capsule peri op and anaesthesia Flashcards

1
Q

what to give for local procedure in digits

A

local anesthetic agent-ring block. rapid and effective regional anaesthesia. never use anaesthetic containing adrenaline in digits as vasoconstroctor effects can cause ischaemia

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2
Q

when should lidocain not be used

A

intra arterially as regional anaesthetic

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3
Q

when does lidocain become peak plasma arterial concentration

A

25-20 min post injection. pt need to be monitored for at least this amount of time if larger doses of lidocaine has been used

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4
Q

when can you use IV lidocain as initial treatment

A

ventricular tachy arrthythmias

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5
Q

how does local anaesthetic work

A

inhibits influx of sodium into cells, and act on small unmyelinated c fibres before (which transmit pain and temperature sensation) large A fibres (which transmit touch and power)

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6
Q

when does lidocaine become peak plasma arterial concentration

A

25-20 min post injection. pt need to be monitored for at least this amount of time if larger doses of lidocaine has been used

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6
Q

when does lidocaine become peak plasma arterial concentration

A

25-20 min post injection. pt need to be monitored for at least this amount of time if larger doses of lidocaine has been used

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7
Q

how would you try to make anaesthetic more affective

A

enabling anaesthetic to warm up, adding adrenaline (so effect can last longer because delays anaesthetic being washed out into circulation)
but never use adrenaline in digits as it can cause ischaemia

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8
Q

what are side effects of local anaesthetic

A

cardiac arrythmias, neurotoxicity, central resp depression.
allergic reaction eg urticaria or anaphylaxis

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9
Q

insensible loss

A

evaporative water loss from skin and resp tract
50ml/h in hospitalised pt, or 0.5-1ml/kg/h

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10
Q

how to calculate maintenance fluid

A

4 2 1 rule (4mls/ kg for the first 10kg, 2mls/ kg for next 10kg and 1ml/kg for the remaining weight)
Daily sodium requirements are between 1-2 mmol/kg and potassium 0.5 – 1mmol/kg.

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11
Q

crystalloid

A

inorganic ions or small molecules- glucose

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12
Q

gelatin

A

colloidal solutions with molecular weight of 30,000. no longer in regular use

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13
Q

dextrose 5%

A

will distribute throughout total body water

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14
Q

hartmann’s solution

A

balances salt solution containing lactate-metabolised by liver to bicarbonate. balanced because it has less chloride than normal saline and closer to electrolyte contents of plasma

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15
Q

how to dec risk of regurgitation of stomach

A

A rapid sequence induction is the standard technique to rapidly secure the airway with an endotracheal tube. This technique is indicated in any patient at risk of regurgitation to reduce the likelihood of aspiration of stomach contents of which he is at a high risk of due to his hiatus hernia.
administer antacid before anaesthesia

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16
Q

which conditions are associated with higher risk of aspiration under anaesthesia

A

diabetic, diagnosed with hiatus hernia, symptoms of acid reflux, BMI 45

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17
Q

when do you transfuse blood post op

A

post op pt without cardiovascular disease do not need to be transfused unless Hb less than 80

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18
Q

how can peri-op transfusion of donated blood be dec?

A

using regional anaesthesia instead of local, correcting pre op anaemia before pt undergo surgery. adhering to guidelines for approrpiateness of post- op blood transfusion
using intra-operative cell salvage techniques

19
Q

what should you transfer to anaemic pt

A

packed RBC, - have been seperated from whole blood by centrifuge. RBC are denser and settle to bottom and majority of liquid blood plasma remains on top

20
Q

how to test if pt is hypovolaemic

A

elevate pt legs and measure BP with her lying supine- inc venous return to heart and stroke vol which will inc BP

21
Q

MAP

A

Diastolic pressure+ 1/3 pulse pressure (systolic-diastolic)

22
Q

ST elevation in lead II, III, AVF

A

inf MI and reciprocal changes in I and AVL

23
Q

ST elevation in precordial leads and I an dAVL

A

LAD ant stemi

24
Q

st elevation in II, III, AVF and depression in V1-3

A

post stemi, often occurs with inferior MI- in L Cx artery

25
Q

what anti coagulation do you give in acute inf MI

A

clopidrogel and aspirin

26
Q

new heart murmur and fever indicative off

A

infective endocarditis

27
Q

peripheral oedemma, basal crackles, SOB

A

acute heart failure

28
Q

SOB and pain on deep inspiration

A

PE

29
Q

febrile, tachycardic, productive cough

A

pneumonia

30
Q

central chest pain, non radiating worse at night and relieved by eating

A

oesophagitis, gastritis

31
Q

SOB, heavy smoker, occasional wheeze, productive cough

A

COPD

32
Q

lung bases dull to percuss, poor air entry bilaterally

A

pleural effussion

33
Q

syncope: sudden collapse (transient loss of consciousness), immediately waking on reaching floor

A

aortic stenosis

34
Q

how does warfarin work?

A

vit K antagonist so prevents formation of clotting factors. takes a few days to work

35
Q

waht does intrinsic pathway involve

A

begins in blood stream, involves factors XII, XI, IX

36
Q

what does extrinsic pathway involve

A

begins in blood vessle and involves factor III and VII. prothrombin time so can be ued to monitor warfarin

37
Q

what is common pathway

A

X and II

38
Q

what is INR

A

international normalised ratio compares time taken for blood sample to clot compared to normal control sample.

39
Q

how does warfarin affect INR

A

prolongs the time for clotting so inc INR

40
Q

what can cause change in INR

A

warfarin metabolism de activates cytochrome PD50 so interacts with many medication
Vit K
lifer function
other drugs that can affect vit K synthesis-cephalosporin

41
Q

what reaction is ABO incompatavilty

A

raised temp, HR, abrnormal bleeding ( haemoglobinuria) and low BP. wrong blood given to wrong person so cause acute intravascular haemolysis

42
Q

transfusion related lung injury PC

A

tachypnoea, hypoxia, low BP, pulmonary oedema due to donor HLA antivodies that attack host leucocyte antigen which activate lung neutrophils that damage lung tissue so cause oedema

43
Q

what criteria used to ascertain what anticoagulatn needed

A

CHA2DS2-VASc- ascertain LT risk of stroke in pt with Af

44
Q

CHA2?

A

C: congesitv heart failure-1
H: HTN-1
A: age over 75:2

45
Q

DS2

A

DM
S: stroke, TIA, thrombo-embolism: 2

46
Q

VASc?

A

V: vascular disease-1
A: age 65-74: 1
S: sex femal=1