Minimum questions Flashcards

1
Q
  1. Symptoms and clinical features of diffuse otitis externa
A

Symptoms

  1. Earache;
  2. The external part of the ear canal is painful (especially the tragus);
  3. Discharge, itching;
  4. Ear congestion, hearing loss;
  5. Fever is uncommon.

Clinical findings

  1. Swelling and hyperemia of the skin of the ear canal;
  2. Serous or purulent discharge;
  3. Accumulation of debris in the ear canal;
  4. Tympanic membrane appears to be normal.
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2
Q
  1. Symptoms and clinical features of acute otitis media (AOM) – suppurative
    form
A

Symptoms:

  1. Earache;
  2. Hearing loss;
  3. Nasal discharge and congestion;
  4. Fever, malaise;
  5. If perforation is present: otorrhea

Clinical findings

  1. Ear canal appears to be normal;
  2. Hyperemia of tympanic membrane;
  3. Later in the course of the disease: marked bulging of the tympanic membrane, subsequently spontaneous perforation can develop.
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3
Q
  1. Causes of acute hearing loss
A
  1. Conductive type:
  2. 1 wax, foreign body;
  3. 2 acute tubal occlusion, otitis media (OME/AOM);
  4. 3 trauma (e.g. perforation of the tympanic membrane).
  5. Sensorineural type:
  6. 1 Noise (acute) induced hearing loss;
  7. 2 Viral infection;
  8. 3 Vascular causes;
  9. 4 Toxical damage (medication, chemicals);
  10. 5 Traumas.
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4
Q
  1. What is to be done in case of acute sensorineural hearing loss?
A

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.

  1. immediate IV nootropic/vasodilatating therapy
  2. or steroid bolus
  3. with hospitalization
  4. detailed investigation to determine the etiology
  5. the earlier treatment is started the better the outcome
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5
Q
  1. Recognition of hearing loss in childhood
A

Signs of hearing loss in childhood:

  1. the newborn does not react to sounds;
  2. tone of crying is unusual;
  3. babbling period does not appear;
  4. speech development is delayed;
  5. visual orientation is dominant;
  6. tone, pitch, intensity, melody and rhythm of the speech is pathologic;
  7. articulation disorders;
  8. worse reading and writing skills
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6
Q
  1. Causes of ear pain
A

Primary otalgia

  1. Otitis;
  2. Tumors of the ear;

Referred ear pain

  1. Tumors of the larynx, pharynx, tonsils, base of the tongue
  2. inflammations of the larynx, pharynx, tonsils, base of the tongue;
  3. Dental inflammations,
  4. temporomandibular joint syndrome,
  5. neuralgic pain.
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7
Q
  1. Complications of acute otitis media (AOM)
A

Extracranial:

  1. Intratemporal:
  2. 1 Acute mastoiditis;
  3. 2 Zygomaticitis;
  4. 3 Petrositis;
  5. 4 Labyrinthitis;
  6. 5 Facial nerve palsy;
  7. Extratemporal
  8. 1 Abscess: subperiosteal,
  9. 2 preauricular,
  10. 3 suboccipital,
  11. 4 Bezold’s abscess;
  12. Intracranial
  13. 1 Extradural abscess;
  14. 2 Subdural abscess;
  15. 3 Brain abscess;
  16. 4 Meningitis, encephalitis;
  17. 5 Sinus phlebitis - sinus thrombosis
  18. General:
  19. 1 sepsis
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8
Q
  1. Clinical features and symptoms of acute mastoiditis
A
  1. Associated with, or following acute otitis media;
  2. The pinna is pushed forward;
  3. The posterior wall of the external ear canal is swollen, seems to be lowered;
  4. Retroauricular pain, erythema;
  5. Pulsating, severe pain;
  6. Pulsating otorrhea.
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9
Q
  1. Causes of unilateral otitis media with effusion (OME) in adults and childhood
A

Chronic dysfunction of the Eustachian tube (adenoid vegetation or nasopharyngeal
tumor)
In adults, the possibility of a nasopharyngeal tumor must not be left out of
consideration!

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10
Q
  1. How to diagnose vertigo caused by vestibular disorders
A

Patient history:

  1. Type of vertigo (sensation of spinning or falling);
  2. Vegetative symptoms, nausea, vomiting.

Examination:

  1. deviation, tilting;
  2. spontaneous nystagmus and nystagmus provoked by head movements
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11
Q
  1. Causes of peripherial facial palsy (list)
A

Bell’s palsy;

  1. Herpes zoster oticus;
  2. Other viral or bacterial infections (HSV, EBV, Lyme);
  3. Acute and chronic middle ear diseases (acute and chronic middle ear infections, cholesteatoma, rarely tumors);
  4. Tumors of the pontocerebellar angle, vestibular schwannoma;
  5. Malignant tumors of parotid gland.
  6. Cranial traumas (pyramid bone fractures), extratemporal traumas;
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12
Q
  1. Primary management of epistaxis/nosebleeding (at home/ambulance/by GP)
A
  1. The patient should lean forward with open mouth,
  2. firm digital pressure should be applied to both nasal alae for 10 minutes;
  3. Ephedrine/nasal drop/vasocontrictor solution imbibed cotton or spongostan should be applied in nasal cavity;
  4. Cold compress should be applied to the nape of the neck and to the nasal dorsum;
  5. Blood pressure-measurement, antihypertensive treatment if needed.
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13
Q
  1. Management of epistaxis/nosebleeding (anterior, posterior) by ENT
    professionals
A
  1. Blood pressure-measurement, antihypertensive treatment - if needed;
  2. Visible bleeding source: chemical cauterization (trichloroacetate, silver nitrate) or coagulation (bipolar electrocoagulation);
  3. Anterior nasal bleeding: anterior nasal packing;
  4. Posterior nose bleeding: posterior nasal packing (Bellocq tamponade), balloon catheter.
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14
Q
  1. Management and complications of nasal folliculitis and furuncles
A
  1. Circumscript folliculitis: local therapy with antibiotic and steroid containing creams, vapor coverage;
  2. The patient should be told not to pick or squeeze the lesions;
  3. For furunculosis and/or phlegmonous reaction, parenteral antibiotics should be administered, along with vapor coverage;
  4. The infection is usually caused by Staphylococcus aureus;
  5. Possible complications:
  6. 1 Facial phlegmone,
  7. 2 angular vein thrombophlebitis,
  8. 3 cavernous sinus thrombosis.
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15
Q
  1. Types of rhinitis (list)
A
  1. Common infections:
  2. 1 Simple acute rhinitis,
  3. 2 purulent rhinitis;
  4. Specific forms of Rhinitis:
  5. 1 TB,
  6. 2 syphilis,
  7. 3 sarcoidosis;
  8. Allergic rhinitis
  9. Atrophic rhinitis (oezena)
  10. Rhinitis sicca anterior.
  11. Other causes:
  12. 1 idiopathic,
  13. 2 vasomotoric,
  14. 3 hormonal,
  15. 4 drug-induced,
  16. 5 rhinitis medicamentosa,
  17. 6 occupational (caused by irritants)
  18. 7 foodstuffs.

(3 causes are required from the “other” group)

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16
Q
  1. Clinical features and management of angioedema (Quincke-edema)
A

Symptoms and clinical features:

  1. urticaria, edema in the head and neck region;
  2. dysphagia, globus feeling or visible swelling in the throat, choking;
  3. in a severe form: anaphylaxis;

Treatment:

  1. antihistamines,
  2. steroids,
  3. adrenaline,
  4. maintaining free airways: cricothyrotomy/tracheotomy – if needed.
17
Q
  1. Complications of paranasal sinus infections (list)
A

Extracranial complications

  1. Periorbital cellulitis;
  2. Subperiosteal abscess;
  3. Orbital phlegmone / abscess;
  4. Osteomyelitis;
  5. Sepsis;

Intracranial complications

  1. Meningitis; encephalitis
  2. Epi/subdural or brain abscess,
  3. Cavernous sinus thrombosis.
18
Q
  1. Where does the patient localize the pain in cases of frontal, maxillary,
    ethmoidal or sphenoidal sinusitis?
A
  1. Frontal sinusitis – forehead;
  2. Maxillary sinusitis – face;
  3. Ethmoidal sinusitis –periorbitally, between the eyes;
  4. Sphenoid sinusitis – crown of the head, referring to the occipital area;
  5. All forms of sinusitis can cause diffuse headache.
19
Q
  1. Causes of unilateral nasal obstruction and discharge in childhood and in
    adulthood
A

Childhood:

  1. foreign body;
  2. nasopharyngeal angiofibroma;
  3. meningoencephalocele.
  4. sinusitis;
  5. congenital malformation: choanal atresia,

Adulthood:

  1. nasopharyngeal tumors;
  2. diseases causing nasal cavity obstruction (polyp, benign and malignant tumors);
  3. hypertrophy of turbinates;
  4. deviation of the nasal septum;
  5. trauma and it’s late consequences;
  6. rhinosinusitis
20
Q
  1. ENT diseases causing headache
A
  1. Viral infection of the upper airways;
  2. Inflammation of nasal sinuses: (acute and chronic);
  3. Complications of otitis and sinusitis: mastoiditis, meningitis, brain abscess, inflammation of the petrous pyramid;
  4. Benign and malignant tumors of nasal sinuses;
  5. Cervical: cervical vertebra disorders, spondylosis, myalgia
  6. Neuralgias;
  7. Pain of temporomandibular joint.
21
Q
  1. Most frequent causes of dysphagia
A
  1. GERD;
  2. Globus feeling, psyhogenic disorders;
  3. Foreign bodies in the hypopharynx and oesophagus;
  4. Tumors in the mesopharyngeal, hypopharyngeal and laryngeal region;
  5. Esophageal, hypopharyngeal stenoses;
  6. Esophageal motility disorders, achalasia;
  7. Diverticulum (e.g. Zenker);
  8. Inflammation in the mesopharyngeal, hypopharyngeal and laryngeal region;
  9. Neuralgia (n. IX, n. X);
  10. Sensorial and motor innervation disorders: sensorial disorders in supraglottical region;
22
Q
  1. Indications of tonsillectomy (absolute and relative)
A

Absolute indications:

  1. rheumatic fever;
  2. peritonsillar abscess;
  3. tonsillogenic sepsis.

Relative indications:

  1. chronic tonsillitis;
  2. recurrent tonsillitis;
  3. tonsillogenic or posttonsillitis focal symptoms;
  4. marked hypertrophy of the tonsils causing mechanical obstruction;
  5. if a tonsillar tumor is suspected;
  6. obstructive sleep-apnea syndrome or other obstructive sleep-related breathing disorders;
  7. severe orofacial / dental disorders causing narrow upper airways.
23
Q
  1. Clinical features and symptoms of peritonsillar abscess
A
  1. Throat pain, referred ear pain;
  2. Difficulty in swallowing;
  3. Trismus, the speech is thick and indistinct;
  4. Oral fetor;
  5. Fever, insomnia, loss of appetite;
  6. Swelling, redness and protrusion of the tonsil, faucial arch, palate and uvula; the
    uvula is pushed towards the healthy side.
24
Q
  1. Peritonsillar abscess – treatment
A
  1. Drainage of the abscess - puncture, incision, daily opening of the abscess cavity;
  2. Tonsillectomy:
  3. abscess-tonsillectomy;
  4. tonsillectomy 6 weeks after recovery;
  5. Antibiotics, decreasing edema, analgesics, administration of fluids.
25
Q
  1. Clinical features, symptoms and complications of para- and retropharyngeal
    abscesses
A

Symptoms:

  1. throat and neck pain,
  2. foreign-body sensation,
  3. difficulty in swallowing,
  4. swelling of the lateral or posterior pharyngeal wall,
  5. laryngeal/oropharyngeal edema;
  6. thick speech,
  7. trismus,
  8. torticollis,
  9. fever,

Complications:

  1. oropharyngeal and laryngeal edema,
  2. choking.
  3. septicemia,
  4. mediastinitis,
26
Q
  1. Pathogens of tonsillitis and pharyngitis, indication of antibiotic treatment
A

Pathogens:

Viral (80-90%);

  1. adenovirus,
  2. rhinovirus;
  3. (EBV - infectious mononucleosis);

Bacterial:

  1. Streptococcus pyogenes - follicular tonsillitis;
  2. Group C and G Streptococci;
  3. Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Neisseria subspecies;
  4. (Pneumococci);
  5. (Haemophilus influenzae);
  6. (Moraxella catarrhalis);
  7. (Staphylococcus subspecies);

Antibiotics:

  1. bacterial infection - physical findings,
  2. laboratory findings (blood count, CRP, ESR, rapid bacteriological test),
  3. acute or chronic infection,
  4. presence of immunosuppression
27
Q
  1. Precancerous lesions of the oral cavity and oropharynx
A
  1. Erythroplakia,
  2. Leukoplakia,
  3. Lichen planus
  4. Naevus
  5. Spongiosus albus mucosae
28
Q
  1. Causes of chronic hoarseness (Why is it necessary to visit an ENT specialist
    after 3 weeks of hoarseness?)
A
  1. Acute and chronic inflammations of the larynx;
  2. Benign laryngeal lesions (cysts, granulation, Reinke edema, polyps, papillomatosis);
  3. Malignant laryngeal lesions;
  4. Recurrent laryngeal nerve paresis, (which can be caused by: hypopharyngeal, thyroid gland, esophageal, pulmonary, mediastinal cancer, intracranial diseases);
  5. GERD;
  6. It is exceptionally important to diagnose a malignant lesion as soon as we can.
29
Q
  1. Symptoms of laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancers
A
  1. Hoarseness;
  2. Dyspnea;
  3. Dysphagia;
  4. Loss of body weight
  5. Globus feeling;
  6. Hemoptoe;
  7. Referred ear pain;
  8. Neck lump.
30
Q
  1. Swollen neck lymph nodes – causes:
A
  1. Non-specific inflammations (e.g. upper respiratory tract infections);
  2. Specific inflammations:
  3. 1 Bacterial (4): TB, syphilis, cat scratch disease, tularemia,
  4. 2 Protozoal: toxoplasmosis,
  5. 3 Viral: HIV-infection,
  6. Non-infectious: sarcoidosis;
  7. Lymphomas;
  8. Metastases of head and neck cancers
31
Q
  1. Evaluation of neck lumps – diagnostic steps
A

1.Correct, accurate registration of patient history: e.g. duration of symptoms, upper respiratory tract infections, dysphagia, hoarseness;
2. Careful ENT examination – special attention should be paid to the examination of the neck: localization, consistency, sensibility of the lump, its relation to the
surrounding structures;
3. Blood tests: inflammation markers, serology;
4. Imaging modalities: ultrasound, CT/MRI;
5. US guided Fine Needle Aspiration Biopsy;
6. For lymphadenomegaly, excision of the node is carried out only if the evaluation
of the FNAB reveals lymphoma (or, if it is needed by the pathologist).

32
Q
  1. Causes of dyspnea in the upper respiratory tract
A
  1. Upper respiratory tract infections (tonsillitis, epiglottitis, laryngitis);
  2. Lumps in the upper respiratory tract: abscess, granulation tissue, malignancies;
  3. Foreign body;
  4. Stenosis
  5. Non-specific reactions of the upper respiratory mucosa: allergy, Reinke edema, hereditary angioneurotic edema;
  6. Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy.
33
Q
  1. Middle-aged, smoker patient presents with unilateral ear pain, but the
    examination of the ear does not reveal any disorders. What may be the cause,
    and what is obligatory to be examined?
A

Unilateral, referred ear pain is a typical finding in patients with hypopharyngeal (less commonly supraglottic and oropharyngeal) malignancies. This symptom and the tobacco use in the patient history make the examination of the oral cavity, oropharynx/hypopharynx, larynx and the neck obligatory

  1. unilateral ear pain: hypopharyngeal (less common: supraglottic and oropharyngeal) malignancies
  2. symptom and tabacco smoke = examination of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx, larynx and neck OBLIGATORY!!
34
Q
  1. Management of choking patients – if intubation cannot be carried out
A
  1. Cricothyrotomy – in the lack of time and appropriate tools: we find the cricothyroid ligament above the cricoid cartilage (using fingers), and after carrying out a transversal incision on the skin, we pierce the ligament with any instrument at hand, and insert a holed tool (e.g. outer tube of a pen).
  2. Tracheotomy – After incising the skin and the platysma, we find (and if necessary- ligate) the isthmus of the thyroid gland, and - at the 2nd or 3rd tracheal cartilage -we make an incision on the anterior wall of trachea (in childhood) or remove a part of the cartilage (in adults). We insert a tube/cannula in order to maintain the free airway.