13 Flashcards
How do class Ia, Ib, Ic antiarrhythmics work?
- Ia – Lengthen AP duration
- Ib – Shorten AP duration
- Ic – No significant effect on AP
What are some common symptoms of pulmonary TB?
- Haemoptysis.
- Cough.
- Sputum.
- Chest pain.
- Systemic symptoms of infection.
Antimuscarinics MOA in asthma
o Block the activity of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (blocks ACh binding to muscarinic receptors)
o This results in bronchial dilation + decreased secretions
Side effects of amiodarone (class III anti-arrthymatic)
- Blue-grey skin discolouration
- Photosensitivity
- Lung fibrosis
- Corneal deposits
What is coarctation of the aorta?
Narrowing of a short section of the aorta
It’s rare
MOA of streptokinase
Activates plasminogen to plasmin which is a fibrinolytic enzyme
Used in acute MI
How are diffusion and perfusion affected in obstructive lung disease?
Not much, it is a ventilatory problem.
- Diffusion affected in emphysema due to parenchyma destruction.
- Perfusion affected in end stage (cor pulmonale).
What do Th2 cells produce?
IL-4 which stimulates IgE
IL-5 which activates eosinophils
What does an atheroma contain?
o Macrophage cells
o Lipids
o Calcium
o Variable amount of fibrous connective tissue
What 2 types of test for TB are there?
1) Mantoux tuberculin skin test.
2) Interferon gamma release assay.
Blue bloaters (bronchitis)
- Coughs up lots of sputum
- Oedematous ankles
- Cyanosed
- Overweight
- Sleep apnoea
- Do into ventilatory failure early on
Tissue changes in the kidney in hypertension
- Glomerular damage
- Shrink
- Renal artery stenosis
- Arteriosclerosis leading to progressive ischaemia of the nephrons
What happens when you breathe out if you lack alveolar integrity?
Pleural pressure will exceed > pressure in small airway, so it would collapse prematurely on exhalation.
Hyperexpanded chest in asthma and emphysema
What are arterial blood gases? When is it indicated?
Gives you:
- PaO2.
- PaCO2.
- Acid-base balance (pH, HCO3, H+ etc).
- When oxygen sats are 90-92% or lower.
Overview of pharmacological treatment of patients with LV HF
Patients w/ LV HF should be on ACE inhibitors, beta blockers + ARBs for the rest of their life – because the cumulative effect of these drugs doubles life expectancy (triple therapy)
What is the point of a granuloma? What happens within it in TB? What is the main disadvantage of this?
To try and contain the focus of infection.
- Caseating necrosis to prevent dissemination of TB.
- Dampens the host immune response.
1st degree heart block
QRS normal
P wave present
Long PR interval
What is wheeze?
A musical noise produced by air moving through narrowed airways (airway obstructed)
o Obstruction of airways within chest causes wheezing w/ expiration – airways get narrower because lungs get smaller
Contrast with stridor which occurs in inspiration – e.g. whooping cough, epiglottitis, foreign body
How is sinus bradycardia treated?
Investigate and remove cause:
- Beta blockers
- Hypothyroidism
- Heart block - recent MI, digoxin toxicity, B-blockers
Usually manged consevatively
Which cytokine is skewed in asthma?
Greater Th2 production
Haemodynamic model for progression of heart failure
- Sympathetics and RAAS activated
- Increased preload and afterload
- Consequence is very dilated heart
MOA and example of a biguanide
- Metformin
- Increases utilisation of glucose by increasing uptake and decreasing gluconeogenesis
List and explain the 3 factors regulating stroke volume
o Preload: the degree of stretch before contraction
o Contractility: the forcefulness of contractions
o Afterload: the pressure that must be exceeded for the ventricle to eject blood
Non-dihydropyridines
Calcium antagonists
- Verapamil, diltiazem (class IV anti-arrithymatics)
- Slow heart rate
- Useful for angina
- Not for use in heart failure