Emergencies Flashcards

1
Q

Components of the Glasgow coma scale

A

Eyes max 4
Verbal max 5
Motor max 6

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2
Q

Metabolic causes of a coma

A
Hypoglycaemia
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Hepatic encephalopathy
Ureamia
Wernicke's encephalopathy/thiamine deficiency.
Hypoxia
Carbon monoxide poisoning
Addisonian crisis.
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3
Q

Definition of a coma

A

Defined via GCS. Unrousable unresponsive

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4
Q

Neuro causes of a coma

A
Trauma
Infection - meningitis, encephalitis
Tumour/SOL
Vascular stroke
Epilepsy - post-ictal.
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5
Q

Management of a coma

A
ABCDE
Support circulation - IV fluids
Oxygen
Protect cervical spine
Treat cause if identifiable - naloxone, IV midazolam, glucose, Pabrinex (thiamine)
Urgent head CT
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6
Q

Mild, moderate or severe head injury on GCS

A
Mild = 13-15
Moderate = 9-12
Severe = 8 or less.
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7
Q

Acute headache differentials

A
Subarachnoid haemorrhage
Raised ICP
Venous thrombosis
Giant cell arteritis
Meningitis
Acute glaucoma
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8
Q

First, worst thunderclap headache ∆ and management.

A

Subarachnoid haemorrhage.
A-E resuscitation, neurosurgical referral ASAP.
Insert peripheral and consider central lines.
0.9% saline 500ml STAT.
Nifedipine to prevent vasospasm
CT scan
Surgical clipping or endovascular coil embolisation.

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9
Q

Unilateral headache and eye pain differentials and managements.

A

Cluster headache - high flow oxygen + subcut sumatriptan.

Acute glaucoma - ophthalmology referral, lie flat, pilocarpine eye drops.

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10
Q

Cough-initiated, worse on lying down (in morning) and bending forward headache differentials and managements.

A

Raised ICP - A to E resuscitation. IV mannitol.

Venous thrombosis.

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11
Q

Headache with fever and neck stiffness differentials and managements.

A

Meningitis - IM benzylpenicillin, IV ceftriaxome.

Subarachnoid haemorrhage - CT head + nifedipine + surgical clipping.

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12
Q

Status epilepticus definition

A

Single seizure lasting longer than 30mins or repeated seizures without full regain of consciousness

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13
Q

Management of status epilepticus

A

ABCDE
Open airway, recovery position, intubate if necessary. 100% oxygen plus suction if require.
IV access and bloods (FBC, LTF, U+E, Calcium)
- Pre-hospital buccal midazolam
- IV lorazepam in hospital
- If seizure continues - IV infusion of phenytoin or diazepam.

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14
Q

Causes of raised ICP

A
Tumour - primary or metastatic
Haemorrhage
Hydrocephalus
Infection - meningitis, encephalitis, brain abscess
Cerebral oedema
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15
Q

Signs of raised ICP

A

headache - worse on bending forward, lying down and cough.
Altered GCS
Vomiting
Pupil change
Papilloedma
Cushing’s response = falling pulse and rising BP

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16
Q

Cushing’s response

A

Falling HR and rising BP

17
Q

Spinal cord compression ∆ and management

A

Cancer patients, spine trauma, intervertebral disc herniation.
Acute onset of back pain, numbest + paraesthesia in lower limbs, weakness, bowel and bladder dysfunction, hyper-reflexia of knee and ankle.
TREAT BEFORE INVESTIGATING - IV dexamethasone, immobilisation, MRI spine.

18
Q

Spinal injury approach

A
  • CABCDE - catastrophic haemorrhage, C-Spine injury.
  • Canadian C-Spine high risk = aged over 65yrs, dangerous mechanisms of injury, paraesthesia of limbs.
  • Maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation.
  • Analgesia - IV morphine.
  • MRI or whole body CT
19
Q

Name a mild traumatic brain injury, ∆ and management

A
Concussion = closed head injury due to a direct blow to head, or deceleration from an impulse force. Changed mental status.
S+S = headache, dizziness, memory dysfunction, nausea, feeling foggy/confused/slow.
Ix = Head CT if fits NICE guidance.
Rx = physical rest, analgesia.