week 1
week 2
week 3
week 4
100

Normal aging (list 3)

-an increase in fat and decrease in total body water 

-atrophy of the brain with a decrease in weight by 7% 

-altered sleep patterns with decrease in stage 3 and stage 4 sleep and more frequent awakenings 

-decreased visual acuity up to 70%, reduced intensity of colour

-decline in hearing acuity, which starts as early as age 12, with a decline in the highest frequency hearing range first 

-altered/reduced taste up to 70% 

-reduced cardiac maximum heartbeat reduced from 195 to 155 bpm 

-reduced renal perfusion each decade up to 50% 

-reduced bone mineralization by up to 10-30% 

-increase in the size of prostate gland up to 100% 

-loss of libido (male and female) and erectile dysfunction (male) and atrophic vaginitis (female) 

100

fever, nausea, change in bowel regimen (constipation, diarrhea, or tenesmus), and left lower quadrant (LLQ) pain, tender LLQ mass and leukocytosis as well  

Diverticulitis Classic presentation

100

Recent guidelines have now focused on WHAT as key factor in determining target A1c in older adults NOT age

 functional status 

independent- less than 7.0, dependent < 8.0, frail < 8.5, end of life do not measure

100

what are the causes of peripheral vertigo and how do we differentiate them

BPPV

Menieres

labryntitis 

200

Rule of fourths

The rule clarifies that changes/decline in function are often attributed to normal aging by the general public (and sometimes by medical professionals caused by:  

  1. disease,  

  1. disuse,  

  1. misuse and  

  1. physiology- about one-fourth of the time for each. 

200

What is the pharm and non-pharm treatment of constipation?


-fluid, exercise, bowel routine,

-fibre first (titrated gradually.. increased 5. g per week) up to 20-30 g /day

-recommended that therapy begin with  

-a bulk-forming agent, (like psyllium) but the patient must be able to drink it with a full glass of water (contraindicated in bedridden, are cognitively impaired, or have other contraindications)  

-then an osmotic laxative (like PEG)

200

DM II over 70 otherwise well + at least a decade of life expectancy should be treated to normal targets

true or false?

TRUE

200

What is the purpose of the hints exam

Central vs peripheral vertigo

Head impulse (none in central) (peripheral corrective saccade)

Nystagmus (central bidirectional) (peripheral- unidirectional)

Test of skew (central vertical saccade) (no skew peripheral)

300

Patho (neurotransmitters) for delirium

Stressors lead to metabolic changes that modify cerebral neurotransmission, ultimately causing cholinergic deficiency and dopaminergic excess

300

What is an example of social, physical, and environmental influences impacting nutrition and feeding problems in older adults

Social: widow, isolation, poverty

environmental: housing, transportation, local resources

physical access: mobility limitations, no driving, no ramp

meds: changes to taste/smell, xerostomia, anorexia

biological: age-related changes, vision, dental, dysphagia

300

what are the ABCDESSS of DM?

A1C less than 7 (most adults), less than 6.5 reduce risk of CKD, frail 7.1-8.5

BP <130/80

LDL < 2 or 50%

Drugs Ace/ARB (if CVD, age ≥55 with risk factors, OR diabetes complications), Statin (if CVD, age ≥40 for Type 2, OR diabetes complications), ASA (if CVD), SLGT2i/GLP1ra with demonstrated CV benefit (if have type 2 DM with CVD and A1C not at target)

Exercise: 150 mins of moderate to vigorous activity + 2-3 X resistance training (health diet like Mediterranean)'

S: Screening: ECG Q3-5 years if >40 or DM complications, Foot Monofilament yearly, Kideny eGFR+ACR yearly, yearly dilated retinal exam

S Smoking cessation

Self-management: get goals

300

Open-angle vs closed glaucoma patho/presentation

-open problem with the balance of aqueous fluid production and draining, increases pressure leading to peripheral loss

Insidious, painless, can be bilateral (usually asymmetrical)

-closed: either chronic or acute- drain angle is closed and becomes blocked resulting in an increase in ocular pressure damage to nerve

Severe eye pain, headache, N/V, decreased vision, halos around light, headache,  

Unilateral (but both eyes at risk) 

*** chronic may not be as obvious 

400

What symptoms of depression are older adults more likely to display

igher tendency for somatic complaints (gastrointestinal primarily), hypochondriasis, and agitation; higher rates of psychotic and severe (melancholic) depression with more weight loss and decreased appetite  

400

How do older adults present differently with appendicitis 

One-fifth of all elderly patients with appendicitis present after 3 days of symptoms and another 5% to 10% of patients present after 1 week of symptoms  

Scoring systems to risk stratify patients don’t have good discriminatory or predictive ability in the elderly. 

Less than one-third of patients have fever, anorexia, right lower quadrant pain, or leukocytosis. One-quarter of patients have no right lower quadrant pain at all 

Keep a high suspicious, liberal use of CT for elderly pts. 

400

A1C >1.5 above target? or if symptomatic

-start metformin + second agent

start insulin +/- metformin

400

COPD when to start ICS

HX of hospitalization of COPDE

> 2 moderate exacerbations in one year

Blod eosinophils > 300

HX of asthma

500

Differentiate between the two types of dysphagia 

Oropharyngeal/transfer dysphagia: characterized by difficulty initiating a swallow.  Swallowing may be with nasopharyngeal regurgitation, aspiration, and a sensation of residual food remaining in pharynx  

-difficulty transferring food from mouth to pharynx and report obstruction in neck, and may point to cervical region as site of S/S 

-common complaints: coughing, drooling, and regurgitation when swallowing liquids or solid food 

Esophageal Dysphagia: characterized by difficulty swallowing several seconds after swallowing and a sensation of food getting stuck 

-may point to suprasternal notch or area behind sternum as site of obstruction 

500

Patients may have a history of long-standing post-prandial abdominal pain or ‘intestinal angina"

SMA (superior mesenteric artery) thrombosis

Mesenteric artery thrombosis (MAT) is a condition involving occlusion of the arterial vascular supply of the intestinal system

500

Which diabetic medication has shown a great safety profile in terms of hypoglycemia and should be selected first

DPP-4 "gliptins"

Dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP)-4 inhibition is a glucose-lowering treatment for type 2 diabetes. The classical mechanism for DPP-4 inhibitors is that they inhibit DPP-4 activity in peripheral plasma, which prevents the inactivation of the incretin hormone Incretins help the body produce more insulin only when it is needed and reduce the amount of glucose being produced by the liver when it is not needed

500

New blood vessels formed under the macula that leak fluid and blood under the macula

Wet MD

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