PREP:EM Questions Flashcards

1
Q

mild vs moderate vs severe hypothermia

definitions and treatment

A

mild 32-35: active external warming
moderate 28-32: +active core (bladder, gastric lavage)
severe < 28: ECMO, pleural lavage

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2
Q

treatment of shivering

A

BDZs

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3
Q

atropine dose

A

0.02mg/kg (minimum dose of 0.1mg)

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4
Q

What’s a normal ankle-brachial index?

A

> 0.9

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5
Q

disorder with mousy/musty odor

A

PKU

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6
Q

fishy odor

A

trimethylaminuria

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7
Q

sweaty feet smell

A

isovaleric acidemia

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8
Q

SIRS criteria

A

Core temp < 36 or >38.5
tachycardia or bradycardia
tachypnea
leukocytosis, lymphopenia, or 10%+ bandemia

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9
Q

Septic shock definition

A

sepsis + SIRS + continued cardiovascular dysfxn after 40ml/kg fluids

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10
Q

refractory septic shock definitions

A

fluid refractory: after 60ml/kg fluids

catecholamine refractory: after 10 mcg/kg/min of dopa, epi, or norepi

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11
Q

severe sepsis definition

A

when associated with:
ARDS
cardiovascular dysfxn
dysfxn of 2 or more organ systems

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12
Q

what is hydrogen sulfide

A

mustard gas

causes superficial skin burns, eye irritation, and resp tract irritation

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13
Q

What are the classifications of neutropenia

A

severe < 500
moderate 500-1000
mild 1000-1500

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14
Q

What is the discriminatory zone with HCG?

A

transvaginal US- 1,500 mIU/mL

transabdominal US- 6,000 mIU/mL

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15
Q

symptoms of carbemazepine toxicity

A

can cause resp compromise, altered mental status, vomiting, drowsiness, slurred speech, nystagmus, hallucinations, hypotension, coma, dystonic reactions, seizures
has some anticholinergic properties
false positive for TCAs on UDS

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16
Q

expected compensation for acute resp acidosis

A

increase in serum bicarb 0.1 meq for each 1 mmHg PCO2

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17
Q

expected compensation for acute metabolic acidosis

A

decrease in PCO2 1.2 mmHgfor each 1 meq of bicarb

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18
Q

expected compensation for acute resp alkalosis

A

decrease in serum bicarb 0.2 meq for each 1mmHg PCO2

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19
Q

expected compensation for acute metabolic alkalosis

A

increase in PCO2 0.6 mmHg for each 1meq of bicarb

20
Q

how frequently can you repeat epi in anaphylaxis?

A

3-4 times every 5-15 minutes

21
Q

what is the pathophys of staph scalded skin syndrome?

A

hematogenous spread of epidermolytic or exfoliative toxin; children are more affected that adults due to inefficient renal clearance

22
Q

most common nerve injury in supracondylar fracture

A

median nerve

23
Q

most common artery injury in supracondylar fracture

A

brachial artery

24
Q

treatment of DUB

A

combo pills or progestin only pill taper

25
Q

risk factors for patellar dislocation

A

patella alta
genu valgum
increased femoral anteversion
ligamentous laxity

26
Q

sites for IO access

A
proximal tibia
distal tibia
distal femur
proximal humerus
sternum in adults
27
Q

MUDPILES

A
methanol/metabolic defects
uremia
DKA, alcoholic ketoacidosis, starvation
paraldehyde
iron and INH
lactic acidosis
ethylene glycol
salicylates
* also CO, cyanid, hydrogen sulfide, metformin, phenformin, sulfur, theophyllin, and toulene!
28
Q

normal CSF opening pressure

A

< 20 cm H2O

29
Q

LR +

A

= (positive test/presence of disease) / (positive test/absence of disease)
= sensitivity / (1 - specificity)

30
Q

LR -

A

= (negative test/presence of disease) / (negative test/absence of disease)
= (1 - sensitivity) / specificity

31
Q

How do you use LRs?

A

You have to convert the pretest probability to odds
This is pretest probability / (1 - pretest probability)
Then you multiply by the LR
Finally, you convert the odds BACK to the probability!

32
Q

What are clinically significant LRs?

A

LR + > 10

LR - < 0.1

33
Q

Amanita phalloides ingestion

A

white mushroom that can kill. classically:
stage I: 6-24hrs of no sxs
II: V/D 12-24hrs
III: seeming recovery
IV: 2-4d later with liver and renal failure

34
Q

typical murmur for HOCM

A

midsystolic harsh ejection murmur

35
Q

Brown Sequard syndrome

A

hemisection of the spinal cord
loss of contralateral pain and temperature
loss of ipsilateral motor

36
Q

loss of contralateral pain and temperature

loss of ipsilateral motor

A

Brown Sequard syndrome

hemisection of the spinal cord

37
Q

Anterior cord syndrome

A

disruption of the anterior spinal artery
loss of motor and pain sensation
preserved temp and proprioception

38
Q

loss of motor and pain sensation

preserved temp and proprioception

A

Anterior cord syndrome

disruption of the anterior spinal artery

39
Q

Central cord syndrome

A

upper extremities affected more than lower extremities

40
Q

upper extremities affected more than lower extremities

A

central cord syndrome

41
Q

Posterior cord syndrome

A

loss of proprioception and pain sensation

42
Q

loss of proprioception and pain sensation

A

posterior cord syndrome

43
Q

ectasy/MDMA intoxication

A

hyponatremia, concentrated urine, altered mental status

may see serotonin syndrome

44
Q

formula for odds ratio?

A

(AxD)/(BxC) in standard 2x2 table

45
Q

what’s the difference between odds ratio and relative risk?

A

relative risk is used when patients are followed over time.

odds ratio is used when patients already have the outcome and you look back retrospectively at an exposure of interest