Misc Flashcards
Primary risk factors for heart failure in the US are…
CAD, smoking, HTN, DM, Obesity
H&P findings that raise likelihood of CHF
Myocardial Infarction
Crepitations (crackles in lungs)
Edema
Peri-op drugs in CHF
if well-tuned, continue all of them
- What is the WHO definition of anemia for men and women? At altitude? For smokers?
men - 13 women - 12 altitude - correction ranges from adding up 0.2 g/dL to the cutoff for people living at 1000 m to 4.5 g/dL for those living at ≥4500 m smokers - smoke up to 1 ppd -0.3 smoke 1-2 ppd -0.5 some more than 2 ppd -0.7
- What proportion of preoperative patients are likely to have anemia? What proportion of these will be iron-deficient?
34%
75%
- With what adverse postoperative outcomes is preoperative anemia associated?
bood transfusion, mortality, prolonged LOS, morbidity
- But certainly mild preop anemia is no big deal?
preop anemia, even to a mild degree, is independently associated with an increased risk of 30-day morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery.
- The international consensus statement recommends screening anemia in surgical cases with what level anticipated blood loss?
500ml+
- What is ferritin?
Ferritin is a blood cell protein that contains iron. A ferritin test helps your doctor understand how much iron your body is storing.
- What is transferrin?
a protein of the beta globulin group which binds and transports iron in blood serum.
- How can iron deficiency anemia be diagnosed?
Serum ferritin level < 30 lg.l!1 is the most sensitive and specific test used for the identification of absolute iron deficiency. However, in the presence of inflammation (C-reactive protein > 5 mg.l!1) and/or transferrin saturation < 20%, a serum ferritin level < 100 lg.l!1 is indicative of iron deficiency.
10 (there is no 9). What are the benefits of treating preoperative anemia?
reduced morbidity, mortality, transfusions