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Hemoptysis

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Hemoptysis 

Definition

Hemoptysis is the coughing up of blood or bloody sputum from the lungs or airway. It may be either self-limiting or recurrent. Massive hemoptysis is defined as 200-600 mL of blood coughed up within a period of 24 hours or less.

Description

Hemoptysis can range from small quantities of bloody sputum to life-threatening amounts of blood. The patient may or may not have chest pain.

Causes and symptoms

Hemoptysis can be caused by a range of disorders:

Diagnosis

The diagnosis of hemoptysis is complicated by the number of possible causes.

Patient history

It is important for the doctor to distinguish between blood from the lungs and blood coming from the nose, mouth, or digestive tract. Patients may aspirate, or breathe, blood from the nose or stomach into their lungs and cough it up. They may also swallow blood from the chest area and then vomit. The doctor will ask about stomach ulcers, repeated vomiting, liver disease, alcoholism, smoking, tuberculosis, mitral valve disease, or treatment with anticoagulant medications.

Physical examination

The doctor will examine the patient's nose, throat, mouth, and chest for bleeding from these areas and for signs of chest trauma. The doctor also listens to the patient's breathing and heartbeat for indications of heart abnormalities or lung disease.

Laboratory tests

Laboratory tests include blood tests to rule out clotting disorders, and to look for food particles or other evidence of blood from the stomach. Sputum can be tested for fungi, bacteria, or parasites.

X ray and bronchoscopy

Chest x rays and bronchoscopy are the most important studies for evaluating hemoptysis. They are used to evaluate the cause, location, and extent of the bleeding. The bronchoscope is a long, flexible tube used to identify tumors or remove foreign objects.

Imaging and other tests

Computed tomography scans (CT scans) are used to detect aneurysms and to confirm x-ray results. Ventilation-perfusion scanning is used to rule out pulmonary embolism. The doctor may also order an angiogram to rule out pulmonary embolism, or to locate a source of bleeding that could not be seen with the bronchoscope.
In spite of the number of diagnostic tests, the cause of hemoptysis cannot be determined in 20-30% of cases.

Treatment

Massive hemoptysis is a life-threatening emergency that requires treatment in an intensive care unit. The patient will be intubated (the insertion of a tube to help breathing) to protect the airway, and to allow evaluation of the source of the bleeding. Patients with lung cancer, bleeding from an aneurysm (blood clot), or persistent traumatic bleeding require chest surgery.
Patients with tuberculosis, aspergillosis, or bacterial pneumonia are given antibiotics.
Foreign objects are removed with a bronchoscope.
If the cause cannot be determined, the patient is monitored for further developments.

Prognosis

The prognosis depends on the underlying cause. In cases of massive hemoptysis, the mortality rate is about 15%. The rate of bleeding, however, is not a useful predictor of the patient's chances for recovery.

Key terms

Aneurysm — A sac formed by the dilation of the wall of an artery, vein, or heart; it is filled with clotted blood or fluid.
Angiography — A technique for imaging the blood vessels by injecting a substance that is opaque to x rays.
Aspergillosis — A lung infection caused by the mold Aspergillus fumigatus.
Intubation — The insertion of a tube into a body canal or hollow organ, as into the trachea or stomach.
Pulmonary embolism — The blocking of an artery in the lung by a blood clot.

Resources

Books

Stauffer, John L. "Lung." In Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment, 1998, edited by Stephen McPhee, et al., 37th ed. Stamford: Appleton & Lange, 1997.

hemoptysis /he·mop·ty·sis/ (he-mop´ti-sis) the spitting of blood or of blood-stained sputum.
parasitic hemoptysis  infection of the lungs with flukes of the genus Paragonimus, with cough, spitting of blood, and slow deterioration.

he·mop·ty·sis (h-mpt-ss)
n.
The spitting of blood derived from the lungs or from the bronchial tubes.

hemoptysis (hēmop´tisis),
n the expectoration of blood, by coughing, from the larynx or lower respiratory tract.

hemoptysis
coughing and spitting of blood as a result of bleeding from any part of the respiratory tract. In true hemoptysis the sputum is bright red and frothy with air bubbles; it must not be confused with the dark red or black color of hematemesis.
Hemoptysis is a most unusual sign in animals, most aspirated blood being swallowed. Anything more profuse than that may gush from the nostrils and the mouth but that can hardly be classified as spitting.

endemic hemoptysis
schistosomiasis.

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fever, headache, muscle pain, meningism, conjunctival suffusion, and jaundice), together with hemoptysis, hepatomegaly, diarrhea, hypotension, and reduced urine output.
Adults with CF face an increased likelihood of producing excess sputum, and they are more likely to develop hemoptysis (coughing up blood), pneumothorax (collapsed lung), and infections requiring intravenous antibiotic treatment (Orenstein, 1997).
Because of the highly toxic nature of mercury, workers exposed to the compound exhibited chest pain, dyspnea, cough, hemoptysis, and evidence of interstitial pneumonitis.
 
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