Random facts_2 Flashcards
MEN I
- what types of cancers
- which gene?
MEN I
3 Ps:
- Parathyroid
- Pituitary
- Pancreas e.g. insulinoma
Also:
- adrenal and thyroid
Gene: MEN1
MEN II
- what types of cancers
- which gene?
MEN II
2 P’s
- Parathyroid
- Phaemochromacytoma
- Medullary Thyroid
Gene: RET oncogene
MEN III
- what types of cancers
- which gene?
MEN III
1 P
- Phaeochromocytoma
- Medullary thyroid
- Marfanoid body habitus
- Neuromas
Gene: RET oncogene
In the picture of haemolytic anaemia, what does it mean that reticulocytes are within normal range?
Reticulocytes within normal range = acute, not chronic
(so anaemia was not going on for a long time - as no immature RBCs release)
What are these blood results suggestive of:
- raised bilirubin
- inflammatory picture
Haemolysis
*if additionally, decreased Hb = haemolytic anaemia
What is causative organism:
CAP Pneumonia + erythema multiforme
Mycoplasma pneumonia
(atypical pneumonia)
Atypical picture of pneumonia with:
*acute haemolysis
*erythema multiforme
Does atypical pneumonia respond to penicillin or cephalosporins?
No, they lack peptidoglycan cell wall
Management of atypical pneumonia:
- doxycycline or a macrolide (e.g. erythromycin/clarithromycin)
Where the tumour is located if:
- high level of dexamethasone will suppress ACTH secretion
- high level of dexamethasone would not suppress ACTH
High-dose dexamethasone suppression test
- if pituitary source then cortisol suppressed
- if ectopic/adrenal then no change in cortisol
Organisms responsible for exacerbations of COPD
The most common bacterial organisms that cause infective exacerbations of COPD are:
- Haemophilus influenzae (most common cause)
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Moraxella catarrhalis
Respiratory viruses account for around 30% of exacerbations, with the human rhinovirus being the most important pathogen.
Management of acute exacerbation of COPD
- increase frequency of bronchodilator use and consider giving via a nebuliser
- give prednisolone 30 mg daily for 7-14 days
- it is common practice for all patients with an exacerbation of COPD to receive antibiotics. NICE do not support this approach. They recommend giving oral antibiotics ‘if sputum is purulent or there are clinical signs of pneumonia’
- the BNF recommends one of the following oral antibiotics first-line: amoxicillin or tetracycline or clarithromycin
CURB 65
Criterion Marker C Confusion (abbreviated mental test score <= 8/10) U urea > 7 mmol/L R Respiration rate >= 30/min B Blood pressure: systolic <= 90 mmHg and/or diastolic <= 60 mmHg 65 Aged >= 65 years
What electrolyte imbalance may occur with dehydration?
Hypernatraemia
Management of hypernatremia
- aim for reduction of sodium <12mmol/day (therefore <0.5mmol/hour)
- IV 5% dextrose can be used slowly, (risk correction of sodium too fast = fluid shift -> cerebral oedema)
- If sodium >170 mmol/l or haemodynamically unstable then IV 0.9% NaCl -> this would correct the sodium more slowly and prevent cerebral oedema
Following MI, on discharge from the hospital, patients should be prescribed what drugs?
- dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin plus a second antiplatelet agent)
- ACE inhibitor
- beta-blocker
- statin