NOVEMBER BIMONTHLY EXAM
CASE 1
Question 1) pain in the epigastric region differentials
Gastric ulcers
Inferior wall MI
Acute pancreatitis (Boaring kind of pain)
2)sob- acidosis due to renal failure
? Ards secondary to sepsis/pancreatitis
Pleural effusion due to acute pancreatitis
3)decreased urine output-pre renal Aki secondary to volume loss(oliguric)
3rd space loss due to pancreatitis
Sepsis induced aki
4) abdominal distention with constipation and nausea
Secondary to paralytic ileus
Treatment
1) Antibiotics
imipenem, ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, ceftizoxime, cefotiam, piperacillin, mezlozillin, metronidazole and tazobactam were detected in pancreatic tissue at concentrations exceeding the MICs of most of the relevant bacteria
A first controlled clinical study with prophylactic imipenem in patients with severe acute pancreatitis showed a reduction in the rate of sepsis
https://www.karger.com/Article/PDF/172465#:~:text=According%20to%20efficacy%20factor%20analysis,in%20the%20rate%20of%20sepsis.
2)analgesics for pain
3)diuretics for decreased urine output due to renal failure
4) Fluid replacement.
4) nebulization in view of b/l wheeze secondary to ?copd
5)diuretics for decreased urine output due to renal failure
Non pharmacological interventions
1)nill per mouth
2)ryles tube catheterisation ( prevent aspiration of bile fluid)
CASE 2
1)bone marrow and bones
2)kidneys
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3205153/
The pathophysiology of renal failure in multiple myeloma is often multifactorial but is mostly due to the high excretion of immunoglobulin free light chains. When the light chains combine with Tamm-Horsfall proteins, they form obstructing casts (5). Chemotherapy should therefore be initiated rapidly to decrease light chain production. Intravenous fluids can be given to treat volume depletion, hypercalcemia, or hyperuricemia.
A) pharmacological interventions
Antibiotics
Antibiotic prophylaxis for a finite duration can decrease the overall incidence of infection within the first 3 months following diagnosis. This does not lead to a decrease in mortality. Further data on antibiotic resistance patterns, toxicity, healthcare expenditures, and the impact of antibiotics on subsequent therapies can assist providers in helping make decisions on prophylactic antibiotics with their patients.
Blood transfusion in severe casses
B)non pharmacological
Pleural fluid analysis
Imaging -xray skull, hrct chest
Serum electrophoresis,sputum culture
CASE 3
1)pedal edema with abdominal distention with sob suggestive of right heart failure or renal failure
B)etilogy of rt heart failure
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK459381/
chronic conditions of pressure overload may lead to RVF. These include:
Primary pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and secondary pulmonary hypertension (PH) as seen in chronic-obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or pulmonary fibrosis)
Congenital heart disease (pulmonic stenosis, right ventricular outflow tract obstruction, or a systemic RV).
The following conditions result in volume overload causing RVF:
Valvular insufficiency (tricuspid or pulmonic)
Congenital heart disease with a shunt (atrial septal defect (ASD) or anomalous pulmonary venous return (APVR)).
Another important mechanism that leads to RVF is intrinsic RV myocardial disease. This includes:
RV ischemia or infarct
Infiltrative diseases such as amyloidosis or sarcoidosis
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD)
Cardiomyopathy
Microvascular disease.
Lastly, RVF may be caused by impaired filling which is seen in the following conditions:
Constrictive pericarditis
Tricuspid stenosis
Systemic vasodilatory shock
Cardiac tamponade
Superior vena cava syndrome
Hypovolemia.
2 )Pharmacological interventions
https://heart.bmj.com/content/104/5/407(meta analysis with each class of drugs)
Preload reducers
Diuretics
Afterload reducers-ace inhibitors
Rate controlling agents-beta blockers
Antiepileptics for known case of epilepsy
Insulin for glycemic control in diabetes.
Non pharmacological interventions
Salt and fluid restriction
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23787719/
Individualized salt and fluid restriction can improve signs and symptoms of CHF with no negative effects on thirst, appetite, or QoL in patients with moderate to severe CHF and previous signs of fluid retention.
CASE 4
1)heart(rt and left)
Mention has been made of the coexistence
of beriberi with other organic types of heart
disease. In a patient with heart failure of
known etiology, particularly when there is a
history or evidence of an inadequate diet,
when signs and symptoms of failure fail to re-
spond to the usual therapeutic regime, an
additional factor of thiamine deficiency should
be strongly considered.
www.ahajournals.org › doi › pdf
Beriberi Heart Disease - AHA Journals
pharmacological interventions
Diuretics
Thiamine
Specific therapy for beriberi heart disease
consists in the administration of thiamine
chloride. Milder cases require 10 to 30 mg.
3 times a day, whereas the more severe cases
may require 100 mg. thrice daily. Intravenous or subcutaneous administration should
be used when associated gastrointestinal or
liver disorders may interfere with the absorption of thiamine. In markedly edematous
or severely dyspneic patients digitalis, oxygen, salt restriction, and diuretics should be
used. As Blankenhorn and co-workers9 have
pointed out, there is considerable doubt regarding the dictum that digitalis is without
value and that if the heart responds well to
this drug the diagnosis of beriberi is eliminated. In the acutely ill patient, therapy
should be immediate and no time should be
lost with diagnostic studies or test thiaminedeficient diets, since some patients may
2)non pharmacological interventions
Salt and fluid restriction
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