CTC Lecture Notes
CTC Lecture Notes
CTC Lecture Notes
2016-10-17
Orientation [Silas Taylor]
How do clinicians think? [Arvin Damodaran]
Hypothetico-deductive method
Theres a lot of info in how patients answer you as well as in the answers
themselves.
Case 1
DDx
Headaches
o Tension-type headache
Stress-induced
o Cluster headache
o Migraine
Common particularly in females of this age
Infections
o Meningitis
o Sinusitis
o Otitis media
Raised ICP
o SAH (subarachnoid haemorrhage)
o Intracerebral haemorrhage
Trauma
Intracerebral infarction
o Stroke
Trigeminal neuralgia
Temporal arteritis
Drugs
o Alcohol
Hx
HPC
o
o
o
o
o
S
O
Timing
Triggers
C
R
A
o
o
o
Systemics
Meningitis: neck stiffness, rash
Clarify meaning
Progression
T
E
S
PMH/Surg
o Has it happened before
o Risk factors:
HTN
Meds/All
o
FHx
o
SHx
o Alcohol, smoking, recreational drugs
o Lifestyle
Sleep
Hydration
Diet
o Occupational
DDx #2
Include
o Red flags:
Intracranial mass
Subarachnoid some people might not have typical
thunderclap headache
o Migraine
But why late onset (first severe one now)
o Etc.
Exclude
Ix
Vitals
o Pulse
o Temperature
o Blood pressure
o RR
o Level of consciousness
Cranial nerve exam, especially:
o Slit lamp or fundoscopy (for ICP)
Dilated pupils
Papilloedema difficult to diagnose
Peripheral nerve exam or walking
o Stroke
Meningitis
o Kernig's sign, Brudzinski's sign
Lie down vs stand up
Exam
Exam findings
Alert, GCS 15
BP 151/86
o DDx: pain, stress (e.g. hospital environment)
Pulse 82/min
Nil significant photophobia
No neck stiffness
PEARL
No papilloedema
o Though it often takes hours to develop so does not rule out
intracranial mass
Rest of CN exam normal
Gait normal
Provisional: migraine
Exclude: subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke, malignancy
Red flags
Stroke, subarachnoid
Space-occupying lesion (not completely ruled out)
Meningitis
Management
Analgesia
Imaging
o CT?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Case 2
DDx
Tension-type headache
Medication-related
Red flag: intracranial mass
Management
Do we need CT?
Inform and educate
o Chances of tumour
o Symptoms and signs to note, upon which pt should re-present
o Risk of finding an incidental-oma w unnecessary testing; chance of
finding cause of headache is low, but chance of finding another
abnormality is high; cascade of ensuing consequences e.g.
investigations and management and exposure to further risks
o Discuss all these w pt so that they can make an informed decision
whether to do a CT scan, to delay considering the scan, or to do it
now.
Px request
Case 3
DDx
Additional questions
Neurological syptoms
Hx of trauma
Symptoms of GCA
o Scalp tenderness
o Visual
o Jaw claudication
o Fever
Symptoms of polymyalgia rheumatic
o Pain and stiffness of shoulder and pelvic girdle muscles over past
few weeks to months
o Fatigue
o Weight loss
Medications (especially blood thinners)
PMH including past haemorrhage, PMR, cancer
DDx
Metastases
Subdural
Intracerebral haemorrhage
Exclude: stroke
Exam
2016-10-21
Approach to a patient with a fluid balance problem
[Rohan Gett]
Numbers
3L of fluid/day
1ml of urine/kg/hr
1-2 mmol Na/kf/day
1 mmol K/kg/day
4:2:1 = 70kg 110ml/hr
o 4 ml of fluid for first 10 kg
o 2 ml of fluid for next 10 kg
o 1 ml of fluid for remaining kg
3L fluid 125mL/hr
o Use crystalloid (cheap, effective)
o
o
o
Continuing
Serum magnesium
Resuscitation
o
o
o
o
Definitions
Assessment
History
o Previous deliveries, anaesthetics, bleeding, ICU
o Specific complications
o Medical records
Examination
o Heart and lungs
o Signs of failure
o Pre-eclampsia
o Other
Investigations
o Bloods including FBC, Group and Hold, Coags, functional clotting
and platelet function
o MRI
2 patients
Bleeding
Specialised resources
o Environment tertiary centre
o Equipment cell saver, rapid infusor, access
o Staff obstetrics, neonatology, anaesthetics, haematology, often
gynae-oncology / general surgeons
Avoid:
o Shock
Secondary to, potentially: anaesthesia, haemorrhage, spinal
cord hypoperfusion (and other forms of
neurogenic/cardiogenic/iatrogenic obstructions)
Defining shock
Initial diagnosis
o Based on clinical recognition of inadequate perfusion and ?????
Types of shock
o Septic delayed treatment, unrecognised infecton
o Hypovolaemic e.g. haemorrhagic
o Obstructive tension PTx (pneumothorax), cardiac tamponade
o Cardiogenic coronary artery thrombus
o Neurogenic upper thoracic and higher SCI (spinal cord injury)
Haemorrhage
Definition
o A rate of loss >150ml/hr
o Paeds >20 to 40ml/kg
Classes of haemorrhagic shock
o Blood loss tennis scores
Compression
o E.g. direct (at the site) or aortic
Packing
Realign / reposition
o E.g. fractures
Tourniquet
Haemostatic agents
Etc.
Balloon tamponade
o Bakri intrauterine
o REBOA resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta
Embolization / interventional radiology
Surgical ligation
o Cautery, diathermy, topical agents
Etc.
Physical measures
o Bimanual pressures (uterine fundus and cervix)
o Aortic compression
o Uterine balloons
o Compression sutures
o Arterial ligation
o Embolization
o Hysterectomy
People needed
2 anaesthetists
Surgeons / obstetricians
o Most experienced available
Assistants
o Anaesthetic technicians / nurse
Theatre nurses
Orderlies
o Transporting blood products and tests
Equipment needed
Critical physiological
derangement
Temperature
Acid-base status
Ionised calcium
Haemoglobin
Platelet count
PT / INR
APTT
Fibrinogen
< 35
pH < 7.2, BE > -6, lactate > 4
mmol/L
< 1.1 mmol/L
< 70 g/L
< 50 x 109 /L
> 1.5 x normal
> 1.5 x normal
< 1.0 g/L
Preoperatively
o Emergency contingency plan
o Patient close to planned hospital of confinement for duration of third
trimester
Estimated date of confinement (EDC)
o Optimisation of maternal Hb and iron stress
E.g. through transfusion or oral supplementation
o Antifibrinolytics
Associated with some pro-coagulant thrombotic risk
o Consideration of ureteric stenting
Prophylaxis to protect them e.g. leading to iatrogenic renal
failure
o Interventional radiology salvage device placement / preembolisation
o Team training and simulation
o Multidisciplinary care in a specialised centre
Intraoperatively
o Rapidly available blood products
o Point of care testing and targeted therapy (ROTEM) tranexamic
acid (TXA), fibrinogen, recombinant factor VIIa
o Ability to deliver and manage high volume transfusion team work,
rapid infusor
o Cell salvage appropriate draping
o One more!
Postoperatively
o Ongoing transfusion management as required
o Intensive care with capacity for all organ supports
o Multidisciplinary specialised care
o Debriefing, reporting, critical analysis and research
Written
- Specific concerns
- Progress notes
- Discharge summaries
- 1x results
- Information booklets
- Referrals to allied health/
other HCPs
Oral
- Calling consults
- Handovers between diff
HCP / departments
- Multi-disciplinary meetings
- Families
- Getting advice / second
opinions
Educatio
n
Admission notes
Operation reports
Student assignments
Case reports
Research
Audits
A medical history
As a senior medical student quickly present the case to a busy ED staff
specialist for advice about who to call.
Patient notes: write up the hospital admission so the team on in the morning
has an accurate record of your assessment and plan
PC
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
HPC
o
PMHx
o
Surg
o
o
Meds
o
All
o
FHx
o
SHx
o
o
o
o
Pain
Site: in stomach, under ribcage
Onset: Last night, woke him up & cannot go back to sleep
Character: Colicky
Radiation:
Associated Sx: nausea
Timing:
Exacerbating: nothing makes it best or worse, tried
quickies/aspirin/panadol
Severity: 8-9/10 (last night), 6/10 (now)
Never happened
Asthma as a child and now only wheezy cough upon sickness
Fractured ankle (at 14)
Projectile vomit as a baby
Tetracyclines
Parents dead; father: stroke (87), mother: AMI (70 something)
Diet:
Pizza and cake at sons birthday last night
Pretty good otherwise
A lot of take-away lately (more fatty foods than usual
Exercise:
Smoke: 30 per day for 30 years
Alcohol: 5-6 beers on the weekend and around one here and there
o
o
o
Learning
AMPLE
o A: allergies
o M: medication
o P: past history (med, surg)
o L: last ate and drank
o E: events
SNAPPS
o Mnemonic for a learner-centered model for case
o S: summarize briefly the history and findings
o N: narrow the differential to two or three relevant possibilities
o A: analyse the differential by comparing and contrasting the
possibilities
o P: probe the preceptor by asking questions about uncertainties,
difficulties
33 yo male
5 day history of feeling hot & cold, headache, generalised myalgia, nausea
At the onset of his illness, he also had a sore throat for two days but this
settled
The headache and nausea has been gradually worsening which prompted
his presentation
o Common: sinusitis
o Red flag: meningitis
DDx (in order of likelihood):
o ILI
o Meningitis (ask about neck stiffness, photophobia, rash; primary
symptom is bad headache)
o STIs
o LRTI lower on list
Past health
o Appendicectomy age 10
o Idiopathic epilepsy diagnosed at age 16
Controlled w carbamazepine for past 10 yrs
Social history:
o Married, 2 children
Family well except 3yo daughter who had 3 day illness with
fever, sore throat and irritability just prior to the onset of the
patients illness
^ very helpful!!!
o Financial advisor
o Travelled to Bali with family two months ago.
Working through
Immediate DDx
o ILI (influenza-like illness)
o Meningitis
Screen with headache! If no headache then dont need to ask
other symptoms
o Skin
o UTI
o STIs
o Gastro
o Resp
Age
o <65 more likely virus
o 65 or more more likely bacteria, more likely respiratory/skin
Gender
o Female more likely UTI
o Male
Case 2
19 yo male
One week hx of sore throat, headache, fever, generalised myalgia and
arthralgia, tiredness
On the day prior to presenting he notices a rash over his trunk
o May be due to antibiotics (EBV and taken amoxicillin; this specific
combination)
o Red blotches on chest and back, slightly itchy
DDx:
o Meningitis
o EBV most likely thus far
o RRV/Barmah forest
o ILI
o Influenza
o HIV
o STIs
o Malaria
o SLE
o Dengue
o Zica
Sexual
Past health
o Hep C diagnosed one year ago; has mild abnormality of LFTs
Social history
o Single, gay male, frequent unprotected sex with casual partners
o Works in engineering company
o Occasional use of cocaine, including injecting
Physical examination
o Bilateral inflamed tonsils
o Tender cervical lymphadenopathy
o Tender splenomegaly (2-3cm)
o Rash erythematous, maculopapular lesions on trunk
Initial investigations
o Normal Hb and platelets
o Total WCC 21,000; 40% lymphocytes; atypical lymphocytes
o Mild mixed LFT abnormalities (cholestatic enzymes raised unlike
past LFTs)
DDx:
o EBV still much more common despite his history;
o HIV - 1 in 100 for gays and only 20% will present with
seroconversion illness
Working through
HIV
o
EBV
o
Inhale
Recurrent laryngeal nerve close epiglottis
Increase intrathoracic pressure (abdominal muscles etc.)
Explosive release of air
Classification
Subacute? 2 to 8 weeks
Case 1
Robyn, started about 3 wks ago and getting worse in past few days
Wakes her up at night and too tired to work
Onset (trigger/timing)
o Night waking them up: could be manifestation of PND
o Medications: ACEI (5% of people with cough are due to ACEI)
Characteristics
o Moist vs dry
o Blood
Tuberculosis, carcinoma
o Sputum quantity and quality
clear: non-infective
Purulent (browny, yellowy, greeny): infections often bacterial
Assoc Sx
o Pain
Pleuritic vs non-pleuritic
o Fever
Allergies
o Perhaps asthma-related (e.g. pollen), cats
Smoking Hx
Exposure to asbestos, dust etc.
Further history
Initial sore throat [ie pharyngitis] and feeling generally unwell about 10
days ago. Hurt to swallow for a few days
She does not own a thermometer so does not know if she had a fever
Still coughing and feeling unwell
Has tried OTC cough medicine
o Cough medicine OTC often does not have much effect
Usually well
No known allergies
Takes only propranolol 10 mg daily for migraine
Never smoked
Married w two adult children (live away)
Husband is an architect
Owns a cockatiel
Hypotheses
Red flags
Haemoptysis
Investigations
Provisional diagnosis
Asthma
Explaining to patient:
Suggested management
Adults
o Asthma
o Rhinosinusitis
o ?? reflex??
Etc.
Neoplasia
o Even in non-smokers, esp. small cell
Parenchymal disease
o COPD, fibrosis, bronchiectasis, sarcoid
Infection
o TB, pertussis
Cardiovascular disease
o LVF, thromboembolism
Cough
Is common
Chronic persistent cough >8 weeks
Explore causes
Retain a list of worrying symptoms
Think of medication reactions
Keep an open mind
Where any contact with sterile items, sterile tips etc. is unavoidable
or inevitable
Standard aseptic non-touch technique (standard ANTT)
o Used when performing simple, short and uninterrupted procedure
o Requires non sterile glove and aseptic field
o Procedures where contact with critical sterile points is evitable
o
Types of wound
Epithelial = pink
Granulation = red
Slough = yellow
Infected = green
Ascar? = black
Acute
o Local inflammation
o Increased exudate
o Pus formation
o Pain
o Heat
o Systemic: increased temp, malaise
o Increased WCC
o Culture?
Chronic
o ??
Infection Control
Sources of information
o Policies see intranet
o Infection control communication sheets
o Flagging system of patient front sheet - Alert box on CR1
Majority of hospital acquired infections are preventable
Infection control breaking the chain
o infectious agent reservoirs portal of exit means of
transmission portal of entry susceptible host infectious
agent (cycle)
o infectious agent e.g. MRSA (methicillin resistant staph aureus)
o reservoir e.g. flagged patient
o means of transmission e.g. hands, environment, equipment
o portal of entry e.g. wounds, basic dermoses (cannulas, catheters)
o susceptible host e.g. immunosuppressed, most of patients in
hospital
Infection control process
o Two-tiered approach
o Etc.
Hand hygiene 5 moments
Biomed viva
Overview:
o 4 stations
o Scientist and clinical examiner
o Questions about specific discipline in a clinical context
o Scans, x-rays, histology
Station types
o A: Campus-based Anatomist + Hospital-based clinician
o B: Examines knowledge gained from hospital diagnostic laboratory
visits and laboratory medicine. Staffed by any Campus-based
Biomedical Scientist + Hospital-based Haematologist/Clinical
Chemist/ Microbiologist/ Immunologist/ Anatomical Pathologist
Phase 3 ICE
Three components
Etc.
History
o Describe
o Tap out
Words mean different things to different people
Correlation between palpitations and arrhythmia not good
Examination
o Pulse
Irregularity may be normal in quite a few children and
young people. With age, irregularity increasingly becomes a
sign of abnormality.
o JVP
o Auscultation
o BP
Investigations
o ECG
o Holter
o Longer-term recording options
o Assessment of co-morbidities (echo, angiography etc)
Management
o Reassurance
o First do no harm
o Anticoagulation issue
o Beta-blockers
o AAD
o Interventional EP