Minimum questions Flashcards
(34 cards)
- Symptoms and clinical features of diffuse otitis externa
Symptoms
- Earache;
- The external part of the ear canal is painful (especially the tragus);
- Discharge, itching;
- Ear congestion, hearing loss;
- Fever is uncommon.
Clinical findings
- Swelling and hyperemia of the skin of the ear canal;
- Serous or purulent discharge;
- Accumulation of debris in the ear canal;
- Tympanic membrane appears to be normal.
- Symptoms and clinical features of acute otitis media (AOM) – suppurative
form
Symptoms:
- Earache;
- Hearing loss;
- Nasal discharge and congestion;
- Fever, malaise;
- If perforation is present: otorrhea
Clinical findings
- Ear canal appears to be normal;
- Hyperemia of tympanic membrane;
- Later in the course of the disease: marked bulging of the tympanic membrane, subsequently spontaneous perforation can develop.
- Causes of acute hearing loss
- Conductive type:
- 1 wax, foreign body;
- 2 acute tubal occlusion, otitis media (OME/AOM);
- 3 trauma (e.g. perforation of the tympanic membrane).
- Sensorineural type:
- 1 Noise (acute) induced hearing loss;
- 2 Viral infection;
- 3 Vascular causes;
- 4 Toxical damage (medication, chemicals);
- 5 Traumas.
- What is to be done in case of acute sensorineural hearing loss?
In case of acute sensorineural hearing loss, immediate intravenous nootropic/vasodilatating therapy or steroid bolus treatment is necessary with hospitalization; meanwhile detailed investigation is required to be carried out to clarify the etiology. The earlier the treatment is started, the better the outcome is.
- immediate IV nootropic/vasodilatating therapy
- or steroid bolus
- with hospitalization
- detailed investigation to determine the etiology
- the earlier treatment is started the better the outcome
- Recognition of hearing loss in childhood
Signs of hearing loss in childhood:
- the newborn does not react to sounds;
- tone of crying is unusual;
- babbling period does not appear;
- speech development is delayed;
- visual orientation is dominant;
- tone, pitch, intensity, melody and rhythm of the speech is pathologic;
- articulation disorders;
- worse reading and writing skills
- Causes of ear pain
Primary otalgia
- Otitis;
- Tumors of the ear;
Referred ear pain
- Tumors of the larynx, pharynx, tonsils, base of the tongue
- inflammations of the larynx, pharynx, tonsils, base of the tongue;
- Dental inflammations,
- temporomandibular joint syndrome,
- neuralgic pain.
- Complications of acute otitis media (AOM)
Extracranial:
- Intratemporal:
- 1 Acute mastoiditis;
- 2 Zygomaticitis;
- 3 Petrositis;
- 4 Labyrinthitis;
- 5 Facial nerve palsy;
- Extratemporal
- 1 Abscess: subperiosteal,
- 2 preauricular,
- 3 suboccipital,
- 4 Bezold’s abscess;
- Intracranial
- 1 Extradural abscess;
- 2 Subdural abscess;
- 3 Brain abscess;
- 4 Meningitis, encephalitis;
- 5 Sinus phlebitis - sinus thrombosis
- General:
- 1 sepsis
- Clinical features and symptoms of acute mastoiditis
- Associated with, or following acute otitis media;
- The pinna is pushed forward;
- The posterior wall of the external ear canal is swollen, seems to be lowered;
- Retroauricular pain, erythema;
- Pulsating, severe pain;
- Pulsating otorrhea.
- Causes of unilateral otitis media with effusion (OME) in adults and childhood
Chronic dysfunction of the Eustachian tube (adenoid vegetation or nasopharyngeal
tumor)
In adults, the possibility of a nasopharyngeal tumor must not be left out of
consideration!
- How to diagnose vertigo caused by vestibular disorders
Patient history:
- Type of vertigo (sensation of spinning or falling);
- Vegetative symptoms, nausea, vomiting.
Examination:
- deviation, tilting;
- spontaneous nystagmus and nystagmus provoked by head movements
- Causes of peripherial facial palsy (list)
Bell’s palsy;
- Herpes zoster oticus;
- Other viral or bacterial infections (HSV, EBV, Lyme);
- Acute and chronic middle ear diseases (acute and chronic middle ear infections, cholesteatoma, rarely tumors);
- Tumors of the pontocerebellar angle, vestibular schwannoma;
- Malignant tumors of parotid gland.
- Cranial traumas (pyramid bone fractures), extratemporal traumas;
- Primary management of epistaxis/nosebleeding (at home/ambulance/by GP)
- The patient should lean forward with open mouth,
- firm digital pressure should be applied to both nasal alae for 10 minutes;
- Ephedrine/nasal drop/vasocontrictor solution imbibed cotton or spongostan should be applied in nasal cavity;
- Cold compress should be applied to the nape of the neck and to the nasal dorsum;
- Blood pressure-measurement, antihypertensive treatment if needed.
- Management of epistaxis/nosebleeding (anterior, posterior) by ENT
professionals
- Blood pressure-measurement, antihypertensive treatment - if needed;
- Visible bleeding source: chemical cauterization (trichloroacetate, silver nitrate) or coagulation (bipolar electrocoagulation);
- Anterior nasal bleeding: anterior nasal packing;
- Posterior nose bleeding: posterior nasal packing (Bellocq tamponade), balloon catheter.
- Management and complications of nasal folliculitis and furuncles
- Circumscript folliculitis: local therapy with antibiotic and steroid containing creams, vapor coverage;
- The patient should be told not to pick or squeeze the lesions;
- For furunculosis and/or phlegmonous reaction, parenteral antibiotics should be administered, along with vapor coverage;
- The infection is usually caused by Staphylococcus aureus;
- Possible complications:
- 1 Facial phlegmone,
- 2 angular vein thrombophlebitis,
- 3 cavernous sinus thrombosis.
- Types of rhinitis (list)
- Common infections:
- 1 Simple acute rhinitis,
- 2 purulent rhinitis;
- Specific forms of Rhinitis:
- 1 TB,
- 2 syphilis,
- 3 sarcoidosis;
- Allergic rhinitis
- Atrophic rhinitis (oezena)
- Rhinitis sicca anterior.
- Other causes:
- 1 idiopathic,
- 2 vasomotoric,
- 3 hormonal,
- 4 drug-induced,
- 5 rhinitis medicamentosa,
- 6 occupational (caused by irritants)
- 7 foodstuffs.
(3 causes are required from the “other” group)
- Clinical features and management of angioedema (Quincke-edema)
Symptoms and clinical features:
- urticaria, edema in the head and neck region;
- dysphagia, globus feeling or visible swelling in the throat, choking;
- in a severe form: anaphylaxis;
Treatment:
- antihistamines,
- steroids,
- adrenaline,
- maintaining free airways: cricothyrotomy/tracheotomy – if needed.
- Complications of paranasal sinus infections (list)
Extracranial complications
- Periorbital cellulitis;
- Subperiosteal abscess;
- Orbital phlegmone / abscess;
- Osteomyelitis;
- Sepsis;
Intracranial complications
- Meningitis; encephalitis
- Epi/subdural or brain abscess,
- Cavernous sinus thrombosis.
- Where does the patient localize the pain in cases of frontal, maxillary,
ethmoidal or sphenoidal sinusitis?
- Frontal sinusitis – forehead;
- Maxillary sinusitis – face;
- Ethmoidal sinusitis –periorbitally, between the eyes;
- Sphenoid sinusitis – crown of the head, referring to the occipital area;
- All forms of sinusitis can cause diffuse headache.
- Causes of unilateral nasal obstruction and discharge in childhood and in
adulthood
Childhood:
- foreign body;
- nasopharyngeal angiofibroma;
- meningoencephalocele.
- sinusitis;
- congenital malformation: choanal atresia,
Adulthood:
- nasopharyngeal tumors;
- diseases causing nasal cavity obstruction (polyp, benign and malignant tumors);
- hypertrophy of turbinates;
- deviation of the nasal septum;
- trauma and it’s late consequences;
- rhinosinusitis
- ENT diseases causing headache
- Viral infection of the upper airways;
- Inflammation of nasal sinuses: (acute and chronic);
- Complications of otitis and sinusitis: mastoiditis, meningitis, brain abscess, inflammation of the petrous pyramid;
- Benign and malignant tumors of nasal sinuses;
- Cervical: cervical vertebra disorders, spondylosis, myalgia
- Neuralgias;
- Pain of temporomandibular joint.
- Most frequent causes of dysphagia
- GERD;
- Globus feeling, psyhogenic disorders;
- Foreign bodies in the hypopharynx and oesophagus;
- Tumors in the mesopharyngeal, hypopharyngeal and laryngeal region;
- Esophageal, hypopharyngeal stenoses;
- Esophageal motility disorders, achalasia;
- Diverticulum (e.g. Zenker);
- Inflammation in the mesopharyngeal, hypopharyngeal and laryngeal region;
- Neuralgia (n. IX, n. X);
- Sensorial and motor innervation disorders: sensorial disorders in supraglottical region;
- Indications of tonsillectomy (absolute and relative)
Absolute indications:
- rheumatic fever;
- peritonsillar abscess;
- tonsillogenic sepsis.
Relative indications:
- chronic tonsillitis;
- recurrent tonsillitis;
- tonsillogenic or posttonsillitis focal symptoms;
- marked hypertrophy of the tonsils causing mechanical obstruction;
- if a tonsillar tumor is suspected;
- obstructive sleep-apnea syndrome or other obstructive sleep-related breathing disorders;
- severe orofacial / dental disorders causing narrow upper airways.
- Clinical features and symptoms of peritonsillar abscess
- Throat pain, referred ear pain;
- Difficulty in swallowing;
- Trismus, the speech is thick and indistinct;
- Oral fetor;
- Fever, insomnia, loss of appetite;
- Swelling, redness and protrusion of the tonsil, faucial arch, palate and uvula; the
uvula is pushed towards the healthy side.
- Peritonsillar abscess – treatment
- Drainage of the abscess - puncture, incision, daily opening of the abscess cavity;
- Tonsillectomy:
- abscess-tonsillectomy;
- tonsillectomy 6 weeks after recovery;
- Antibiotics, decreasing edema, analgesics, administration of fluids.