Interactive Transcript
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Okay, cardiopulmonary imaging,
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atelectasis session two.
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This one's going to be a
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little bit of a myth-buster.
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If you're still teaching that atelectasis
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causes fever, you need to stop.
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So let me show you why.
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This is, it's based on some false,
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uh, false information and a lot
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of dogma that got carried through.
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Um, but it does not cause fever.
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And the other thing we're going to look
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at after that is that understanding
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that atelectasis and consolidation look
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very different on CT with convalescence.
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Contrast atelectasis enhances differently.
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So there's no real reason to just say,
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well, it could be atelectasis or consolid.
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No, you can tell between the two.
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So again, morphologic patterns were
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in the increased capacity atelectasis.
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This is the second session.
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And we'll start you right off by seeing that
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there is a pacification here, sharply marginated.
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You can see the minor fissures deviated
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inferiorly, no bronchograms.
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And there's no fever.
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This is a mucous plug and atelectasis within
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the right lower lobe, post-obstructive.
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Now, if this patient's on the I.C.
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or, um, medicine service and they
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see this and they go, Huh, atelectasis,
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I thought that caused fever.
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No, no, people don't tend to do that.
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They just kind of, they have fever and then
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they look and they go, oh, it's the atelectasis.
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When in fact,
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you got to keep looking at something else.
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So, uh, Chest Volume, uh, Chest Volume 107,
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you can go see this paper, 1995, prospectively
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evaluated 100 postcardiac patients,
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and they demonstrated an inverse relationship
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between post-op fever and atelectasis.
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That is, as the atelectasis improved,
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a lot of people were getting fevers.
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Okay, so there was no association there.
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Again, we have patients with hypoxia because
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atelectasis does give hypoxia because essentially
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it's shunting blood through without being
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oxygenated, but it does not cause fever.
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Another one came out of Chest in April,
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2011, where they evaluated the studies
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and it, yeah, they could not find any
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pathophysiologic explanation or any,
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uh, studies to really support it.
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So where did it come from?
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Well, this whole atelectasis causes fevers
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from the early 1900s and 1950s when many
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physicians, especially surgeons, did not
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distinguish between atelectasis or pneumonia.
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They used them interchangeably.
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And then in 1963, these folks did a study and
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they placed nonsterile, nonsterile cotton
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plugs in the left main bronchus and 30 docs.
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Most developed fever in 12 hours.
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How about that?
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Uh, on autopsy, inflammation,
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obstructive pneumonia were actually seen.
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Six became septic.
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That's right, septic from atelectasis.
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No, that's all post-obstructive pneumonia.
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And in the same paper, they actually
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stated, it's interesting the antibiotics
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improve the fever, not the atelectasis.
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In conclusion, atelectasis is the cause for fever.
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Okay, you can see there that those don't connect.
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Okay, what else?
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Well, this one gets quoted to me
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from surgeons from time to time.
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Rats were given one atelectatic lung.
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The contralateral lung was normal.
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And then they bronc the atelectatic lung,
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and they found, "Hey, look, there's more
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cytokines and tumor necrosis factor."
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Our theory is that hypoxia-induced activation
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of the alveolar macrophages induces the fever.
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Therefore, this is the likely
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mechanism, but one line in the results.
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None of the rats became febrile.
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None of the rats became febrile.
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That was just skipped over.
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Okay, right lower lobe collapse,
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no air bronchograms, bronchial cutoff.
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I've shown this one before.
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There's no fever.
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Okay, atelectasis does not cause fever.
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Now this person, notice this,
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it's a little different.
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The atelectasis is not sharply marginated.
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It's a bit more ill-defined.
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It is kind of triangular, but it
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does extend pretty far and this
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one extends down to the lower lobe.
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Because it's ill-defined, I start to wonder
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about the possibility of aspiration pneumonitis,
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which is a cause of low-grade fever.
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So if a person's got something that looks
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like atelectasis, maybe a little ill-defined,
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dependent, low-grade fever, you could
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suggest retained secretions or aspiration.
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As opposed to this person,
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who has high spiking fevers.
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And high white count.
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Well, this doesn't look like atelectasis at all.
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Anyway, it's very ill-defined.
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It's peripheral, it's not triangular,
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doesn't radiate from the hilum.
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This is bacterial or nosocomial pneumonia.
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So they look different now quickly CT enhancement
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um Consolidation because the vessels are all
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spread apart tends to enhance but not to a
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great degree atelectasis like here Everything is
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crowded together It will in fact enhance brightly.
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So one way to do this is just take a look at what
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you're seeing and then look at the paraspinal
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muscle. Okay, is it the same? It's going to
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be consolidation. Atelectasis will blush much
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brighter and will be much brighter than the
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paraspinal muscle. So if it looks a lot brighter,
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it's atelectasis most likely. If it's about the
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same, that's consolidation. Another nice example
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Consolidation. Atelectasis enhances much more.
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And there's what the pleural fluid looks like.
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So based on enhancement and comparing it
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to the paraspinal, you should come down
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pretty hard on one or the other and not kind
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of just put them all always in the same.
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Well, it could be atelectasis or pneumonia.
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You don't have to do that.
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You don't have to do that.
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So, uh, summary, atelectasis
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is not a cause for fever.
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If someone's teaching you this, uh, walk away.
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If the patient has fever, look elsewhere.
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Aspiration, when it does occur, will be a little
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more ill-defined, tends to be a low-grade fever.
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If it's a high-grade fever, an elevated
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white count, infectious pneumonia.
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And on CT with contrast, atelectasis will
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blush and enhance much greater than
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consolidation, and you can use the paraspinal
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muscles as your standard of reference.
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With that, thank you very much.
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