Term
What do the American Society of pharmacists say about drug interactions between NSAIDs and Coumadin in the elderly?? |
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Definition
It is a VERY bad combo! Oftentimes will cause GI bleeds in the elderly. |
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Term
What is the most common type of urinary incontience? |
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Definition
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Term
When suspecting elderly abuse, how should the interview go? |
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Definition
Interview the caregiver and pt separately. |
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Term
What were the 4 main drugs Prof Yattaw said to avoid in the elderly?? |
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Definition
1. Coumadin 2. Demerol (Pain) 3. Valium (long-acting) 4. Xanax |
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Term
What is one of the most common psych disorders in the elderly? |
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Definition
Depression-it is poorly recoginzed and undertreated. |
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Term
What is a good drug to give an elderly person with anxiety? |
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Definition
Atavan (Lorazepam)- avoid giving XANAX and Valium bc they are associated with falls. |
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Term
What is Sporonox (Itraconazol)? What is it used for? What does it do to elderly individuals? |
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Definition
Oral Antifungal. Used for toe nail fungus. It decreases liver metabolism of many drugs and increases GI pH(affecting absorption of meds). It is very hard on the liver. Can cause diarrhea and dizzy. |
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Term
If an elderly person has sx of being dizzy, can't sleep, chronic pain and can't cope...what do they probably have? |
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Definition
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Term
Abrupt vertigo (weak and dizzy) is common in what types of pts? |
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Definition
Pts who have had a TIA with vertebrobasilar artery sx. |
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Term
What are some common causes of delirium? |
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Definition
Sundowning and polypharmacy |
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Term
When a pt falls and hits their head, what should be a concern and your next step of action? |
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Definition
You should be worried about an underlying neurologic problem. Do eval, get CT and MRI. Make sure to get Neuro involved...AKA...MAKE THE RIGHT CONSULT. |
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Term
What is geriatric syndrome? What do you need to do as a provider in regards to this syndrome? |
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Definition
Deliruim, incontience, fraility, falls, polypharmacy. You want to prevent this syndrome from getting out of hand. After taking 9 or more meds, they are "flagged" It consists of medication prescribing and avoiding risky diagnostic workups. |
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Term
What class of drugs are known to have SE of less falls in the elderly? Give 2 really good examples. |
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Definition
TCAs such as Norpremine and decipramin. DO NOT GIVE XANAX (TCAs are the best antidepressants for elderly) |
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Term
If there is a leakage of urine while laughing and coughing, this is called? |
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Definition
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Term
What should be used to assess alzhiemer's? |
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Definition
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Term
How does Meniere's dz present? |
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Definition
Vertigo, tinnitus, hearing loss |
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Term
What is a full thickness decubital ulcer? What stage is it? |
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Definition
It is an ulcer that extends down to the fascia but NOT into it. It is a stage 3 decubiti. |
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Term
If a pt complains of back pain, what are some other things you should consider? |
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Definition
AAA, spinal mets (tumor), urinary bladder syndrome, bowel issues. |
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Term
What is the life expectancy of an individual with alzheimer's? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some DDX for sexual dysfunction? What work-ups should u do? |
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Definition
Hormonal, endocrine (thyroid), neuro |
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Term
What affects does aging have on the kidneys? |
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Definition
It causes a decrease in creatinine clearance, therefore causing decrease renal BF. |
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Term
What is the purpose of CYP450? |
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Definition
Competes for transformation through liver enzymes. |
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Term
What is significant about grapefruit juice? |
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Definition
Competes with P450 binding sites (BP MEDS). It is an inhibitor which causes increased levels of the drug that could be toxic. This is also seen with CCBs. |
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Term
Can elderly men have premature ejaculation without an erection? |
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Definition
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Term
Can elderly men have premature ejaculation without an erection? |
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Definition
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Term
Menopause is associated with (5)? |
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Definition
1. Decrease sexual function 2. Decreased sexual interest 3. Decreased responsiveness 4. Decreased coital frequency 5. INCEASED urogenital sx- often not discussed with the MD** |
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Term
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Definition
Certain foods or drugs that can cause drug interactions. They decrease metabolism of drugs causing either increase drug effect or toxic effects. |
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Term
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Definition
They increase metabolism of a drug, which can lead to decreased drug effects and lower levels. |
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Term
Why should Soma be avoided? |
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Definition
It has active metabolites that can be very addicting. Benzos will give drug hangovers and can build up in the body. |
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Term
When giving meds to the elderly, what should be monitored? |
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Definition
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Term
What are common SE of ACEi? |
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Definition
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Term
Arthritis meds can be toxic to pts with what type conditions? |
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Definition
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Term
What affect may aminoglycsodies have on the elderly? |
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Definition
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Term
IV contrast can be ____________ to pts. What should be monitored when giving a pt IV contrast? |
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Definition
nephrotoxic. MONITOR creatinine. |
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Term
Demerol should not be used in elderly pts with delirium bc? |
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Definition
Can cause serotonin syndrome and renal insufficiency. (Automatic substitition). Also leads to respiratory depression |
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Term
When is IV demerol approved? |
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Definition
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Term
ACEi can cause ______ in elderly men. |
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Definition
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Term
When using the Vacumm tumescence device, how long should the ring be left on for? |
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Definition
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Term
Do the elderly have more or less gastric acid? How does this affect drug absorption? |
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Definition
LESS. Drugs that require a low pH to be broken down are not absorbed as well. |
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Term
Are topical meds in the elderly absorbed slower or quicker? why? |
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Definition
Slower. B/C skin perfusion has declined. |
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Term
Do the elderly have more or less free water in the body? What does this lead to? |
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Definition
LESS. This leads to higher active drug concentrations. |
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Term
Malnutrition in the elderly affects proteins in which way? |
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Definition
Causes less serum protein for drugs to bind to causing higher serum levels. |
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Term
Oftentimes drug levels in the elderly are higher bc their bodies are not processing it as fast. What causes this? From a providers stand point, what should you do about this? |
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Definition
Liver mass + decreased hepatic BF + decreased renal clearance. Reduce dosages and monitor creatinine clearance. |
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Term
Which drugs are the elderly more sensitive to? |
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Definition
Warfarin and centrally acting drugs like NSAIDs |
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Term
Oftentimes drug levels in the elderly are higher bc their bodies are not processing it as fast. What causes this? From a providers stand point, what should you do about this? |
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Definition
Liver mass + decreased hepatic BF + decreased renal clearance. Reduce dosages and monitor creatinine clearance. |
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Term
As the provider, what are important things to counsel elderly pts on? |
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Definition
Drug interactions and lifestyle. (ie smoking and ETOH) |
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Term
What drugs cause confusion in the elderly? Examples of these drugs include: |
|
Definition
Anti-Ach. 1. Flurosemide (all loop diuretics) 2. Clonidine 3. H2 blockers (Cimetidine, Ranitidine) 4. SSRIs and TCAs 5. Opiods 6. Benzos and some antipshych drugs 7. Digitalis 8. NSAIDs 9. BB (Propanolol) 10. Fluroquinolones |
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Term
What drugs are esp associated with falls? |
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Definition
1. Anticonvulsants 2. HTN 3. TCAs, Benzo 4. Diruetics 5. Vasodilators 6. Opioids |
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Term
As a provider what it important to note about drug interactions and polypharmacy? |
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Definition
You need to be careful. SE can be visible (rash, vomiting) or subtle (personality changes, somnolence) |
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Term
What is signficant with alternative therapy? |
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Definition
These meds (herbals, supplements) can interact with their Rx meds....monitor these and be very careful! |
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Term
How should you manage Polypharmacy?? |
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Definition
1. Minimize the # of drugs they are taking 2. Consider the alternatives 3. Start low, go slow 4. Titrate therapy to get the goal 5. Educate the pt, family 6. Review the drug list at each visit 7. Don't give one drug just to fix another drug's SE 8. Some drugs may worsen existing conditions--> arthritis meds and kidney dz 9. USE as FEW drugs as possible--> there may be competition for absorption and metabolism of each drug 10. Metabolism is changes by other drugs and diet- avoid grapefruit juice with meds! |
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Term
How can drugs affect social activities? |
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Definition
They can change them. Pts may quit drugs and not tell the MD. |
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Term
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Definition
When a pt quits taking a drug for a period of time if they feel it is in their best interest. Some drugs may be discontinued with CLOSE follow up- be sure to monitor them! |
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Term
Conditions that contribute to gait disorders include? |
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Definition
1. DJD 2. Acquired musculoskeletal deformities 3. Intermittent cladication 4. Impairments following orthopedic surgery 5. Impairments following stoke 6. Postural hypotension 7. Dementia 8. Fear of falling |
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Term
Parkinsonism is what type of gait disorder? What are the sx? |
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Definition
Middle sensorimotor level gait disorder. Sx: small shuffling steps, hesitation, propulsion, retropulsion, turning en bloc, absent arm swing |
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Term
Cerebellar ataxia is what type of gait disorder? What are common sx of this disorder? |
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Definition
Middle sensorimotor level. Sx: antalgic (wide-based) gait with increased trunk sway, irregular stepping. |
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Term
What does the neuroendocrine theory state about the hypothalamus? |
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Definition
As we age, the hypothalamus looses its precision of action. |
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Term
What are the 2 leading chronic conditions shared by both sexes? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the top chronic conditions in elderly men? |
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Definition
1. Hearing impairment 2. Heart Condition 3. Arthritis 4. HTN 5. Cararacts |
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Term
What are the top chronic condition in elderly women? |
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Definition
1. Arthritis 2. HTN 3. Heart condition 4. Hearing impairment 5. Cataracts |
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Term
Memory impairment begins to rapidly deteriorate in men and women after ____ years. |
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Definition
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Term
Depression is more common among with sex? |
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Definition
Women-- but as people age, the ratio evens. |
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Term
Which race reports better health across all decades among both sexes than other minority groups? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the #1 cause of death among people 65+? |
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Definition
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Term
What comprises the bulk of medicare expeditures? |
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Definition
Inpatient hospitaliztions and outpatient medical expenses. |
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Term
What is the Barthel Index? |
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Definition
10 items that measure a person's daily functioning. These include: 1. Feeding 2. Moving 3. Personal toilet use 4. transfers (on/off toilet) 5. bathing self 6. walking 7. mobility ease (assistive devices used?) 8. Stairs 9. Dressing 10. Continence- BM and bladder control |
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Term
How is the score assessed for Barthel's Index? |
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Definition
Person receives a score based on whether they have received help while doing the task. The higher the score, the more independent the person. |
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Term
What is Fostein's Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE)? |
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Definition
(Recall 3 items) It is widely used. Tests orientation, registration, recall, attention, calculation, language, visual-spatial skills. A number score is given in 5-10 minutes. |
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Term
If a pt has difficulty with immediate recall of 3 words during the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE), this generally indicates? |
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Definition
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Term
If a pt has difficulty with predominant recall after 5 minutes of 3 words during the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE), this generally indicates? |
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Definition
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Term
If a pt deficits of attention recognized by inability to spell simple words backwards, repeat 5 digits or recite the months backwards during the MMSE, this suggests? |
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Definition
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Term
Hbg, serum BUN, creatnine, glu can help exclude what in the elderly? |
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Definition
dehydration, anemia or hyperglycemia. |
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Term
Is the holter monitor good for routine eval? |
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Definition
NO. There is no proven value for it. |
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Term
What you do to uncover carotid sinus hypersensitivity? |
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Definition
Carotid sinus massage with continous HR and BP monitoring. |
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Term
What is important to order for ALL geriatric services? |
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Definition
PT and OT. Many MDs do not know how to order this. |
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Term
Black stool can indicate what? |
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Definition
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|
Term
Small amounts of diarrhea can indicate what? |
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Definition
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Term
Prune juice is excellent for what? |
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Definition
Stimulates peristalsis, accelerating transit. (stimulants and softeners) |
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Term
Polyethyleneglycol is good for what? |
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Definition
Consitiation or impaction. This is Miralaz....lots of MDs use this. |
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Term
Many drugs have SE of dizzy. Dizzy with postural changes is MC in those with? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the preferred class of drugs for most anxiety disorders? |
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Definition
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|
Term
Depression in the elderly causes: |
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Definition
Marked disability, hastened functional decline, increased hospitalization, diminshed QOF, increased medical services, increased mortality (4x) |
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Term
What makes dx of depression in older people more difficult? |
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Definition
They more often report somatic sx, less often report depressed mood to to guilt, may present with masked depression (more concerned about physical condition) |
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Term
What are the risk factors of depression? |
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Definition
Medical illness, fxnal disability, social isolation, total life stressors and losses, genetic vulnerabilites. |
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Term
Do not give Nortriptyline or Desipramine in the presence of: |
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Definition
Conduction disturbance, heart dz, intolerance to anticholinergic SE |
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Term
SSRIs are used when...to tx depression? SE include? |
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Definition
Mild to mod severe depression, use if TCAs are contraindicated or not tolerated. SE: anxiety, agitation, N, D, sex effects, psuendoparkinsonism, increase warfarin effect, hyponatremia/SIADH, falls and fxs |
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Term
When are MAOIs indicated for depression? SE? MOA? |
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Definition
If TCAs and SSRIs don't work. SE: Orthostatic hypotension, falls, life-threatening HTN crisis if taken with tyramine rich foods, SS if taken with SSRIs (Meperidine). MOA: Blocks monoamine oxidase enzyme in CNS which precvents the breakdown of NT |
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Term
ECT (Electoconvulsive therapy) is the 1st line tx for pts with? What improves with ECT? |
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Definition
Serious risk of suicide (70% success rate for MDD) Anterograde amnesia improves rapidly after tx, retrograde more persistent (events prior to tx may be forgotten) |
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Term
What is geriatric psychosis? |
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Definition
The 1st sign of medical, neurologic or substance-induced condition. It is a LOSS OF CONTACT WITH REALITY. Need eval--> send to psych. |
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|
Term
Risk factors for psychosis include: |
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Definition
1. deterioration of cortical areas 2. neuro and chemical changes 3. hearing and visual impairments 4. social isolaton 5. congitive deficits |
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Term
What are the risk factors for sucicide in older adults? |
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Definition
depression, physical illness, living alone, male, alcoholism- VIOLENT sucicdes are MC |
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|
Term
what are the risk factors for ETOCH dependence? |
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Definition
social isolation, depression, financial stress, housing needs, spousal loss/death |
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Term
What should be considered as a factor for people who fall, have appetite/memory problems, trouble sleeping and depression? |
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Definition
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Term
What drug might help relapse to ETOH abuse in 50-70 yo? |
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Definition
Naltroxone (elderly pts are most likely to comply to absintence programs) |
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|
Term
What are some factors assoc with nursing home placement? |
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Definition
1. Increasing age 2. Low income 3 .Poor family supports (esp lack of spouse/children) 4. Accepting attitude toward nursing home 5. Cognitive and functional impairment |
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|
Term
What do you use to test the PROGRESSION of dementia in old ppl? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What is one of the most correctable reasons for dementia? |
|
Definition
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Term
|
Definition
1. Degenerative Disorders- MS, Alzeimers, huntings, creurtfeldt-jacob (mad cow) 2. CV- Stoke/TIZ, infarct, Endocarditis 3. Trauma- brain injury, subdural, concussion, punch drunk 4. Infections-meningitis, enceph, spesis, syphilis |
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|
Term
Meds that require Caution include: (4) and SE of them: |
|
Definition
1. Anti-Ach- Dryness, sedation, urinary retention, blurred vision 2. Long Acting/Active Metabolites- have hangover effect (Benzos) 3. NSAIDs- GI Bleeds, Renal failure 4. Drugs with narrow theraprutic index- dig, coumadin, dilantin, quinidine |
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|
Term
What % of pts cannot get up without help after a fall? What predicts function decline? |
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Definition
50%; if they are stuck lying on the ground for a long time ("long lie") |
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|
Term
What 3 conditions contribute to hip fx? |
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Definition
Osteopenia, osteoporosis, vit D def. |
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Term
If the pt has a single fall, what should you check for? |
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Definition
Balance or gait disturbance |
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Term
If a pt has recurrent falls, what should u check? |
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Definition
hx, meds, joints, CV, neuro reasons. |
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Term
What is the "get up and go test"? What are the time frames and what do they indicate? |
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Definition
Test to see hoe long it takes to get out of chair, walk 10 feet, turn, return to chair and sit. Should be 10 secs for a healthy adult. Elderly may be btw 11-20. If over 14s- increased risk of fall If over 20s-need to do comp eval. *This test shows a strong correlation btw functional independence and ability to do ADL's. |
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Term
What is the "get up and go test"? What are the time frames and what do they indicate? |
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Definition
Test to see hoe long it takes to get out of chair, walk 10 feet, turn, return to chair and sit. Should be 10 secs for a healthy adult. Elderly may be btw 11-20. If over 14s- increased risk of fall If over 20s-need to do comp eval. *This test shows a strong correlation btw functional independence and ability to do ADL's. |
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|
Term
Is incontience a sx or dz? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What are reversible causes of incontience? |
|
Definition
"DRIP" 1. Delirium, drugs 2. Restricted mobility, retention of urine 3. Infection, inflammation, injury, impaction, illness 4. Polyuria, pharmaceuticals |
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|
Term
What are the persistent causes of incontinence? |
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Definition
1. Stress- leakage increased with intrabd. pressure- MC in WOMEN 2. Urge- inability to delay bladder emptying (deturssor hyperactivity) MC in ELDERLY 3. Overflow-pressure of full bladder exceeds that of outlet of outlet which is partially obstructed; enlarged prostate 4. Functional- US is nrl (impaired mobility, unaware of need to urinate). MC in DEMETIA, NEURO, IMPAIRED MOBILITY |
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Term
Small gut has propagated motor activity every: |
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Definition
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|
Term
Food stay in s. intestine for? Lg. intestine? |
|
Definition
Small- 1-2h; lg-1-3 days. GI transit is prolonged in the elderly |
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|
Term
What body parts are affected in regards to the colon and consitipation? |
|
Definition
external anal sphincter and pelvic floor strength decrease; decreased rectal sensation in elderly with hx of impactation. |
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|
Term
Meds known to cause constipation include: |
|
Definition
1. CCBs 2. Narcotics 3. antidepre 4. anti-Ach 5. Ca 6. NSAIDS 7. Fe |
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|
Term
Disorders assoc with constipation: |
|
Definition
1. hypo K/mg, DM, parkinson's, dementia, strokes |
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|
Term
Structural disorders assoc with constipation: |
|
Definition
anal fissures, mucosal prolapse, rectocele, divertic, pelvic floor dysfn, strictures |
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|
Term
|
Definition
spinning or motion. due to imbalance in vestib system from middle ear, brainstem, cerebellum. MCC: BPPV, cerebrovascular dz, larrinthitis, vestibular neuronitis |
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|
Term
|
Definition
Recurrent verigo and tinnitus. ear stuffiness may precede attack. Rx= diurtics, endolyphatic shunt for severe. |
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|
Term
Discribe REM sleep with aging. |
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Definition
REM sleep decreases with aging. Stages 1 and 2 increase, 3 and 4 decrease. |
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|
Term
What is organic brain syndrome? |
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Definition
dz that are not psych disorders, but cause decreased mental fxn. (NOT A DZ) Loss of fxn is not normal for a pts age. |
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|
Term
What are the sx of organiz brain syndrome?? |
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Definition
agitation, confusion, loss of brain fxn short term (delirium) and long term (dementia) |
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