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Dyspnea & cough.

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Presentation on theme: "Dyspnea & cough."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dyspnea & cough

2 Objectives Definition of dyspnea
prevalence of dyspnea in palliative care Causes of dyspnea Medical management (Treatment of underlying cause) Non-pharmacological and symptom management Briefly review cough

3 an uncomfortable awareness of breathing
Dyspnea an uncomfortable awareness of breathing

4 “…the most common severe symptom in the last days of life”
davis c.l. the therapeutics of dyspnoea cancer surveys 1994 vol 21 p 85-98

5 70% incidence in last 6 weeks of life
severe/very severe dyspnea - 50% in last week of life less than 1/2 were offered effective treatment 70% incidence in hospice survey 50% based on family and friends perceptions

6 Causes of dyspnea Direct Tumour causes Indirect Tumour causes
Treatment-related causes

7 Direct Tumour Causes Parenchymal Lymphangitic carcinomatosis
Obstruction Pleural effusion Pericardial effusion Superior ven cava obstruction Ascites, hepatomegaly Tumour microemboli

8 Indirect Tumour Causes
Cachexia Electrolyte imbalances Infections Anemia Pulmonary Embolism Paraneoplastic syndromes Aspiration

9 Treatment-Related Causes
Surgery Radiation pneumonitis / fibrosis Chemotherapy-induced pulmonary fibrosis (bleomycin) Chemotherapy-induced cardiomyopathy (adriamycin, cyclophosphamide) Neutropenic infection

10 Managing the dyspneic palliative patient
Disease specific Non-specific, symptom-oriented

11 Disease specific management
Tumour treatment - chemo/radiation, hormone Infection - antibiotics CHF - Lasix SVCO - steroids, diuretics, radiation, anticoagulation Pleural effusion - thoracentesis Pulmonary Embolism - anticoagulation Airway obstruction - steroids, radiation, tracheostomy

12 Disease-specific medications
Corticosteroids Obstruction, SVCO, Lymphangitic carcinomatosis, radiation pneumonitis Furosemide CHF, Lymphangitic carcinomatosis Antibiotics Anticoagulation Pulmonary embolism, svco Bronchodilators

13 Non-specific, non-pharmacological
calm reassurance sitting up / semi-reclined open window fan

14 Non-specific, pharmacological
Oxygen Opioids chlorpromazine benzodiazepines

15 Opioid management Multiple central effects that lead to subjective improvement in dyspnea Opioid selection and titration is similar to pain management Dyspnea = Pain

16 Dyspnea Crisis Sudden onset or rapid worsening of dyspnea
Often an imminently terminal event (minutes -hours) Pulmonary embolism Fulminant pneumonia Upper airway obstruction Hemoptysis

17 Managing Dyspnea Crisis
Aggressively pursue comfort remain on site until comfortable Ideally use intravenous route (subcutaneous usually adequate) Employ non-specific measures: reassurance oxygen Opioids sedatives (mehotrimeprazine, chlorpromazine, benzodiazepines)

18 Opioids in Dyspnea Crisis
q10-15m iv push with escalating doses

19 10-15mins 5 mg 10 mg 20 mg e.g. Morphine

20 Consider the use of crisis Medications
Midazolam 5-10 mg SC Methotrimeprazine mg SC Opioid Double baseline dose

21 Congestion in the final hours
Antisecretory scopolamine mg sc q1h prn glycopyrrolate mg sc q1h prn Atropine mg sc q1h prn 1% eyedrops several drops q1h sl prn

22 Cough Defense mechanism to clear excess secretions and foreign material from airways

23 Causes of Cough postnasal drip, asthma, gerd, infection, acei, smoking, bronchiectasis, bronchitis, interstitial lung disease, etc.

24 cough is one of the most common initial symptoms in lung cancer
Prevalence of 45% at diagnosis 39-80% receiving chemotherapy or radiotherapy for lung cancer 22-37% prevalence in patients with other cancers A comparative survey revealed that end-stage heart failure patients at a heart failure clinic had more cough than persons identified as terminally ill by a palliative care team (44% versus 26%)

25 Treatment of Cough Environmental
humidification, supplemental oxygen, avoid irritants (perfume, smoke) Local treatment radiotherapy to cancer

26 Opioids Work by raising the threshold of the medullary cough centres Dextromethorphan NMDA antagonist with conflicting results on efficacy possible central inhibition of cough centre secondary to its syrup form which soothes the pharynx Benzonatate acts peripherally by anesthetizing pulmonary stretch receptors

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