Transcript Slide 1

House Officer Preparation
Case study
• 65 yr old female
• Referred by GP ? Appendicitis
• Pt had pain+++ but not many signs so not
sure
• Central and RIF pain
• Now severe – pt moaning
• Sudden onset
• Nausea, no vomiting
• PMH COPD, hypertension, intermittent
claudication
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o/e Confused, moaning, writhing in pain
Clammy, pale
Pulse irreg. irreg. 140
BP 80/40
Approx 50kg
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How do you proceed first?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Give cautious IV morphine
Carry on examination and examine chest
Give O2 15L/min
Insert IV line, take blood and give IV
fluids
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On examination her chest is clear
O2 sats are 84% but erratic
Her radial pulses are not palpable but her brachials are
You should:
a.
b.
c.
d.
Take blood gases from the brachial artery
Take blood gases from the femoral artery
Take venous blood and analyse it instead
Insert an IV line, give fluids, take ABGs later when BP
improved and pulses palpable
• Describe how to take ABGs
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Blood gases show
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pH
pO2
pCO2
HCO3
BE
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This picture shows:
a.
b.
c.
d.
Metabolic acidosis
Respiratory acidosis
Metabolic alkalosis
Respiratory alkalosis
7.30
23.5
2.9
17
-6
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Metabolic acidosis is commonly caused
by
(true or false for each)
a.
b.
c.
d.
Diarrhoea
Vomiting
Shock
Aspirin overdose
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You insert 2 Large bore IV lines
You take bloods and want to start IV fluids
Which of the following would be most
appropriate?
a.
b.
c.
d.
1L Hartmann’s stat
500 mls dextrose saline stat
1L Hartmann’s over 6hrs
250 mls Hartmann’s stat
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On examination
Abdo not distended
Abdo slightly tender in RIF but no guarding
Absent bowel sounds
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She is still in pain, hypotensive and her urine output is low
Which of the following would be the most appropriate analgesia:
a.
b.
c.
d.
Paracetamol
Ketorolac
Morphine
Codeine
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Hb 17
WCC 25
Plt 400
PCV 50%
Na 135
K 2.9
Ur 13
Cr 110
LFTs normal
Amylase 220
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The most likely diagnosis is:
a.
b.
c.
d.
Acute pancreatitis
Appendicitis
Strangulated femoral hernia
Mesenteric ischaemia
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IV fluids have corrected the hypotension.
The medical registrar suggests you give a loading dose
of digoxin and correct the hypokalaemia.
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What would be her normal daily requirement for
potassium
a.
b.
c.
d.
70mmol
30mmol
50mmol
100mmol
• Suggest some fluids to correct her
hypokalaemia
• If she wasn’t NBM what else could you
give her?
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The ideal value above which her serum
K+ needs to be to control her AF is:
a.
b.
c.
d.
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
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Your boss arrives and commends you on an
excellent job keeping her alive. However when
she palpates her abdomen it is now rigid.
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a.
b.
c.
d.
The most likely cause is:
Perforation
Muscle spasm secondary to hypokalaemia
Bacterial translocation and peritonitis
Voluntary guarding
• Your boss tells you to sort the patient for
theatre while she goes to get some coffee
to wake her up.
• What do you need to do?
• You take the patient to theatre and find 2 feet of
ischaemic small bowel which your boss resects.
• She has an uneventful recovery from the
anaesthetic but due to lack of HDU beds has to
go back to a normal ward.
• 20 minutes after you finally get to bed and fall
asleep you are called by the ward saying that
her urine output was 15mls then 0mls in the last
2 hours
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Her minimum acceptable hourly urine
output should be:
a.
b.
c.
d.
35
30
25
20mls / hr
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What should you do?
a. Tell the nurses not to worry – it’s a natural response to
trauma / surgery where you secrete more ADH, and go
back to sleep
b. Ask the nurses to take an order over the phone for
250mls of Hartmann’s stat then phone you back if the
urine output doesn’t improve; go back to sleep
c. Ask the nurses to speed up her fluids to 4 hourly, and
go back to sleep
d. None of the above
• Run through the steps of what to do if a
post op. patient has a low urine output
• The only nurse who can do an ECG is on
her 2hr break. You have to do it yourself.
How?
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You diagnose an MI. How should you
proceed. True or false for each.
a.
b.
c.
d.
Thrombolysis
IV Heparin
LMW Heparin
Aspirin
• You discuss with your boss on the phone
and she says she will talk to the ITU
consultant on call about the possibility of a
bed on ITU / HDU.
• What additional support will they be able
to offer?
• Four days later the patient returns from
HDU. Her clinical picture is good. She
has passed flatus this morning, but your
boss is reluctant to feed her yet. She asks
you to prescribe maintenance fluids for the
next 24hrs
• What is her daily requirement for sodium?
• What is the sodium content of N Saline?
• What is the sodium content of Hartmann’s?
• What is the sodium content of 5% Dextrose?
• What are the other constituents of Hartmann’s?
Table 1 Composition of crystalloid and colloid solutions usually available in hospital
Na+
K+
Cl -
Ca2+ HCO3-
(mmol/l)
(mmol/l)
(mmol/l)
(mmol/l)
(mmol/l)
Ener
gy
(kJ/l)
Crystalloid
Normal saline (NaCl 0.9%)
154
NaCl 0.9%, KCl 0.15%
150
Dextrose - saline (NaCl 0.18%,
dextrose 4%)
30
20
-
Dextrose 5%
-
Dextrose 5%, KCl 0.15%
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Hartmann's solution
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154
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150
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30
-
-
669
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837
-
-
837
-
-
20
20
131
5
111
2
154
0.4
125
0.4
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157
2
118
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-
29
-
Colloid
Gelatine:
Gelofusine
Natural:
Human plasma protein
Fig 1 Early effect of isotonic glucose, saline, and colloid infusion on
intravascular volume, interstitial fluid, and intracelluar fluid
Intravascular
volume (I)
Normal
Plus plasma 1.5 l
Plus 0.9% saline 1.5 l
Plus 5% glucose 1.5 l
Interstitial
fluid (I)
Intracellular
fluid (I)
Estimated blood loss 1000 ml
Estimated blood loss 2000 ml
Estimated blood loss >3000 ml
Fig 2 Examples of fluid therapy in hypovolaemic shock
• What are the dangers of giving too much
N saline?
• Her temperature is 38ºC, how does this
affect how much fluid you should give
• Your team are away at a conference the
next morning.
• You have to do the ward round on your
own.
• What do you want to check?
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On the ward round, one of the nurses points
out that the pt hasn’t had any Clexane since
being transferred from HDU.
What do you do?
a. Nothing – it’s too early post-op, the pt may
haemorrhage
b. Give 20mg Clexane s/c od
c. Give 40mg Clexane s/c od
d. 1mg per kg bd
e. 1.5 mg per kg od
• The patient is still pyrexial.
• What are the possible sources of sepsis?
• What investigations should you do?
• The phlebotomists have been already this
morning so you have to take your own bloods.
What bottles do you need for the tests you have
ordered?
• What order should you fill them and why?
• In general which bottle should not be
underfilled?
• In general which bottle needs to be handwritten?
• Describe how to take blood cultures.
• How do you ensure you get your results
back the quickest?
• Your boss phones you to ask how the patient is
doing. You tell your boss that she has an Hb of
8.9. Your boss tells you not to transfuse.
However after putting down the phone, being an
ultra-sharp PRHO, you remember a reason to
transfuse. What is it?
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How many units should you request?
How?
Why should you not transfuse too much?
What are the risks with transfusion?
• On day 7 post-op you are on nights again and
whilst you, your reg and boss are all scrubbed in
with an emergency aneurysm repair, you are
bleeped to say that your pt has developed chest
pain. Your boss says that she needs you to
retract for another 5 minutes and then you can
go.
• What do you ask the nurse to do in the
meantime?
Sinus tachycardia
What blood tests do you order?
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Following her previous episode of anuria and MI she
has developed renal failure.
Which test do you try and line her up for the next day?
a.
b.
c.
d.
VQ scan
CT pulmonary angiography
Pulmonary angiography
Doppler US scan of her legs
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Radiology confirms PE.
What treatment do you start her on?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Clexane 60mg sc od
Clexane 1mg/kg bd
Clexane 1.5mg/kg od
Warfarin
• How long does she need to be on Warfarin
for?
• How do you decide her daily dose of
warfarin?
• How do you arrange follow up for her INR
check and warfarin dosing