Minimal criteria COPY Flashcards
Complications of acute otitis media (AOM)
Extracranial:
-
Intratemporal:
- Acute mastoiditis
- Zygomaticitis
- Petrositis
- Facial nerve palsy
- Labyrinthitis
-
Extratemporal:
- Abscess: subperiosteal, preauricular, suboccipital, Bezold’s abscess
Intracranial:
- Extradural abscess
- Subdural abscess
- Brain abscess
- Sinus phlebitis - sinus thrombosis
- Meningitis, encephalitis
General: sepsis.
Causes of dyspnea in the upper respiratory tract
- Upper respiratory tract infections (tonsillitis, epiglottitis, laryngitis)
- Lumps in the upper respiratory tract: abscess, granulation tissue, malignancies
- Non-specific reactions of the upper respiratory mucosa: allergy, Reinke edema, hereditary angioneurotic edema
- Foreign body
- Stenosis
- Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy.
Where does the patient localize the pain in cases of frontal, maxillary, ethmoidal or sphenoidal sinusitis?
- Frontal sinusitis – forehead
- Maxillary sinusitis – face
- Ethmoidal sinusitis –periorbitally, between the eyes
- Sphenoid sinusitis – crown of the head, referring to the occipital area
All forms of sinusitis can cause diffuse headache.
Pathogens of tonsillitis and pharyngitis, indication of antibiotic treatment
Pathogens:
-
Viral (80-90%)
- Adenovirus, rhinovirus
- (EBV - infectious mononucleosis)
-
Bacterial:
- Streptococcus pyogenes - follicular tonsillitis
- Group C and G Streptococci
- Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Neisseria subspecies;
- (Pneumococci)
- (Haemophilus influenzae)
- (Moraxella catarrhalis)
- (Staphylococcus subspecies);
Antibiotics:
Bacterial infection -
- Physical findings
- Laboratory findings (blood count, CRP, ESR, rapid bacteriological test)
- Acute or chronic infection
- Presence of immunosuppression.
Management of epistaxis/nosebleeding (anterior, posterior) by ENT professionals
- Blood pressure-measurement, antihypertensive treatment - if needed
- Visible bleeding source: chemical cauterization (trichloroacetate, silver nitrate) or coagulation (bipolar electrocoagulation)
- Anterior nasal bleeding: anterior nasal packing
- Posterior nose bleeding: posterior nasal packing (Bellocq tamponade), balloon catheter.
Symptoms and clinical features of diffuse otitis externa
Symptoms
- Earache
- The external part of the ear canal is painful (especially the tragus)
- Discharge, itching
- Ear congestion, hearing loss
- Fever is uncommon.
Clinical findings
- Swelling and hyperemia of the skin of the ear canal
- Serous or purulent discharge
- Accumulation of debris in the ear canal
- Tympanic membrane appears to be normal
What is to be done in case of acute sensorineural hearing loss?
In case of acute sensorineural hearing loss, immediate intravenous nootropic/vasodilatating therapy or steroid bolus treatment is necessary with hospitalization. Meanwhile detailed investigation is required to be carried out to clarify the etiology. The earlier the treatment is started, the better the outcome is.
Symptoms and clinical features of acute otitis media (AOM) – suppurative form
Symptoms:
- Earache
- Hearing loss
- Nasal discharge and congestion;
- Fever, malaise
- If perforation is present: otorrhea
Clinical findings:
- Ear canal appears to be normal
- Hyperemia of tympanic membrane
- Later in the course of the disease: marked bulging of the tympanic membrane, subsequently spontaneous perforation can develop.
Precancerous lesions of the oral cavity and oropharynx
- Erythroplakia,
- Leukoplakia,
- Lichen planus
- Naevus
- Spongiosus albus mucosae
Causes of ear pain
Primary otalgia:
- Otitis
- Tumors of the ear
Referred ear pain:
- Tumors and inflammations of the larynx, pharynx, tonsils, base of the tongue
- Dental inflammations, temporomandibular joint syndrome, neuralgic pain.
Causes of peripherial facial palsy (list)
- Bell’s palsy
- Herpes zoster oticus
- Other viral or bacterial infections (HSV, EBV, Lyme)
- Acute and chronic middle ear diseases (acute and chronic middle ear infections, cholesteatoma, rarely tumors)
- Tumors of the pontocerebellar angle, vestibular schwannoma
- Cranial traumas (pyramid bone fractures), extratemporal traumas
- Malignant tumors of parotid gland.
Types of rhinitis (list)
- Common infections: Simple acute rhinitis, purulent rhinitis
- Specific forms of Rhinitis: TB, syphilis, sarcoidosis
- Allergic rhinitis
- Atrophic rhinitis (oezena)
- Rhinitis sicca anterior.
- Other causes: idiopathic, vasomotoric, hormonal, drug-induced, rhinitis medicamentosa, occupational (caused by irritants) foodstuffs. (3 causes are required from the “other” group)
Swollen neck lymph nodes – causes:
- Non-specific inflammations (e.g. upper respiratory tract infections);
-
Specific inflammations:
- Bacterial: TB, syphilis, cat scratch disease, tularemia.
- Protozoal: toxoplasmosis.
- Viral: HIV-infection.
- Non-infectious: sarcoidosis
- Lymphomas
- Metastases of head and neck cancers.
Causes of chronic hoarseness (Why is it necessary to visit an ENT specialist after 3 weeks of hoarseness?)
- Acute and chronic inflammations of the larynx
- Benign laryngeal lesions (cysts, granulation, Reinke edema, polyps, papillomatosis)
- Malignant laryngeal lesions
- Recurrent laryngeal nerve paresis (which can be caused by: hypopharyngeal, thyroid gland, esophageal, pulmonary, mediastinal cancer, intracranial diseases)
- GERD
It is exceptionally important to diagnose a malignant lesion as soon as we can.
Causes of acute hearing loss
Conductive type:
- Wax, foreign body
- Acute tubal occlusion, otitis media (OME/AOM)
- Trauma (e.g. perforation of the tympanic membrane).
Sensorineural type:
- Noise (acute) induced hearing loss
- Viral infection
- Vascular causes
- Toxical damage (medication, chemicals)
- Traumas.