclomethasone, Budesonide, Fluticasone — limited as monotherapy
  • Roflumilast (PDE4i) if FEV1 <50% and frequent exacerbations
  • Azithromycin 250 mg/d × 1 yr for frequent exacerbators
  • Dupilumab (anti-IL4/IL13) SC q2wk
  • Methylxanthines (Aminophylline / Theophylline): avoid — narrow therapeutic index
  • Ensifentrine (dual PDE3/4 inhibitor, nebulized q12h)
  • Exacerbation: Prednisolone 40 mg/d × 5–7 d
  • Surgical: lung volume reduction, transplantation, bullectomy
  • N-acetyl cysteine; Alpha-1 antitrypsin supplementation in AATD
Special
  • Cor pulmonale = right HF from chronic lung disease via hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
  • AATD: elastase uninhibited → early panacinar emphysema
  • GETomics paradigm: Genetics + Environment + Time
  • Post-BD FEV1/FVC <70% differentiates COPD from asthma
  • Arrhythmia + COPD → use LAMA/SAMA (avoid SABA, Aminophylline)
  • Complications: Type II resp failure, cor pulmonale, pneumothorax (bulla rupture), bronchiectasis
3

Bronchiectasis

C/P
  • Irreversible abnormal dilatation of medium-sized airways
  • Persistent productive cough, voluminous purulent sputum (bronchorrhoea)
  • Recurrent LRTIs; sometimes massive haemoptysis
  • Clubbing; coarse early/mid-inspiratory + expiratory crackles that shift with cough
  • Six aetiology categories: primary infective insult (bronchitis, pneumonia, TB; adenovirus, measles); abnormal immune (HIV, ABPA, SLE, RA); developmental (bronchomalacia); abnormal cilia (immotile cilia); viscid mucus (CF); bronchial obstruction
Inves
  • CXR not sensitive: ring shadows, tramline shadows
  • HRCT = gold standard: tubular bronchiectasis, signet ring sign (airway > artery)
  • Spirometry: obstructive pattern
  • Sputum culture; TB sputum testing
  • Reid classification: cylindrical, varicose, cystic
  • Microbiology: H. influenzae (most common), Strep pneumoniae, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Mng
  • Six lines: antibiotics, mucolytics (N-acetyl cysteine), ICS (only if COPD/asthma overlap), bronchodilators, surgery (lobectomy in localized only), chest physiotherapy
  • Pseudomonas 1st isolation: Ciprofloxacin 750 mg q12h × 2 wk → inhaled Colistin ≥3 mo
  • Non-Pseudomonas + ≥3 exacerbations/yr: culture-based abx + Azithromycin ≥3 mo
  • Inhaled antibiotics via nebulizer: Colistin, Garamycin
Special
  • Cole's vicious cycle: insult → stagnation → colonization → inflammation → wall damage → dilatation
  • 3 pathogenesis theories: atelectasis (negative pressure), pressure of secretions, traction fibrosis
  • Pseudomonas isolation = aggressive eradication needed
  • Surgery never in generalized disease
4

Lung Abscess

C/P
  • Circumscribed pus / necrotic debris in lung parenchyma with cavity + air-fluid level (broncho-pulmonary fistula)
  • Early pneumonia-like: fever, sweating, cough, dyspnoea
  • Sputum: dry then productive, large volume (bronchorrhoea), foul-smelling = anaerobic
  • Chronic: weight loss, clubbing
  • Local: dullness, ↓ breath sounds ± bronchial breathing if large + superficial + bronchus-connected, crackles
  • Aspiration predisposers: dental/peridental infection, stroke, alcohol, frequent vomiting (bulimia, seizures)
Inves
  • CXR: cavity with air-fluid level
  • Bronchoscopy: visualize abscess, exclude foreign body / endobronchial mass, BAL, transbronchial biopsy
  • Sputum + blood culture; CBC (anaemia of chronic disease, leukocytosis)
  • 90% polymicrobial; anaerobes (Bacteroides fragilis) most common
  • Inhalation aerobes → necrotizing pneumonia: S. aureus / MRSA, Strep milleri, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas
Mng
  • Two branches: medical (antibiotics) + drainage (closed intercostal tube / open surgery)
  • Clindamycin (anti-anaerobe) + Meropenem (adjunct) × 4–6 wk
  • Percutaneous drainage (sonar/CT-guided, LA) if antibiotics fail; complications: bleeding, empyema, broncho-pulmonary fistula
  • Lobectomy if size >6 cm, symptoms >12 wk, failed medical Rx, suspect malignancy
Special
  • DDx cavitary lesion: excavating bronchial carcinoma, localized pleural empyema, cavitary pneumoconiosis, hydatid cyst
  • Acute (<6 wk) = poorly defined wall; Chronic (>6 wk) = pyogenic membrane (fibrosis)
  • Aspiration → superior segment of right lower lobe (dependent)

Interstitial / Occupational

5 entries
5

Interstitial Lung Disease (general)

C/P
  • >150 disorders with inflammation + fibrosis of interstitium
  • Dyspnoea hallmark; cough common but non-specific
  • Acute (days–wk): SLE pneumonitis, acute HP, drugs, acute eosinophilic pneumonia, diffuse alveolar haemorrhage
  • Chronic (mo–yr): CTD-ILD, chronic HP, occupational, chronic eosinophilic pneumonia, IPF
  • Bilateral end-inspiratory Velcro rales (basal → apical progression)
  • Mid-inspiratory squeaks suggest HP (airway-centred)
  • Cyanosis + clubbing; signs of CTD (Raynaud, proximal weakness, joint pain)
  • Smoking-related: IPF, PLCH; smoking-protected: sarcoidosis, HP
Inves
  • HRCT = gold standard (CXR can be falsely negative)
  • IPF: bilateral basal honeycombing + traction bronchiectasis, BAL neutrophil-predominant
  • Sarcoidosis HRCT: septal beading, nodules abutting bronchovascular bundles, hilar lymphadenopathy
  • HP HRCT: headcheese sign
  • LAM: diffuse bilateral thin-walled cysts, normal intervening lung
  • PLCH: bizarre-shaped cysts, abnormal intervening lung
  • PAP: crazy paving; milky BAL with foamy macrophages
  • BAL CD4/CD8: HP <1, Sarcoidosis ≥2.5; Eosinophilic pneumonia: BAL eos >50%; PLCH: Langerhans cells >3%, CD1a + S100 positive
  • Surgical lung biopsy preferred over transbronchial (except sarcoidosis, up to 90% sensitive)
  • PFTs: restrictive (↓ TLC, RV, VC), ↑ FEV1/FVC, ↓ DLCO; 6-min walk test if normal rest
  • Anti-Scl-70 (scleroderma); ssDNA + complement (SLE)
  • Drug causes: Amiodarone (fibrosis), Nitrofurantoin (alveolar haemorrhage), Methotrexate
Mng
  • Remove offending agent (smoking IPF/PLCH, antigen HP, drug DI-ILD)
  • O₂ if hypoxic, pulmonary rehab, pneumococcal + influenza vaccines
  • Immunosuppressants: Cyclophosphamide, Azathioprine, Methotrexate
  • Pirfenidone → IPF; Sirolimus → LAM (avoid pregnancy); Cladribine → PLCH
  • GM-CSF + whole lung lavage → PAP
  • Plasmapheresis → diffuse alveolar haemorrhage
  • Lung transplantation = definitive for end-stage
Special
  • Restrictive pattern with preserved/↑ FEV1/FVC ratio
  • IPF >50 yr, worst prognosis among IIPs
  • Exposure clues: bird breeders/farmers (HP); pipefitters/shipyard (asbestosis); miners/ceramic (silicosis); coal miners (CWP)
  • BAL neutrophilia → worse prognosis
6

Sarcoidosis

C/P
  • Idiopathic systemic granulomatous disease, non-caseating granulomas
  • Young adults 20–40, female > male, 10–12× more in blacks
  • Pulmonary involvement >90% — dyspnoea, cough, chest pain, pulmonary HTN
  • Löfgren's: fever + arthralgia + erythema nodosum + bilateral hilar adenopathy — excellent prognosis, NSAIDs + bed rest
  • Heerfordt-Waldenström: anterior uveitis + fever + parotid enlargement + facial palsy
  • Skin (25%): erythema nodosum (lower legs/ankles), lupus pernio (face)
  • Eyes (20–25%): uveitis, lacrimal gland enlargement, sicca, optic neuropathy
  • Cardiac (10–20%): heart block, arrhythmias, sudden death
  • CNS (10–25%): cranial neuropathy, aseptic meningitis
  • Renal (5–10%): hypercalcaemia, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, stones
  • Hematologic >50%: peripheral lymphopenia, hypergammaglobulinaemia
Inves
  • CXR Scadding staging (NOT progressive): I bilateral hilar adenopathy; II hilar + infiltrates; III infiltrates only; IV honeycombing/fibrosis
  • HRCT: septal beading, perilymphatic nodules along bronchovascular bundles
  • D'Espine sign on chest (resonance of hilar lymph nodes)
  • ↑ ESR, mild normochromic anaemia, hypercalcaemia 10–20% (macrophage 1α-hydroxylase → active vit D), hypercalciuria 30–50%
  • Serum ACE elevated >75% — screening + monitor disease activity, non-specific
  • PFTs: restrictive, ↓ gas transfer
  • BAL: lymphocytosis, CD4/CD8 ≥2.5
  • Transbronchial biopsy positive up to 90% (tissue is the issue)
  • Definitive: non-caseating granulomas on biopsy
Mng
  • Prednisolone 0.5 mg/kg × 4–6 wk → taper to maintenance ≥12 mo
  • Steroid-sparing: Methotrexate, Azathioprine, Hydroxychloroquine
Special
  • Lupus pernio = pathognomonic facial lesion
  • Hypercalcaemia mechanism = macrophage-produced active vit D
  • High CD4/CD8 BAL distinguishes from HP (low CD4/CD8)
  • Acute syndromes (Löfgren, Heerfordt) carry very good prognosis
7

Asbestos-related pleural disease + Asbestosis

C/P
  • Exposure: mining/milling, insulation, brake linings, ship construction (WWII), pipefitting
  • Long latency: 20–30 yr (rarely <10 yr if massive exposure)
  • Pleural disease: pleural plaques (most common, asymptomatic, diaphragm-level, calcified), diffuse pleural thickening, pleural effusion, rounded atelectasis, mesothelioma
  • Asbestosis (lower-lobe fibrosis): dyspnoea, dry cough, clubbing, cor pulmonale, bilateral inspiratory rales
Inves
  • CXR asbestosis: bilateral diffuse reticulonodular opacities, honeycombing
  • PFTs: restrictive, ↓ DLCO, normal FEV1/FVC
  • ABG: hypoxaemia + ↑ A-a gradient
  • Pleural plaques: localized thickening + calcifications at diaphragm
  • Rounded atelectasis: round opacity with irregular outlines, comet tail sign → biopsy / PET-CT to exclude cancer
  • Biopsy: barbell-shaped golden-brown fusiform rods = ferruginous bodies; Prussian blue stain on sputum
Mng
  • No specific Rx, symptomatic
  • Smoking cessation critical (lung cancer risk 75× higher with smoking)
  • Avoid further exposure
Special
  • Ferruginous bodies = pathognomonic asbestos fibres coated with iron-protein
  • Asbestos + smoking = synergistic bronchogenic carcinoma risk
  • Rounded atelectasis: pleural scarring fuses + traps lung — comet tail sign
  • Pleural plaques most common manifestation
8

Silicosis

C/P
  • Silica dust (Earth's crust major component)
  • Exposures: mining, quarrying, drilling, tunneling, sandblasting, cement/concrete, glass/pottery
  • Chronic: >15 yr latency, dyspnoea, dry cough
  • Acute: massive inhalation → onset within months → rapid hypoxaemic ventilatory failure → death
Inves
  • Chronic CXR: nodules 1–10 mm upper lobes, coalesce >10 mm = PMF, eggshell calcification of hilar lymph nodes (characteristic), lower lobe scarring
  • Acute CXR: diffuse alveolar filling, lower-zone predominant
  • Diagnosis: exposure history + lung biopsy (silicotic nodule = concentrically arranged hyalinized collagen fibres)
Mng
  • No effective therapy → symptomatic
  • Smoking cessation, supplemental O₂
  • Influenza + pneumococcal vaccines
Special
  • Eggshell calcification of hilar nodes = pathognomonic
  • Silica impairs macrophages → TB risk ↑ → annual tuberculin skin test mandatory
  • Chronic = upper lobes; Acute = lower zones (rapid, fatal)
9

Coal Worker's Pneumoconiosis (CWP) + Caplan syndrome

C/P
  • Coal mine dust → "Coal miner's lung" / "Black lung disease"
  • Progressive dyspnoea
  • Clubbing + crackles characteristically ABSENT → if present, look for another cause
  • ↑ COPD risk (focal emphysema)
  • Caplan syndrome: nodular opacities + Rheumatoid Arthritis in coal/silica-exposed workers
Inves
  • Simple CWP: small rounded opacities <1 cm in upper zones
  • Complicated CWP / PMF: large opacities >1 cm, upper-lobe; massive lesions = "angel wings"
  • Biopsy: coal macule → coal nodule (palpable, fibrotic) → PMF
  • Focal emphysema adjacent to dust macule
  • Caplan: circulating Rheumatoid Factor in miners with PMF
Mng
  • No cure, symptomatic
  • Avoid further dust exposure
  • Caplan: treat as PMF + RA rheumatologic protocol
Special
  • Clubbing + crackles ABSENT (vs asbestosis where present) — exam pearl
  • Caplan = CWP/silica + RA = necrobiotic lung nodules
  • Coal macule (microscopic) → coal nodule (palpable) → PMF (radiological)
  • "Angel wings" = massive upper-lobe PMF

Infection

6 entries
10

Community-Acquired Pneumonia (CAP)

C/P
  • Acute infection + signs of consolidation
  • Respiratory: dyspnoea, cough, fever, sputum, chills, pleuritic chest pain
  • Haemodynamic: hypotension, shock, tachycardia
  • Extrathoracic: otitis/pharyngitis, skin alteration, haemolytic anaemia (Mycoplasma), headache, GIT symptoms, confusion, hyponatraemia
  • Elderly: vague — GIT upset, confusion, absent fever, no chest symptoms
  • Chest: cyanosis, accessory muscles, dullness, ↓ breath sounds, bronchial breathing, crackles
  • Transmission: inhalation, aspiration (anaerobes), colonization (smoking), blood spread
Inves
  • CXR consolidation; lung US, CT chest if needed; CBC, ABG, BUN
  • IDSA/ATS severe criteria (1 major or 3 minor)
  • Normal PaO₂ ≈ 100 − (1/3 age); FiO₂ on 2 L = 0.29
  • Hospitalized + severe OR resistant-bacteria risk: sputum Gram + culture, blood culture
  • Microbiology: S. pneumoniae 35% (most common), atypicals 22%, H. influenzae 12%, others 31%
Mng
  • CURB-65: 0–1 home, 2 ward, 3–5 ICU
  • Outpatient 0–1 no comorbidity: Amoxicillin / doxycycline / macrolide
  • Outpatient + comorbidity: Amoxicillin/clavulanate or Ceftriaxone + macrolide/doxycycline, OR fluoroquinolone
  • Inpatient non-severe: β-lactam + macrolide OR fluoroquinolone monotherapy
  • Inpatient severe: β-lactam + macrolide OR β-lactam + fluoroquinolone (no monotherapy)
  • MRSA: Vancomycin (red-person syndrome) / Linezolid
  • Pseudomonal cover: MAFIA PCC mnemonic
  • Aspiration: Clindamycin only if abscess or empyema suspected
  • Antiviral: molecular flu test → Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) / Favipiravir
  • Corticosteroid in severe CAP + (shock OR P:F <300 OR rapid progression ≤3 d)
  • Duration: 3–4 d non-severe; ≥5 d severe; 7+ d Egypt
  • Vaccination: influenza annual; pneumococcal ≥65 or high-risk
Special
  • MAFIA PCC anti-Pseudomonal (Moxifloxacin EXCLUDED, Aminoglycosides nephrotoxic)
  • Legionella: atypical, aerosolized water, hemoptysis 1/3, confusion + diarrhoea + bradycardia + hyponatraemia
  • Klebsiella (Friedlander's): rare, DM + alcoholics, RUL, bulging fissure sign
  • Aspiration → superior segment RLL, foul sputum, anaerobes
  • Complications: para-pneumonic effusion (aseptic), empyema, lobar collapse, Type 1 resp failure, lung abscess, AF, septicaemia, pericarditis/myocarditis, ARDS
  • Pathology: lobar (4-stage) vs bronchopneumonia vs atypical (no consolidation)
11

Pulmonary Tuberculosis

C/P
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis; acid-fast bacillus
  • 4 diagnostic pillars: Clinical, Radiological, Bacteriological, Pathological
  • Chronic cough, sputum, haemoptysis (cavitary), fever, night sweats, weight loss
  • HIV: atypical, lower zone infiltrates, false-negative sputum
  • Latent TB: persistent immune response without active disease
Inves
  • "TB can mimic any chest disease"
  • CXR/CT: apical infiltrates/cavitation, mediastinal LN, pleural effusion, miliary shadows; Ghon's focus, RUL consolidation
  • Sputum (3 consecutive morning): Ziehl-Neelsen (cheap, threshold-limited), fluorescent (faster, more sensitive)
  • Culture: Lowenstein-Jensen (egg, most common), Middlebrook media; 6–8 wk
  • BACTEC 460 (¹⁴C-palmitic acid, 10–12 d, GI ≥10 = positive); MGIT
  • PCR drug resistance: katG (high-level INH), inhA promoter (low-level INH), rpoB (Rifampicin)
  • ADA: pleural >70 IU/L suggestive, <40 excludes; CSF >8; ascitic >36
  • IGRA (QFT-G, ELISPOT): ESAT-6 + CFP-10 (NOT in BCG); one visit, 24h, processed within 12h
  • TST (Koch's phenomenon, Type IV): 5 TU PPD intradermal, read 48–72 h, measure induration
Mng
  • First-line: HRZES — Streptomycin only injectable, rest oral
  • Mechanisms: H mycolic acid, E arabinogalactan, Z plasma membrane, R RNA polymerase, S protein synthesis
  • Standard new: 2 mo HRZE → 4 mo HR
  • Daily/daily optimal; intermittent (3×/wk) only with DOT and NOT HIV
  • Monitor: clinical, sputum 2 mo + completion, AST/ALT/bilirubin/CBC
  • Major SE: rash (any); deafness/vertigo (S); ↓ urine (S/E); jaundice (H/R/Z); red-green vision (E — avoid kids + psychiatric)
  • Minor SE: GIT (H/R/Z); gouty arthritis (Z); peripheral neuropathy (H — give B6 50–75 mg/d); orange urine (R); flu-like (intermittent R → daily)
  • MDR-TB = resistance to R + H → DOT, admission if non-compliant
  • Pregnancy: HRZE safe, S contraindicated (fetal ototoxicity)
  • Renal: R/H/Z safe; aminoglycosides reduce if CrCl <50; avoid cycloserine/PAS/E; if E used → daily serum <5 µg/mL, dose interval 48h
  • HIV: ART 2–8 wk after TB Rx (CD4 <200); IRIS risk
Special
  • Koch's phenomenon = Type IV delayed hypersensitivity basis of TST
  • BCG vaccine prevents miliary TB + TB meningitis
  • ESAT-6 + CFP-10 absent in BCG → IGRA specificity
  • Rifampicin (1969) shortened therapy 12–24 mo → 6–8 mo by killing dormant bacilli
  • Thiacetazone implicated in cutaneous reactions in HIV
12

Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis

C/P
  • Spread routes: haematogenous, lymphatic, contiguous
  • Miliary TB: children, immunocompromised; fever, weight loss, hepatosplenomegaly, miliary CXR
  • TB meningitis: insidious headache, altered mental status, cranial nerve palsies
  • Genitourinary TB: sterile pyuria, haematuria, infertility
  • TB peritonitis: ascites, abdominal pain
  • TB pericarditis: pericardial effusion → constrictive pericarditis
  • TB lymphadenitis: scrofula
  • Cutaneous: lupus vulgaris
  • Pott's disease (spinal TB): cold abscess → spinal cord compression, kyphosis
  • GI TB: malabsorption, obstruction
  • Hepatic TB: hepatomegaly + granulomas
Inves
  • Same TB labs (ZN, culture, PCR, ADA)
  • MRI spine (Pott's), CT abdomen (peritoneal/lymphadenitis)
  • Biopsy: lymph node, pleural, peritoneal — definitive
  • Treatment trial sometimes diagnostic
  • Psoas abscess in genitourinary TB
  • ADA elevated in fluids
Mng
  • Same anti-TB regimen, often longer for CNS/bone (9–12 mo)
  • Corticosteroids in: TB meningitis, TB pericarditis (prevent constriction)
  • Surgical: drainage of abscess, fixation for spinal instability (Pott's), pericardiectomy if constrictive
Special
  • Pott's disease = spinal TB → cold abscess + cord compression
  • Constrictive pericarditis from chronic TB pericarditis
  • Miliary TB ↑ in children, immunocompromised; prevented by BCG
  • Scrofula = classic cervical lymphadenitis
13

Non-Tuberculous Mycobacteria (NTM / MAC)

C/P
  • >190 species, most non-pathogenic
  • Transmission: inhalation, ingestion, percutaneous; reservoirs = tap water, cockroaches
  • Indolent / subacute course; fever most common
  • Pulmonary (85%): chronic cough, sputum, haemoptysis, fatigue, weight loss — non-specific
  • Lymphadenitis: immunocompetent children 1–5 yr, female predominance, isolated cervical/submandibular; benign self-limiting
  • Disseminated: immunocompromised (HIV, transplant, steroids, TNF-α inhibitors), 90% MAC; cutaneous lesions
  • SSTI: linear nodules along lymphatics; fish tank granuloma (M. marinum), Buruli ulcer (M. ulcerans)
  • Predominant species: MAC (most common slow), M. kansasii, M. abscessus (rapid)
  • Host risk: pre-existing lung disease, immunodeficiency (IFNγ-IL12, HIV, biologics)
Inves
  • Runyon classification (Groups 1–4 by growth + pigment)
  • Imaging: fibro-cavitary (upper-lobe, mimics TB) vs nodular bronchiectatic (RML + lingula = Lady Windermere)
  • Diagnosis pulmonary: ALL radiological + ONE microbiological (two positive sputum cultures OR one bronchial wash OR biopsy + histology)
  • Smear: cannot distinguish TB from NTM
  • PCR = only rapid method to differentiate NTM from TB DNA
  • Children lymphadenitis: 80% MAC, 2nd M. scrofulaceum
Mng
  • Pulmonary: multi-drug prolonged course (species-specific)
  • Lymphadenitis: surgical excision (do not I&D — avoids fistula)
  • Disseminated MAC in HIV: macrolide-based + ART
Special
  • Lady Windermere syndrome: nodular bronchiectatic NTM in elderly women, RML/lingula
  • Fish tank granuloma = M. marinum; Buruli ulcer = M. ulcerans
  • "Diagnosis is a challenge" — colonization vs disease
  • IGRA may cross-react with M. marinum, M. szulgai, M. kansasii
14

Pulmonary Aspergillosis

C/P
  • Three subtypes (Simple / Chronic / Invasive)
  • Simple (Aspergilloma): fungus ball in pre-existing cavity (often post-TB), often asymptomatic, may cause haemoptysis
  • Chronic: chronic cough, sputum, weight loss, mild haemoptysis in structural lung disease
  • Invasive: immunocompromised (neutropenia, transplant); fever, dyspnoea, pleuritic pain, haemoptysis; angioinvasion → infarction → necrosis
  • ABPA: asthma exacerbations, bronchiectasis
Inves
  • Simple: CXR/CT shows fungus ball within cavity
  • Chronic: cavitary disease, cavity wall thickening, fibrosis
  • Invasive: angioinvasion on histology
  • Biopsy
Mng
  • Simple aspergilloma: usually conservative; surgery if massive haemoptysis
  • Chronic: long-term antifungal
  • Invasive: urgent antifungal
Special
  • 3-subtype master concept (Simple = aspergilloma in cavity / Chronic = structural / Invasive = immunocompromised)
  • Aspergilloma classically in old TB cavity
15

Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PCP)

C/P
  • Opportunistic infection in immunocompromised host (HIV/AIDS, transplant, chemotherapy)
  • Listed under opportunistic pneumonia / immunocompromised host pathogens
Inves
  • Sputum / BAL for cysts
Mng
  • Standard therapy (covered in opportunistic pneumonia context)
Special
  • Opportunistic pathogen in immunocompromised alongside CMV, MAC, invasive aspergillosis, invasive candidiasis

Tumour

3 entries
16

Bronchogenic Carcinoma (NSCLC + SCLC)

C/P
  • 95% of primary lung tumours; males > females; smoking dominant; peak 50–70 yr
  • Red flag: "Old man, smoker, new chest symptoms = bronchogenic carcinoma until proven otherwise"
  • Types: NSCLC 85% (squamous 30%; non-squamous 70% → adeno 90%, large-cell 10%); SCLC 15%
  • Risk: smoking (60× heavy, 80% cases), asbestos (synergistic), pollution, scarring, genetic
  • Intra-thoracic: bronchial irritation (cough), erosion (haemoptysis, dull aching pain), obstruction (wheeze, atelectasis, post-obstructive pneumonia)
  • Pleural: transudate (SVC compression), exudate, haemorrhagic (invasion), chylothorax (thoracic duct), pyothorax; pleuritic pain
  • Pancoast / thoracic inlet: apical mass invading 1st/2nd ribs, subclavian vessels, brachial plexus → shoulder pain to axilla/scapula, dullness at Kronig's/clavicle, unequal pulse + BP, unilateral clubbing, upper limb oedema, wasting of small hand muscles; Horner's (ptosis + myosis + anhidrosis + enophthalmos + unilateral nasal obstruction + loss of spino-ciliary reflex)
  • Mediastinal: trachea (brassy cough, stridor), oesophagus (dysphagia); vagus (brady → tachy, bronchospasm), phrenic (shoulder pain + hiccups → paralysis), left recurrent laryngeal (hoarseness); D'Espine sign = LN enlargement
  • SVC syndrome (often SCLC): facial plethora, distended JVP, lip cyanosis, arm swelling, chest collateral circulation
  • Metastatic: liver, brain, bone, adrenal
  • Paraneoplastic (mostly SCLC): hypercalcaemia (SqCC — PTHrP), hypoglycaemia (SqCC — insulin-like), SIADH (SCLC), ectopic ACTH (SCLC), somatostatinoma (SCLC), gynaecomastia (large-cell + adeno), carcinoid
Inves
  • CXR, CT chest, PET-CT for staging
  • Tissue biopsy (bronchoscopic, transthoracic, surgical)
  • TNM staging (NSCLC); SCLC limited vs extensive (single radiation port)
  • IHC: TTF-1 + Napsin-A positive in primary lung adeno; TTF-1 negative in metastatic adeno (except thyroid)
  • Histology: SCC central / smoking; Adeno peripheral / lepidic; Large-cell peripheral / poorly differentiated; SCLC central / neuroendocrine
Mng
  • NSCLC: surgery if early-stage, chemotherapy ± radiotherapy, targeted therapy
  • SCLC: chemotherapy + radiotherapy; rarely surgical
  • Paraneoplastic: address tumour ± symptomatic management
Special
  • Pancoast tumour → Horner's syndrome
  • SVC syndrome dominantly SCLC
  • Paraneoplastic syndromes mostly SCLC; SqCC owns hypercalcaemia + hypoglycaemia
  • Pulmonary neuroendocrine spectrum: carcinoid → SCLC
  • Pleural metastases more common than primary pleural tumours; cytology = dual cell population
  • Unilateral clubbing in Pancoast (subclavian artery compression)
17

Malignant Mesothelioma

C/P
  • Primary pleural tumour from mesothelial cells
  • Extensive bilateral pleural spread, aggressive local invasion, metastasis less common
  • 50% asbestos exposure; latency up to 40 yr; lifetime risk does not diminish
  • Smoking does NOT increase mesothelioma risk
  • Sources: mining, fabrication, insulation, pipefitting
  • Progressive dyspnoea, unilateral chest pain, cough, systemic (fever, malaise, myalgia, weight loss)
Inves
  • CT: encapsulation of lung by malignant fibrous rind
  • Pleural effusion: very cellular, large clusters with scalloped contours
  • Cytology cannot assess invasion → biopsy
  • Gross: pleural plaques first → diffuse thickening encasing lung in yellow-white firm rind
  • Histology: epithelial (cuboidal, tubular/microcystic, favourable, mimics adeno) / sarcomatous (spindled, unfavourable) / biphasic (both, unfavourable)
  • IHC: Calretinin POSITIVE / TTF-1 NEGATIVE (vs adenocarcinoma)
  • Pathogenesis: fibres → mesothelial layer → ROS → DNA damage → mutations (p16, NF2)
Mng
  • Limited — surgical, chemo, radiotherapy
Special
  • Pleural rind encasing lung = mesothelioma gross hallmark
  • Calretinin+/TTF-1− distinguishes from adenocarcinoma
  • p16 and NF2 tumour suppressor mutations
  • Asbestos fibres not removed/metabolized → lifetime risk
  • Smoking does NOT add to mesothelioma risk (unlike bronchogenic carcinoma)
18

Lung Metastases

C/P
  • Common in both carcinoma and sarcoma
  • Most common primary origins: breast, GI tract, kidney
  • Most common histological type: adenocarcinoma
  • Can't usually distinguish histologically from primary
Inves
  • IHC to clue primary origin (TTF-1 negative; lung primary positive)
  • Gross: multiple well-circumscribed round nodules — "cannonball" pattern
  • Lepidic growth pattern favours primary lung adenocarcinoma over metastasis
Mng
  • Address underlying primary
Special
  • Cannonball pattern = pathognomonic metastatic gross morphology
  • Bilateral multiple peripheral nodules + extra-pulmonary primary history → secondary

Pleural

4 entries
19

Pleural Effusion

C/P
  • Pleural space normally has thin film for lubrication
  • Progressive dyspnoea, dull side-pain, dry cough
  • Reduced expansion, stony dullness, ↓ breath sounds, ↓ vocal resonance, tracheal/mediastinal shift away (massive)
Inves
  • CXR: meniscus sign (concave upper border), mediastinal pulling/shifting away, costophrenic angle obliteration
  • Lateral decubitus: 1 cm layering = significant
  • US: highly sensitive
  • Light's criteria for exudate (any one): protein ratio >0.5; LDH ratio >0.6; LDH >2/3 ULN serum
  • Transudate: heart failure, cirrhosis, hypoalbuminaemia, nephrotic syndrome
  • Exudate: infection, malignancy, TB (high ADA), PE, autoimmune
  • Pleural fluid analysis: gross, chemistry (Light's, glucose, pH, ADA), differential cell count
  • ADA >70 IU/L highly suggestive TB; <40 excludes
  • Encysted (loculated); hydropneumothorax (air-fluid level)
Mng
  • Thoracentesis (contraindications + complications: bleeding, pneumothorax, infection)
  • Treat underlying cause
  • Drainage for symptomatic / large effusion
  • Pleurodesis for recurrent malignant effusion
Special
  • Light's criteria = exudate gate
  • Pleural fluid ADA + lymphocyte/neutrophil >0.75 → TB highly suggestive
  • Meniscus sign on CXR
  • Malignant pleural effusion = exudate, often haemorrhagic
  • Pleural transudate from SVC compression by lung tumour
20

Empyema

C/P
  • Infected pleural fluid (gross D-shape on test tubes)
  • Fever, pleuritic chest pain, systemic toxicity, productive cough
  • Often complicates parapneumonic effusion
Inves
  • Pleural fluid: pus, low pH, low glucose, high LDH
  • Loculations on imaging
Mng
  • Drainage (intercostal tube) + targeted antibiotics
  • Decortication if chronic
  • Add Clindamycin if aspiration / lung abscess context
Special
  • D-shaped gross appearance
  • Parapneumonic effusion → empyema when fluid infected
  • Pleural fluid analysis confirms (gross pus)
21

Haemothorax

C/P
  • Blood in pleural space
  • Dyspnoea, chest pain, haemodynamic instability if massive
  • Reduced breath sounds, dullness on affected side
  • Trauma + iatrogenic + malignancy + ruptured vessel
Inves
  • Erect CXR: blunted costophrenic angle, opacity with fluid level
  • US sensitive
  • Pleural fluid aspirate confirms blood
Mng
  • Intercostal drain
  • Massive haemothorax → urgent thoracotomy
  • Treat haemodynamic compromise
Special
  • Erect CXR is the classic image
  • Surgical drainage threshold based on initial volume + rate
22

Pneumothorax (spontaneous + tension)

C/P
  • Air in pleural space
  • Sudden chest pain, dyspnoea, hyperresonance, ↓ breath sounds, ↓ tactile fremitus
  • Tension pneumothorax: hypotension, tachycardia, tracheal deviation AWAY, distended neck veins, severe distress — emergency
  • Classification: spontaneous (primary tall young men, secondary underlying lung disease — COPD bulla rupture) vs traumatic vs iatrogenic
Inves
  • Erect CXR: visceral pleural line, absent lung markings beyond
  • Tension: contralateral mediastinal shift, diaphragm depression
  • ABG: hypoxia
  • Don't delay imaging if tension is clinically obvious
Mng
  • Spontaneous primary: small + asymptomatic → observe; symptomatic → aspiration or intercostal tube
  • Spontaneous secondary: admit + intercostal tube (low threshold)
  • Tension: emergency needle decompression (2nd intercostal space, midclavicular line) → intercostal tube
  • Persistent air leak → surgery (pleurodesis, bullectomy)
Special
  • Tension pneumothorax = clinical diagnosis, treat before CXR
  • Trachea deviation AWAY (vs collapse where it deviates TOWARD)
  • Pneumothorax = complication of COPD (bulla rupture)

Vascular / Emergency

3 entries
23

Pulmonary Embolism

C/P
  • Virchow's triad: stasis + endothelial injury + hypercoagulability
  • Risk factors: surgery, immobility, malignancy, OCP/HRT, pregnancy, thrombophilia, prior VTE
  • Non-thrombotic: fat embolism, amniotic fluid
  • Sudden dyspnoea, pleuritic chest pain, haemoptysis, syncope
  • Tachypnoea, tachycardia, hypoxia; signs of DVT
  • Massive PE: shock, hypotension, RV strain, cardiac arrest
  • Life-threatening distress signs in respiratory emergencies
Inves
  • ABG: hypoxia + hypocapnia (respiratory alkalosis)
  • ECG: sinus tachycardia most common; S1Q3T3, RV strain
  • CXR: often normal; Hampton's hump (peripheral wedge), Westermark sign (regional oligaemia)
  • CTPA = imaging gold standard: filling defect, infarction
  • Revised Geneva score for clinical probability
  • Simplified PESI for risk stratification of early death
  • V/Q scan if CTPA contraindicated
Mng
  • Haemodynamic instability: hemodynamic support + reperfusion (systemic thrombolysis)
  • Without instability: initial anticoagulation (LMWH, fondaparinux) → Apixaban / Rivaroxaban / Edoxaban / Dabigatran / Warfarin
  • Vena cava filter if anticoagulation contraindicated
  • Discharge algorithm based on PESI
  • Risk-stratify by PESI + RV dysfunction
Special
  • Hampton's hump = peripheral wedge-shaped infarct
  • Westermark sign = oligaemia distal to occlusion
  • Revised Geneva score (deck uses Geneva, not Wells)
  • PESI for mortality prediction
  • Sinus tachycardia most common ECG (S1Q3T3 classic but less common)
24

ARDS

C/P
  • Acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure with bilateral infiltrates not explained by cardiac cause
  • Sudden severe dyspnoea, hypoxia refractory to O₂
  • Causes: pulmonary (pneumonia, aspiration, inhalation, contusion) + extrapulmonary (sepsis, trauma, transfusion, pancreatitis, burns)
  • Phases: exudative → proliferative → fibrotic
  • Pathophysiology: alveolar-capillary membrane damage → protein-rich exudate → hyaline membranes → impaired gas exchange
Inves
  • Berlin definition: acute onset, bilateral opacities, not cardiogenic, P:F with PEEP ≥5
  • Severity by P:F: mild >200, moderate 100–200, severe ≤100
  • CXR + CT: bilateral infiltrates, ground-glass, consolidation
  • ABG: severe hypoxia
Mng
  • Mechanical ventilation (low tidal volume, PEEP)
  • Treat underlying cause
  • ECMO in severe refractory cases
Special
  • Berlin definition distinguishes ARDS (non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema) from heart failure
  • P:F ratio defines severity
  • Hyaline membranes histological hallmark
  • Phases: exudative → proliferative → fibrotic
25

Atelectasis

C/P
  • Collapse of lung tissue
  • Macro vs micro
  • Massive postoperative collapse — postop complication
  • Dyspnoea, ↓ breath sounds, dullness, tracheal/mediastinal shift TOWARD affected side
  • Clinical picture varies with extent and rate of collapse
Inves
  • CXR: opacity + volume loss (mediastinal shift toward, elevated hemidiaphragm, crowded ribs)
  • Lobar collapse patterns with eponymous signs
Mng
  • Chest physiotherapy, deep breathing, mobilization
  • Treat obstruction (bronchoscopy if foreign body / mucus plug)
  • Address postop pain to enable deep breathing
Special
  • Mediastinal shift TOWARD side = atelectasis (vs away = pneumothorax/effusion)
  • Postop hypoxia + ↓ breath sounds at base → atelectasis until proven otherwise
  • Round atelectasis = pseudotumour in asbestos-related disease

Asthma

4 entries
1

GINA 2025 — Asthma definition

  • Chronic airway inflammation
  • Variable chest symptoms (cough, SOB, wheeze, chest tightness)
  • Variable expiratory airflow limitation
  • Asthma = variable; COPD = persistent
2

Asthma diagnostic criteria

Required: clinical variable symptoms + physiological test of variable airway obstruction.

TestThreshold
Pre-BD FEV1/FVC<80%
Pre-BD FEV1 % predicted<80%
Reversibility post Salbutamol 200–400 mcg (wait 10–15 min)FEV1 ↑ ≥200 mL AND ≥12%
PEF diurnal variability>10%
Bronchial challenge (histamine / methacholine)Fall in FEV1 ≥20%
FeNOIncreased
Blood / sputum eosinophilsIncreased

PEF formula: ((highest PEF − lowest PEF) / mean) × 100

3

Acute exacerbation — life-threatening signs

  • Confusion
  • Hypotension
  • RR >30
  • SpO₂ <90%
  • Silent chest
4

GINA discharge criteria

  • SpO₂ >94% on room air
  • PFT >60–80% predicted
  • Step-up drugs + follow-up 1–2 wk

COPD

6 entries
5

COPD definition (GOLD 2025)

Heterogeneous lung condition + chronic respiratory symptoms (dyspnoea, cough, sputum) + airway and/or alveolar abnormalities → persistent often progressive airflow obstruction.

Diagnosis = clinical presentation + spirometry showing post-BD FEV1/FVC <70%.

6

GOLD severity grades (1–4)

Based on post-BD FEV1 % predicted:

GradeFEV1 % predicted
GOLD 1 (Mild)≥80%
GOLD 2 (Moderate)50 ≤ FEV1 < 80%
GOLD 3 (Severe)30 ≤ FEV1 < 50%
GOLD 4 (Very Severe)<30%

FEV1 <50% = threshold to start Roflumilast.

7

GOLD groups (A / B / E)

GroupExacerbations / hospSymptoms
A0–1 moderate (no hosp)mMRC 0–1 OR CAT <10
B0–1 moderate (no hosp)mMRC ≥2 OR CAT ≥10
E≥2 moderate OR ≥1 hospAny

Initial therapy

  • A → single bronchodilator
  • B → LABA + LAMA
  • E → LABA + LAMA; consider triple if blood eosinophils ≥300

Single inhaler preferred.

8

mMRC dyspnoea scale

GradeDescription
0Dyspnoea only with strenuous exercise
1Dyspnoea when hurrying or walking up a slight hill
2Walks slower than peers / stops for breath on level ground
3Stops for breath after ~100 yards or a few minutes on level
4Too breathless to leave the house, breathless when dressing

mMRC ≥2 = highly symptomatic threshold (Group B or E).

9

CAT score grouping cut-off

  • <10 = less symptomatic (Group A)
  • ≥10 = more symptomatic (Group B)
10

COPD acute exacerbation definition

  • Acute worsening of symptoms over <14 days
  • Most common cause: infection

CAP

7 entries
11

IDSA/ATS severe pneumonia criteria

Severe CAP = 1 major OR 3 minor criteria

Major (need 1)

  • Septic shock requiring vasopressors
  • Respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation

Minor (need 3)

  • RR ≥30 b/min
  • Hypotension corrected by IV fluid
  • Hypothermia
  • Confusion / disorientation
  • Leukopenia <4,000 cells/μL
  • Thrombocytopenia <100,000/μL
  • Uremia (BUN) ≥20 mg/dL (indicates sepsis)
  • PaO₂/FiO₂ ratio ≤250
  • Multilobar infiltrates

Calculations

  • Normal PaO₂ ≈ 100 − (1/3 × age)
  • FiO₂ room air = 0.21; on 2 L O₂ = 0.29
  • Neutrophil shift LEFT = infection; RIGHT = steroids
12

CURB-65 (site of care)

ComponentThreshold
C ConfusionNew
U Urea>7 mmol/L (20 mg/dL)
R Respiratory rate>30 breaths/min
B Blood pressureSBP <90 OR DBP <60 mmHg
65 Age>65 years

Site of care

ScoreSetting
0–1Home (outpatient)
2Ward
3–5 (or Severe by IDSA/ATS)ICU

Inpatient treatment

  • Non-severe: β-lactam (+ β-lactamase inhibitor) + macrolide OR fluoroquinolone monotherapy
  • Severe: β-lactam + macrolide OR β-lactam + fluoroquinolone (NO monotherapy)
13

MAFIA PCC (anti-Pseudomonal coverage)

LetterDrugClass
MMeropenemCarbapenem
AAminoglycosides(nephrotoxic — kidneys!)
FFluoroquinolonesCiprofloxacin / Levofloxacin (NOT Moxifloxacin)
IImipenemCarbapenem
AAztreonamMonobactam
PPiperacillin-tazobactamPenicillin
CCeftazidimeCephalosporin
CCefepimeCephalosporin

Anti-MRSA: Vancomycin (red-person syndrome) / Linezolid.

14

Responsive pneumonia at 72h

All seven required:

  • Temperature ≤37.8°C
  • Heart rate ≤100 b/min
  • Respiratory rate ≤24 b/min
  • SBP ≥90 mmHg
  • SpO₂ ≥90% on room air
  • Normal mental status
  • Normal oral intake
15

Treatment duration

  • Non-severe + clinically stable: 3–4 days
  • Severe CAP OR non-severe + deteriorating: ≥5 days
  • Egypt-specific: 7 days or more

Radiological resolution lags clinical → don't reorder before 3 weeks.

OrganismRadiological resolution
Mycoplasma2–4 wk
Legionella2–6 mo
Staph3–5 mo
S. pneumoniae + shock3–5 mo
16

Corticosteroid indication

Severe CAP + at least ONE of:

  • Septic shock
  • Respiratory failure (P:F <300)
  • Rapid progression: ≤3 d between symptom onset and severe CAP presentation
17

Lobar pneumonia stages (timeline)

StageDuration
1. CongestionEarly, 1–2 days
2. Red hepatization3–4 days
3. Grey hepatization1 week
4. Resolution1–2 weeks

Tuberculosis

7 entries
18

TST positivity criteria (5 / 10 / 15 mm)

Measure induration (not erythema), perpendicular to forearm long axis, 48–72 h after intradermal 5 TU PPD.

ThresholdPatient groups
≥5 mmHIV+; recent TB contact; old healed TB on CXR; immunosuppressed (transplant, etc.)
≥10 mmRecent arrival (<5 yr) from high-prevalence; IVDU; residents/staff of high-risk settings (prisons, nursing homes, hospitals, homeless shelters); mycobacteriology lab; high-risk conditions: DM, silicosis, CKD, prolonged corticosteroids, malignancy
≥15 mmNo known risk factor

Immunocompromised TST-negative → check IGRA (anergy can mask). BCG-vaccinated TST-positive → check IGRA (false positive).

19

ADA cut-offs by fluid

FluidCut-off
CSF8 U/L → distinguishes TB meningitis from other lymphocytic causes
Ascitic>36 U/L → suggests TB
Pleural>70 IU/L → highly suggestive TB
Pleural<40 IU/L → excludes
Pleural>40 U/L + fluid/serum ratio ≥2 → TB effusion / empyema
Pleural lymphocyte/neutrophil>0.75 ↑ specificity
20

QFT-G (IGRA) vs TST

FeatureQFT-GTST
SettingIn-vitroIn-vivo
AntigensESAT-6 + CFP-10 (multiple)PPD (single)
BCG cross-reactNoYes (false positive)
SpecificityHigherLower
Visits12
Reader biasMinimalSignificant
Result time24 h48–72 h
BoostingNoneYes (2-step in immunocompromised)
ConstraintBlood processed within 12 h of drawPatient must return
21

Pulmonary TB regimen — new patient

  • Intensive (2 mo): HRZE (Isoniazid + Rifampicin + Ethambutol + Pyrazinamide)
  • Continuation (4 mo): HR (Isoniazid + Rifampicin)

Daily/daily optimal. Intermittent (3×/wk) only if DOT + NOT HIV.

22

HRZES doses (daily + 3×/wk)

DrugDaily mg/kgDaily max3×/wk mg/kg3×/wk max
Isoniazid (H)5 (4–6)300 mg10 (8–12)900 mg
Rifampicin (R)10 (8–12)600 mg10 (8–12)600 mg
Pyrazinamide (Z)25 (20–30)35 (30–40)
Ethambutol (E)15 (15–20)30 (25–35)
Streptomycin (S)15 (12–18)15 (12–18)1000 mg

Streptomycin = only injectable first-line; rest oral.

23

TB monitoring schedule

  • Clinical: general condition, fever, appetite, side effects
  • Sputum (culture + PCR): at 2 mo + completion of therapy
  • Labs (AST, ALT, bilirubin, CBC):
    • First 2 weeks: twice weekly
    • At 1 month then monthly
24

MDR-TB definition

Resistance to both Isoniazid + Rifampicin. Non-compliant → DOT → hospital admission if DOT fails.

Pleural

1 entry
25

Light's criteria (exudate)

Exudate if any one met:

  • Pleural fluid protein / serum protein >0.5
  • Pleural fluid LDH / serum LDH >0.6
  • Pleural fluid LDH >2/3 upper limit normal serum LDH

Sarcoidosis

2 entries
26

Scadding CXR staging (I–IV)

Stages NOT progressive — they describe pattern, not time course.

StageFinding
IBilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
IIBilateral hilar adenopathy + pulmonary infiltrates
IIIPulmonary disease only (infiltrates / reticulonodular)
IVIrreversible fibrosis + honeycombing
27

BAL CD4/CD8 ratio

DiseaseCD4/CD8
Sarcoidosis≥2.5
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis<1

BAL neutrophilia → worse prognosis (sarcoid, HP, IPF).

Bronchiectasis

1 entry
28

Reid morphological classification

Three patterns of bronchiectasis (mildest → most severe):

  • Cylindrical — tubular dilation
  • Varicose — alternating dilation + constriction
  • Cystic (saccular) — balloon-like cavities

NTM

2 entries
29

Runyon classification (4 groups)

GroupGrowthPigmentSpecies
1SlowPhotochromogen (in light)M. kansasii, M. marinum, M. simiae
2SlowScotochromogen (without light)M. scrofulaceum, M. szulgai, M. gordonae
3SlowNon-photochromogenM. avium, M. intracellulare, M. ulcerans, M. haemophilum
4Fast (<7 d)M. fortuitum, M. chelonae, M. abscessus, M. smegmatis
30

NTM pulmonary disease diagnostic criteria

ALL radiological + ONE microbiological

Radiological (all required)

  • Pulmonary symptoms
  • Cavitary or nodular lesion on CXR / HRCT
  • Exclusion of other diagnosis

Microbiological (one required)

  • Two positive sputum cultures
  • One positive bronchial wash / lavage culture
  • Lung biopsy positive for NTM with consistent histology

NTM lymphadenitis in children 1–5 yr: 80% MAC, 2nd M. scrofulaceum.

Lung Cancer

3 entries
31

Lung cancer classification (% breakdown)

Category%
All primary lung tumours95% of lung tumours overall
NSCLC85% of lung cancers
└ Squamous30% of NSCLC
└ Non-squamous70% of NSCLC
└ Adenocarcinoma90% of non-squamous
└ Large-cell10% of non-squamous
SCLC15% of lung cancers

Smoking: 80% of cases; 60× ↑ in heavy smokers; 95% of smokers have atypical bronchial mucosa cells.

32

NSCLC TNM staging

  • T (primary tumour): T1–T4 by size + local invasion
  • N (regional lymph node): N0–N3 by node location/extent
  • M (distant metastasis): M0 / M1
  • Common metastasis sites: liver, brain, bone, adrenal
33

SCLC staging (limited vs extensive)

  • Limited: confined to one hemithorax, treatable with single radiation port
  • Extensive: outside that field

Vascular / Emergency

4 entries
34

Berlin definition — ARDS

Distinguishes ARDS (non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema) from heart failure.

ElementCriterion
TimingAcute onset within 1 week of known insult
Chest imagingBilateral opacities not fully explained by effusion / collapse / nodules
OriginNot fully explained by cardiac failure / fluid overload
OxygenationPaO₂/FiO₂ with PEEP ≥5 cmH₂O

Severity

SeverityPaO₂/FiO₂
Mild>200
Moderate100–200
Severe≤100
35

Revised Geneva score (PE)

Used for clinical probability of PE. Guides next step:

  • PE-unlikely → D-dimer
  • PE-likely → imaging (CTPA)
36

Simplified PESI (sPESI)

Predicts 30-day mortality risk in PE. sPESI ≥1 = higher risk.

Components (each = 1 point):

  • Age >80 years
  • Chronic cardiopulmonary disease (chronic heart / lung disease)
  • Cancer history
  • Heart rate ≥110 b/min
  • SBP <100 mmHg
  • Arterial oxyhaemoglobin saturation <90%
37

PE risk stratification

  • Low risk: sPESI = 0, no RV strain
  • Intermediate: sPESI ≥1 (PESI class III–V) OR RV strain
  • High: haemodynamic instability → systemic thrombolysis + hemodynamic support

Pneumoconiosis

2 entries
38

Pneumoconiosis CXR signatures

DiseaseCXR finding
AsbestosisBilateral diffuse reticulonodular + honeycombing (lower lobes)
Asbestos pleural plaquesLocalized thickening + calcifications at diaphragm
Rounded atelectasisRound opacity, irregular outlines, comet tail sign
Silicosis (chronic)Upper-lobe nodules 1–10 mm → coalesce >10 mm (PMF) + eggshell calcification of hilar LN
Silicosis (acute)Diffuse alveolar filling, lower-zone predominant
Simple CWPSmall rounded opacities <1 cm in upper zones
Complicated CWP / PMFLarge opacities >1 cm; "angel wings"
39

Latency periods

DiseaseLatency
Asbestosis (standard)20–30 yr
Asbestosis (very heavy exposure)<10 yr
MesotheliomaUp to 40 yr
Chronic silicosis>15 yr
Acute silicosisWithin months