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General Medicine Board Review June 12, 2009 Internal Medicine Morning Report Sally Ravanos, MD

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General Medicine Board Review. June 12, 2009 Internal Medicine Morning Report Sally Ravanos, MD. MKSAP Question #1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: General Medicine Board Review

General Medicine Board Review

June 12, 2009Internal Medicine Morning Report

Sally Ravanos, MD

Page 2: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #1 A 51yo woman with chronic low back pain is evaluated for

a 2-week history of moderate low back pain radiating down her right leg to her right foot following a paroxysm of sneezing. She has no leg weakness or numbness. She is on no meds, and her medical history is only significant for a hysterectomy.

On physical examination, temp is 36.9. Her lumbar paraspinal muscles are tender to palpation. Straight leg test is positive on the right. Her perineal sensation and rectal sphincter tone are intact. She has difficulty extending her right great toe against resistance, but LE strength, sensation and reflexes are otherwise normal. Xray of the spine shows some lower lumbar degenerative changes, but no disc narrowing or vertebral collapse.

Page 3: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #1 (cont’d)

Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?(a) Referral to orthopedics(b) Bed rest for 7 days(c) MRI of lumbar spine(d) NSAIDs(e) Back exercises

Page 4: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #1: D Acute sciatica with L5-S1 nerve root involvement NSAIDs have been shown to provide short-term

symptomatic relief for patients with acute low back pain with or without sciatica

Possible benefit with spinal manipulation, physical therapy, and muscle relaxants

Surgery should only be considered if symptoms persist more than 6 weeks or progressive neurologic deficits develop

Bed rest for 2-3 days may be appropriate for severe pain, but longer can make symptoms worse

MRI is not indicated this early in the course of her low back pain› People who get MRIs are more likely to undergo surgery unnecessarily

Page 5: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #2 A 67 yo man undergoes urgent evaluation for a 2-month history

of low back pain radiating down his right leg that has worsened over the past 3 days, causing him difficulty with walking due to leg weakness. He has also been unable to urinate for the past 24 hours. His medical history is notable for COPD, diabetes mellitus, prostate cancer, and hyperlipidemia. Medications include bronchodilator inhalers, insulin, leuprolide, simvstatin, and aspirin.

On physical examination, he is in obvious discomfort. The temperature is normal, HR 88, BP 148/72. He has severe lower lumbar tenderness to palpation, with no bony abnormalities. Lower extremity strength is 4/5 bilaterally, and straight leg raise is positive on the right. On rectal exam, there is decreased rectal sphincter tone and diminished sensation over the perineal region and buttocks. His prostate is asymmetric and hard.

Page 6: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #2 (cont’d)

Which of the following is the most appropriate diagnostic imaging evaluation for this patient?(a) CT of lumbar spine(b) MRI of lumbar spine(c) Radiography of lumbar spine(d) PET scan(e) Radionuclide bone scan

Page 7: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #2: B Cauda equina syndrome

› Urinary retention› Saddle anesthesia› Radiculopathy› All resulting from epidural spinal cord compression caused by

metastatic prostate cancer MRI =noninvasive definitive imaging study to confirm

spinal cord compression CT does not visualize the spinal cord and epidural space as

well PET, Xray, and bone scan do not have the necessary

anatomic clarity to diagnose spinal cord compression

Page 8: General Medicine Board Review

Definition of Acute Low Back Pain

Defined as pain < 6 weeks in duration Differential Diagnosis

› Mechanical Musculoligamentous injuries/DJD Herniated disks Spinal stenosis Compression fractures

› Nonmechanical Infections Neoplasia Inflammatory arthritis

› Visceral Pelvic organ dysfunction Renal disease Vascular disease GI disease

Page 9: General Medicine Board Review

Diagnosis of Acute Low Back Pain

History and physical Radiographic imaging

› Should be reserved for pts with red flags or those for whom conservative management has failed

› Radiography (AP and lateral)› CT or MRI for herniated disks and spinal stenosis

Should be used only when nonurgent surgery is being considered

Page 10: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #3 A 42 yo woman is evaluated for occasional episodes of

severe vertigo with nausea, vomiting, tinnitus, and a feeling of ear fullness. Her first episode occurred 3 years ago, and since then, she has had approx 6 episodes, each of which may last from a few hours to 1 or 2 days. Meclizine and diazepam taken at the onset of symptoms provide partial relief, but she often must resort to bed rest during these episodes, missing 1-2 days of work. She has a family history of migraine headache, although the patient doesn’t experience headache or visual symptoms with her episodes of dizziness.

Physical examination, including vital signs, is normal. An audiogram discloses a bilateral low-frequency sensorineural hearing loss. MRI of the head is normal.

Page 11: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #3 (cont’d)

Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis in this patient?(a) Acephalic migraine(b) Meniere’s disease(c) Acoustic neuroma(d) Benign positional vertigo(e) Vestibular neuritis

Page 12: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #3: B Meniere’s disease is the most common cause of recurrent disabling

attacks of vertigo Common findings

› Tinnitus› Fluctation hearing loss› Severe vertigo

Usually occurs in 4th to 6th decade of life Episodes last for several hours and include vomiting and cochlear

symptoms Can lead to progressive sensorineural hearing loss, usually low

frequency in nature Diagnosis is established clinically via H and P Audiogram can identify the bilateral low frequency hearing loss Treatment

› Acute-Meclizine, benzos, antiemetics› Prophylactic-Diuretics and low-salt diet

Pathophys seems to involve increased endolymphatic fluid volume

Page 13: General Medicine Board Review

Other Causes of Vertigo Benign positional vertigo

› Brief (5-15 sec) episodes of vertigo triggered by changes in head position

› Usually not associated with vomiting Vestibular neuritis

› Single episode of disabling vertigo that resolves in a few days to a week

› Rarely chronic or episodic› No association with hearing loss

Labyrinthitis› Acute episode of dizziness associated with unilateral hearing loss

Rare causes› Cerebrovascular disease› Brain tumors› Multiple sclerosis

Page 14: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #4 A 40 yo woman is evaluated during a 6 month follow up visit

for episodes of abnormal uterine bleeding. Prior to these abnormal bleeding episodes, she had heavy 5-day menstrual periods, with dysmenorrhea for the first 3 days of menstruation. Exam findings from 6 months ago included a normal pelvic exam, negative transvaginal ultrasound, and negative Pap smear. She also had a normal CBC and TSH. Since that evaluation she has had three episodes of bleeding between periods, with the last occurring one month ago.

Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in the management of this patient?(a) Placement of a progesterone IUD(b) Uterine artery embolization(c) Endometrial biopsy(d) Repeated transvaginal ultrasound

Page 15: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #4: C Endometrial biopsy is the gold standard for diagnosis of

abnormal uterine bleeding Not all endometrial abnormalities can be detected on

ultrasound Possible causes for her bleeding include endometrial

polyps, endometrial hyperplasia, or endometrial cancer If biopsy is nondiagnostic, hysteroscopy may be indicated

Uterine artery embolization is used for fibroids An IUD can help with bleeding but should not be placed

until the endometrium has been assessed

Page 16: General Medicine Board Review

Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Infrequent menses Excessive flow Prolonged duration of menses Intermenstrual bleeding Postmenopausal bleeding

Evaluation should always include:› H and P› Pelvic exam› Pap smear› Pregnancy test if premenopausal

Other testing should be considered based on age and other medical history› GC, chlamydia, CBC, TSH, glucose, coags, prolactin level

Page 17: General Medicine Board Review

Abnormal Uterine Bleeding An assessment of the endometrial lining is necessary in all

women older than 35 to r/o endometrial hyperplasia or cancer Transvaginal U/S okay for younger patients Biopsy in older patients Sonohysterography or hysteroscopy are other options Treatment (if normal labs and endometrial assessment)

› Ovulatory bleeding: high dose estrogens followed by regular OCPs, or levonorgestrel IUD

› Anovulatory bleeding: OCPs or cyclic progestins to maintain regular cycles

Treatment options for fibroids› Uterine artery embolization› Myomectomy› Hysterectomy

Refer to gynecology at any point

Page 18: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #5 A 20 yo college wrestler is evaluated for a painful lesion on his

upper back. He first noted a small painful area 7 days ago, and the lesion enlarged and became more red and painful during the next several days. The patient states that other members of his wrestling team have developed similar lesions. His history is otherwise negative. Exam of the upper back reveals a 1x1cm red, raised pustule that is tender to palpation, with a 4x4 cm area of surrounding erythema. The remainder of the exam, including vital signs, is normal. The lesion is incised and drained. A culture is sent to the lab.

Which of the following is the most appropriate empiric treatment pending culture results?(a) Levofloxacin(b) Doxycycline(c) Dicloxacillin(d) Cephalexin

Page 19: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #5: B MRSA abscess/cellulitis

› Doxycycline is the most appropriate answer of these choices. Very common especially in athletes, military, children,

prisoners, MSM, homeless, IV drug users Levofloxacin and cephalexin do not cover for MRSA Other treatment options include bactrim, minocycline, and

clindamycin

Page 20: General Medicine Board Review

Bacterial Skin Infections Cellulitis

› Infection of the dermis and subcutaneous tissues, marked by warmth, erythema, and advancing borders

› Commonly occurs at breaks in the skin including tinea infections, trauma, ulcerations, or wounds

› Most common organisms are MRSA and Beta hemolytic Streptococci› Rx for 14 days with doxy, bactrim, or clindamycin› Prevent recurrence by treating tinea infections

Folliculitis› A superficial or deep infection or inflammation limited to the hair follicles› Superficial vs . Deep› Risk factors: S. aureus nasal carriage, recent Rx with antibiotics or

steroids, hot tub or whirlpool use› Superficial usually resolves spontaneously› Furuncle=deep follicultis usually caused by S. aureus

Rx with warm compresses and oral Abx

Page 21: General Medicine Board Review

Bacterial Skin Infections Impetigo

› A superficial vesiculopustular infection that usually occurs on the face and exposed extremities

› Groups of vesicles or pustules with oozing or adherent yellow crust› Group A Strep or S. aureus› Rx with topical vs oral Abx

Page 22: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #6 A 27 yo woman has a 1-day history of dysuria, left flank pain,

and fever. The patient is sexually active. She had one episode of cystitis 3 months ago that was treated successfully with bactrim. Urine cultures were not obtained at that time. On physical exam, the patient appears uncomfortable but not acutely ill. Temp 38.5, HR 100, RR 18, BP 120/78. She has pain on percussion of the left flank. WBC count is 20,000 with 80% segmented neutrophils and 5% bands. U/A shows 100 WBC/hpf and positive LE.

Which of the following is the most appropriate empiric therapy for this patient?(a) Oral bactrim(b) IV bactrim(c) Oral augmentin(d) Oral levofloxacin(e) IV levofloxacin

Page 23: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #6: D Pyelonephritis Rx with oral levofloxacin x 7-14 days PO Abx used for compliant patients who can tolerate PO

meds IV Abx used for pts who have nausea/vomiting Don’t use bactrim in this case because of increasing

resistance Other possible options include 3rd gen cephalosporins,

extended-spectrum penicillins, aminoglycosides, monobactams, and carbapenems

Page 24: General Medicine Board Review

Urinary Tract Infections Uncomplicated

› Healthy, nonpregnant woman› No systemic symptoms (fevers, chills, N/V)› Can treat with 3 days of fluoroquinolone , bactrim, or nitrofurantoin› Urine Cx not always required

Complicated› UTI associated with a condition that increases the risk of therapy failure

Anatomic abnormality of GU tract Pregnancy Men Elderly Diabetes mellitus Nosocomial

› Systemic symptoms› Should be treated with fluoroquinolones as treatment failure with bactrim due to resistance can

cause significant morbidity in these cases› Length of treatment 7-14 days

Recurrent› Sexual hygiene, decreased estrogen leads to increased colonization in postmenopausal women› Rx with daily low dose prophylaxis, post coital prophylaxis, or patient-initiated antimicrobial

treatment

Page 25: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #7 A 70 yo woman undergoes preoperative evaluation before

cataract surgery and excision of a 0.75cm basal cell carcinoma on the right lateral thigh. Her history includes CAD, with no angina since she has been adhering to her current medical regimen, and nonvalvular atrial fibrillation for which she takes chronic anticoagulation therapy. She has not had a stroke of TIA. Her functional capacity is good.

Which of the following is the best management approach to anticoagulation for these procedures?(a) Continue warfarin at usual dose and target INR for both procedures(b) Reduce warfarin dose to achieve a lower target INR of 1.3 to 1.5(c) Stop the warfarin and perform surgery when the INR is normal for both

procedures(d) Stop warfarin and use therapeutic enoxaparin until 12 hours before

surgery

Page 26: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #7: A Perioperative anticoagulation management varies with the

reason for anticoagulation and the planned surgery This pt is low risk for thromboembolism and is undergoing

low risk surgery Bridging with heparin is only indicated in patients who are

at high risk for thromboembolism off warfarin

Page 27: General Medicine Board Review

Perioperative Anticoagulation Management

Surgery with moderate to high risk of bleeding› Low risk for clot (atrial fib w/o stroke or w/CHADS2 =0)

Stop warfarin 4d preop; monitor INR to near normal Use VTE prophylaxis (low dose UFH or LMWH) pre and post op Restart warfarin when hemostasis achieved

› Intermediate risk (CHADS2=1-2) Stop warfarin 4d preop; monitor INR fall UFH or LMWH (low or high dose) 2 days preop and postop Restart warfarin when hemostasis achieved

› High risk (VTE<3mos, arterial TE 4-6 wk, mechanical MV, ball/cage mechanical valve, CHADS2>/=3) Stop warfarin 4d preop; monitor INR fall 2d preop start therapeutic SQ dose of UFH or LMWH When admitted, change to therapeutic heparin drip or SQ UFH/LMWH

D/c IV heparin 5 hours preop; SQ heparin 12-24 hrs preop Restart full dose heparin postop; restart warfarin when hemostasis achieved Continue heparin drip/therapeutic SQ heparin until INR at target

Page 28: General Medicine Board Review

Perioperative Anticoagulation Management

Surgery with low risk of bleeding (e.g. gynecology or less invasive orthopedic procedures)› Continue, but lower dose of warfarin 4-5 days preop› Perform surgery when INR of 1.3-1.5 is achieved› Return to usual warfarin dose when hemostasis adequate› VTE prophylaxis with UFH/LMWH as indicated

Superficial Dermatologic Procedures/Cataract Surgery› Continue usual warfarin dose

Dental Procedures› Continue usual warfarin dose› Give tranexamic acid or epsilon aminocaproic acid mouthwash for

local hemostasis

Page 29: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #8 An 87 year old wheelchair-bound woman is evaluated during a

routine examination. She is accompanied by her son. The patient lives in a residential living setting in her own apartment and has recently become socially isolated, no longer visiting with friends, eating in the common dining room, or finding enjoyment from watching television. Her medical history includes hypertension, CAD, and osteoporosis. Her meds include HCTZ, metoprolol, calcium carbonate, aspirin, and alendronate.

On PE, she appears well-groomed and has a friendly demeanor. HR 70, BP 125/75, BMI 18.3. She is oriented to person, place, and time and is able to ambulate with assistance. Neuro exam is significant only for a resting tremor in the right hand. CBC, chemistries, and TSH are normal. Results of the Five Item Geriatric Depression Screen are 1/5.

Page 30: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #8 (cont’d)

Which of the following is the most appropriate management option in addressing the current symptoms?(a) Assess hearing and vision(b) Discontinue HCTZ(c) Initiate sertraline(d) Schedule neuropsychological testing

Page 31: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #8: A Hearing and vision loss are a common reason for social

isolation in the elderly. Functional assessment of the elderly serves to address

unrecognized problems to improve quality of life. Several scales exist to assess this

› Katz Index of ADLs› Barthel Index› Lawton and Brody Instrumental ADL scale

Page 32: General Medicine Board Review

Screening Tests in the Elderly Vision screening Hearing tests

› Whispered voice test, Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly, audioscope MMSE

› Three item recall test, animal naming test, clock-completion test Five-Item Geriatric Depression Scale

› Are you generally satisfied with your life?› Do you feel bored?› Do you feel helpless?› Do you prefer to stay home instead of go out?› Do you feel worthless?

Review of prescription drugs Rapid gain test (walk 10ft, turn, walk back)

› If takes longer than 10 seconds, pt has significant chance of having difficulty with ADLs in the next year

Fall risk assessment Incontinence screening Weight loss/nutrition screening

Page 33: General Medicine Board Review

Falls in the Elderly Falls occur in 30-40% of older adults each year Risk factors

› Age, female sex, h/o falls, cognitive impairment, motor weakness, balance difficulty, psychotropic medication use, arthritis

Age related changes in vision/hearing/vestibular system and CV system also predispose to falls

Fall risk assessment› Get up and Go test

Patient rises from a chair, walks 10ft, turns around, walks back to the chair, and sits down If this takes longer than 20 seconds, patient is at risk for falls.

› Orthostatic evaluation› Carotid sinus hypersensitivity assessment› Review of environmental factors› Vision/hearing screening› Lower extremity sensory function testing› Medication review

Interventions› Muscle strengthening/balance retraining› Home hazard modification› Withdrawal of psychotropic meds› Vit D supplementation› Cardiac pacing when indicated

Page 34: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #9 A 67 yo woman is evaluated because she is worried that

her memory is not what it used to be. She has trouble remembering where she places her keys and purse and sometimes has difficulty remembering where she parked her car on shopping trips. She is otherwise well and fully independent in her ADLs. She denies depression or anhedonia and plays a round of golf each week. Her medical history includes HTN and hypothryoidism well controlled with HCTZ, lisinopril, and levothyroxine. She takes no herbal supplements, and her other medications are ASA, calcium, and vitamin D. On PE, her MMSE score is 28/30. The exam is otherwise unremarkable. Recent lab tests including TSH, CBC, MVC, LFT’s, and chemistries were all normal.

Page 35: General Medicine Board Review

MKSAP Question #9 (cont’d)

Which of the following is the most appropriate management option for this patient?(a) Donepezil(b) Depression screening(c) MRI of the head(d) RPR, serum folate, and B12 measurement

Page 36: General Medicine Board Review

Answer #9: D Benign memory loss of aging Always check for reversible causes

› Depression› Hypercalcemia› B12/folate deficiency

B12 deficiency doesn’t always have hematologic abnormalities

Benign memory loss does not have cognitive impairment on objective tests

Page 37: General Medicine Board Review

Pressure Ulcers Areas of localized damage to the skin and underlying tissue

caused by pressure, shear, or friction Usually occur over bony prominences Usually in the elderly, immobile, and those with neuro deficits Incontinence and poor nutritional status also contribute Stage I

› Intact skin, but has evidence of pressure changes including changes in temperature, consistency, or sensation

Stage 2› Superficial wound, with partial thickness skin loss involving the epidermis or

dermis Stage 3

› Full thickness skin loss extending into the subcutaneous tissues Stage 4

› Extensive destruction, including to the muscle, bone, or supporting structures

Page 38: General Medicine Board Review

Prevention/Treatment of Pressure Ulcers

Prevention› Change position every 2 hours› Use pillows/foam padding to reduce pressure› Healthy diet› Daily exercise regimen/range of motion exercises› Skin should be kept clean and dry

Treatment› Relieve the pressure, wound debridement, treat infection, maintain a

moist wound environment› Irrigate with normal saline› Dressings that keep the surrounding intact skin dry while maintaining

moisture in the ulcer bed and controlling the exudate without dessicating the ulcer bed

Page 39: General Medicine Board Review

References MKSAP 14 Up to Date 2009