Term
Def: transient myocardial ischemia with chest pain that is induced by exertion and relieved by rest or nitro
Cause? Sx? Risk factors? Studies? tx? |
|
Definition
Stable Angina
Causes: reduction in O2 supply or increase in myocardial O2 demand with atheroscolerosis
Sx: precipitated by activity, stress, or anger - chest pressure/tightness/squeezing/burning/choking/aching. Last <20 min
Risk factors: family hx CAD, male, dyslipidemia, DM, HTN, physical inactivity, excess alcohol, smoking, obesity
EKG: NL, maybe old MI
Labs for lipids, DM, HTN
CXR: LVH, aneurysm, HF
Stress test to confirm dx
Tx:
- Keep in hospital for observation and serial troponins
- SL Nitro
- Nitrates - oral, patch, ointment
- BBs
- Asprin daily
- Plavix
- RIsk reduction
- Consider need for revascularization |
|
|
Term
Definition of unstable angina ** |
|
Definition
angina or equivalent ischemic discomfort with and least one:
- rest angina (worse if >10 min)
- New-onset that causes marked limitations of physical activity
- increasing angina in severity, frequency, duration, lower threshold of precipitation |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
clinical features of unstable angina in the presence of elevated cardiac biomarkers and the absence of ST elevation on EKG |
|
|
Term
NSTEMI: 1. EKG 2. CK-MB 3. Troponins |
|
Definition
EKG: ST depression, transient ST elevation, T-wave inversion, no changes
CK-MB: Rises 4-6 hrs, peaks at 24 hours, remains elevated 36-48 hrs
Troponin: gold standard for dx - only rises in INFARCTION - not in ischemia, rises 4-8 hr, may remain elevated for 2 weeks |
|
|
Term
Fundamental difference between unstable angina, NSTEMI, and STEMI |
|
Definition
UA: No elevation in enzymes
NSTEMI: elevated enzymes without EKG changes
STEMI: elevated enzymes with EKG changes |
|
|
Term
MI/unstable angina management: 1. coronary sx w/ normal EKG and enzymes 2. MI 3. anti-ischemics 4. anti-platelet 5. anti-coagulation
Acute tx algorithm: MONABAH |
|
Definition
1. monitoring, observation, repeat EKG/enzymes after 6-12 hrs, stress test after discharge
2. MI: admit for catheterization or PCI within **90 MIN**
3. anti-ischemics: sublingual nitro, morphine, BB, CCB, ACE
4. anti-platelet: aspirin, clopidegrel
5. anti-coagulation: LMWH (enoxaparin, dalteparin)
MONA-BAH:morphine, O2, nitrogen, asprin, BB, ACE/ARB, Heparin |
|
|
Term
MI long term treatment/prevention: 1. BP control 2. Lipid control 3. glucose control |
|
Definition
BP: <140/90 or <130/80 if DM/CKD
- BB and ACE are best
LIpids: LDL<100; Tg<200
- Statins
Glucose: A1C < 7% |
|
|
Term
ectopic pacemaker competes with SA node for control of heartbeat.
sx: sensation of flutter, skipped beat can be due to electrolyte abnormalities, hyperthyroid, occult heart disease -- rule these out
tx? |
|
Definition
PVCs
tx: BB, catheter ablation |
|
|
Term
Irregular ventricular rhythym w/ no discernible distinction between QRS segement and T waves.
tx? |
|
Definition
VFIB
tx: DEFIB - 200 biphasic, 360 monophasic |
|
|
Term
Vtach: 1. Fast, wide complex ventricular arrhythmia defined as 3 or more PVCs 2. runs of 3 or more PVCs lasting <30 sec and terminating spontaneously 3. tx |
|
Definition
1. sustained
2. unsustained
3. tx: BB, implantable defibrillator, ACLS protocol
|
|
|
Term
ACLS protocol for VTACH/VFIB |
|
Definition
Shock
CPR 2 min
Shock
CPR
Epi
CPR
Shock
CPR
Amiodarone
CPR
Shock
CPR
Epi
CPR |
|
|
Term
ACLS protocol for asystole/PEA |
|
Definition
NON-SHOCKABLE RHYTHM
CPR
EPI
CPR
EPI
|
|
|
Term
Reversible causes of cardiac arrest |
|
Definition
H's and T's: Hypothermia
Hypovolumea
Hypoxia
Hydrogen ions (acidosis)
Hypo/hyperkalemia
Tension pneumo
Tamponade
Toxins
Thrombosis |
|
|
Term
Ectopic focus in the atria fires before the next sa node impulse or a reentry circuit is establisehd
causes: caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, stress |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
regular rhythm with 100-150 bpm - EKG shows sawtooth pattern in leads II, III, AVF
tx? |
|
Definition
A flutter
***tx: ventricular rate control - convert to sinus rhtyhm with Class III antiarrhtyhmic (amiodarone) or electrical conversion |
|
|
Term
loss of AV node synchrony causing irregular ventricular response, rapid heart rate, impaired coronary flow with atrial rate >350.
EKG: Irregularly irregular
Reversible causes: alcohol, surgery, electrocuion, MI, pericarditis, myocarditis, PE, hyperthyroid
tx? |
|
Definition
Afib
***tx:
1. slow ventricular rate: CCB (verapamil, diltiazem) or dig
2. 2nd: determine CHADS score (CHF, HTN, Age, DM, Prior stroke)
3. Anticoagulation - aspirin, warfarin, coumadin (depending on CHADS)
4. Cardioversion
5. Consider ablation, implantable defibrillator, pacemaker |
|
|
Term
abrupt onset/offset of palpitations, very rapid rate with regular rhythm common in young adults, most often NOT associated with structural heart disease - usually due to reentry
HR: 140-240
tx? |
|
Definition
PSVT
**Tx: Vagal/valsalva
- adenosine IV, CCB, esmolol
- cardiversion if hemodynamically unstable
- may need catheter ablation |
|
|
Term
minor proximal radius pain with minimal swelling in a child 1-3 y/o. holds are flexed and pronated. cannot supinate
tx |
|
Definition
nursemaid's elbow (slipped radial head)
tx: reduction
|
|
|
Term
Elbow fractures in kids: 1. radiological abn 2. most common elbow fx in kids? 3. common complications |
|
Definition
Radiology: posterior fat pad sign or sail sign
Supracondylar fracture: most common. due to fall on outstretched arm
complications: median nerve damage, brachial artery damage leading to volkmann's contracture |
|
|
Term
Diabetic Ketoacidosis: 1. labs 2. sx 3. PE 4. Tx |
|
Definition
** labs: hyperglycemia >250, acidosis, serum bicarb <15, serum positive ketones, hyperkalemia, hyponatremia
** sx: usually preceded by a day or more of polyuria/polydipsia with marked fatigue, n/v, mental stupor, coma
** PE: dehydration (hypotension/tachy), rapid deep breathing, fruity breath/acetone odor, abd pain
Tx: Intubation if coma, NS to GB of 250 - then switch to D5W, insulin, potassium, bicarb, phosphate
|
|
|
Term
Cluster HA: 1. sx 2. tx - acute, preventative |
|
Definition
Sx: deep retroorbital pain, lacrimation, conjunctival injection, rhinorrhea, nasal congestion, ptosis. need to move about, pace.
tx:
1. acute: 100% O2 for 15-20 min, sumatriptan
2. preventative: 10 day course of prednisone, ergotamine, lithium, verapamil |
|
|
Term
What electrolyte disturbance causes Torsades de pointes? |
|
Definition
hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia --> need to replace these |
|
|
Term
Alcohol Tx: 1. alcoholism 2. withdrawal |
|
Definition
1. alcoholism: disulfuram (makes you puke), naltrexone (pleasurable effects), acamprosate (reduces cravings). diet high in thiamine, pyridoxine, folic acid, ascorbic acid
2. Withdrawal: CNS depressants (benzos - lorazepam), carbamazepime, atenolol, clonidine |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
carb-deficient transferrin
GGT >30
MCV >95 (men), or >100 (women)
High HDL |
|
|
Term
Meningitis: 1. typically limited to ___ space 2. Classic sx triad 3. workup 4. general tx |
|
Definition
1. limited to subarachnoid space
2. classic triad: HA, Fever, neck stiffness
3. workup:
- + brudzinski's and kernig's
- CT if neuro defects, papilledema, AMS, nerve palsies, posturing, otherwise move straight to LP
- LP: Glucose <40 in bacterial (bc bacteria are eating it), protein >150, WBC, PMNs,
- blood cultures, CBC, chemistry
4. tx: abx, steroids |
|
|
Term
what kind of meningitis?
most deadly most common in first year of college from prolonged intimate contact May have petechial rash tx? |
|
Definition
Meningicoccal meningitis
tx: ceftriaxone, dexamethasone |
|
|
Term
Most common cause of neonatal sepsis and meningitis |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
gram positive rod that is food bourne and can cause meningitis
tx? |
|
Definition
listeria monocytogenes
tx: ampicillin x 3 weeks |
|
|
Term
most prevalent cause of meningitis in adults often begins as pneumonia, sinusitis, otitis media, head trauma lancet-shaped diplococci
tx? |
|
Definition
strep pneumonia
tx: ceftriaxone |
|
|
Term
most dangerous cause of meningitis - more common in kids petechial rash gram neg intracellular diplococci
tx? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
cause of meningitis in unvaccinated kids |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What type of meningitis:
LP - inflammation with lots of WBC but no causative agent on gram stain or PCR |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Spinal cord injury: 1. NEXUS criteria 2. PE 3. best imaging |
|
Definition
NEXUS criteria = NSAID: neuro deficit, spinal tenderness, AMS, intoxication, distracting injury
NEXUS score
PE: examine genitals for priapism, decreased rectal sphincter tone, perineal sensation, neuro exam with glasgow coma scale,
- dorsal column: vibration, light touch
- ventral column: pain, temperature
- brainstem reflexes (nystagmus, hypoventilation)
- spinal reflexes (DTR, babinski)
imaging: CT of head is best |
|
|
Term
Spinal Cord Syndromes: 1. penetraing injury resulting in hemisection of spinal cord with ipsilateral motor paralysis and contralateral sensory loss 2. due to cervical hyperextension and buckling of ligamentum flavum - quadriplegia with some sensory sparing. greater neuro deficit in upper extremities 3. due to hyperflexion - position/vibration sense preserved by motor, temp, and pain lost BL below lesion 4. perineal or BL leg pain, bowel/bladder dysfunction, perianal anesthesia, diminished rectal sphincter tone, LE weakness 5. SCIWORA |
|
Definition
1. Brown-sequard
2. central cord syndrome
3. anterior cord syndrome
4. cauda equina syndrome
5. spinal cord injury without radiological abnormalities |
|
|
Term
Pulmonary edema/acute heart failure: 1. common causes 2. sx 3. PE 4. xray 5. tx |
|
Definition
1. causes: MI, exacerbation of CHF, acute volume overload, mitral stenosis, high ICP, opioids, DIC, sock
2. ** Sx: dyspnea, productive cough, diaphoresis, pink/frothy sputum, cyanosis
3. ** PE: rales in ALL lung fields, wheezing, rhonchi, low O2 sat
4. xray: BUTTERFLY PATTERN, increased interstitial markings, enlarged heart
5. **tx: sit with legs over side of beds, O2, morphine, diuretics, nitrates, SABA |
|
|
Term
Theophylline toxicity: 1. sx 2. tx |
|
Definition
sx:
1. acute: hypotension, tachycardia, hypokalemia, seizures, arrhythmia
2. chronic: n/v, abd cramps, tremor, anxiety, arrhythmia, seizures
tx: obtain serial levels
GI decontam: activated charcoal if dose ingested w/in 1 hr of arrival
Diazepam/phenobarb for seizures
IV fluids for hypotension
Antiarrhythmics
Demodialysis
|
|
|
Term
Acetaminophen Overdose: 1. OD level 2. sx 3. dx 4. tx |
|
Definition
OD at >150-200 mg/kg or 8-10 g in adult, lower if alcoholic or on INH
sx: n/v at first - asymptomatic for 24-48 hours - then fulminant hepatic necrosis with jaundice, hepatic encephalopathy, CKD, death
dx: serum acetaminophen level
**tx: activated charcoal within 1-2 hours of ingestion
N-acetylcysteine no matter how long after ingestion |
|
|
Term
Narcotic overdose: 1. sx 2. tx |
|
Definition
sx:euphoria, drowsiness, constricted pupils, hypotension, bradycardia, hypothermia, coma, resp arrest
tx: activated charcoal if recent ingestion, Naloxone (narcan) |
|
|
Term
Ottawa criteria for whether pt needs xray of knee injury |
|
Definition
age >55
isolated patellar tenderness
fibular head tenderness
inability to flex to 90 deg
inability to walk 4 steps |
|
|
Term
Patellar fx: 1. MOI 2. sx 3. tx |
|
Definition
MOI: falls, forceful contraction of quads
sx: pain, tenderness, joint effusion, palpable defect
tx: immobilize, ortho consult |
|
|
Term
Patellar dislocations: 1. MOI 2. sx 3. tx |
|
Definition
MOI: hyperflexion - almost always displaces laterally
sx: tenderness, deformity, effusion, patellar apprehension
tx: sedate pt and reduce patella then immobilize, crutches, ortho refurral
|
|
|
Term
Tibial plateau fx: 1. MOI 2. High suspicion for ___. 3. sx 4. tx |
|
Definition
MOI: varus or valgus stress
high risk for compartment syndrome
sx: pain, tenderness, hemarthrosis, associated ligamentous injury
tx: ortho |
|
|
Term
Most commonly injured ligament in the knee |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
MOI: direct anterior/posteroir force, rotational force
Test: lachman, anterior drawer
tx: immobilization, crutches, non-WB, ortho |
|
|
Term
meniscal tear: MOI which most commonly affected? Sx |
|
Definition
MOI: rotational force applied to knee while foot is planted
MCL more commonly affected
Sx: may say they heard a pop, joint line tenderness, feeling of knee locking,
Tests: McMurray, Apley
Tx: immobilization, crutches, pain control, ortho |
|
|
Term
Test for achilles rupture |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Ankle sprain: 1. most commonly affected ligament 2. how to test for laxity of this ligament? |
|
Definition
1. anterior talofibular ligament
2. anterior drawer or talar tilt test |
|
|
Term
Classic findings for spinal nerve compression at each level: 1. L3-4 2. L4-5 3. L5-S1 |
|
Definition
L3-4 (L4 nerve root): weakness in anterior tib, numbness in shin, pain in thigh, asymmetric knee reflex
L4-5 (L5 nerve root): weakness in great toe extensor (extensor hallucis longus), numbness top of foot and first web space, pain in posterolateral thigh and calf
L5-S1 (S1 nerve root): weakness in great toe flexor and gastroc/soleus, inability to toe walk, numbness in lateral foot, pain and ache in posterior calf, assymetric ankle reflex |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
NSAIDs
Neurontin
abstain from nicotine
narcotics for 7 days or less
Limit sitting and prolonged standing walking/standing
** Epidural steroid injections (3 in 6 mos) - NOT if pt has neuro deficit
Surgical disckectomy
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
prostaglandin E1 used to maintain PDA in newborns |
|
|
Term
PUD: 1. most common etiologies 2. most common complication 3. most deadly complication 4. sx 5. workup |
|
Definition
1. causes: H. pylori, NSAIDs, ZE syndrome
2. most common complication: UGI hemorhage (10%)
3. most deadly: Perforation (7%)
4. Sx: occur periodically - epigastric dyspepsia relieved by antacids or food, abd distention, belching, flatulence, halitosis, epigastric tenderness
5. workup: H. pylori test (endoscopic culture gold standard), urea breath test |
|
|
Term
Triple and quadruple therapy for PUD |
|
Definition
Triple: PPI qd, amoxicillin 1 g BID, clarithromycin 500 mg BID x 14 days
Quadruple: bismuth QID, Flagyl 500mg TID, TCN 500mg QID, PPI BID x 14 days |
|
|
Term
Ectopic pregnancy: 1. 98% are located ___ 2. most common cause of ? 3. Sx 4. Workup 5. Tx |
|
Definition
1. 98% are tubal
2. most common cause of 1st trimester maternal death
3. sx: lower abd pain - sudden, stabbing, intermittent; abn menstruation; pelvic mass; abd distention; mild paralytic ileus
4. workup: positive hCG (lower than normal pregnancy), US shows empty uterus, CBC: anemia, leukocytosis
5. Tx:
***- stable: methotrexate 50 mg IM --> NEVER if unstable
- Surgery is definitive |
|
|
Term
Child drooling in tripod position xray: "thumb print sign"
dx and tx? |
|
Definition
Epiglottitis
Tx: intubation |
|
|
Term
Normal ABG values - pH, PCO2, HCO3, PO2, O2 sat, base excess |
|
Definition
pH: 7.35-7.45
pCO2: 35-45
HCO3: 21-28
pO2: 80-100
O2 sat: 95-100%
Base Excess: 0 +/- 2 mEq/L |
|
|
Term
pH, pCO2, and HCO3 for each: resp acidosis, metabolic acidosis, resp alkalosis, metabolic alkalosis
How to evaluate an ABG in a stepwise fashion |
|
Definition
Respiratory Acidosis:
pH: low
pCO2: high (>45)
HCO3: normal (rises to compensate)
Metabolic Acidosis:
pH: low
pCO2: normal (falls to compensate)
HCO3: low (<22)
Respiratory alkalosis:
pH: high
pCO2: low (<35)
HCO3: normal (falls to compensate)
Metabolic alkalosis:
pH: high
pCO2: normal (rises to compensate)
HCO3: high (>26)
evaluation:
1. pH - acidosis or alkalosis?
2. Is CO2 or HCO3 off? Which one makes sense with the pH? Low pH = high PCO2 or low HCO3. This tells you respiratory or metabolic
3. Is the other value (pCO2 or HCO3) off also? This tells you if it's compensated. |
|
|
Term
Causes of acidosis and alkalosis |
|
Definition
Resp acidosis: respiratory depression, pulmonary disease
Resp alkalosis: hyperventilation
Metabolic acidosis: DM, shock, CKD, intestinal fistula
Metabolic alkalosis: HCO3 overdose, prolonged vomiting, NG drainage |
|
|
Term
**Fluid replacement in DKA |
|
Definition
Initially NS - 2L or 2 hr
Then 300-400 ml NS/hr
Switch to D5W when glucose gets <250 mg/dl to prevent hypoglycemia and reduce chance of cerebral edema |
|
|
Term
What head injury?
A non-space-occupying lesion within the brain matter. Less likely to lead to herniation. Significant edema can occur leading to increased ICP
Dx via CT
Usually no surgery required |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What head injury?
bleeding beneath the dura mater sx: drowsy, HA, confusion, hemiparesis, pupillary abn
acute: <24 hrs, sub-acute: 24h - 2 weeks, chronic subdural >2 weeks
commonly occurs in alocholics, elderly, anticoagulated
CT/MRI: crescenteric collections over convexity of one or both hemispheres
Caused from tear in which veins?
tx? |
|
Definition
subdural hematoma
from tear in tethered bridging veins
Tx:
1. ABCs, intubate if necessary
2. CT
3. Elevated head of bed to 30 deg
4. Surgery if focal neuro deficit, >1 cm bleed, midline displacement >5 mm, increased ICP |
|
|
Term
Management of chronic subdural hematoma |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
collection of blood between dura and skull causing increased ICP
sx: brief LOC followed by transient lucid interval
CT: biconvex shape (Football), may have herniation of cerebral contents
caused by tear in ___ artery
tx |
|
Definition
Epidural hematoma - tear in middle meningeal artery
tx: surgery |
|
|
Term
Bleeding into subarachnoid space (btwn arachnoid and pia mater) due to trauma or pathology
Cause: 85% ruptured aneurysm, usually from circle of willis (posterior/anterior communicating arteries, middle/anterior cerebral arteries)
**SX: sudden severe HA (thunderclap HA) w/ photophobia and n/v
workup: GCS, CT
**TX? |
|
Definition
subarachnoid hemorrhage
tx: O2, maintain BP, CCB to prevent vasospasm, surgical coil/clipping/embolization |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
head injury w/ skull penetration
any alteration in consciousness
hx of LOC w/ memory deficit
focal neuro deficit
seizures
recurrent vomiting
increased HA |
|
|
Term
**Treatment of COPD exacerbation |
|
Definition
1. Bronchodilators: SABA + ipratroprium - nebulizer is best
2. ABX (most common organisms - s. pneumo, h. flu, m. catarrhalis, m. pneumo, chlamydia pneumo)
3. glucocorticoids - hyperglycemia is common
4. O2
5. mechanical ventilator |
|
|
Term
AMS: 1. causes 2. drugs to give asap 3. assessment |
|
Definition
1. Causes: MOVE STUPID - metabolic, O2, vascular, electrolytes/endocrine, seizure, trauma/tumor/toxins/temp, uremia, psych, infection, drugs
2. Give thiamine (for alcoholic/Wernicke's encephalopathy), D5W, and narcan ASAP
3. assessment: MMSE, Glasgow coma scale |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Eyes:
1. does not open eyes
2. opens eyes in response to pain
3. opens eyes in response to voice
4. opens eyes spontaneously
Verbal:
1. makes no sounds
2. incomprehensible sounds
3. utters inappropriate words
4. confused, disoriented
5. oriented, converses normally
Motor:
1. makes no movements
2. extension to painful stimli (decerebrate)
3. abnormal flexion to painful stimuli (decorticate)
4. flexion/withdrawal to pain
5. Localizes painful stimuli
6. Obey's commands |
|
|
Term
Stroke: 1. risk factors 2. sx 3. evaluation 4. tx |
|
Definition
Risk factors: HTN, DM, hyperlipidemia, smoking, heart disease, AIDS, recreational drugs, alcoholism, fm hx
sx: sudden onset neuro deficit
evaluation: always listent to heart and carotids
Tx:
1. **thrombolytics (TPA) w/in 4.5 hrs
2. elevate head of bed
3. mannitol (osmotic agent)
4. ** DO NOT lower BP - keeps perfusion to brain adequate
5. anticoagulation
|
|
|
Term
TIA: 1. definition 2. s/s 3. dx 4. tx |
|
Definition
1. def: focal ischemic neuro deficit <24 hr
2. sx: abrupt onset and quick recovery - sx depend on area of ischemia
3. dx studies: CT/MRI, carotid US, angiography, check for HTn, heart diesease, lipids, PVD, holter monitor
4. Hospitalization if w/in 48 hr of onset, crescendo atacks, sx lasting >1 hr, symptomatic carotid stenosis, known cardiac source or hypercoagulability
- carotid endarterectomy
stop smoking!
anticoagulants if cardiac source
ASA + clopidegrel if non-cardiac |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Head and neck: 9%
Anterior trunk: 18%
Posterior trunk: 18%
Arms: 9% each
Legs: 18% each
Genitals: 1% |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Depth:
1st degree - red/grey w/ good capillary refill. no blistering
2nd degree superficial: blistering, blanches
2nd degree deep: red/white, blistering, bloody, less blanching. may have contractures
3rd degree: stiff, white/brown, painless
|
|
|
Term
Burn treatment
common pathogens? |
|
Definition
1. ABCs
2. Fluids - ** Parkland formula **: 4 ml/kg LR (Crystalloid) x % body burned = total for 24 hrs.
- Half over first 8 hours, half over second 16 hours
- Use colloids (blood/plasma) - for pulmonary injury
3. Surgery - escharotomy, fasciotomy, debridgement
common pathogens: Staph, VRE, pseudomonas |
|
|
Term
how long to leave sutures in: face, scalp, neck, trunk, arm, leg |
|
Definition
** face: 3-5 days **
Scalp: 5-9 days
Neck: 5-7 days
Trunk: 10-14 days
Arm: 10-14 days
Leg: 10-28 days |
|
|
Term
UGI bleed: 1. sx 2. causes 3. workup |
|
Definition
Sx: hematemesis, melena, hematochezia
Causes: PUD (Most common), erosive gastritis/esophagitis (EtOH), salicylates, NSAIDs, varices, Mallory-Weiss tears
Workup: NG tube, endoscopy is best, Angiography
- monitor for rebleed: NG tube, stool, H&H q 4 |
|
|
Term
LGI bleed: 1. Sx 2. Causes 3. workup |
|
Definition
sx: hematochezia, melena
2. Causes: Upper GI bleed (most common cause of LGI bleed), hemorrhoids (most common true LGI bleed), diverticulosis, angiodysplasia, carcinoma, IBD, infection, Meckel's diverticulum
3. workup: colonoscopy, anoscopy, angiography, bleeding scan |
|
|
Term
Guillain-Barre 1. sx 2. labs 3. tx |
|
Definition
Sx: weakness varies in severity w/ proximal emphasis and systemic distribution - legs--> arms --> face; distal paresthesias, neuropathic pain, autonomic disturbances (tachy, hypo/hypertension, cardiac irregularities, facial flushing)
labs:
- CSF: high protein, NL cell count
- EMG: demyelination
Tx:
- ** NOT PREDNISONE **
- Plasmapheresis, IVIG |
|
|
Term
Thyroid crisis/storm: 1. def 2. sx 3. tx |
|
Definition
Definition: extreme thyrotoxicosis that may be triggered by stressful illness, thyroid surgery, or RAI administration
Sx: marked delirium, tachycardia, vomiting, dehydration, very high fever, tremors, death
Tx: 5 drug regimen: thiourea (PTU), ipodate sodium, iodine, propanolol, hydrocortizone
- ** AVOID ASPIRIN ** |
|
|
Term
** Testicular torsion: 1. cause 2. sx 3. tx |
|
Definition
cause: twisting of spermatic cord. often due to bell clapper deformity
sx: severe pain, absent cremasteric reflex, high elevation of testicle in scrotum, blue dot sign (twisted testicular appendage)
tx: surgery in 4-6 hr or will lose testis |
|
|
Term
Unilateral pain and swelling in scrotum, fever, irritative voiding, flank/abd pain, penile discharge
CBC: Leukocytosis UA: bacteriuria, hematuria, pyuria
tx: ceftriaxone IM followed by oral doxy x 10 days |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Varicocele is more common on ___ side |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Painless testicular enlargement
workup: hCG, AFP, lactate dehydrogenase, LFTs
tx: orchiectomy |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
1. Def of coma 2. Def of stupor 3. Def of drowsiness 4. DDx 5. Tx |
|
Definition
Coma: deep sleeplike state from which pt cannot be aroused
Stupor: pt can be aroused with vigorous stimuli
Drowsiness: light sleep, easily arousable
Ddx: SAH, intoxication, shock, post-seizure, concussion, infection, sub/epidural hemorrhage
tx:
1. ABCs
2. Check: BP, BG, electrolytes, O2 sat, temp
3. Drugs: Naloxone, D5W, thiamine, thrombolytics (after hemorrhage r/o), phyostigmine (anticholinergic od) |
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Term
Most common abdominal surgical emergency - usually due to obstruction by fecolith, inflammation, foreign body, neoplasm
sx: periumbilical to RLQ pain, worse w/ walking or coughing, n/v, constipation, low grade fever
CBC: leukocytosis, neutrophilia, hematuria, pyuria |
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Definition
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Term
Cocaine-induced coronary ischemia 1. pathophysiology 2. tx |
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Definition
pathophysiology: stimulates sympathetic ns - increases HR and BP --> coronary spasm
tx: nitrates, CCB, anti-platelet, benzos |
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Term
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Definition
SABA
Oral corticosteroids (3-10 days)
Ipratroprium
Mag Sulfate
Intubation |
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Term
Evaluation of SOB pt postop 1. most serious thing to always think of 2. common causess 3. atelectasis tx 4. PE tx |
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Definition
1. always think PE 2. atelectasis, bronchospasm, pnuemonia, upper airway obstruction, pleural effusion
3. atelectasis tx: CPAP
4. PE: iv fluids, vasopressor, anticoagulation, thrombolysis, inf vena cava filter |
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Term
Algorithm for unshockable rhythms |
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Definition
Asystole or PEA
CPR w/ rhythm checks every 2 min
1 mg epi q 3-5 min |
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Term
Algorithm for shockable rhythms |
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Definition
Vtach and Vfib
shock 200J biphasic/360 J monophasic
2 min CPR
assess - SHOCK
2 min CPR
1 mg epi
Assess - SHOCK
2 min CPR
1 mg epi
Assess - SHOCK
2 min CPR
1 mg epi
Assess - SHOCK
2 min CPR
300 mg Amiodarone
Assess - SHOCK
2 min CPR
150 Amiodarone |
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Term
Reversible causes of cardiac arrest (H's and T's) |
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Definition
Hypovolemia, Hypoxemia, Hydrogen ions (acidosis), Hypo/hyperkalemia, Hypothermia
Tension pneumo, Tamponade, Toxins, Thrombosis |
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Term
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Definition
Vtach
tx: amiodarone, procainamide, lidocaine, shock |
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Term
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Definition
vagal/valsalva, adenoside/verapamil, cardioversion, AV ablation |
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Term
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Definition
cardioversion if anticoagulated - cardizem or adenosine or electrical
rhythm control - amiodarone
rate control - dig, BB, CCB
anticoagulation
AV node ablation |
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Term
saw tooth EKG with 2:1 atrial to ventricular contractions
tx? |
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Definition
Aflutter
tx: same as Afib - cardioversion (cardizem, adenosine, electrical), amiodarone, rate control (BB, CCB, dig) |
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Term
EKG changes and location/artery of MI:
II, III, aVF V1-V4 V5-V6, aVL ST depression V1/V2 |
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Definition
II, III, aVF: inferior - RCA
V1-V4 (often add V5-6, I, and aVL): anterior - LAD
V5-6, I, aVL: Lateral - Left circumflex
Depression in V1-2: posterior: Left circumflex or RCA |
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Term
thrombolytic thearpy (tPA) for stroke pts
must be given w/in __ hrs Contraindications |
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Definition
4.5 hrs
** CI: stroke/head trauma w/in 3 mos, hx IC hemorrhage, recent surgery, GI bleed within 3 weeks, MI in last 3 mos
- if 3-4.5 hours, CI include: >80 y/o, evidence of hemorrhage, high INR |
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Term
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Definition
PE: palpable cord, calf/thigh pain, edema with increased calf diameter, warm, erythema
Tests: *** Compression US, D-dimer
Tx: Lovenox |
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Term
Most common causes of death in US |
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Definition
** UNINTENTIONAL INJURY (including MVA)
homicide
suicide
malignancy
heart dz |
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Term
***Concussion grading and return to play |
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Definition
Grade I: no LOC, sx <15 min - checked every 5 min - can RTP in 15 min
Grade II: Sx > 15 min, no LOC - RTP in 1 week
Grade III: LOC
- IIIA: LOC seconds - RTP 1 mon
- IIIB: LOC minutes - RTP 6 months
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Term
#1 cause of seizure in elderly? ** |
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Definition
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Term
Seizures in elderly: 1. causes 2. sx 3. workup 4. tx |
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Definition
Cause: stroke (>50%), metabolic abn, trauma, alcohol/drugs, neoplasm, infx
sx: confusion, ams, memory problems
workup: CBC, CMP, UA, ca, mg, tox screen, LP if febrile, abg if resp compromise, CT/MRI, EEG
Tx:
- treat cause if known
- AED (anti-epileptic drug) for epilepsy
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Term
Shoulder dislocation: which direction is most common? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of these things happen in seizure, pseudoseizure, or syncope? motor response tonic posture head movement clonus/limb jerks purposeful movement biting babinski micturation eyes pupils color pulse |
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Definition
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Term
Seizure responses Motor Head clonus/limb jerk Purposeful movements Biting Babinski Micturation Eyes Pupils Color Pulse Duration ONset Termination Injury Post-ictal |
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Definition
Motor: tonic/clonic
Head movement: to one side
Clonus/limb jerks: bilateral, synchronous
Purposeful movements: absent Biting: tongue Babinski: present Micturation: frequent Eyes: open Pupils: dilated or hippus Color: cyanotic or grey Pulse: rapid, strong Duration: 1-5 min ONset: sudden Termination: spontaneous Injury: Frequent Post-ictal: tired, confused, sleepy
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Term
Pseudoseizure responses: Motor Head clonus/limb jerk Purposeful movements Biting Babinski Micturation Eyes Pupils Color Pulse Duration ONset Termination Injury Post-ictal |
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Definition
Motor: tonic, flailing, thrashing
Head: side to side
Clonus: asynchronus
Purposeful mvements: present avoidance
Biting: lips, arms, other people
Babinski: absent
Micturation: rare
Eyes: closed Pupils: Normal
Color: rubor or normal
Duration: 5-60 min
Termination: variable
Injury: rare
Post-ictal: alert, emotional |
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Term
Syncope responses: Motor Head clonus/limb jerk Purposeful movements Biting Babinski Micturation Eyes Pupils Color Pulse Duration ONset Termination Injury Post-ictal |
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Definition
Motor: atonic
Clonus: bilaterally synchronous
Purposeful movements: absent
Biting: rare
Babinskis: absent
Micturation: occasional
Eyes: open Pupils: dilated
Color: pale
Pulse: slow
duration: 1-2 min
Onset: gradual
Termination: rapid
Injury: depends on situation
Post-ictal: alert but tired |
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Term
Hyperkalemia: 1. Causes 2. Always check for ___ - can falsely elevated K+ 3. Sx 4. EKG 5. Tx** |
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Definition
Causes: impaired excretion (acute or chronic kidney dz, d/o of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone, drugs), redistributive (hyperglycemia)
Always check for hemolysis during blood draw
Sx: muscle weakness, paralysis, arrhythmias (K > 7)
EKG: peaked T waves
**Tx: C BIG K + Albuterol
Calcium
Bicarb
Insulin
Glucose
Kexylate
Albuterol
Also - loop/thiazide diuretics |
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Term
Calcium and digoxin toxicity causes ___ |
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Definition
Stone heart - heart stops |
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Term
Human bites: 1. always ask about ___ 2. Common orrganisms 3. abx |
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Definition
Always ask about tetanus status
Organisms: eikenella corrodens (corrosive teeth), group A strep, staph
Abx: Augmentin or Doxy if allergic - for hand, ear, tendon, joint |
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Term
Cat Bites: 1. Most common organism 2. Abx 3. Another disease to watch out for? |
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Definition
1. Most common: pasturella
2. Abx: augmentin
3. Cat scratch fever (bartonella henselae)
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Term
Dog bites: 1. most common organism 2. tx |
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Definition
pasteurella
augmentin for moderate to severe injuries |
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Term
Cardiac Tamponade: 1. def 2. causes 3. sx 4. PE ** 5. Workup - EKG, CXR, Echo, CT/MRI, FAST 6. Tx ** |
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Definition
Compression of cardiac chambers due to increased pericardial pressure. Chambers become smaller and are unable to completely fill. Venous return falls, chambers shrink, CO and BP fall
Causes: rupture of heart or aorta, neoplasm, hypovolemia, uremia, surgery
Sx: CP, tachypnea, dyspnea, high JVP, venous distention, hypotension, cyanosis, decreased urine
Subacute: dyspna, chest discomfort, peripheral edema, fatigue, narrow pulse pressure, hypotension
PE: *** BECK'S TRIAD: hypotension, JVD, muffled heart sounds **
- tachy, pulseus paradoxus, pericardial rub
EKG: tachy, electrical alternans
CXR: elarged heart w/ clear lungs
Echo: chamber collapse, resp variations in flow, IVC plethora (dilation of IVC during inspiration)
CT/MRI: rarely used
FAST scan
Tx: Catheter pericardiocentesis, surgery, supportive care |
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Term
Stroke w/ hypertension: 1. First thing to do? 2. Only treat HTN in acute ischemic stroke when? 3. drug of choice? |
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Definition
1. decide if it's ischemic or hemorrhagic
2. In ischemic stroke, only tx if >220/>120, if active ischemic coronary dz, HF, aortic dissection, or acute renal failure
- Needs to be <185/110 for lytic therapy
3. drug of choice: labetolol |
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Term
Benzo overdose: 1. sx 2. tests 3. tx |
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Definition
Sx: CNS depression w/ nl vitals, slurred speech, ataxia, AMS
tests: glucose, acetaminophen and salicylate levels, EKG, pregnancy test, EtOH
Tx: ABCs
** Antidote: flumazenil
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Term
Aortic dissection: 1. sx 2. hallmark 3. EKG |
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Definition
Sx: severe, sharp, tearing chest/back pain + syncope, CVA, MI, CF, pulse dificit, hx HTN
Hallmark: widened mediastinum, variation in pulse or BP
EKG: nonspecific
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Term
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Definition
Cholangitis
RUQ pain, fever, jaundice
tx: cipro, ERCP, surgery |
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Term
PTX: primary spontaneous secondary traumatic tension |
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Definition
Primary: absence of underlying lung dz
Secondary: presence of lung disease
Traumatic: chest injury
Tension: Positive pressure in skinny males
- needle to 2nd ICS then chest tube |
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