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Emergency Medicine: Abdominal, Head, Back, Pediatrics

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Term
Definition
Percentage of ED visits abdominal pain comprises?   5-10%  
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What is the goal of Dx abdominal pain in the ED?   Rule out any life threatening disease  
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3 types of abdominal pain   1) Visceral 2) Somatic 3) Referred Pain  
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Generated by stretch receptors, dull, achey, cramping. What kind of pain?   Visceral  
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Receptors located in parietal peritoneum, sharp, discrete, localized. Responsible for palpation, guarding, rebound. What kind of pain?   Somatic  
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Discomfort perceived at cutaneous site is distant from diseased organ. What pain?   Referred  
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Initial approach to abd pain?   Determine stability!  
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4 things not to miss in the elderly: (or anyone really)   1) AAA 2) Mesenteric Ischemia 3) MI 4) Aortic Dissection  
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Deleted...Bad card   Sorry!  
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Biggest risk factor for AAA?   SMOKING  
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Rebound tenderness hallmark of _____________?   Peritoneal irritation  
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One thing you should get for every abdominal exam?   Rectal exam  
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T/F: Appendicitis will not always have rebound tenderness   True, retrocecal appendix requires a rectal exam  
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Most common cause of abdominal pain in the ED?   Non-specific abdominal pain  
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T/F: Chest XRAY is more helpful than a Abdominal XRAY in abdominal complaints   True, CXR helps Dx pneumonia, pleural effusion, and other pulmonary causes of abd pain. Abd XR helpful with intestinal obstruction  
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Free air on CXR?   Viscous rupture --> Surgery!  
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RUQ pain? Best imaging/testing for evaluation?   Ultrasound  
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Unclear abdominal etiology? Best imaging/testing to figure it out   CT can make Dx 95% of the time  
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When is angiography used in abdominal complaints?   Reserved for mesenteric ischemia or GI bleeding  
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What routine labs are used in helping Dx abdominal pain?   NO ROUTINE LABS, must be indicated in some other part of a condition  
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Important for a decision to discharge with abdominal pain complaint?   Patient able to take fluids  
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Anorexia and periumbilical pain followed by nausea. RLQ and vomiting in 50%. One of the most common surgical emergencies. Initial Tx? (3)   Appendicitis; Tx: NPO, Intravenous fluids, Surgery consult  
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Poorly localized, crampy pain with change in bowel habits, diffusely tender and distended with high pitched bowel sounds. Dx? Tx? (4)   Intestinal Obstruction; Dx: Abdominal XRAY: dilated loops of bowel w/ air-fluid levels. Tx: NG tube, IVF, surgical consultation, admission  
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Burning epigastric pain, sharp, dull, achy, empty, hungry. RF? (4)   PUD (Pelvic Ulcer Disease); RF: H. pylori, NSAIDs, smoking, hereditary  
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Sudden and severe abdominal pain. Pain may subside, then return after peritoneal secretions dilute the leaking gastric contents. Upper abdominal tenderness w/ rigidity of the abdomen will be present   Perforation  
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Tx for Perforated Peptic Ulcer (4)   NG tube, IVF, IV ABX, immediate surgical consultation  
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Steady, deep discomfort in LLQ, low grade fever, localized tenderness, rebound and guarding, left sided pain on rectal exam, occult blood. Dx? Tx? (3)   Diverticulitis; Dx: CT: Pericolic fat stranding; Tx: Metronidazole IV 500 mg and Ciprofloxacin IV 400 mg, IVF, NPO  
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Pain occuring in discrete episodes usually after eating a meal; Female, 40, fertile, fat, upper abdomen but usually localizes RUQ referring to scapula. Dx? Tx?   Biliary Colic; Dx: U/S: gallstones, dilated gallbladder or cystic duct; Tx: Disposition depends on exact etiology, but surgical consultation and pain control  
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RUQ or epigastric pain radiating to the back or shoulders. Initially dull and achy, later sharp and localized. Pain lasts longer than 6 hours, N/V, anorexia, fever, chills. Dx?   Acute Cholecysitis; Dx: U/S RUQ thickened gallbladder wall, sonographic Murphy's sign, HIDA (hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid) scan.  
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Severe abdominal pain of sudden onset radiating to back, confined to low back, groin, genitalia, flank. Discrete palpable abdominal mass. Unequal lower extremity pulses palpated. Cullen Sign, Grey-Turner's Sign, Dx? Tx (4)?   Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA); Dx: CT eval of choice, but may be unstable and resort to ultrasound. Tx: IV access, lab studies, type RBCs, emergent surgical consultation  
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Cullen's Sign   Periumbilical ecchymosis  
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Grey-Turner's sign   Flank ecchymosis  
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Consider in all elderly patients w/: AFib, recent MI, atheroscelrosis, CHF, digoxin, hypercoag, prior DVT, liver disease; sudden, severe, diffuse abd pain in mid/lower abdomen. May not look sick. Pt out of proportion to exam, unrelieved by narcotics. Dx   Mesenteric Ischemia; Dx: CT angiogram  
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Alcoholic w/ gallstones, severe hyperlipidemia; severe epigastric pain radiates toward back, N/V. Can present RUQ. Low grade fever, resp Sx -> pulm effusion, tachycardia, HypoTN, Cullen/Grey-Turner. Tx? (2) What do you not give unless severe?   Pancreatitis; Tx: NPO, IVF, no ABX unless disease severe  
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What should be considered in any women of child-bearing age that presents w/ abdominal pain? Amenorrhea, abd pain, vaginal bleeding. What should confirm (2)? ED management? (2)   Ectopic pregnancy. Preg test and U/S looking for free fluid or adenexal mass. M: large bore IVF, emergent OB consult and admission  
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Sudden unilateral lower abd or pelvic pain radiating to back, groin, flank. Hx of ovarian abnormalities. Dx? Management?   Ovarian Torsion Dx: U/S, but negative imaging CAN NOT rule out torsion. M: OB/GYN surgical consult  
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Most common cause of N/V?   Viral gastroenteritis  
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T/F: Most N/V requires intervention   False, most cases are self-limiting  
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2 ways emesis triggered?   Multiple medullary neurons activated in sequential fashion (chemoreceptor trigger at postrema of 4th ventricle), and vagal activation  
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Unpleasant sensation preceding vomiting. Sx? (2)   Nausea; Sx: hypersalivation and repetitive swallowing  
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Pain preceding N/V indicative of   obstruction  
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Fever and diarrhea indicative of   Acute gastroenteritis  
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High urine specific gravity indicative of   dehydration  
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Ketones in urine indicative of (2):   1) Diabetic ketoacidosis 2) Hyperemesis gravidarum  
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Secretory diarrhea w/ significant dehydration, not usually associated w/ fever or abd pain. Management?   Viral Gastroenteritis; M: self-limiting and requires only supportive care  
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Inflammatory or secretory diarrhea, possibly dysentery. Define dysentery. Tx? ()   Bacterial Gastroenteritis; Dysentery: abd pain, bloody diarrhea, anorexia, dehydration/wt loss, stool Cx. Tx: supportive/hydration status/IVF, careful administration of ABX (Cipro)  
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Most common UGI bleed   Peptic Ulcer Disease  
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What should you do if someone is coughing up or vomiting bright red blood? (3) What if it is significant?   Large bore IV, NPO, surgical consult; significant: NG Tube  
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Most important lab of UGI bleed? Dx study of choice?   Type and Cross match blood. UGI endoscopy study of choice  
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Decreases the rate of gastric emptying, reduces smooth muscle contraction and blood flow within the intestine. Also suppresses pancreatic secretion   Octreotide  
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Passing of bright red, bloody stools or dark, tarry stools (melena). Common causes (4)   Lower GI bleed. Causes: Diverticular disease, colitis, polyps, malignancies  
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What do you always get with a lower GI bleed? What else will the patient get for Dx and Management? (3)   Digital rectal exam; Imaging (Either angiography, scintigraphy, or colonoscopy), will be admitted and most will go to surgery  
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Initial stabilization procedures for GI bleeding (management) (3)   1) ABCs 2) cardiac monitor 3) 2 large bore IV catheters  
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Difference between primary HA and secondary HA   Prime: HA itself is disease, Tx HA (60%). Second: HA underlying Sx of another disease, Tx disease (40%)  
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>50 yo w/ a new onset of headaches what, generally, is this a strong predictor of?   Intracranial pathology  
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DD: Thunderclap HA (1)   Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH)  
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DD: Worst HA ever (2)   SAH, cerebral venous thrombosis  
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DD: HA in pregnancy (2)   Eclampsia, central venous thrombosis  
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HA w/ change in vision and eye movement pain   Optic neuritis, glaucoma  
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Fever, HA, confusion, seizures, viral, requires LP for Dx   Encephalitis  
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Fever, global HA, stiff neck, photophobia, malaise, LP for Dx (w/in 30 min of arrival)   Meningitis  
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How does cold weather/winter associate w/ HAs?   Carbon monoxide poisoning from heaters  
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3 physical signs of head trauma   Battle's sign, depressed skull, scalp laceration  
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Battle's sign   mastoid ecchymosis or bruising behind an ear  
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Horner's Syndrome   Ptosis (droopy eyelid), miosis (constricted pupil), anhydrosis (can't sweat)  
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Periorbital eccymosis (raccoon eyes) indicates (more specific than trauma)   basilar skull fracture  
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Papilledema on fundoscopic exam reflects:   elevated intracranial pressure (ICP)  
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2 conditions a unilateral red eye (on fundoscopy) indicates. What should you do (during said fundoscopy?)   1) Glaucoma 2) cluster headache; measure IOP  
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CSF otorrhea and hemotympanum suggests   skull fracture  
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CSF rhinorrhea suggests   basilar skull fracture  
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Maneuver for Meningitis   Kernigs and Brudzinski  
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Jolt Maneuver   ask patient to rapidly shake head from side to side. With fever, if this accentuates a HA, "100% sensitive and 54% specific" for meningitis  
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Petechial rash with HA may be indicative of   meningitis  
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Motor deficit? What is very sensitive and well used to test for it?   Pronator Drift  
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What lab test would be elevated in someone with temporal arteritis   Sed rate  
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When can carbon monoxide be incidentally elevated?   In smokers!  
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Xanthrochromia is Dx for what?   SAH (Subarachnoid Hemorrhage)  
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Most widely available and useful neuroimaging test available   Non-contrasted Head CT scan  
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Absolute CONTRA to LP (2)   1) Unequal pressures btwn supra and infratentorial compartments and 2) infected skin over needle site  
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Relative CONTRA to LP (3)   1) ICP 2) Coagulopathy 3) Brain Abscess  
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Main indications for head/brain CT PRIOR to LP (6)   1) immunocompromised 2) known CNS lesions 3) who have had a seizure w/in 1 week of presentation 4) LOC 5) papilledema 6) suspect subarachnoid hemorrhage  
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H/A w/o aura caused by physiological, dietary, environmental aspects   Common migraine  
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H/A w/ aura (transient focal neurological phenomenon such as scotoma [spotted lights]), unilateral and pulsating, N/V, photo/phonophobia, duration 4-72 hours   Classic migraine  
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T/F: Narcotics not generally recommended for migraines   True  
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Tx of migraines (specify that combo she liked IV)   NSAIDs, caffeine, TRIPTANS, ergotamines, Reglan/Decadron/Benadryl cocktail IV  
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HA w/ ipsilateral lacrimation, rhinorrhea, eyelid edema 4-6th decades in life. Sharp/stabbing unilateral pain. Tx? (3)   Cluster HAs; Tx: O2, Triptans, analgesia  
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Bilateral pain with tightness like a band. Tx?   Tension HAs; Tx: NSAIDs.  
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Intermittent sharp pain in head and face, normal neuro exam; Management?   Trigeminal neuralgia: M: refer to Neuro, should include eval for more serious causes  
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SSNOOP red flags...for what?   Headache! Systemic sx, Secondary rf, Neurologic sx, Onset, Older, Positional/Prior HA/Papilledema  
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Major etiology of SAH   ruptured saccular aneurysm  
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African Americans 2x than whites, women> men, >50 yo, as many as 60% die in the first month, smokers and drinkers, coarctation of aorta, HTN. Imaging based off demographics and RF?   SAH; CT head is what we typically use. Gold standard is angiography (CTA or MRA)  
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3 general things we do for SAH in ED.   1) Dx 2) Emergent Neurosurgery Consult 3) Supportive therapy.  
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Classically occurs first thing in the AM or causes pt to awaken. More common in adults? More common in children?   Brain tumors; Supratentorial (Cerebrum) more common in adults. Infratentorial (cerebellum) more common in pediatrics  
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First line imaging for suspected intracranial mass   CT head w/ contrast  
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Unilateral HA, jaw claudication, temporal artery tenderness, blurred vision, ESR> 50, Dx? Tx?   Temporal arteritis; Dx: temporal artery Bx; Tx: High dose steroids  
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HA, diplopia, neurological deficit. Rare. Can be caused by OCPs, sinusitis/mastoiditis/meningitis. Dx? Tx?   Cerebral Venous Thrombosis; Dx: CT Venography or MRI. Tx: anticoagulation  
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HA, N/V, double vision, papilledema. Dx? Tx?   Pseudotumor Cerebri; Dx: LP w/ CSF opening pressure >25 cmH2O. Tx: Diamox or Lasix  
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Tx for acutely ill patients with Encephalitis:   Administration of acyclovir and/or ABX and/or steroids ASAP  
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HA w/ pulsatile pain exacerbated by upright position usually in cervical/sub-occipital position. After previous ER visit or admission (Hint: what happened during that visit?) Tx?   Post-LP HA: Tx: Blood patch  
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Primary vs Secondary Head Injury   Primary: irreversible cellular damage as a direct result. Prevent event. Secondary: Damage to cells not initially injured. Prevent hypoxia and ischemia  
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How to airway control w/ cervical spine immobilization (as seen w/ head injuries)   Orotracheal RSI (Rapid Sequence Intubation  
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Management of circulation in head injury (3 main things)   1) Aggressive fluid resuscitation (doesn't raise ICP) 2) Vasopressors 3) Transfuse if HypoTN and Hct <30  
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Severity of TBI? GCS (Glasgow Coma Score) 14-15, 80% of TBIs, LOC, amnesia, vomiting, diffuse HA   Mild TBI of medium risk  
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Severity of TBI? GCS <9, 40% mortality   Severe TBI  
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T/F: All pediatric patients that come in with a severe head injury should get a CT   FALSE! Should try to avoid if you can since it can lead to blood cancer down the road  
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How do you Dx a TBI?   Concussion Sx Dx! (not CT) (Clinically)  
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What is normal cranial pressure? ICP? What kind of management can help with ICP and how?   Normal: <15 mmHg; ICP: >20-25 mmHg (NOTE: ICP not usually available in EDs and must rely on PE). M: Hypertonic saline improves cerebral cranial pressure (CCP) by lowering ICP by 35%. Mannitol also effective  
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CSF otorrhea and rhinorrhea, Battle Sign, Racoon sign, vertigo, hearing loss, hemotympanum. Prophylaxis?   Basilar fracture w/ dural tear; P: Ceftriaxone 1-2 gm IV  
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Most common CT finding in moderate to severe TBI. What Tx helps?   Traumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. Nimodipine (CCB) reduces death and disability by 55% (reduces vasospasm and free bleeding)  
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Brain anatomy from brain to scalp   Brain -> Pia mater -> Subarachnoid space w/ CSF -> Arachnoid mater -> subdural space -> Dura mater -> epidural space -> skull -> scalp  
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Head injury -> awake lucid interval -> decline in mental status -> alterations of consciousness -> collapse and death. Often associated w/ skull fractures   Epidural hematoma  
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Sudden acceleration-deceleration injury w/ tearing of bridging veins   Subdural hematoma  
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Disruption of axons in white matter and brainstem. Injury occurs immediately and is irreversible. Usually left in a persistent vegetative state. What are some examples where this occurs? (2)   Diffuse Axonal Injury; MVC or shaken baby syndrome  
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What percentage of people recover from a concussion after 1 year?   85-90%  
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First of all, what direction is axial or an axial load. What vertebrae is vulnerable to it? What is the fracture of that vertebrae called? Stable/unstable?   Axial load is when the head comes down caudally. C1 is vulnerable and it is called a Jefferson's Fracture. Extremely unstable  
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What is C2 vulnerable to? What is that fracture called? Stable/unstable?   Hyperextension; Hangman's fracture. Unstable  
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Strong flexion of the vertebrae forces a wedge shaped fragment to break off body. Stable/unstable?   Flexion teardrop injury. Unstable.  
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Direct blow to the back of the neck or MVC causes what fracture? Stable/unstable?   Clay Shovelers fracture (abrupt flexion of head in opposition to strong supraspinous ligament resulting in avulsion fracture). Stable  
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Name for flexion distraction fractures   Chance Fracture  
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No motor or sensory function below injury level   Complete SCI (Spinal Cord Injury)  
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Any Sensory/motor function below level of injury   Incomplete SCI (Spinal Cord Injury)  
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Descending motor pathway. What spinal tract?   Corticospinal tract  
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Pain/temperature. What spinal tract?   Spinothalamic tract  
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Vibratory/proprioception. What spinal tract?   Dorsal column pathway  
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Primary spinal injury is   a mechanical injury  
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Secondary spinal injury is (3)   vascular abnormalities/free radicals/inflammation etc.  
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Which tracts are injured during an incomplete SCI that is anterior spinal cord syndrome?   Corticospinal and spinothalamic  
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Where is the injury during an incomplete SCI that is a posterior spinal cord syndrome?   Dorsal column  
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Decreased strength and pain/temperature of upper extremities compared to lower extremities due to hyperextension injuries or _____ spinal stenosis   Incomplete SPI: Central cord syndrome; central spinal stenosis  
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Affects the transverse hemisection of spinal cord. Ipsilateral loss of motor function and contralateral loss of pain/temperature sensation. Cause?   Brown Sequard Syndrome (Incomplete SCI); Penetrating injury or lateral cord compression.  
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Phenomenon charcterized by loss of all spinal cord function caudal to level of injury: flaccid paralysis, hypotonia, areflexia, priapism, venous pooling. Outcome?   Spinal Shock; spastic paresis and hyper-reflexia  
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Type of distributive shock characterized by loss of adrenergic tone due to sympathetic denervation: HypoTN, Bradycardia, Hypothermia classic triad. Management? (3)   Neurogenic Shock; IVF, Vasopressor support, atropine  
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First management other than ABCs with spine injury?   Immobilization  
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T/F: No difference in immobilization with a cervical collar than there is with a cervical collar and spine board   FALSE, there is significant improvement w/ both  
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Indications for spinal XR (4)   TRAUMA: 1) midline tenderness 2) Neuro deficits 3) altered consciousness 4) Intoxicated pts  
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What view exposes 90% of cervical spine fractures on XR? What must be seen to be considered an adequate XR?   Lateral C-Spine XR; Top of T1 must be seen  
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Which is better for detecting C-spine injuries: Nexus or CCR (Canadian C-Spine)?   Canadian C-Spine  
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3 high risk factors based on CCR chart (rules in needing radiography)   1) >65 yo 2) Dangerous mechanism 3) Paresthesias in extremities  
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5 low risk factors based on CCR chart (rules out needing radiography)   1) simple MVC 2) sitting position in ED 3) Ambulatory at any time 4) Delayed onset of neck pain 5) absence of midline C-spine tenderness  
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How do steroids effect spinal cord trauma?   Inhibit free radical induced lipid peroxidation  
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Why is the use of methyprednisolone controversial in spinal cord trauma   Linked w/ increased mortality in isolated head injury  
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T/F: About 90% of all LBP episodes will resolve within 6 weeks regardless of treatment approach or lack of treatment   True  
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Most common cause of disability in people younger than 45 yo   Low back pain  
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5 DDs where Sx of these DDs are red flags in a low back assessment   1) Cauda Equina Syndrome 2) Spinal fracture 3) Cancer 4) AAA 5) Infection  
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Dull and achy, exacerbation w/moving, relieved w/ rest, no radiation, no dermatomal pattern, normal DTRs (Benign or malignant?)   Benign Sx of LBP  
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Irritation of sciatic nerve passing under ________ muscle --> pain on resisted abduction/external rotation (Patrick maneuver)   Piriformis syndrome  
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Subtle presentation: pain w/ walking (shopping cart sign), mistaken for claudication. Management long term?   Lumbar Spinal Stenosis; Ortho consult if progressive long term  
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Tx for benign backpain (4)   Cortico dose pack, NSAIDs, Flexiril (muscle relaxer), minimal pain meds if any  
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Urinary retention/incontinence, saddle anesthesia. Where is the injury below? Management?   Cauda Equina Syndrome; Injury below L1; orthopedic or neurosurgical emergent consult and MRI  
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Most common aneurysm of arterial tree. 50% mortality if ruptured. Usually presents as flank pain or a painless throbbing mass. Can complain of back pain or syncope. Dx? Tx? (5)   Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA); Ultrasound! Tx: 1) O2 2) Two large bore IVs 3) Cardiac monitoring 4) BP control 5) Surgical consult  
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T/F: Observation of the child is more predictive of serious illness than standard PE techniques   True  
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Breathing Red flags (3)   1) RR >60 <2 yo; 2) RR >40 >2 yo; O2 <92%  
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#1 cause for pediatric cardiopulmonary arrest? 4 causes of that?   Primary Respiratory Disturbance; 1) Localized infxs 2) Asthma 3) Upper Airway Obstruction 4) Sepsis  
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Airway management in alert vs lethargic child   Alert: Allow child to maintain position of comfort. Leth: head tilt/chin tilt and padding under shoulder so head flops back  
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Medications for imminent respiratory failure in a child (2)   1) Albuterol 2) Nebulized epinephrine  
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Initial fluid support for peds not in shock but that need a bolus. Boluses in shock?   20 cc/kg; 60cc/kg  
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What is the Broselow Pediatric tape used for? (3)   estimates weight, doses, and equipment sized based on heights  
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Tachypnea, tachycardia, oliguria, mottled extremities, altered mental status. Late sign?   Pediatric shock; HypoTN is a late sign in children...30-50% acute blood loss!!!  
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Acute wt loss, sunken eyes, dry mucous membanes, delayed cap refill, tachycardia. Cause? Best Tx(s)   Dehydration: CV emergency! Cause: V/D. Best Tx: water by mouth, but IV indicated if necessary. Odansetron if necessary (they have dissolving tablets  
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Base dehydration based off of these 3 things   1) Mucus membranes 2) cap refill 3) pulse  
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Respiratory Sx: tachypnea, wheezing, rales, rhonchi, poor feeding, sweating or color change. Hepatomegaly, weak pulses WORSENING W/ FLUID ADMINISTRATION. Tx? (3)   Congestive Heart Failure; Tx: Furosemide, Digoxin, Dopamine  
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Causes of CHF in: 1 day old, 2 weeks, 10 years +   PDA (patent ductus arteriosus), Coarctation of the Aorta, Rheumatic Fever  
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Describe the steps of the hyperoxia test for CHF (3)   1) Obtain room air ABG 2) administer 10 min of 100% O2 3) repeat ABG will be unchanged (pts w/ CHF will have unchanged ABG)  
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Apnea in infants: Definition   D: cessation of breathing for 20 seconds  
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Apnea with stressors such as scolding: Definition. Tx?   Breath Holding Spells; D: transient episodes of breath holding up to 1 minute; No intervention required  
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inspiratory stridor, dyspnea, tachypnea, nasal flaring, retractions   Upper Airway Obstruction  
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Classic association of stridor? Dx?   Epiglottits (rare now), but lateral neck XR will show thumb sign  
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Main Tx for anaphylaxis other than ABCs (4)   Epinephrine, H1 blockers, corticos, H2 blockers  
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Abrupt complete obstruction w/ protracted course of wheezing. Management:   Laryngoscopy or bronchoscopy for removal  
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Which side does a lower airway foreign body usually choose? Tx?   Right side; bronchoscopy  
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Barky cough w/ retraction and tachypnea but no hypoxia; Imaging? Dx? Tx?   Croup; Imaging: AP XR w/ steeple sign. Dx: Clinical Dx. Tx: Nebulized racemic epinephrine, albuterol if that epi doesn't work  
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What must you do if you give epinephrine?   Observe child for 2 hours to ensure there is no rebound  
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Main indications for hospitalization for croup (3)   1) No improvement w/ Tx 2) Decreased LOC 3) Family unable to care for child  
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Sudden onset w/o barking cough, drooling, febrile. Prevalence? Etiology? Tx?   Epiglottis; Rare due to Hib vaccine. Tx: DO NOT agitate child w/ exams/labs/Tx  
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"hot potato" voice, no barky cough, fever, drooling/difficulty swallowing   Peritonsillar or Retropharyngeal Abscesses  
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Acute lower respiratory tract infection in December. Etiology? Management?   Bronchiolitis; E: RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus). M: Supportive care, albuterol trial ONLY if benefit is noted.  
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Wheezing, cough, SOB, chest tightness. Loud biphasic (ex and inspiratory) wheezing (most severe obstruction may be absent). Tx? (FOR ACUTE)   ACUTE Asthma 1) SABA (albuterol) 2) Ipratropium (anti-cholinergic) 3) Magnesium sulfate  
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Pediatric Glascow Coma scale score that indicates intubation?   < 8  
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Seizures that are precipitated by fever   Simple Febrile Seizures  
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Focal or prolonged or multiple seizures   Complex Febrile Seizures  
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Major seizure cause in younger children   metabolic disturbance  
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New seizure evaluation labs (5)   CBC, CMP, CSF, EEG, U/A  
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Local warmth, erythema, refusal to move limb, knees and hips most commonly affected. Etiology for Neonates? Adolescents? Tx?   Septic Arthritis; E: N- S aureus or GBS OR A- gonorrhea. Tx: IV ABX for at least 3 weeks and ortho admission  
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Most common cause of acute hip pain. Inflammation --> arthralgia/arthritis, presents as limp. Low grade fever. Recent viral infection. Tx?   Toxic synovitis; Tx: NSAIDs and rest  
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Difference between Septic Arthritis and Toxic Synovitis Dx   Septic Arthritis: ESR>40, WBC>12,000  
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Fever, warmth, erythema, swelling; usually hematologic spread involving femur, tibia, humerus (long bones). Etiology? Etiology w/ foot wound? Initial Imaging? Tx?   Acute Osteomyelitis; E: staph aureus. Puncture: Pseudomonas; Imaging: XR initially, MRI after). Tx: IV ABX 4-6 weeks  
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When is endoscopy indicated regarding GI foreign bodies?   3 days (only 2 days w/ a battery  
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Microangiopathic, hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, acute renal failiure often following viral/bacterial illness. Can develop bloody diarrhea/prodromal gastroenteritis. Etiology?   Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS); E.coli 0157:H7  
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Lab evaluation for HUS (4). Tx? (3) What to avoid?   CBC, elevated creatinine, U/A, stool Cx. Tx: supportive, steroids, dialysis. Avoid: anti-motility, ABX  
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Polyuria, polydipsia, V, altered mental status, Kussmaul breathing, sweet odor, hypovolemic. Tx?   Diabetic Ketoacidosis; Tx: Fluid resuscitation and small dose insulin  
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Tx of cerebral edema (HA, V, worsening altered mental status, sudden onset)   Osmotic diuresis (mannitol which lets tissues shrink)  
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