Case Study ISBAR Handover: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Introduction-David Nazzal a 62-year-old male with no known allergies (NKA)

 

Situation- David presented to the Emergency Department at 2200 hrs. Upon assessment he was sitting in a tripod position and found to have a barrel chest. David presents with fever, sore throat, productive cough, yellow phlegm and dyspnoea.

Background- David tested positive for COVID-19 three days ago through a rapid antigen test. Wife Linda indicated symptoms had progressively worsened with no relieving factors noted. David had similar episode a year ago with an acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) requiring hospitalisation. David has an increasing amount of purulent mucus which appears as yellow phlegm. He self-medicated with a Ventolin inhaler prior to admission but this had not resolved his symptoms

Past Medical History- COPD, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia. He was a previous smoker for 30 years however he quit when he was diagnosed with COPD 10 years ago.

Current Regular Medications taken:

  • Ipratropium (Atrovent) via nebulizer once a day
  • Salbutamol (Ventolin) puffer PRN
  • Lipitor 40mg daily
  • Not up to date on his annual pneumococcal and influenza vaccinations

A to G Assessment

Airway- Patent, own

Breathing- RR-30 b/min, SPO2 78% on room air, Increased Shortness Of Breath (SOB)

Auscultation: Diminished breath sounds bilaterally, with wheezing and crackles in the lung bases. Using accessory muscles of respiration ++.

Circulation- Heart Rate (HR) Regular- 128 b/min-Sinus tachycardia. BP- 168/85 mmHg.

Capillary Refill Time 3 sec, peripherally cool, heart sounds dual no murmur.

Disability- GCS-14/15 E4V4M6, confused and distressed +

Exposure- Febrile, skin intact, IV cannula right cubital fossa

Abdo: bowel sounds present in all four quadrants with a soft, nontender abdomen

Fluid- IVF fluids in progress TKVO, Nil by mouth

Glucose- BSL- 5.8 mmol/L

Imaging: Chest X-ray showing hyperinflated lungs with increased interstitial markings consistent with COPD exacerbation.

Lab tests

  • CBC
  Result Reference Range
Haemoglobin 153 g/L 120-140 g/L
White blood cells 15.0×10^9/L 4.0-11.0×10^9/L
Neutrophils 11.0×10^9/L 2.0-7.5×10^9/L
Platelets 200×10^9/L 150-400×10^9/L
C Reactive Protein

(CRP)

 25 mg/L <3mg/L

 

  • 2- COVID-19 PCR Test: Positive

 

 

 

 

 

  • ABG on room air (at 2200hrs)
  Result Reference Range
pH  7.30 7.35-7.45
PaO2  55 mmHg 80-100 mmHg
PaCO2  60 mmHg 35-45 mmHg
HCO3-  28 mmol/L 22-26 mmol/L
SpO2  78% (88-92% COPD)
BE  -4 mmol/L -2 to +2 mmol/L

 

 

Clinical Impression: Infective Exacerbation of COPD COVID 19 +ve

 

Recommendations

  • Continuous monitoring of vital signs- Transfer to High Dependency Unit
  • COVID-19 Management: Isolate the patient in a negative pressure room, implement infection control precautions, and monitor for progression of COVID-19 symptoms
  • Controlled oxygen therapy -Continuous pulse oximetry, to keep O2 between 88% to 92%
  • Sit patient in high fowlers position
  • 4/24 ABGs
  • Salbutamol (Ventolin) nebuliser 2/24
  • Ipratroprium (Atrovent) via nebuliser 6/24
  • Prednisolone (40–50 mg daily)
  • 12- lead ECG 6th hourly
  • Blood troponin
  • Sputum culture
  • IV Azithromycin (Zithromax) 500 mg on day 1 , followed by 250 mg once daily for the next four days.
  • 300 mg nirmatrelvir with ritonavir 100 mg taken together orally every 12 hours for 5 days.
  • Pulmonary function tests Spirometry when patient is stable