Aetiology and Organ Involvement (acute onset)
Acute/ Sudden Onset
1. Pulmonary – Pneumothorax, Acute Ashma Attack, Pulmonary Embolism, Anaphylactic shock, Acute Pulmonary Oedema
2. Cardiovascular - Ishaemic Heart Disease
3. Psychogenic- Anxiety/ Panic attack
4. Miscellaneous- Foreign objects (choking), inhalation injury (chemical substance)
Tension Pneumothorax/ Secondary Spontaneous Pneumothorax.
-occurs when there is communication between the lung and the pleural space, with a flap tissue acting as a valve, allowing air to enter the pleural space during inspiration and preventing it frolom leaving during expiration.
-Air accumulates under increasing pressure in the pleural space, deflating the lungs and displacement of the mediastinum with obstruction of the great vessels.
-Sudden acute breathlessness, chest pain, tachypnoea and cynosis. May be hypotensive
Acute Astma Attack
-especially in acute exacerbation bronchial asthma attack, presenting with sudden onset of respiratory distress
- associated symptoms include wheezing, chest tightness and coughing.
Small/ Medium Pulmonary Embolism
- thrombus from systemic veins (usually pelvic and abdominal veins) dislodged and embolised into pulmonary arterial system.
-lung tissue is ventilated but not perfused producing an intrapulmonary dead space resulting in impaired gas exchangealveolar collapse and exacerbates hypoxaemia elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure and reduction in cardiac output.
- Area of lungs which are not perfused by pulmonary artery may infarct but often does not because O2 continues to be supplied by bronchial circulation.
-sudden onset of dyspnoea, may have chest pain (pleuritic or non-pleuritic), haemoptysis, pleural rub, hypoxemia or fever if infaction occurs.
Acute Pulmonary Oedema.
-when pressure in the lungs is above 20mmHg causes increased filtration of fluid out of capillaries into the interstitial space. When capillary pressure exceeds 25 mmHg, alveolar oedema occurs.
- Acute breathlessness, wheezing, anxious and perspiring profusely.
- other associated symptoms include productive cough, frothy, with blood-tinged sputum.
IHD (Acute Coronary Syndrome)
- Limited or occlusion of blood flow into coronary arteries due to Coronary Artery Disease
- Sudden onset chest pain with dyspnoea, sweating and palpitation.
Panic Disorders (hyperventilation syndrome)
- panic attack- overbreathing leading to a decrease in PCO2 and an increase of pH in arterial.
- Sudden onset of dyspnoea, palpitations, chest pain, choking sensation and sweating
Inhalation of foreign bodies
- usually in children inhaling peanuts or small toys.
- In adult, inhalation often occurs after an excess of alcohol or under GA
- Choking (sudden onset of dyspnoea), can become cyanosed.
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