Falls Flashcards

1
Q

Differentiate between the autonomic and neuroglycopaenic features of hypoglycaemia.

A

Autonomic: trembling, sweating, anxiety, hunger, palpitations, nausea, tingling
Neuroglycopaenic: confusion, weakness, drowsiness, visual change, difficulty speaking, headache, dizziness, tiredness, difficulty concentrating

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2
Q

What are the four questions involved in the AMT?

A
  1. What year is it?
  2. How old are you?
  3. What is your date of birth?
  4. Where are we?
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3
Q

Name some drugs which cause postural hypotension.

A
nitrates
ACEi
diuretics
L-dopa
tricyclics
SSRIs
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4
Q

What are the typical clinical features of idiopathic Parkinson’s disease?

A

bradykinesia
rigidity
tremor
postural instability

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5
Q

What is idiopathic Parkinson’s disease?

A

neurodegenerative disease that affects predominantly dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra

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6
Q

What are the non-motor symtoms of PD?

A

neuropsychiatric: anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, cognitive changes, hallucinations
olfactory: altered sense of smell
GI: constipation
urinary: nocturia: urinary frequency, incontinence, ED
muscular pain
hyperhidrosis

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7
Q

How would you describe a typical PD tremor?

A

assymetrical, 4-6Hz enhanced by anxiety, occurs at rest

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8
Q

What does progressive supranuclear palsy cause?

A

axial imbalance, oculomotor disturbance, early bulbar involvement (speech and swallow difficulties)

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9
Q

What are some of the causes of falls?

A

D:rugs + alcohol
A:ge-related changes e.g. gait, balance, weakness, sensory impairment
M:edical e.g. CVD, PD
E:nvironmental e.g. obstacles, lighting

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10
Q

Name causes of gait abnormalities.

A
PD
hemiplegic gait
cerebellar disease
sensory ataxia
normal pressure hydrocephalus
antalgic gait
proximal myopathy
foot drop
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11
Q

What are the risk factors for developing pressure sores?

A
poor mobility
poor nutritional status
neuropathy
pain
age and frailty
cognitive impairment
incontinence
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12
Q

What causes pressure ulcers?

A

interfacial pressure exceeding capillary pressure, which then leads to ischaemia

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13
Q

Describe the grading system used for pressure ulcers.

A

1: non-blanching erythema -
Intact skin with localised erythema, may differ in temperature to surrounding skin and be tender to touch
2. Partial thickness - superficial skin loss appears as shallow open ulcer without slough. May also be a blistered area without bruising
3. Full-thickness skin loss - Subcutaneous fat visible, may have sinus formation. No exposed tendon/ bone
4. Full-thickness tissue loss- Extends down to bone, tendon or fascia. Often accompanied by sinus formation

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14
Q

Discuss the management of pressure ulcers.

A

positional changes, mattress support, dressings, barrier creams, antibiotics, dietary support, debridement

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