Week 1 Critical Illness/Ischemic Heart disease Flashcards
A 55-year-old patient with no history of diabetes presents with stress-induced hyperglycemia in the ICU. Which of the following mechanisms predominantly contributes to this condition?
Complicated hormonal, cytokine and nervous system signals on glucose metabolic pathways
–> insulin resistance in liver & skeletal muscles
In critically ill patients, tight glycemic control targeting a blood glucose level of 80 to 110 mg/dL has been reconsidered because:
-found an increase in hypoglycemia & mortality
-2009 NICE SUGAR study no longer recs 80-110
-140-180 is current accepted range
Sick euthyroid syndrome in critically ill patients is characterized by
- significant depression of T3 across all stages
-nonspecific alterations in thyroid hormone concentrations in patients who do not have intrinsic thyroid dysfunction that relate to the severity of the critical illness.
-systemic reaction involving immune and endocrine systems
-Decreases in serum gonadotropin sex hormone concentrations, T3/T4
-increased adrenocorticotropic hormone, and cortisol
A patient in the ICU is diagnosed with relative adrenal insufficiency. Which of the following is the most likely cause?
impaired response to corticol at the tissue level due to sepsis
Other: impaired pituitary ACTH release, decreased adrenal responsiveness to ACTH, reduction in cortisol synthesis, impaired cortisol transport, impaired response to cortisol at the tissue level
Acute renal dysfunction (AKI) in ICU patients is most closely associated with:
hypotension, sepsis and nephrotoxic agents
RF: age, baseline CKD, Oliguria, sepsis
A 40-year-old male is admitted to the emergency department following a high-impact fall. He presents with severe hemorrhagic shock and a systolic blood pressure of 70 mm Hg. How could tranexamic acid be used in this scenario?
-Only admin if injury <3hrs ago, SBP < 75. 1g over 10 min followed by 1g over 8hrs
antifibrinolytic to bind with plasminogen to prevent activation to plasmin, interfering with the process of clot lysis. This slows bleeding. Part of evidence-based guidelines for adult trauma patients in severe hemorrhagic shock with known predictors for fibrinolysis or documented on TEG.
A 45-year-old female patient is undergoing an emergency laparotomy because of a ruptured ectopic pregnancy. During the procedure, she experiences substantial blood loss. What is the most likely complication arising from this scenario, and what is the recommended initial management strategy?
Hemorrhagic Shock/coagulopathy treated with MTP
Mgmt: PRBC, control bleeding source. Early use of blood products over crystalloid. Permissive hypotension until bleeding is controlled. Correct hypothermia, acidosis, hypocalcemia, coagulopathy. Consider MTP.
Fulminant hepatic failure in a patient can lead to (11):
MODS/death
encephalopathy —> high ICP, cerebral edema, sepsis, ARDS, hypoglycemia, coagulopathy, GI hemorrhage, pancreatitis, and ARF
In managing pain in critically ill ICU patients, which of the following is a significant consequence of unrelieved pain?
–Catabolic hypermetabolism leads to hyperglycemia, lipolysis, and muscle wasting.
-chronic pain, PTSD, and low health-related QOL.
-Increased catecholamines-> vasoconstriction and impaired tissue perfusion/O2 delivery.
-Impaired wound healing and higher risk of infection
A 60-year-old male, who has a history of chronic kidney disease, has been admitted to the ICU after undergoing major abdominal surgery. Postoperatively, he exhibits oliguria and a notable elevation in serum creatinine levels. What is the most likely diagnosis based on these findings, and what are the key elements of the initial management approach?
-AKI/ARF on CKD, optimize HDs and avoid nephrotoxic agents
-treating the cause (hypotension, sepsis, nephrotoxic meds) and avoiding further injury
-HD/CRRT
A 65-year-old patient with a history of ischemic heart disease is scheduled for elective surgery. During the preoperative evaluation, which of the following factors would most significantly increase the patient’s risk of perioperative myocardial ischemia?
silent MI
Other:
a. Unstable coronary syndromes
b. Acute or recent MI with evidence of important ischemic risk based on clinical symptoms or noninvasive study
c. Unstable or severe angina
d. Decompensated HF or hx of HF
e. dysrhythmias: symptomatic ventricular dysrhythmias in the presence of underlying heart disease or high degree AV block
F. Severe valvular disease
g. Mild angina
h. Old MI with pathological Q waves
I. DM
J. Renal insufficiency
K. Age
L. pHTN
M. Poor functional capacity (<4METs)
A patient with a history of coronary artery disease is undergoing elective surgery. To minimize the risk of stent thrombosis, perioperative management should prioritize:
continue ASA id DAPT stopped
(1) timing of the operation after PCI, also called the PCI-to-surgery interval
(2) continuation of dual antiplatelet therapy
(3) perioperative monitoring strategies
(4) anesthetic technique
(5) immediate availability of an interventional cardiologist
— delay elective sx (BMS 4W, DES 6-12mon)
Which of the following best describes the pathophysiology of stable angina pectoris in a patient with ischemic heart disease?
partial occlusion or significant (>70%) narrowing of a segment of coronary artery.
Angina pectoris reflects intracardiac release of adenosine, bradykinin which stimulate cardiac nociceptive and mechanosensitive receptors whose afferent neurons converge with the upper 5 thoracic sympathetic ganglia and somatic nerve fibers in the spinal cord and produce thalamic and cortical stimulation that results in angina. These substances slow AV conduction and decrease cardiac contractility which improve the balance between myocardial O2 supply and demand. Atherosclerosis is the most common cause.
A 70-year-old patient with ischemic heart disease presents with an acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Which of the following is the most likely underlying pathophysiological process?
Ruptured atherosclerotic plaque w/ subsequent thrombus rupture
Rupture of atherosclerotic plaque> release of vasoactive substances> activation of plts and coagulation cascade
During an ischemic episode in a patient with IHD, which of the following ECG changes is most characteristic of subendocardial ischemia?
-ST segment depression in the area of ischemia that coincides with the timing of chest pain
-may also see T wave inversion (or return to upright T waves if previous MI)