Risk scores for OSCE Flashcards
What factors need to be asked about in the Diabetes Risk Score Station history?
Age
Gender (M>F)
BMI (High increases risk)
Ethnicity (Kala, Caribbean, South Asian at higher risk)
Pregnancy (increases risk)
Lifestyle factors: poor diet, sedentary, smoking, alcohol, disturbed sleep
PMH: Hypertension, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, Depression +(anti-psychotics increase risk)
FHx- close relative with DM
What are the results for the diabetes risk score and how are they stratified?
0-6= Low Risk
7-15= Increased
16-24= moderate
25-47= High
What factors need to be asked about in the Qrisk2 (risk of CVD in 10 years) score history?
Age
Gender
BMI
Ethnicity
Lifestyle: Diet, Exercise, Smoking, Alcohol
PMH: AF, diabetes, RA, CKD
FHx: angina or heart attack in 1st degree relatives under 60
What are the risk stratifications for Qrisk and what actions should be taken?
<10%- Low Risk
10-20%-Moderate Risk
>20%= High Risk
Above 10% offer lifestyle changes
Above 20% offer a statin
What are the factors to ask about in CHA2DS2Vascs score and how many points are allocated?
Congestive Heart Failure (+1)
HTN (+1)
Age >65(+1) or >75 (+2)
Diabetes (+1)
Previous Stroke/TIA/ or Thromboembolism (+2)
Vascular Disease (+1)
Female Sex (+1)
How are the results of CHA2DS2VascS stratified and how do they guide treatment?
- 0 = low
- 1 = low-moderate (antiplatelet or anticoagulation)
- > 2 = moderate-high (anticoagulation)
What are the factors to ask about for the ABCD2 Risk score station?
Age- >60=+1
Blood Pressure- >140/90=+1
Clinical Features of TIA-
Unilateral Weakness = +2
Speech disturbances without unilateral weakness= +1
Duration of Symptoms-
<10 minutes=0
10-59 minutes=+1
>60 minutes=+2
Diabetes=+1
How is the risk score for ABCD2 Stratified and what are the implications of each score?
0-3= low risk
4-5= Moderate risk
6-7= High Risk
If high risk patient should undergo MRI, Carotid Ultrasound, and Neurology should be consulted
What are the questions for the Well’s Score for DVT?
- Age, gender, BMI
- DVT Px:
o Calf swelling >3cm (+1)
o Entire leg swollen (+1)
o Pitting oedema (+1)
o Localised leg tenderness along the deep venous system (+1)
o Superficial veins (+1) - Bedridden for >3 days OR major surgery within 12wks (+1) [immobilisation]
- Plaster cast (+1)
- Recent travel (+1)
- Previous DVT/PE (+1)
- Contraception, hormone therapy (+1)
- Pregnancy (+1)
- Lifestyle: diabetes, smoking, obesity, immobile
- PMH: cancer, clotting OR bleeding disorders
- FHx
How is the risk stratified for the Well’s Score and what are the treatment implications?
0= low risk
1-2= Moderate risk and a high sensitivity D Dimer should be done
3+= High risk and a diagnostic Ultrasound Scan of the calf is required
What are the questions for the FRAX Score Station?
Age
Gender(F>M)
BMI (low BMI increases risk)
Previous Fracture
Parent Fractured Hip
Bone Mineral Density (DEXA Scan)
Lifestyle: Smoking, Alcohol, Diet, Exercise
PMH: Rheumatoid Arthritis
-secondary osteoporosis e.g. T1DM, malnutrition malabsorption, chronic liver disease
DH: Glucocorticoid Use
How are the results presented for FRAX?
% osteoporosis risk in 10 years
% hip fracture in 10 years
What does the Wells Score Assess?
Risk of DVT
What does FRAX assess?
Risk of Fracture within 10 years
What does ABCD2 score assess?
Risk of further stroke following TIA