Random facts 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Define oliguria

A
  • a reduced urine output
  • urine output of less than 0.5 ml/kg/hour
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2
Q

Classical symptoms of ischaemic colitis

A

Ischaemic colitis

Classic presentation:

  • after a meal
  • intermittent and severe pain

pain out of proportion to clinical finding

Predisposing factors: increasing age, atrial fibrillation, other causes of emboli: endocarditis, malignancy, cardiovascular disease risk factors: smoking,hypertension, diabetes, cocaine use

Diagnosis: CT

Management

  • usually supportive
  • surgery may be required in a minority of cases if conservative measures fail. Indications would include generalised peritonitis, perforation or ongoing haemorrhage
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3
Q

Clinical presentation of small bowel obstruction

A

Small bowel obstruction:

  • intermittent pain
  • clinical examination and imaging would likely show a distended abdomen
  • obstruction on imaging
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4
Q

Presentation of diverticulitis

A

Diverticulitis:

  • PR bleed
  • bowel symptoms on top
  • pain
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5
Q

Clinical presentation of ruptured ulcer

A

Ruptured ulcer:

  • severe and diffuse abdominal pain
  • likely present with epigastric pain at first

bloody emesis

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6
Q

Complications of diverticulosis

A
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7
Q

What’s the volvulus? (in general)

What are the common sites of it?

A

Volvulus - it’s torsion of the bowel loop around the mesentery -> obstruction and #blood flow

Types:

A. Sigmoid volvulus -> 80%

B. Coecal volvulus -> 20%

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8
Q

Clinical picture of volvulus

A

Features

  • constipation
  • abdominal bloating
  • abdominal pain
  • nausea/vomiting
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9
Q

Diagnosis of volvulus:

A. Sigmoid

B. Coecal

A

A. Sigmoid: ‘coffee bean sign’ + large bowel obstruction (large, dilated loop of the colon, often filled with air)

B. Coecal: ‘embryo sign’ + small bowel obstruction

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10
Q

Treatment of volvulus

A. Coecal

B. Sigmoid

A

A. Coecal -> usually operative e.g. right hemicolectomy

B. Sigmoid -> right sigmoidoscopy + rectum tube insertion

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11
Q

Malignant hyperthermia

  • what’s that?
  • mechanism of action/cause
  • drugs that cause it
A

Malignant hyperthermia

hyperpyrexia + muscle rigidity following the reaction to anaesthetic drugs

MoA: the excessive release of Ca++ from the endoplasmic reticulum

Cause: defects in chromosome 19

Drugs:

halothane, suxamethonium, other drugs: antipsychotics (neuroleptic malignant syndrome)

*similar aetiology to neuroleptic malignant syndrome

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12
Q

Management of malignant hyperthermia

A

Management

  • dantrolene - prevents Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum
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13
Q

Hartmann’s procedure

  • what’s that
  • use
A

Hartmann’s = proctosigmoidectomy

  • resection of rectosigmoid colon + formation of end colostomy
  • use: management of malignant obstruction of distal colon (when perforation occurs)
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14
Q

MANAGEMENT of sigmoid volvulus

A

1st endoscopic decompression + flatus tube insertion

2nd surgery - preferably anastomosis (if decompression failed, ischaemia occur)

*in coecal volculus, surgery may be 1st line due to higher chanc of ischaemia

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15
Q

3 most common feeding tube types

  • names
  • location
A
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16
Q

Which artery is commonly associated with the GI bleed due to a duodenal ulcer?

A

Gastro-duodenal (posterior wall, 2nd part of duodenum)

17
Q

What’s Dieulafoy Lesion?

  • presentation
A

Dieulafoy - abnormally large artery somewhere in the GI tract (it is due to arteriovenous malformation)

  • Haematemesis and Malena - often with no prodromal symtpoms
18
Q

signs of basal skull fracture

A

Basal skull fracture:

  • haemotympanum
  • ‘panda’ eyes
  • cerebrospinal fluid leakage from the ear or nose
  • Battle’s sign
19
Q

Treatment (medical) of breast Ca that is ER +

  • pre-menopausal women
  • postmenopausal women
A
  • Pre-menopausal -> Tamoxifen
  • Post-menopausal -> Aromatase inhibitors

*In postmenopausal women, Tamoxifen would increase the risk of endometrial cancer

20
Q

What scoring system is used in the assessment of severity of GI bleed

A

The Blatchford score is used to determine the severity of a suspected GI bleed and whether or not the patient needs admitting +/- the requirement for urgent upper GI endoscopy

21
Q
A
22
Q

What surgical incisions do you know?

  • name them + location
  • what surgeries to they mean

aim for 12 incisions’ names

A
23
Q

What is a lucid interval feature of?

A

Extradural haemorrhage = lucid period, usually following major head injury.

24
Q

What type of haemorrhage is fluctuating consciousness feature of?

A

Subdural = fluctuating consciousness, often following trivial injury in the elderly or alcoholics