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How should you dose orals to children? |
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Definition
First, follow manufacturer guidelines. Otherwise:
Dose = Adult dose x (weight in lbs / 150) |
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Definition
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What other medication may no longer work if the patient is prescribed doxycycline? |
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Definition
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What are the adult dosages of acyclovir? |
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Definition
HSK: 400mg PO 5x/day for seven days HSV: 800mg PO 5x/day for ten days
400mg PO BID x 1-2 year for prophylaxis |
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What are the adult dosages of cephalexin (Keflex)? |
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Definition
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What are the adult dosages of fexofenadine (Allegra)? |
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Definition
60mg BID for ages 12 and up, 30mg BID down to 6 years. |
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What are the adult dosages of acetazolamide (Diamox)? |
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Definition
Two 250mg tablets, either at the same time or separated by a few hours. |
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Term
What are the adult dosages of azithromycin (Zithromax)? |
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Definition
Z-PAK = Two 250mg tablets, then 1 tablet a day for four days. = First-line chlamydia treatment |
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Term
When do you typically use Vicodin (acetaminophen + hydrocodone)? |
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Definition
1 tablet right after LASIK is fairly common. |
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Term
What's a typical dose of prednisone? How and when should you take it? |
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Definition
40-60mg/day (0.5 mg/kg). Take in the morning with food. |
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Term
An oral steroid can worsen what very significant optic nerve issue? |
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Definition
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Term
Tapers should be (faster / slower) with oral steroids than topical steroids. |
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Definition
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Term
What's pretty much guaranteed after a cataract surgery? |
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Definition
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Term
What are we looking for in a 1-day cataract post-op? |
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Definition
Cells and flare, but really just cells. (Flare is often just from chronic issues.) |
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Term
What's the only drop FDA approved for post-op cataract surgery? Which drop are we more likely to use? If you're concerned about IOP? |
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Definition
FDA: Vexol Go-to: Pred Forte IOP: Lotemax |
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Term
Why not use cycloplegics on a post-op iritis? |
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Definition
Because it's the flare part of a given iritis that indicates cycloplegia. Don't use cycloplegics for post-op cataract surgery induced iritis. |
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Term
For a steroid responder, could use NSAIDs. Why don't patients like those? And what could you maybe still do with steroids? |
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Definition
NSAIDs sting. Also, you could always still do Pred for the first few days to kick the bulk of the inflammation before moving on to NSAIDs. Plus, I guess it tends to take steroid responders like 2-3 weeks to actually 'respond'. |
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Term
Blood (hyphema) should resolve quick. What's it usually due to? Why is it a concern at all? |
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Definition
Due to bleeding at the site of incision. RBCs can plug up the TM. |
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Term
If the patient has oddly low IOP, what might you want to check for? |
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Definition
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Why not use prostaglandins if the patient has elevated IOP? |
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Definition
1. May cause or perpetuate inflammation 2. Don't work fast enough for this |
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Term
Why shouldn't you worry about IOP spikes per trabecular inflammation? |
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Definition
Because inflammation is what you're already treating. |
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Term
CAIs are a decent choice for (short-term / long-term). |
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Definition
Short-term. Long-term could end up with aplastic anemia or something? |
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Term
1-day corneal edema is expected, but… |
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Definition
…you still need to figure out why it's there. |
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Term
What's really the only reasonable choice in treatment of an endophthalmitis? |
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Definition
Refer to a retinal specialist right the heck now. Oral antibiotics don't penetrate well enough, and deciding whether it's sterile or not is a pretty huge gamble. |
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Term
Post-op CME is more common in what type of patient? |
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Definition
Diabetics or folks who had really dense cataracts. |
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Term
Why do topical NSAIDs help with CME? |
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Definition
Because post-op CME is caused by inflammation. Knocking out the inflammation will help resolve the CME. |
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Term
If a PCO looks kind of bubbly, like your windshield after an ice storm, what is the cause? What if it looks like wax paper? |
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Definition
Bubbly = leftover capsule Wax paper = the bag |
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Term
How important is it to stop Flomax or filter out folks with Pseudoexfoliation syndrome? |
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Definition
It's not such a big deal anymore. |
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Term
What should you do with a post-op IOP between 21 and 25? |
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Definition
Nothing really. Should normalize in a few days. |
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What should you do with a post-op IOP between 25 and 30? |
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Definition
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What should you do with a post-op IOP above 30? |
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Definition
Probably orals in addition to topicals |
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Term
When should you treat post-op CME more aggressively or consider a retinal referral? |
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Definition
When VAs are worse than 20/80. |
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Term
If IOP is over 40, there's no point in using Pilocarpine to try to open that angle closure. Why? |
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Definition
Because the ciliary muscle is sort of pinned down at that point. |
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Term
Why isn't Dr. Y a fan of Bactrim (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)? |
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Definition
Because it carries the highest risk for SJS. |
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Term
What's the safest pain killer? What's maybe a superior pain killer? |
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Definition
Safest: Acetaminophen Superior: Ibuprophine |
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Term
What are the Famous 5 risks that you need to educate a foreign body patient about? |
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Definition
Scar VA loss RCE Uveitis Infection |
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