ICCH Flashcards
What are the DDx of dizziness?
Peripheral disorders:
- Labyrinth:
- Labyrinthitis: viral or suppurative
- Ménière syndrome
- Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)
- Drugs
- Trauma
- Chronic suppurative otitis media
- Eight nerve:
- Vestibular neuronitis
- Acoustic neuroma
- Drugs
Cervical disorders
- Brain stem (TIA or stroke):
- Vertebrobasilar insufficiency
- Infarction
- Cerebellum:
- Degeneration
- Tumours
- Migraine
- Mutiple sclerosis
What are the red flags for dizziness/ vertigo?
- Neurological signs
- Ataxia out of proportion to vertigo
- Nystagmus out of proportion to vertigo
- Central nystagmus
- Central eye movement abnormalities
What do you want to know from a patients Hx about dizziness?
- SOCRATES: key questions.
- Is it vertigo or pseudovertigo?
- Symptoms pattern:
- paraoxysmal or continuous?
- Effect of position and change of posture?
- Any aural symptoms? Tinnitus? Deafness?
- Any visual symptoms?
- Any nausea or vomiting?
- Any symptoms of psychoneurosis?
- Any recent colds
- And recent head injury (even trivial)?
- Any drugs being taken?
- alcohol?
- marijuana?
- hypotensive?
- psychotropics?
- other drugs?
How do you examine a patient who presents with dizziness?
- Ear disease:
- Auroscopic examination: ?wax, ?drum
- Hearing tests
- Weber and Rinne tests
- The eyes:
- Visual acuity
- Test movements for nystagmus
- Cardiovascular system:
- Evidence of atherosclerosis
- BP: supine, standing, sitting
- Cardiac arrhythmias
- Cranial nerves:
- 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th and 7th
- Corneal response for 5th
- 8th -auditory nerve
- The cerebellum or its connections:
- Gait
- Coordination
- Reflexes
- Romberg test
- Finger nost test: ?past pointing
- The neck, including cervical spine
- General search for evidence of:
- Anaemia
- Polycythaemia
- Alcohol dependence
- Hallpike manoeuvre
- Carotid arteries and carotid sinus
What investigations can be order for dizziness?
- FBC
- Blood glucose
- ECG: ?holter monitor
- Audiometry
- Brain-stem evoked audiometry
- Caloric test
- Visual evoked potentials (MS)
- Electrocochleography
- Electro-oculography
- Rotational tests
- Radiology:
- Chest X-ray (?bronchial carcinoma)
- Cervical spine x-ray
- CT scan
- MRI: the choice to locate acoustic neuroma or other tumour - may detect MS and vascular infarction)
What medications can be used to provide symptomatic relief of vertigo?
- Anti-emetics:
- Prochlorperazine
- Metoclopramide
- Antihistamines:
- Promethazine
- Betahistine
- Benzodiazepines
- Diazepam
- Lorazepam
What are the DDx of neonatal jaundice?
Unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia:
- Physiologic jaundice
- Breast milk jaundice
- Alloimmune haemolysis : haemolysis from blood group incompatibility -rhesus
- Others: Sepsis, excessice, non-haemolytic red cell destruction (polycythaemia, brusing, or cephalhaematoma), GIT obstruction or ileus (pyloris stenosis), prematurity, hypothyroidism.
Conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia:
- Biliary atresia
- Gilberts syndrome
- Crigler-Najjar syndrome
- Others causes:
- Choledochal cyst
- Neonatal hepatitis (congenital infection, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency; often idiopathic)
- Metabolic (galactosaemia, fructose intolerance)
- Complication of TPN
What is the antidote to paracetamol poisoning?
N-Acetylcysteine
What is the antidote for tricyclic antidepressant or aspirin overdose?
Sodium bicarcbonate
What is used to treat mild to moderate and moderate to severe lead poisoning?
- Mild to moderate: Oral succimer - lead chelator
- Moderate to severe: Calcium EDTA - it is a lead chelator
What is the antidote for iron overdose?
- IV fluids
- Deferoxamine