ENT Flashcards

1
Q

How is otitis media managed? Risk/benefit of abx, indications.

A

Analgesia (incl 2% lignocaine if TM ok), 48hr review. Abx adverse in 7%. Abx: amoxy 15mg/kg TDS 5 days, augmentin if not responding. Cefuroxime or bactrim. Abx if < 6 mo, < 2y w both ears, systemically unwell, discharge, immunocompromised.

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2
Q

What is recurrent AOM? How is mastoiditis treated?

A

3+ episodes in 6mo or 4+ in 1 year. M: IV fluclox and cepahlosporin.

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3
Q

How is otitis media with effusion managed? What is if it discharges?

A

OME for 3mo normal post AOM. Longer = glue ear, check hearing + ENT. Chronic suppurative otitis media if 6 weeks discharge, risk hearing loss - dry aural toilet, cipro drops until discharge stops for 3 days.

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4
Q

Cholesteatoma - cause, symptoms, features management.

A

Epithelial cell growth from canal into mid ear. Hearing loss, discharge, smell. TM perforation superior + posterosuperior risk. Surgery to treat.

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5
Q

How is allergic rhinits managed?

A

Intranasal antihistamine 1st. If >4d + >4weeks OR bothersome, affecting sleep/work/school, add steroid for 4 weeks. Beyond, if obstructive - dymista combo for >12yo. If allergic - montelukast.

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6
Q

Sialolithiasis - Symptoms, preciptiants, management.

A

Pain/swelling w eating or pre-food. Dehydration, diuretics, anticholinergics. Conservative: massage, milk duct, sour candies. Abx if infected. Surgery if recurrent/not improving.

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7
Q

Otitis externa management, prevention.

A

Keep dry 2 weeks, dry aural toilet. Otodex, locorten vioform, cipro HC. No otodex or kenacomb if perforation. Cover ears for shower/swimming. Can do aqua ear after getting wet.

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8
Q

Features of audiograms with CHL, SNHL, age, noise and menieres.

A

C: air reduce, bone normal. SNHL: both reduced. Age: SNHL at high frequency. Noise: SNHL mid frequency. Menieres: SNHL one side at low frequency.

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9
Q

What are the causes of sensorineural hearing loss?

A

Vestibular schwannoma, ototoxic drugs, noise induced, MS, stroke, meniere’s disease. If sudden - steroids and ENT

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10
Q

What are the causes of conductive hearing loss? Features of otosclerosis.

A

Cerumen, otitis externa, otitis media, cholesteatoma. OS: overgrowth of stapes plate, uni or bilateral, autosomal dominant, develops in 20-30s. ENT for surgery.

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11
Q

Exostoses and barotrauma - features, management.

A

Surfers ear, benign bony overgrowth: pain, hearing loss,infection late. Surgery if big or hearing affected. Baro: pain, tinnitus,hearing loss, bleeding into TM. From flying. Analgesia, refer if TM rupture, vertigo or SNHL.

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12
Q

Rhinosinusitis management

A

Analgesia, nasal spray/rinse, IN steroid. If >7-10d, severe symptoms likely bacterial -may improve within 2 weeks. Abx: amoxy 5 days, cefuroxime if allergy, doxy if severe. Augmentin if not responding.

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13
Q

What are the red flag symptoms of rhinosinusitis? What are possible complications?How are nasal polyps managed?

A

Confusion, diplopia/vision change, meningism, proptosis, bad smell. Peri/orbital cellulitis, meningitis, fungal, nasopharyngeal ca ddx (if recurrent or unilateral). If polyps, use 3 weeks of steroids then refer if needed.

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14
Q

Causes of sialadenitis. Acute management.

A

Inflam (bacterial infection, viral mumps EBV, TB, sjogrens), obstructive (stone, trauma), metabolic (obesity, hypothyroid, eating disorder), tumour. Acute bacterial: IV fluclox, urgent surgical review.

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15
Q

Features and indications of abx for sore throat.

A

Acute onset, fever >38, tonsilar exudate, cervical lymphadenopathy, no viral features. High risk: ATSI/maori, fhx of rheum heart disease, immunosuppressed. Abx if severe: phenoxymethylpenicillin 500mg BD 10 days OR amoxicillin. Single dose benzathine benpen. Allergic: keflex, azithromycin.

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16
Q

Causes and red flags for hoarse voice.

A

Laryngopharyngeal reflux, vocal cord mass, parkinsons, myasthenia. Red flags: smoking, dysphagia, stridor, haemoptysis, fevers/sweats, weight loss.

17
Q

How are grommets managed?

A

No swimming 1 week post, use cap/plugs when swimming. If discharging, treat as CSOM - dry mopping, cipro ear drops for 3-7 days.

18
Q

How is epistaxis managed in kids?

A

Usually bleed from anterior septal wall (Little’s). Sit up, head tilt forward, pressure above nostrils, breathe through mouth, don’t swallow blood.

19
Q

Ludwig’s angina - symptoms, pathology, risk factors

A

Fever, stridor, tongue displaced, bull neck. From gangrenous bilateral cellulitis of submandibular space, polymicrobial infection from oral flora. Often post procedure in diabetes, IVDU, alcohol, HIV, smoking.