ENT & Opthalmology Flashcards

1
Q

A person has a severe nose bleed, tried managing it with cautery, anterior and posterior packing yet it is still bleeding. The patient is on warfarin for A fib. What to do now?

A

Tried both 1st and 2nd line now:

Ligation of the sphenopalatine artery in theatre

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2
Q

What treatment options would there be in a px with chronic sinusitus and clear runny discharge?

A

clear discharge - not bacteria so no abx

INTRANASAL corticosteroid
and
Nasal irrigation with saline

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3
Q

A person has Meniere’s (vertigo, N&V, Hearing loss, tinnitus) how to treat their acute flare and prevent future cases?

A

Acute attack = Buccal or IM prochlorperazine

Prevention - betahistine

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4
Q

Epistaxis treatment for bleed from known source vs cannot find the source of bleed?

A

if you know it : Silver nitrate cautery

If cannot find it: Nasal packing

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5
Q

Having chronic sinusitis itself isn’t a red flag, but what key features would be red flags that would result in an ENT referral?

A

Unilateral chronic symptoms

Epistaxis

Blood stained discharge

Orbital features

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6
Q

Having chronic sinusitis itself isn’t a red flag, but what key features would be red flags that would result in an ENT referral?

A

Unilateral chronic symptoms

Epistaxis

Blood stained discharge

Orbital features

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7
Q

The dix-hallpike manouvre is the 1st line test to diagnose BPPV, what is seen?

A

would see

  • patient experiencing vertigo
  • rotatory nystagmus
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8
Q

acute maniere disease attacks medication?

A

Buccal or IM

Prochlorperazine

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9
Q

Scleritis summary

  • episcleritis is a painless red eye in comparison
A
  • underlying systemic e.g RA, SLE, IBD
  • Deep eye pain worse on movement
  • Red eye
  • Photophobia

Ix = phenylephrine drops = if redness improves its episcleritis not scleritis

Mx = urgent referral due to threat to sight
NSAIDs 1st line if mild case
2nd line = systemic glucocortiods
3rd line = azathioprine/methotrexate

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10
Q

Uveitis summary

A

Anterior = HLAB27 linked

  • dull pain
  • red eye
  • photophobia
  • movement DOES NOT cause pain
  • blurry vision
  • lacrimation, hypopyon, small oval pupil

Posterior = Infections usually, same features + Floaters

referral + prednisolone drops

can give cycloplegic e.g atropine eye drops to dilate pupil and help relieve the pain and photophobia

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11
Q

Periorbital and orbital cellulitis summary

A

periorbital = superifical eyelid, insect bit = red swollen, oedema but no pain on movement

orbital = infection spread, sinusitis = red, oedema, severe pain + on movement, visual disturbance, proptosis, eyelid oedema

Ix = CT sinus + orbits with contrast, helps differentiate and assess for posterior spread

Mx
periorbital = oral abx co-amoxiclav and 2ndry care referal

Orbital = admission and review, IV vancomycin + ceftaxime

  • risks cavernous sinus thrombosis
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12
Q

Optic neuritis summary

A

Commonly caused by MS (MS features)

Quick vision loss quickly or presents as decreased acquity with scotoma
Pain and on eye movement
colour desaturation
no red eye
RAPD
Papillitis

Ix - gadolinium enhanced MRI of orbit and brain

Mx - high dose prednisolone

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13
Q

Lesion to the superior optic radiation

A

inferior homonymous quadrantanopia

(cannot see between 6-9 oclock on both eyes)

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14
Q

Lesion to the inferior optic radiation

A

superior homonymous quadrantanopia

e.g. px can only see from 4-11 oclock on both eyes

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15
Q

what is the most likely source of orbital cellulitis infection?

A

Ethmoid sinus (sinusitis)

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16
Q

px has viral conjunctivitis, with pre auricular lymph nodes, how long to take off work?

A

Sign of adenovirus conjunctivitis, avoid contact up to 2 weeks

17
Q

what is the epley manourvre?

A

A type of canalith repositioning manouvre - CRM

move the otoconia out of the semicircular canal and into the vestibule

Used in BPPV

18
Q

whats tests may be done in menieres?

A

Fakudas stepping test

look for nystagmus

positive rombergs test

19
Q

ix for meniere?

A

pure tone audiometry = rhinne + weber

will get unilateral sensourineal:

rhinne positive bilaterally
weber localising to normal ear

20
Q

meniere accute attacks mx

meniere prevention

maintenance therapy

A
  • IM prochlorperazine
  • betahistine
  • thiazide diuretic to redice endolymph fluid
21
Q

epistaxis:

hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia ?

A

arteriovenous malformations

over skin and mucous membranes

spontaneous bleeding

first degree relative will have it too

22
Q

epistaxis:

granulomatosis with polyangiitis (wegener’s)

A

px with epistaxis, sinusitis and saddle shaped nose

rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (’pauci-immune’).

cANCA positive.

23
Q

ITP vs TTP in epistaxis?

A

ITP = idiopathic
TTP = thrombotic (in sick patient

  • thrombocytopaenic purpura

will get low platelets either in a well or unwell patient.

if ITP can tx with steroids

24
Q

recurrent epistaxis mx?

A

Naseptin

25
Q

is your sinusitis viral or bacterial?

A

viral = <10 days

bacterial = 10 days - 4 weeks (can give intranasal ICS)

severe bacterial = phenoxymethylpenicilin

26
Q

viral tonsilitis organism

bacterial organism?

A
  • rhinovirus
  • strep pyogenes
27
Q

tonsilitis sx?

A

sore throat, high fever, purulent tonsillar exudate
pain on swallowing!

enlarged anterior cervical lymph nodes

28
Q

throat culture vs rapid streptococcal antigen test for tonsilitis?

A

if you suspect GABHs do the antigen test for specific organism cause

based on Centor criteria:

presence of exudate
tender lymph
fever 38+
absence of cough
3+ = pyogene tonsilitis

29
Q

topical abx for bacterial conjunctivitis?

A

Chloramphenicol

if pregnant = fusidic acid

30
Q

management for allergic conjunctivitis?

A

topical antihistamine - olopatadine

topical mast cell stabilizers - sodium cromoglycate

topical corticosteroids if that severe

31
Q

bilateral vs unilateral conjunctivtis?

A