Causes of Hemoptysis
Blood-streaked sputum can result from minor illnesses, such as viral or bacterial respiratory tract infections, or a long-term cough. But it can also occur due to severe conditions, such as:
- Tracheobronchial sources: acute or chronic bronchitis, bronchiectasis, broncho lithiasis, foreign body presence- chronic and undiagnosed, bronchogenic or bronchial tumor, metastasis, and Kaposi sarcoma.
- Pulmonary parenchymal sources: active granulomatous disease (syphilitic, fungal, tuberculous) or myeloma (including fungus ball and aspergilloma), Goodpasture syndrome, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, lung abscess, lupus pneumonitis, and pneumonia.
- Primary vascular sources: aortic aneurysms with leakage into the pulmonary parenchyma, arteriovenous malformation, pulmonary artery rupture, pulmonary embolism causing pulmonary infarction, and tracheal-innominate artery fistula.
Other causes of hemoptysis include pulmonary endometriosis, the use of thrombolytics or anticoagulants, and systemic coagulopathy. In children, the most common causes are lower respiratory tract infections and foreign body aspiration.
Role of Nurses
When a patient presents with hemoptysis, taking an appropriate medical history is essential in diagnosing the underlying cause. Include present illness with duration and temporal patterns, such as cyclical recurrence or abrupt onset. Ask the patient about provoking factors of hemoptysis, such as exposure to cold, exertion, allergens, and lying in the supine position. Also ask about the volume of hemoptysis. They can explain it as streaking, a cup, or a teaspoon quantity.
While obtaining their medical history, make sure the patient differentiates between true and pseudo hemoptysis: bleeding from the nasopharynx coming with cough, and hematemesis is blood from the gastrointestinal tract. To make the distinction, ask about postnasal drip from the nares without coughing that indicates pseudo hemoptysis, or nausea and vomiting with black, brown, or coffee-ground–colored blood (a characteristic of hematemesis).
True hemoptysis is characterized by bright red blood and frothy sputum, and if massive, it can be accompanied by a choking sensation.
And don’t forget to discuss risk factors for hemoptysis, including:
- HIV infection
- Long-term use of immunosuppressants that can cause TB, fungal infection
- Exposure to a person with tuberculosis
- Long-term smoking history that can cause cancer
- Recent immobilization or surgery
- Pre-existing cancer
- Prior or family history of clotting, pregnancy, use of estrogen-containing medications, and recent long-distance travel that can cause pulmonary embolism
As you obtain the patient’s complete medication history, be sure to rule out whether or not they take anticoagulants or blood thinners or have taken them recently, which can cause hemoptysis.
![Hemoptysis](https://nursingcecentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Hemoptysis-2.png)