Breast and vascular Flashcards

1
Q

definition of AAA

A

Abnormal dilatation of the aorta > 3cm diameter or >50% greater than normal artery above it

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2
Q

describe the vascular Trendelenburg test

A
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3
Q

describe Perthe’s vascular test

A
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4
Q

causes of gynaecomastia

A
  • Liver cirrhosis due to alcoholism
    • Failure of liver so unable to metabolism oestrogen
  • Bronchial carcinoma (rare paraneoplastic)
  • Pituitary tumours (↑ prolactin)
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Testicular tumours
  • Renal failure
  • Hypogonadism
  • Drug related - esp. spironolactone
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5
Q

causes of nipple discharge

A
  • Physiological (60%)
  • Duct ectasia
    • Benign condition, blocked duct
    • Cheesy water discharge, may be blood stained
  • Intraductal papilloma
    • Blood discharge from single duct
  • Epithelial hyperplasia
    • Occasionally blood stained, single duct
  • Galactorrhoea
    • Pregnancy, high prolactin
  • Carcinoma
    • Single duct discharge, Watery/serous/bloody
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6
Q

what is the most common breast cancer?

A

ductal carcinoma

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7
Q

is HER2 +ve a good or bad prognosticator?

A

bad

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8
Q

is ER +ve a good or bad prognosticator?

A

good

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9
Q

what are the signs of peripheral vascular disease?

A
  • HAS LEGS
    • Haemosiderin deposition
    • Atrophie blanche
    • Swelling/oedema
    • Lipodermatosclerosis
    • Eczema (venous)
    • Gaiter region
    • stars (venous)

ulcers

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10
Q

management of fibroadenoma

A
  • conservative - most, safety next
  • excision - patient request, large (> 3cm), complex, symptomatic
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11
Q

describe screening for AAA

A
  • men - offer in 65th year
  • females - > 70 with RF (COPD, arterial disease, FHx, dyslipidaemia, HTN, smoking)
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12
Q

describe the surveillance of AAA

A
  • 3-4.4cm - yearly USS
  • 4.5 - 5.4 - 3 monthly USS
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13
Q

indication for elective AAA repair

A
  • AAA > 5.5cm
  • symptomatic
  • asymptomatic > 4cm and growing 1cm/year or 5mm/6 months
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14
Q

management of AAA (unruptured)

A
  • reduce risk of rupture
    • smoking cessation
    • weight loss
    • HTN management
    • statin and aspirin
    • DVLA if > 6.5 (can’t drive till repair)
  • monitoring
  • surgical - open or EVAR
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15
Q

EVAR vs OPen AAA repair

A
  • similar long term, EVAR better short term
  • EVAR has higher rate of re-intervention
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16
Q

complications of open AAA repair

A
  • haemorrhage, injury to structures, anesthetic
  • early - pain, bleed, infection, seroma, blots, bowel ischaemia, renal impairment
  • late - hernia, graft occlusion, impotence
17
Q

complications of EVAR repair of AAA

A
  • conversion to open, anaesthetic risk
  • early - pain, bleed, infection, seroma, clots, bowel ischaemia, AKI
  • late - endoleak, migration, limb occlusion, impotence, reintervention
18
Q

causes of acute limb ischaemia

A
  • thrombosis (40%)
  • emboli (40%)
  • aneurysms
  • trauma
  • graft/angioplasty
  • vasospasm
19
Q

6 P’s of limb ischaemia

A
  • Pain - constant, persistent
  • Pulseless - ankle pulses absent
  • Pallor (or cyanosis or mottling)
  • Perishingly cold
  • Paraesthesia or ↓ sensation or numbness
  • Paralysis or power loss
20
Q

investigations in acute limb ischaemia

A
  • Bedside
    • Examination of affected limb - neurovascular status
    • ABPI
    • ECG - assessment for AF
    • Handheld Doppler - assessment of peripheral pulses
  • Bloods
    • VBG - monitor lactate
    • FBC, U&E, G&S, clotting
    • Glucose, lipids
    • Thrombophilia
  • Imaging
    • Doppler USS
    • CT angiogram
    • Echocardiogram - ?AF (enlarged left atrium), ?IE
21
Q

acute initial management

A
  • A-E assessment
  • Duplex, angiogram (CTA, MRA or DSA)
  • Referral to vascular surgeons + admission
  • Heparin 500 IU IV stat
  • Foot down to promote blood flow
  • Determination of level and if salvagable
  • Definitive management
  • Control of reperfusion sequalae
  • Anti-coagulation and control of embolic source as required
22
Q

what is the A-E for acute limb ischaemia

A
  • A - ensure patent
  • B - 100% oxygen, CXR (assess for signs of PE)
  • C - IV access, 0.9% NaCl rehydration
    • Bloods - FBC, U&ES, glucose, cardiac enzymes, clotting, HbA1c, BNP, G&S
    • ECG - assess for AF
    • Urinary catheter to monitor fluid balance
  • D
  • E - opiate analgesia
    • Duplex, angiogram (CTA, MRA or DSA)
23
Q

definitive management of acute limb ischaemia

A
  • No neurosensory deficit
    • early revascularisation
  • Neurosensory deficit without limb staining/mottling → urgent CTA + revascularisation
    • If emboli → embolectomy (arteriotomy or balloon embolectomy, Fogarty catheter), 2nd - bypass or intra-op theombolysis
  • If thrombosis
    • Bypass graft
  • Intra-arterial thrombolysis
  • Neurosensory deficit + limb staining/mottling
    • non-salvageable → palliation or amputation
24
Q

follow up/long term management of acute limb ischaemia

A
  • Identify underlying cause/contributing factors if emboli
    • Clot sent for MC&S + histology
    • Image of proximal arteries
    • Echo - bubble, TOE
    • 24 hour tape - intermittent AF
    • Assess for hypercoagulability
  • Risk reduction
    • Long term anti-coagulation or anti-platelet
  • Statin
25
Q

types of aortic dissection

A

stanford

  • A - ascending aorta, most common
  • B - distal to left subclavian, descending
26
Q

RF for aortic dissection

A
  • HTN
  • aortic atherosclerosis
  • CTD (EDS, SLE, Marfan’s)
  • aortitis
  • trauma
  • iatrogenic
  • cocaine/amphetamines
  • valvular heart disease
27
Q

management of aortic dissection

A