PVS Flashcards

1
Q

Transverse depressions of the nail plates, usually bilateral, resulting from temporary disruption of the proximal nail growth

A

beaus line - peripheral ischemia

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2
Q

a. Painless separation if the whitened opaque nail plate from the pinker translucent nail bed
b. Local causes: trauma, psoriasis, fungal infection, allergic rxn
c. Systemic causes: peripheral ischemia, anemia, DM, hyperthyroid, syphilis

A

onycholysis - raynauds

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3
Q

smooth and rounded contour +2

A

normal pulse

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4
Q

small and weak +1

decreased CO

A

pulsus parvus

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5
Q

weak and delayed pulse

aortic stenosis

A

pulsus parvus et tardus

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6
Q

increased pulse pressure, rapid,brief peak +3, increase SV, AR, bradycardia, AV fistulas

A

bounding pulse

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7
Q

alternate beats due to changing systolic pressure

LHF

A

pulsus alternans

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8
Q

two beats occurring in rapid succession, followed by a pause (normal beating alternating with a premature contraction)

A

pulsus bigeminus

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9
Q

two palpable peaks (1 beat with 2 peaks)

hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy

A

bisferiens pulse

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10
Q
  1. exaggeration of the normal variation in the pulse during inspiration
    a. Decreased systolic > 10 on quiet inspiration
    COPD exacerbations, cardiac tamponade, constrictive pericarditis, sleep apnea
A

pulsus paradoxus

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11
Q

Pt makes tight fist, compress radial and ulnar arteries, pt opens hand, palm is pale, release ulnar artery, palm flushes in 3-5 sec

A

Allens test

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12
Q

smaller, red, purple, blue vessels < 1mm, non palpable – central dilated arteriole surrounded by small veins carrying away the free flowing blood

A

telangiectasia

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13
Q

cyanotic discoloration – blue toe syndrome – impending necrosis

A

Atheroembolism

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14
Q

dependent rubor, thin, shiny, atrophic skin; loss of hair over foot and toes; nails thickened

A

arterial disorder

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15
Q

stasis dermatitis; thickening of skin brown discoloration; ulcer

A

venous disorder

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16
Q

i. Episodic m. ischemia induced by exercise d/t obstruction of lg or med sized artery by atherosclerosis
ii. Usually calf, butt, hip, thigh, foot
iii. Brief, pain forces pt to rest, severe crampy pain
iv. Agg by exercise, alleviated with rest and pain stops in 1-3 minutes
v. Local fatigue, numbness, diminished pulses, signs of insufficient

A

intermittent claudication -atherosclerosis

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17
Q

i. Severe continuous ache in butt, thigh, calf, foot
ii. Relieved by hanging affected leg off side of bed
iii. Pallor, coldness, fatigue, numbness, ulcers

A

rest pain - atherosclerosis

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18
Q

looking for low velocity flow through the artery

A

duplex doppler for PAD

19
Q

a. Sudden embolism or thrombosis
b. Distal pain – usually foot and leg
c. Sudden onset – 6 Ps pain, pallor, pulselessness, paresthesia, paralysis, poikilothermia

A

acute limb ischemia

20
Q

a. Claudication
b. Pallor on elevation, dusky red on dependence
c. Thin, shiny, atrophic skin, hair loss, thickened and ridged nails
d. Gangrene possible
e. Ulcerations on toes and or feet
f. Temp cold
g. Pulses decreased or absent
h. No edema, muscle atrophy
i. ABI >.9

A

chronic arterial insufficiency

21
Q

a. Atherosclerosis of abdominal aorta just above site of bifurcation @ L4
b. Claudication of calf muscle, then thigh, hip, butt, in more severe
c. Impotence/ erectile dysfunction
d. Diminished pulses in lower limb
e. Dx: duplex Doppler
f. DDx: Osteoarthritis of the hips and knees – normal ABI – pain does not disappear at rest; Sciatica – normal ABI – pain not correlated with exertion

A

LeRiche syndrome - aorta-iliac occlusive disorder -AIOD

22
Q

a. Age > 65, white male, smoking, HTN, CAD, FxHx, marfan syndrome, trauma
b. Thumb palm sign*
c. Failure of the structural proteins of the aorta
i. Unruptured: asymptomatic
ii. Ruptured: ripping chest pain radiating to back; dyspnea; PE: hypotension, tachycardia, AR murmur
d. Non tender, pulsatile abdominal mass above the umbilicus
e. Grey turner sign at flanks; cullens sign at center
f. Dx: chest x ray, abdominal ultrasound, CT or MRI with contrast

A

aortic aneurysm

23
Q

a. Inflammation and thrombotic occlusions of smooth artery and vein – occurring smokers
b. Non-atherosclerotic; Segmental inflammation
c. Intermittent claudication – arch of foot and hands; Rest pain in fingers or toes
d. Brief recurrent ic; Chronic persistent, worse at night rp
e. AG: exercise; AL: rest; permanent cessation of smoking – helps both kinds of pain
f. 20 -40 y/o smokers; distal coldness, sweating, numbness, cyanosis, paresthesia; ulceration & gangrene at fingertips; migratory thrombophlebitis
g. angiogram – looking for smooth tapering lesion in distal vessels

A

thromboangitis obliterans - burgers disorder

24
Q

a. Primary – episodic spasm of small artery – no vascular occlusion
b. Secondary – to other conditions ex: collagen vascular dz, artery occlusion, trauma, drugs
c. Distal fingers, pain usually not prominent unless fingertips ulcers develop
d. Numbness and tingling common
e. Ag: exposure to cold, emotional upset; AL: warm environment, smoking cessation
f. Color change: distal fingers – white blue red
g. Blood tests: ESR, ANA, C3

A

raynauds

25
Q

a. Entrapment of popliteal artery by medial head of gastrocnemius muscle
b. Unilateral claudication
c. Hx: intermittent, exercise – induced
d. May occur with thrombosis or embolism

A

popliteal artery entrapment syndrome

26
Q

a. Pulsatile mass
b. Limb ischemia secondary to thrombosis or embolism
c. Dx: Doppler
d. DDx: bakers cyst – non pulsatile mass, knee pain, stiffness, swelling

A

popliteal artery aneurysm

27
Q

detects stenosis in major blood vessels in legs
R ABI = higher R ankle/ higher brachial (R or L)

L ABI = higher L ankle/ higher brachial (R or L)

A

ankle brachial index

28
Q

a. Raise both legs for 1 min until maximal pallor of the feet develops
b. Ask pt to sit with feet hanging off, compare
i. Return to pink <10 sec
ii. Filling of veins ~15 sec
iii. Look for unusual rubor – dusky redness

A

postural changes test

29
Q

a. Abrupt dorsiflexion of the patients foot at the ankle while the knee is flexed to 90 degrees
testing for DVT

A

homans test

30
Q

a. Incompetent venous valves, venous obstruction
b. Superficial leg veins – great saphenous + tributaries; posterior saphenous
c. Leg pain – aching, burning, AG: standing, relieved by elevation; dilated tortuous bluish green veins

A

varicose veins

31
Q

a. F>M
b. Virchow’s triad: hypercoagulability, injury, venous stasis
c. Lower limb: great saphenous vein
d. Leg pain, possible fever, erythema, tenderness, induration- nodular cord along vein, swelling
e. DVT 20%
f. Dx: Doppler – lack compressibility of vein

A

superficial thrombophlebitis

32
Q

a. Blood clot in deep veins
b. Virchow triad
c. Popliteal/ superficial femoral vein
d. LE pain and swelling, possible fever, LE erythema, calf tenderness, homan sign – 50% of cases
e. Dx: compression ultrasound with Doppler - + study
f. Incompressibility, clot formation
g. D-dimer assay – high sensitivity, low specificity coagulation profile

A

deep vein thrombosis

33
Q

a. Bilateral LE edema with dilated, visible superficial abdominal veins
b. Tumor: renal cell carcinoma
c. Extrinsic compression
d. Hematoma or trauma
e. Iatrogenic: venous catheter, pacemaker

A

inferior vena caval thrombosis

34
Q

a. Effort thrombosis
b. UE: heaviness and swelling; diffuse aching pain, cyanosis
c. Dilated veins in chest and UE
d. Dx: Doppler

A

axillary subclavian vein thrombosis

35
Q

a. Often painful
b. normal color or brown pigment
c. stasis dermatitis, excoriation, lichenification
d. ulcers medial side of ankle
e. no gangrene
f. normal temp, normal pulse, edema present

A

chronic venous insufficiency

36
Q

a. Migratory thrombophlebitis
b. Intermittent superficial venous thrombosis at unusual site – arms, chest
c. Pancreatic cancer: inc age, heavy smoker, abdomen pain, weight loss, jaundice
d. Assoc. with malignancy of pancreas
e. Dx: CT of abdomen

A

trousseaus syndrome - paraneoplastic syndrome

37
Q

a. Obstruction of the SVC impedes venous return
b. Edema of the neck, face, arms
c. Dyspnea, cough, headache, dizziness
d. Bending over or lying down accentuates symptoms
e. Dx: chest x ray

A

superior vena cava syndrome

38
Q

a. Congenital: cutaneous birthmark at an early age with no history of trauma
i. Hypertrophy, sweating and hypertrichosis in affected areas
b. Acquired: trauma or hemodialysis
c. Dx: ultrasound and contrast angiography
d. Assoc. Localized murmur or thrill; branham sign: slowing of the pulse rat with compression proximal to the AVF; Visceral AVMs: hematuria, hematemesis, hemoptysis, melena

A

AVF

39
Q

red streaks on skin, following lymph nodes; increase WBCs with left shift

A

lymphangitis

40
Q

a. Painless, persistent, non-pitting edema, seen in young women
b. UE or LE
c. Swelling without ulceration, edema – indurated, hard, non-pitting in later stages

A

lymphedema

41
Q

a. Pressure build up from direct trauma

b. Excruciating pain, pain increase on passive stretch, rapidly increasing and tense swelling, paresthesia

A

compartment syndrome

42
Q

a. Non-purulent
i. deep dermis, slowly spreading rash with flat, indistinct edges + warmth, tenderness, indolent
b. Purulent: purulent drainage
c. leukocytosis – increase neutrophils
d. Fever, localized pain, redness, swelling + regional lymphadenopathy

A

cellulitis

43
Q

a. Delayed hypersensitivity – sarcoidosis

b. Painful subcutaneous, bilateral anterior led nodules

A

erythema nodsum