Geris Flashcards
1
Q
Define frailty.
A
A decrease in reserve or capacity to tolerate an insult that is not attributed to disease, comorbidity or age alone (though they contribute):
- Weakness (grip strength)
- Slowness of gait
- Weight loss
- Exhaustion
- Low activity levels
Classical defined by signficant sarcopenia. The kind of person that could live for another ten years but wouldn’t survive if they got pneumonia.
2
Q
A
3
Q
What are the risk factors for functional decline in the elderly?
A
- Cognitive impariement
- Depression
- Disease burden (co-morbidities)
- Increased and decreased body mass index
- Lower extremity functional limitation
- Low frequency of social contacts
- Low level of physical activity
- No alcohol use compared to moderate use
- Poor self-perceived health
- Smoking
- Vision impairement
4
Q
WHat are the different types of incontinence?
A
- Urge
- Stress
- Functional
- Overflow
5
Q
Describe stress incontinence.
A
- Caused by laxity of pelvic floor muscles
- allows proximal urethra to drop below the pelvic floor
- ↓ urethral/vesicle angle allows bladder pressure to exceed urethral pressure briefly at times of strain
- Associated withcystocele
- bulging of bladder wall into the upper anterior vaginal wall
- ↓ estrogen
- history of vaginal childbirth
- Presentation
- symptoms
- leak with cough or laughing (presumably due to elevated intra-abdominal pressure)
- symptoms
- Treatment
- topical vaginal estrogen
- Kegel exercises to strengthen pelvic floor muscles
- α-adrenergic agonists to ↑ muscle tone of bladder neck
- surgical procedures available if difficult to treat
6
Q
Describe urge incontinence.
A
- Caused by involuntary bladder contraction
- result of ↑ detrusor muscle activity
- Most common type
- Presentation
- symptoms
- ↑ urinary frequency
- small volume voids
- nocturia
- symptoms
- Treatment
- anticholinergics to ↓ parasympathetic tone of detrusor muscle
7
Q
Describe functional incontinence.
A
- Inability to arrive to the toilet in a timely fashion due to some condition (eg, delirium, dementia, immobility, and so forth)
- these patients have the ability to hold urine and empty their bladder
- in other words, the patient has a medical condition that makes it difficult for the patient to arrive to the bathroom within a reasonable time frame
8
Q
Describe overflow incontinence.
A
- Overdistended bladder and urinary retention → dribbling and inability to empty bladder
- Etiology:
- impaired detrusor contractility
- neurogenic
- i.e., diabetes mellitus, B12 deficiency, alcoholism
- pathologies affecting the spinal cord
- i.e., spinal stenosis, multiple sclerosis, tumors
- medications
- i.e., anticholinergics, alpha agonists, calcium channel blockers, opioids, psychotherapeutics
- neurogenic
- bladder outlet obstruction
- i.e., benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), pelvic organ prolapse (advanced), iatrogenic (i.e., pelvic surgery), fibroids
- impaired detrusor contractility
- Presentation
- involuntary small volume voids and dribbling
- can occur during the day and night
- urinary hesitancy
- involuntary small volume voids and dribbling
- Treatment
- guided by etiology
- identify reversible causes and address them
- stopping medications
- catheterization may be necessary
- may be temporary or permanent
- cholinergic agonists to ↑ detrusor muscle tone (for bladder atony)
- α-adrenergic antagonists to ↓ tone of bladder neck
9
Q
Differentiate dementia, delirium and depression from eachother.
A