Hemoptysis
🔹 Introduction
Hemoptysis refers to expectoration of blood originating from the lower respiratory tract (below the glottis). It is a potentially life-threatening emergency when massive, as it can cause airway obstruction, asphyxiation, or hypoxemic respiratory failure, even before exsanguination occurs.
🔹 Classification
|
Type |
Definition |
Volume / Clinical Relevance |
|
Non-massive hemoptysis |
Blood-streaked sputum or <100–200 mL/day |
Usually benign, common in bronchitis or mild infections |
|
Massive hemoptysis |
Traditionally >200–600 mL in 24 hr, or any volume causing airway compromise or hemodynamic instability |
True emergency — high mortality if not controlled rapidly |
Clinical definition preferred:
➡️ Any hemoptysis that causes respiratory distress, airway obstruction, or hemodynamic instability should be treated as massive, irrespective of volume.
🔹 Pathophysiology
1. Vascular sources
- Bronchial circulation (90%) — systemic high-pressure system from thoracic aorta.
- Pulmonary circulation (10%) — low-pressure system, but involvement in vasculitis, AV malformations, or trauma.
2. Mechanisms
- Erosion or rupture of bronchial artery due to chronic inflammation or neoplasm.
- Neovascularization with fragile vessels (e.g., bronchiectasis, TB).
- Alveolar capillary leakage (e.g., diffuse alveolar hemorrhage).
🔹 Common Causes of Hemoptysis
1. Infectious
- Tuberculosis (active or sequelae) – cavitary lesions erode bronchial vessels.
- Bronchiectasis – chronic suppurative infection with fragile neovascularity.
- Lung abscess, necrotizing pneumonia, or fungal infections (Aspergilloma).
2. Inflammatory / Autoimmune
- Goodpasture’s syndrome (anti-GBM disease)
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener’s)
- Microscopic polyangiitis
- SLE, Behçet’s disease
3. Neoplastic
- Bronchogenic carcinoma – central tumors may erode vessels.
- Metastatic lesions – especially choriocarcinoma, renal cell carcinoma.
4. Cardiovascular
- Mitral stenosis – pulmonary venous hypertension → rupture of bronchial veins.
- Pulmonary embolism / infarction
- AV malformations, aneurysm of pulmonary artery (Rasmussen’s aneurysm)
5. Iatrogenic / Traumatic
- Bronchoscopy, biopsy, tracheostomy, catheter-induced injury, or mechanical ventilation.
6. Coagulopathy / Drugs
- Anticoagulants, antiplatelet therapy, DIC, thrombocytopenia.
7. Idiopathic
- Up to 30% of cases — particularly in smokers and chronic bronchitics.
🔹 Differential Diagnosis — “Pseudohemoptysis”
|
Source |
Key Features |
|
Upper airway (epistaxis, gingival bleeding) |
Blood seen on posterior pharyngeal wall; not associated with cough |
|
GI tract (hematemesis) |
Coffee-ground appearance, acidic pH, mixed with food particles, melena |
|
True hemoptysis |
Alkaline pH, bright red, frothy, preceded by cough |
- Most common cause worldwide: Tuberculosis
- Most common cause in developed countries: Bronchiectasis
- Most common cause of death: Asphyxiation
- Definitive treatment for massive hemoptysis: Bronchial artery embolization
- DAH hallmark on BAL: Hemosiderin-laden macrophages
- Rasmussen’s aneurysm: Pulmonary artery aneurysm adjacent to TB cavity
🔹 Clinical Evaluation
1. History
- Onset: sudden (PE, bronchiectasis) vs gradual (malignancy).
- Associated symptoms: fever, weight loss, hematuria (vasculitis), chest pain.
- Risk factors: smoking, TB exposure, anticoagulants, recent procedures.
2. Physical Examination
- Vital signs, oxygenation, hemodynamic stability.
- Inspection for clubbing, cyanosis, signs of vasculitis, murmurs (mitral stenosis).
- Auscultation: crackles, bronchial breath sounds, wheeze, cavity signs.
🔹 Investigations
1. Initial
- CBC, renal and liver function, coagulation profile, ABG.
- Chest X-ray – localize lesion (cavity, mass, infiltrate, consolidation).
- Sputum for AFB, cytology, Gram/fungal stain.
2. Advanced
- CT chest (HRCT or CECT) —first line if patient is stable, best for localization, detecting bronchiectasis, malignancy, aspergilloma, PE.
- Bronchoscopy (Flexible or Rigid)
- Diagnostic & therapeutic.
- Allows localization, suctioning, tamponade, instillation of vasoconstrictors or iced saline.
- first line if patient is unstable
3. Specific
- Autoimmune panel: ANA, ANCA, anti-GBM.
- Urinalysis: red cells, casts (DAH).
- Echocardiography: evaluate mitral stenosis, cardiac causes.
🔹 Diffuse Alveolar Hemorrhage (DAH)
Definition: Bleeding into alveolar spaces due to capillaritis or non-inflammatory causes.
Causes:
- ANCA-associated vasculitis
- Anti-GBM disease
- SLE
- Drugs (amiodarone, cocaine, anticoagulants)
Clinical triad:
- Hemoptysis (may be absent in 30%)
- Anemia
- Diffuse pulmonary infiltrates
Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL): sequentially more bloody aliquots, hemosiderin-laden macrophages.
🔹 Management Approach
1. Immediate Priorities (ABCDE)
- Airway protection – main cause of death is asphyxiation, not exsanguination.
- Intubate with large-bore single-lumen ETT (>8.5 mm) for bronchoscopy access.
- Selective mainstem intubation of non-bleeding lung if bleeding side known.
- Can use bronchial blocker
- Breathing: supplemental oxygen, mechanical ventilation if required.
- Circulation: IV access, fluids, transfusion for anemia/shock.
2. Localization of Bleeding
- CT chest followed by bronchoscopy — often both needed.
- If site identified, position patient bleeding side down (dependent position).
3. Specific Therapy
a. Medical Measures
- Stop anticoagulants, correct coagulopathy (FFP, PCC, platelets).
- Tranexamic acid – 500–1000 mg IV or via nebulization; may reduce bleeding duration.
- Cold saline lavage, topical epinephrine (1:20,000) via bronchoscope.
- Treat underlying cause — antibiotics, antituberculars, immunosuppressants.
b. Bronchoscopic Interventions
- Balloon tamponade, fibrin glue, topical hemostatics.
- Rigid bronchoscopy preferred in massive cases (better suction, airway control).
c. Definitive Therapies
- Bronchial Artery Embolization (BAE):
- First-line definitive therapy for massive hemoptysis.
- Success: 70–90%, recurrence 10–30%.
- Embolic agents: PVA particles, coils, glue.
- Avoid spinal artery embolization (paraplegia risk).
- Surgical Resection:
- Indicated when embolization fails or if resectable localized lesion (aspergilloma, tumor, destroyed lobe).
- High mortality if done emergently; prefer elective once stabilized.
🔹 ICU and Critical Care Aspects
- Massive hemoptysis = Airway emergency → immediate airway control.
- Maintain PEEP cautiously to avoid dislodging clot.
- Prone positioning may aid dependent drainage.
- Blood conservation: monitor hemoglobin and coagulation closely.
- Multidisciplinary team: pulmonologist + interventional radiologist + thoracic surgeon.
🔹 Prognosis
- Depends on etiology and bleeding severity.
- Mortality in massive hemoptysis: >50% without intervention, <10% with early embolization.
- Recurrence common in bronchiectasis and TB sequelae.

