Class 4 Flashcards

1
Q

At risk anorexia

A

female, young, depression, medical comorbidities

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2
Q

at risk bulimia

A

change in weight, bulimia, anxiety, vital signs, medical comorbidities

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3
Q

at risk BED

A

not as young, increase in weight, male or female, anxiety, impulsivity, depression, GI problems, mestrual prb, metabolic syndrome

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4
Q

What to ask screening

A
  • Are you trying to lose weight, have you lost weight, are you still losing weight?
  • What are you doing to lose weight?
  • Do you ever lose control over how much you eat?
  • Would you say that food dominates your life?
  • Body image question
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5
Q

Worrisome sx

A
loss of consciousness 
convulsions
weakness: get out of chair
BMI ≤ 15
Weight loss ≥ 1 kg /week x 3 months
Pregnancy
Type 1 diabetes
Weakness or syncope
Sodium < 130
Potassium < 3.0
Abnormal liver function tests
Bradycardia < 45; Prolonged QTc
Orthostatic changes : BP drops by ≥ 20; Pulse increases by ≥ 20
Hypothermia (≤ 35.0°C)
Contact us: Medical risk management
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6
Q

basic labs to do

A
CBC
Albumin, Total Protein
Glucose Random
Creatinine
Sodium, Potassium, Chloride, Bicarbonate
ALT (Alanine aminotransaminase);
AST (Aspartate aminotransaminase) if alcoholic
CK (Creatinine kinase)
Calcium, Magnesium, Phosphate
B12
HbA1c (if diabetic)
TSH
Other recommended tests
Electrocardiogram (ECG)
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7
Q

Elevated CK

A

intense exercise

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8
Q

potassium low, increase Cl and CO2

A

induced vomiting

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9
Q

increased ALT

A

liver damage because malnourished

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10
Q

WBC low

A

bone marrow suppression in the case of chronic under eating. Not more prone to illness

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11
Q

Physical consequences

A
Arrhythmia
Bradycardia
Osteoporosis
Amenorrhea
Hypokalemia
Hypothermia
Hypophosphatemia
Hypotension
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12
Q

Starvation leads to

A

energy conservation: decrease in temperature, pulse, BP, turn off reproductive factors
dehydration: water conservation mechanisms turn on: decrease BP increase pulse

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13
Q

Starvation uses up

A

reserves: fat, muscle and bone, other tissues

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14
Q

Effect of vo

A
Teeth
Throat
Salivary glands
Stomach
Blood in vomit
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15
Q

Effect of laxatives

A

Cramps
Bloating
Diarrhea
Blood in stool

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16
Q

Most common s/symptoms: or purging

A
dizziness and poor concentration
Gastroesophageal reflux (heartburn); dental problems, parotid gland enlargement
Elevated amylase (normal lipase); metabolic alkalosis (elevated CO2)
17
Q

when weight decreases, what increases

A

compulsivity and hyperactivity

18
Q

PRIORITY 3

A

Normal weight
No daily bingeing or purging
No medical complications

19
Q

PRIORITY 2

A

BMI: 15-18 (women); 16 -19 (men) or sign of medical instability
With at least one symptom

Syncope
Laxatives > 10 co./day
Hypokalemia < 2.8 mmol/L
Fasting > 2 days/week
Multiple purging episodes per day
20
Q

PRIORITY 1

A

BMI: < 15 (women); < 16 (men) or Drastic weight loss
1 kg/week x 3 months
Significant medical instability i.e. syncope, bradycardia, ↓↓ potassium
Fasting : 2 days/week
Pregnancy
type 1 db
transfer from adolescent services

21
Q

Proposed criteria to send patient to ER

A

BMI < 12 (female) <13 (male) or rapid and drastic weight loss.
•Plus at least one or more of the following:
–Ongoing weight loss
–Syncope
–Weakness
–Bradycardia HR< 40 bpm or HR > 110 bpm
–Hypothermia <34.8 C
–Hyponatremia <120 mmol/L or <125 mmol/L and symptomatic

Regardless of weight:
–Hypokalemia < 2.8 mmol/L or hypokalemia with abnormal EKG and/or significant metabolic alkalosis (CO2 >38 mmol/L)
–Signs and symptoms of severe dehydration

22
Q

To ignore labs

A
  • Low T3 (metabolic compensation)

* High cholesterol

23
Q

pharmaco bulimia

A

SSRIs and other antidepressants are useful.

24
Q

pharmaco BED

A

SSRIs, SNRIs, and medications associated with appetite and weight reduction, such as the stimulant LDX (Vyvanse), work.

25
Q

pharmaco anorexia

A

Olanzapine appears to have a small but significant effect on weight gain, but should not be used as a stand-alone treatment

26
Q

pharmaco arfid

A

Mirtazapine and Olanzapine are worth a try

27
Q

Not recommended: pharmaco

A

Tricyclics (cardiac risk; prolonged QTc interval), Paroxetine(weight gain), Mirtazapine (increased appetite), Bupropion (increased seizure risk)

28
Q

What doesn’t work pharmaco

A
  • Manipulating appetite (↑ or ↓)
  • Trying to decrease or stop bingeing and purging when a person is underweight
  • Taking your medication and then throwing up
29
Q

K 3-3.5

A

a banana per day

if lower: give supplement, ask tonight in bed (less chance of purging)

30
Q

sx of low k:

A

cramps, fatigue, palpitations thirst, novo, thirst, partial or total paralysis, tingling of the extremities, fingertips, around the mouth and nostrils

31
Q

complications of hypok

A

arythmie, slowing of the heart, cardiac arrest

32
Q

Refeeding

A

•Increasing your intake can be painful
–Expect physical and psychological discomfort
–Bloating, early satiety, nausea, feeling uncomfortably full, gas, constipation…
•Refeeding syndrome is rare and only seen in hospitalized patients

33
Q

osteoporosis give

A

Ca and vit D:

34
Q

Weight loss: Common symptoms and signs

A

Sx:Cold intolerance; dizziness; hair loss; poor concentration, fatigue; insomnia ; early satiety (fullness); bloating; heartburn; amenorrhea; loss of libido
Signs: Metabolic profile different from other types of starvation (Normal protein and albumin); Sick euthyroid (normal TSH/T4; low T3; increased rT3); Anemia (~40%) often normochromic, normocytic but may be microcytic if iron deficient; low white count (~30%); high cholesterol (up to 75%)

35
Q

Hyponatremia

A

Low sodium: suspect water loading (<130 mmol/L high risk) or occult chest infection with associated SIADH

36
Q

Hypoglycemia:

A
  • blood glucose <3 mmol/L (if present, suspect occult infection, especially with low albumin or raised C-reactive protein)
  • Also seen in refeeding usually post-prandial (insulin surge in context of low glycogen stores in liver to offset). Treat only if patient is symptomatic
37
Q

Normal weight Bulimia: Common s/sx

A

Symptoms: Dizziness, Palpitations, Fatigue, Heartburn; Bloating
Signs: Dental caries, enamel erosion, loss of teeth, gingivitis, enlarged salivary glands, callous on the back of the hand (Russell’s Sign)

38
Q

Normal weight Bulimia: Worrisome

A

Orthostatic changes in blood pressure+ pulse:
BP decreases by≥ 20/Pulse increases by ≥ 20
Hypokalemia (potassium < 3.0); Pseudo-Bartter’s syndrome (hypochloremic hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis). CO2 > 38
Hyponatremia
Pancreatitis
Hematemesis (Mallory-Weiss tear)
Incontinent (severe laxative abuse)