Pathophysiology Exam 2 (USM Nursing) – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Cilia
answer
● Hair like projections that extend from cell surfaces of lung epithelial cells. They propel mucous and trapped particles out of lower airway to be coughed out or swallowed
question
Surfactant
answer
a lipoprotein produced by alveoli cells that has a detergent-like quality.produces surface tension on the alveoli, which enhances pulmonary compliance and prevents the alveoli from collapsing
question
Diaphragm
answer
Dome shaped muscle that separates the thoracic and abdominal cavities. Diaphragm receives impulses that cause it to contract, lower and flatten which draws air into the lungs.
question
Mediastinum
answer
the part of the thoracic cavity between the lungs that contains the heart and aorta and esophagus and trachea and thymus (but not lungs and pleura)
question
Pleura
answer
Lung lining
question
Hemothorax
answer
hemorrhage into pleural space
question
Pneumothorax
answer
presence of air/gas in pleural space caused by rupture in visceral pleura or parietal pleura and chest wall.
question
Empyema
answer
presence of pus in pleural space
question
Atalactasis
answer
collapse of alveoli, surfactant inactivation
question
Orthopnea
answer
dyspnea when a person is lying down
question
COPD
answer
A combination of Emphysema and Chronic Bronchitis. COPD is irriversible, chronic hypercapnic shift. Leads to cor pulmonale & right sided HF.
question
Emphysema
answer
Destruction of the alveolar walls leads to large, permanently inflated alveoli.Enzyme necessary for lung remodeling is deficient.Loss of elastic recoil and hyperinflation of the alveoli, leading to air trapping Manifestations: dyspnea upon exertion, diminished breath sounds, wheezing, chest tightness, tachypnea, hypoxia, hypercapnia, activity intolerance, anorexia, and malaise
question
Chronic bronchitis
answer
Characterized by inflammation of the bronchi, a productive cough, and excessive mucus production Manifestations:hypoventilation, hypoxemia, cyanosis, hypercapnia, polycythemia, clubbing of fingers, dyspnea at rest, wheezing, edema, weight gain, malaise, chest pain, and fever
question
Asthma
answer
Intermittent reversible airway obstruction. Acute airway inflammation, Bronchoconstriction, Bronchospasms, bronciole edema, mucous production Manifestations: wheezing, dyspnea, cough, anxiety, tachypnea, shortness of breath, chest tightness
question
Manifestations of Pulmonary Embolism
answer
increase HR, increase RR, SOB, anxiety; pleural pain, hemoptysis, fever, increase WBC
question
What causes Pulmonary Embolism
answer
Blood clot, 90% often from DVT Fats - femur fracture Air May infarct segment of lung, may cause sudden death Multiple small emboli (showers) - chronic or recurrent 2nd to cancer or clotting disorder
question
How does O2 and CO2 exchange in the lungs? What process of movement is this called?
answer
In the capillary bed of the alveoli by passive diffusion
question
Hypercapnia
answer
increase CO2 levels
question
Hypocapnia
answer
decrease CO2 levels
question
Hypoxia
answer
decreased O2 levels in tissue and cells
question
Hypoxemia
answer
decreased O2 levels in the blood
question
ARDS
answer
(Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome) Hyperventilation, Respiratory alkalosis, Dyspnea and hypoxemia, Metabolic acidosis, Hypoventilation, Respiratory acidosis, Further hypoxemia, Hypotension, decreased cardiac output, death ○ PaO2 less than 50 mm Hg ○ PaCO2 greater than 50 mm Hg ○ pH less than 7.25
question
What causes ARDS?
answer
Occurs in response to other condition:Sepsis,fluid overload,shock, burns, DIC,aspiration,neurologic injuries Massive pulmonary inflammation Damage to the alveolocapillary membrane pulmonary edema, decreased lung compliance, impaired alveolar ventilation Surfactant inactivation - Atelectasis
question
What are manifestations of ARDS?
answer
labored/shallow respirations, rales, productive cough w/ frothy sputum, hypoxia, caynosis, tachycardia
question
Cor pulmonale
answer
Pulmonary heart disease causesRight ventricular enlargement Secondary to pulmonary hypertension Pulmonary hypertension creates chronic pressure overload in the right ventricle leading to right sided HF
question
What are the clinical manifestations of cor pulmonale
answer
Exertion dyspnea Fatigue and weakness Jugular vein distention, hepatosplenomegaly, peripheral edema Abnormal ECG showing right ventricular hypertrophy
question
Community acquired pneumonia
answer
Streptococcus pneumoniae— most common Mycoplasma pneumoniae—common in adolescents Influenza virus—most common viral in adults
question
Hospital acquired pneumonia
answer
Pseudomonas aeruginosa Staphylococcus aureus
question
Pneumonia associated w/ HIV/AIDS
answer
Pneumocystis jiroveci (formerly carinii)
question
Clinical manifestations of lung cancer
answer
persistent cough(chronic over 2-3 weeks) or a change in usual cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis, frequent respiratory infections, chest pain, hoarseness, weight loss, anemia, fatigue, and other symptoms specific to site of metastasis
question
Pathophysiology of TB
answer
1. Primary infection:bacillus enters body, some travel to lymph nodes, activates type IV hypersensitivity, lymphocytes/macrophages for a granuloma, tubercle, caseous necrotic tissue, in healthy people become calcified (Ghon Complexes) but can remain dormant 2. Secondary/ Active infection: TB spreads in lungs/other organs
question
Manifestations of TB
answer
productive cough, hemoptysis, night sweats, unexplained weight loss, fever/chills, anorexia
question
What allows TB to lie dormant?
answer
Scar tissue around tubercle - tubercles form and become scar tissue (caseous necrosis) after 10 days, becomes dormant but not dead for life. Reactivated by malnutrition, type 1 diabetes, immunocompromise.
question
Manifestations of chronic hypoxia
answer
clubbing, polycythemia, cor pulmonale, prolonged hypercapnia
question
Review ABG values
answer
PaCO2= 35-45 HCO3= 22-26 PH= 7.35-7.45 PaO2=80-100
question
Describe cardiovascular circulation
answer
Superior/Inferior Vena Cava, RA, Tricuspid, RV, Pulmonary Valve, Pulmonary Artery, Lungs, Pulmonary Vein, LA, Mitral, LV, Aortic Valve, Aorta, Body
question
Vessels of the Coronary Arteries
answer
Right Coronary Artery, Right Marginal, Anterior Intraventricular Artery, Posterior Intraventricular Artery, Left Coronary Artery, Left Circumflex Great Cardiac Vein, Middle Cardiac Vein, Small Cardiac vein
question
Where is the opening of the Coronary Arteries?
answer
Coronary ostea
question
Where do Coronary veins drain into?
answer
Coronary sinus in the RA
question
Describe the conduction of a healthy heart
answer
SA Node, Atrial Contraction, AV Node, Bundle of His, L/R bundles, Perkenji fibers, Ventricular contraction
question
What is the primary pacemaker?
answer
Sinal Atrial (SA) Node 60-100 bpm
question
What are the back up pacemaker?
answer
Atrial Ventricular (AV) Node 40-60 bpm Bundle branches/Perkenji Fibers <40 bpm
question
Describe pericarditis
answer
● Pericarditis- inflammation of the pericardium. ○ Fluid accumulates called pericardial effusion, swollen tissue creates friction. ● Constrictive pericarditis- loss of elasticity, results from chronic inflammation
question
Clinical manifestation of pericarditis
answer
pericardial friction rub, sharp sudden , severe chest pain that increases with deep inspiration and decreases when sitting up and leaning forward, dyspnea, tachycardia, edema, flulike symptoms
question
Describe cardiac temponade
answer
cardiac compression from excessive fluid accumulation. Life threatening
question
Clinical manifestations of cardiac temponade
answer
arterial pressures fall, rising venous pressures, narrowing pulse pressure, and muffled heart sounds. Comp- heart failure, shock, and death
question
What causes Dilated Cardiomyopathy?
answer
Caused by ischemic heart disease and hypertension, infections, toxins, connective tissue disease, nutritional deficiencies, idiopathic results from extensively damaged myocardium fibers
question
What causes hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy?
answer
Diastolic dysfunction, hypertrophic ventricle becomes stiff leading to decreased ventricular filling. leading to decreased CO
question
Manifestations of Dilated Cardiomyopathy
answer
Dyspnea, non productive cough, orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, dysrhythmias, angina, dizziness, activity intolerance, jugular vein distention, murmurs, peripheral edema, poor cap refill, Hepatomegaly
question
Manifestations of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
answer
Syncope, left ventricular failure, infarction (similar to dilated)
question
Patho and Manifestations of Aortic Stenosis and problems it causes
answer
Aortic Stenosis:→hypertrophy of left ventricle→blood backs into left atrium→AFIB→blood back up into pulmonary circulation→pulmonary edema, leads to left sided heart failure Manifestations: murmur, angina, syncope, pulmonary edema, dyspnea on exertion
question
Patho and Manifestations of Mitral Stenosis and problems it causes
answer
Mitral Stenosis:→hypertrophy of left atrium→blood backs up into pulmonary circulation→pulmonary edema, leads to left sided heart failure Manifestations:similar to aortic, dysrhythmias, decreased cardiac output, pulmonary hypertension, orthopnea, increased respiratory infections.
question
What is Rheumatic heart disease?
answer
Valvular damage: inflammation, erosion, and deposition of clumps of vegetation.Myocarditis and pericarditis can also occur.
question
What causes Rheumatic heart disease?
answer
Type II reaction. Group A beta hemolytic strep. Not the strep itself but body's response to the strep that causes the problem. 10% of patients with untreated rheumatic fever will develop RHD.
question
Infective endocarditis and 3 steps of progression
answer
○ Infection by Streptococcus viridans and Staphylococcus aureus infections ○ Vegetation forms on internal structures and creates small thrombi ○ Microemboli occur as they are dislodged, resulting in microhemmorages
question
Risk factors for Infective endocarditis
answer
valvular heart disease, prosthetic valves, long term indwelling catheters, IV drug use, dental procedures, recent cardiac surgery
question
What are the clinical manifestations of infective endocarditis
answer
flu like symptoms, splinter hemorrhage under nails, Osler's nodes, petechiae, Hematuria
question
Describe heart failure
answer
congestive heart failure, blood cannot pump adequate amount of blood to meet the body's needs
question
Manifestations of Left Sided HF
answer
pulmonary congestion (rales), orthopnea
question
Manifestations of Right Sided HF
answer
weight gain, edema, distended jugular veins, cor pulmonale (systemic effects)
question
Preload
answer
how much blood is coming into heart and the stretch against ventricles because of that blood Frank Starling Law= greater volume, greater pressure, better contractility until a point and then it starts to lose contractility over time
question
Afterload
answer
force the heart is working against, resistance
question
Stroke Volume
answer
effected by preload, afterload and contractility
question
Cardiac output
answer
Amount of blood pumped every minute Stroke Volume X HR=CO 4-8 L per minute
question
Cardiogenic shock
answer
Failure of heart pump, something happened at heart level- left ventricle cannot maintain adequate cardiac output. Compensatory mechanisms of heart failure are triggered;however these mechanisms increase cardiac workload and O2 consumption, resulting in decreased contractility. Tissue and organ perfusion decreases, leading to multi-system organ failure
question
Nuerogenic shock
answer
decrease in sympathetic tone in vascular smooth muscle leads to massive vasodilation
question
Septic shock
answer
caused by bacterial infection (septicemia)
question
Anaphylactic shock
answer
Hypersensitive reaction to an allergen
question
Hypovolemic shock
answer
Venous return reduces because of external blood volume losses. Preload drops decreasing ventricular filling and stroke volume. As cardiac output falls, tissue and organ perfusion decreases.
question
Common steps for all forms of shock
answer
1.activation of compensatory mechanisms such as the SNS and RAA 2. compensatory mechanisms fail to maintain CO, cells use anaerobic respiration, lactic acid builds up, metabolic acidosis, sluggish blood flow, increased coagulation 3. irreversible shock leading to irrerversible organ damage and cardiac failure
question
What does the P wave represent on an EKG
answer
Atrial Depolarization
question
What does the QRS complex represent on an EKG
answer
Ventricle Depolarization
question
What does the T wave on represent on an EKG
answer
Ventricle Repolarization
question
Automaticity
answer
cell's ability to generate electrical impulse (generate own impulse)
question
Refractoriness
answer
rest before another impulse
question
Excitability
answer
The ability to respond to stimuli by the production of electrical impulses
question
Conductivity
answer
ability to transmit an impulse from cell to cell
question
What occurs during Diastole
answer
relaxation of ventricles- ventricles fill
question
What occurs during Systole
answer
contraction of ventricles- blood is pushed out of ventricles
question
Describe the steps in the development of atherosclerosis.
answer
Chronic inflammatory disease characterized by thickening and hardening of the arterial wall. Triggered by a vessel wall injury. Lesions develop on vessel wall and calcify over time. Leads to vessel obstruction, platelet aggregation, and vasoconstriction
question
List the risk factors for the development of primary hypertension
answer
Age, Race, Overweight/Obese, Sedentary, Tobacco use, high Sodium diet, low Potassium diet, high Vitamin D, Alcohol, Stress, Chronic conditions (dyslepedemia, diabetes, renal disease, sleep apnea)
question
List complications that may occur from hypertension.
answer
atherosclerosis, aneurysms, HF, Stroke, Hypertensive crisis, Renal damage, Vision loss, Metabolic syndrome, Problems w/ memory and understanding
question
What is orthostatic hypotension? What are the causes?
answer
Decrease in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure upon standing Sluggish blood pressure compensation in response to (baroreceptor) gravitational changes on the circulation Causes: Medications, Dehydration, Physical exhaustion Venous pooling (pregnancy, extensive varicosities)
question
What is an embolus? Thrombus?
answer
● Thrombus- stationary blood clot ● Embolus- traveling body. Floats through blood. May be a thrombus, air, fat, tissue, bacteria, amniotic fluid, tumor cells, and foreign substances. Can become lodged in places like the lungs, brain, and heart
question
Describe the different types of aneurysm.
answer
○ saccular aneurysm- bulge on the side ○ fusiform- occurs the entire circumference Atherosclerosis is the most common cause, hypertension is a contributing factor
question
What is a true aneurysm?
answer
affects all 3 vessel layers.
question
Describe Raynaud phenomenon and disease, think about the causes, processes and symptoms
answer
result of vasospasms of arteries, most often of the hands, that occur because of sympathetic stimulation. Raynaud's phenomenon describes when these vasospasms occur with an autoimmune disease (systemic lupus erythema and scleroderma). As vessel occlusion increases, the ischemia to the affected tissue becomes worse.
question
What are clinical manifestations of chronic venous insufficiency?
answer
DVT- Virchow's Triad o Venous stasis o Venous endothelial damage o Hypercoagulable state Vericose Veins:dilated, tortuous, engorged veins (vericose veins) Manifestations: Irregular, purplish, bulging veins,Pedal edema, Fatigue,cAching in the legs, Shiny, pigmented, hairless skin on the legs and feet-Skin ulcer formation
question
What is stable angina? What causes it? How is it different from unstable angina.
answer
ischemia that is initiated by increased demand (activity) and relieved with the reduction of that demand (rest) Caused by reduction of O2 to the cardiac muscles that produces chest pain Unstable angina is unpredictable, pre-infarction stage
question
What lab values are monitored to confirm the diagnosis of myocardial infarction (MI)?
answer
● Cardiac troponins (troponin I and troponin T) are most specific for MI (these are enzymes released when heart muscle damaged) ○ creatine kinase (released w/any type of muscle damage ○ lactic dehydrogenase
question
What is hematopoiesis and where does it occur?
answer
the production of blood cells, takes place in the spleen and liver of a fetus and in the bone marrow after birth.
question
What is a stem cell?
answer
Stem cells (primitive cells) differentiate the precursors for the different blood cells. All blood cells come from one pluripotent stem cell. Can branch into Myologenic/Lymphactic
question
What are erythropoietin and thrombopoietin, where do they come from and what do they do?
answer
erythropoietin- hormone produced by the kidneys that stimulates production of RBCs in bone marrow thrombopoietin- hormone produced by the kidneys that stimulates the production of platelets in bone marrow
question
Describe the functions of the spleen and lymph nodes
answer
Spleen: Filters and cleans blood, mounts immune response against blood-borne pathogens, serves as blood reservoir Lymph nodes - Part of the immune and hematologic systems ● Facilitates maturation of lymphocytes ● Transports lymphatic fluid back to the circulation ● Cleanses the lymphatic fluid of microorganisms and foreign particles
question
What is a normal platelet count?
answer
● Normal Value: 150,000-400,000/mm3 ● <50,000/mm3: hemorrhage from minor trauma (anything uner 100,000 should not be on asprin or any other kind of blood thinner) ● <15,000/mm3: spontaneous bleeding ● <10,000/mm3: severe bleeding
question
What is the role of platelets in hemostasis?
answer
Forms platelet plug Thrombin + Fibrinogen= fibrin
question
What other processes and substances participate in hemostasis?
answer
1. Vessel spasm 2. Formation of platelet plug 3. Blood coagulation 4. Clot retraction 5. Clot dissolution
question
What is polycythemia vera? What are the clinical manifestations?
answer
Abnormally high erythrocytes,Considered a neoplastic disease Increased blood volume and viscosity, leading to tissue ischemia and necrosis Manifestations:cyanotic or plethoric skin, high blood pressure, tachycardia, dyspnea, headaches, visual abnormalities
question
Know the normal WBC count.
answer
● White blood cells -normal level is 5,000 to 10000 mm3
question
List the WBCs, identify which are granulocytes and agranulocytes, describe their function
answer
● Granulocytes ○ Neutrophils - small phagocyte ○ Eosinophil- ○ Basophil-histamine ● Agranulocytes ○ Monocytes/Macrophages - phagocytize bacteria ○ Lymphocyte -involved in immune protection
question
What is the cause of infectious mononucleosis? Which cells are infected?
answer
● Cause: Epstein Barr Virus ● Infects B cells by killing the cell or being incorporated into genome
question
Describe multiple myeloma
answer
(plasma cell) B cell cancer, malignant plasma cells, chromosomal break, plasma cells infiltrate bone and organs. ii. Anemia, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, decreased bone density, bone pain,
question
Describe Leukemia
answer
Cancer of the leukocytes Leukemia cells abnormally proliferate, crowding normal blood cells
question
Differentiate between the different types of leukemia
answer
a. Acute lymphocytic (ALL) b. Acute myelogenous (AML) c. Chronic lymphocytic (CLL) d. Chronic myelogenous (CML
question
contractility
answer
mechanical response, how well the heart contracts
question
What causes cool/clammy skin in shock pts
answer
Vasoconstriction/shunting of blood to vital organs
question
ITP (Idiopathic Thrombocytopenia Purpura)
answer
○ causes: idiopathic, autoimmune diseases, immunizations with a live vaccine, immunodeficiency disorders, and viral infections ■ Hypocoagulation resulting from an autoimmune destruction of platelets ○ clinical manifestations:bleeding or indications of bleeding (e.g. bruising, petechia, etc)
question
DIC (
answer
○ causes: Life-threatening complications of many conditions, Results from an inappropriate immune response ■ Widespread coagulation followed by massive bleeding because of the depletion of clotting factors ○ clinical manifestations: tissue ischemia and bleeding
question
TTP (Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia Purpura)
answer
○ causes: idiopathic causes, heredity, bone marrow transplants, cancer, medications, pregnancy, and HIV ■ Deficiency of enzyme necessary for cleaving von Willebrand's factor, leading to hypercoagulation ■ Hypercoagulation depletes platelet levels ○ clinical manifestations:purpura, changes in consciousness, confusion, fatigue, fever, headache, tachycardia, pallor, dyspnea on exertion, speech changes, weakness, and jaundice
question
Pernicious Anemia (Macrocytic Normochromic)
answer
● Cause: B12 deficiency caused by lack of instrinsic factor ● Manifestations:•bleeding gums, diarrhea, impaired smell, loss of deep tendon reflexes, anorexia, personality or memory changes, positive Babinski's sign, stomatitis, paresthesia, and unsteady gait
question
Iron Deficiency Anemia (Mycrocytic Hypochromic)
answer
● Cause: inadequate intake, inadequate absorption, increased bleeding ● Manifestations: cyanosis to sclera, brittle nails, decreased appetite, headache, irritability, stomatitis, pica, and delayed healing
question
Aplastic Anemia (Normocytic Normochromic)
answer
● Cause: insidious, autoimmune, medications, medical treatments, viruses, and genetic ● Manifestations:-Anemia (e.g., weakness, pallor, dyspnea)-Leukocytopenia (e.g., recurrent infections)-Thrombocytopenia (e.g., bleeding)
question
cricoid cartilage
answer
...