DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Chest pain
- Dyspnea
- Fever
- Weakness
- Fatigue
- Night sweats
- Weight loss
History
- Inquire about prior lung, renal, or valvular heart disease
- History of cigarette smoking
- Chemical, asbestos, or infectious exposure
- Travel history (consider parasitic or fungal infectious etiology)
- Aspirin, NSAID, or anticoagulant use
- Consider Goodpasture syndrome if a history of hematuria is present.
- Recurrent or chronic hemoptysis raises suspicion of arteriovenous malformations, bronchiectasis, and cystic fibrosis.
Physical-Exam
- Clubbing of the fingers (chronic inflammatory lung diseases)
- Cutaneous ecchymosis (blood dyscrasia or anticoagulants)
- Aphthous ulcers (Behcçet disease)
- Nasal septal perforation (Wegener granulomatosis)
- Hematuria (Goodpasture syndrome)
- Unilateral lower extremity edema may indicate DVT.
- Suggestive of pseudohemoptysis:
- Sinusitis, epistaxis, rhinorrhea, pharyngitis, upper respiratory infection, aspiration
Pediatric Considerations
- Thorough head, eyes, ears, nose, and throat exam to exclude nonpulmonary source of bleeding
- Pulmonary exam is often normal.
- Wheezing may suggest obstruction (e.g., foreign body).
- Crackles may indicate an underlying pulmonary etiology (e.g., pneumonia, hemothorax, heart failure).
- Telangiectasias or hemangiomas raise suspicion of arteriovenous malformations.
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Differentiate between hemoptysis and pseudohemoptysis:
- Note any precipitating factors, duration of symptoms, quantity and quality of blood.
- Pulmonary source:
- Bright red blood
- Frothy in appearance
- Sputum mixed with blood is likely pulmonary
- pH > 7
- GI source:
- Dark red or brown blood
- Accompanied by gastric contents
- Worsens in the setting of nausea/vomiting
- pH < 7
- Gastric lavage may be used to rule out GI source of bleeding; however, nasal or other trauma may cause further bleeding.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC with differential
- Basic metabolic panel
- PT/INR, PTT
- Urinalysis
- Febrile patient or suspected infectious etiology:
- Blood cultures
- Sputum culture and Gram stain
- Cytology
- KOH prep for fungal causes
- AFB stain for tuberculosis
- Hypotensive patient (criteria for massive hemoptysis):
- Type and cross
- Complete metabolic (liver and renal function) panel
- Coagulation profile:
- Fibrin and fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) or antithrombin III if disseminated IV coagulation suspected
- Pediatric patient:
- Consider sweat-chloride test if cystic fibrosis is suspected.
Imaging
- CXR:
- Characterizes pathology (e.g., tumor, cavity, effusion, infiltrate, pneumothorax)
- Early pulmonary hemorrhage may present as infiltrate.
- ∼20% will be normal.
- CT:
- High-resolution CT has become gold standard for diagnosing bronchiectasis.
- Ideal study for stable patients with hemoptysis and a normal CXR
- Can detect active TB by the presence of cavitary lesions and acinar nodules
- Higher sensitivity for peripheral tumors that may not be apparent on bronchoscopy
- CTA:
- Known variability in bronchial arterial supply
- Characterizes origin of bronchial arteries and presence of variants
- May identify a pulmonary artery as a source of bleeding, show a pulmonary or bronchial artery aneurysm
- Characterizes abnormal nonbronchial arterial supply, eliminates nonbronchial arteries as possible sources of bleeding
- identifies pulmonary embolism
- V/Q:
- If PE is suspected and patient cannot get CTA
- Limited utility if x-ray is abnormal
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Bronchoscopy:
- Allows direct visualization of tumors, foreign bodies, granulomas, and infiltration
- Valuable for collecting bronchial secretions for cytology and histology
- Limited diagnostic yield in lesions outside the bronchial wall, distal to bronchial stenosis or occlusion, or peripheral lesions.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Pseudohemoptysis:
- Epistaxis
- Pharyngeal bleeding
- GI bleeding
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Respiratory and contact precautions
- Airway management:
- Oxygen
- Suctioning as needed
- Endotracheal intubation if airway compromised, severe respiratory distress, or hypoxemia
- Dual large-bore IV access
- Volume resuscitation as needed
- Continuous pulse oximetry, close hemodynamic and cardiac monitoring
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Airway and breathing:
- Endotracheal intubation for impending respiratory failure
- >8Fr endotracheal tube to facilitate suctioning and subsequent bronchoscopy
- Selective intubation of nonbleeding lung with single- or double-lumen endotracheal tubes may be required.
- Supplemental oxygen as needed
- Continuous pulse oximetry and cardiac monitoring
- Massive hemoptysis:
- Principal risk to life is asphyxiation, not exsanguination
- Maintain dual large-bore IV access.
- Volume resuscitation with crystalloid or blood products as needed
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Antimicrobial therapy if concern for or diagnosed infectious cause
- Correct hypoxemia and/or coagulopathy
- If massive hemoptysis:
- Multiple large-bore IVs or central access with volume resuscitation and blood products as needed
- Patient should be positioned upright or in lateral decubitus with affected lung positioned down
- Intubation for airway protection, impending respiratory failure, or to facilitate bronchoscopic evaluation
- Endobronchial tamponade with Foley or Fogarty (<4Fr) catheter, or double-lumen endotracheal tube (temporary measures)
- Bronchoscopy for local therapy including vasoconstrictive agents, stent or balloon tamponade, electrocautery, procoagulants
- Bronchial artery embolization (success rates reported as high as 98%); rebleeding presents in ∼20% of cases
- Surgery:
- Lobectomy or pneumonectomy if unsuccessful embolization or in the presence of thoracic aneurysm, trauma, or arteriovenous malformation
- Surgical resection is most effective for patients with localized lesions and adequate cardiopulmonary reserve
MEDICATION
Refer to specific etiology
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- ICU:
- Intubation
- Massive hemoptysis
- Hemodynamic instability
- Hypovolemic shock
- Severe or refractory hypoxemia
- Impending respiratory failure
- Impending airway compromise
- General ward:
- Mild hemoptysis
- TB (isolation)
- Stable foreign body
- Lung abscess
- Cavitary lung disease
Discharge Criteria
- Hemodynamically stable
- Mild hemoptysis
- No coagulopathy
- No supplemental oxygen requirement
- History of chronic stable hemoptysis
- Close follow-up
Issues for Referral
- PCP within 7–10 days
- Specialist if etiology warrants referral
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Council patient not to smoke.
- Avoid medications that may increase the risk of bleeding, including herbal supplements such as garlic, gingko, or ginseng.
- The patient should seek care immediately for:
- Shortness of breath
- Chest pain
- Severe dizziness on standing
- Fainting
- Persistent or worsening hemoptysis
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Consider early airway management as clinical picture warrants.
- If severe unilateral hemorrhage with hypoxemia, place patient “bad lung” down
- Bronchial artery embolization can be very effective. Discuss case early with IR.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Bidwell JL, Pachner RW. Hemoptysis: Diagnosis and management.
Am Fam Physician
. 2005;72(7):1253–1260.
- Corder R. Hemoptysis.
Emerg Med Clin North Am.
2003;21(2):421–435
- Hurt K, Bilton D. Haemoptysis: Diagnosis and treatment.
Acute Med.
2012;11(1):39–45.
- Jean-Baptiste E. Clinical assessment and management of massive hemoptysis.
Crit Care Med
. 2000;28:1642–1647.
- Sirajuddin A, Mohammed TL. A 44-year-old man with hemoptysis: A review of pertinent imaging studies and radiographic interventions.
Cleve Clin J Med
. 2008;75(8):601–607.