Urology Flashcards

1
Q

First line treatment for BPH

A

Alpha blockers when mod-severe symptoms

SOR A

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2
Q

When to use 5-alpha reductase inhibitors

A

bothersome, mod-severe symptoms and documented enlarged prostate when alpha blocker monotherapy not effective

SOR A

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3
Q

In addition to alpha blockers and 5 alpha reductase inhibitors (Level A). What is a medication whose off label use helps BPH (level B)?

A

Cialis - mechanism unknown

don’t use with alpha blockers

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4
Q

Empiric antibiotics for Acute bacterial prostatitis (3 choices)
- what are you trying to cover

A
  • cover gram negative enterics. Cover for GC/CHL if sexually active
  • Ceftriaxone + Doxy. Ciprofloxacin. Bactrim
  • duration 10-14 days
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5
Q

Which labs most accurately predict hypogonadism

A

AM labs:

  • low testosterone
  • high FSH
  • high LH
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6
Q

What is the diagnostic sequence for primary hypogonadism

A
  1. Testosterone level –> low
  2. repeat free testosterone. Add FSH, LH
  3. Low T, high FSH, high LH = primary hypogonadism = pituitary is working, the testes are not
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7
Q

What is the diagnostic sequence for secondary hypogonadism

A
  1. Testosterone level –> low
  2. repeat free testosterone. Add FSH, LH
  3. Low T, low FSH, low LH = secondary hypogonadism = regulatory problem, so look at the pituitary
  4. prolactin, MRI, TSH, T4
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8
Q

What are concerning side effects of treating with testosterone

A

increased risk of prostate cancer and breast cancer
worsening BPH
blood clots
sleep apnea

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9
Q

Which populations benefit most from PDE type 5 inhibitors in treatment of ED?

A

DM, spinal cord injury, antidepressant side effects

SOR A

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10
Q

Who should be screened with PSA?

A

AAFP does not recommend routine PSA based screening.
For men ages 55-69 who are considering periodic prostate cancer screening –> shared decision making
SOR C

Don’t screen older than 70
SOR D

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11
Q

What lifestyle changes should people with kidney stones make if they have calcium oxalate stones?

A
  • don’t change dietary sodium
  • increase fluid intake to at least 2 L per day

SOR B

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12
Q

Which initial image should I get if I suspect kidney stones?

A
  • pregnant, gallbladder dz, or gyn cause suspected –> US
  • Hx or radio-opaque stones –> X ray
  • Everyone else –> US if not obese, otherwise non contrast CT
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13
Q

How do I manage Kidney stones that are < 4 mm?

A
98% pass on their own in 1-2 weeks
analgesia
alpha blockers unlikely to benefit
repeat KUB in 1-2 weeks
Urology if not passed in 2-4 weeks
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14
Q

How do I manage kidney stones 5-10 mm?

A
53% pass on their own
analgesia
alpha blockers unlikely to benefit
repeat KUB in 1-2 weeks
Intervene if: persisting colic, failure of stone progression, evidence of obstruction
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15
Q

What size kidney stone warrants immediate urology referral?

A

10 mm

SOR C

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16
Q

Who needs to have their kidney stone analyzed?

A

Recurrent stone formers

17
Q

Diagnostic evaluation of hematospermia

A
Exclude infection with UA
rule out prostatitis
Imaging in persistent symptoms
- 1st transrectal ultrasonography
- 2nd MRI
18
Q

What are the top 3 reasons for hematuria?

A

infection, stones, malignancy

19
Q

If unable to diagnose reason for hematuria based on UA with micro and history, what should be done next?
What is the next question I need to ask myself?

A

Is this glomerular or not?

  • Glomerular (proteinuria, renal disease) –> nephro
  • Not –> 1. CT urography 2. Cytology 3. Cystoscopy
20
Q

How do you diagnose chronic bacterial prostatitis?

A

Hx - recurrent acute sxs with asymptomatic intervals. lasts > 3 months
UA - WBCs pre and post prostatic massage
C & S - neg on pre and + on post prostatic massage

21
Q

Treatment for chronic bacterial prostatitis

A

1st line: Bactrim (level C)

2nd line Quinolones

22
Q

How do you treat Acute infectious epididymitis?

A

prepubertal - post infectious or anatomic –> refer all to GU for anatomic eval
If < 35 treat for GC/CHL
If > 35 treat for enteric UTI pathogen

SOR A

23
Q

What are “kidney stone labs” that you should get in recurrent stone formers? - there are 9

A
CBC
UA
Urine C and S
BMP
CA
PO4
vitamin D
Stone analysis
Urate
24
Q

What further testing do you need in Kidney stone formers in these following scenarios?

  • hypercalcemia
  • abnormal albumin
  • hyperoxaluria
  • sarcoidosis
A
  • hypercalcemia –> PTH
  • abnormal albumin –> ionized calcium
  • hyperoxaluria –> oxalate levels
  • sarcoidosis –> ACE level and calcitriol
25
Q

Workup for scrotal pain

A
  • CRP > 24 –> suspect epididymitis/orchitis
  • scrotal ultrasonography
    ALL SOR C recommendations
26
Q

What is Prehn’s sign in testicular pain

A

elevation relieves pain in epididymitis and not torsion

*this is not a reliable test

27
Q

Differential of testicular pain - 5 causes

A
Testicular torsion
Torsion of appendix testes
Epididymitis
Trauma
Orchitis
(there are other causes but these are the main ones)
28
Q

Differential of testicular swelling

A

hydrocele
caricocele
spermatocele
tumor