ENT Flashcards

1
Q

Menieres disease symptoms?

A
mainly vertigo with n and v
tinnitus
aural fullness
nystagmus asssociated
aquire some SNHL
episodes last upto 12 hours
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2
Q

When should otalgia become a red flag?

A

when there are no visible ear signs

it may be referred pain from the nasopharynx - particularly a cancer

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3
Q

What is the complication of a nasal septal haematoma?

A

irreversible septal necrosis and only takes 3-4 days to come about. this may result in a saddle nose deformity. they wiull commonly complain of nasal obstruction and fullness and a boddy mass seen in both nostrils. therefore urgent referal for drainage and abx is required

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4
Q

Which triangle does a cystic hygroma present in?

A

posterior - usually on the left
it is a lymphangioma
usually presents at birth or within first two years

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5
Q

Suspected posterior nose bleed?

A

instert 18G foley catheter and inflate with 10ml water and pull slightly until lodged. immediate ENT for endoscopic visualisation and cautery or ligation

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6
Q

Genetic cause of recurrent nosebleeds?

A

osler weber rendu/HHT:

recurrent nose bleeds, GI bleeds, due to AVMs also in lungs and liver and brain. -get pulmonary hypertension

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7
Q

How do acoustic neuromas present?

A
unilateral SNHL
tinnitus
vertigo
CN palsy 5,7,8 (reduced reflexes)
SOL type sx with headache
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8
Q

attic crust?

A

classic cholesteatoma.

squamous epithelium trapped in the basal skull.

foul smelling discharge with hearing loss and usually present in 10-20 yr old

may have vertigo

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9
Q

what is otosclerosis

A

autosomal dominant inherited stapes fixation causing conductive hearing loss from a young age.
hey have tinitus and a normal tympanic membrane

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10
Q

Causes of parotid swelling

A
sarcoid-6% of sufferers(bilat non tend)
mumps-viral parotitis also may cause pancreatitis
stones
hiv
alocohol
sjogrens
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11
Q

What type of tumours invade facial nerve?

A

malignant lesions
benign things do not usually cause damage except warthins tumour
sarcoid may invade and cause a facial palsy

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12
Q

Most common benign parotid lesions?

A

benign pleomorphic adenoma (5% recur, upto 10% malig change)

warthins tumour old men, smokers

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13
Q

Which drugs are ototoxic?

A

Aminoglycosides
Quinines
aspirin
loop diuretics

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14
Q

sistrubks procedure?

A

for removal of thyrogloassal cyst

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15
Q

complications of thyroid surgery?

A

bleeding causing build of pressure which can close the trachea. give blade.
recurrent laryngeal nerve damage.
parathyroid gland damage causing hypocalcaemia

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16
Q

What is postnasal drip?

A

mucus production which sticks in back of throat and causes chronic cough and bad breath. associated with smoking.

17
Q

Viral labyrinthitis vs vestibular neuronitis?

A

neuronitis does not cause hearing loss wheras vestibular labrynthitis does.

18
Q

What is vestibular rehabilitaiton used for?

A

vestibular neuronitis, gent toxicity, acoustic neuroma. PTSD vertigo.

19
Q

treatment for sudden loss of hearing - sensorineural

A

referal to ENT with high dose steroids - 60mg MRI to rule out neuroma