Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Bronchial

Subject: Medical and Surgical Nursing I (Theory)

Overview

The hallmark of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a gradual, partially reversible airflow restriction. It comprises bronchial asthma, pulmonary edema, and chronic bronchitis.

Clinical Manifestation

  • A presence of a productive cough lasting at least 3 months a year for 2 successive years.
  • Production of thick gelatinous sputum,
  • Wheezing,
  • Dyspnea,
  • Shortness of breath, especially during physical activities,
  • Chest tightness.

Management

  • Cessation of smoking,
  • Medication,
  • Lung therapies,
  • Surgery.

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Bronchial

This is characterized by a progressive, partially reversible airflow limitation. It includes bronchial asthma, pulmonary edema, and chronic bronchitis.

Chronic Bronchitis

It is a persistent infection of the lower respiratory tract that causes dyspnea, coughing up too much mucus, and chronic inflammation of the lower respiratory tract.

Pulmonary Emphysema

It is a complex lung disease characterized by destruction of the alveoli, enlargement of distal airspace, and breakdown of alveolar walls.

Types of emphysema are Centrilobular, pan lobular, para septal.

Etiology

  • Cigarette smoking,
  • Air pollution,
  • Occupational exposure,
  • Allergy,
  • Autoimmunity,
  • Infection,
  • Genetic predisposition,
  • Aging.

Pathophysiology

  • Chronic Bronchitis
    • Environmental toxins from smoke irritate the airways,
    • Mucus-producing gland hypertrophy and a rise in goblet clearance secretion,
    • Less ciliated cells and increased mucus. reduced removal of mucus,
    • Accumulation of secretions and airway obstruction.
  • Emphysema
    • Wall of the alveoli is destroyed,
    • Alveolar surface area decrease,
    • Increased dead space,
    • Impaired diffusion of oxygen and impair the exchange of O2 and CO2,
    • Hypoxia.

Clinical Manifestation

  • A presence of a productive cough lasting at least 3 months a year for 2 successive years.
  • Production of thick gelatinous sputum,
  • Wheezing,
  • Dyspnea,
  • Shortness of breath, especially during physical activities,
  • Chest tightness,
  • Cyanosis,
  • Frequent chest infection,
  • Lack of energy,
  • Unintended weight loss(in later stages).

Diagnostic Evaluation

  • Pulmonary function test,
  • ABG levels,
  • Chest x-ray,
  • CT scan.

Management

  • Cessation of smoking
  • Medication
    • Bronchodilators:- short- acting bronchodilators include albuterol (ProAir HFA, VentolinHFA, others), Levalbuterol (Xopenex), and ipratropium (Atrovent). The long-acting bronchodilators include tiotropium (spirivia), salmeterol, (serevent), formoterol (Foradil, Perforomist), arformoterol (Brovana), indacaterol (Arcapta) and aclidinium(Tudorza),
    • Inhaled steroids:- Fluticasone (Flovent) and budesonide (Pulmicort),
    • Combined inhalers:- Salmeterol and fluticasone (Advair) and formoterol and budesonide (Symbicort),
    • Oral steroids,
    • Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors,
    • Theophylline.
  • Antibiotics
  • Lung therapies
    • Oxygen therapy.
    • a pulmonary rehabilitation program.
  • Surgery
    • Lung volume reduction surgery:- In this surgery, surgeon removes small wedges of damaged lung tissue. This creates extra space in chest cavity so that the remaining lung tissue and the diaphragm work more efficiently.
    • Lung transplant.

Nursing Management

  • Improving Airway Clearance
    • Eliminate pulmonary irritants,
    • Smoking cessation,
    • Administer bronchodilators,
    • Assess for adverse effect of medication,
    • Auscultate chest before and after aerosol therapy,
    • Postural drainage,
    • Avoid dairy product.
  • Improving Breathing Pattern
    • Teach and supervise breathing exercise,
    • Teach diaphragmatic, lower coastal, abdominal breathing using relaxed breathing pattern,
    • Use pursed lip breathing at intervals and during dyspnea,
    • Comfort position,
    • Relief from anxiety.
  • Controlling Infection
    • Recognize early sing of infection,
    • Sputum for culture and sensitivity.
  • Improving Gas Exchange
    • Observe the patient for any disturbance,
    • Monitor ABG,
    • Oxygen saturation,
    • Assist mechanical ventilation.
  • Improving Nutrition
    • Collect nutritional history,
    • Encourage small and frequent feeds,
    • Liquid nutritional supplement,
    • Avoid gas-producing food,
    • Encourage oral hygiene,
    • Encourage pursed-lip breathing in between the meals,
    • Monitor body weight.

References

  • https://medlineplus.gov › Medical Encyclopedia
  • http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/copd/diagnosis-treatment/treatment/txc-20204923
  • www.copdfoundation.org/What-is-COPD/Understanding-COPD/What-is-COPD.asp
  • www.healthline.com/health/copd
Things to remember
  • Remove respiratory irritants,
  • Quitting smoking,
  • Give bronchodilators out,
  • Check for any drug side effects,
  • Before and after aerosol treatment, auscultate the chest,
  • Drainage of the spine,
  • Skip the dairy products,
  • Keep an eye out for any changes in the patient,
  • Track ABG,
  • Saturation with oxygen,
  • Mechanical ventilation with your help.

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