ENT Flashcards

1
Q

Otitis externa

A

Inflammation of the external portion of the ear and or auditory canal
Pain, itchiness, hearing loss, discharge and swollen ear canal.
Non-infectious cause; atopic dermatitis, psoriasis, seborrhoea dermatitis, acne and eczema
Infectious causes;
Bacterial - most common cause; cause fever, lymphadenopathy, white mucus discharge
Fungal - asymptomatic but can have white,black,grey,yellow discharge

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2
Q

Otitis externa treatment

A

Ear calm (acetic acid 2%)
Simple analgesia
Neomycin/cloquinol max of 7 days
Aluminium acetate
Consider oral antibiotics if systemically unwell or it is spreading past the ear; flucloxacillin or clarithromycin

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3
Q

Acacute otitis media

A

Self limiting - clear up 3-7 days
Often children
Middle ear infection
Viral or bacterial
Advice, duration, self care and paracetamol should clear it up if systemic symptoms develop or longer lasting consider oral antibiotics
Often without effusion

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4
Q

Red flags for acute otitis media

A

Severe systemic infection (NEWS score)
Signs of meningitis (rash, high temperature, confusion, mottled skin)
Mastoiditis (large lump behind ear)
Intracranial abscess
Sinus thrombosis
Facial nerve paralysis
Children younger than 3 months with a temperature of 38’ or more
Children between 2-6 months of age with a temperature of 39’

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5
Q

Ear wax

A

Cerum, brown, orange red yellow or grey
Ear wax is normal bodily secretion, protective film
Remove if it begins to cause hearing loss or interferes with a proper view of the ear drum
Earache, hearing difficulty, itchiness, diziness

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6
Q

Ear wax treatment

A

3 to 5 days; olive oil, almond oil, sodium bicarbonate (helps dryness), sodium chloride nasal drops
Otex can be sued but it contained peanuts - avoid if have allergy
Patient must lie to side to allow wax to soften
Failure treatment consider irrigation
Never give drops to patients with a suspected perforated tympanic membrane is suspected

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7
Q

Rhinitis/ cattarh

A

Cattarh is build up of mucus in nose and sinuses and phlegm in the throat
Often self-limiting
Nasal congestion, runny nose, sneezing and itching
Caused by allergies mainly
Rhinitis affects 1/4 people - common

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8
Q

Causes rhinitis/cattarh

A

Infections
Allergies
Change in temperature
Hormone imbalances
Nasal polyps

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9
Q

Red flags for rhinitis/ cattarh

A

Significant respiratory involvement
Purulent nasal discharge Sinusitis?

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10
Q

Treatment cattarh/rhinitis

A

Infection-associated; dependent on co-existing symptoms manage as a URTI (amox/clarity/erythromycin) or sinusitis (phen v or doxy)
Allergy associated; intranasal antihistamine (azelastine), oral histamine, cromoglicate nasal spray, intranasal steroids (mometatsone fluticasone, triamcinolone, belcomethasone)
OTC corticosteroids; 18+ and 2 puffs per dose max 3 months
Avoid or review trigegrs

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11
Q

Nasal congestion

A

Infection, allergies, nasal polyps, sinusitis, deviated nasal septum

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12
Q

Nasal congestion red flags

A

Significant respiratory involvement
Purulent nasal discharge sinusitis?
Periodical swelling
Altered speech
Double vision or reduced visual acuity
Unilateral polyps and other symptoms
Bloody nasal discharge

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13
Q

Nasal congestion treatment

A

Polyps; intranasal steroids (high dose 6 weeks) then surgery; blocked nose and decreases smell
Sinusitis; analgesia, nasal saline, nasal decongestants (medicamentosa if used more than 7 days)
Decongestants; not under 6 and 6-12 years for max 5 day treat
Moist air / menthol and eucalyptus
Ephedrine is the safest - 7 days, sympathomimetic
Refer; nasal staphylococci infection (naseptin or mupirocin as well)

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14
Q

Sterimar

A

Can be used from birth
Isotonic - same concentration
Hypertonic - different concentration to cell membrane (more saline) concentration is stronger

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15
Q

Epistaxis

A

Nose bleeding
Caused by; trauma, infection, picking or blowing nose, dry skin, high BP, medication and nasal polyps

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16
Q

Epistaxis red flags

A

Haemodynamic compromises (lightheadedness, syncope, pallor)
<2 years of age
Facial pain or numbness
Double vision
Hearing loss
Bleeding lasts longer than 10-15 mins
Clotting abnormalities

17
Q

Epistaxis management or treatment

A

Acute; sit with upper body tilted forward and mouth open, pinch the cartilaginous part of the nose firmly and hold it for 10-15 mins without releasing the pressure
Infection-associated (crusting) - naspetin QDS for 1 days, or mupirocin ointment BD/TDS for 5-7 days
High BP or medication - review as appropriate

18
Q

To treat dermatitis of ear

A

Dry skin build up and itchy aoroung outside ear
Steroid drops used to treat

19
Q

What can cause a dry mouth

A

Antimuscarinics
TCAs
Antipsychotics
Diuretics
Disease to salivary glands

20
Q

What can dry mouth lead to?

A

Increased risk dental caries
Periodontal disease
Intolerance of dentures
Oral infection (particularly candidiasis)

21
Q

How to treat dry mouth

A

Frequent sips of cool drinks
Artificial saliva - has neutral pH contains electrolytes
ACBS, biotrax, glandsane, saliva orphans and saliveze
Fluoride prevents dental caries

22
Q

Other preparations for orophanygeal use

A

Lozenges and sprays no evidence
Mouthwashes, gargles and dentifrices
Warm saline mouthwash for cleaning effects
Hydrogen peroxide useful for ulcerative gingivitis

23
Q

Chlorohexidine

A

Antiseptic
Stops plaque formation and prevents candidiasis
Can’t replace brushing, adjunct to other oral hygiene measures
Mouthwash, spray or gel
Secondary infection in mucosal ulceration and for controlling gingivitis
Main side effects; temperature, stain teeth; dilute water and decrease irritation and staining
Reversible brown staining of teeth and tongue with prolonged use

24
Q

Oral ulceration and inflammation

A

Refer if longer than 3 weeks
Simple mouthwashes - saline may relieve pain
Antiseptic mouthwashes
Secondary bacterial infection use Chlorohexidine

25
Q

Thrush

A

Often caused corticosteroid treatment with inhaler use
White inside of mouth
Miconazole; daktarin oral gel used - to for warfarin patients
Nystatin is alternative

26
Q

Other mouthwashes

A

Benzydamine hydrochloride; difflam
Dilute mouthwashes with equal water if causing stinging
Flurbiprofen lozengers - relief sore throat
Choline salicylate (bonemeal), dental gel too much = irritate mucosa causing ulceration
Other preparations doxycycline rinsed in mouth apotheosis ulceration

27
Q

Pericoronitis

A

Inflammation of gum tissue surrounding crown
Would give metronidazole or amoxicillin for 3 days

28
Q

Gingivitis

A

Inflammation of gum
Metronidazole or amoxicillin 3 days

29
Q

Abscess

A

Pocket of pus inside the gum
Amoxicillin or metronidazole 5 days

30
Q

Periodontitis

A

Inflammation of the gums and structures supporting the teeth
Give metronidazole or doxycycline if over 12

31
Q

Sore throat (pharyngitis)

A

Acute
Viral and often self-limiting
Symptoms can last a week
If bacterial then give phen v pr clarithromycin for 5 days
Report in blood dyscarsia causing drugs; e.g methotrexate

32
Q

Tonsillitis

A

Fever pain score
Red flag; issues with wheezing and breathing difficulties
Pus and inflammation of the Toni’s
Antibiotics often needed if serious

33
Q

Aperitonsilar absess

A

999 referral
Dehydration breathing difficult
Drainage and antibiotic