Intro to PXDX Flashcards
What is the format/steps for an organized physical exam?
- Make sure there is enough room and space
- Get all your equipments ready
- Good lightning
- Wash your hands
- Develop a sequence for the physical exam
- Cephalo-caudad (head to toe) approach
- Perform exam from pt’s right side
- Make sure both the patient and you are comfortable (sit near pt if needed to comfort them)
- Make sure you take adequate time to talk to pt and get complete history.
What are the 5 fingers of the osler?
- Observation/inspection (pt’s walk, dress, facial expressions, grooming, distress)
- Palpation (feel)
- Percussion
- Auscultation (hear)
- use other senses (smell?)
What is the major component of diagnoses?
- History (70%)
- physical examination (20%) and investigation (10) are the other 2 components
What is your objective in a clinical encounter with a patient?
- to elicit relevant facts from pt’s history of present illness and symptoms
- to derive a differential diagnoses
- to elicit risk factors and significant co-morbid pathologies. (to rule out most dangerous/risky diseases first)
What does a complete history comprise of? (8 things)
- CC (chief complaint)
- HPI (history of present illness)
- ROS (review of system)
- PMHX (past medical history)
- PSHX (past surgical history)
- FHX (family history)
- SHX (social history)
- Meds/allergies
What is Chief complaint and what does it consist of and an example?
- Chief complaint is the symptom that patient is seeking medical advice for.
- It consist of pt’s complaint, age, and gender. Chief complaint is written in patient’s own words.
- 50 yrs old female complaining of shortness of breath.
What is the OPQRST of the history of present illness?
- Onset (when/how did it first start?)
- Provocation/palliation (what makes it better or worse?)
- Quality (What does it feel like? sharp?)
- Region/Radiation (location? is it radiating/moving?)
- Severity (on scale of 0-10 how bad is it?)
- Time (how long has it been happening? is it constant or comes and goes at certain times?)
What are the review of systems and how many do you need for a complete chart?
- Constitutional (fever? weight loss? weakness? anything different in general?)
- Skin (rash, bruising)
- HEENT (headache? blurry vision? loss of hearing? loss of smell? trouble swallowing?
- Respiratory (trouble breathing? shortness of breath? cough?
- Cardiovascular (heart palpitations? circulation? chest pain?)
- GI (constipation? abdominal pain? bloating? bloody stool?)
- Genitourinary (pain with voiding? frequency of void?)
- Musculoskeletal (muscle weakness, trouble moving any joints? muscle pain?)
- Neurological (numbness or tingling? trouble staying focused? slurred speech? sensation loss?)
- Psychiatric (uncontrollable thoughts? anxiety? depression?)
- Endocrine (excessive thirst? irregular menstrual cycle? any hormonal therapy? heat or cold intolerance?
- Hematologic/lymphatic (abnormal bleeding? enlarged lymph-nodes? easy bruising?)
- Allergies/immunologic (any allergies? if so what kind of reaction do you get or severeness of allergy? any recurrent infections?)
- Need 10 ROS for a complete chart.
What does past medical history consist of?
- Childhood history (until age of 30ish)
- past trauma/injuries
- past psychiatric history
- immunizations
- past hospitalizations/surgeries
- previos diagnosis
- previous allergies
- previous medications
What is the purpose of the soap note and who are the audiences?
purpose= memory aid, communication with colleagues and patient, assessment by preceptors/attending, insurance and legal matters, research. audiences= yourself, colleagues, preceptors/attending, patient, insurance company, social and case management, quality assurance, administration and researchers.
What does SOAP stand for?
- Subjective= what patient tells you or what you read from transfer notes (complete history)
- Objective= what you find or measure yourself (physical exam, vitals, labs)
- Assessment= differential diagnosis or what you made out from patient’s history and objective data, 1st differential should address pt’s CC.
- Plan= What are your next steps for this patient? (procedure? treatment? admission/discharge? follow up?)
What are the Dos of documentation?
- be concise and accurate
- initial and date changes made
- use ink
- sign properly
- provide your contact info
- document soon
What are the Don’ts of documentation?
- don’t use abbreviations
- don’t use good, negative, normal, abnormal
- don’t write false information/data
- don’t obliterate errors or omit data
- don’t leave any spaces
- don’t write too soon or write too much