COPD

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What is the group automatically if a patient has had more than 2 exacerbations or at least one that has led to hospitalization

E

What is the assumption for classification of Airflow limitation and GOLD grades

FEV1/FVC ratio is below 0.70

What is considered frequent exacerbations

2+ per year

What is the GOLD group for patients that has a mMRC score of 0-1 or a CAT score of less than 10 with 0-1 moderate exacerbations per year

A

In COPD, when is spirometry done

After bronchodilator is given

What is the clinical presentation of COPD

Airway obstruction and airway trapping

What is an ABE assessment and what two things are considered when using assessment

Apart of the GOLD, uses exacerbation history and symptoms to place patient into groups

What is the GOLD group for patients that has a mMRC score of greater than 2 or a CAT score of greater than 10 with 0-1 moderate exacerbations per year

B

What are some other common findings of COPD

Chest tightness or wheezing, shallow breathing, increased respiratory rate, use of accessory muscles, barrel chest and fatigue

What is the subjective information of assessing COPD

Current nature and magnitude of symptoms using the mMRC or the COPD assessment test (CAT)

According to GOLD 2, what is moderate COPD

FEV1 greater than 50% but less than 80%

According to GOLD 1, what is mild COPD

FEV1 greater than or equal to 80% predicted

According to GOLD 3, what is severe COPD

FEV1 is greater than 30 but less than 50% predicted

According to GOLD 4, what is very severe COPD

FEV1 less than 30% predicted

What are the host risk factors

Genetic (alpha01 antitrypsin deficiency), increased age, male sex, socioeconomic status and lung growth/development

What is GOLD

Global initiative for chronic obstructive lung disease

What is the value of FEV1/FVC for COPD diagnosis

Less than 0.7

What does a score of 10 or more for a CAT assessment mean

Not well controlled

What is COPD

Persistent and progressive disease characterized by airflow obstruction and chronic respiratory symptoms which is preventable and treatable

What are the three primary symptoms of COPD

Persistent, progressive dyspnea that gets worse with exercise, chronic cough that can be intermittent or unproductive and chronic sputum production

What are the causes of COPD exacerbation

Respiratory tract infections, environment factors

What is required to diagnose COPD

Spirometry

What is the objective information of assessing COPD

Spirometry results, exacerbation history and presence of comorbidities

What does a 2 or more score for a modified MRC dyspnea scale mean

Symptoms are not well controlled

What does a 0-1 score for a modified MRC dyspnea scale mean

Symptoms are well controlled

What does a score of below 10 for a CAT assessment mean

Symptoms are well controlled

What are the environmental risk factors

Tobacco smoke, indoor air pollution, occupational exposure, and outdoor air pollution


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