COMMON PRESENTING COMPLAINTS
Cough is “the watchdog of the lungs.” It is provoked by mechanical or chemical stimulation of the airways. The cough is preceded by a deep breath followed by glottic closure. Then active compression causes a rapid rise in intrathoracic pressure until sudden opening of the glottis allows rapid decompression. The high flow velocity achieved serves to clear the airway of secretions or foreign bodies. Cough may be caused by the presence of secretions, viral infection of the airway epithelium, or stimulation of parenchymal receptors by pulmonary edema or fibrotic lung disease or may be the sole manifestation of bronchospasm. Chronic cough at night can often be ascribed to the presence of postnasal drip, reflux esophagitis, or aspiration. Recent alteration in the character of a chronic cough may be due to bronchial carcinoma. The cause of chronic isolated cough can usually be elucidated without recourse to invasive measures.
Hemoptysis requires immediate evaluation. A bleeding site in the upper airway should be excluded. Blood-streaked sputum is commonly seen in bronchitis, bronchiectasis, pneumonia, and tuberculosis, but in the absence of infection, persistent or intermittent hemoptysis usually indicates the presence of tumor. Massive hemoptysis is a medical emergency and unless promptly treated the patient may asphyxiate. Unexplained hemoptysis requires a complete evaluation, including a chest x-ray, and fiberoptic bronchoscopy may eventually be required.
Breathing is an automatic, unconscious act. Dyspnea indicates an awareness of increased difficulty in breathing. Its pathophysiology is unclear but may be due to a disproportion between the perceptive demand for ventilation and that achieved. This may result from a change in the relationship between respiratory center drive and minute ventilation or the work of breathing. Clarification of the predisposing factors is important in the diagnosis of its origin. Episodic dyspnea associated with wheezing at rest or following exercise may indicate bronchospasm. Dyspnea causing arousal from sleep may be due to nocturnal asthma, pulmonary edema, sleep apnea syndrome, or aspiration. Dyspnea on exertion may be cardiac or pulmonary in origin, and differentiation often requires exercise testing.
Chest pain originates in the chest wall, the parietal pleura, the large airways, and the structures located within the mediastinum, as the lung parenchyma and visceral pleura are insensitive to painful stimuli. Pleuritic pain is distinctive, being sharp and knifelike and exacerbated by breathing and coughing. It must be differentiated from pericardial pain, involvement of the intercostal nerves by herpes zoster, and inflammation of the costochondral junctions (Tietze’s syndrome). Disease involvement of the diaphragmatic pleura may cause referred pain to the shoulder, because the phrenic nerve supply arises from the cervical roots (C3, 4, 5).
Careful review of the remainder of the history is important. Prior episodes of respiratory infection may indicate acquired or congenital abnormalities of pulmonary clearance mechanisms. Similar findings in family members may suggest an inherited disorder such as immotile cilia syndrome. Attention should be paid to occupation, travel, habits (smoking), and hobbies (pets).
- Clinical Manifestations
- Other Clearly Extrinsic Causes of Diffuse Infiltrative Lung Disease
- Nephrotic Glomerulopathies
- THE AIRWAY STRUCTURE
- PNEUMOTHORAX
- Pneumonia in the Immunocompromised Host
- CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS OF GALLSTONES
- V-GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE
- ASTHMA
- GLOMERULAR DISEASE
- Pathogenic Mechanisms - Mechanism of Injury
- AORTIC DISEASE - AORTIC ANEURYSMS
- TREATMENT OF MALABSORPTION
- CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY
- iMATOPOIESIS
- TREATMENT
- DC CARDIOVERSION AND DEFIBRILLATION
- Public health and environment
- Sarcoidosis
- APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WITH SUSPECTED OR CONFIRMED ARRHYTHMIAS
- PERICARDIAL DISEASES - ACUTE PERICARDITIS
- SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH
- NONPULMONARY FACTORS
- Chronic Interstitial Nephritis
- Classification or Glomerular Diseases
- Hematuria
- CLINICAL CLASSIFICATION OF JAUNDICE
- Nephritic Glomerulopathies
- Vitamin Dresistant Rickets
- Genitourinary System
- Focal Glomerular Sclerosis (FQS)
- Gardner's Syndrome
- Phenytoin
- Disorders of Pregnancy
- BILIRUBIN METABOLISM