PCM Newer Material Flashcards

1
Q

How does measuring JVP work?

A

Place the pt supine and allow veins to engorge, then put the pt up to 30-45 degrees. have them turn their head to the left and look at their right JV. take a ruler with CM markings and place it at the angle of louie and go horizontally to the halfway point of the JV. Add 5 because the heart is 5 below the sternum

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2
Q

What is a normal range to JVP (including the +5)?

A

0-8

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3
Q

What 2 things could cause an increase of JVD/JVP?

A

SVC obstruction , severe heart failure

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4
Q

What does it mean to have a higher A wave

A

Trouble getting out of the atria.. so Tricuspid/pulmonary stenosis, pulmonary embolism

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5
Q

What does it mean to have a higher V wave?

A

Tricuspid Regurgitation.

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6
Q

What does the JVP waveforms measure side wise?

A

What’s going on on the RIGHT side of the heart

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7
Q

What are the 2 heart sounds and where can you best hear them?

A

First sound = Lub –> closure of the mitral and tricuspid. Best heard at the APEX of the heart

second sound = dub –> closure of aortic and pulmonic valves. Best heard at the BASE of the heart

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8
Q

What is the reason for a systolic murmur + diastolic murmur.

Where are these sounds from?

A

Systolic = between S1 and S2

Flow sucks across the valve or regurgitation so Mitral / Tricuspid regurgitation or aortic/pulmonic stenosis

Diastolic = between S2 and the next S1

Flow sucks across the mitral valve / tricuspid (stenosis) or pulmonic/aortic regurgitation (insufficiency)

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9
Q

What are the grades for a murmur?

A

1 = very faint
2 = quiet but heard with stethoscope
3 = moderately loud but no thrill
4-6 have thrill
4 is loud with thrill
5 is loud with stethoscope partially off chest
6 you can hear it without the stethoscope on it.

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10
Q

What’s the difference between HPI and H&P?

A

H&P is a new patient. it includes HPI and also includes a huge review of systems. it WILL have a CC because that’s how you get into the hospital

it could be a annual checkup, and that won’t have a CC.

HPI is history of present illness. Usually when they present to the hospital and have a chief complaint you’re doing an HPI

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11
Q

What’s included in the HPI and the ROS?

A

HPI has associated symptoms vs ROS is review of systems which talks about symptoms asking about bodily changes that may not be related to the symptoms.

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12
Q

What are the different things we look at for general appearance of the pt?

A
Position
Activity
Posture
Affect
Skin color
Diaphoretic
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13
Q

What activity would you see someone with a kidney stone? appendicitis?

A

restless

still

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14
Q

what posture is not normal?

A

slumped, fetal position

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15
Q

what affect would you see in someone that is sick?

A

grimace, worried, frightened.

furrowed brows

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16
Q

what skin color is considered”sick”?

A

anemic or washed out

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17
Q

What is diaphoretic

A

sweating

may be hot or cold.

the cold is associated with really bad problems.

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18
Q

What are the two problems of urinary origin that we talked about?

A

Cystitis or pyelonephritis

cystitis is bladder localized
pyelonephritis is kidney localized infection

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19
Q

What are the three GI things we talked about?

where are two of them localized?

A

Appendicitis, Collitis, Diverticulitis

appendicitis is localized to lower right. diverticulitis is lower left

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20
Q

What are the 2 things we talked about in the female reproductive system?

what’s the one thing for the male reproductive system?

A

Cyst, Ovarian Cyst Rupture

Prostatitis

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21
Q

What is a possible sign of urinary tract cancer? What are the different categories for this?

A

Hematuria

Gross - can see with naked eye

Microscopic = urinalysis

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22
Q

What are the majority of renal cel carcinomas?

A

clear cell type

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23
Q

What do you want to label your PLAN with?

A

you want to determine the most cost effective with the highest yield and least potential complications first, and go from there on down.

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24
Q

Why is it good to go through a FH?

A

a few types of benign or familial hematuria that could cause it could include other symptoms. blood in the urine sometimes can be associated with something else that they have as a disorder.

like an autoimmune disorder

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25
What is.. hypopnea? Bradypnea? Hyperpnea?
Decreased depth and rate of respiration regular rhythm but slower than normal rate (less than 14) deeper breathing and higher rate (happens during exercise)
26
``` What is.. Tachypnea Dyspnea Hypoxia Hypoxemia ```
rapid breathing (20-25/min) feeling SOB deficiency in amount of O2 reaching tissues oxygen deficiency in arterial blood
27
``` What is.. Apnea Atelectasis Pleximeter finger Plexor finger ```
no breathing collapse of lung tissue that affects alveoli from normal O2 absorption hyperextended middle finger on skin thing that's hitting the pleximeter finger
28
Where is a needle thoracentesis placed?
2nd intercostal space, midclavicular line
29
Where is a chest tube inserted? where is it going if you want to put it in the 5th intercostal space for males and females?
4th and 5th, just anterior to mid axillary line males = just below the nipple females = inframammary fold
30
Where is the neurovascular bundle and why do we care?
runs along the inferior margins of each rib chest tubes and needles need to be placed over the superior margin of the rib to avoid the bundle
31
What are the 5 lines we learned in lab?
``` midsternal line midclavicular line anterior axillary line midaxillary line posterior axillary line ```
32
What is pulse oximetry? what can cause a bad wave form? (4)
measures peripheral arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2) improper placement hypo perfusion, hypothermia, motion artifact
33
What is End Tidal CO2?
concentration of CO2 in exhaled air at the end of respiration. Because CO2 is only a trace gas in the air, the CO2 detected in exhaled air is produced by the body and delivered to the lungs by the blood correlates with PaCO2 normal PETCO2 35-40, normal PaCO2 35-45
34
How does an incentive spirometer work? what does it help with?
completely exhale, put over mouthpiece, breathe in as much as possible, moving the piston. get to the point of the piston that the Dr. recommends, hold for 2-5 seconds atelectasis, treatment and prevention
35
What is a PFT?
shows how well the lungs are working and diagnose obstructive vs. restrictive. there's expensive ones or spirometry spirometry measures lung functions, amount and speed of air inhaled and exhaled
36
What would you inspect for breathing problems with someones skin color?
blue face, nail beds blue, hypoxia
37
What if the trachea isn't midline?
pneumothorax, pleura effusion, atelectasis, mass
38
What are the different accessory muscles used?
sternomastoids, scalene, trapezius, and another one in the abdominal region
39
What causes clubbing of the nails
congenital heart disease, interstitial lung disease, pulmonary fibrosis, CF, cancer, IBD, etc.
40
What are the different shapes of the chest that are considered a deformity
``` Barrel chest pigeon chest funnel chest kyphoscoliosis flail chest ```
41
What is a flail chest?
multiple rib fractures result in weird movements. the injured part moves inward during inhalation and pushes outward during exhlaation
42
If you have asymmetrical expansion of the ribcage what is one reason why?
pleural effusion
43
If you have retraction, what could cause that?
they tighten at the wrong time, severe asthma, COPD, upper airway obstruction
44
What is tactile fremitus? decreased vibration? increased vibration?
balls of your hands or ulnar surface --> 99 or 1-1-1 COPD, pleural changes (effusions, fibrosis, air, infiltrating tumor) pneumonia
45
What are the 5 percussion sounds?
Flat, dull, resonant, hyper resonant, tympanic
46
What can cause dullness?
fluid or solid tissue replaces air. lobar pneumonia, pneumothorax, hemothorax, empyema, fibrous tissue, etc.
47
What can cause hyperresonance
COPD, asthma, chronic bronchitis
48
How do you do diaphragmatic excursion and what can happen if it's abnormal?
exhales completely, percuss the diaphragm (spot where resonant and dullness meet), mark with pen, inhale as much as can, mark diaphragm normal is 3-5.5 Asymmetry one side over the other is pleural effusion high diaphragm could be atelectasis or phrenic nerve paralysis
49
What are the 4 breath sounds? what do they sound like? Best heard? Which ones, if heard more distal, would you suspect air-filled lungs has been replaced by fluid filled or solid lung tissue? When might you have decreased breath sounds?
bronchial: Loud and high pitched. best heard over manubrium bronchovesicular Intermediate in intensity and pitch. best heard in 1st and 2nd interspaces between scapulae tracheal: Very loud and high pitched, heard over trachea vesicular: Soft and low pitched. heard over most of lungs Bronchovesicular or bronchial decreased air flow or poor transmission of sound.
50
What are crackles?
caused by small airway closed during inspiration, "popping" open during inspiration. sounds like velcro pneumonia, CHF, atelectasis, fibrosis, COPD, asthma, etc.
51
What causes wheezing?
rapid airflow through a narrowed bronchial airway
52
what causes stridor?
narrowing of the upper airway. this is emergent
53
What is rhonchi? What is pleural friction rub?
Suggest secretions in large airways sounds like a creaking door. Inflamed and roughened pleural surface grate each other.
54
What is bronchophany? Egophany? whisper pectoriloquy?
spoken words get louder to auscultation E sounds like A whispering words are louder and clearer during auscultation
55
Wha are the ABCs to reading a chest X-ray?
``` Adequate/Assessment, Airway Bones and soft tissues Cardiac size/valves Diaphragms Effusion/ET tube, EKG leads Fields/fissures, foreign body Great vessels, gastric bubble Hilar Masses Impression ```
56
What are the main things to do for an ear evaluation? include hearing and looking
Check the external ear, check for drainage and redness, tenderness of the tragus, can use a puffer to look at the TM normal TM you should see a cone of light and seeing the bony structures. whisper test first, then do weber ring
57
What is the whisper test?
primary test you do for checking hearing loss softly whisper into each ear and ask the pt what was whispered (combination of numbers and letters) normal: patient can repeat sequences after 2 sequences, can identify 3 of the 6. abnormal: incorrectly identifies 4/6 ALSO rub fingers next to one ear as well and ask pt what one it was at
58
What is the Rinne/Weber tests?
Start with weber. if it goes to the affected ear, then go to rinne if to the other side, then it's sensorineural when doing Rinne, if BC>AC, it's conductive hearing loss If AC>BC, normal.
59
What can cause conductive hearing loss? What part of the ear is it associated with? sensorineural causes? What part of the ear is it associated with?
too much wax.. external or middle head trauma, age, ototoxic drugs.. inner ear, cochlear nerve, central brain
60
What are the signs of problems with the tonsils? what's to note about kids?
redness, exudate on them. Kids have huge tonsils
61
What is cobblestoning?
flex colored bumpy. indicative of post nasal drainage. fluid is coming down from the nose and irritating the skin. usually this is caused by allergic rhinitis
62
When do kids get their frontal sinuses?
age 7
63
What swells in the nose and what colors determine what it is?
turbinates. if bluish tint = allergic rhinitis if clear = viral rhinorrhea
64
What are the different lymph node spots that we were taught
``` Preauricular Postauricular Submental Submandibular Tonsillar Anterior Cervical posterior Cervical Supraclavicular ```
65
What are the three main signs of streptococcal pharyngitis? what is it caused by?
biggest is little red bumps on the prepalatine surface exudate on the tonsils, and erythematous in nature. Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus
66
Why can someone have nausea with strep?
pharynx is next to abdominal organs for the homunculus
67
You're more likely to have GABHS if... (6)
``` children 5-15 winter and early months absence of. cough tender ANTERIOR cervical lymphadenopathy Tonsillar exudate Fever ```
68
What do you do if the Centor score is 2 or 3? 4+?
rapid strep in office Treat them regardless
69
What do you use for dx strep? 2 things what about for mono? what do you give for tmt of strep?
Rapid strep = detects presence of group A Throat Culture Monospot test penicillin
70
What does pharyngitis mean? What are the common symptoms for viral pharyngitis?
inflammation of the pharynx with resulting sore throat. it can be viral or bacterial Inflamed mucous membrane, conjunctivitis, fatigue, hoarseness, low grade fever
71
What is Acute otitis labyrinthitis?
inner ear, feeling like vertigo, dizzy
72
What is Acute Otitis Media? what are the different types? what about chronic OM?
inflammation of middle ear caused by bacteria or virus Acute suppurative OM is OM with purulent material in middle ear Serous OM is fluid build up in the middle ear WITHOUT bacterial or viral infection. Chronic OM with effusion happens when fluid remains in the middle ear and continues to return without bacterial or viral infection... they give kids ear tubes to prevent this. Chronic Suppurative OM is persistent ear infection that results in tearing or perforating the eardrum
73
What is Acute Otitis Externa?
Outer ear infection --> swimmer's ear Pt reports drainage from the ear. pain upon touching external ear structures.
74
What is otosclerosis
abnormal bone growth around stapes bone. progressing hearing loss at age 10-30, marked loss occurring during middle age.
75
Conductive / Sensory loss and otosclerosis?
Conductive = Ossicle Sclerosis into a single immovable mass Sensory = otic capsule sclerosis affects males more than females
76
What is Acute Rhinosinusitis What is it caused by sometimes? What are the symptoms?
mucosal lining becomes inflamed by viral or bacterial infections. dental infections thick nasal discharge cough sneezing facial pressure "does it hurt to lean forward"?
77
What is a hallmark for bacterial sinusitis?
Double sickening!
78
What is Croup? caused by?
Bark like cough. Swelling of the larynx, trachea, bronchi causing stridor. caused by parainfluenza, influenza, etc.
79
What is epiglottis? caused by? symptoms?
swelling of epiglottis, caused by type 2 flu or group A strep. toxic appearance, tripod, high grade fever, sore throat, muffled voice this is an emergency
80
What is BPPV?
most common cause of vertigo caused by Canalithiasis (stone preventing endolymph from moving) feeling like you're spinning or that your head is spinning
81
What 2 maneuvers are associated with this?
Dix-hallpike maneuver | Epley maneuver
82
What is the general cause of vertigo
eustachaian tube dysfunction, causes by flu, sinus infection, allergies
83
What is Vestibular Neuritis?
Inflammation of the nerve affects branch associated with balance. results in dizziness or vertigo but NO CHANGE IN HEARING.
84
What is Labyrinthitis?
affects BOTH branches of the vestibulocochlear nerve, HEARING DOES CHANGE as well as dizziness or vertigo.
85
What is Meniere's disease?
disorder in inner ear that causes episodes of vertigo and fluctuating hearing loss ending in permanent hearing, tinnitus, fullness/pressure in ear.. usually only affects one ear.
86
What is the CENTOR mnemonic?
``` C = absence of Cough E = Exudate N = Anterior Cervical Lymph Nodes T = Temp >100.4 3-14 OR old 45+ ``` if 3-14 +1, if 45+ -1
87
What are the two normal heart sounds and where do they come from?
(LUB) S1 = Systolic blood pressure --> closure of the AV valves (DUB) S2 = Diastolic blood pressure --> Closure of the semilunar valves
88
What are the abnormal heart sounds?
S3 = Ken-tuckee normal in children and young adults Vibratory sound that occurs form blood filling the relaxed ventricle. Occurs after S2 S4: Tenness-ee (atrial filling from high pressure from SVC/IVC and pulmonary venous return. Occurs before S1 NORMAL IN ATHLETES
89
What are the listening posts?
All Physicians Take Money 2nd, 2nd, 3rd (erbs), 4th, 5th + midclavicular line
90
What makes murmurs louder or softer (excluding the exceptions)
``` Louder = RINspiration LEXpiration Higher Preload Higher Afterload ``` Softer = Lower Preload Lower Afterload
91
during breathing, which parts become louder or softer? what intercostal space would you listen to?
RINspiration = Inspiration the right side is louder, so Tricuspid + Pulmonic murmurs are louder This would be 2nd and 4th LEXpiration = Expiration the left side is louder. Mitral and Aortic louder This would be 5th and 2nd
92
What is HOCM and how does preload and after load affect its loudness?
HOCM is a hypertrophied septum. Increased preload and after load fixes the problem, so sounds quieter
93
What is MVP, how does preload and after load affect it, and what's the mnemonic to know?
mitral valve prolapse. increasing the preload and after load makes it better so sounds quieter. You'll see Myxomatous Valvular Disease with it. See the MVP, be the MVP and everything will CLICK
94
Aortic Stenosis is caused from what? What is a common sound of this? does it radiate anywhere? Mnemonic
getting old causes calcium deposits inside the valves. Crescendo decrescendo radiates up to Carotid arteries OLD --> SAD Syncope, angina, dyspnea
95
What is the mnemonic for diastolic / systolic murmurs?
Diastolic: Ms. PrArTs Systolic: Mr. TrAsPs
96
Mitral Regurgitation: Phrase to use? Radiation? Best heard where? What kind of sound?
"Rheu-mitral" to the axilla 5th intercostal space and it radiates to axilla holosystolic (TV sound)
97
Tricuspid regurg sound type who usually has it? mnemonic
holosystolic history of ivda Want to TRI some drugs?
98
Aortic Regurg Mnemonic? What does it sound like? What is it presented with usually?
AR thar she BLOWS early blowing diastolic murmur connective tissue disorders, marfan, HEAD BOBBING, femoral bruits
99
Mitral Stenosis phrase to use? Mnemonic?
Opening "Snap" "Rheu-mitral" The OS is MS Opening Snap is Mitral Stenosis
100
What's the order of heart sounds?
S4, S1, S2, S3
101
Umbo?
Where the eardrum meets the tip of the males. from here the cone of light fans downward and anteriorly.
102
What's the handle of the malleus?
Manubrium
103
When can you have a septal perforation?
Meth, cocaine, trauma, surgery
104
How many sets of turbinates are there?
3, inferior, middle, superior
105
What are the 4 types of sinuses? how do you palpate the maxillary ones?
Frontal, Maxillary, Ethmoid, Sphenoid press up on the location
106
What is Aphthous Ulcers? Cheilitis? Gingivitis? Torus Palatinus?
canker sores B12 or iron deficiency, red cracks at corners of mouth swelling or ulcerations gums Benign lump on hard palate
107
Where is an endotracheal tube seen on an Xray?
T4
108
What are the different retraction sites?
Supraclavicular Substernal Intercostal
109
What's the steps to a cardiovascular exam? this is not what you expect
Inspection Palpation Percussion Auscultation
110
How do you inspect for carotid bruits?
use bell of diaphragm, check for bruits AFTER palpating pulse. ask the pt to inhale and hold breath when listening
111
What is Systole and Diastole?
Systole = Ventricular contraction and ejection Diastole = Ventricular relaxation and filling
112
What's the average pulse? which is bounding?
2/4. 4/4 is bounding
113
Allen Test? What does it indicate if there's a problem?
occlude both arteries while pt makes a fist, have the pt open and close fist, palm should be pale. release pressure on ulnar artery and observe color return to hand within 5-10 seconds. Repeat with radial artery INDICATION: lack of dual blood supply to the hand (negative indication for radial catheterization)
114
2,4,6,8 edemas, what is the grade an the times
1,2,3,4 rapidly gone, 10-15 sec, 1 minute, 2-5 minutes