Endocrine emergencies Flashcards

1
Q
29 year old male
18 mile race on hottest day of the year, collapsed
O/E: GCS 10
Ix: low Na, low plasma osmolality
- Cause?
- What is the management?
A

a) Excessive hypotonic fluids
b) Hypertonic saline bolus (3.0% NaCl, 150ml over 20 mins) - rapid fall so rapid correction is permissible (if chronic, risk of central pontine myelinolysis)

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2
Q

20 year old female, taking levothyroxine
O/E: Thin, low BP
Ix: hyponatraemic, low plasma Osm, normal TSH
- Diagnosis?
- Management?
- Gold standard diagnostic test? (after treatment)

A

a) Addisonian crisis

b) - IV hydrocortisone (better than dexamethasone as had mineralocorticoid effects at high doses),
- then maintenance IM hydorcortisone (more stable doses than IV)
- Also fluids - 0.9% NaCl

c) SynACTHen test (test for cortisol rise (>500 = normal)

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3
Q

Headaches, anxiety, dizziness, sweating

  • O/E: BP 220/130, HR 120
    a) diagnosis? - what might preciptate crisis?
    b) management?
    c) investigations?
    d) if extra-adrenal, called..?
A

a) Phaeo (tachy + HTN = phaeo U.P.O)
- crisis might be preciptated by: beta-blockade, bleeding into tumour, abdominal pressure, exercise, urination, etc.

b) - Alpha blockade (e.g. phenoxybenzamine) to lower BP
- then beta-blockade (if at all)
- Definitive: resect tumour

c) 24-hour plasma and urine metanephrines (breakdown products after adrenaline/noradrenaline), after treating
d) Paraganglioma

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4
Q

24 year old woman, sudden headache, neck stiffness, diplopia (CN IV palsy)

  • Ix: mass in pituitary fossa
    a) Diagnosis?
    b) Initial management?
A

a) PItuitary apoplexy (DD: SAH)
- usually history of pituitary mass or signs of hormone excess/deficiency

b) IV hydrocortisone

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5
Q

58 year old woman, low mood, polydipsia, confusion, constipation

a) Diagnosis?
b) What blood tests should you carry out?
c) Rx?

A

a) Hypercalcaemia
b) Adjusted calcium and PTH (low in malignancy, high in primary hyperparathyroidism)

c) IV fluids +/- IV bisphosphonates
- Then investigate for cause

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