Signs and Symptoms Flashcards

1
Q

What are the symptoms for a personal history of bleeding?

A
  • Bruising: unexpected places, no injury, lumpy
  • Surgical history, dental history (ask about family also), cuts and injuries
  • Epistaxis: duration and frequency i.e. >30 mins
  • GI tract: start at mouth and work down to anus
  • Menses: duration, flooding/clots, no. of pads/tampons per period
  • Urine: haematuria
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2
Q

What part of a FH would be signs of a clotting disorder?

A
  • Known bleeding disorders
  • Bleeding/abnormal bruising in family members, especially after surgery or dentistry
  • If there is, get details of where tested, by whom and when
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3
Q

What does bruising in a child mean?

A

Any bruising/bleeding in a non-ambulant child must be considered non-accidental until proven otherwise, due to safety first policy.

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4
Q

What is Virchow’s triad?

A
  1. Stasis of blood flow
  2. Endothelial injury
  3. Hypercoagulability
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5
Q

What would be the examination findings for DVT?

A
  • Warm, swollen leg
  • Tenderness in calf > worse with dorsiflexion of ankle (Homan’s sign)
  • Calf circumference greater than 3cm compared with unaffected leg - measure 10cm from tibial tuberosity on each leg and mark this
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6
Q

What are the typical symptoms for a PE?

A
  • Sudden onset of pleuritic chest pain (worse on inspiration)
  • SOB
  • Haemoptysis
  • Syncope
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7
Q

What are the signs of PE?

A
  • Tachypnoea
  • Tachyarrhythmia (commonest is AF)
  • Possible signs of DVT
  • Hypotension
  • Pleural effusion
  • Hypoxaemia
  • Raised JVP
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8
Q

What are platelet disorder signs?

A
  • Bruising
  • Bleeding after dental/minor surgery
  • Epistaxis
  • Menorrhagia
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9
Q

What is the presentation of haemophilia A?

A

Depends on severity and it’s often early in life or after surgery/trauma - with bleeds into joints leading to crippling arthropathy and into muscles causing haematomas (increase pressure > nerve palsies and compartment syndrome).
It is diagnosed by increased APTT and decreased factor VIII assay.

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