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Generalizations: General Internal Medicine Board Review. Jimmy Stewart, MD Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics Division of General Internal Medicine and Hypertension Program Director, Med/ Peds Program University of Mississippi Medical Center. Preventive Medicine. Screening Vaccinations
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Generalizations:General Internal Medicine Board Review Jimmy Stewart, MD Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics Division of General Internal Medicine and Hypertension Program Director, Med/Peds Program University of Mississippi Medical Center
Preventive Medicine • Screening • Vaccinations • Prophylaxis • Education
Colorectal Ca • All adult ages 50-75 yo • 40+ or 10 years prior to relative • FOBT, flex sig for “average risk” • Colonoscopy - every 5-10 years for high risk
Prostate Ca • PSA - NOT recommended for routine screening • Greatest sens in AA or high risk group
Lipids • High Risk (CAD or equivalent) – statin • LDL > 190 mg/dL – statin • ASCVD risk > 7.5 % - statin
Attenuated Live Vaccines • MMR* • Oral Polio • Nasal influenza • Yellow fever • Smallpox • Typhoid • BCG • Varicella (including Zostavax)
HIV vaccinations • HBV • Influenza • Pneumococcal • Hib • MMR/Td
Strep Pneumo • Asplenia • >65 yo every 5 years • Chronic disease (including DM)
Influenza • Yearly >50 yo • Healthcare workers • Childcare workers • Household contacts of above
Zostavax • >55yo? • History of zoster not important
Others • Meningococcal - not against “B”, college freshmen • Cholera - DOESN’T WORK
Traveler’s diarrhea: Prevention • Flouroquinolones • Azithromycin • Must take daily
Traveler’s diarrhea • Mild: 1-2 stools/day - loperamide • Mod: 3 stools/day - single dose Abx • Sev: 6 stoos/day - Abx x 3 days with loperamide
Traveler’s diarrhea: Treatment • Flouroquinolones • Azithromycin
Malaria • Chloroquine-resistant - Mefloquin (neuro SE’s) • Chloroquine • Others - doxy, primaquine, azithromycin
Meningococcal • Rifampin • Cipro • Rocephin - pregnancy
Education - what works... • Smoking cessation • Firearm safety • Bladder Cancer • Folate supplementation • Osteoporosis • CVA
Drug Overdose • Isopropyl (rubbing alcohol) • Methanol (wood alcohol) • Ethylene Glycol • Salicylates • Acetaminophen • Theophylline • Lithium • Tricyclics • PCP • Anticholinergics • Cholinergics • CO • Cyanide • Pb • Insecticides
Isopropyl • CNS depression • Osmolal gap • Early lavage • Hemo/peritoneal dialysis
Methanol • Visual changes • AG met acidosis • Treat with ETOH, folate, dialysis, fomepizole
Ethylene glycol • Ca oxalate crystals • AG met acidosis • Treat with ETOH, bicarb, calcium, dialysis, fomepizole
Salicylates • AG met acidosis • Classic presentation: AG with pH 7.4 and history • Treatment - lavage, alkalinization, hemodialysis, charcoal
Acetaminophen • N - acetylcysteine • Early gastric emptying • Normogram
Theophylline • Seizures • Treat with diazepam, lavage, charcoal, cathartic
Lithium • MS changes, Parkinsonian • DO NOT GIVE CHARCOAL • Lavage, electrolytes/fluids, hemodialysis
Tricyclics • Tachycardia, long QT, PR, QRS • Hemodialysis INEFFECTIVE • Alkalize • Lidocaine/phenytoin
PCP • Agitation, seizures, dystonia, HTN • Give ammonium Cl to acidify the urine • Diazoxide for HTN
Anticholinergics • “Red as a beet, dry as a bone, blind as a bat, mad as a hatter, and hot as a hare” • Supportive care • Physostigmine
Anticholinergics • Scopolamine • Antihistamines • Antipsychotics • Antispasmotics • Cyclic antidepressants • Mydriatics
Cholinergics • “SLUDGE” • “DUMBELS” • Skin cleansing • Atropine • 2-PAM for organophosphates
Carbon monoxide • CNS depression • mild-mod: 15-30% • mod-sev: >30% • Fatal: >50% • O2
Cyanide • Almond breath, bright red venous blood • Amyl nitrate • 3% Na nitrite • Sodium thiosulfate
Ethics Principles • Autonomy • Beneficence • Nonmaleficence • Cultural differences • Confidentiality • Brain death - NO EEG REQUIRED!
Perioperative Evaluation • Clinical Risk • Functional Capacity • Risk of Surgery
Clinical Risk • History • PE • ECG (men >40 yo, women >55 yo, CAD)
Functional Capacity • Excellent: >7 METs • Moderate: 4-7 METs (angina walking >2 blocks) • Poor <4 METs (angina walking 1-2 blocks)
Surgical Risk • Low - endoscopy, local biopsy, breast biopsy, vasectomy, cataract • Mod - CEA, intraperitoneal, intrathoracic, orthopedic, prostate, head and neck • High - emergencies, long procedures/fluid shifts, CVS (cross-clamping aorta or bypass
Who to Test? • Moderate risk with poor functional capacity • Moderate risk with good functional capacity and high risk surgery • High Risk - all
Tests • Exercise stress treadmill • Dipyridamole thallium • Dobutamine stress echo
Scenarios... • Low risk patient goes directly to surgery without testing • Moderate risk patient with good functional capacity goes directly to nonvascular surgery • High risk patient need further workup
Ophthalmology • Glaucoma • Retinal Detachment • Retinal Vascular Occlusion • Optic Neuritis • Vitreous Hemorrhage • Alkali/Trauma • Iridocyclitis • Keratoconjunctivitis • Viral conjunctivitis • Bacterial conjunctivitis • Neisseria conjunctivitis • Endophthalmitis
Closed Angle glaucoma • Asian American with severe acute nausea, headache while in movie theater • Ocular emergency • Pupillary constriction
Retinal Detachment • Acute trauma to head/globe • Flashes/streaks of light, showers of black dots • Ocular emergency
Retinal Artery Occlusion • Sudden, PAINLESS BLINDNESS • Mostly embolic • Ocular emergency
Optic Neuritis • Ocular pain with eye movement, loss of vision • MS
Vitreous Hemorrhage • Sudden painless loss of vision • Must look for retinal detachment