Term
What are the complications of Friedrich's ataxia? |
|
Definition
Neurological: Ataxia (frequent falls) and dysarthria Endocrine: Diabetes Cardiac: Concentric Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Skeletal: Scoliosis, Hammer Toes |
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Term
In what age group is transient synovitis of the hip seen? |
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Definition
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Term
How can you distinguish transient synovitis of the hip from septic arthritis? |
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Definition
Suspect septic arthritis if at least 3/4 are met: 1. WBC > 12000 2. ESR > 40 3. Temperature > 39 4. Child refuses to bear weight on that side |
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Term
What are the characteristics of physiological vaginal discharge in neonates? When can it occur? |
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Definition
Colorless (milky white). May be bloody. Can occur up to 3 months of age. |
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Term
What are the signs of epiglottitis? How is it diagnosed? How might one differentiate it from croup? |
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Definition
High fever, stridor, tripod position, drooling, respiratory distress. Diagnosed with lateral x-ray which shows the "thumb sign" (swollen epiglottis). A barking cough does not occur in epiglottitis and is specific to croup. Drooling on the other hand is not generally seen in croup. |
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Term
What is the most common cause of end stage renal disease in children? |
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Definition
Vesico-ureteral reflux leading to upper urinary tract infections and renal scarring |
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Term
What is the sign of posterior urethral valves? How is this condition diagnosed? Does it occur in boys or girls? |
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Definition
Midline mass in the lower abdomen representing a distended bladder. Diagnosis by VCUG. Occurs in boys. |
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Term
When do symptoms of pyloric stenosis appear most commonly? At what age does pyloric stenosis leave the differential? And how is it diagnosed? |
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Definition
Symptoms usually appear between 3 and 5 weeks of age, and up to 12 weeks of age. Diagnosis is by abdominal ultrasound. |
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Term
What are the complications of vitamin A deficiency? |
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Definition
Mainly ophthalmological: night blidness, eventually leading to complete blindness, xeropthalmia, keratomalacia, corneal perforations. Other: Immunodeficiency, nonspecific rash. |
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Term
What is the ONLY bacteria that causes meningitis and a rash |
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Definition
Neiserria meningitidis. Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenza also cause meningitis but do NOT cause a rash. |
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Term
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Definition
Fever in a patient with an absolute neutrophil count < 500 |
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Term
What lab findings are seen in vitamin D deficiency and why? |
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Definition
Hypophosphatemia is usually the prominent finding. Vitamin D deficiency causes decreased serum calcium levels, which results in secondary hyperparathyroidism, returning calcium levels toward normal but decreasing phosophate |
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Term
What is the cause of hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis? |
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Definition
Volume contraction, for example from excessive vomiting or loop diuretics. |
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Term
What is the hallmark of a Proteus infection on urinalysis? |
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Definition
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Term
What organism is most commonly responsible for osteomyelitis from stepping on a nail? |
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Definition
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Term
What clinical signs are typical of an MCA vs. ACA. |
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Definition
ACA = contralateral lower body sensory and motor defecit. MCA = contralateral upper body sensory and motor deficit. |
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Term
How might sickle cell disease affect the genitourinary system? |
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Definition
Can cause painless hematuria as a result of sickling in the renal papilla, causing papillary necrosis. |
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Term
What is torticollis and what is the cause? |
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Definition
Focal dystonia of the SCM muscle. Usually caused by medications but can be idiopathic. |
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Term
What does a high A-a gradient mean? |
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Definition
Could either mean shunt, V/Q mismatch (dead space), or diffusion problems |
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Term
What skin condition occurs with increased frequency in both HIV and Parkinson's? |
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Definition
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Term
List the major causes of urinary incontinence |
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Definition
1. "Transient" causes (DIAPPERS) Delirium Infection (UTI) Atrophic urethritis/vaginitis Pharmaceuticals Psychiatric (severe depression) - rare Excess urine output (fluid intake, diuretics, alcohol, caffeine) Restricted Mobility Stool Impaction. 2. "Real" causes Detrusor overactivity (urge incontinence) Detrusor underactivity (rare) Stress Incontinence Urethral Obstruction |
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Term
In which type of ulcers is the pain RELIEVED by food and in which type is the pain EXACERBATED by food? |
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Definition
RELIEVED = duodenal EXACERBATED = gastric |
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Term
Describe the typical rash of Molluscum contagiosum |
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Definition
flesh colored dome-shaped papules with a central umblication, located on the extremities, truck, and ano-genital area |
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Term
How is molluscum contagiosum transmitted? |
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Definition
Skin to skin contact, or sexual contact |
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Term
What often can precipitate pseudogout? How is it diagnosed? |
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Definition
Surgery, or an acute medical illness. Rhomboid-shaped, positively birefringent crystals on joint aspiration |
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Term
What is the cause of "contraction alkalosis"? |
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Definition
Volume loss leads to aldosterone production through the RAA system. Aldosterone. Aldosterone stimulates ENaC, which results in increased sodium absorption in the distal tubule, which results in increased potassium and hydrogen ion excretion. |
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Term
When endocarditis is due to intravenous drug use, what valve is usually affected? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of gait is caused by foot drop? |
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Definition
A "steppage" (high-stepping) gait |
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Term
What are the most common causes of foot drop? |
|
Definition
1. Peripheral neuropathy 2. Common peroneal nerve damage 3. L5 radiculopathy |
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Term
What type of vision is lost in macular degeneration and which type is spared? |
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Definition
Central is lost while peripheral is spared |
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Term
What is the mechanism of statin-induced myopathy? |
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Definition
Statins inhibit HMG-CoA reductase, which produces mevalonate. This substance is needed to produce coezyme Q10. The lack of Coenzyme q10 is thought to cause statin myopathy. |
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Term
What is the classic presentation of steroid-induced myopathy? |
|
Definition
Proximal muscle weakness in the lower extremities (can't get out of a chair) |
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Term
What is the most common cause of adrenal insufficiency in developing countries? What about in developed countries? |
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Definition
Developing - adrenal tuberculosis Developed - autoimmune adrenalitis |
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Term
What is seen on adrenal tuberculosis on CT scan? |
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Definition
Calcifications within the adrenal gland |
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Term
In what population is de Quervain tenosynovitis seen? |
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Definition
New mothers (due to irritation of the extensor pollicis brevis and abductor pollicis longus against the radius when the mother holds the baby with her hands around it) |
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Term
What is the definition of systemic sclerosis? |
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Definition
Scleroderma + internal organ involvement |
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Term
What vaccine is indicated for all HIV patients, as long as the CD4 count is greater than 200 |
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Definition
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Term
What special test should be ordered on a diabetic's urine and why? |
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Definition
Albumin/Creatinine ratio. Provides an estimate of the 24 hr excretion of albumin in the urine. Dipstick only detects macroproteinuria (>300mg/24 hr) so are not good enough. Normal is <30 mg/24 hrs. |
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Term
Define Relative Risk and Odds Ratio. How is odds mathematically related to risk/probability? |
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Definition
Relative Risk = the risk of getting cancer if you smoke/the risk of getting cancer if you don't smoke. Odds Ratio = the odds of getting cancer if you smoke/the odds of getting cancer if you don't smoke. Odds = risk/(1-risk) Risk = odds/(odds+1) |
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Term
A jejunal ulcer is pathognomic for what condition? |
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Definition
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Term
Why is steatorrhea seen in Zoster-Ellison syndrome? |
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Definition
The small intestine is too acidic so pancreatic enzymes are inactivated. |
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Term
How does a stroke in the posterior limb of the internal capsule manifest? |
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Definition
Motor defect in the face, arm, or leg, without higher cortical dysfunction or visual field defect. |
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Term
What is the most common cause of secondary hypertension? |
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Definition
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Term
What does someone with an anal fissure commlain of? |
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Definition
Extreme pain on defection with bright red blood in the stool |
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Term
Where are anal fissures located on the anus? |
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Definition
Midline, either posterior or anterior |
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Term
How are anal fissures treated? |
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Definition
1. Fiber supplements, stool softeners. 2. Sitz baths after defecation 3. Nitroglycerin ointment if tolerated 4. If this fails after several works, surgery: internal sphincterotomy, which works because the fissure is due to a hypertrophic internal sphincter cutting off blood supply to the anus. |
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Term
How does acute cholecystitis happen? |
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Definition
A stone becomes lodged in the cystic duct, causing obstruction. Bacterial overgrowth of the gall bladder occurs, which causes inflammation. |
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Term
What is the treatment of acute cholecystitis? |
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Definition
1. NPO 2. IV antibiotics 3. Pain medication 4. Cholecystectomy once stable |
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Term
What are the four most common things you will see in a patient with acute cholecysitis? |
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Definition
1. RUQ pain, sudden onset, usually after meal 2. Fever 3. Leukocytosis 4. Vomiting |
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Term
What do post-MI PVCs portend and what do you do about them? |
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Definition
They are associated with a worse prognosis, but there's nothing you can do about them. If they are symptomatic than a beta blocker is prescribed. |
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Term
What conditions often accompany autoimmune adrenalitis? |
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Definition
Autoimmune thyroid, parathyroid, or ovarian diseases. Also vitiligo and pernicious anemia. |
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Term
List the major anti-emetics by mechanism |
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Definition
1. Serotonin antagonist = ondansetron (Zofran) 2. Histamine antagonist = diphenhydramine (Benadryl) and Promethazine (Phenergan) 3. Dopamine antagonist = Prochlorperazine (Compazine), Metoclopramide (Reglan) 4. Anticholinergics (Scopolamine) |
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Term
What are the serum calcium levels and phosphorus levels in Vitamin D deficiency? |
|
Definition
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Term
What are the causes of primary hypoparathyroidism? |
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Definition
1. Thyroid surgery 2. Congenital (common with DiGeorge) 3. Autoimmune (seen in APECED syndrome) 4. Parathyroid glands cannot sense calcium levels. |
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Term
What causes primary, secondary, and tertiary hyperparathyroidism? |
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Definition
Primary = Parathyroid adenoma Secondary = Chronic kidney disease causes vitamin D deficiency, leading hypocalcemia leading to hyperparathyroidism Tertiary = Chronic stimulation of the parathyroid due to the above condition leads to an autonomous parathyroid gland. |
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Term
What causes hypertension and hypokalemia together? |
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Definition
1. Renin-secreting tumor 2. Renovascular disease 3. Primary hyperaldosteronism |
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Term
What does foul-smelling sputum tend to indicate? |
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Definition
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Term
What skin lesion is associated with celiac sprue? |
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Definition
Deramititis herpetiformis |
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Term
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Definition
Heat rash, seen in hot climates. Consists of vesicles, papules, and pustules on the trunk that may itch or burn. |
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Term
How is molluscum contagiosum treated? |
|
Definition
Liquid nitrogen or curettage. Treatment is to prevent spread. |
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Term
What is a likelihood ratio? How is it calculated from a 2x2 table? |
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Definition
The test is this much more likely to be positive in the presence of disease than in the absence. In 2x2 table, (a,b on top, c,d on bottom): (a/(a+c))/(b/(b+d)) |
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Term
In a population with low disease prevalence, the PPV of a diagnostic test will (increase/decrease). The NPV will (increase/decrease). |
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Definition
The PPV will decrease while the NPV will incrase |
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Term
What is lead-time bias? Give an example. |
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Definition
Lead-time bias is when a study falsely shows an increased survival time when studying time from diagnosis to death. This is because early screening catches the disease before you would catch it without screening, but the person still lives the same amount of time. Example; a chest x ray will catch lung cancer sooner and thus will have an increased time between diagnosis and death, but it has no effect on mortality. |
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Term
What is length-time bias? |
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Definition
Refers to falsely promising results of an early screening and treatment program for slow-growing cancers. More cancers are caught in the early screening group than would have ever been caught in real life (pt dies from other causes); making the results of treatment seem falsely promising. |
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Term
What is a test's reliability? Give two synonyms |
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Definition
Also known as reproducibility and precision; means how well does the test keep getting the same values on repeated trials. |
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Term
What is a test's validity? |
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Definition
It's accuracy; it's similarity to the actual state of things. |
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Term
What's the latest you can give t-PA for an MI? When's the window that it works the best. |
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Definition
Best within 3 hours, some effect has been observed up to 12 hours. |
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Term
What are contraindications for t-PA? |
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Definition
1. Active internal bleeding or aortic dissection. 2. A site that might be predisposed to bleed, ex. surgery, trauma 3. An intracranial process, such as neoplasm or ischemic stroke, or head trauma 4. Pregnancy |
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Term
What imaging test must every MI pt have before leaving the hospital? When should they have their stress test? |
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Definition
1. Echo to evaluate EF 2. Stress test in 4-6 weeks |
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Term
Describe the pathophysiology of plaque formation. |
|
Definition
Risk factors: Smoking, hypertension, high LDL, diabetes. Endothelial cell injury leads to smooth muscle cell proliferation, lipid accumulation. 1. Fatty streaks. Present in children 2. Fibrous plaques. Seen in ages 30-40s 3. Unstable plaques. Seen in 50s-60s. |
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Term
Name 5 causes of sinus bradycardia, in the order from most to least lethal. |
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Definition
1. Hypoxemia 2. Inferior MI (RCA): Check EKG! 3. Medications: Beta blockers esp. 4. Vasovagal. 5. Young athlete. |
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Term
A person is having an acute MI. In what three instances can you NOT give them nitroprusside? |
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Definition
1. Hypotension (SBP < 90) 2. Taking PDE5 inhibitors (Viagra, Cialis, etc.) 3. There is a right ventricular MI. |
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Term
What are the 6 steps of reading a blood gas? |
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Definition
1. Does this blood gas make sense? [H+] = 24 x PCO2/HCO3-. 7.40 = [H+] of 40. 7.5 = [H+] of 30, 7.3 = [H+] of 50, etc. 2. Acidemia or alkalemia 3. Metabolic or respiratory 4. What is the anion gap? (MANDATORY!) Anion gap = Na+ - HCO3- - Cl 5. If there is an anion gap, what is the delta gap? Delta gap = anion gap - 12. 6. Is the compensation appropriate? Look up formulas. |
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Term
What are the causes of respiratory acidosis? |
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Definition
PCO2 = Production/RR(TV-DS) So either excess production, slow respiratory rate, poor tidal volume, or too much dead space |
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Term
What are the causes of respiratory alkalosis? |
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Definition
CNS: ASA toxicity, sepsis, CVA, meningitis Respiratory: Any cause of hypoxemia (PE, ARDS, etc.) Liver: ESLD (unknown why) Pregnancy |
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Term
What are the causes of metabolic acidosis? |
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Definition
1. Anion gap? Y = MUDPILES. Think Lactate 95%, 5% uremia or DKA. Methanol Uremia DKA Paraldehyde Isoniazid Lactic acidosis Ethylene glycol Salicylic acid overdose (ASA) 2. No anion gap ("hyperchloremic) a. Diarrhea b. RTA c. Too much NS (only bolus a person 2 liters) |
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Term
What are the causes of lactic acidosis? How do you know the difference between them? |
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Definition
1. Poor oxygen delivery (sats, Hb, CO) 2. Tissues cannot use the oxygen they are given (a. sepsis, or b. cyanide poisoning, which you can get from burning furniture or from nitroprusside) 3. A clot, usually in the gut 4. Meds: Metformin, protease inhibitors, epinephrine, ativan (because its carrier is ethylene glycol). 1 will have a low SvO2. 2 will have a high SvO2. 3 and 4 will have normal SvO2 |
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Term
What are the causes of metabolic alkalosis? |
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Definition
1. Chloride-responsive (Low urine chloride) = contraction alkalosis. 2. Chloride-resistant = Primary aldosteronism or Cushing's syndrome, refeeding syndrome. |
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Term
What medications cause vasodilation? |
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Definition
1. Calcium channel blockers 2. alpha blockers 3. Propofol 4. Epidural with bupivocaine 5. Hydralazine 6. Nitrates |
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Term
Generic: Quetiapine. 1. Brand name? 2. Class? 3. Mechanism? 4. Adverse effects? |
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Definition
1. Seroquel 2. Atypical antipsychotic 3. Dopamine antagonist 4. a. sedative b. EPS, but less so than other antipsychotics c. Weight gain d. Prolongs QT interval e. Cataracts |
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Term
How is unstable angina differentiated from an NSTEMI? |
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Definition
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Term
Name 2 causes of ischemic chest pain aside from coronary artery disease |
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Definition
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Term
What drugs are used in all forms of CAD and why? |
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Definition
1. Antiplatelet agent, aspirin being the most common, but plavix, others can be used also. 2. Beta blocker. Reduces myocardial oxygen demand 3. Statin. Other meds in addition could include nitro for pain relief and a calcium channel blocker in addition. |
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Term
What is the treatment of unstable angina? |
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Definition
Aggressive anti-platelet and anti-coagulation: aspirin, plavix, heparin or lovenox, +/- Gb2/3a inhibitor. Beta blocker. Pain relief with nitroglycerine and morphine. +/- cath lab (based on severity) |
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Term
When do symptoms of Prinzmetal angina generally occur? |
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Definition
Early morning waking the pt from sleep |
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Term
CABG is shown to better than PTCA in which situations? |
|
Definition
Diabetic with multi-vessel disease. Left main or proximal LAD. |
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Term
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Definition
1. New severe angina pectoris 2. Angina at rest 3. Angina that is rapidly getting worse |
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Term
What is the thirty day mortality of a non-STEMI ACS? |
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Definition
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|
Term
Is revascularization indicated for chronic stable angina? Why/Why not? |
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Definition
Usually not, there has not been any evidence of benefit to mortality. However, it can be used in high-risk patients, such as those with easily-provoked ischemia, diabetes, impaired LV function, or LAD/left main involvement. |
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Term
Any total cholesterol value of ??? is high, unless ???? is true. |
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Definition
200, unless TC/HDL ratio is normal. |
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Term
Who should be screened for high ch cholesterol and what needs to be measured? |
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Definition
Males over 35 and females over 45, unless they already have a risk factor for CAD, in which case you start earlier? |
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Term
What is the normal value for LDL cholesterol? |
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Definition
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|
Term
On the lipid profile, which is the most important number in terms of being a risk factor for CAD? |
|
Definition
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Term
What are the 5 major risk factors for CAD? |
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Definition
1. Smoking 2. HTN 3. Diabetes 4. Family history (primary male <55 or female <65) 5. Age (males > 45 and females > 55) |
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Term
What are "CAD risk factor equivalents?" |
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Definition
Disease, that if present, are equal to major risk factors in terms of the development of CAD. They include diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, symptomatic carotid stenosis, and AAA. |
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|
Term
Define high triglycerides, and what does this usually mean? |
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Definition
250 or greater is high. Usually seen in diabetic patients with poor control. |
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Term
What testing must be done on a patient starting a statin and why? |
|
Definition
Measure LFTs before starting therapy, at 12 weeks, at 6 months, and then yearly. Check LFTs if you change the dose. Statins can be hepatotoxic. Also measure CPK if the patient complains of MSK pain because statins can be toxic to skeletal muscle. |
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Term
What is the expected change in LDL cholesterol with a statin? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is the expected change in the lipid profile with niacin? |
|
Definition
Decreases LDL by 35%, decrease TG by 75%, and increase HDL by 100% |
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Term
What are the side effects of niacin? |
|
Definition
1. Can irritate the stomach and cause gastritis 2. Can cause PUD to worsen/come back 3. Can precipitate gout 4. Can make glycemic control worse in diabetics. 5. Can cause cutaneous flushing and dry/scaly skin |
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Term
How does a lipid profile relate to CAD risk? |
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Definition
LDL is the biggest risk factor, HDL is second, TC is third, and TG is 4th. |
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|
Term
What blood pressure meds affect plasma lipids adversely? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is the treatment of choice for hypertriglyceridemia. |
|
Definition
A fibric acid derivative such as gemfibrozil. |
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|
Term
Name 3 causes of hypertriglyceridemia? |
|
Definition
1. Poor glycemic control in diabetes 2. Alcohol abuse 3. OCPs |
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Term
How can H+P differentiate systolic from diastolic heart failure. |
|
Definition
Diastolic tends to occur in elderly women. Systolic, you will have an S4 and persistent, as opposed to paroxysmal, atrial fib. |
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Term
What is good BP control for a diabetic pt? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is appropriate non-pharm therapy for CHF? |
|
Definition
Salt resitriction! And bed rest for very severely ill patients. |
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Term
In general, not to say there aren't exceptions, what 2 medications are the mainstay of treating CHF? |
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Definition
Ace inhibitors/ARBs and betablockers. ACEis may prevent remodeling and they decrease afterload. Betablockers stop the heart from working too hard. |
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|
Term
Name 3 drugs that interact with digoxin: How? |
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Definition
Amiodarone, verapamil, and nifedipine. They increase the level of digoxin. |
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|
Term
What are the 2 indications for dig in CHF? |
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Definition
Afib with RVR and/or a decreased EF. |
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|
Term
What are the classes of heart failure and how should each be treated? |
|
Definition
A-asymptomatic with risk factors. Address risk factors. B-asymptomatic with structural defects of the heart. Should be on ACE-inhibitor +/- beta blocker C-Symptomatic. ACE-inhibitor, beta blocker, diuretics if needed, oxygen if needed, spironolactone if needed. Revascularization or valve repair if necessary. D-refractory to treatment. inotropes, assist devices, transplants, etc. |
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|
Term
Uremia causes what 3 major problems? |
|
Definition
1. encephalopathy 2. coagulopathy (decreased platelet function) 3. Pericarditis |
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|
Term
Name 3 causes of pulsus paradoxus |
|
Definition
1. hypovolemia 2. tamponade 3. COPD (due to increase in transmural pressure, and therefore afterload, with inspiration) |
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