All about the heart
Hospitalist
MSK
Instant Recall
Bugs
100
Name 2 absolute contraindications to exercise stress testing.
severe CHF, significant aortic stenosis, myocarditis, unstable angina, acute MI within 2 day, recent PE, BP >200/120
100
A 75-year-old female with dementia is admitted to the hospital with pneumonia.She has baseline urinary incontinence and a urinary catheter was placed in the emergency department.True statements regarding this situation include which of the following? (Mark all that are true.) ○  Urinary catheters are the most common cause of nosocomial infections ○  This patient should be screened halfway through her hospital stay for bacteriuria ○  Urinary catheter reminders and stop orders have been shown to decrease the rate of catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) ○  CAUTIs acquired in the hospital will be covered by Medicare if they occur within the first 2 days of admission
A, C
100
A 5y/o boy p/w acute L anterior thigh and hip pain, had a viral URI 7 days ago. The boy has a low grade fever and cannot bear weight but there is no obvious joint swelling. What is the most likely diagnosis?
Transient (toxic) synovitis. Affects boys twice as often as girls. Most frequently occurs in children aged 3-10 years. Highest incidence rate among causes of nontraumatic hip pain in children (may be limp only). Recent URI/pharyngitis/bronchitis/AOM or GE common. Most sensitive test is the log roll. Difficult to distinguish between septic arthritis (WBC >18) and consider hip aspiration
100
Skin lesion that is found by looking for "ABCDE" and what the letters stand for.
Melanoma: A- asymmetric shape B- borders irregular C- color variegated D- diameter >6 mm E- enlargement of any lesion
100
At what CD4 count do you start prophylaxis for PCP? What do you use? Name 2 out of 3 possibilities.
CD4<200, TMP-SMX, dapsone, or atovaquone
200
22 yo F p/w a history of palpitations. Currently she denies any dizziness or palpitations. You capture the arrhythmia on the monitor in your office: isolated PACs. She is otherwise healthy, does not take any medications and has no FHx of arrythmia. How would you treat this patient?
No treatment unless symptomatic. A beta blocker like metoprolol may help to reduce symptomatic PACs
200
A 58-year-old male with type 2 diabetes mellitus undergoes elective knee surgery. After the surgery he is restarted on all of his usual medications with intensive glucose monitoring. On his first postoperative day he is found to be confused and lethargic with a blood glucose level of 32 mg/dL. When used alone, which of the following diabetes medications can cause this problem? (Mark all that are true.) ○  Exenatide (Byetta) ○  Glipizide (Glucotrol) ○  Insulin glargine (Lantus) ○  Metformin (Glucophage) ○  Pioglitazone (Actos)
A, B, C
200
15 yo F cross country runner p/w knee pain that has been gradually increasing since the start of the season 3 weeks ago. Pain is anterior, mild swelling, + crepitus and pain worse with climbing stairs and running. What is the most likely diagnosis?
Patellofemoral syndrome. Common over use syndrome, F>M, preferred treatment is decreased activity level and quad strengthening exercises
200
S- systemic I- inflammatory R- response S- syndrome List the criteria....
Temp <36C, >38C HR >90 RR >20, or PaCO2 <32 Leukocytes >12000 or <4000 or >10% bands
200
Name the 3 most common causes of CAP?
Strep pneumoniae, H. influenzae, Atypicals
300
Which NYHA class of CHF is a good candidate for spironolactone?
has been shown to reduce mortality in patients with NYHA Class 3-4
300
A 79-year-old mildly demented female is hospitalized with acute diverticulitis. Her home medications include oxybutynin (Ditropan) for urinary incontinence, lisinopril (Prinivil, Zestril), and over-the-counter acetaminophen/ diphenhydramine for sleep. On her second hospital day she becomes more agitated and combative. Which of the following would be appropriate at this time? (Mark all that are true.) ○  Discontinue oxybutynin ○  Discontinue acetaminophen/diphenhydramine ○  Administer lorazepam (Ativan) ○  Administer haloperidol
A, B, D Anticholinergic drugs such as oxybutynin can cause or worsen agitation and delirium, and should be discontinued if such problems arise (SOR C). Diphenhydramine is another drug that has significant anticholinergic side effects and may cause delirium (SOR C). Oral haloperidol is the agent of choice. Intravenous haloperidol may be associated with increased morbidity due to cardiovascular side effects (SOR C). Lorazepam and other benzodiazepines may cause excessive sedation and rebound agitation, and tolerance develops rapidly (SOR C).
300
A 2 yo M BIB by mom for not using his right arm. According to mom, the child was unwilling to leave the sand box and a tug of war ensued with mom eventually picking the child by by his forearm. What happened?
Radial head subluxation (nursemaid's elbow), radiographs are usually normal, reduction is the treatment, child shouild be using the arm normally within minutes
300
What are the indications for emergent HD?
Acidosis, Electrolytes, Ingestion (toxins), Overload (volume), Uremic symptoms (encephalopathy, pericarditis)
300
3 most common causes of bacterial meningitis in neonates (0-4 weeks)?
Group B strep, E.coli and Listeria
400
You have a patient who is mildly hypertensive and decide to check labs. The patient's K is 3.0. What is the most likely cause of his low potassium?
Hyperaldosteronism
400
A 47-year-old female with protein S deficiency presents to the emergency department with acute cholecystitis and is admitted to the hospital. She currently takes warfarin (Coumadin), 5 mg daily, and has a previous history of deep-vein thrombosis and two pulmonary embolisms. Her last pulmonary embolism was 5 years ago. The surgeon consults you about perioperative management of the patient’s anticoagulation. He plans to perform a laparoscopic cholecystectomy tomorrow morning. The patient’s INR on admission was 2.9. Which of the following would be appropriate recommendations? (Mark all that are true.) ○  Administration of vitamin K, 2.5 mg orally tonight ○  Administration of a dose of vitamin K 90 minutes before surgery if the patient’s INR is ≥1.9 at that time ○  Bridge therapy with a therapeutic dose of low molecular weight heparin after the surgery ○  Continued hospitalization postoperatively until the INR is therapeutic ○  Restarting warfarin at the patient’s usual dosage tomorrow evening
A, C, E This patient’s INR should be normalized by the morning of the surgery, so vitamin K the evening before would be appropriate (SOR C). If her INR had not normalized by the morning of the surgery, she should receive low-dose oral vitamin K plus either fresh frozen plasma or another prothrombin concentrate. The patient is considered at high risk for recurrent venous thromboemoblism because of her protein S deficiency, and bridge therapy with low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) or intravenous unfractionated heparin is recommended, starting 24–72 hours after surgery (SOR C). From a cost-containment perspective, the best choice is subcutaneous LMWH administered in an outpatient setting if this is feasible (SOR B/C). When resuming vitamin K antagonists after surgery, approximately 48 hours is required to attain a partial anticoagulant effect, with an INR >1.5. Consequently, the potential effect of these agents to promote postoperative bleeding is likely to be mitigated by the delayed onset of their anticoagulant activity. It is reasonable, therefore, to resume warfarin therapy on the evening of the day of surgery or the next day, with a partial anticoagulant effect anticipated to occur 48 hours later (SOR C).
400
What is the first ligament injured with an inversion ankle sprain?
Anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL)
400
"CRASH and Burn..." is what you look for in this disease.
Kawasaki Disease (aka Mucocutanous Lymph Node Syndrome) C-CONJUNCTIVITIS (EXTREMELY RED EYES) R- RASH (ON BODY) A- ARTHRITIS ( JOINT PAIN) S- STRAWBERRY TONGUE (RED, SWOLLEN TONGUE) H- HANDS (SKIN PEELING) BURN- UNCONTROLLED HIGH FEVER PERSISTING LONGER THAN 5 DAYS
400
Name the organism(s) responsible for toxic shock syndrome.
Staph and strep. TSS is caused by exotoxin made by certain strains of staph and strep. And only certain hosts are thought to be susceptible due to lack of appropriate antibodies. Of note, strep toxic shock usually causes bacteremia, whereas staph TSS does not.
500
Name 3 out of 5 of the "terrible T's" of congenital cyanotic disease
Tetralogy of Fallot Transposition of the Great vessels Total anomalous venous return Tricuspid atresia Truncus arteriosus
500
Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents may be used to treat anemia in patients with nonmyeloid hematologic malignancies. Which of the following should the treating physician be aware of before using these agents? (Mark all that are true.) ○  They increase the incidence of myocardial infarction, stroke, and heart failure ○  They increase the survival rate in cancer patients ○  Patients receiving them during cancer therapy have a slower tumor growth rate ○  The hemoglobin target in renal patients receiving renal replacement therapy (dialysis) is 11.0 g/dL ○  The hemoglobin target for patients with chronic kidney disease who are not on dialysis is 12–14 g/dL ○  Once the hemoglobin target has been reached in patients with chronic kidney disease, the medications should be stopped
A&D. Once erythropoiesis-stimulating agents are started, they should be continued unless the patient’s hemoglobin level is above the desired level (SOR B). These agents actually decrease the survival rate, due to the increased risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, blood clots, and increased tumor growth rates (SOR B). The hemoglobin target in renal dialysis patients is 11.0 g/dL. A higher hemoglobin target may actually increase mortality rates (SOR B). The target hemoglobin rate for chronic kidney disease patients who are not on dialysis is the same as for dialysis patients (SOR B). Once the hemoglobin target has been reached in patients with chronic kidney disease, the medications should be continued at a lower dosage (SOR B).
500
25 yo M p/w a h/o a soccer injury. Someone fell on his R foot while trying to steal a ball. The patient is rapidly and forcefully twisted around the fixed foot. Since then, he has had significant pain and swelling of his midfoot. Xrays show a widened space b/t first and second metatarsals. What does this patient have?
LISFRANC fracture (Lisfranc joint = tarso-metatarsal articulation) These fx are difficulty to identify. 20% are missed in polytrauma patients. Commonly due to twisting or axial loading of a plantarflexed foot. Requires casting (SLC) and NWB for 6-8 weeks. Operative if >2mm displacement as this could lead to significant long term pain if not identified.
500
The TTP pentad
Renal failure Fever Anemia (microangiopathic hemolytic) Seizure (ie. neurologic signs, AMS) Thrombocytopenia - HUS + fever and fluctuating neuro signs - Causes: HIV, pregnancy, lupus, cancer, organ transplant - TOC: plasmapheresis
500
Diarrhea caused by this bug is associated with Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome.
E.coli - usually the strain known as O157:H7.
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