Insomnia/TIA, CVA, Parkinson's Overview Flashcards

1
Q

what stages do elderly not spend as much time in later in life?

A

Stage 3 and 4

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2
Q

Do elderly get the same amount of sleep?

A

Yes, but have decreased sleep efficiency (time in bed increases)

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3
Q

Are insomnia or excessive daytime somnolence a normal part of aging?

A

No

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4
Q

what should you ask patient/ sleep partner about?

A

Night time coughing
unusual movement
snoring
SOB when supine/ awakens patient from sleep

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5
Q

will patients always know they are waking up?

A

No

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6
Q

If patients report excessive daytime sleepiness what should you do?

A

Still evaluate and get a sleep study

may have sleep apnea, etc.

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7
Q

2 main type of treatments for insomnia

A

Pharmocologic (best for primary)

Psychological

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8
Q

if insomnia is due to acute distress what should you start with?

A

pharmacologic

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9
Q

what can happen with benzos when they stop taking them?

A

rebound insomnia

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10
Q

falls and fractures are less likely with what types of benzos

A

short acting

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11
Q

episodes of either cessation or marked decreased airflow during sleep. Caused by upper airway obstruction or central (mor uncommon)

A

sleep apnea

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12
Q

risk factors of OSA

A
Obesity
large neck circumference
structural factors related to nasal obstruction
male
postmenopausal state
smoke
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13
Q

3 cardinal symptoms of OSA

A

snoring
sleepiness
noticed by bed partner

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14
Q

Diagnosis for OSA

A

polysomnography

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15
Q

should you treat a patient with OSA without symptoms?

A

Yes

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16
Q

treatment for OSA

A
weight loss
discontinue sedative- hypnotics
avoidance of alcohol/ sedative use
non-supine sleeping position 
CPAP
Surgery
17
Q

itchy, scratchy, crawly sensation of legs so they can’t sleep

A

Restless leg syndrome

18
Q

fall asleep and then do the “river dance”, leg jerks around patients from sleep

A

PLMD

19
Q

tx for RLS

A
dopamine agonists (pramipexole, ropinirole)
levodopa/ carbidopa
anticonvulsants
20
Q

what are some types of embolisms

A

fats
amniotic fluid
air
valvular vegetation

21
Q

most common places for a clot to get stucks

A

carotid

posterior circulation

22
Q

contralateral hemiparesis/ leg, UI, confusion, poor judgement, mutism

A

ACA

23
Q

contralateral hemiparesis/ arm and face, aphasia/dominant hemisphere or apraxia

A

MCA

24
Q

monocular blindness (amaurosis)

A

ophthalmic (MCA branch)

25
Q

U/L or B/L CN deficits (Nystamgus, vertigo, dysarthria, diploplia) ataxia, limbs, sensroya nd motor deficits, altereted consciousness

A

vertebrobasilar

26
Q

motor hemiparesis, sensory hemianthestsia

A

lacunar infarcts

27
Q

aneurysm found, will often present later 30s early 40s, will often present in coma

A

Barry’s aneurysm

28
Q

most people with TIAs will have a stroke within what time?

A

6 month to a year

29
Q

presents with thunderclap HA w/ altered consciousness

A

SAH

30
Q

what is the pathophys condition with parkinson’s?

A

synucleinopathy