Critical Care Flashcards

1
Q

When given information about a patient from an external source, what are 3 things that you must always consider?

A

Severity?
Is the patient suffering from what is claimed?
Never accept anything at face value.

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2
Q

What is focal neurology?

A

A neurological impairment that affects a specific region of the body.

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3
Q

What is the single most appropriate action when sepsis is suspected?

A

IV access and fluid resuscitation.

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4
Q

What are the 2 categories of fluids? And what is the difference?

A

Crystalloids (same as plasma concentration) and colloids (synthetic HIGHER osmotic pressure).
In reality there is little difference in terms of resuscitation.

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5
Q

What dictates the maximum rate of bolus delivery in fluid resuscitation?

A

Size of cannula.

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6
Q

How fast would you infuse someone with fluid?

A

500-1000ml over 10-20mins.

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7
Q

Why do you do a head CT before a lumbar puncture?

A

If there is ICP present, coning can occur - this is brainsteam compression as brain moves to fill space created by LP.

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8
Q

What are some signs of ICP? (4)

A

Papillodoema
Headache that changes on movement
Nausea and vomiting
Deteriorating neurological function

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9
Q

What treatment would you give for meningitis:

  • in hospital?
  • in a GP?
A
  • Ceftriaxone 2g IV

- Benzylpenicillin 1.2g IM (in the bum)

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10
Q

Where do you perform a lumbar puncture?

A

L5 ish

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11
Q

Where does the spinal cord end?

A

L1/2

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12
Q

What would you expect the protein and glucose levels be in a LP of a bacterial meningitis patient?

A

High protein, low glucose

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13
Q

Meningitis:

When looking at lumbar puncture results, how would you determine whether

A

Virus or bacteria
Bacteria are large with lots of protein in them, viruses might have SOME protein in them
Bacteria make it gunky

Bacteria like glucose, so glucose levels likely to be low, with viruses it can be normal
Red cells are in subarachnoid haemorrhage

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14
Q

What is SIRS?

A

Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome

Temp 38
HR > 90bpm
RR > 24
White cells 12

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15
Q

What is sepsis?

A

When a patient amount a SIRS to an infectious pathogen (OR - PE, anaphylaxis, acute pancreatitis, recent surgery)

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16
Q

What is septic shock?

A
Ongoing hypoperfusion (low BP, raised lactate, organ dysfunction) despite aggressive fluid resuscitation
Patient should always be assessed for ITU.
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17
Q

What is the morality of septic shock?

A

50%

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18
Q

What are the sepsis 6? When should they be done?

A

NB - take 3, give 3. In first hour.

Oxygen
Blood culture
ABG (v useful to assess how sick - especially LACTATE levels)

IV antibiotics
Fluid
Catheter

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19
Q

What is a significant ingestion of paracetomol?

And in patients with liver dysfunction?

A

Ingested dose 12g or more/24h

Ingested dose >150g/kg

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20
Q

What bloods do you request in suspected paracetomol OD and why? (4)

A

Paracetamol level
LFTs
U&Es (prognosis - is there kidney damage?)
INR (liver damage can affect clotting function)

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21
Q

Which enzymes are raised in liver damage?

A

ALT, AST, gamma GT

22
Q

When is ALP raised?

A

Obstruction in the biliary system.

23
Q

What is naloxone?

A

An opiate antidote

24
Q

What would you give to patients with a paracetamol OD who are above the treatment line (or high risk for hepatotoxicity treatment line)?

A

N-acetylcycsteine

25
Q

When would you give charcoal in an overdose?

A

Within first hour to hinder absorption.

26
Q

How does N-acetylcysteine work?

A

It replenishes glutathione so that toxic metabolite (NAPQI - created by P450) is broken down faster into cysteine and mercapturic acid conjugate (non-toxic)

27
Q

Which patients have enhanced hepatotoxic risk? (4)

A

Underlying liver disease
Liver enzyme inducing drugs (HIV drugs, anti epileptics, rifampicin)
Alcohol intake
Glutathionine depleted liver - eating disorder….finish

28
Q

What should you look out for when infusing N-acetylcysteine?

A

Reaction - anaphylaxis, rash, wheeze

If this happens, can give piriton (proper name?), adrenaline if v bad.

29
Q

Airway Assessment? (ABCDE)

A

‘Patent’

Full sentences, stridor.

30
Q

Breathing Assessment? (ABCDE)

A
Chest expansion
Resp rate
Laboured breathing?
O2 sats
ABG
Tracheal deviation
Cyanosis
31
Q

Circulation Assessment? (ABCDE)

A
HR
BP
CRT
JVP
Pulse - rate, rhythm, character, where?
ECG
Urine output
IV access
32
Q

Disability Assessment? (ABCDE)

A

CBG
GCS/AVPU
Temp
PEARL/neuro

33
Q

ABCDE, what does it stand for? What is the significance of the order?

A

Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure
This is the order of things that will cause the most serious harm to the patient - so you must ALWAYS do something about an abnormality before you move onto the next thing.

34
Q

How is blood pressure sensed and controlled?

A
Fiiinnndddd
Aterial constriction (angiotensin II, sympathetic, adrenaline)
Venous constriction
35
Q

What

A

Gastric mucosa and prostaglandins

36
Q

Risk for gastric problems

A

NSAIDS

37
Q

How do PPIs work?

A

Sodium potassium pump within parietal cells inhibited

38
Q

NSAIDs - how do they

A

COX-1 inhibition, anti-platelet, reduced prostaglandins

39
Q

How does H Pylori cause gastric damage?

A

Inflammation and stimulation of G cells.

40
Q

Name some fluids

A

Hartmann’s, normal saline

41
Q

What should you do if you suspect a GI bleed?

A

Give them blood!

42
Q

What is ‘group and save’?

A

Provide 2 pink bottles of blood, taken 5 mins apart.
They will check patient’s blood and antibodies, and then if you need blood later, the group is there so that you can cross match at a later date. Lasts for about a year.

43
Q

Cross matching

A

The same 2 pink bottles of blood.

They cross match there and then and find blood. Takes half an hour.

44
Q

What is the major haemorrhage protocol?

A

If half an hour required is too long to cross match blood, you can activate it. A registrar comes and OKs the protocol, O negative blood is then provided.

45
Q

What else might you need to give if you are giving a large transfusion

A

Platelets, plasma, clotting factors etc. Because the blood provided is just red cells.

46
Q

What is the danger of increasing blood pressure too much in a patient with a bleed?

A

It might make the bleed worse. Aim for systolic of 100 ish.

47
Q

PPIs - when can you not give them

A

If going for surgery??

48
Q

Who would deal with an upper GI bleed?

A

Medical team

49
Q

How do they deal with an upper GI bleed?

A

Put in an endoscope. Can then put a band, clips, glue etc to stop the bleed if necessary.

50
Q

4 key ways in which the body maintains adequate blood pressure?

A

Venoconstriction
Arterioconstriction
Incr HR
Incr stroke volume

Go back and read this stuff

51
Q

In a suspected GI bleed, what should you consider when you are administering medications?

A

Give them IV, because they might need to do an endoscopy.