Respiratory Assessment

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Introduction[edit | edit source]

Respiratory conditions can affect breathing either through damage to the lungs or excess secretions. To ensure that the correct treatment is implemented a thorough respiratory assessment is undertaken and should include both a comprehensive subjective and objective component to get a complete understanding of the client's function and baseline.

Subjective Assessment[edit | edit source]

The subjective assessment is an important part of the client experience. It allows the client to express their symptoms from their viewpoint and helps to guide the objective assessment and plan a treatment programme with the clients needs at the forefront. Each subjective assessment should include the following components.

  • Main Complaint:
  • History of Present Illness:
    • Site , Intensity , Type , Aggravating factor and Relieving factor (SITAR)
    • Onset - sudden or gradual
    • Location - radiating
    • Duration - frequency or chronology ( seasonal or daily variations )
    • Characteristics - quality or severity
    • Current situation - improving or deteriorating
    • Effect on activity of daily living (ADL)
    • Previous diagnosis of similar episodes
    • Previous treatment and efficacy

SUBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT[edit | edit source]

Cardinal signs and symptoms :-

1.Cough : onset - sudden or gradual

duration - Acute < 3 weeks

Chronic - >3 weeks

Nature - Dry : irritation

Wet : signs of infection

Type - Mucoid

Mucopurulent : TB

Froathy : pulmonary oedema

Rusty ( blood ) : TB , lobar pneumonia

Odour - foul : infection


2) sputum : Amount (tea spoon , table spoon , cup )

Normal - 100 ml of tracheobronchial secretions are produced daily and cleared subconsciously


Color :

• Blood streaked sputum : inflammation of throat ( larynx , trachea ) or bronchi , lung cancer , ulcers

•Pink sputum : sputum and blood formed from alveoli and small peripheral bronchi

•Massive blood : cavitary TB , lung abscess ,bronchieactasis , lung infarction , pulmonary embolism

•Green or greenish coloured infection : pneumonia , cystic fibrosis ( green from degenerative changes in cell debris )

•Rust colored - pneumococcal bacteria , pulmonary TB

•Brownish - chronic bronchitis ( greenish / yellowish / brown ) , chronic pneumonia ( whitish - brown )

•Yellowish purulent - pus - haemophilus

Yellowish - green ( mucopurulent ) - treatment with antibiotics that reduce symptoms - bronchiectasis , cystic fibrosis , pneumonia

• Whitish grey - chronic allergic bronchitis ( no. of eosinophilis )

•White , milky or opaque (mucoid) - viral infection or allergy ( asthma )

•Foamy white - earlier phase - pulmonary edema

•Froathy pink - severe pulmonary edema

•Black - black specks in mucoid secretions - smoke inhalation ( fires , tobacco , heroine ) , coaldust


3) Breathlessness-

The physiotherapist should always relate breathlessness to the level of function that the patient can achieve

  • Exercise tolerance ( no. of stairs client can climb or can walk )
  • Shortness of breath at rest
  • Association of paraoxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (PND)
  • Associated swelling of ankles or recent weight gain
  • Activities : Sudden ( pneumothorax , pulmonary embolism , DVT )

Always ( fibrosis , fluid )

SCALES -[edit | edit source]

A.NYHA ( New York Heart Association )[edit | edit source]

Grade 1 - no symptoms and limitation in ordinary physical activity

Grade 2 - mild symptoms , angina and slight limitation in ordinary activities

Grade 3 - marked limitation in activity due to symptom , even during less than ordinary activity .

Grade 4 - severe limitation , experience symptoms even at rest mostly bed bound patient .

B. MMRC ( Modified Medical Research Council )[edit | edit source]

Grade 0 - no dyspnea except with strenous exercise

Grade 1- dyspnea when walking up on the hill or hurrying on the level

Grade 2 - walks slower than most on the level or stops after 15 minutes of walking on the level.

Grade 3 - stops after few minutes of walking on the level.

Grade 4- dyspnea with minimal activity such as getting dressed or too dyspneic to leave the house.

C. ATS (AMERICAN THORACIC SOCIETY)[edit | edit source]

Grade 0- none - no trouble of dyspnea on level / uphill

Grade 1 - mild - dyspnea on at level / uphill.

Grade 2 - moderate - walks slower than person of same age

Grade 3 - severe - stops after 100 yards

Grade 4 - very severe - breathlessness

4. CHEST PAIN -[edit | edit source]

Chest pain in respiratory patients usually originate from musculoskeletal , pleural or tracheal inflammation as lung parenchyma and small airways contain no pain fibres.

Example : Pleuritic chest pain

Tracheitis

Musculoskeletal (chest wall) pain

Angina pectoris

Pericarditis


Efforts to treat - Heat , Splinting , Pain medication


INCONTINENCE - Coughing and huffing increases intra - abdominal pressure which may precipitate urinary leakage

5. OTHER SYMPTOMS:[edit | edit source]

Fever (pyrexia) - TB

Headache - morning headache - nocturnal CO2 retention

Peripheral oedema - right heart failure

Shivering

Weight loss

Palpitations

Vomiting and nausea

Gastro intestinal reflex


Past medical history- •Thoracic , nasal , pharyngeotracheal , trauma or surgery , hospitalisation for pulmonary disorders.


•Use of ventilation - assisting devices


•COPD- TB , bronchitis , emphysema , etc


•Other chronic disorders - cardiac , cancer , blood clotting disorders


•Allergy


•Immunization (pneumococcal , influenza )


•DM / TB / BP / asthma


Surgical history -

Endoscopy , tracheostomy , lobectomy


Personal and social history -

Sleep

Appetite / bowel , bladder / nutrition

Smoking

Exercise tolerance

Home environment

Economic condition - poor / fair / good


OBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT


General examination

Vital sign :

Temperature

Pulse

Respiratory rate

Blood pressure

Spo2


General appearance- Ectomorph

                                  Mesomorph
                                  Endomorph


Body weight - BMI - weight in kg

                               Height in meter square 

Nails - Clubbing


Eyes - pallor (anaemia)

           Plethora (high haemoglobin)
           Jaundice (yellow color due to liver or blood disturbance)


Tongue and mouth - Cyanosis - hypoxemia


Jugular venous pressure - increased in right heart failure , chronic lung disease , dehydrated patient


Peripheral oedema - seen in decreased albumin level , impaired venous or lymphatic function , increased steroids

   In bedbound patients , check the sacrum.


Observation of chest-

Transverse diameter > A P Diameter


Abnormalities - •Kyphosis


•Kyphoscoliosis - restrictive lung defect


•Pectus carinatum - pigeon chest


•Hyperinflation or barrel chest - AP = transverse - ribs horizontal


Breathing pattern -

12 to 16 breath per minute

Inspiratory : expiratory = 1:1.5 to 1:2

Check for bradypnea , tachypnea , hyperventilation

Prolonged expiration - 1:3 to 1:4

•Pursed lip breathing


•Apnoea


•Hypopnea


•Kaussamaul ‘s respiration - metabolic acidosis


•Cheyne strokes respiration - drugs ( narcotics) , heart failure , neurological disturbances


•Ataxic breathing - cerebellar disease


•Apneutic breathing - brain damage


•Thoracoabdominal - female ; abdominothoracic


• ICU Patients - mode of ventilation ( supplemental oxygen , intermitent positive pressure ventilation)


•Route of ventilation (mask , endotracheal tube , tracheostomy )


•Level of consciousness (glasgow coma scale)


•Central venous pressure (CVP) , pulmonary artery pressure (PAP)


PALPATION :

TRACHEA - tracheal deviation indicates underlying mediasternal shift . trachea may be pulled towards in collapsed or fibrosed upper lobe or pushed away from pneumothorax or large pleural effusion .


CHEST EXPANSION - BY TAPE :

Supramammary - 1.5cm

Mammary - 1.5 cm

Inframammary - 1cm


   Technique : at residual volume , the examiner ‘s hands are placed spanning the posterolateral segment of both bases , with the thumbs touching in the midline posteriorly . both the sides should move  equally with 3 - 5 cm being the normal displacement.


Hoover’s sign :
      Paradoxical movement of the lower chest can occur in patients with severe chronic airflow limitation who are extremely hyperinflated . as the dome of the diaphragm cannot descend any further diaphragm contraction during inspiration pulls the lower ribs inwards. This is called hoover’ s sign.


Vocal fremitus -

    It is the measure of speech vibrations transmitted through the chest wall to the examiner’ s hands .It is the measure by asking the patient to repeatedly say ‘ggg’ or 111 whilst the examiner`s hands are placed flat on both sides of the chest .
  Increase in patient whose lung underneath is relatively solid ( consolidated)

Decrease in patient - pneumothorax or pleural effusion.


PERCUSSION -

It is performed by placing the left hand firmly on the chest wall so that the finger have good contact with the skin . the middle finger of the left hand is struck over the DIP joint with the middle finger of the right hand . for all the positions , percuss at 4 to 5 cm intervals over the intercostal spaces , moving systematically from superior to inferior and medial to lateral .


Resonance - the expected sound can usually be heard over all areas of the lungs.

Hyper resonance - associated with hyperinflation may indicate emphysema , pneumothorax or asthma.

Dullness or flatness - pneumonia , atelactasis , pleural effusion , pneumothorax or asthma.

Tympany - sound usually associated with percussion over the abdomen .


AUSCULTATION :

Auscultation with the stethscope provides important clues to the condition of the lungs and pleura . all sounds can be characterized in the same manner as the percussion notes , intensity , pitch , quality and duration. 

1.Breath sound : normal - bronchial , vesicular


   Abnormal - crackels, rhonchi ,wheeze , pleural friction rub.


2. Vocal resonance :

Transmission of voice through the airway and lung tissue to the chest wall where it is heard through a stethscope . it is usually tested by instructing the patient to say ‘99’ repeatedly .

  Decrease in resonance - emphysema , pneumothorax , pleural thickening or pleural effusion .


3. Heart sound :

1st - closure of mitral and tricuspid valve.

2nd - closure of pulmonary and aortic valves.

3rd - cardiac failure

4th - heart failure , hypertension , aortic valve disease


TEST RESULTS : 1.SPIROMETRY - The forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV) , the forced vital capacity ( FVC ) and peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) are important measures of ventilatory function.


2.ARTERIAL BLOOD GASES - ABG provide an accurate measure of O2 uptake and CO2 removal by the respiratory system as a whole


             Normal values :
                 pH : 7.35 TO 7.45
           PaO2: 10.7 to 13.3 kPa ( 80 - 100 mmHg)
         PaCO2: 4.7 TO 6.0 KPa (35 to 45 mm hg)
          HCO3: 22 - 26 MMOL / L 
Base excess : -2 to +2 


3. Chest radiograph