Ambulatory 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Possible causes of cough that’re ass’d w/ other symptoms?

A
  • URI (most common cause of acute cough)
  • Pulmonary disease: pneumonia, COPD, pulmonary fibrosis, lung cancer, asthma, lung abscess, TB
  • CHF w/ pulmonary edema
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2
Q

Duration of time that defines acute vs. chronic cough?

A

3 weeks is the duration that separates them.

Usually acute & self-resolving, but if lasts > 1 month, further investigation is appropriate

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3
Q

Possible causes of postnasal drip?

A
  • URIs (viral infections)
  • Rhinitis (allergic or non-allergic)
  • Chronic sinusitis
  • Airborne irritants
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4
Q

Likely cause of isolated cough in patients w/ normal CXR…

– nocturnal cough?

A

GERD

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5
Q

Possible causes of isolated cough in patients w/ normal CXR?

A
  • Smoking
  • Postnasal drip
  • GERD
  • Asthma
  • ACE inhibitors
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6
Q

Causes of chronic cough in adults?

A
  • Smoking
  • Postnasal drip
  • GERD
  • Asthma
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7
Q

Cough – when is CXR indicated

A
  • If acute & a pulmonary cause is suspected
  • If acute & p/w hemoptysis
  • if chronic
  • sometimes in a long-term smoker in whom COPD or lung cancer is a possibility
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8
Q

Cough – when is CBC indicated?

A

If infection is suspected

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9
Q

Cough – when are PFTs indicated?

A
  • if asthma is suspected

- if cause is unclear in a pt w/ chronic cough

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10
Q

Cough – when is Bronchoscopy indicated?

A

If there’s no dx after CXR, CBC, & PFTs

– to look for tumor, foreign body, or tracheal web

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11
Q

Postnasal drip – Tx?

A
  • 1st gen anti-histamine/decongestant
  • if sinusitis also present, consider ABX

For Allergic rhinitis, consider non-sedating long-acting oral anti-histamine (loratadine)

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12
Q

Allergic Rhinitis – Tx?

A

Loratadine

MOA = long-acting, oral anti-histamine

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13
Q

Nonspecific antitussive meds for cough symptoms?

A
  • Codeine
  • Dextromethorphan
  • Benzonate (Tessalon Perles) capsule

(“expectorants” such as Guaifenesin & water improve effectiveness of meds)

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14
Q

Common features of viral URI?

A

Rhinorrhea, Myalgias, Headache, Fever, Cough

yellow sputum + F/C = bacterial

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15
Q

Common features of bacterial URI?

A

Fever, Cough, Yellow Sputum

rhinorrhea, myalgias, headache + F/C = viral

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16
Q

Acute Bronchitis – _____ account for the majority of cases.

A

Viruses

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17
Q

Acute Bronchitis – workup?

A
  • CXR if suspect pneumonia (presence of fever, tachypnea, crackles, egophony on auscultation, or dullness to percussion)
    • infiltrate or consolidation NOT present in acute bronchitis
  • Lab tests are not indicated
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18
Q

Acute Bronchitis – what features might suggest pneumonia?

A

Presence of fever, tachypnea, crackles, egophony on auscultation, or dullness to percussion

    • if present, get CXR
    • acute bronchitis does not have infiltrate or consolidation
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19
Q

Acute Bronchitis – clinical features?

A
  1. Cough (w/ or w/out sputum) for 1-2 wks
    - in some pts, may last > 1 month
  2. Chest discomfort or SOB may be present
  3. Fever may or may not be present
20
Q

Acute Bronchitis – Tx?

A

Symptomatic – cough suppressants &/or bronchodilators

ABX usually not necessary – most cases are viral

21
Q

Most common URI?

A

Common cold

22
Q

Common cold – most common causes?

A
  • Rhinovirus (> 100 serotypes w/ no cross-immunity between them)
  • Coronavirus
  • Parainfluenza virus (types A, B, C)
  • Adenovirus
  • Coxsackie virus
  • RSV
23
Q

Common cold – most common route of transmission?

A

Hand-to-hand transmission

24
Q

Common cold – possible complications?

A

Secondary bacterial infection – bacterial sinusitis or pneumonia

** these are VERY rare

25
Q

Is fever typically part of the Common Cold?

A

Not in adults (suggest bacterial complication or influenza)

Not unusual in children

26
Q

Common Cold – clinical features?

A

Rhinorrhea, sore throat, malaise, nonproductive cough, nasal congestion

27
Q

Common cold is synonymous with ______

A

Acute Rhinosinusitis

– inflammation & congestion of mucous membranes of nasal & sinus passages

28
Q

Common causes of Sinusitis?

A
  • Acute bacterial – Strep pneumoniae, H. influenzae, or anaerobes
  • Other types – viral, fungal, allergic
29
Q

Most common sinuses involved in Sinusitis?

A

Maxillary sinuses

30
Q

Sinusitis – Tx to promote drainage?

A
  • Saline nasal spray

- Decongestants (Pseudoephedrine or Oxymetazoline)

31
Q

Sinusitis – Antihistamines you could use? Why do you not want to overuse these?

A
  • Loratadine (Claritin), fexofenadine (Allegra), chlorpheniramine (ChlorTrimeton)
  • Reserve for pts w/ allergies bc of “drying effect”
32
Q

Acute purulent sinusitis – ABX Tx?

A

Amoxicillin, amoxicillin-clavulanate, TMP/SMX, levofloxacin, moxifloxacin, and Cefuroxime are all good choices

33
Q

Sore throat – likely cause(s)? Most concerning cause(s)?

A

Viruses – most likely

Concern = group A β-hemolytic strep due to possibility for rheumatic fever

Others:

    • Chlamydia, mycoplasma
    • Gonococci (oral sex)
    • Corynebacterium diphtheriae—pseudomembrane covering pharynx
    • Candida albicans (if immunosuppressed, on ABX, or severely ill)
34
Q

Sore throat – Tx?

A

Viral (most likely) – symptomatic (ibuprofen or acetaminophen, gargling warm salt water, use humidifier)

Strep throat – penicillin x 10 days (erythromycin if PCN allergy)

Mononucleosis – advise rest & ibuprofen/acetaminophen for Sx

35
Q

Sore throat – Dx tests?

A
  • Rapid strep – results in < 1hr but only gives +/- for strep
  • Throat culture = best test but takes 24 hrs
  • Monospot test – if Mono is suspected
36
Q

UTI – ABX Tx?

A

TMP/SMX (3 days), Nitrofurantoin (7 days), Cephalexin, Ciprofloxacin (3 days), Amoxicillin

37
Q

Pyelonephritis – ABX Tx?

A
  • TMP/SMX or Fluoroquinolone for gram-negative rods
  • Amoxicillin effective for most gram-positive cocci (enterococcus, S. saprophyticus)
  • Single dose of Ceftriaxone or Gentamicin often given initially before starting oral Tx
38
Q

Acute Prostatitis – ABX Tx?

A

Ampicillin & Gentamicin

39
Q

Community acquired pneumonia – ABX Tx?

A

As outpatient:
Azithro, Clarithromycin, or doxycycline (if existing comorbidities/previous antibiotics, give Levofloxacin)

As inpatient:
Levo or moxifloxacin or Ceftriaxone + azithromycin

40
Q

Lung Abscess – ABX Tx?

A

Clindamycin or Penicillin

usually due to aspiration thus cover for anaerobes

41
Q

Impetigo – ABX Tx?

A

(Impetigo = staph and strep)

Mild – Topical mupirocin or bacitracin or Repatamulin

Severe - Oral doxycycline or clindamycin or Trim/sulfa

42
Q

Erysipelas or cellulitis – ABX Tx?

A

Erysipelas: (strep > staph)
Cellulitis: (staph>strep)

Mild – oral dicloxacillin or cephalexin or if allergic, macrolide or clindamycin

Severe – IV oxacillin or nafcillin or cefazolin or if allergic, clindamycin

43
Q

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis – ABX Tx?

A

Cefotaxime

44
Q

Postpartum Endometritis – ABX Tx?

A

Clindamycin + gentamicin

45
Q

Endocarditis – ABX Tx?

A

Vancomycin + gentamicin

46
Q

PID – ABX Tx?

A

Exclude pregnancy first and give Ceftriaxone+doxycycline (outpatient)
or if inpatient, cefotetan + doxycycline

If pregnant, substitute doxycycline with azithromycin or amoxycillin or erythromycin