Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-B02 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:52


Bronchiectasis Bronchiolitis 253

follow-up
During Treatment
■Regular office visits if on rotating antibiotics

Routine
■Depending on severity of symptoms and airway obstruction

complications and prognosis
Complications
■Hemoptysis:
➣If nonmassive (>500 mL/d), antibiotics and bronchoscopic eval-
uation should be considered
➣If massive, patient should be positioned bleeding side down with
attention to airway management, and bronchial artery emboliza-
tion or, rarely, lobectomy considered

Prognosis
■Overall, good; minority has severe physical and social problems as
result of bronchiectasis
■Decreased pulmonary function and cor pulmonale associated with
increased mortality
■After bronchial artery embolization for hemoptysis, rebleeding may
occur in 50% as long as 3 y after procedure

Bronchiolitis........................................


STEPHEN C. LAZARUS, MD


history & physical
Difficult to identify early because involvement of peripheral airways
produces few symptoms

History
■Bronchiolitis:
➣Common in infants and small children: usually due to virus
(especially RSV); begins as acute viral illness; cough, dyspnea,
fever later
➣Uncommon in adults: industrial, environmental exposures to
poorly soluble irritants (nitrogen dioxide, phosgene) from silo
gas, jet and missile fuel, fires; may occur withMycoplasma,
Legionella, viruses
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