Cyanosis 

Cyanosis 

Q1. Cyanosis becomes clinically apparent when deoxygenated hemoglobin exceeds:

5 g/dL
2 g/dL
10 g/dL
15 g/dL
Cyanosis is visible when deoxygenated Hb > 5 g/dL in capillary blood.

Q2. Which type of cyanosis is seen on tongue and mucous membranes?

Central cyanosis
Peripheral cyanosis
Differential cyanosis
Reverse differential cyanosis
Central cyanosis involves lips, tongue, mucous membranes due to low arterial oxygen saturation.

Q3. Cyanosis limited to fingers and toes is most consistent with:

Central cyanosis
Peripheral cyanosis
Differential cyanosis
Acrocyanosis
Peripheral cyanosis occurs due to sluggish circulation and is limited to extremities.

Q4. In which condition is “differential cyanosis” seen?

PDA with Eisenmenger physiology
Tetralogy of Fallot
Severe COPD
Mitral stenosis
Differential cyanosis: cyanosis in lower limbs but not upper limbs → PDA with right-to-left shunt distal to subclavian artery.

Q5. Reverse differential cyanosis is typically seen in:

TGA with PDA + pulmonary hypertension
PDA with Eisenmenger
VSD with shunt reversal
Severe aortic stenosis
Reverse differential cyanosis: upper limb cyanosis with spared lower limbs, usually in TGA with PDA and PHT.

Q6. Which of the following is NOT a cause of central cyanosis?

Tetralogy of Fallot
Severe pneumonia
Shock
ARDS
Shock causes peripheral cyanosis due to slow circulation, not central cyanosis.

Q7. Which type of cyanosis shows improvement with oxygen therapy?

Central cyanosis (unless shunt)
Peripheral cyanosis
Differential cyanosis
All types equally
Central cyanosis improves with oxygen, except when due to intracardiac shunts. Peripheral cyanosis does not improve significantly.

Q8. Which of the following is a feature of peripheral cyanosis?

Warm extremities
Cold extremities
Involves lips and tongue
Always improves with oxygen
Peripheral cyanosis → cold extremities due to vasoconstriction and sluggish blood flow.

Q9. Cherry-red lips without cyanosis is seen in:

Methemoglobinemia
Sulphhemoglobinemia
Carbon monoxide poisoning
Hypothermia
CO poisoning → bright cherry-red lips despite hypoxia, not cyanosis.

Q10. Clubbing is most often associated with:

Acute peripheral cyanosis
Chronic central cyanosis
Shock
Methemoglobinemia
Clubbing is commonly seen in long-standing central cyanosis (e.g., cyanotic CHD, chronic lung disease).

Q11. Minimum Hb required for cyanosis to be visible:

>5 g/dL deoxygenated Hb
>2 g/dL deoxygenated Hb
>10 g/dL total Hb
Any Hb level
Cyanosis is apparent only when deoxygenated Hb exceeds ~5 g/dL.

Q12. Which of the following is a cardiac cause of central cyanosis?

Right-to-left shunt
Left-to-right shunt
Systemic hypertension
Bradycardia
Right-to-left shunts (e.g., TOF, Eisenmenger) cause central cyanosis.

Q13. Peripheral cyanosis is most likely in:

Asthma exacerbation
Tetralogy of Fallot
Congestive heart failure
High altitude
CHF causes reduced circulation → peripheral cyanosis.

Q14. In methemoglobinemia, cyanosis occurs because:

Hb cannot carry oxygen effectively
Excessive deoxygenated Hb
Pulmonary vasoconstriction
Right-to-left shunt
Methemoglobinemia: Hb is oxidized and cannot carry oxygen, causing cyanosis despite normal PaO₂.

Q15. Which of the following best differentiates central from peripheral cyanosis?

Examination of tongue and mucosa
Presence of cold extremities
Clubbing
Polycythemia
Central cyanosis affects mucous membranes, unlike peripheral cyanosis.

Q16. High altitude cyanosis is due to:

Low inspired oxygen tension
Right-to-left shunt
Cold exposure
Shock
At high altitude, low atmospheric O₂ causes hypoxemia → central cyanosis.

Q17. Which investigation is most useful in differentiating central vs peripheral cyanosis?

Arterial blood gas (ABG)
ECG
Chest X-ray
CBC
ABG shows low PaO₂ in central cyanosis, normal PaO₂ in peripheral cyanosis.

Q18. Peripheral cyanosis with warm extremities suggests:

Peripheral cyanosis
Central cyanosis
Shock
Hypothermia
Warm extremities point toward central cyanosis.

Q19. Cyanosis does NOT occur in:

Severe anemia
COPD
Congenital cyanotic heart disease
Methemoglobinemia
In severe anemia, absolute deoxy-Hb rarely exceeds 5 g/dL, so cyanosis may not be visible.

Q20. Long-standing cyanosis can lead to:

Polycythemia
Thrombocytopenia
Neutropenia
Anemia
Chronic hypoxemia → compensatory erythrocytosis (polycythemia).

Cyanosis 

PointSummary
1Definition: Bluish discoloration of skin/mucous membranes due to >5 g/dL deoxygenated Hb.
2Detection requires adequate hemoglobin; may not be visible if Hb <5 g/dL (severe anemia).
3Types: Central, Peripheral, Differential, Reverse differential.
4Central Cyanosis: Due to low arterial O₂ saturation. Seen on tongue, lips, mucosa.
5Peripheral Cyanosis: Due to sluggish circulation/vasoconstriction. Seen on extremities.
6Differential Cyanosis: Lower limb cyanosis with spared upper limbs (PDA with Eisenmenger physiology).
7Reverse Differential Cyanosis: Upper limb cyanosis with spared lower limbs (TGA with PDA + PHT).
8Central causes (Respiratory): COPD, ARDS, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism.
9Central causes (Cardiac): R→L shunts (TOF, Eisenmenger), severe CHF.
10Peripheral causes: Shock, heart failure, cold exposure, peripheral vascular disease.
11Blood disorders: Methemoglobinemia, sulfhemoglobinemia cause cyanosis despite normal PaO₂.
12Pulse oximetry: Shows ↓ saturation in central cyanosis, may be misleading in methemoglobinemia.
13ABG: Low PaO₂ in central cyanosis; normal PaO₂ in peripheral cyanosis.
14Clubbing often accompanies chronic central cyanosis (e.g., cyanotic CHD, chronic lung disease).
15Polycythemia may develop as compensatory response in chronic hypoxemia.
16Effect of oxygen: Central cyanosis improves with O₂ (unless shunt); peripheral cyanosis shows little change.
17Temperature of extremities: Cold in peripheral cyanosis; warm in central cyanosis.
18Special sign: Cherry-red lips in CO poisoning (not cyanosis despite hypoxia).
19High altitude: Can cause central cyanosis due to low inspired O₂ tension.
20Clinical importance: Always signifies hypoxemia, circulatory stasis, or abnormal Hb — requires urgent evaluation.

Cyanosis Short Q&A

Q1. What is the definition of cyanosis?
➡️ Bluish discoloration of skin/mucosa due to >5 g/dL deoxygenated hemoglobin.

Q2. When does cyanosis become clinically apparent?
➡️ When deoxygenated hemoglobin exceeds 5 g/dL.

Q3. Why may cyanosis be absent in severe anemia?
➡️ Total hemoglobin is low, so deoxy-Hb rarely exceeds 5 g/dL.

Q4. What are the main types of cyanosis?
➡️ Central, Peripheral, Differential, and Reverse Differential.

Q5. Which type involves tongue and mucous membranes?
➡️ Central cyanosis.

Q6. Which type is limited to fingers, toes, and extremities?
➡️ Peripheral cyanosis.

Q7. What are the main cardiac causes of central cyanosis?
➡️ Right-to-left shunts (e.g., TOF, Eisenmenger).

Q8. Name two respiratory causes of central cyanosis.
➡️ COPD, severe pneumonia, ARDS, pulmonary embolism.

Q9. What causes differential cyanosis?
➡️ PDA with Eisenmenger physiology (cyanosis in lower limbs, upper spared).

Q10. What causes reverse differential cyanosis?
➡️ TGA with PDA and pulmonary hypertension (upper cyanotic, lower spared).

Q11. How do extremities feel in peripheral cyanosis?
➡️ Cold due to vasoconstriction and sluggish blood flow.

Q12. How do extremities feel in central cyanosis?
➡️ Warm, as arterial O₂ is low but circulation intact.

Q13. Which type of cyanosis improves with oxygen therapy?
➡️ Central cyanosis (except intracardiac shunts).

Q14. Why does peripheral cyanosis not improve with oxygen therapy?
➡️ Because the problem is circulatory stasis, not low PaO₂.

Q15. What investigation differentiates central from peripheral cyanosis?
➡️ Arterial blood gas (ABG).

Q16. What does ABG show in central cyanosis?
➡️ Low PaO₂.

Q17. What does ABG show in peripheral cyanosis?
➡️ Normal PaO₂, but increased O₂ extraction in tissues.

Q18. What abnormal hemoglobin states can cause cyanosis?
➡️ Methemoglobinemia, sulfhemoglobinemia.

Q19. What feature is often associated with chronic central cyanosis?
➡️ Clubbing of fingers and toes.

Q20. What hematological adaptation occurs in long-standing cyanosis?
➡️ Polycythemia (secondary erythrocytosis).


PointCentral CyanosisPeripheral CyanosisDifferential CyanosisReverse Differential Cyanosis
1. DefinitionLow arterial O₂ saturationIncreased extraction due to slow flowLower limb cyanosis, upper sparedUpper limb cyanosis, lower spared
2. SiteLips, tongue, mucosa, skinFingers, toes, nail bedsLower extremitiesUpper extremities
3. Extremity temperatureWarmColdLower limbs cyanotic & warmUpper limbs cyanotic, lower warm
4. Oxygen therapy responseImproves (unless R→L shunt)Little/no improvementPartial responseLimited response
5. PaO₂DecreasedNormalLower body PaO₂ ↓Upper body PaO₂ ↓
6. Cause (cardiac)R→L shunts (TOF, Eisenmenger)CHF, shockPDA with EisenmengerTGA with PDA + PHT
7. Cause (respiratory)COPD, ARDS, pneumoniaHypoperfusion
8. Cause (hematologic)Methemoglobinemia, sulfHb
9. Mucous membrane involvementPresentAbsentLower lips sparedUpper lips affected
10. Visibility in anemiaLess visible if Hb lowLess visible if Hb lowSame rule appliesSame rule applies
11. Associated signsClubbing, polycythemiaCold, clammy extremitiesLower limb cyanosis onlyUpper limb cyanosis only
12. ABG findingLow PaO₂Normal PaO₂Low PaO₂ in legsLow PaO₂ in arms
13. Pulse oximetry↓ saturationUsually normal↓ saturation in legs↓ saturation in arms
14. Example systemic causeHigh altitude hypoxemiaSevere circulatory shockPDA + EisenmengerTGA + PDA + PHT
15. DurationOften chronic (CHD, COPD)Often acute (shock, cold)Chronic with PDA shunt reversalChronic with TGA physiology
16. Color intensityGeneralized, dark blueLocalized, patchy blueLower body bluishUpper body bluish
17. ClubbingCommon in long-standing casesAbsentMay occur in lower limbs onlyMay occur in upper limbs only
18. PolycythemiaCommonAbsentMay occurMay occur
19. Key differentiatorTongue & mucosa involvedExtremities onlyLower limb cyanosis onlyUpper limb cyanosis only
20. Clinical importanceIndicates hypoxemiaIndicates circulatory stasisIndicates PDA reversalIndicates TGA with PHT

Cyanosis,,Central cyanosis,,Peripheral cyanosis,,Differential cyanosis,,Reverse differential cyanosis,,Cyanosis causes,,Cyanosis types,,Cyanosis flowchart,,Cyanosis infographic,, ,Low arterial oxygen saturation,,PaO₂ decrease,,Hypoxemia,,Hypoxia,,Reduced oxygen delivery,,Oxygen therapy response,,Right-to-left shunt,,Pulmonary disease cyanosis,,Congenital heart disease cyanosis,, ,Right-to-left shunt cyanosis,,Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA),,Eisenmenger syndrome,,Transposition of great arteries (TGA),,Cyanotic congenital heart disease,,Cardiac cyanosis,,Cyanosis in newborn,,Differential diagnosis cyanosis,, ,Cyanosis in COPD,,Cyanosis in interstitial lung disease,,Cyanosis in pneumonia,,Methemoglobinemia,,Hemoglobinopathies,,Cold extremities cyanosis,,Shock and cyanosis


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