ENT Flashcards

1
Q

Bacterial Tracheitis

A
  • mean 5-8 yrs old
  • often secondary to viral URI
    • sudden worsening with sore throat & tracheal tenderness, high fever, stridor, productive thick cough
  • xray not needed, but may show subloglottic narrowing + irregular tracheal margins
  • same management as epiglottitis
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2
Q

Retropharyngeal Abscess

A
  • neck pain, fever, drooling, dysphagia, bulging of posterior pharynx
  • lateral neck xray
    • retropharyngeal space @ C2 > 2x diameter of vertebral body or > 1/2 width of C4 vertebral body
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3
Q

Management of Epiglottitis

A
  • nebulized epi
  • IV Ceftriaxone/cefuroxime +- vanco
  • +- dex
  • lateral xray if stable + unclear dx
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4
Q

Croup

A
  • Clinical
    • 6 months to 3 years (older consider a anatomic abnormality)
  • Tx
    • Dexamethasone 0.6 mg/kg PO or IM (giving IV preparation PO is a good idea, as smaller volume) (max 10 mg) X1 prevents hospitalization
    • Racemic (L-epinephrine) 0.25 mL mixed with 3-5 mL saline or 1:1000 epi 0.5 mL/kg max 5 mL Watch for at least 3h if thinking of sending home.
    • Admit if still stridor at rest, nasal flaring, or needed > 2 epi treatments.
    • Do not use beta-agonists (vasodilate tracheal mucosa)
    • Impending resp failure: epinephrine 0.01 mL/kg 1:1000 (max 0.3 mL)
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5
Q

Pediatric Neck Masses

A

Review Evernote “Neck Masses”

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6
Q

Sialolithiasis and Parotitis

A

Sialolithiasis

  • clinical Dx
  • can be hard to tell apart from/can coexist with parotitis
  • imaging only if abscess
  • lemon drops, massage

Parotitis

  • mumps will not cause redness
  • suppurative parotitis
    • purulent DC from Stenson’s duct
    • swab
    • Clavulin or Clinda or Keflex + Flagyl
    • US/CT only if not responding/fluctuant
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7
Q

Lateral Sinus Thrombosis

A
  • From AOM
  • headache, occasional CN palsies
  • CT/MR Venogram
  • IV Abx
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8
Q

Bullingous Myringitis

A
  • treat same as AOM
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9
Q

Malignant Otitis Externa

A
  • infection of deeper ear structures (cartilage, bone, skull)
  • ~80% pseudomonas aeruginosa, 15% MRSA
  • sometimes fungal in diabetics
  • suspect if AOE persists despite 2-3 weeks of topical therapy
  • granulation tissue may be present on floor of canal
  • Contrast CT or MRI to diagnose
  • check for CN involvement
  • Tx:
    • children: imipenem
    • adults: gent + cipro or cefotaxime
      • mild cases may settle with outpatient oral quinolone therapy
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10
Q

TM Perforation

A
  • no need for Abx unless FB/trauma/water
  • keep dry, ENT 1-2 weeks (within 24h if posterosuperior quadrant affected, or from penetrating trauma)
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11
Q

Rinne and Weber Tests

A
  • Weber Test: tune forehead –> louder ear has conductive loss or quieter ear has SN loss
  • Rinne Test: tune mastoid, then move in front of ear –> ear louder (normal), bone louder (conductive loss)

Review Evernote “Ear EM” if still unclear

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12
Q

Tinnitus/Hearing Loss

A

Review Evernote Ear EM

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13
Q

Trach Complications

A

See Evernote

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14
Q

Angioedema

A

Review Evernote

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