Vitamins, Mineral & General Principal Flashcards

1
Q

What electrolytes does the low volume state have?

A

Increased total Na+ (NET)
Decreased serum Na (dilution effect)
Decreased serum K+
Increased serum pH

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2
Q

What serum pH does the low volume state have?

A

Alkalotic (due to H+/K+ exchanger)

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3
Q

What serum pH does emesis have?

A

Alkalotic because you vomit out HCl-

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4
Q

What serum pH does diarrhea have?

A

Acidosis because stool has bicarb

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5
Q

What is a possible cause if pulse rises more than 10 bpm in repositioning from lying to sitting?

A

Hypervolemia

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6
Q

What happened if your pulse drops more than 10 bpm on standing?

A

Autonomic dysfunction

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7
Q

What are the symptoms of a Low Energy State?

A

CNS: Mental retardation, dementia
CV: heart failure, pericardial effusion
Muscle: weakness, SOB, vasodilation, impotence, urinary retention, constipation

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8
Q

What are the Rapidly Dividing Cells of the Energy State?

A
Skin: dry
Nails: Brittle
Hair: Alopecia
Low Bone Marrow: Suppressed
Vasculature: Endothelium breaks down
Lungs: Infection / SOB
Kidney: PCT effecfted first
GI: N/V/D
Bladder: Decreased tone
Sperm: Decreased
Germ Cells: Predisposed to cancer
Breasts: Atrophic
Endometrium: Amenorrhea
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9
Q

What are the most common signs of the Low Energy State?

A

Tachypnea and Dyspnea

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10
Q

What are the most common symptoms of the Low Energy State?

A

Weakness and SOB

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11
Q

What are the most common infections of the Low Energy State?

A

UTI and respiratory infections

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12
Q

What is the most common cause of death in the Low Energy State?

A

Heart Failure

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13
Q

Explain Restrictive Lung Disease:

A

Restrictive: Interstitial problem that causes trouble breathing in (small stiff lungs)
Pulmonary Function Test’s: FEV1/FVC greater than 0.8, decrease vital capacity
ABG: decreased pH, decreased PO2, decreased PcO2 (increased respiratory rate)
Chest X-Ray: reticulonodular pattern, ground glass appearance
Most common cause of death is Cor-pulmonale
Treatment: PEEP ventilator, increased O2, increased respiratory time

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14
Q

Explain Obstructive Lung Disease:

A

Obstructive: Airway structure problem that causes trouble breathing out (mucus filled lungs)
PFT’s: FEV/FVC is less tha 0.8, increased RV; Reid index increased (thick airway)
ABD: decreased pH, normal to low PO2, increased PCO2
Most common cause of Death is Bronchiectasis
Treatment: ventilator to increase respiratory rate and expiratory time, increase oxygen only if needed

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15
Q

What symptoms does a “more likely to depolarize” state have?

A

Brain: Psychosis, seizures, jitteriness
Skeletal Muscle: muscle spasms, tetany
Smooth Muscle: diarrhea, then constipation
Cardiac: tachycardia, arrhythmia

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16
Q

What symptoms does a “less likely to depolarize” state have?

A

Brain: lethargic, mental status changes, depression
Skeletal Muscle: weakness, SOB
Smooth Muscle: constipation then diarrhea
Cardiac: hypotension, bradycardia

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17
Q

What is the humoral immune response?

A

B-cells and PMN’s patrol the blood looking for bacteria

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18
Q

What is the cell-mediated immune response?

A

T-cells and Macrophages patrol the tissues looking for non-bacteria

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19
Q

What are the Macrophages called in areas of the body?

A
Blood: Monocytes
Brain: Microglia
Lung: Type 1 Pneumocytes
Liver: Kupffer cells
Spleen: RES cells
Lymph: Dendritic cells
Kidney: Mesangial cells
Peyer's Patch: M cells
Skin: Langerhan cells
Bone: Osteoclast cells
Connective Tissue: Histiocytes, Giant cells, Epithelioid cells
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20
Q

What is the CBC for every basculitis?

A

Decreased: RBC and platelets
Increased: WBC, T-Cells, Monocytes, Schistocytes, ESR

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21
Q

What is the time course of the inflammatory response?

A

1 hour: swelling
Day 1: PMN’s show up
Day 3: PMN’s peak
Day 4: Monocytes/Macrophages and T-cells show up
Day 7: Monocytes/ Macrophages and T-cells peak, Fibroblasts arrive
Day 30: Fibroblasts peak
Month 3-6: Fibroblasts complete scar formation

22
Q

What state does Estrogen mimic?

A

The Neuromuscular disease state

Estrogen is a muscle relaxant

23
Q

What do high GABA levels lead to?

A

Bradycardia, lethargy, constipation, impotence, memory loss

24
Q

What determines the prognosis of Cancer?

A

Depth of invasion, any choice that has to do with depth - the deeper it is= the worse the prognosis

25
What ion has the least movement at rest?
Chloride
26
What ion has the greatest movement at rest?
Potassium
27
How would you know the patient has a Vitamin A (retinoic Acid) Deficiency?
Poor night vision, Hypoparathyroidism, dry skin
28
How would you know the patient has a Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) Deficiency?
Beriberi, Wernicke's Encephalopathy, Wenicke-Korsakoff Syndrome
29
How do i know the patient has a Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin) Deficiency?
Angular Cheilosis
30
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin B3 (Niacin) Deficiency?
Pellagra (4 D's: Diarrhea, dermatitis, dementia, death)
31
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin B4 (Lipoic Acid) Deficiency?
No deficiency state
32
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin B5 (Pantothenic Acid) Deficiency?
No deficiency state
33
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin B6 (Pyridozine) Deficiency?
Peripheral Neuropathy
34
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin B9 (Folate) Deficiency?
Megaloblastic anemia, hypersegmented neutrophils, neural tube defects
35
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin B12 (Cyanocobalamin) Deficiency?
Megaloblastic anemia, hypersegmented neutrophils, Neuropathy
36
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid) Deficiency?
Scurvy
37
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin D Deficiency?
Rickets (children), Osteomalacia (adults)
38
How do I know the patient has a Vitamin E Deficiency?
Increased free radical damage, hemolytic anemia, ataxia gait, impaired position and vibration sense
39
What happens when there is a biotin Deficiency?
Loss of carboxylase function
40
How do I know the patienthas a Vitamin K Deficiency?
Bleeding, Loss of gamma-carboxylation
41
What is seen in Calcium deficiency?
Poor bone and teeth development
42
What is seen in Magnesium deficiency?
Loss of kinase function, hypoparathyroidism
43
What is seen in Zinc deficiency?
Dysgeusia, anosmia, Poor wound healing
44
What is seen in Copper deficiency?
Menky Kinky Hair Syndrome
45
What is seen in iron deficiency?
Anemia
46
What disease has a chromium deficiency?
Diabetes
47
What disease has a Selenium deficiency?
Dialted cardiomyopathy
48
What is seen with Tin deficiency?
Poor hair growth
49
What is seen why Molybdenum deficiency?
Lose xanthine oxidase function
50
What is seen with Manganese deficiency?
Lose xanthine oxidase function
51
What is seen with Fluoride deficiency?
Poor teeth and bone growth