Pulmonary
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- Pneumonia = fever, purulent vs dry cough, pleuritic chest pain
- Pneumothorax = acute onset, pleuritic chest pain. Consider in any intubated patient.
- Pulmonary embolism = Hx DVT, recent surgery, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, hypoxia
- Often difficult to rule in or out by history/exam. Consider this early.
- Aspiration = common problem if acute loss of consciousness
- Bronchospasm = seen with CHF, pneumonia, asthma/COPD
- Upper airway obstruction = often acute onset, stridor/focal
wheezing
-wheezin- If albuterol fails, consider vocal cord dysfunction
- ARDS = usually in pts hospitalized with another dx (e.g. sepsis)
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Cardiac
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- MI/ischemia = dyspnea can be an anginal equivalent
- CHF = common in elderly pts on IVF or due to ischemia
- Arrhythmia = can cause dyspnea with or without CHF/ischemia
- Tamponade = consider if signs of isolated right heart failure
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Metabolic
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- Acidosis = pts become tachypneic to blow off CO2 in compensation
- Sepsis = dyspnea can be an early, non-specific sign of systemic infection
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Hematologic
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- Anemia = easy to miss this by Hx/exam
- Methemoglobinemia = rare; consider if taking dapsone, nitrates, topical/local anesthetics
- - Cyanosis, blue discoloration of skin/mucous membranes confusion, seizures, normal PO2
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Psychiatric
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- Anxiety = common, diagnosis of exclusion
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