HEENT Bates
What are the causes of vertigo?
Vertigo represents vestibular disease. Peripharal causes in the inner ear include: 1. Benign positional vertigo 2. Labyrinthitis 3. Menieres disease Central neurologic causes in the cerebellum or brainstem (may be associated with ataxia, diplopia and dysarthria) include: 1. Cerebral vascular disease 2. Posterior fossa tumor 3. Migraine p210
Differentiate between vertigo, presyncope and disequilibrium.
Vertigo: Sensation of true rotational movement of the patient or the surroundings Presyncope: Feeling light-headed, weak in legs, or about to faint Disequilibrium: Feel unsteady or loss of balance. p210
What can cause vertigo?
Vestibular disease usually from peripheral causes in the inner ear: benign positional vertigo, labyrinthitis, meniere's disease
How does the nasal mucosa appear in viral rhinitis? in allergic rhinitis?
Viral - red and swollen Allergic - pale, bluish, or red
What can cause rhinorrhea?
Viral infections, allergic rhinitis ("hay fever") and vasomotor rhinitis. Itching favors allergic cause
Causes of rhinorrhea (3)
Viral infections, allergic rhinitis (hay fever), vasomort rhinitis
Nasal mucosa is reddened and swollen in:
Viral rhinitis
Presbyopia
Vision condition in which the shape of the crystalline lens of your eye changes. These changes make it difficult to focus on close objects.
Example of prodrome (early sx indicating onset of illness/disease) with migraine?
Visual aura, spark photopsias (flashed of light), fortifications (zig-zag arcs of light), scotomata (area of visual loss with surrounding normal vision)
What does moving speck or strands suggest?
Vitreous floaters
What do moving specks or strands in the patients visual filed suggest____.
Vitreous floaters. p208
Painless unilateral vision loss
Vitreous hemorrhage Macular degeneration Cataracts Retinal detachment Retinal vein occlusion Central retinal artery occlusion
Sudden unilateral visual loss with no pain suggests?
Vitreous hemorrhage from diabetes or trauma, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion or central retina artery occlusion.
What are the most likely causes for acute hoarseness?
Voice overuse and acute viral laryngitis
Hypertensive Retinopathy With Macular Star
Punctate exudates are readily visible: some are scattered; others radiate from the fovea to form a macular star. Note the two small, soft exudates about 1 disc diameter from the disc. Find the flame-shaped hemorrhages sweeping toward 7 o'clock and 8 o'clock; a few more may be seen toward 10 o'clock. These two fundi show changes typical of accelerated (malignant) hypertension and are often accompanied by papilledema
Mydriasis
Pupil DILATION
Tonic Pupil (Adie's Pupil)
Pupil is large, regular, and usually unilateral. Reaction to light is severely reduced and slowed, or even absent. Near reaction, although very slow, is present. Slow accommodation causes blurred vision. Deep tendon reflexes are often decreased.
Red Reflex
Pupil should glow orange when you shine the light of the opthalmoscope on it. If not, there's an opacity in the eye.
Aniscoria
Pupillary inequality of .5 mm or less (benign if reactions are normal)
Diptheria
Rare; dull red, and grey exudate present on the uvula, pharynx, and tongue
What does sudden, bilateral and painless visual loss suggest?
Reaction to medications that change refraction: - cholinergics - anticholinergics - steroids
Palpable tenderness or step-offs of the skull may suggest?
Recent head trauma
Herpes Simplex
Recurrent and painful vesicular eruptions of the lips and surrounding skin
Exudative Tonsillitis
Red throat with white exudate; sore throat and fever. It is frequently caused by a viral infection, type of pharyngitis.
Viral Rhinitis
Reddened mucosa and swollen
Gingivitis
Reddening of gingiva
Nasal mucosa
Redder than oral mucosa
What is indicated with redness of the gums around the teeth? What blackness of the gums around the teeth?
Redness - gingivitis Blackness - lead poisoning
Neovascularization
Refers to the formation of new blood vessels. They are more numerous, more tortuous, and narrower than other blood vessels in the area and form disorderly looking red arcades. A common feature of the proliferative stage of diabetic retinopathy. The vessels may grow into the vitreous, where retinal detachment or hemorrhage may cause loss of vision.
Define aphthous?
Repeated formation of benign and non-contagious mouth ulcers in otherwise healthy individuals
Arteries wall = full and tortuous Light reflex = increased w/ a bright copper color
Retinal arteries in copper wiring
Arterial wall = less transparent Light reflex = narrowed Focal narrowing (in the middle)
Retinal arteries in hypertension
Prominent short process and prominent handle suggests:
Retracted Drum
Where does a cluster HA arise? (location)
Retro-orbital
Cluster headaches found in
Retro-orbital areas
small lumps on the helix or antihelix that can alos be found on hands, elbows, or knees
Rheumatoid nodules
Cricoid cartilage
Ring-shaped cartilage of the larynx
Rings and Crescents
Rings and crescents are often seen around the optic disc. These are developmental variations that appear as either white sclera, black retinal pigment, or both, especially along the temporal border of the disc. Rings and crescents are not part of the disc itself and should not be included in your estimate of disc diameter
Tori Mandibulares
Rounded bony growths on the inner surfaces of the mandible are typically bilateral, asymptomatic, and harmless.
severe and sudden onset HA pathology
SAH
neck anterior triangle
SCM laterally, midline of neck medially
neck posterior triangle
SCM, trapezius, clavicle
SNS and PSNS innervation of the iris
SNS dilates the pupil. Pupil constriction is PSNS.
Eyebrow scaliness seen in
Seborrheic dermatitis
What does redness and scaling on scalp indicate?
Seborrheic dermatitis or psoriasis
Generalized Lymphadenopathy
Seen in HIV/AIDS, infectious mononucleosis, lymphoma, leukemia, and sarcoidosis.
Vertigo
Sensation of true rotational movement of patient or surroundings
Having trouble understanding speech, complaining that others mumble, and noisy environments makes it worse suggests __________ loss.
Sensorineural
What kind of hearing loss is present in a patient that has particular trouble understanding speech? They often complain that others mumble, and noisy environments make hearing worse.
Sensorineural hearing loss - this results from an external and middle ear problem
What can be indicated when fresh blood or crusting is seen at the nasal septum?
Septal perforation, which includes: - trauma - surgery - intranasal use of cocaine or amphetamines
Two most important attributes of a headache
Severity and chronologic pattern EX: if severe and sudden subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis.
What are the two most important attributes of a HA?
Severity and chronology
Most important attributes of a headache
Severity: severe and sudden-subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis Chronologic pattern- Episodic and tend to peak- migraine and cluster headaches New and persisting- Tumors, abscess, or mass lesion
Assess corneal light reflex
Shine a light in either eye noting where the "shine spot" is and making sure it's in the same position in both
Tips for thyroid palpating
Short necks- hyperextension Flex neck slightly forward and to the side
Cover/Uncover Test ??????? (unilateral test)
Shows TROPIAS: Eg) cover L eye -- if nothing happens to the R eye, they must be R eye dominant NOW cover R eye and inspect the L -- check to see if there is any correcting movement; notice where the movement is going to. (bottom of the eye to the middle = L hypotropia), etc.
Feeling light-headed, weak in the legs or about to faint indicate?
Signs of pre syncope from arrhythmia, orthostatic hypotension or vasovagal stimulation.
Dryness may occur from impaired secretion in
Sjogren's syndrome
Xanthelasma
Slightly raised, yellowish, well-circumscribed plaques that appear along the nasal portions of one or both eyelids. May accompany lipid disorders.
Where is the blind spot?
Slightly temporal, along the horizontal line.
Macular degeneration
Slow central vision loss
Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome
Small brown pigmented spots in the dermal later of the lips, buccal mucosa, and perioral area; high risk for gastrointestinal cancers
Argyll Robertson pupils
Small, irregular pupils that accommodate but do not react to light. Seen in central nervous system syphilis.
Superficial Retinal Hemorrhages
Small, linear, flame-shaped, red streaks in the fundi, shaped by the superficial bundles of nerve fibers that radiate from the optic disc in the pattern illustrated
Shotty nodes
Small, mobile, discrete, nontender nodes, which are normal for that person.
Deep Retinal Hemorrhages
Small, rounded, slightly irregular red spots that are sometimes called dot or blot hemorrhages. They occur in a deeper layer of the retina than flame-shaped hemorrhages. -DIABETES
Causes of chronic hoarsness
Smoking, allergy, voice abuse, hypothyroidism, chronic infections (i.e. tuberculosis, tumors)
Obtaining Distant Visual Acuity
Snellen Charts
Thyroid palpation
Soft in Grave's disease Firm in Hashimoto's and malignancy Tender is thyroiditis Nodules can also occur, both benign or malignant
Characteristics of the thyroid with..Graves, Hashimotos thyroiditis, Malignancy, Thyroiditis
Soft in graves Firm in Hashimotos and in malignancy Tenderness in Thyroiditis
Copper Wiring
Sometimes the arteries, especially those close to the disc, become full and somewhat tortuous and develop an increased light reflex with a bright coppery luster.
Septal perforation
Sources include; trauma, surgery, and intranasal use of cocaine or amphetamines (the later 2 can cause septal ulceration)
What can be indicated with lateral sparseness of the eyebrows? Scaliness of the eyebrows?
Sparseness - hypothyroidism Scaliness - seborrheic dermatitis
Carcinoma of the lip
Squamous cell carcinoma usually affects the lower lip; may appear scaly plaque with or without crust or as a nodular lesion
Parotid ducts
Stensen's Ducts Open onto the buccal mucosa, near the upper second molar
Which condition is most commonly known to produce tonsillar exudates in a patient:
Streptococcal pharyngitis
Fever, pharyngeal exudates, anterior lymphdenopathy, especially in the absence of cough suggests... ____________ ______________
Streptococcal pharyngitis (strep throat)
If headache is severe and of sudden onset
Subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis
Patient presents with severe and sudden onset of HA what should you consider?
Subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis
Thunderclap headaches reaching maximal intensity over several minutes occur in 70% of patients with _______.
Subarachnoid hemorrhage. They are often preceded by a sentinel leak headache from a vascular leak into the subarachnoid space. p206
What is indicated from an eye with leakage of blood outside of the vessels, producing a homogeneous, sharply demarcated, red area?
Subconjunctival hemorrhage
Asymmetric protrusion of the tongue
Suggests lesion of cranial nerve XII
Postauricular lymph node
Superficial nodes over mastoid process. Infection from inner or outer ear drain here
Anterior cervical lymph nodes
Superficially anterior to the sternocleidomastoid muscle. Indicate infections in the mouth, tongue, pharynx, larynx, thyroid, or trachea
Extraocular muscles associated with CN IV
Superior oblique (medial, bottom)
Extraocular Muscles
Superior, Inferior, Lateral and Medial Rectii muscles Superior and Inferior Oblique muscles
Papilledema
Swelling of the optic disc and bulging of the physiologic cup. Can be caused by increased ICP, swelling of the optic nerve head, and intraxonal edema. This is a worrying sign- consider meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, trauma, and mass lesions
Testing for Direct and Consensual Light Reflex
Swinging Flashlight Test Will shine light in one eye and look at the reactivity in that eye; put the light in the same eye again & look at opposite eye (consensual REPEAT IN BOTH EYES
Testing for RAPD (relative afferent pupillary defect -- optic nerve damage)
Swinging Light Test in dark room Eg) L sided optic nerve damage Shine light at one R eye and you get a direct pupil constriction response, as well as L eye consensual constriction response. Shine light on L eye and both pupils dilate * if decrease in constriction or widening of pupil there's reduced stimulus to the affected eye)
Acute Angle Glaucoma
Sx: Decrease vision, Dilated, fixed pupil, Cornea is steamy, cloudy, extreme pain, halos around lights, photophobia, headache
Symtoms of acute bacterial sinusitis (4)
Symptoms appearing agter a URI, pain bending forward, maxillary toothache, tenderness over sinuses
Acute Sinusitis
Symptoms such as: localized tenderness, pain, fever, and nasal discharge
Common symptoms and physical findings of Graves' Ophthalmopathy are
Symptoms: diplopia, tearing, grittiness, and pain from corneal exposure Physical findings: exophthalmos, lid retraction, EOM dysfunction, ocular pain, lacrimation
True or false: pain in the ear can be referred from other structures in the mouth, throat, or neck
TRUE! Bing bing bing!
Retinal detatchment
Tear the retina and fluid may pass through a retinal tear, lifting the retina off the back of the eye Flashing lights, new or increased floaters, painless
Tension headaches found in...
Temporal areas
Where does a tension HA arise? (location)
Temporal areas
Homonymous hemanopsia
Temporal defect in visual field of one eye, nasal defect in the other eye
Abnormal lymph node findings
Tender nodes indicate infection or inflammation. Hard, fixed nodes suggest malignancy. If you find either, rexamine the regions they drain. Examine other lymph nodes to tell whether it's regional or generalized lymphadenopathy.
Abnormal nodes
Tender nodes- suggest inflammation Hard or fixed nodes- suggest malignancy (Enlargement of the supraclavicular node; especially on the left suggests metastasis from thoracic or abdominal malignancy)
What does a tender lymph node suggest? A hard or fixed node?
Tender: inflammation Hard/fixed: malignancy
Test of Otitis Media
Tenderness behind the ear- push on the mastoid process to check for this.
Furuncle or local infection
Tenderness of the nasal tip or alae suggests this
Vitreous floaters
Moving specks or strands
Labial frenulum
Mucosal fold connects each lip with the gingiva
Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia
Multiple red spots on the lips; autosomal dominate endothelial disorder causing vascular fragility and ateriovascular malformations
What do the different muscles in the eye do?
Muscle or iris control pupillary size. Muscles of ciliary body control the thickness of the lens: allowing eye to focus on near or distant objects.
Ambylopia
Muscle weakness of the eye. Treated by patching the "good" eye so that the other strengthens.
Tinnitus
Musical ringing or a rushing or roaring noise in one or both ears
Difficulty with distances suggests ____.
Myopia (nearsightedness). p208
Weber Test Results:
NORMAL: hear the sound in both ears In unilateral CONDUCTIVE HEARING LOSS, sound is heard in the impaired ear (it seems louder) In unilateral SENSORINEURAL HEARING LOSS, sound is heard in the good ear Ex: With someone who has potential hearing loss in the right ear, they will tell you they hear better in either the R side or the L side
Ulcers result from
Nasal use of cocaine
What are common symptoms that accompany a migraine?
Nausea and vomiting (but can also occur with brain tumors and subarachnoid hemorrhage).
Myopia
Nearsightedness Vision condition in which people can see close objects clearly, but objects farther away appear blurred.
Myopia
Nearsightedness (problems with distance)
Proliferative Retinopathy, Advanced
Neovascularization has increased, now with fibrous proliferations, distortion of the macula, and reduced visual acuity.
Hyperthyroidism
Nervousness, tremors Weight loss with increased appetite Excessive sweating and heat intolerance Tachycardia; palpitations increased SBP, decreased DBP Warm, smooth, moist skin Diarrhea Fine hair
AC>BC
Neural hearing loss
Primary Headaches
No identifiable underlying cause: migraines, tension, cluster
Exostoses
Nonmalignant overgrowths in ear canals
Exostoses
Nonmalignant overgrowths in ear canals, non-tender
Exostoses
Nontender, nonmalignant nodules, covered by normal skin, which can form in the ear canal and may block you from seeing the ear drum.
Arterial wall = transparent Light reflex = narrowed (1/4 diameter of blood column) B/c it's transparent, a vein crossing the
Normal retinal arteries
Normal Cornea and Lens findings
Normal: translucent, flat, sclera visible beneath
Confrontation Test
For visual field testing. Start from the temporal fields, about two feet lateral to their eardrums. Patient should see both sets of fingers at the same time. If not, then have them cover the eye on the side that they saw first, and cover your opposite-side eye and try again, moving from the affected area to the part with better vision. Ie, patient sees the fingers on their right side before the left side. So, suspect left defect. Patient covers right eye, you cover left eye, make eye contact with patient, begin wiggling fingers from patient's left side towards their midline.
normal small yellow spots in buccal mucose or lips
Fordyce spots
Rinne Test Results:
Normally the sound is heard longer through air than through bone in both ears (AC > BC).
Epistaxis
Nosebleed
Conjunctivitis (Vision)
Not affected except for temporary mild blurring due to discharge
Slow central visual loss occur with?
Nuclear cataract, macular degneration
Physical examination of the NOSE step 3
Test CN 1 (olfactory=sensory) - occlude the opposite nares - two scents (will be provided)
1st step after the physical examination of the ear (both internal and externally) is to ______
Test gross hearing with the whispered voice test - ask the pt. to block one ear with finder while you check the auditory acuity in the opposite ear. - rub fingers together 3 ft. from the unobstructed ear and then move fingers in until patient can hear the rubbing
Normal vs Abnormal Whispered Voice Test for Auditory Acuity
Test includes 3 number/letter combinations for each ear NORMAL: correct initial sequence/second test..pt repeats at least 3 of 6 numbers/letters ABNORMAL: 4 of 6 numbers/letters are incorrect
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 1 Visual Acuity
Testing CN II: (OPTIC --> SENSORY) 1. Obtain Distant Visual Acuity 2. Obtain Near Visual Acuity 3. Record Correct Findings
Visual acuity is expressed in two numbers (Snellen eye chart) e.g., 20/200. What does each number represent?
Numerator: the distance of the patient from the chart. Denominator: the distance at which a normal eye can read the line of letters 20/200 means that at 20 ft the pt can read print that a person with normal vision could read at 200 ft. The larger the second number the worse the vision. p.221
A fine, rhythmic, oscillation of the eyes
Nystagmus
pain with tug test
OE but not OM
eternal ear HL causes
OE, trauma, sq. cell carcinoma, benign bony growths
red bulging of an acute purulent drum indicates
OM
tenderness behind the ear suggests
OM
the amber drum of a serous effusion indicates
OM
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 11 Inspect the Anterior Chamber
Oblique lighting for Crescent Shadow With light shining, directly from the temporal side, looking for a crescentic shadow on the medial side of the iris, because the iris is normally fairly flat, and forms a relatively open angle with the cornea (this lighting should cast on shadow)
Silver Wiring
Occasionally a portion of a narrowed artery develops such an opaque wall that no blood is visible within it. It is then called a silver wire artery.
Horizontal Defect- eyes
Occlusion of a branch of the central retinal artery may cause a horizontal (altitudinal) defect. Ischemia of the optic nerve can produce a similar defect.
What are warning signs for HA?
Frequency or severity over 3 month, sudden onset of "thunderclap", after age 50, worse with changes in position, precipitated by valsalva maneuver, other sx such a fever/night sweats/weight loss, presence of cancer/HIV/infection/pregnancy, head trauma, neck stiffness or focal neurologic deficits.
Structures of the neck
From most superior downwards: Hyoid Thyroid cartilage (notched) Cricoid cartilage Lobes of the thyroid (just above the suprasternal notch) Trachea
What is a secondary headache?
From underlying structural systemic or infectious causes such as: meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage and may be life threatening
CN III
Oculomotor -- Motor principally responsible for moving the R eye (inferior oblique, medial rectus, superior rectus, inferior rectus muscles)
one dilated pupil that is fixed to light; ptosis of the affected eye is almost always present
Oculomotor nerve (CN 3) paralysis
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (significance)
Often none. May result from trauma, bleeding disorders, or sudden increase in venous pressure, as from cough
Cataracts
Opacities of the lenses visible through the pupil. Risk factors are older age, smoking, diabetes, corticosteroid use.
What is the first question to ask when examining a patient's ears? If a patient has noticed hearing loss, what kinds of questions should you ask?
Open ended question - How is your hearing? - have you had any trouble with your ears? If a patient has noticed hearing loss: - does it involve one or both ears? - did is start suddenly or gradually? - what are the associated symptoms, if any?
Peripheral visual loss occur with?
Open-angle glaucoma
What is the first thing to ask when examining a pt's eyes? When do you pursue details, based on their answer?
Open-ended question - How is your vision? - Have you had any trouble with your eyes? Pursue details if pt reports a change in vision
Absence of a red reflex suggests:
Opicaity of lens (cataract), detached retina, or retinoblastoma in children
Why would a RAPD dt L sided optic nerve damage cause pupillary dilation in both eyes?
Optic nerve damage in the L eye causes reduced afferent signals and also reduced efferent signals to both pupils, so the net effect is dilation.
Valsalva maneuver?
The action of attempting to exhale with the nostrils and mouth closed. Causes pressure in middle ear and chest.
Horner's Syndrome
The affected pupil, though small, reacts briskly to light and near effort. Ptosis of the eyelid is present, perhaps with loss of sweating on the forehead. In congenital Horner's syndrome, the involved iris is lighter in color than its fellow (heterochromia)
What to inspect in oral examination?
Oral cavity, decayed or loose teeth, inflammation of the gingiva and signs of periodontal disease (bleeding, pus, recession of the gums and bad breath). Also inspect the mucous membranes, the palate, the oral floor, and the surfaces of the tongue for ulcers and leukoplakia, waning signs for oral cancer and HIV disease
Drugs that causes nasal stuffiness
Oral contraceptives Reserpine Guanethidine Alcohol Cocaine
Drugs that cause stuffiness (4)
Oral contraceptives, alcohol, reserpine, guanethidine
What drugs may cause nasal stuffiness?
Oral contraceptives, reserpine, guanethidine, alcohol, cocaine
The Middle Ear is composed of
Ossicles (the malleus [note the handle and short process] the incus, and the stapes), umbo, pars flaccid and pars tensa Tympanic Membrane Eustachian tube
Describe the different locations of ear pain.
Otitis externa - pain occurs int he external canal Otitis media - pain in the inner ear (if respiratory infection) Pain may also be referred from other structures in the mouth, throat or neck. p209
Ear pain associated with other symptoms of respiratory infection/referred from mouth/throat/neck suggests...
Otitis media
Red, bulging, ear drum indicates:
Otitis media
Soft wax discharge, debris from inflammation, rash in ear canal suggests...
Otitis media
Thrush
Overgrowth if candida yeast in the mouth Should be able to be scraped off
If coughing /sneezing/valsalva position worsens headache it could be...
Pain from brain tumor, acute sinusitis
Otitis media
Pain in the inner ear
Otitis externa
Pain occurs in the external canal
Nasal polyps
Pale saclike growths of inflamed tissue that can obstruct the air passage or sinuses
Allergic Rhinitis
Pale, bluish, or red
What is the opening between the eyelids called?
Palpebral fissure
What suggests hyperthyroidism?
Palpitations, involuntary weight loss, intolerance to heat
What can cause vertical diplopia?
Palsy of CN III or IV
What can cause horizontal diplopia?
Palsy of cranial nerve (CN) III or VI
Swelling of optic disc and anterior bulging of physiologic cup
Papilledema
intracranial pressure causes edema along the optic nerve
Papilledema
Causes of enlarged blind spot
Papilledema, glaucoma, optic neuritis
Phases of the Hearing Pathway
The conductive phase is from the external ear through the middle ear. Causes of conductive hearing loss include otitis media, trauma, overgrowths of bone or epithelium, congenital conditions of the middle ear, cholesteatomas or tumors in the middle ear, otosclerosis, and perforation of the tympanic membrane. The sensorineural phase is the cochlea and cochlear nerve. Causes of sensorineural hearing loss include congenital conditions of the inner ear, presbycusis, viral infections such as rubella and CMV, Meniere's disease, noise exposure, and acoustic neuroma.
Oculomotor Nerve (CN III) Paralysis
The dilated pupil is fixed to light and near effort. Ptosis of the upper eyelid and lateral deviation of the eye are almost always present.
Otoscope exam of otitis media
The drum is red and bulging (acute purulent otitis media) or amber (serous effusion).
What is a visual field?
The entire area seen by an eye when it looks at a central point.
Left Cranial Nerve III Paralysis- straight ahead
The eye is pulled outward by action of the CN VI. Upward, downward, and inward movements are impaired or lost. Ptosis and pupillary dilation may be associated.
Nephrotic Syndrome
The face is edematous and often pale. Swelling usually appears first around the eyes and in the morning. The eyes may become slitlike when edema is severe.
Cushing's Syndrome
The increased adrenal cortisol production of Cushing's syndrome produces a round or "moon" face with red cheeks. Excessive hair growth may be present in the mustache and sideburn areas and on the chin
Cover/uncover test
Patient looks at your nose and covers L eye with a card. Shine a light on the R side of the R eye. Both eyes will move towards the right (outward for the R, inward for the L covered eye). When you remove the cover, the left will move outward and the right inward. Looks for muscle balance.
holes in the eardrum from purulent infections of the middle ear
Perforation of the drum
Open-angle glaucoma
Peripheral vision loss
small brown pigmented spots in the dermal layers, buccal mucosa, and perioral area
Peutx-Jeghers Syndrome
Enlarged, tender lymph nodes accompany ___________
Pharyngitis
What do soft lumps on scalp indicate?
Pilar cysts (wens)
Normal eardrum appearance
Pinkish gray and clear, not retracted or bulging. Malleus, incus, and umbo visible
Hirsutism occurs in women with what condition?
Polycystic ovary syndrome
Posterior cervical lymph nodes
Posterior to sternocleidomastoid muscle and anterior to trapezius muscle. Probe gently around muscle. Indicate mono or viral illness
What do light rays focus in a hyperopic patient?
Posterior to the retina
Causes of Sensorinural Hearing Loss
Presbyacusis
Diplopia in one eye with the other closed suggests?
Problem in the cornea or lens
Sensorinerual loss is due to problems in the _______ ______, __________ nerve, connections to the __________.
Problems in inner ear, cochlear nerve, connections to the brain
Conductive hearing loss
Problems in the external or middle ear Can be caused by foreign body or perforated eardrum Occurs in childhood and young adulthood, up to 40 Usually able to visualize abnormality in the ear Little effects on sound Hearing improves in noisy environment; pt's voice soft Weber- lateralizes to impaired ear; vibrations improves Rinne- Bone conduction longer than or equal to air Air conduction is impaired
What is conductive hearing loss?
Problems in the external or middle ear: noisy environment may help
Sensorineural hearing loss
Problems in the inner ear, cochlear nerve, or connections Can be caused by loud noises, infections, trauma, etc Occurs in middle or later years No visible problem in the ear Higher register of sound lost, Trouble hearing speech Worse in noisy environments; pt's voice loud Weber- lateralizes to good ear Rinne- Air conduction longer than bone conduction
What is sensorineural hearing loss?
Problems in the inner ear, the cochlear or its central connections in the brain: particular trouble understanding speech, often complaining that others mumble, noisy environments make it worse
Peripheral contact
Produces spokelike shadows that point—gray against black, as seen with a flashlight, or black against red with an ophthalmoscope. A dilated pupil, as shown here, facilitates this observation.
Headache warning signs
Progressively frequent or severe over a 3-month period. Sudden onset like a "thunderclap" or "the worst headache of my life". New onset after age 50 years. Aggravated or relieved by change in position. Precipitated by Valsalva maneuver. Associated symptoms of fever, night sweats, or weight loss. Presence of cancer, HIV infection, or pregnancy. Recent head trauma. Associated papilledema, neck stiffness, or focal neurologic deficits.
Abnormal protursion of eyeball
Proptosis or Exophthalmos
What is the tear fluid and where does it come from?
Protects the conjunctiva and cornea from drying, inhibits microbial growth and gives a smooth optical surface to the cornea. Comes from the meibomian glands, conjunctival glands and lacrimal gland. Tear fluid drains medially through two tiny holes called lacrimal punch and then pass into the lacrimal sac and on into the nose through the nasolacrimal duct.
Temporal hemianopsia
Pt can't see temporal sides
20/40 corrected vision
Pt. can read the 40 line with glasses (a correction)
Ptosis
Ptosis is a drooping of the upper lid. Causes include myasthenia gravis, damage to the oculomotor nerve, and damage to the sympathetic nerve supply (Horner's syndrome). A weakened muscle, relaxed tissues, and the weight of herniated fat may cause senile ptosis. Ptosis may also be congenital.
Tug Test
Pulling the auricle back and pushing on the tragus. If painful, suspect otitis externa (ear canal inflammation).
Acromegaly
The increased growth hormone of acromegaly produces enlargement of both bone and soft tissues. The head is elongated, with bony prominence of the forehead, nose, and lower jaw. Soft tissues of the nose, lips, and ears also enlarge. The facial features appear generally coarsened.
What does it mean for the patient when a crescentic shadow is present during lateral illumination of the iris?
The iris is abnormally far forward, forming a very narrows angle with the cornea - Increased risk for acute narrow-angle glaucoma
Left Cranial Nerve IV Paralysis- looking down/right
The left eye cannot look down when turned inward. Deviation is maximum in this direction.
Anterior triangle of the neck
The mandible above, the sternomastoird laterally, and the midline of the neck
Normal Retinal Artery and Arteriovenous (AV) Crossing
The normal arterial wall is transparent; only the column of blood can usually be seen. The normal light reflex is narrow—about one-fourth the diameter of the blood column. Because the arterial wall is transparent, a vein crossing beneath the artery can be seen right up to the column of blood on either side.
Myxedema
The patient with severe hypothyroidism (myxedema) has a dull, puffy facies. The edema, often pronounced around the eyes, does not pit with pressure. The hair and eyebrows are dry, coarse, and thinned. The skin is dry.
Physiologic Cupping
The physiologic cup is a small whitish depression in the optic disc, the entry point for the retinal vessels. Although sometimes absent, the cup is usually visible either centrally or toward the temporal side of the disc. Grayish spots are often seen at its base.
What does 20/40 corrected mean?
The pt could read the 40 line with glasses (a correction)
Posterior triangle of the neck
The sternomastoid muscle, the trapezius, and the clavicle
Concealment or AV nicking
The vein appears to stop abruptly on either side of the artery.
Tapering
The vein appears to taper down on either side of the artery
Banking
The vein is twisted on the distal side of the artery and forms a dark, wide knuckle.
What can nausea and vomiting indicate?
They are common with migraine but also occur with brain tumors and subarachnoid hemorrhage
What causes secondary headaches?
They arise from underlying structural, systemic or infectious causes such as meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage and may be life-threatening. p206
Supraclavicular lymph nodes
Think malignancy!. Hook finger over clavicle lateral to sternocleidomastoid. If you feel them it is always a cause for concern
Chondrodermatitis Helicis.
This chronic inflammatory lesion starts as a painful, tender papule on the helix or antihelix. Here the upper lesion is at a later stage of ulceration and crusting. Reddening may occur. Biopsy is needed to rule out carcinoma
Hairy Leukoplakia
This does NOT scrape off Smokers Pre-cancerous Tx is generally to quit smoking
Anatomy of the TYMPANIC MEMBRANE
This is an image of the R ear
Tracheal deviation may signify
Thorax issues such as mediastinal mass, atelectasis, opr large pneumothorax
Thunderclap Headaches
Thunderclap headaches that reach maximum intensity over several minutes occur in 70% of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage. Often preceded by sentinel leak headache (vascular leak into subarachnoid space).
What happens with presence of a goiter?
Thyroid function may be increased, decreased or normal.
Microaneurysms
Tiny, round, red spots commonly seen in and around the macular area. -DIABETIC RETINOPATHY
Sore tongue results from... (2)
Local lesions, systemic illness
Angioedema
Localized subcutaneous or submucosal swelling caused by leakage of intravascular fluid into interstitial tissue Mast cells cause urticaria and pruritus Swelling only usually in bradykinin mediators Usually benign and resolves in 24-48 hours
Thyroid Gland
Located above the suprasternal notch, spans the second, third, and fourth tracheal rings just below the cricoid cartilage
Occipital lymph node
Located at base of skull. Indicate infection in scalp or outer ear
Why is it important to ask about family history when asking the pt about their headache?
Genetic inheritance appears to be present in 30%-50% of patients with migraine
Can migraine headaches be genetically inherited?
Genetic inheritance appears to be present in 30-50% of patients with migraine. p207
Bleeding gums caused by...
Gingivitis
Swollen interdental papillae, redness of gingiva suggests:
Gingivitis
What causes bleeding gums?
Gingivitis
Leading cause of blindness
Glaucoma
An enlarged blind spot occurs in conditions affecting the optic nerve such as ____, ____ and ___.
Glaucoma Optic neuritis Papilledema
Dark, crescent shadow on iris increases the risk of
Glaucoma (iris bows abnormally foward forming a narrow angle with the cornea)
Enlarged blind spot in:
Glaucoma, optic neuritis, papilledema
increased pressure leads to backward depression of the disc
Glaucomatous cupping
Iron Deficiency Anemia
Glositis - red, beefy tongue
Elarged thyroid gland
Goiter
Discussing Tonsil Size
Grade 0: Tonsils absent Grade 1: hidden behind tonsillar pillars Grade 2: Extend to pillars Grade 3: Visible beyond pillars Grade 4: Enarged to midline
Soft thyroid lobes
Grave's disease
thyroid gland is soft in
Grave's disease
Inward/outward deviation of eyes or abnormal protrusion seen in
Graves' disease, ocular tumors
Gingiva
Gums; Light skinned- pale or coral pink and lightly stippled Dark skinned- diffusely or partly brown
diffuse lymphadenopath suggests
HIV or AIDS
generalized lymphadenophy is seen in pts with
HIV or AIDS mono lymphoma leukemia sarcoidosis
Generalized lymphadenopathy is seen in
HIV or AIDS, infectious mononucleosis, lymphoma, leukemia, and sarcoidosis
Generalized Lymphadenopathy is seen in what conditions?
HIV/AIDS mono lymphoma leukemia sarcoidosis
generalized lymphadenopathy pathology
HIV/AIDs, infectious mono, lymphoma, leukemia, sarcoidosis
yellowish-brown or black elongated papillae on tongue's dorsum o Benign and associated with: antibiotic therapy, candida infection, or poor dental hygiene
Hair tongue
tongue looks like candida, but cannot be scraped off
Hairy leukoplakia, seen in HIV and AIDs
Submandibular lymph nodes
Halfway between angle and tip of mandible. Infections of mouth mucosa, floor of mouth, face nose, or maxillary sinus drain here
firm thyroid lobes
Hashimoto's thyroiditis and malignancy
thyroid is firm in
Hashimoto's thyroiditis and malignancy
Cover Test ???????
Have Px look at an Object. Cover 1 eye, and observe movement of UNCOVERED eye. Observe uncovered eye to see if it takes up fixation. Eg) L exotropic eye When R eye is covered, L eye will lose exotropia and "take up fixation" of the object.
Jugular vein examination
Head elevated to 30 degrees
contraindications for mydriatic drops:
Head injury, coma, suspicion of narrow angle glaucoma
Loss of venous pulsations signifies:
Head trauma, meningitis, mass lesions, elevated intracranial pressure
Most common symptom (30% general population)
Headache
What is a common cause of jugular venous distention (JVD)?
Heart failure
One-sided visual loss occur with?
Hemianopsia and quadratic defects
Retrosternal goiters symptoms
Hoarseness Shortness of breath Stridor Dysphagia (Often benign 85%; occur in 5th decade)
Visual field defects that are all or party temporal include
Homonymous Hemianopsia, Bitemporal Hemianopsia, and Quadrantic Defects (p222)
Compare benign anisocoria with
Horner's syndrome, oculomotor nerve paralysis, and tonic pupil
one small pupil that reacts with light; ptosis of the affected eye is present, w/sometimes loss of sweating on the forehead
Horner's syndrome:
What does an enlarged skull signify?
Hydrocephalus or Paget's disease of bone
Proptosis caused by, abnormal protrusion of the eyeballs leading to stare on frontal gaze:
Hyperhyroidism
Difficulty with close work suggests_____ or _____.
Hyperopia (farsightedness) or presbyopia (aging vision) p208
A localized systolic or continuous bruit may be heard in what thyroid condition
Hyperthyroidism
Poor convergence of the eyes can indicate what?
Hyperthyroidism
Poor convergence seen in:
Hyperthyroidism
What is indicated when a rim of sclera is visible above the iris with downward gaze (lid lag)?
Hyperthyroidism
note the rim of sclera from proptosis, an abnormal protrusion of the eyeballs leading to a characteristics stare on frontal gaze
Hyperthyroidism, If unilateral, consider an orbital tumor or retrobulbar hemorrhage from trauma
Hair differences in hypo vs hyperthyroidism
Hyperthyroidism: fine hair Hypothyroidism: coarse hair
Lateral sparseness of eyebrows
Hypothyroidism
What are possible causes for longterm (>2 weeks) hoarseness?
Hypothyroidism, reflux, vocal cord nodules, head and neck caners, neurologic disorders (Parkinson disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or myasthenia gravis).
Lateral sparseness of eyebrows seen in:
Hypothyroidsim
Using a Snellen Chart
Ideally, from 20 feet away, cover one eye with a card, and count the smallest line for which they get more than half the letters right. Note if they used corrective lenses.
Thyroid cartilage
Identified by the notch on its superior edge
Marcus Gunn Pupil (afferent pupillary defect)
If left sided optic nerve damage is present, the pupils will usually behave as follows: when the light is shown into the normal right eye, there is brisk pupillary constriction of both pupils (direct response on the right and consensual response on the left). when the light is then swung over to the abnormal left eye, partial dilation of both pupils will occur. The afferent stimus on the left is reduced, thus, the efferent signals to both pupils will also be reduced and a net dilation will occur.
What to look for in the visual examination?
Look for clouding of the lens (cataracts), mottling of the macula, variations in retinal pigmentation, sub retinal hemorrhage or exudates (macular degeneration) and changes in color and size of the optic disc (glaucoma).
What to look for on scalp during examination?
Look for scaliness, lumps, nevi or other lesions
Visual pathway
Images enter eye and are reflected onto the retina, upside down and left-to-right reversed (so something seen in the upper nasal part of the field lands on the lower temporal part of the retina). The signal is conducted through retina, optic nerve, through optic chiasm to the optic tract, then to a curving tract called the optic radiation. Finally, ends in the visual cortex in the occipital lobe.
Define myopia
Impaired far vision (aka nearsightedness)
Define hyperopia
Impaired near vision (aka farsightedness)
Parotid
Lymph node in between the preauricular and tonsillar
Define presbyopia
Impaired near vision, found in middle-aged and older people. A presbyopic person often sees better when the card is farther away. p.222
Supraclavicular nodes
Lymph nodes almost behind the clavicle (deep in the angle formed by the clavicle and the sternomastoid)
Posterior cervical nodes
Lymph nodes along the trapezius above the clavicle (along the anterior edge of the trapezius)
Tonsillar nodes
Lymph nodes at the back of the jaw (angle of the mandible)
Occipital nodes
Lymph nodes at the base of the skull
Posterior auricular nodes
Lymph nodes behind the ears near the base (superficial to the mastoid process)
Deep cervical chain nodes
Lymph nodes deep to the sternomastoid
Preauricular nodes
Lymph nodes in front of the ear
Submental nodes
Lymph nodes midline behind the chin (behind the mandible)
Superficial cervical nodes
Lymph nodes under the ears (superficial to the sternomastoid)
Tonsils
In adults may be small or even absent
Ectropion
In ectropion, the margin of the lower lid is turned outward, exposing the palpebral conjunctiva. When the punctum of the lower lid turns outward, the eye no longer drains well, and tearing occurs. Ectropion is also more common in the elderly
Preauricular lymph nodes
In front of ear. Indicate infection in eye, middle ear or partoids
What is considered legally blind? (2 categories)
In the US: 1. Vision in better eye, corrected by glasses, is 20/200 or less. OR 2. Constricted field of vision: 20 degrees or less in the better eye p. 223
Nonproliferative Retinopathy, Severe
In the superior temporal quadrant, note the large retinal hemorrhage between two cotton-wool patches, beading of the retinal vein just above them, and tiny tortuous retinal vessels above the superior temporal artery.
Hard/fixed lymph nodes suggest:
Malignancy
What does an enlarged cup to disk ratio suggest?
Increased intraocular pressure - chronic open-angle glaucoma
Glaucomatous Cupping (Process)
Increased pressure within the eye leads to increased cupping (backward depression of the disc) and atrophy. The base of the enlarged cup is pale.
What is another name for a relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD)?
Marcus Gunn Pupil - Yhe most common pupillary abnormality.
Excessive tearing is a sign that there is either increased production or impaired drainage. What are conditions that could be indicated by each of these causes?
Increased production - conjunctival inflammation, corneal irritation Impaired drainage - ectropion, nasolacrimal duct obstruction
Asymmetry of the corneal reflection (white light reflection) indicates a deviation from normal ocular alignment. What does a temporal light reflection on one cornea indicated?
Indicates a nasal deviation of the eye
Thyroid bruit
Indicates hyperthyroidism
What is indicated with localized sinus tenderness? What are some commonly associated symptoms with this? What diagnostic test could be used?
Indication: acute sinusitis (frontal or maxillary) Symptoms: fever, pain, nasal discharge Diagnostic test: transillumination of the sinuses
Tender lymph nodes suggest:
Inflammation
Angular cheilitis
Inflammation and small cracks in one or both corners of the mouth.
Pharyngitis
Inflammation of the pharynx, reddened without exudate, tender lymph nodes
Labial Mucosa
Inside part of front lip
Physical Examination of the EAR process INSPECTION
Inspect Ears --- AURICLES: note the correct position MASTOID REGION CANAL FOR DISCHARGE
What suggests hypothyroidism?
Intolerance to cold, preference for warm clothing and many blankets, and decreased sweating suggest hypothyroidism
Hypertensive Retinopathy
Marked arteriolar-venous crossing changes are seen, especially along the inferior vessels. Copper wiring of the arterioles is present. A cotton-wool spot is seen just superior to the disc. Incidental disc drusen are also present but are unrelated to hypertension
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 10 Inspect the Iris
Markings should be clearly defined
Tracheal deviation
Masses in the neck may push the trachea to one side; also can signify atelectasis or large pneumothorax
Two types of angioedema
Mast cells in allergic and NSAID rxn, and ACE-inhibitor from bradykinin
Function: muscles of the iris vs muscles of the ciliary body
Iris: control pupillary size; Ciliary Body: control the thickness of the lens allowing the eye to focus on near or distant objects
What is a "medication for overuse headache"?
It is indicated if it is present >=15 days a month for 3 months and reverts to <!5 days a month when the medication is discontinued. p207
Nasal Septum
Medial wall of each nasal cavity; made of bone and cartilage
Hyoid bone
Just below the mandible
low-grad vascular tumor associated with herpes virus, deep purple lesions
Kaposi's sarcoma
small white specks that resemble grains of salt in mouth
Koplik's spots
Connects lip with gingiva
Labial frenulum
Vertigo suggests problem in these places:
Labrynths of inner ear, peripheral lesions of CN VIII, or lesions in central pathways/nuclei in brain
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (Pattern of Redness)
Leakage of blood outside of the vessels, producing a homogeneous, sharply demarcated, red area that resolves over 2 weeks
The eye is always pulled outward; cannot move up, down, or inwards
Left cranial nerve 3 paralysis
The left eye cannot look down when turned inward
Left cranial nerve 4 paralysis
Esotropia when looking straight forward Maximum esotropia when looking to the right
Left cranial nerve 6 paralysis
What is suggested with asymmetrical protrusion of the tongue??
Lesion of CN XII
Asymmetric protrusion of tongue suggests
Lesion of CN XII (Hypoglossal)
Where is diplopia seen?
Lesions in the brainstem or cerebellum or weakness or paralysis of one or more extraocular muscles
What does a fixed defect in a patient's vision (called a scotoma) suggest?
Lesions in the retina of visual pathway
What does fixed defects or scotomas suggest?
Lesions in the retina or visual pathways
Scotomas (fixed defects, areas where the patient cannot see) suggest ___.
Lesions in the retina or visual pathways. p208
Buccal mucosa
Lines the cheeks
Connects tongue to floor of the mouth
Lingual Frenulum
What can be indicated if there is any overuse of analgesics, ergotamines, or triptans?
Medication of overuse headache - if present 15 or more days a month for 3 months and reverts to less than 15 days a month is medication is discontinued
Pts. with chronic daily headaches taking symptomatic meds 2+ days per week might have...
Medication overuse
Painless bilateral vision loss
Medications (anticholinergics, cholinergics, and steroids)
Sudden bilateral visual loss with no pain suggests?
Medications that change refraction such as cholinergic, anticholinergics and steroids
Sudden bilateral + PAINLESS visual loss may be due to ____.
Medications that change refraction such as cholinergic, anticholinergics and steroids. p208
Medullated Nerve Fibers
Medullated nerve fibers are a much less common but dramatic finding. Appearing as irregular white patches with feathered margins, they obscure the disc edge and retinal vessels. They have no pathologic significance.
Taking a history of the oropharynx
Lips - lesions - dryness Mouth, Teeth, Tongue - pain - lesions - too much or too little saliva - dental & periodontol changes - difficulties with chewing - malocclusion - difficulties with speaking Pharynx - pain - hoarseness - swallowing problems - respiratory problems - lump - hemorrhage - referred pain - foreign body - weight loss
Tinnitus + hearing loss + vertigo =
Meniere disease. Note: Tinnitus is a perceived sound that has no external stimulus. It is a common symptom, increasing in frequency with age. p209
Patient presents with tinnitus and hearing loss and vertigo, what does this suggest?
Meniere's disease
Tinnitus + hearing loss + vertigo suggests...
Meniere's disease
Tinnitus associated with hearing loss and vertigo
Meniere's disease
Tinnitus when associated with hearing loss and vertigo suggests
Meniere's disease
Papilledema suggests:
Meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, trauma, mass lesions
Nasal polyps come from:
Middle meatus
Primary headaches
Migraine Tension Cluster Chronic daily headaches
What is indicated if a headache is associated with unusual feelings, such as euphoria, cravings, fatigue, dizziness, changes in vision, numbness, and weakness?
Migraine --> 60-70% symptoms prodrome prior to onset
Episodic headaches that peak over several hours
Migraine and Tension
Unilateral HA occur with which?
Migraine and cluster HA
Unilateral headaches found in...
Migraine and cluster headaches
Contrast the presentation of migraine, cluster and tension headaches.
Migraine headaches: UNILATERAL Tension headaches: TEMPORAL AREAS Cluster headaches: RETRO-ORBITAL p207
What is a primary headache?
Migraine, tension, cluster and chronic daily HA
What is indicated if a headache is associated with visual aura, such as flashes of light, fortification or zigzag arcs of light, and scotomata (area of visual loss with surrounding normal vision)?
Migraines
Associated symptoms of nausea and vomiting associated with...
Migraines, brain tumors, subarachnoid hemorrhage
Conjunctivitis (Pain)
Mild discomfort rather than pain
Miosis and Mydriasis
Miosis is constriction of pupils Mydriasis is dilation of pupils
Corneal Injury or Infection (pain)
Moderate to severe, superficial
Acute Iritis (pain)
Moderate, aching, deep
Headache
Most common symptom in clinical practice
What does the absence of a red reflex suggest?
Most commonly, cataracts (opacity of the lens) or loss of vitreous Less commonly, detached retina or retinoblastoma in children
What should be suspected if a patient has any persistent nodule or ulcer, red or white, on the tongue (especially if it is indurated)?
Tongue cancer
Streptococcal Pharyngitis
Tonsillar exudate
deposit of uric acid crystals on the helix or antihelix
Tophi: characteristics of gout
A benign midline lump of hard palate of roof of mouth
Torus palatinus
What are local causes of epistaxis?
Trauma (especially nose-picking), inflammation, drying and crusting of the nasal mucosa, tumors and foreign bodies
CN IV
Trigeminal -- Motor principally responsible for moving the left eye (superior oblique muscle)
What should you consider with a new and persisting, progressively severe HA?
Tumor, abscess or mass lesion
New and persisting, progressively severe headaches raise concern for...
Tumor, abscess, mass lesions
Onset of bilateral visual loss is gradual what does that suggest?
Typically from cataracts or macular degeneration
Sudden unilateral visual loss with pain suggests?
Typically in cornea and anterior chamber: corneal ulcer, uveitis, traumatic hyphema, acute glaucoma
acute bacterial sinusitis
URI sxs >7 days, prurulent drainage, facial pain
Viral sinusitis vs Bacterial sinusitis
URI symptoms persist for more than 7 days Purulent drainage Facial pain
Chancre of Primary Syphilis
Ulcerated papule with an indurated edge; appears 3-6 weeks after initial infection
Migraine headaches
Unilateral 70%, bifrontal or global 30% Throbbing or aching; severity varies Rapid onset 1-2 hours Duration 4-72 hours Aura in 30%; photophobia, phonophobia, nausea/vomiting Worsens with alcohol, foods, stress, menses Improves in quiet, dark rooms; sleep
Equal Pupils and One Blind Eye
Unilateral blindness does not cause anisocoria as long as the sympathetic and parasympathetic innervation to both irises is normal. A light directed into the seeing eye produces a direct reaction in that eye and a consensual reaction in the blind eye. A light directed into the blind eye, however, causes no response in either eye.
Sound is heard in the impaired ear in:
Unilateral conductive hearing loss
Sound is heard in the impaired ear in:
Unilateral conductive hearing loss, caused by otoscleosis otitis media, perforation of eardrum, and cerumen
Sound is heard in the good ear in:
Unilateral sensorineural hearing loss
Cluster headaches
Unilateral, usually behind or around the eye or temple Deep, continuous, severe Abrupt onset; peaks with in minutes Duration up to 3 hours Lacrimation, rhinorrhea, miosis, ptosis, eye edema, infection Worsens sensitivity to alcohol during attack
What presents with an acute or chronic otitis media?
Unusually soft wax, debris from inflammation or rash in the ear canal or discharge through a perforated eardrum
EOM test order
Using finger or pencil. Make an H, starting with extreme right right and up right and down extreme left left and up left and down Look for nystagmus as well as symmetric movements of the eyes.
Tension headaches
Usually bilateral or generalized to back of head or neck Steady; pressing or tightening;nonthrobbing mild-moderate Gradual onest Duration 30 minutes - 7 days photophobia, phonophobia Worsens with sustained tension Improves with massage, relaxation
What does painful, sudden. unilateral visual loss suggest?
Usually originates from cornea and anterior chamber: - corneal ulcer - uveitis - traumatic hyphema - acute glaucoma - optic neuritis (from MS) Note: immediate referral is warranted for patients with painful, sudden, unilateral visual loss
Nasal exam findings (viral rhinitis versus allergic rhinitis)
VIRAL=mucosa is red and swollen ALLERGIC= mucosa may be pale, bluish, or red
Cause of conductive deafness
[results from problems in the external or middle ear] the sound is coming from the outside to about the malleus/incus - blockage of ear canal - perforation of TM - fluid in the middle ear - damage to ossicles
Torus palatinus
a benign midline bony growth/lump of the hard palate (roof of the mouth)
feeling unsteady, lightheaded, or "dizzy in the legs" sometimes suggests
a cardiovascular etiology
discharge of mucopurulent material from the puncta suggests
a obstructed nasolacrimal duct
Each tarsal plate of the eyelid contains
a parallel row of meibomian glands which open on the lid margin
Legal Blindness
a person is considered legally blind when vision in the better eye corrected by glasses is 20/200 or less. this can also result from a constricted field of vision.
contraindications for mydriatic drops (for pupillary dilation)
1) head injury and coma, in which continuing observations of pupillary reactions are exxential, and 2) any suspicion of narrow angle glaucoma
Name 5 medications that affect hearing.
1. Aminoglycosides 2. Aspirin 3. NSAIDs 4. Quinine 5. Furosemide p209
List 3 causes of presyncope.
1. Arrhythmia
N/V are common with migraines. What other conditions might they occur with?
1. Brain tutors 2. Subarachnoid hemorrhage p207
Name 2 causes of GRADUAL bilateral vision loss.
1. Cataracts 2. Macular degeneration p208
Two types of hearing loss and diagnostic question for each:
1. Conductive loss - do you have special difficulty understanding people as they talk? 2. Sensorineural loss - what happens in a noisy environment?
When performing the Rinne test (AC and BC), what results are expected with conductive hearing loss and with sensorineural hearing loss?
1. Conductive: BC=AC or BC>AC 2. Sensorineural: AC>BC
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 4 Determine Position and Alignment
1. Describe AP Position: (size, shape, symmetry) - not symmetrical and aligned if one protrudes 2. Perform Hirschberg Test 3. Describe deviation (strabismus) - Tropias - Phorias 4. Perform Cover Test 5. Perform Cover/uncover test
What are two contraindications for mydriatic drops?
1. Head injury and coma (because pupillary reaction observations are essential) 2. Any suspicion of acute angle glaucoma
Contraindications for mydriatic drops include
1. Head injury and coma, in which continuing observations of pupillary reactions are essential 2. Any suspicion of narrow-angle glaucoma
One-sided loss occurs in _____ and _____.
1. Hemianopsia 2. Quadrantic defects p208
Identifying midline structures of the neck
1. Hyoid bone just below the mandible 2. The thyroid cartilage readily identified by the notch on its superior edge 3. The cricoid cartilage 4. The tracheal rings 5. The thyroid gland
Physical examination of the NOSE step 1
1. INSPECT and PALPATE - purcuss the sinuses check for symmetry and tenderness
6 causes of earaches
1. acute otitis media 2. otitis externa 3. furunculosis 4. mastoiditis 5. malignancy 6. referred pain (teeth/tongue/TMJ, tonsillitis, herpes zostor, carcinoma of pharynx, cervical spondylosis)
2 types of hearing loss
1. conductive loss 2. sensorineural loss
One sided nasal congestion is caused by (5)
1. deviated nasal septum 2. nasal polyp 3. foreign body 4. granuloma (wegener's) 5. carcinoma
aura, change in vision, numbness/weakness in arm or leg associated with...
1/3 of people with migraine patients
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 10
10. palpate the tongue wearing gloves examine the tongue for lesions palpate both under and over and on sides to ensure no lesions 2x2: gauze allows you to better grasp the tongue when its moving around bimanual exam: use both hands
what size tuning fork do you use for vibratory sensation
100-400Hz
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 11
11. palpate the saltatory ducts WHARTON: under the tongue-one hand intramural the other extraoral move in a circular motion STENSON: on the buccal mucosa (parotid ducts) feel for
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 12
12. palpate and percuss the teeth using nail of finger or tongue depressor,tap on the tooth
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 2
2. inspect the lips ovserve their color and moisture, and not any lumps, ulcers, cracking, or scaliness, not cyanosis, or pallor
legally blind
20/200 or less
"Legally blind"
20/200 or less in better eye, corrected
Visual Acuity
20/200; at 20ft the Pat. can read a print that a person with normal vision could read at 200ft.
Nasal turbinates (names/how many, covered by, found where, landmarks)
3 (superior turbinate, middle turbinate, inferior turbinate); covered by a highly vascular mucous membrane; found laterally and protrude into the nasal cavity; each turbinate is a groove or meatus
ossicles
3 bones of middle ear, malleus/incus/stapes, transform sound vibrations into mechanical waves
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 3
3. Inspect the oral mucosa - look into the mouth with a good light and the help of a tounge lade - look for color, ulcers, white patches, and nodules
Genetic inheritance appears to be present in ____ to _____ % of patients with migraine.
30-50
What percentage of patients with migraine have genetically inherited it?
30-50%
genetic inheritance of migraines
30-50% of patients with migraines
Teeth
32 adult teeth; 16 in each jaw
Horizontal diplopia occurs in
3rd or 4th nerve palsy
Vertical diplopia occurs in
3rd or 6th nerve palsy
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 4
4. Inspect the gum and gingiva - gingiva should be pale or coral pink or partly brown in dark skin people - can be lightly stippled (marked by specks or small dots) - look for swelling or users of the gingiva
abnormal results of whispered ear test
4/6 letters incorrect, refer to audiometry
what is the clinical normal decibel range
40
in the right ear the cone of light is at what clock position
5
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 5
5. Inspect the roof of the mouth - hard palate - soft palate inspect color and architecture of the palate color-no lesions or growths w light
what Hz tuning fork is usually used
512
what tuning fork is used to test auditory function
512-1024Hz
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 6
6. Inspect the tongue and the floor of the mouth -inspect the color and texture of the tongue and floor - look for lesions w light
What percentage of patients with migraine have a symptom prodrome prior to onset
60-70%
Feelings of euphoria, food cravings, fatigue, or dizziness prior to onset
60-70% of Migraines
in the left ear the cone of light is at what clock position
7
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 7
7. Determine the function of CN XII (hypoglossal - motor) STICK TONGUE STRAIGHT OUT: if asymmetrical, may have lesion *** If suspect, check for cheek push - have them put their tongue to their cheek
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 1
1. Inspect the teeth for dentition and oral health looking for lesions or dentition ( teeth in the dental arch), make sure gingiva is firmly attached to the teeth and mandible maxilla, (look to see if any teeth are missing, discolored, or misshapen, or abnormal position. Check for loose ones with your gloved hand look for malocclusion (crowding or severely misaligned teeth)
Name two causes of diplopia.
1. Lesions in the brainstem or cerebellum 2. Weakness or paralysis of one or more extra ocular muscles (AS in horizontal diplopia from palsy of CN II or VI, or vertical diplopia from palsy of CN III or IV) Note: Diplopia in ONE EYE, with the other closed, suggests a problem in the CORNEA OR LENS. p209
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 12 Inspect the Pupils
1. Measure Size: on our card use the black circles of varying sizes to measure pupil size should be between 3 and 5 mm 2. Take Note of Shape 3. Take note of Symmetry 4. Test for Direct and Consensual Light Reflex 5. Test for RAPD 6. Test for Near Reaction
Name 2 types of headaches that are episodic and tend to peak over several hours.
1. Migraine 2. Tension p207
Primary headaches include which 3 types of headaches?
1. Migraine 2. Tension 3. Cluster 4. Chronic daily p206
Slow central visual loss occurs in ____ and ____.
1. Nuclear cataract 2. Macular degeneration p208
Headache Warning Signs ("red flags" that need prompt investigation)
1. Progressively frequent or severe over a 3-month period 2. Sudden onset like a "thunderclap" or "the worst headache of my life" 3. New onset after age 50 years 4. Aggravated or relieved by change in position 5. Precipitated by Valsalva maneuver 6. Associated symptoms of fever, night sweats, or weight loss 7. Presence of cancer, HIV infection, or pregnancy 8. Recent head trauma 9. Associated papilledema, neck stiffness, or focal neurologic deficits
Best way to ask about vertigo:
"do you have feelings of being pulled to the ground or off to one side?"
Cross-Cover Test ????????
"the patient that says they start getting double vision when they are driving in the car late at night..." etc. Shows PHORIAS: cover one eye and see if there is movement, then go to the other eye and see if there is movement (this is subtle) Eg) If you go back and forth bw the eye, breaking fusion/communication bw the eyes, and both eyes move in, then normally they are both exophoric.
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 2 Screen Visual Fields by Confrontation
*flying fingers!* - UNILATERAL: have patient cover an eye; do wiggle test only on side that is UNCOVERED * right eye is open come on their right side with wiggling fingers - BILATERAL: have them tell you when they see the fingers- start from behind the test and work your way in and forward
Depress Lower Lid
*inspect the sclera and palperbral conjunctive for color * note vascular pattern against the white sclera background look for any nodules or swelling
Anatomy of the OROPHARYNX
*know all of them!
Spread Upper and Lower Lid
*open both lids with finger and thumb, on the brow of the bones of the cheek and brow *ask the patient to look to each side and down - good view of the sclera, and bulbar conjunctiva (not palpebral conductive) note color and any lesions
Hairy tongue
- "Hairy" yellowish to brown and black elongated papillae on tongue's dorsum - Benign condition associated with Abx therapy, Candida infection and poor dental hygeine - can occur spontaneously
Diphtheria
- Acute infection caused by cornyebacterium diphtheriae - Dull red throat and a gray exudate (pseudomembrane) present on uvula, pharynx, and tongue -> airway may become obstructed
Serous effusion
- Amber fluid behind eardrum, air bubbles sometimes present - Causes: viral URT infections (otitis media) or sudden changes in atmos presure (otitic barotrauma from flying, diving) -> eustachian tube can't equalize air pressure in middle ear and outside air -> air absorbed from middle ear into blood and serous fluid accum there instead - Sx: fullness and popping, mild conduction hearing loss, pain (sometimes)
Abrasion of teeth with notching
- Biting surfaces of teeth become abraded/notched by recurrent trauma (biting nails, opening bobby pins between teeth) - Sides of teeth show normal contours; size and spacing of teeth unaffected
Acute otitis media with purulent effusion
- Bulging eardrum (laterally, toward examiner's eye), loss of landmarks, redness near umbo and dilated vessels in all segments of drum (diffuse redness) - Spontaneous rupture of drum can occur -> discharge of purulent material into ear canal - Causes: bacterial infection from S. pneu and H. infl; sx: earache, fever, conduct. hearing loss - More common in chilren
Marginal gingivitis
- Common in teens and young adults - Gingiva reddened and swollen, interdental papillae blunted, swollen and red - Brushing teeth makes gums bleed - Plaque (soft white film in salivary salts, protein and bacteria) is NOT readily visible
Kaposi's Sarcoma in AIDS
- Deep purple color lesion, may be raised or flat - Lesions suggest Kaposi's sarcoma = low-grade vascular tumor associated with human herpesvirus 8; 1/3 of pts with this have lesions in oral cavity - Other affected sites = GI tracts and lungs - ARV therapy has reduced prevalence of dz
Tympanosclerosis
- Deposition of hyaline material within layers of tympanic membrane, can follow severe episodes of otitis media - Doesn't impair hearing usually - Also shown here: healed perforation (large oval in upper post drum); retracted drum (pulled medially, short process protrudes sharply, and handle is pulled inward at umbo and appears more horizontal)
Geographic tongue
- Dorsum shows scattered smooth red areas denuded of papillae; together with normal rough and coated areas give maplike pattern that changes over time - Normal variant
Koplik's Spots
- Early sign of measles - rash appears within a day - Small white specks that resemble grains of salt on a red background appearing on buccal mucosa near 1st and 2nd molars
Erosion of teeth
- Erosion of enamel from lingual surfaces of upper incisors, exposing yellow-brown dentin - Results from recurrent regurgitation of stomach contents (bulimia)
Where is the pain located in: - Otitis externa - Otitis media
- External canal - Inner ear
Define: - Hyperopia - Presbyopia - Myopia
- Farsightedness - Aging vision: impaired near vision- often sees better far - Nearsightedness
Describe hair in: - Hyperthyroidism - Hypothyrodism
- Fine hair - Coarse hair
What are conditions where general lymphadenopathy is noted?
- HIV/AIDS - infectious mononucleosis - lymphoma - leukemia - sarcoidosis (collections of inflammatory cells, granulomas, throughout the body)
Perforation of the Drum
- Holes in the eardrum from purulent infections of middle ear - Can be central (shown here - don't extend to margin of drum) or marginal (involve margin) - Reddened ring of granulation tissue surrounds perforation = chronic infection - Scarred eardrum, no landmarks visible, discharge may drain through hole - Hole closes in healing process -> thin memb
Gingival hyperplasia
- Hyperplasia enlarges gums, which become swollen into heaped-up masses that may cover teeth - May also see redness of inflammation - Causes: puberty, pregnancy, phenytoin therapy and leukemia
Attrition of teeth; recession of gums
- In elderly people, chewing surfaces of teeth worn down by repetitive use so that yellow-brown dentin becomes exposed (called attrition) - Also note: recession of gums which has exposed roots of teeth (gives "long tooth" appearance)
Abnormal Cornea and Lens findings
- Injected (bloodshot) - Chemosis (edema) - Opacities (cataract) - Lacerations - Subconjunctival - hemorrhage
Large normal tonsils
- Large without being infected, especially in children - Can protrude medially beyond pillars and even to midline - Shown here: pink tonsils, touch sides of uvula and obscure pharynx
Actinic cheilitis
- Lip loses normal redness and may become scaly, thickened and slightly everted - Causes: excessive sun (fair-skinned men who work outdoors are often affected) - Primarily in lower lip, carcinoma of lip possible
Angioedema
- Localized subcutaneous or submucosal swelling caused by leakage of IVF into interstitial tissue - If vasc perm triggered by mast cells in allergic and NSAID rxns look for uriticaria and pruritis - Usually benign and resolves in 24-48 hrs; life-threatening when involves larynx, tongue, upper airway
What is a common cause of poor central vision in older adults? What retinopathy is commonly seen with this?
- Macular degeneration - Drusen (undigested cellular debris) are commonly seen
If a patient with hearing loss is also experiencing earache or vertigo, what could be the issue?
- Medications that might affect hearing (include: aminoglycosides, aspirin, NSAIDS, quinine, and furosemide) - sustained exposure to loud noise
Torus Palatinus
- Midline bony growth in hard palate - Fairly common; size and lobulation varies; harmless
What can be indicated if a headache is unilateral?
- Migraines and cluster headache - tension --> temporal area - cluster --> may be retro-orbital
Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome)
- Multiple small red spots on lips, also visible on oral mucosa and fingertips - Autosomal dominant d/o causes by vascular fragility and arteriovascular malformations (AVMs in lungs and brain = life-threatening hemorrhage) - Common = nosebleeds, GI bleeding, iron deficiency anemia
Fordyce Granules (Spots)
- Normal sebaceous glands appear as small yellowish spots in buccal mucosa OR on lips - Spots usually not numerous
Fissured tongue
- Normal variant, appears with age - Can become irritated with food debris accumulation
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 9 Observe the Cornea
- Note opacities (cataracts), defects, or foreign body - look for injected (bloodshot), chemises (edema), lacerations or subconjuctival hemorrhage - Assess for corneal reflex (CN V: Trigeminal -- Sensory & Motor)
Bullous Myringitis
- Painful hemorrhagic vesicles on tympanic membrane, ear canal or both - Causes: mycoplasma, viral, and bacterial otitis media - Sx: earache, blood-tinged discharge, conductive hearing loss - Shown here: two large bullae on drum, reddened drum, obscured landmarks
Aphthous Ulcer
- Painful, round or oval ulccer that is white or yellowish and surrounded by a halo of reddened mucosa - Heals in 7-10 days, can recur
Mucous patch of syphilis
- Painless lesion of secondary syphilis, highly infectious - Slightly raised, oval and covered by grayish membrane - May be multiple or occur elsewhere in mouth
What can be indicated if the uvula deviates?
- Peritonsillar abscess - CN X paralysis (soft palate fails to rise, deviation to opposite side)
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome
- Prominent small brown pigmented spots in dermal layers of lips, buccal mucosa, and perioral area; also on hands/feet and rarely on nose and mouth - Skin changes accompany many intest polyps - Autosomal dominant d/o - increased risk of GI and other cancers ranges from 40-90%
Herpes simplex (cold sore)
- Recurrent and painful vesicular eruptions of lips and surrounding skin - Small cluster of vesicles -> rupture -> yellow-brown crusts form; 10-14 days to heal
Pregnancy epulis (Pyogenic granuloma, pregnancy tumor)
- Red purple papules of granulation tissue form in interdental papillae & sometimes on fingers - Red, soft, painless and usually bleed easily - Occur in 1-5% of pregnancies and usually regress after delivery - Note: accompanying gingivitis
Exudative tonsillitis
- Red throat with white exudate on tonsils - Together with fever, enlarged cervical nodes = increased chance of group A streptococcal infection or infectious mononucleosis (mono -- Deirde)
Tori Mandibulares
- Rounded bony growths on inner surfaces of mandible - Typically bilateral, asymptomatic and harmless
Varicose veins on tongue
- Small purplish or blue-black round swellings appearing under tongue with age - No clinical significance
Petechiae buccal mucosa
- Small red spots caused by blood that escapes from capillaries into tissues - In buccal mucosa: caused by accidental cheek biting - In oral cavity: due to infection, decreased platelets, or trauma
Hutchinson's teeth in congenital syphilis
- Smaller and more widely spaced than normal and notched on biting surfaces - Sides of teeth taper down toward biting edges - Upper central incisors of permanent teet are most often affeted
Smooth tongue (Atrophic Glossitis)
- Smooth and often sore tongue that has lost its papillae suggests a deficiency in riboflavin, niacin, folic acid, vit B12, pyridoxine, iron or tx with chemotherapy
Angular chelitis
- Softening of skin at angles -> fissuring - Saliva wets and macerates infolded skin, leading to 2ndary infection with candida - Causes: nutritional deficiency, overclosure of mouth, and in those with no teeth or ill-fitting dentures
Septum (normal findings)
- The septum is highly vascular (pink and vascular when healthy)
Candidiasis
- Thick white coating from Candida infection (infection can occur without coating) - Can be scraped off, would see red raw surface underneath - Seen in immunosuppression from chem or prednisone therapy
Leukoplakia tobacco
- Thickened white patch anywhere in oral mucosa; benign reactive process of squamous epithelium may lead to cancer (need for biopsy) - Shown here: from tobacco chewing - Another risk factor: HPV infection
Carcinoma, floor of mouth
- Ulcerated lession is in a common location for carcinoma - Medially, note reddened area of mucosa (called erythroplakia) -- suspicious for malignancy
Chancre of primary syphilis
- Ulcerated papule with indurated edge appears 3-6 weeks post infection with spirochete Trep pallidum - On lip: may resemble carcinoma or crusted cold sore - Also common in pharynx, anus, vagina but may escape detection since are painless, nonsuppurative and heal spontaneously - Infectious! Wear gloves
Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis
- Uncommon, occurs suddenly in adolescents and young adults accompanied by fever, malaise and enlarged lymph nodes - Ulcers develop in interdental papillae -> destructive process spreads along gum margins, where a grayish pseudomembrane forms - Red, painful gums bleed easily; foul breath
Leukoplakia oral mucosa
- Undersurface of tongue appears painted white with persisting painless white patch in oral mucosa - Raise possibility of squamous cell carcinoma and require biopsy
Squamous cell carcinoma of lip
- Usually affects lower lip (like act chelitis) - Can appear as scaly papule, ulcer with/without crust, or as a nodular lesion (illustrated here) - Risk factors: fair skin and prolonged exposure to sun
Hairy leukoplakia
- White, raised areas with a feathery corrugated pattern that cannot be removed (unlike candidiasis) - Most often affects sides of tongue - Seen in HIV and AIDS
Thrush on palate
- Yeast infection from Candida species - Thick, white plaques are adherent to underlying mucosa, can appear elsewhere on mouth - Predisposing factors: 1) prolonged tx with Abx or corticosteroids 2) AIDS
What is indicated when a patient experiences pain with movement of the auricle and tragus?
- acute otitis externa NOT otitis media
What does peripheral visual loss suggest?
- advanced open-angle glaucoma
6. Perforation of the TM
- after repeated infections - traums
Nasal polyps are pale saclike growths of inflamed tissue that obstruct the air passage or sinuses. What are some causes of this?
- allergic rhinitis -aspirin sensitivity - asthma - chronic sinus infection - cystic fibrosis
Taking a history of the NOSE
- blockage - discharge - sneezing - pain - changes in sense of smell - deformity
Cancer of the Tongue
- can be very subtle - why you need to palpate the tongue
What does gradual, bilateral visual loss suggest?
- cataracts - macular degeneration
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 8 Observe the entire Conjunctiva and Sclera
- depress lower lid - spread upper and lower lid - have patient look in all directions - evert the upper lid
What does one-sided visual loss suggest?
- hemianopsia - quadrantic defects
When the thyroid gland is retrosternal, below the suprasternal notch, is is often not palpable. What symptoms are with seen retrosternal goiters?
- hoarseness - shortness of breath - stridor - dysphagia from tracheal compression - neck hyperextension and arm elevation may cause flushing form dilatation of the external jugular veins and obstruction of the thoracic inlet
4. Mastoiditis
- inflammation/infection behind the ear (of the process over the bone)
Abnormal Conjunctiva
- injected (bloodshot) or pale (anemia) - Chemosis - edema - Opacities - Lacerations - Subconjunctival hemorrhage
What can cause tracheal deviation?
- masses in the neck Thorax problems, such as: - mediastinal mass - atelectasis - large pneumothorax
What is indicated if a headache is episodic and peaks over several hours? If it is also new and persisting, getting progressively severe?
- migraine/tension headache - concern for tumor, abscess or mass lesion
What can be indicated is a headache is associated with nausea and vomiting?
- migraines - brain tumors - subarachnoid hemorrhage
What does slow central visual loss suggest?
- nuclear cataract - macular degeneration
"Red flags" for headaches (9):
- progressively frequent or severe over 3 month period - sudden onset like a "thunderclap" or "worse headache of my life," with maximal intensity over several minutes (70% of patients have subarachnoid hemorrhage) - new onset after 50 years of age - aggravated or relieved by change in position - precipitated by Valsalva maneuver - associated with fever, night sweats, or weight loss - presence of cancer, HIV infection, or pregnancy - recent head trauma - associated papilledema, neck stiffness, or focal neurologic deficits
What causes loss of mobility of the TM?
- serous effusion - thickened TM drum - purulent otitis media
What is indicated if a headache is severe with sudden onset (2)?
- subarachnoid hemorrhage - meningitis
History of the Eye (Review of Systems)
- visual acuity/blurred - vision/visual loss - last eye examination - pain - inflammation/redness - discharge - tearing or dryness (Dryness is a sign of a systemic issue) - visual difficulties - double vision - scotomata - floaters or flashers
What do moving specks or strands in the patient's vision suggest?
- vitreous floaters
What does painless, sudden, unilateral visual loss suggest?
- vitreous hemorrhage from diabetes or trauma - macular degeneration - retinal detachment - retinal vein occlusion - central retinal artery occlusion
Normal Sclera
- white (jaunidice = yellow) - no swelling - no injection (blood shot)
Transillumination of the Frontal Sinus (place light where, look for, absence of glow suggests)
-deep under each brow, close to the nose -look for dim red glow transmitted through air filled frontal sinus to FORHEAD -absence suggests a thickened mucosa or secretions in the frontal sinus, but may also result from developmental absence of one or both sinuses
Transillumination of the Maxillary Sinus (place light where, look for, absence of glow suggests)
-shine light downward from just below the inner aspect of each eye -look through the open mouth at the hard palate for reddish glow -absence of glow suggests thickened mucosa or secretions in the maxillary sinus
How to check for an APD (test name, steps, what occurs, also termed)
-swinging flashlight test; -1. light shines into normal right eye & there is brisk constriction of both pupils 2. light swings over to the abnormal left eye, partial dilation of both pupils will occur -the afferent stimulus on the left is reduced so the efferent signals to both pupils are also reduced and a net dilation occurs -afferent pupillary defect aka Marcus Gunn pupil, the most common pupillary abnormality
Left Homonymous Hemianopsia (right optic radiation)
A complete interruption of fibers in the optic radiation, produces a visual defect similar to that produced by a lesion of the optic tract.
Tophi
A deposit of uric acid crystals characteristic of chronic tophaceous gout. It appears as hard nodules in the helix or antihelix and may discharge chalky white crystals through the skin. It also may appear near the joints, hands
Kayser-Fleischer Ring.
A golden to red brown ring, sometimes shading to green or blue, from copper deposition in the periphery of the cornea found in Wilson's disease.
Open-Angle Glaucoma
A gradual loss of vision as a result of the loss of retinal ganglion in cell axons. There is initial loss of peripheral visual fields, and pallow and increasing size of teh optic cup. It is the leading cause of blindness in African Americans, and the second leading cause of blindness overall
Pinguecula
A harmless yellowish triangular nodule in the bulbar conjunctiva on either side of the iris. Appears frequently with aging, first on the nasal and then on the temporal side.
Bitemporal Hemianopsia (optic chiasm)
A lesion at the optic chiasm, may involve only fibers crossing over to the opposite side. Since these fibers originate in the nasal half of each retina, visual loss involves the temporal half of each field.
If the patient sticks out their tongue and it is not symmetrical, what does that indicate?
A lesion of CN XII (hypoglossal)
Blind Right Eye (right optic nerve)
A lesion of the optic nerve and, of course, of the eye itself, produces unilateral blindness
Left Homonymous Hemianopsia (right optic tract)
A lesion of the optic tract, interrupts fibers originating on the same side of both eyes. Visual loss in the eyes is, therefore, similar (homonymous) and involves half of each field (hemianopsia).
Episcleritis
A localized ocular inflammation of the episcleral vessels. Vessels appear movable over the scleral surface. May be nodular or show only redness and dilated vessels. Seen in rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, and herpes zoster.
Nuclear cataract
A nuclear cataract looks gray when seen by a flashlight. If the pupil is widely dilated, the gray opacity is surrounded by a black rim.
Sty
A painful, tender, red infection in a gland at the margin of the eyelid.
Homonymous Left Superior Quadrantic Defect (right optic radiation, partial)
A partial lesion of the optic radiation in the temporal lobe, may involve only a portion of the nerve fibers, producing, for example, a homonymous quadrantic defect.
Physiologic Cup
A ring around the optic disc
Congenital hearing loss may be from ____.
A single gene mutation. p209
Chalazion
A subacute nontender, usually painless nodule involving a blocked meibomian gland. May become acutely inflamed but, unlike a sty, usually points inside the lid rather than on the lid margin.
Corneal Scar
A superficial grayish white opacity in the cornea, secondary to an old injury or to inflammation. Size and shape are variable. Do not confuse with the opaque lens of a cataract, visible on a deeper plane and only through the pupil.
Dacryocystitis
A swelling between the lower eyelid and nose. An acute inflammation (illustrated) is painful, red, and tender. Chronic inflammation is associated with obstruction of the nasolacrimal duct. Tearing is prominent, and pressure on the sac produces regurgitation of material through the puncta of the eyelids.
Corneal Arcus
A thin grayish white arc or circle not quite at the edge of the cornea. Accompanies normal aging but also seen in younger people, especially African Americans. In young people, suggests possible hyperlipoproteinemia. Usually benign.
Pterygium.
A triangular thickening of the bulbar conjunctiva that grows slowly across the outer surface of the cornea, usually from the nasal side. Reddening may occur. May interfere with vision as it encroaches on the pupil
Actinic Cheilitis
Actinic cheilitis results from excessive exposure to sunlight and affects primarily the lower lip. Fair-skinned men who work outdoors are most often affected. The lip loses its normal redness and may become scaly, somewhat thickened, and slightly everted. Because solar damage predisposes to carcinoma of the lip, examine such skin lesions carefull
What does the canal look like in a patient with acute otitis externa? Chronic otitis externa?
Acute - canal narrowed, swollen, moist, pale, and tender Chronic - skin of canal is thickened, red, and itchy
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma (significance)
Acute increase in intraocular pressure constitutes an emergency
What is indicated with moderate, deep, and aching eye pain, with ciliary injection/diffusely red conjunctiva? Note, vision is decreased with photophobia. Pupils are small and irregular
Acute iritis
Soft wax, debris from inflammation or rash int he ear canal, or discharge through a perforated eardrum is present in _____.
Acute or chronic otitis media. p209
Local sinus tenderness with pain, fever, and nasal discharge suggests
Acute sinusitis
Valsalva maneuver may increase the pain from what?
Acute sinusitis of from a mass lesion due to changing intracranial pressure
What can be indicated if sneezing, coughing, and/or changing position affect headache?
Acute sinusitis or mass lesion due to changes in intracranial pressure - valsalva maneuvers may increase pain
Normal teeth (adult number, 1st molar at what age, 2nd molar at what age, 3rd molar at what age?)
Adult=32 teeth/16 in each jaw 1st molar=at 6 years old 2nd molar=at 12-years old 3rd molar=wisdom tooth)
Peripheral loss occurs in ____.
Advanced open-angle glaucoma p208
Presbyopia
Aging vision (impaired near vision)
Paranasal sinuses
Air-filled cavities within the bones of the skull; only frontal and maxillary sinuses are readily accessible to the examiner
Opening of the parotid duct
Aka Stenson's duct. On the buccal mucosa, near the upper second molar.
Nostril Bump is aka
Ala nasi
Nasal mucosa is pale, bluish, or red in
Allergic rhinitis
Condition that can have polyps
Allergic rhinitis Aspirin sensitivity Asthma Chronic sinus infections Cystic fibrosis
Causes of rhinorrhea
Allergic rhinitis Viral infection Vasomotor rhinitis Drug-induced rhinitis (use of decongestants or cocaine)
Medications that can affect hearing
Aminoglycosides Aspirin NSAIDs Quinine Furosemide
What medications may affect hearing?
Aminoglycosides, aspirin, NSAIDs, quinine and furosemide
7. Cholesteatoma
An abnormal sebaceous growth behind the TM, often caused by repeated infections, cysts. Can cause permanent hearing loss, dizziness, or facial paralysis. A buildup of tissue (skin tissue) that is built up behind the ear
Angioedema
Angioedema is a localized subcutaneous or submucosal swelling caused by leakage of intravascular fluid into interstitial tissue
fissuring at the angles of the mouth
Angular cheilitis
Where do light rays focus in a myopic patient? Do retinal structures look smaller or large than normal?
Anterior to the retina Larger than normal
What drugs contribute to epistaxis?
Anticoagulants, NSAIDs and coagulopathies
medication causes of epistaxis
Anticoagulants, NSAIDs, and coagulopathies
What to look for on skull during examination?
Any deformities, depressions, lumps or tenderness
Alveolar mucosa
Area below gingiva, but above labial mucosa
Testing the near reaction is helpful in diagnosing
Argyll Robertson and tonic (Adie's) pupils
Small, irregular pupils: if do not react to light
Argyll Robertson pupils; seen in CNS syphilis
Secondary Headaches
Arise from other conditions: withdrawal of medication, glaucoma, sinusitis, meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, brain tumor, giant cell arteritis, post-concussion
Secondary headaches
Arise from underlying structural, systemic, or infectious causes such as meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage and may be life threatening.
Identifying arteries and veins in the retina
Arteries are light red and 2/3 of the size of veins, with a light reflex that is bright in color. Veins are dark red, larger, and have little or no light reflex.
Retinal arteries vs retinal veins
Arteries= smaller (2/3-3/4 the diameter of veins), light red, bright light reflex Veins= larger, dark red, inconspicuous or absent
Taking a history of the EAR
Ask even if they aren't coming in with a CC of ear pain - itch - pain - discharge - deafness - tinnitus - dizziness Also ask about ototoxic drugs (gentamycin, diuretics), trauma, barotrauma, systemic disease such as multiple sclerosis, prior ear surgery
Lid Lag
Associated with hyperthyroidism. Normally, as the eyes move up and down, the lid should follow, slightly overlapping the iris throughout the movement. If you see the sclera above the iris, it means the lid is lagging.
Acute Iritis (Significance)
Associated with systemic infection, Herpes zoster, tuberculosis; refer promptly
What to look for on face during examination?
Asymmetry, involuntary movements, edema and masses
Tonsillar lymph nodes
At angle of mandible. Infections of mouth, pharynx, larynx, thyroid, trachea, and tonsils would drain here
Opening of the submandibular gland ducts
At the base of the tongue, one on each side of the frenulum.
Vision of 20/200 means...
At twenty feet, the patient can read print that a person with normal vision could read at 200 ft (larger second number = worse vision)
What suggests central neurologic causes in the cerebellum or brainstem? (Ex: cerebral vascular disease or posture loss tumor and migraine )
Ataxia, diplopia and dysarthria
A 26 y/o female presents to your office with a c/o sore throat, fever, severe fatigue and anorexia for the past week. She reports epigastric and LUQ discomfort. She has cervical lymphadenopathy and a rash. Her boyfriend experienced similar symptoms recently. Which of the following is the best differential diagnosis?
B) Infectious mononucleosis, hepatitis, acute pharyngitis, acute HIV infection, secondary syphilis
Conjunctivitis (Significance)
Bacterial, viral, and other infections; highly contagious; allergy; irritation
Submental lymph nodes
Behind tip of mandible. Infections from the mouth or lower lip drain here
Why might one eye blink at a different rate than the other?
Bells Palsy
Black Hairy Tongue
Benign condition Caused by ingestions of things, smoking, pepto bismol
Where are tonsils located
Between the anterior and posterior pillars. May or may not be visible in adults.
What can be indicated with bilateral proptosis (abnormal protrusion of the eyeballs)? Unilateral proptosis?
Bilateral - hyperthyroidism Unilateral - orbital tumor, retrobulbar hemorrhage
What is indicated with bilateral diplopia? Unilateral diplopia?
Bilateral diplopia - lesions in the brainstem or cerebellum - paralysis of one or more EOMs - horizontal diplopia (palsy of CN III or VI - vertical diplopia (palsy of CN III or IV Unilateral diplopia - problem in the cornea or lens
Types of Hemianopsia
Bitemporal hemianopsia- they can see the middle, ie right eye sees on its left side and left eye sees on its right side. Homonymous Hemianopsia- both eyes are missing either the left side of the visual field or the right side of the visual field.
Red inflamed lid margins, often with crusting:
Blepharitis
Central Retinal Vein Occlusion
Blood and Thunder
Upper third of nose
Bone
Hard palate
Bony front part of the roof of the mouth
Myopia and hyperopia
Both are refractive errors. In myopia, the light rays focus anterior to the retina. This causes nearsightedness In hyperopia, they focus on a point posterior to the retina, causing farsightedness.
Convergence and Accomodation
Both parts of shifting the gaze to a near object. Accommodation is a change in the shape of the lens and cannot be observed. Convergence is an EOM.
Lead Poisoning
Burton line; Very thin, black-blue line visible along the margin of the gums, at the base of the teeth
1/3 of patients with migraine experience
a visual aura, such as spark photopsias (flashes of light), fortifications (zig-zag arcs of light), and scotoma (area of visual loss with surrounding normal vision)
A 30 y/o male comes to your office c/o "night sweats " x 1 month. He smokes a pack of cigarettes a day, when he can get them. After some time he admits to associated symptoms of cough and swollen glands. Which of the following choices most accurately reflects a differential diagnosis for this patient?
C) Tuberculosis, Acute HIV infection, Lymphoma, Leukemia
A 35 yof presents with intermittent episodes of vertigo, tinnitus, nausea and hearing loss within the past week. DiDx?
C) Vestibular neuronitis, labyrinthitis, benign positional vertigo, Meniere's disease, Acoustic neuroma
Primary headaches include...
Caused by problems of overactivity of pain-sensitive structures in your head. Examples include: migraine, tension, cluster, chronic daily headaches
Sudden unilateral loss that is PAINFUL suggests which 7 conditions.
Causes are usually in the cornea and anterior chamber as in: 1. Corneal ulcer 2. Uveitis 3. Traumatic hyphema 4. Acute glaucoma 5. Optic neuritis from MS may also be painful. Requires immediate referral. p208
Painful bilateral vision loss
Chemical or radiation exposure
What does sudden, bilateral and painful visual loss suggest?
Chemical or radiation exposure
Sudden bilateral visual loss with pain suggests?
Chemical or radiation exposures
Sudden bilateral + PAINFUL visual loss may be due to ____.
Chemical or radiation exposures. p208
chronic inflammatory lesion that starts as a painful papule on the helix or antihelix
Chondrodermatitis helicis:
Skin of ear canal is thickened, red, and itchy in addition to being swollen
Chronic Otis Externa
Parotid Gland Enlargement
Chronic bilateral asymptomatic parotid gland enlargement may be associated with obesity, diabetes, cirrhosis, and other conditions. Note the swellings anterior to the ear lobes and above the angles of the jaw. Gradual unilateral enlargement suggests neoplasm. Acute enlargement is seen in mumps.
Aqueous Humor and Cataract formaiton
Ciliary body produces Aqueous Humor (AH) AH travels from the posterior chamber to the Anterior Chamber and drains through the Canal of Schlemm. If the Canal of Schlemm is blocked then pressure builds and the LENS is pushed forward.
Corneal Injury or Infection/acute iritis/ acute angle closure glaucoma (pattern of redness)
Ciliary injection: dilation of deeper vessels that are visible as radiating vessels or a reddish violet flush aroundthe limbus. Ciliary injection is an important sign of these three conditions but may not be apparent. The eye may be diffusely red instead. Other clues of these more serious disorders are pain, decreased vision, unequal pupils, and a clouded cornea.
Herpes Simplex Lesion
Classic is a vesicular lesion Very painful
Define conjunctiva and its two components:
Clear mucous membrane: - Bulbar conjunctiva: covers most of the anterior eyeball, adhering loosely to the underlying tissue and meets cornea at the limbus - Palpebral conjunctiva: lines the eyelids
Acute Iritis (cornea)
Clear or slightly clouded; injection confined to corneal limbus
Optic Atrophy (Appearance)
Color white Tiny disc vessels absent Seen in optic neuritis, multiple sclerosis, temporal arteritis
Normal Eye
Color yellowish orange to creamy pink Disc vessels tiny Disc margins sharp (except perhaps nasally) The physiologic cup is located centrally or somewhat temporally. It may be conspicuous or absent. Its diameter from side to side is usually less than half that of the disc.
What to look for on the skin during examination?
Color, pigmentation, texture thickness, hair distribution, lesions, hair loss
Deviation of lower septum
Common and may be easily visible; seldom obstructs air flow
Tongue Cancer
Common in men older than 50, smokers, tobacco chewers, and alcohol drinkers Usually appears on the side or base of the tongue
Rinne Test
Compare air conduction (AC) and bone conduction (BC). - Place the base of a lightly vibrating tuning fork on the mastoid bone, behind the ear and level with the canal. When the patient can no longer hear the sound, quickly place the fork close to the ear canal and ascertain whether the sound can be heard again. Here the "U" of the fork should face forward, thus maximizing its sound for the patient.
Hearing loss that improves in noisy environments suggests ________ loss
Conductive
BC= AC or BC>AC
Conductive hearing loss
What kind of hearing loss is present in a patient that is helped with noisy environments?
Conductive hearing loss - this results from problems in the inner ear, cochlear nerve, or its central connections in the brain
Contrast conductive vs sensorineural hearing loss.
Conductive: -External/middle ear -Noisy environments may help Sensorineural -Inner ear -Particular trouble understanding speech, often complaining that others mumble -Noisy environments make hearing worse p209
Excessive tearing from increased production of tears seen in:
Conjunctival inflammation, corneal irritation
Conjunctivitis (Pattern of Redness)
Conjunctival injection: diffuse dilatation of conjunctival vessels with redness that tends to be maximal peripherally
What does conjunctival injection, discomfort, and watery, mucoid, or mucopurulent discharge suggest?
Conjunctivitis
Lingual Frennulum
Connects the tongue to the floor of the mouth
What is miosis?
Constriction of the pupil
Miosis
Constriction of the puplis
Diplopia in one eye with the other eye closed suggests...
Cornea/lens issue
What is a Corneal Scar and how does it differ from a Cataract?
Corneal Scar: A superficial grayish white opacity in the CORNEA, secondary to an old injury or to inflammation. Size and shape are variable. Do not confuse with the opaque LENS of a cataract, visible on a deeper plane and only through the PUPIL.
What is indicated with moderate to severe, superficial eye pain, with ciliary injection/diffusely red conjunctiva? Note, vision is usually decreased.
Corneal injury of infection
Painful unilateral vision loss
Corneal ulcer Uveitis Traumatic hyphema Acute glaucoma Optic neuritis
Soft Exudates: Cotton-Wool Patches
Cotton-wool patches are white or grayish, ovoid lesions with irregular "soft" borders. They are moderate in size but usually smaller than the disc. They result from infarcted nerve fibers. Seen in hypertension and many other conditions.
Tongue
Covered in papillae; under surface has none
Chelitis
Cracking redness on the side of the lips Most caused by dryness or sun exposure, also iron deficiency, nutrient deficiency, allergy, infection
Turbinates
Curving bony structures, covered by vascular mucous membrane; provide cleansing, humidification, and temperature control of inspired air
Dome-shaped lump forms a benign closed firm sac
Cutaneous cyst, sebacous cyst, epidermoid cyst of face or neck, pilar cyst on the scalpA
an unusually prominent short process of the malleus, and a prominent handle that looks more horizontal suggests
a retracted eardrum
Diplopia in one eye, with the other eye closed, suggests
a problem in the cornea or lens
ropy discharge is seen in what type of conjunctivitis
allergic
Seasonal onset of environmental triggers
allergic rhinitis
what conditions could indicate nasal polyps
allergic rhinitis ASA sensitivity asthma chronic sinus infections cystic fibrosis
Conditions conducive to nasal polyps include
allergic rhinitis, ASA sensitivity, asthma, chronic sinus infections, and cystic fibrosis
nasal polyp causes
allergic rhinitis, ASA sensitivity, asthma, chronic sinus infections, cystic fibrosis
Nasal polyps come from:
allergic rhinitis, aspirin sensitivity, asthma, chronic sinus infections, and cystic fibrosis
Conditions that cause nasal polyps
allergic rhinitis, aspirin sensitivity, asthma, chronic sinus infections, cystic fibrosis.
in conductive losses, bone conduction exceeds _____
air conduction
Stensen's duct
aka parotid duct opens onto the buccal mucosa near the upper second molar
Tropias
always there! (manifest)
Macular degeneration (what type of vision occurs, describe types)
an important cause of poor central vision in older adults; dry atrophic (more common but less severe) and wet exudative (or neovascular)
Discharge of mucopurulent fluid from the puncta suggests
an obstructed nasolacrimal duct
absence of the red reflex suggests
an opacity of the lens (cataract) possibly the vitreous
Absence of a red reflex suggests
an opacity of the lens (cataract) or possibly of the vitreous, less commonly a detached retina or in children a retinoblastoma
What ear exam finding suggests a retracted ear drum?
an unusually prominent short process and a prominent handle that looks more horizontal
headache causing meds (overuse)
analgesics, ergotamin, triptans; consider medicaiton overuse in patiens with chronic daily headache taking symptomatic medications more than 2 days per week
Medication for overuse headache is indicated if
analgesics/ergotamines/triptans present >/= 15 days a month for three months and reverts to </= 15 days a month when the medication is discontinued
Review a few abnormalities of the oral mucosa
aphthous ulcer, gingivitus, black line of lead poisoning, erythroplakia and leukoplakia (persistent nodule or ulcer, red or white, especially if indurated SHOULD BE BIOPSIED)
sore tongue
apthous ulcers, nutritional deficiency; sore tongue may result from local lesions or systemic illness
earache questions
associated URI, discharge
"Raw Beef" Tongue
associated with B-12 deficiency
Hypoglossal Nerve Paresis (CN XII)
asymmetric
tonsillar nodes
at angle of mandible
Primary Headache-Tension
bilateral, can be generalized to the back of the head and upper neck or to the frontotemporal area; no nausea but sometimes photo/phono; 30 min to 7 days. pain can decrease but is omnipresent when having an episode.
enlarged blind spot occurs in ...
conditions affecting optic nerve such as glaucoma, optic neuritis, papilledema
An enlarged blind spot occurs in
conditions affecting the optic nerve such as glaucoma, optic neuritis, and papilledema
Rinne test=(BC=AC or BC>AC)
conductive hearing loss
noisy environments may help hearing with
conductive hearing loss
the bone-anchored hearing aid should be ipsilateral for
conductive loss
middle ear HL causes
congenital conditions, benign cholesteatomas, otosclerosis, tumors, TM perforation
Middle Ear Hearing Loss Causes
congenital conductions, benign cholesteatomas, otosclerosis, tumors, perforated TM
risk factors of hearing loss
congenital/familial hearing loss, syphilis, rubella, meningitis, hazardous noise exposure
inner ear HL causes
congenital/hereditary conditions, presbycusis, viral infections (rubella/cytomegalovirus), minieres disease, noise exposure, acoustic neuroma
red eyes
conjunctivitis, subconjunctival hemorrhage, corneal injury or infection, acute iritis, acute angle closure glaucoma
labial frenulum
connects each lip
miosis
constriciton of the pupils
miosis
constriction of pupils
miosis is
constriction of the pupil
chronic glaucoma suggests
contraction of field
thin grayish circle around cornea
corneal arcus
what is another cause of haloes
corneal edema
superficial opacity in the cornea from old injury
corneal scar
painful vision loss suggest
corneal ulcer uveitis traumatic hyphema acute glaucoma
5 Possible causes of unilateral vision loss (painful)
corneal ulcer, uveitis, hyphema, acute glaucoma, optic neuritis
If sudden unilateral vision loss is painFUL, consider
corneal ulcer, uveitis, traumatic hyphema, acute glaucoma
Symptoms of HTN
cotton wool spots, AV nicking, hard exudates
What are vassal maneuvers and how are they related to headaches?
coughing, sneezing may increase the pain from acute sinusitis or from mass lesion due to changing intracranial pressure
Hard Exudates
creamy or yellowish, often bright, lesions with well-defined "hard" borders. They are small and round but may coalesce into larger irregular spots. They often occur in clusters or in circular, linear, or star-shaped patterns. Causes include diabetes and hypertension.
iris bows forward, forming a very narrow angle with the cornea- shining light cast a:
crescentic shadow
The ear canal in the adult
curves inward and is approximately 24mm long
Moon face with red cheeks
cushing syndrome
flashing lights or new vitreous floaters suggest
detachment of vitreous from retina
Flashing lights or new vitreous floaters suggest
detachment of vitreous from retina and require prompt eye consultation
flashing lights or new vitreous floaters in vision
detatchment of vitreous from retina; prompt eye consultation is indicated
Pneumatic mobility
determines mobility of TM moves in response to pressure
one sided nasal congestion suggests
deviated nasal septum nasal polyp FB granuloma carcinoma
Is the nasal congestion only on one side? Consider..
deviated nasal septum, nasal polyp, foreign body, granuloma (Wegener's), or carcinoma
unilateral congestion pathology
deviated septum, nasal polyps, FB, granuloma, carcinoma
nasal congestion on one side
deviated septum, tumor, foreign body
the TM separates what
external ear from the middle ear
conductive phase of hearing pathway
external to middle ear, air and bone conduction (air is more sensitive)
Conductive hearing loss is due to problems in the ________ or ___________ ear
external, middle
a crescent shadow is indicative of
narrow angle glaucoma as
pale save like growths of inflamed tissue that can obstruct the air passage or sinuses
nasal polyps
the ET joins the middle ear with the
nasopharynx
exostoses
non-malignant overgrowths in ear canal, may obscure TM
Acute Iritis (ocular discharge)
none
exostoses
nonmalignant overgrowths in ear canal; may obscure eardrum
Exostoses
nontender nodular swellings covered by normal skin deep in the ear canal. these are nonmalignant overgrowths which may obscure the drum.
Exostoses
nontender nodular swellings covered by normal skin deep in the ear canals; nonmalignant overgrowths which may obscure the drum
Fordyce Spots (Fordyce Granules)
normal sebaceous glands that appear as small yellowish spots in the buccal mucosa or on the lips.
Epistaxis is bleeding from the ___________
nose
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (pupil)
not affected
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (vision)
not affected
Corneal Injury or Infection (pupil)
not affected unless iritis develops
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 5 Observe the Eyebrows
note quantity and distribution and any scaliness of underlying skin
tongue symmetry test what CN?
hypoglossal nerve CN XII
Sympathetic pathway for pupil dilation
hypothalamus--> brain stem--> cervical cord--> neck--> follows carotid artery--> branches into orbit
coarse hair accompanies
hypothyroidism
lateral sparseness of eyebrows indicates
hypothyroidism
if hoarseness lasts more than 2 weeks suggests
hypothyroidism reflux vocal cord nodules head and neck CA neuro disorder
hoarseness over 2 weeks pathology
hypothyroidism, GERD, vocal code nodules, head/neck ca, neurologic disorders (refer to laryngoscopy)
Myxedema Facies
hypothyroidism, dull puffy facies. edema is pronounced around the eyes, and does not put with pressure. hair and eyebrows are coarse, dry, and thinned.
Extraocular muscles associated with CN VI
lateral rectus (lateral middle)
hypertensive retinopathy
marked arteriolar-venous corssing changes are seen, especially along the inferior vessels. copper wiring of the arterioles is present. a cotton-wool spot is seen just superior to the disc. incidental disc drusen are also present but are unrelated to hypertension
normal fundus of a dark-skinned person
ring around the fovea has a normal light relfectoin. color of the funus is a grayish brown almost purplish cast which comes from pigment in the retina and the choroid that char obscures the choroidal vessels; no tessellation is visible
in CN X paralysis the soft palate fails to
rise and the uvula deviates to the opposite side
During an ophthalmic fundus exam if you or the patient is hyperopic then
rotate the lens disc clockwise to the plus diopters
During an ophthalmic fundus exam if you or the patient is myopic then
rotate the lens disc counterclockwise to the minus diopters
Lymph nodes are normally
round or ovoid and smooth, small, mobile, discrete, nontender
hearing loss questions
one or both ears, sudden/gradual, associated vertigo/earache, conductive vs sensorineural, meds, loud noise exposure
Cataract
one pupil is white/milky *ONLY THE PUPIL*
What is a thunderclap headache?
one with sudden onset occur in 70% of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage
teeth
only enamel crown exposed, BV and nerves pass through
kayser-fleischer ring
opacities of the cornea and lens: a golden to brown ring sometimes shading to a green or blue from copper deposition in the periphery of the cornea found in wilson's disease. due to a rare autosomal recessive mutation of the ATO7B gene on chrom 13 causing abnormal copper transport, reduced biliary copper excretion, and abnormal accumulation of copper in the liver and tissues throughout the body. patients present with liver disease, renal failure, and neurological symptoms of tremor, dystonia, and psychiatric disorders ranging from behavior changes to depression and schizophrenia
corneal scar
opacities of the cornea and lens: a superficial grayish white opacity in the cornea seconadary to an old injury to an old injury or inflammation. size and shape are variable. do not confuse with the opaque lens of a cataract visible on a deeper plane and only through the pupil
corneal arcus
opacities of the cornea and lens: a thin grayish white arc or circle not quite at the edge of the cornea. accompanies normal aging but also seen in younger people, especially Af Am. in young people suggests possible hyperlipoproteinemia. usually benign
pterygium
opacities of the cornea and lens: a triangular thickening of the bulbar conjunctiva that grows slowly across the outer surface of the cornea usually from the nasal side. reddening may occur. may interfere with vision as it encroaches on the pupil
cataracts
opacities of the cornea and lens: opacities of the lenses visible through the pupil. risk factor are older age, smoking, diabetes, and corticosteroid use nuclear cataract: looks gray when seen by a flashlight. of the pupil is widely dilated the gray opacity is surrounded by a black rim
peripheral contact
opacities of the cornea and lens: produces spokelike shadows that point-gray against black, as seen with a flashlight, or black against red with an ophthalmoscope. a dilated pupil shown her facilitated this observation
Corneal Ulcer
open sore in cornea outer layer caused by infection
palpebral fissure
opening between teh eyelids
death of optic nerve fibers leads to loss of tiny disc vessels
optic atrophy
defect in both eyes suggests
optic chiasm or tract damage
Defect in one eye suggests
optic nerve or retina damage
central defect in eyes suggests
optic neuritis or macula damage
Drugs that may induce nasal stuffiness
oral contraceptives, reserpine, guanethidine, alcohol, cocaine
drugs that might cause stuffiness
oral contraceptives, respirine, guanethidine, and alcohol
Unilateral Proptosis
orbital tumor or retrobulbar hemorrhage
Unilateral Protrusion of the eyeballs
orbital tumor or retrobulbar hemorrhage (from trauma)
what transmits sound impulses to CNVIII
organ of corti
Pain occurs in the external canal in what type of ear infection
otitis externa
pain in external ear suggests ______ _______
otitis externa
Movement of the auricle and tragus (the 'tug test') is painful in what type of ear infection
otitis externa (inflammation of the ear canal) but not in otitis media (inflammation of the middle ear)
Pain in ear
otitis externa, or otitis media if associated with upper respiratory infection; other otitis media symptoms: soft wax, inflammation debris, discharge through eardrum
Tenderness behind the ear may be present in
otitis media
What is indicated when a patient experiences pain with palpation of the mastoid process and generally behind the ear?
otitis media
pain in inner ear suggests ________ ________
otitis media
Respiratory infections are associated with what type of ear infection
otitis media (it may also be referred from other structures in the mouth, throat, or neck)
what are some reasons for CHL
otosclerosis OM TM perf cerumen
Unilateral Conductive Hearing Loss Reasoning
otosclerosis otitis media, perforation of eardrum, cerumen.
what is the limbus
outer edge of iris
most likely causes of sudden hoarseness
overuse of voice and acute infections
Otitis Media
pain in the inner and external ear accompanied by respiratory infections. Pain may also be referred from the mouth, throat, or neck. Unusually soft wax, debris from inflammation, or discharge through a perforated eardrum is present.
Otitis Externa
pain occurs in the external ear canal; pain can also be referred from other structures in the mouth, throat, or neck
bullous myringitis
painful hemorrhagic vesicles appear on the tympanic membrane, the ear canal, or both. earache, blood-tinged discharge from the ear and conductive hearing loss. caused by mycoplasma, viral, and bacterial otitis media
Nasal polyps are
pale saclike growths of inflamed tissue that can obstruct the air passage or sinuses
in allergic rhinitis the mucosa is
pale, bluish or red
allergic rhinitis sxs
pale, bluish, red mucosa
description of nasal polyps
pale, semitranslucent masses that usually come from the middle meatus. ulcers may result from cocaine
gingiva normal color
pale/coral in lighter skin, diffuse/brown in darker skin
The opening between the eyelids is called the
palpebral fissure
hypothyroidism sxs
palpitations, involuntary weight loss, temperature intolerance
Eyes conjugate in right lateral gaze but not in left lateral gaze
paralysis of CN VI
decreased facial mobility, mask like appearance
parkinson's disease
Swelling in from of the ear lobe and above the angles of the jaw
parotid gland enlargement, acute enlargement seen in mumps
Homonymous left Superior Quadrantic Defect
partial lesion of optic radiation in the temporal lobe, may involve only a portion of nerve fibers.
sensorineural hearing loss
particular trouble understanding speech, often complaining that others mumble; noisy environments make hearing worse
who should be routinely screened for hearing
past hx of noise exposure 65+
static finger wiggle test
patient looks into your eyes
Groups at risk for impaired hearing
patients with a history of congenital or familial hearing loss, syphilis, rubella, meningitis, or exposure to hazardous noise levels at work or on the battlefield
Noisy environments may help these patients hear better
patients with conductive hearing loss
These patients have particular trouble understanding speech, often complaining that others mumble, noisy environments make hearing worse
patients with sensorineural loss
Physical Examination of the EAR (photo)
perform otoscopy Proper technique: gently pull the auricle up and back - while holding the otoscope, slowly insert the speculum with a downward and forward movement into the ear canal REPEAT IN OPPOSITE EAR EXTERNAL CANAL: look for cerumen (wax) build up or fluid in the canal TM: should be pink; see handle of malleus umbo and the cone of light; fluid is normal MOBILITY: - valsalva -pneumatic
if the whispered voice test for auditory acuity shows the following results: Four of the six possible numbers and letters are incorrect.... What do you do?
perform the Weber & Rinne tests Bates says to conduct further testing by audiometry. (Weber and Rinne tests are less accurate and precise.) p.237
smoke-like shadows that point with very dilate pupil
peripheral contact
enlarged tender lymph nodes go with
pharyngitis
Soft lumps on the scalp may indicate
pilar cysts (wens)
soft lumps on head
pilar cysts (wens) pigmented nevi
soft lump on scalp pathology
pilar cysts, pigmented nevi
3. Furunculosis
pimple of pus
harmless yellow triangular nodule that appears with aging
pinguecula
hirsutism in women
polycystic ovary disease
audible tinnitus
popping of TMJ or vascular noises from neck
bulbar
portion of conjunctiva reflected onto eyeball
enlargement of a supraclavicular node, especially on the left
possible metastasis from a thoracic or abdominal malignancy
enlargement of supraclavicular nodes, especially on left suggests
possible metastasis from a thoracic or an abdominal malignancy
retroorbital headache
possibly cluster headache
Lymph node superficial to the mastoid process
posterior auricular
occipital nodes
posterior base of skull
Lymph node along the anterior edge of the trapezius
posterior cervical
which chamber contains the vitreous humor
posterior chamber
where do light rays focus in hyperopia
posterior to the retina
lightheadedness, leg weakness, fainting pathology
pre-syncope from arrhythmia, orthostatic hypotension, vasovagal stimulation
Lymph node in front of ear
preauricular
red purple papules form in gingival interdental papillae
pregnancy tumor
Inner Ear Hearing Loss Causes
presbycusis, viral infections, Menieres disease, noise exposure, acoustic neuroma
aging vision or old mans vision
presbyopia
the nasopharynx allows for
pressure to equalize between the middle ear and throat
What is the difference between a primary and secondary headache?
primary = migraine, cluster, tension or chronic daily headaches secondary = arise from underlying structural, systemic, or infectious causes such as meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage and may be life threatening
2 headache types
primary and secondary
gradual loss of vision as a result of the loss fo retina ganglion cell axons, initial loss of eripheral visual fields, and pallor and increasing size of optic cup which enlarges to more than havlf the diameter of the optic disc. What is this condition?
primary open-angle glaucoma; other risk factors include over 65 yrs, family history, African American descent, diabetes, myopia, and ocular hypertension
diplopia in one with the other closed suggests
problem in the cornea or lens
Diplopiain one eye with other closed
problem with cornea or lens
Diplopia in one eye with other closed
problem with cornea or lens -------------shingles can distort the cornea
likely vertigo causes
problem with labyrinth, lesions on CN VIII, central pathway lesions, brain nuclei
Conductive hearing loss results from
problems in the external or middle ear
Sensorineural hearing loss results from
problems in the inner ear, the cochlear nerve, or its central connections in the brain
migranes are often preceded by
prodrome headaches; sometimes pt. has aura with photophobia, scintillating scotomata, or reversible visual and sensory symptoms
headache red flags
progressive sxs, severe over 3 months, "thunderclap", new onset >50 yrs, aggravated/relieves with position change, precipitated with valsalva maneuver, associated fever/night sweats/weight loss, hx of cancer/HIV/preg, associated papilledema/neck stiffness/focal neuro deficits
retracted drum description
prominant short process looks horizontal
triangular of bulbar conjunctiva that grows across the outer surface of the cornea
pterygium
drooping of eyelid
ptosis
with young kids what do you do with the auricle on exam
pull it down and back
retracted drum
pulled medially away from the examiner's eye and the malleolar folds are tightened into sharp outlines. short proccess protrudes sharply and the handle of the malleus, pulled inward toward the umbo, loks foreshortened and horizontal
hypertensive retinopathy with macular star
punctate exudates are readily visible, some are scattered, others radiate from the fovea to the macular star. note the two small, soft exudates, about 1 disc diameter from the disc. find te flame shaped hemorrhages sweeping toward 7:00 and 8:00. these two fundi show changes typical of accelerated (malignant) hypertension and are often accompanied by papilledema
Miosis
pupil constriction
what is miosis
pupil constriction
what is mydrasis
pupil dilation
tonic pupil (adie's pupil)
pupil is large, regular and usually unilateral. reaction to light is severely reduced and slowed or even absent. near reaction, although very slow, is present. slow accomodation causes blurred vision. deep tendon reflexes are often decreased- causes anisocoria. in this is a large pupil and normal size. NO PTOSIS
anisoocoria
pupillary inequality of the less than 0.5 mm; considered benign if pupillary reactions are normal
anisocoria
pupillary size difference
what tone test is done for both air and bone conduction
pure tone
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma (Pain)
severe, aching, deep
most important attribute for headache
severity and chronologic pattern
Trigeminal Neuralgia
sharp pain in the face because of the trigeminal nerve. even mild stimulation to the face can cause severe pain.
Test for a crescentic shadow
shine light at the side of the iris and look for a crescent shaped shadow on the other side, indicating that the iris is bowing out abnormally- think narrow angle glaucoma.
Floor of the nose (normal findings)
should be erythematous - note its color and any swelling, bleeding or exudate - note if clear mucopurulent-containg pus and mcus or purulent-yellow or yellow- brown
During otoscopic examination, what should you see?
should see the tympanic membrane should be pink color if red and inflammed or look like fluid behind it =bad should see the jumbo the cone of light the nadle of malleus and the lateral process of malleus posterior fold of the malleus and anterior fold
causes of chronic hoarseness
smoking, allergy, voice abuse, hypothyroidism, chornic infections such as TB, and tumors
thyroid gland pathology
soft - graves disease hard - hashimotos thyroiditis, malignancy
CN x paralysis sxs
soft palate fails to rise, uvula deviates to opposite end
Phoria
sometimes there (latent) 4 types: 1. esophoria 2. exophoria 3. hypotropia 4. hypertropia
unilateral SNHL with weber test
sound heard in good ear
unilateral CHL with weber test
sound heard in impaired ear
rinne test normal results
sound heard longer through air connection than bone connection
posterior pathway defects
stroke, chiasmal tumors
painful infection in the gland at the margin of the eyelid
sty
If a headache is sever and of sudden onset, consider ______ or ______.
subarachnoid hemorrhage meningitis
Headaches severe and sudden onset, consider
subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis
If headache is severe and of sudden onset, consider
subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis
Severe and sudden onset of headache
subaradchnoid hemorrhage or meningitis
Lymph node midway between the angle and the tip of the mandible; these nodes are usually smaller and smoother than the lobulated submandibular gland against which they lie
submandibular
Lymph node in the midline a few centimeters behind the tip of the mandible
submental
Benign Positional Vertigo
sudden onset after rolling onto affected side, lasts less than a minute. no loss of hearing or tinnitus. sometimes there is nausea, vomiting, nystagmus
Attributes of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)
sudden, thunderclap onset, with worst pain of their life. preceded by sentinel leaks (sudden or focal pain that may be severe). Can also be associated with nausea and vomiting.
absence of red reflex
suggests an opacity of the lens (cataract) or possibly of the vitreous, detached retina or retinoblastoma (children)
parotid glands
superficial and behind mandible, openings visible within oral cavity
Lymph node superficial to the sternomastoid
superficial cervical
superficial cervical nodes
superficial to SCM
posterior auricular nodes
superficial to mastoid process
what is the pars flaccida
superior aspect of the TM
Lymph node deep in the angle formed by the clavicle and the sternomastoid
supraclavicular
Secondary Headache- Errors of Refraction
sustained contraction of EOMs, occurs around and over eyes, could also be in occipital area. steady, aching pain, sandy sensation of eyes, red conjunctiva, occurs after long use of eyes resting helps
what is chemosis
swelling of the bulbar conjunctiva
Papilledema
swelling of the optic disc and anterior bulging of the physiologic cup. Indicative of: intracranial mass, lesion, hemorrhage, meningitis
papilledema
swelling of the optic disc and anterior bulging of the physiologic cup; often signals serious brain d/o (meningitis, subarach. Hemorrhage, trauma, mass lesions)
Papilledema describes
swelling of the optic disc and anterior bulging of the physiologic cup; often signals serious disorders of the brain such as meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, trauma, mass lesions
rise in soft palate when saying "ah"
test for Cranial Nerve X; in CN X paralysis, the soft palate fails to rise and the uvula deviates to opposite side
Physical examination of the NOSE step 2
test potency bilaterally - ask the patient to inhale through each nostril separately while the opposite nostril is help shut
Testing for Near Reaction
testing accommodation hold something about 10cm from their eyes- have patient look off in the distance and then look at the object ** FAR AWAY: pupils should DILATE **BRING CLOSER: pupils should CONSTRUCT when looking at near object (this is mediated by the oculomotor nerve CNIII) Observing one eye at a time is helpful
Weber Test
tests for lateralization; in conductive sound is lateralized to bad ear, in sensorineural sound is lateralized to the good ear. Sensitivity is 55%, specificity is 79 for SN and 92 for Conduction.
The thyroid isthmus usually overlies
the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th tracheal rings
The thyroid isthmus spans
the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th tracheal rings just below the cricoid cartilage
the middle ear is internal to
the TM
looks gray with a flashlight and the pupil is very dilated
nuclear cataract
Slow central vision loss occurs in
nuclear cataract and macular degeneration
slow central vision loss
nuclear cataract, macular degeneration
slow central visual loss
nuclear cataract, macular degeneration
Sore smooth tongue
nutritional deficiency
Causes of angular cheilitis
nutritional deficiency or over closure of mouth in people with no teeth
the eyes are normal looking to the right, but not when looking to the left
o In paralysis of CN 6
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 13
observe breath odors
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 14
observe the voice - hoarseness - nasal quality - stridor
Lymph node at the base of the skull posteriorly
occipital
Horizontal Defect in the Eye
occlusion of a branch of the central retinal artery may cause this. ischemia of optic nerve can produce this as well.
Acoustic Neuroma
occurs from CN VIII. one side hearing is affected and tinnitus may be present.
Secondary Headache-Analgesic rebound
occurs from withdrawal of meds, can be very variable. location and severity varies.
can't see out of a certain quarter of the eye
quadrantic defects
Thunderclap headaches
reach maximal intensity over several minutes, occur in 70% of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage, and are often preceded by a sentinel leak headache from a vascular leak into the subarachnoid space
AOM ear description
red bulging drum
What does acute purulent otitis media look like?
red bulging drum; amber drum of a serous effusion
in viral rhinitis the mucosa is
reddened and swollen
nasal mucosa coloration
reddened and swollen in viral rhinitis; pale, bluish, or red in allergic rhinitis
viral rhinitis sxs
reddened swollen mucosa
If hoarseness lasts more than 2 weeks..
refer for laryngoscopy and consider causes such as hypothyroidism, reflux, vocal cord nodules, head and neck cancers, and neurologic disorders like Parkinson disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or myasthenia gravis
Hoarseness that lasts more than 2 weeks
refer for laryngoscopy and consider hypothyroidism, reflux, vocal cord nodules, head and neck cancers, neurological disorders (Parkinson's, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, MG).
when the light rays from a distance do not focus on the retina
refractive error
what is the most common cause of blurred vision
refractive errors
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
often on the top of the ear
nodular episcleritis
often self limiting in younger adults; also seen in RA and SLE
Glaucoma Risk Factors
older than 65 y/o, family history, African American descent, diabetes, myopia, ocular hypertension.
where does tongue cancer usually appear
on the side or the base of the tongue
Strabismus
one eye is lagging
oculomotor nerve (CNIII) paralysis
the dilated pupil is fixed to light and near effort. ptosis of the upper eyelid and lateral deviation of the eyes are almost always present
Oculomotor Nerve III Paralysis
the dilated pupil is fixed to light and near effort; ptosis of the upper eyelid and lateral deviation of the eye are almost always present
Primary Headache-Cluster
unilateral behind the eye or temple; lacrimation, rhinorhea, miosis, ptosis, edema, up to 3 hours. excruciatingly painful cannot function.
the semicircular canals contain
the end organs for vestibular function
What connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx
the eustachian tube
equal pupils and one blind eye
unilateral blindness does not cause anisocoria as long as the parasymp and symp innervation to both arises is normal. a light directed into the seeing eye produces a direct reaction in that eye and a consenual reaction in the blind eye. a light directed into the blind eye, however, causes no response in either eye
In ______________ hearing loss, sound is lateralized to (heard in) the impaired ear.
unilateral conductive
Weber test= sound is heard in (lateralized to impaired ear)
unilateral conductive hearing loss due to otosclerosis otitis media, cerumen, perforation of the eardrum
bone-anchored hearing air should be contralateral for
unilateral profound sensorineural loss
Weber test= sound is heard in good ear
unilateral sensorineural hearing
Primary Headache-Migraine
unilateral; nausea/vomiting and photophobia/phonophobia; 4-72 hours
What is a prodrome?
unusual feelings such as euphoria, craving for food, fatigue or dizziness that 60-70% of patients with migraines experience prior to onset
Evert the Upper Lid
using a Q-tip roll towards you rolling up the upper lid to evert it note color and any nodules or swelling
If sudden unilateral vision loss is painful, what should you consider?
usually causes are in the cornea and anterior chamber as in corneal ulcer, uveitis, traumatic hyphen, acute glaucoma (optic neuritis from multiple sclerosis may also be painful) immediately refer
Corneal Injury or Infection (vision)
usually decreased
perforated ear drum
usually from purulent infections of he middle ear. central perforations-do not extend the margin of the ear drum, marginal perforations do. reddening ring of granulation tissue surrounds perforation, indicating chronic infection. eardrum itself is scarred ad no landmarks are visible. discharge from middle ear may drain through the opening. ofen closes in the healing process. mem covering hole may be then and transparent
what is in the middle eye layer
vascular layer with choroid, ciliary body and iris
when doing the weber test where do you place the tuning fork
vertex of the head
Benign positional vertigo, labryinthitis, and Meniere's disease
vertigo representing vestibular disease
Central Vertigo
vertigo that occurs because of a CNS issue. often sudden, no LOH or tinnitus. usually occurs with other brainstem deficits like ataxia, crossed motor and sensory deficits; includes acoustic neuroma as a subset
4 Types of Dizziness
vertigo, lightheadedness, presyncope, disequilibrium. Vertigo is most common
Dizziness and Light-headedness are often non-specific and can signify a spectrum of conditions such as
vertigo, presyncope (from arrhythmia, orthostatic hypotension, or vasovagal stimulation), weakness, unsteadiness, and disequilibrium
the inner ear consist of
vestibule semicircular canals cochlea
nose exam is limited to
vestibule, anterior septum, lower/middle turbinates
weber test normal results
vibration heard midline or equal in both ears
Acute bacterial sinusitis is unlikely until..
viral URI symptoms persist >7 days; both purulent drainage and facial pain should be present for diagnosis
rhinorrhea pathology
viral infections, allergic rhinitis, vasomotor rhinitis
Common causes of rhinorrhea and accompanying nasal congestion
viral infections, allergic rhinits (hay fever), vasomotor (nonallergic) rhinitis * allergic often accompanied by itching
mucosa in viral rhinitis vs allergic rhinitis
viral: red and swollen allergic: pale, bluish, or red.
In the U.S. a patient is considered legally blind when
vision in the better eye, corrected by glasses, is 20/200 or less or a constricted field of vision 20 degrees or less in the better eye
Visual field tests include
visual fields by confrontation, static finger wiggle test, kinetic red target test
moving speck or strands in visual field
vitreous floaters
moving specks or strands
vitreous floaters
sudden unilateral vision loss is painless
vitreous hemorrhage macular degeneration retinal detachment retinal vein/artery occlusion
If sudden unilateral vision loss is painless, consider
vitreous hemorrhage from DM or trauma, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion, or central retinal artery occlusion.
What should you consider if sudden unilateral visual loss is painless?
vitreous hemorrhage from diabetes or trauma, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion or central retinal artery occlusion
sudden, painless, unilateral vision loss
vitreous hemorrhage from diabetes or trauma, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion, central artery occlusion
If sudden unilateral visual loss is painless consider
vitreous hemorrhage from diabetes or trauma, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion, or central retinal artery occlusion
unilateral visual loss is painless
vitreous hemorrhage from diabetes/trauma, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal nein occlusion, central retinal artery occlusion
5 Possible causes of unilateral vision loss (painless)
vitreous hemorrhage, MD, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion, retinal artery occlusion
if hoarseness is acute what are the most likely causes
voice overuse acute viral laryngitis
Acure hoarseness
voice overuse and acute viral laryngitis
Acute hoarseness caused by
voice overuse and acute viral laryngitis
questions with voice hoarseness
voice quality changes, larynx disease or extra laryngeal lesions, environmental allergies/GERD/smoking/inhalation
Corneal Injury or Infection (Ocular Discharge)
watery or purulent
Scotomata
wavy lines in field of vision; could be a casue of damage to the brain, MD, part of aura in migraine
what ducts are the outlets of the submandibular glands
whartons
Consensual reaction
when a beam of light shown in one eye causes that pupil to contract, the other pupil will contract as well even if there is no light source, mediated by CN III
The near reaction
when a person shifts there gaze from a far object to a near one their pupils constrict, mediated by CN III. convergence of the eyes and accommodation (lens decreases in size and becomes thicker)
unequal pupils (anisocoria)
when anisocoria is greater in bright light than dim light, the large pupil cannot constrict properly. causes include blunt trauma to the eye, O-A glaucoma, and impaired parasymp nerve supply to the iris as in tonic pupil when anisocoria is greater in dim light, the smaller pupil cannot dilate properly as in Horner's syndrome, cause by an interruption of the sympathetic nerve supply
•Retinal structures than look much smaller than usual and you can see a much larger expanse of the fundus
when lens has been surgically removed
what is accommodation
when the accommodates for close vision by tightening the ciliary m.
what is trichiasis
when the eye lashes are stuck in the eye
what is an astigmatism
when the refractive errors in the horizontal and vertical axes differ
legal blindness
when vision in the better eye corrected by glasses is 20/200 or less, or a constricted field of vision (20 degrees or less in the better eye)
Hypopion
white blood cells inside of the eye from an infection
Arcus Cornealis (Arcus Senilis)
white, grey, or blue opaque ring around the corneal margin more common in older people
lid retraction and exophthalmos
wide-eye stare and common in Graves' disease
hirsutism occurs mostly in?
women with polycystic ovarian syndrome
Internal Anatomy of the NOSE
won't be able to see the meatus should be able to see the turbinates
yellow plaques that appear along the inner corners of the eye
xanthelasma
Fortifications
zig zac arcs of light
Conductive phase of hearing
the first part of the hearing pathway from the external ear through the middles ear
the tongue is anchored to the oral cavity at its base and to the floor by
the frenulum
5. Malignancy
the image shown is just one example
Nasolacrimal duct drains into what
the inferior meatus
What senses the position and movements of the head and helps to maintain balance
the labyrinth of three semicircular canals in the inner ear
left cranial nerve IV paralysis
the left eye cannot look down when turned inward. deviation is max in this direction
Tear fluid comes from
the meibomian glands, conjunctival glands, and lacrimal gland
Most of the paranasal sinuses drain into what
the middle meatus
the eustachian tube is a cartilaginous and bony passageway between
the nasopharynx and the middle ear
What does chronic otitis externa look like?
the skin of the canal is often thickened, red, and itchy
Tension headaches often arise in what area
the temporal areas
2nd most common cancer of the mouth
the tongue; usually on the side and then the base; lip is more common; any indurated red or white persistent nodule is suspect
The eardrum meets the tip of the malleus at
the umbo
Hyperopia
Farsightedness (Difficulty seeing close up)
an enlarged cup suggests
chronic open angle glaucoma
an enlarged physiologic cup indicates
chronic open angle glaucoma
An enlarge physiologic cup
chronic open-angle glaucoma
what does the ciliary body do
ciliary m. provides visual accommodation
pt has difficulty with seeing close
hyperopia
Firm strips of connective tissue within the eyelids are called
tarsal plates
new, persisting, progressively severe headaches
tumor, abscess, or mass lesion
when a patient c/o hearing loss what is the go to tool
tuning fork
What could absence of the red reflex suggest?
Cataracts cause opacity of the LENS so no red reflex.
presbyopia
aging vision
Pharyngitis
(see Bates p 284) - Reddened throats without exudate
Assessing for corneal reflex
(CN V: Trigeminal -- Sensory & Motor) have patient look straight ahead- touch the eye with a q-tip (after pulling out the edge of q-tip to a wisp) (only touch with the wisp) eye should blink
Tonic Pupil
(aka Adie's Pupil) pupil is large, regular, and usually unilateral, reaction to light is severely reduced and slowed, or even absent; near reaction although very slow is present; slow accommodation causes blurred vision; deep tendon reflexes are often decreased
Anatomy of the External Eye
*MEMORIZE*
When performing the Weber test (lateralization test), what is indicated when sound can only be heard in one ear? Which ear hears the sound with each condition?
1. Sensorineural hearing loss - sound heard in good ear 2. Conductive hearing loss - sound heard in bad ear
Name and describe 3 type of visual aura people with migraines may experience.
1. Spark photopsias (flashing of light) 2. Fortifications (zig-zag arcs of light) 3. Scotomata (area of visual loss with surrounding normal vision) Note: ~60-70% of patients with migraine have a symptom prodrome prior to onset. p207
What two conditions should you consider if a headache is severe and of sudden onset?
1. Subarachnoid hemorrhage 2. Meningitis p207
New and persisting, progressively severe headaches raise concerns of which 3 conditions?
1. Tumor 2. Abscess 3. Mass lesion p207
Sudden unilateral vision loss that is PAINLESS suggests which 5 conditions.
1. Vitreous hemorrhage from DM or trauma 2. Macular degeneration 3. Retinal detachement 4. Retinal vein occlusion 5. Central retinal artery occlusion p208
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 8
8. Inspect the pharynx With the patient's mouth open but the tongue not pro- truded, ask the patient to say "ah" or yawn. This action may let you see the pharynx well. If not, press a tongue blade firmly down upon the midpoint of the arched tongue—far enough back to visualize the pharynx but not so far that you cause gagging. Look for any discoloration or lesions on the tonsil anterior and posterior pillars -note color,symmetry - look for swelling - tonsil enlargement, exudate, ulceration etc. - palpate suspicious areas -tonsil should be pink like the pharynx Retropharyngeal wall- should be smooth shiny and pink, should have blood vessels and spots of lymphatic tissue
Physical Examination of the Oropharynx step 9
9. Determine function of CN IX and X IX: glossopharyngeal --> sensory & motor --- using a tongue depressor touch the posterior pharyngeal wall to elicit bilateral gag response X: Vagus --> sensory and motor - have patient say ahh and note the rise of the soft palate and uvula - if it doesn't rise and the uvula deviates to one side -paralysis of nerve x possible
Lid Retraction and Exophthalmos
A wide-eyed stare suggests retracted eyelids. Note the rim of sclera between the upper lid and the iris. Retracted lids and "lid lag" when eyes move from up to down markedly increase the likelihood of hyperthyroidism, especially when accompanied by a fine tremor, moist skin, and heart rate >90 beats per minute.41 Exophthalmos describes protrusion of the eyeball, a common feature of Graves' ophthalmopathy, triggered by autoreactive T lymphocytes. In this disorder, there are a spectrum of eye changes, ranging from lid retraction to extraocular muscle dysfunction, ocular pain, and lacrimation. Changes do not always progress. In unilateral exophthalmos, consider Graves' disease (usually bilateral), trauma, orbital tumor, and granulomatous disorders.
Keloid
A firm, nodular, hypertrophic mass of scar tissue extending beyond the area of injury. It may develop in any scarred area but is most common on the shoulders and upper chest. A keloid on a pierced earlobe may have troublesome cosmetic effects. Keloids are more common in darker-skinned people. Recurrence may follow treatment.
A 55 yof offers a c/o of dizziness for the past 24 hours. she feels faint and has been having diarrhea for the past two days. she takes a diuretic for HTN. didx?
A) Benign positional vertigo, orthostatic hypertention due to dehydration, Acute viral gastroenteritis, Labyrinthitis, Influenza
A 26 y/o female presents with a sore throat, fever, rash and weight loss He has a history of IV drug use and sharing needles. Which of the following are the most likely differential diagnoses?
A) HIV / acute retroviral syndrome, infectious mononucleosis, hepatitis, viral pharyngitis, streptococcal pharyngitis, secondary syphilis
A 44 y/o female presents to the clinic c/o an 11 kg weight gain over the last two months. She quit smoking three months ago. She is on amitriptyline for depression. She also admits to cold intolerance and constipation. Which of the following processes most likely explain her symptoms?
A) Smoking cessation, Hypothyroidism, Drug side effect, polycystic ovary syndrome.
Kaposi's Sarcoma
AID's defining lesion
Physical Examination of the EAR process PALPATION
AURICLES: auricle is the parts of the ear lying outside the head (AKA the pinna) - palpate and push for pressure ask if it hurts when you pull on pinna and push on tragus - NOTE CORRECT POSITION MASTOID REGION: palpate and check for pressure
when arterial walls lose transparency (become opaque) Concealment/AV nicking The vein appears to stop abruptly on either side of the artery The vein appears to taper down on either side of the artery Banking-The vein is twisted on the distal side of the artery and forms a dark, wide knuckle
AV crossings
CN VI
Abducens --- Motor controls the movement of a single muscle, the lateral rectus muscle of the eye
Corneal Injury or Infection (significance)
Abrasions, and other injuries; viral and bacterial infections
Lower two thirds of nose
Cartilage
A 42 y/o female presents to you your office c/o a 7 kg weight loss over the past two months. She has a fine tremor and her pulse is 112 bpm. Which of the following is the most complete differential diagnosis?
C) Hyperthyroidism, Cancer, HIV infection, Dieting/Diet drugs.
_______'s clinical prediction rule for streptococcal and Fusobacterium necrophorum pharyngitis
CENTORS; helps guide diagnosis and treatment of bacterial infection: fever history, tonsillar exudates, swollen tender anterior cervical adenopathy, and absence of cough
Central Retinal Artery Occlusion
CHERRY RED SPOT, Boxcar venules, Pale retina,
Pupils constricting with light controlled by
CN 3
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 3 Test Extra Ocular Movements
CN IIII: Oculomotor --> Motor CN IV: Trigeminal --> Motor CN VI: Abducens --> Motor - cardinal fields of gaze - nystagmus - convergence -Stand in front of the patient and request that, without moving his/her head, follows your finger or a pencil in four directions (H or +) - End with bringing fingers to tip of nose (eyes should converge)
Soft palate fails to rise and uvula deviates to opposite side
CN X paralysis
asymmetric protrusion of the tongue suggests a lesion to CN
CN XII
Asymmetric protrusion of tongue
CN XII lesion
Monocular Diplopia
Can be an issue with the lens due to trauma. Light would be deflected if the lens is messed up, OR it could be an issue with the anterior chamber.
Aniscoria causes
Can be simple (normal difference in size of pupils, less than 0.04mm difference). Can also be Horner's Syndrome, oculomotor nerve paralysis, or tonic pupil.
Thrush on palate
Candidiasis- yeast infection, caused by prolonged antibiotic, corticosteriod use or AIDS
Aphthous ulcer
Canker sore; Small, round, or ovoid ulcers with circumscribed margins, erythematous haloes, and yellow or gray floors.
what is a columella
cartilage along the septum at the inferior base that divides the left and right nare
When is acute bacterial sinusitis likely?
When viral URI symptoms persist more than 7 days and both purulent drainage and facial pain should be present
Anterior Naris
Where air enters the nasal cavity
Centor scoring for strep throat
fever hx, tonsilar exudates, swollen/tender ant cervical andenopathy, absence of cough
Vestibule
Widened area just past anterior naris
Scotomas
Fixed lesions in the retina or visual pathways
How might detachment of the retina present?
Flashing lights or new vitreous floaters. Note: Prompt eye consultation is indicated. p208
Soft palate
Fleshy, flexible part toward the back of the roof of the mouth
Hypothyroidsm
Fatigue, lethargy Weight gain Cold intolerance Bradycardia; decreased SBP, increased DBP Dry, coarse skin Constipation Coarse hair
Kaposi's Sarcoma
Deep purple lesions; can be raised or flat
Flashing lights or new vitreous floaters suggest?
Detachment of vitreous from retina
What do flashing lights or new vitreous floaters in a patient's vision suggest?
Detachment of vitreous from retina Note: a prompt eye consultation is required for patients with flashing lights or new vitreous floaters in their vision.
Preretinal Hemorrhage
Develops when blood escapes into the potential space between the retina and vitreous.
Nasal congestion limited to one side suggests... (3)
Deviated septum, foreign body, tumor
Nasal congestion on one side suggests?
Deviated septum, nasal polyp, foreign body, granuloma (Wegener's) or carcinoma
Asymmetry of corneal reflex suggests:
Deviation from normal ocular alignment
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 13 Prep the Ophthalmoscope
Dial to 0
What constitutes simple aniscoria?
Difference in pupil size of .04 mm or greater
If a patient's vision is not normal, what could be indicated if it is worse during close work or at distances?
Difficulty with close work --> hyperopia (farsightedness) or presbyopia (aging vision) Difficulty with distances --> myopia (nearsightedness)
Actinic chelitis
Diffuse or patchy dryness and variable thickening of the vermilion of the lower lip due to chronic sun exposure.
Mydriasis
Dilation of pupils
What is mydriasis?
Dilation of the pupil
Dull red and has gray exudates Airway may become obstructed
Diphtheria- caused by Corynebacterium
Chron's Disease
Disease that affects the entire immune system Involvement of oral mucosa more common in Crohn's than ulcerative colitis
Hirschberg Test (corneal light reflex)
Done 1st Shine light in the middle ~2 feet away The reflection should be at the same spot on the eye. If it is not, you may have a tropia or phoria.
Diplopia
Double vision
Upstarting palpebral fissures
Down Syndrome
Upstarting palepbral fissures seen in:
Downs syndrome
Rhinorrhea
Drainage from the nose and is often associated with nasal congestion, a sense pf stuffiness or obstruction
Drusen
Drusen are yellowish round spots that vary from tiny to small. The edges may be soft, as here, or hard
Why might valsalva maneuvers increase pain from acute sinusitis or mass lesions?
Due to changing ICP. p207
Otoscope exam of otitis externa
Ear canal is swollen, narrowed, moist, tender, and pale or reddened. If chronic, the skin may be thickened, red, and itchy
What are common symptoms associated with hearing loss?
Earache or vertigo
Koplik's Spots
Early sign of measles; small white specks that resemble salt on a red background
Excessive tearing due to impaired draininge of tears seen in:
Ectropion, Nasolacrimal duct obstruction
Papilledema (Process)
Elevated intracranial pressure causes intraaxonal edema along the optic nerve, leading to engorgement and swelling of the optic disc.
symptoms of strep
fever, pharyngeal exudates, anterior lymphadenopathy, especially in absence of a cough
Gingival Hyperplasia
Enlarged gums that are swollen and may even cover teeth; causes: phenytoin therapy, puberty, pregnancy, and leukemia
Metastasis from thoracic or abdominal malignancy
Enlargement of the supraclavicular node; especially on the left
Goiter
Enlargement of the thyroid gland to twice its normal size
What is a goiter?
Enlargement of the thyroid gland, typically twice its normal size
Entropion
Entropion, more common in the elderly, is an inward turning of the lid margin. The lower lashes, which are often invisible when turned inward, irritate the conjunctiva and lower cornea. Ask the patient to squeeze the lids together and then open them; then check for an entropion that is not obvious.
Describe how a migraine and tension HA presents?
Episodic and tend to peak over several hours
A Left Cranial Nerve VI Paralysis- left
Esotropia is maximum
1 inward eye
Esotropia:
Causes of Conductive Hearing Loss
Excess earwax, otosclerosis, otitis media.
Define hirsutism
Excessive facial hair
What causes drug-induced rhinitis?
Excessive use of decongestants or use of cocaine.
1 outward eye
Exotropia
Parts of ear
External ear- ends at tympanic membrane. Middle ear- air filled, contains ossicles and the end of the eustachian tube. Inner ear- the cochlea, semicircular canals, and the tip of the auditory nerve.
Common symptoms in the Centro's clinical prediction rule for streptococcal and Fusobacterium necrophorum pharyngitis include?
Fever history, tonsillar exudates, swollen tender anterior cervical adenopathy and absence of cough
What are common symptoms associated with earache?
Fever, sore throat, cough and concurrent URI
If a patient complains of an earache, what associated symptoms should you ask about?
Fever, sore throat, cough, and concurrent upper respiratory infection
Hutchinson sign
First sign of Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus that appear as lesions on the tip of the nose
Hyperopia
Farsightedness Vision condition in which distant objects can be seen clearly, but close ones do not come into proper focus.
A 44 y/o female c/ dizziness with head movement to the left. She feels that the room is spinning around her head. Dix-Hallpike test produces nausea and nystagmus. What is the most likely diagnosis?
D) Benign positional vertigo, vestibular neuronitis, labyrnthitis, Meniere's disease
Optic Atrophy (Process)
Death of optic nerve fibers leads to loss of the tiny disc vessels.
Parkinson's Disease
Decreased facial mobility blunts expression. A masklike face may result, with decreased blinking and a characteristic stare. Since the neck and upper trunk tend to flex forward, the patient seems to peer upward toward the observer. Facial skin becomes oily, and drooling may occur
Rosenbaum Chart
For assessing near vision, hold 14" from eyes
Infectious Mononucleosis
Won't always see this Rash on the hard and soft palate
Soft palate issues are associated with what cranial nerve?
X (vagal); soft palate fails to rise and the uvula deviates to the good side
Jaundice
Yellow sclera
Hairy Tongue
Yellowish to brown and black elongated papillae; benign associated with: antibiotic therapy, candida, poor dental hygiene
can hearing loss be congenital?
Yes. from single gene mutations
Thrush
Yest infection from candida; thick white plaques
Cause of tinnitus
[Ringing in your ears] - tumors or aneurysms - Presbycusis: age-related hearing loss - noise-associated hearing loss - chronic otitis media - Meniere's disease - Otosclerosis (hardening in the ear) - Ototoxic drugs - Other
Weber Test
WEBER TEST -- checking to see which ear the sound lateralized to - Set the fork into light vibration by briskly stroking it between the thumb and index finger or by tapping it on your knuckles. -Test for lateralization (Weber test). Place the base of the lightly vibrating tuning fork firmly on top of the patient's head or on the mid-forehead. - Ask where the patient hears the sound: on one side or both sides? Normally the vibration is heard in the midline or equally in both ears. If nothing is heard, try again, pressing the fork more firmly on the head. Restrict this test to patients with unilateral hearing loss since patients with normal hearing may lateralize, and patients with bilateral conductive or sensorineural deficits will not lateralize.
Conjunctivitis (Ocular Discharge)
Watery, mucoid, or mucopurulent
Testing conductive & sensorineural hearing loss
Weber & Rinne tests
Submandibular gland ducts
Wharton's Ducts Found at the base of the tongue
Unequal Pupils (Anisocoria)
When anisocoria is greater in bright light than in dim light, the larger pupil cannot constrict properly. Causes include blunt trauma to the eye, open-angle glaucoma
When is a person considered legally blind in the U.S.?
When his/her corrected vision is 20/200 or worse
Arteriovenous Crossing
When the arterial walls lose their transparency, changes appear in the arteriovenous crossings. Decreased transparency of the retina probably
The near reaction
When the person shifts their gaze from a far object to a near object, the pupils constrict. This is controlled by CN III.
Bacterial Pharyngitis Symptoms
fever, tonsillar exudates, swollen anterior lymph nodes, no cough.
Medical terms for farsightedness, aging vision, and nearsightedness
hyperopia; presbyopia; myopia
Asymmetry of teh corneal reflections indicates
a deviation from normal ocular alignment (dysconjugate gaze)
Meniere's Disease
a disease that causes hearing loss, tinnitus, and vertigo. comes from an issue with hte labyrinths of the inner ear or cranial nerve 8 (vertigo). first tinnitus, then vertigo then hearing loss, it is progressive and nonreversible. tinnitus bothers people mostly at night.
Poor convergence associated with...
hyperthyroidism
when left eye repeatedly does not see your fingers until they have crossed the line of gaze,
a left temporal hemianopsia is present; a left homonymous hemianopsia may thus be established
eardrum mobility may be decreased by
a serous effusion, a thickened drum, or purulent otitis media
near reaction to light
a test done on pupils if reaction to light is impaired or questionable; helpful in diagnosing Argyll Robertson and tonic (Adies's) pupils
a localized systolic or continuous bruit may be heard in
hyperthyroidism
increased pain with valsalva pathology
acute sinusitis or mass lesion (ICP changing)
exopthalmos
abnormal protrusion of the eyeball
proptosis
abnormal protrusion of the eyeball in hyperthyroidism: causes "lid lag"
ectropion
abnormalities of the eyelid: margin of lower lid is turned outward, exposing the palpebral conjunctiva. when punctum of the lower lid turns outward to eye no longer drains well, and tearing occurs. common in elderly
entropion
abnormalities of the eyelids: common in the elderly, inward turning of the lid margin. lower lashes irritate the conjunctiva and lower cornea
ptosis
abnormalities of the eyelids: drooping of the upper lid. causes include myasthenia gravis, damage to the oculomotor nerve, and damange to sympathetic nerve supply (Horner's syndrome). A weakened muscle, relaxes tissue, and weight of herniated fat may cause senile ptosis. may also be congenital
lid retraction and exopthalmos
abnormalities of the eyelids: wide-eyed stare. note the rim of sclera between the upper lid and the iris. retracted lids and "lid lag" when eyes move from up to down remarkably increase the likelihood of hyperthyroidism especially when accompanied by a fine tremor, moist skin, heart rate >90bpm exopthalmos describes protrusion of the eyeball a common feature of Grave's, triggered by autoreactive T lymphocytes, trauma, orbital tumor, and granulomatous disorders. Lid retraction EOM dysfuntion, pain and lacrimation
Headache from Sinusitis
above the eye or above maxillary sinus, aching pain with congestion, discharge, fever.
transillumination of the sinuses
absense of a glow on one or both sides suggest a thickened mucosa or secretions in the sinus, but it may also result from develpmentsal absence of one or both sinuses (frontal). See text for description of methods for transillumination of sinuses
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma (ocular discharge)
absent
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (Ocular discharge)
absent
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (Pain)
absent
objects nearer than infinity are seen with the aid of ______ which increases the _______ power of the lens
accommodation refractive
small, irregular pupils
accomodate but do not react to light indicate argyll robertson pupils. seen in central nervous system syphilis
enlargement of bones and soft tissue
acromegaly
lip loses redness and becomes scaly and slightly everted
actinic cheilitis: caused by excessive exposure to sunlight and primarily affects the lower lip
What is indicated with severe, deep, and aching eye pain, with ciliary injection/diffusely red conjunctiva? Note, vision is decreased and the pupil is dilated and fixed.
acute angle-closure glaucoma
what is unlikely until viral sxs persist more than 7 days
acute bacterial sinusitis
Bacterial vs Viral sinusitis
acute bacterial sinusitis is unlikely unless respiratory infection symptoms have persisted for more than a week. Bacterial is accompanied by purulent (milky, colored) drainage from the nose and facial pain.
what type of glaucoma is common for haloes
acute glaucoma
ulcers in interdental papillae, fever, malaise, enlarged lymph nodes
acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis
Unusually soft wax, debris from inflammation or rash in the ear canal, or discharge through a perforated eardrum is present in
acute or chronic otitis media
Ear canal swollen, narrowed, moist, pale, and tender
acute otitis externa
the tragus will be painful is which type of ear infection
acute otitis externa
red bulging eardrum...
acute otitis media
local tenderness over sinuses together with sxs such as pain, fever and nasal dc suggest
acute sinusitis
Valsalva maneuvers increase pain in what two conditions because of the increased ICP?
acute sinusitis and mass lesion (some sort of large growth, can be an abscess, something benign, malignant, etc.)
Valsalva maneuvers may increase headache pain from
acute sinusitis or from mass lesion due to changing intracranial pressure
peripheral vision loss
adbance open-angle glaucoma
fine hair accompanies
hyperthyroidism
poor convergence is associated to what condition
hyperthyroidism
The U.S. Preventive Task Force recommends hearing screenings for who
adults 50 y.o. and older
peripheral visual field loss
advanced open angle glaucoma,
Peripheral vision loss occurs in
advanced open-angle glaucoma
Horner's Syndrome
affected pupil, although small, reacts briskly to light and near effort. ptosis of the eyelid is present, and the affected iris could be lighter in color. also could be inability to sweat on one side of the face (damage to sympathetic nerves on side of neck).
acute bacterial sinitus symptoms
after URI, pain bending forward or maxillary toothache, fever or local headache, tenderness over the sinuses
Risk factors for glaucoma
age >65 y.o., family history, African American descent, diabetes, myopia, and ocular hypertension (IOP >/=21 mm Hg)
presbyopia
aged vision (difficulty with close up)
serous effusion description
amber drum
what medications effect hearing loss
aminoglycosides ASA NSAIDs quinine furosemide
Medications that affect hearing include
aminoglycosides, ASA, NSAIDS, quinine, and furosemide
meds affecting HL
aminoglycosides, ASA, NSAIDs, furosemide
Medications that affect hearing:
aminoglycosides, aspirin, NSAIDS, quinine, and fureosemide
medications that affect hearing
aminoglycosides, aspirin, NSAIDs, quinine, furosemide
epistaxis causing drugs
anticoagulants, NSAIDs, coagulopathies
poor convergence occurs with
hyperthyroidism
What extend obliquely upward from the short process and separate the pars flaccid from the pars tensa
anterior and posterior malleolar folds (usually invisible unless the eardrum is retracted)
which chamber contains aqueous humor
anterior chamber
posterior cervical nodes
anterior edge of trapezius
airflow through nose
anterior naris -> vestibule -> nasopharynx
where do light rays focus in myopia
anterior to the retina; retinal structures in a myopic eye look larger than normal
Patients with visual field defects should be referred for further evaluation (identify causes of anterior pathway defects and posterior pathway defects)
anterior: glaucoma, optic neuropathy, optic neuritis, and glioma posterior: stroke and chiasmal tumors
secondary headaches
arise from other conditions-some may endanger patient's life
Secondary headaches:
arise from underlying structural, systemic, or infectious conditions such as meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage and may be life-threatening
Feeling light headed, weak in legs, or about to faint points or presyncope from:
arrhythmia, orthostatic hypotension or vasovagal stimulation
what are the two ways lesions responsible for sensorineural loss can be identified
auditory brainstem-evoked responses MRI
opacity of the lens visible through the pupil
cataracts
gradual BL visual loss
cataracts macular degeneration
Gradual bilateral vision loss usually arises from
cataracts or macular degeneration
If onset of bilateral vision loss is gradual what should you consider?
cataracts or macular degeneration
gradual bilateral visual loss
cataracts or macular degeneration
gradual bilateral vision loss
cataracts, macular degeneration
Vitreous Floaters
cause moving specks or strands to appear in the visual field. If these are fixed in place, it suggests lesions in the retina or visual pathway.
red inflamed eyelid margin with crusting
blepharitis
red inflamed eyelids in
blepharitis, often with crusting
Condition associated with poor convergence
hyperthyroidism.
Chondroma
benign cartilagenous tumor
torus palatines
benign midline lump in mouth
Torus palatinus
benign midline lump on the roof of the mouth
Peripheral vertigo types
benign positional vertigo and vestibular neuromitis (labryinthitis): hearing normal and no tinnitus
what drugs may induce nasal stuffiness
birth control reserpine guanethidine alcohol cocaine
epitaxis
bleeding disorders may contribute; must be differentiated from hemoptysis or hematemesis
epistaxis
bleeding from the nostril;bleeding disorders may contribute; must be differentiated from hemoptysis or hematemesis
in sensorineural losses air conduction exceeds ______
bone conduction
what type of hearing aid should someone with conductive loss or unilateral profound sensorineural loss have
bone-anchored hearing aid
Torus Palatinus
bony growth on hard palate, harmless
hyperopia (farsightedness) and presbyopia
both are indicated by difficulty with close work
Ectropion
bottom eyelid is turned outward away from the eyeball
Bulbar vs palpebral conjunctiva
bulbar covers most of the anterior eyeball, palpebral lines the eyelids
What is the number one most common sign of otitis media?
bulging TM
dysconjugate gaze
caused by an imbalance in ocular muscle tone. imbalance has many causes, may be hereditary, and usually appears in early childhood. gaze deviations are classified according to direction. use the cover uncover test
serous effusion
caused by viral URI (otitis mdia with serous infection) or by sudden changes in atmospheric pressure from flying or diving. eustachian tube cannot equalize the pressure in the middle ear and outside air. air is absorbed from the inner ear into the blood stream and serous fluid accumulated there instead.popping sensation in ear. amber fluid behind the eardrum, fluid level line seen on can be seen on either side of he short process, air bubbles can sometimes be seen in fluid
unilateral visual loss is painful
causes are from cornea and anterior chamber like corneal ulcer, uveitis, traumatic hyphema, acute glaucoma,
painful unilateral vision loss
causes are usually in corna or anterior chamber: cornal ulcer, uveitis, traumatic hyphema, acute glaucoma, optic neuritis from MS
rhinorrhea
causes include viral infections, allergic rhinitis, and vasomotor rhinitis; itching favors allergic cause
ear tug test
causes pain in otitis externa, but not in otitis media; OM may present with tenderness behind external ear
If sudden unilateral visual loss is painful consider
causes that are usually in the cornea and anterior chamber as in corneal ulcer, uveitis, traumatic hyphen, and acute glaucoma, optic neuritis from MS may also be painful
Xanthelasmas
cholesterol deposits around the eye
Scaly plaque or an ulcer with or without a crust
carcinoma of the lip
misidentification of lymph nodes
carotid artery; styloid process of mandible; you should be able to roll a node in two directions: up and down, and side to side
great vessels of neck
carotid, IJ vein (deep), EJ vein (superficial)
Attributes of brain tumors
can be associated with nausea and vomiting. Here the pain is new, persisting, and progressively getting worse.
rhinitis medicamentosa
can be caused by excessive use of decongestants; a worsening of rhinorrhea symptoms
Drug toxicity
can cause vertigo: from loop diuretics, amino glycosides, salicylates, alcohol
Epistaxis
can originate in paranasal sinuses or nasopharynx; bleeding from posterior may actually go down the throat instead. could present with hematemesis
Acute Otitis Externa
canal is swollen, narrowed, moist, pale, and tender. It may also be reddened. Be sure to put them on drops and culture some of fluid, STAPH AUREUS IS BIG
where does the anterior chamber drain
canal of schlemm
COE ear description
canal skin thickened, red, itchy
AOE ear description
canal swollen, narrow, moist, pale, tender, reddened
white oval ulcer surrounded by halo of reddened mucosa under the tongue
canker sores=Aphthous ulcer
Ataxia, diplopia, and dysarthria
central neurologic causes in the cerebellum or brain stem such as: cerebral vascular disease or posterior fossa tumor
Ataxia, diplopia and dysarthria (difficult or unclear articulation of speech) + dizziness/vertigo signal/indicate
central neurologic causes in the cerebellum or brainstem such as cerebral vascular disease or posterior fossa tumor, also consider migraine
vertigo with ataxia, diplopia, disarthria pathology
cerebellum/brainstem causes, CVD or posterior fossa tumor
painless nodule involving a blocked meibomiam gland
chalazion
tympanosclerosis
chalky white patch with irregular margins. deposition of hyaline material within the layers of the tympanic membrane that sometimes follow a severe episode of otitis media. usualy impair hearing and is clinical insig.
Corneal Injury or Infection (cornea)
changes depending on cause
Rhinophyma
characterised by prominent pores and a fibrous thickening of the nose, sometimes with papules
thyroid function questions
check for enlarged thyroid/goiter, temperature intolerance/sweating, palpitations/weight change
If bilateral vision loss is painful, what should you consider?
chemical or radiation exposure
painful bilateral visual loss
chemical or radiation exposure
Sudden bilateral vision loss (painful)
chemical or radiation exposures
what does speech discrimination measure
clarity of words
functions of nasal cavities
cleansing, humidification, temperature control
Conjunctivitis (Cornea)
clear
Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (cornea)
clear
Physical Finding consistent with acromegaly?
coarsening of facial features
cochlear implants are surgically implanted into the
cochlea
what structure contains the organ of corti
cochlea
sensorineural phase of hearing pathway
cochlea to cochlear nerve
Inner ear includes the
cochlea, labyrinth, the semicircular canals, organ of Corti, and the distal end of the auditory nerve (CN VIII)
inner ear contains
cochlea, semicircular canals, distal end of auditory nerve
what type of hearing device is used for severe to profound sensory loss
cochlear implant
open angle glaucoma
common form of glaucoma; normal spatial pattern between iris and cornea is preserved and the iris is fully lit
Leukoplakia
common on the sides of the tongue
acute otitis media with purulent effusion
commonly caused by bacterial infection from S pneumoniae and H influenzae. stmpyoms: earache, fever, and hearing loss. ear drum reddens and loses its landmarks. red is most obvious near the umbo. spontaneous rupture (perforation) of the drum may follow with discharge of purulent material into the ear canal. hearing loss is a conductive type
Nausea and vomiting occur with what
commonly with migraines, but also with brain tumors and subarachnoid hemorrhage
Causes of drug-induced rhinitis
excessive use of decongestants or use of cocaine
Lymph node deep to the sternomastoid and often inaccessible to examination; hook your thumb and fingers around either side of the sternomastoid muscle to find them
deep cervical chain
Kaposis Sarcoma (AIDS)
deep purple lesions in the mouth
supraclavicular nodes
deep to angle of clavicle and SCM
drug induced rhinitis
excessive use of decongestants, cocaine
Tension headaches often arise where? What about cluster headaches?
tension - temporal areas cluster - retro orbital
Cluster headaches may arise in what area
retro-orbital
swelling and redness between lower eyelid and nose
dacryocystitits (lacrimal sac inflammation)
Parkinson's Facies
decreased facial mobility blunts expression. decreased blinking and a characteristic stare present. patient seems to peer upward towards observer. facial skin becomes oily and drooling may occur.
Acute Iritis (vision)
decreased; photophobia
Wilson's Disease
dark lining around the iris
Vitreous floaters may be seen as
dark specks or strands between the fundus and the lens
vitreous floaters may be seen as
dark specks or strands btwn the fundus and the lens
mouth inspection
decayed/loose teeth, gingivitis, peridontal disease, bleeding, pus, gum recession, bad breath
drug induced rhinitis occurs in excessive use of
decongestants cocaine
a serous effusion a thickened drum or purulent OM may
decrease mobility
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma (vision)
decreased
bright red edematous mucosa underneath a denture suggests
denture sore mouth
What is suggested with bright red edematous mucosa underneath a denture?
denture sore mouth - may be ulcers or papillary granulation tissue
Nodular episclertitis is seen in
rheumatoid arthritis and lupus erythematosus
mydriasis is
dialation
tuning forks are useful in
differentiating conductive from sensorineural hearing losses
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma (pupil)
dilated, fixed
mydriasis
dilation of pupils
mydriasis
dilation of the pupils
Causes of sensorineural hearing loss
disorders of the inner ear such as congenital and hereditary conditions, presbycusis, viral infections such as RUBELLA and CYTOMEGALOVIRUS, Meniere's disease, noise exposure, and acoustic neuroma
Diplopia
double vision. seen in lesions in the brainstem or cerebellum, or if there is weakness in one or more extraocular muscles. Diplopia in one eye with the other closed suggests a problem in the cornea or lens.
paranasal sinuses
drain to medial meatus
nasolacrimal duct
drains to interior meatus
what is undigested cellular debris
drusen
Wharton's ducts
ducts of the submandibular gland at the base of the tongue
drainage from the nose
rhinorrhea
acute otitis externa signs
ear canal is often swollen, narrowed, moist, pale, and tender, maybe red; skin is often thickened, red and itchy in chronic OE
Prodrome
early symptom that may indicate the start of a disease or condition before it happens. 60-70% of migraine patients experience this, and they can appear as a visual aura: -spark photopsias=flashes of light -fortifications=zig zag arcs of light -scotomata=area of visual loss with surrounding normal vision
Cutaneous Cyst
ebaceous cyst, a domeshaped lump in the dermis forms a benign closed firm sac attached to the epidermis.
outward turning of the lid, common in older people
ectropion
dull puffy face with dry skin
myxedema (hypothyroidism)
pharyngitis is commonly accompanied by
enlarged tender lymph nodes
goiter
enlarged thyroid
Acromegaly Facies
enlargement of both bone and soft tissues. head is elongated with bony prominence over forehead, nose, and lower jaw. nose, lips, and ears also enlarge.
inward turning of eyelid, common in older people
entropion
circular inflammation of scleral vessels
episcleritis
light in the seeing eye produces a pupil response in both eyes, but light in the blind eye produces no response in either pupils
equal pupil and one blind eye
Physical finding upon exam of otitis media
erythematous, bulging tympanic membrane
A Left Cranial Nerve VI Paralysis- straight
esotropia appears
Due to increased risk of ischemic stroke and cardiovascular disease, the World Health Association advises women with migraines over age 35 and women with migraines with aura avoid use of what
estrogen-progestin contraceptives
Hirsutism
excessive facial hair, seen in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
what is epiphora
excessive tearing of the eye
Paralysis of CN 6
eye does not pull laterally, it stays midline
a left cranial nerve III paralysis
eye is pulled outward by action of the CNVI. upward, downward and inward movement are impaired or lost. ptosis and pupilary dilation may be associated
Entropion
eye lid (usually lower) turns inward
paralysis of cranial nerve VI (effect on eyes)
eyes are conjugate in right lateral gaze but not in left lateral gaze
Nephrotic Syndrome Facies
face is edematous and pale. swelling appears around the eyes and in the morning. eyes may become slitlike when edema is severe. periorbital edema, puffy pale face, and lips may be swollen.
The cone of light normally
fans downward and anteriorly
Hyperopia is ________ and myopia is _______.
farsightedness nearsightedness
hyperopia
farsightedness (difficulty seeing up close)
hyperopia
farsightedness - cant see upclose so you give them convex lens
Xerostomia
feeling of oral dryness (xeros-dry, stoma-mouth)
hair pathology thyroid
fine hair - hyper, coarse brittle hair - hypo
Spark Photopsias
flashes of light
Detachment of vitreous from retina
flashing lights or new vitreous floaters present.
xanthelasma
flat raised irregularly shaped yellow lesions, represents depositions of lipids
daily hygiene measures
fluoride toothpastes, brushing/flossing, annual dental care
What muscles control the eye
four rectus (superior, inferior, medial, and lateral) and two oblique (superior and inferior)....lateral rectus (CN 6), superior oblique (CN 4), all the rest (CN 3)
Acoustic neuroma
from CN 8 compassion
what does acute glaucoma cause haloes
from corneal pressure
tenderness of the nasal tip or alae suggests local infections such as a
furuncle
tenderness on nasal tip pathology
furuncle, local infection
Meningitis Headache
generalized headache, rapid, associated with fever, stiff neck, changes in mental status. need immediate antibiotics to determine if bacterial or viral.
gum enlarged and swollen, masses that may cover teeth
gingival hyperplasia- caused by phenytoin therapy, puberty, pregnancy, and leukemia
most common cause of bleeding gums
gingivitis
swollen interdental papillae
gingivitis
lid lag
rim of sclera is visible above iris with downward gaze
what are the 3 leading causes of blindness
glaucoma diabetic retinopathy macular degeneration
enlarged blind spot is in what conditions
glaucoma, optic neuritis, and papilledema
Causes of anterior pathway defects include:
glaucoma, optic neuropahty, optic neuritis, and glioma
anterior pathways defects
glaucoma, optic neuropathey, optic neuritis and glioma
Causes of visual field defects
glaucoma, optic neuropathy, optic neuritis, and glioma.
Possible causes of visual field defects
glaucoma, optic neuropathy, optic neuritis, glioma, stroke and chiasmal tumors
In Primary Open Angle Glaucoma (POAG) there is
gradual loss of vision as a result of the loss of retinal ganglion cell axons, initial loss of peripheral visual fields, and pallor and increasing size of the optic cup, which enlarges to more than half the diameter of the optic disc; blindness occurs in 5% of those with the disease
Primary open angle glaucoma (POAG)
gradual loss of vision with an initial loss of peripheral visual fields
To straighten the ear canal in an adult
grasp the auricle firmly but gently and pull it upward, backward, and slightly away from the head
protrusion of eyes
graves disease or occular tumors
inward/outward deviation of eyes
graves disease or ocular tumors
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 6 Describe the eyelids and Lashes
have patient open/close for lid lag note quantity and distribution
Palpable tenderness or step offs may be present:
head trauma
loss of spontaneous venous pulsations in eye may indicate pathologic conditions such as
head trauma, meningitis, or mass lesions; a sign of elevated intracranial pressure
common concerning symptoms HEENT
headache, vision changes, double vision, hearing loss/earache/tinnitus, vertigo, nosebleed, sore throat/hoarseness, swollen glands, goiter
Secondary headaches include
headaches arising from underlying structural, systemic, or infectious causes such as meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage and may be life-threatening
Causes of conductive hearing loss
hearing disorders of the external and middle ear; EXTERNAL EAR CAUSES include (otitis externs, trauma, squamous cell carcinoma, benign bony growths such as exostoses or osteomas) MIDDLE EAR CAUSES include (congenital conditions, benign cholesteatomas, otosclerosis, tumors, and perforation of the tympanic membrane
Central vertigo
hearing normal and tinnitus not present
JVD pathology
heart failure
Jugular venous distention is common in what condition
heart failure
One-sided vision loss occurs in
hemianopsia and quadratic defects
one sided visual field loss
hemianopsia, quadrantic defects
Whispered Voice Test
high specificity and even higher sensitivity to detect significant hearing loss/
retrosternal goiter sxs
hoarseness, SOB, stridor, dysphagia (tracheal compression)
Retrosternal goiters can cause
hoarseness, SOB, stridor, or dysphagia from tracheal compression
smaller more widely spaced teeth are notched on their biting surfaces
hutchinson's teeth- congenital syphilis
Hearing loss risk factors
hx of congenital or familial hearing loss, syphilis, rubella, meningitis, or exposure to hazardous noise levels at work/on the battle field.
Possible dx of an enlarged skull
hydrocephalus or Paget's disease (excessive formation of bone)
An enlarged skull may signify
hydrocephalus or Paget's disease of bone
enlarged skull
hydrocephalus or Paget's disease of bone
enlarged skull pathology
hydrocephalus, page's disease of bone
medical term for farsigthedness
hyperopia
medication for overuse headache
if 15 days/mo for 3 months and revers to <15 days/mo when meds stopped
What is considered overdue of analgesics?
if present for greater than or equal to 15 days a month for 3 months
When is anisocoria benign?
if pupillary rxns are normal
in unilateral CHL sound is heard in the
impaired ear
Dryness of the eye may occur from
impaired secretion in Sjogren's syndrome
macular degeneration
important cause of poor central vision in the elderly; types: dry atrophic, wet exudative (neovascular); undigested cellular debris (drusen) may be seen
Secondary Headache- acute glaucoma
in and around one eye, steady aching pain after rapid onset. could have decreased vision, nausea and vomiting.
AC vs BC
in conductive hearing loss, sound is heard through bone as long as or longer tha it is through air (BC=AC or BC>AC). in sensorineural hearing loss, sound is heard longer through air (AC>BC)
Rinne Test
in conductive, sound is heard through bone as long or longer than trough air. Sensitivity 60-90, specificity 95-98
Infraclavicular lymph nodes
in front of clavicle. Drains upper limbs
pre auricular nodes
in front of ear
superficial temporal artery
in front of ear, palpable
one-sided loss
in hemianopsia and quadrantic defects
in unilateral sensorineural hearing loss sound is heard
in the good ear
Vertigo sensations point primarily to a problem where
in the labyrinths of the inner ear, peripheral lesions of CN VIII or lesions in its central pathways or nuclei in the brain
Weber test
in unilateral conductive hearing loss, sound is laterlaized to the impaired ear; in unilateral sensorineural hearing loss, sound is heard in the good ear
Excessive tearing may be from
increased production (caused by conjunctival inflammation and corneal irritation) or impaired drainage of tears (ectropion and nasolacrimal duct obstruction
excessive tearing
increased production (conjunctival inflammation and corneal irritation); impaired drainage (ectropion and nasolacrimal duct obstruction)
excessive tearing causes
increased production, impaired drainage, conjunctival inflammation, corneal irritation, ectropion, nasolacrimal duct obsturcion
Valsalva mobility
increases middle ear pressure and can push a retracted eardrum out of the middle ear if not adherent to middle ear structures - -forceful attempted exhalation with closed mouth and plugged nose-clear ears and sinuses when ambient pressure change test potency of the eustachian tube, adjusting middle ear pressure
having a crescentic shade
increases risk for acute narrow angle glaucoma
A temporal light reflection on one cornea
indicates a nasal deviation of that eye
2. Otitis externa
infection in the canal
1. Acute otitis media
infection of the inside of the ear
Dacrocystitis
infection of the tear duct
Vestibular Neuronitis (acute labyrinthitis)
infection of the vestibular nerve in the middle ear. presents with vertigo, without tinnitus or hearing loss. can also have nausea, vomiting, balance difficulties, and can last a couple of weeks.
External Ear Hearing Loss Causes
infection, trauma, SCC, benign bony growths such as exostoses or osteomas.
what is the pars tensa
inferior aspect of the TM
Tender nodes suggest
inflammation
tender nodes suggest
inflammation
tender nodules suggest ________- while hard or fixed nodules suggest
inflammation malignancy
Optic Neuritis
inflammation of optic nerve, associated with MS
what is keratitis
inflammation of the cornea
Blepharitis
inflammation of the eyelids
Hyperemia (Injection)
injection of the uvula, tonsil, and palate
Physical Examination of the EYE: Step 7 Observe Lacrimal Apparatus
look at the lacrimal for swelling excessive tearing or dryness. Palpate for swollen or hard lacrimals
Physical examination of the NOSE step 4
inspect the nares and internal nose - floor - septum - turbinates *Comfort people as much as possible - Always come from the outside (and pull out form the outside) - Looking straight back and also looking up *look for polyps, bleeding, or ulcers
Careful examination of the mouth includes
inspection for decayed or loose teeth, inflammation of the gingiva, and signs of periodontal disease (bleeding, pus, recession of the gums, and bad breath), mucous membranes, palate, oral floor, and tongue surface; urge patients to seek dental care at least annually
what might suggest hypothyroidism
intolerance to cold, prefernce for warm clothing and blankets, decreased sweating; the opposite symptoms as well as palpitations and involuntary weight loss suggest hyperthyroidism
Sensorineural phase of hearing
involves the cochlea and cochlear nerve
Women with migraines over 35 and women with migraines and aura are at a greater risk of _____ and _____ if they use estrogen-progestin contraceptives
ischemic stroke and cardiovascular disease
why is the middle ear called a sinus
it is a hole in the bone that drains into the nose
when swallowing, yawing or sneezing what happens with the tube
it opens briefly to equalize the middle ear pressure with atmospheric pressure
surgical removal of lens affects eye exam because:
its magnifying effect is lost (the lens). retinal structures look much smaller than usual, and you can see a much larger expanse of the fundus
When the lens has been removed surgically
its magnifying effete is lost; retinal structures then look much smaller than usual, and you can see a much larger expanse of the funds
The most important attributes of headache are
its severity and chronologic pattern
what is the ora serrata
junction between retina and ciliary body
Feel the lobes of the thyroid by placing fingers
just below the cricoid cartilage
left cranial nerve VI paralysis
look to the right (eyes are conjugate) looking straight ahead esotropia appears looking to the right?- esoptropia is a maximum
A Left Cranial Nerve VI Paralysis- right
looking to the right -eyes are conjugate
golden ring around corner from rare mutation
kayser-fleischer ring
which plexus is more anterior
kiesselbachs
what are the two plexuses in the nose
kiesselbachs woodruffs
in conductive losses the sound is ______ and in sensorineural losses it is ________
louder in the poorer healing ear lateralizes to the better side
vertigo results primarily from problems with
labyrinths of inner ear, peripheral lesions of CN VIII, or lesions in its central pathways or nuclei in the brain
Black line in gums
lead poisioning
black lines on gums
lead poisoning
Vitreous Hemorrhage
leakage of blood into areas around vitreous
cataracts are densities in the
lens
Diplopia
lesion in brainstem or cerebellum, weakness or paralysis of extraocular muscles (horizontal diplopia from palsy of CNIII or VI, or vertical diplopia from palsy of CNIII or IV)
fixed defects in vision (scotomas)
lesion in the retina or visual pathway
fixed defects or scotomas suggest
lesions in retina/visual pathway
Diplopia is seen in
lesions in the brainstem or cerebellum, or weakness or paralysis of one or more extra ocular muscles
Fixed defects or scotomas, suggest what
lesions in the retina or visual pathways
diplopia
lesions of brainstem/cerebellum; weakness/paralysis of extra-ocular muscles
Cell and Flare
like a snow globe, there are WBC floating around in the anterior chamber.
buccal mucosa
lines cheeks, parotid (stensens) duct opens onto mucosa by upper 2nd molar
what do the tarsal glands secrete
lipid material that lubricates edge of eyelids
Tenderness of the nasal tip or alas suggests
local infection such as a furuncle
tenderness of the nasal tip or alae
local infection, such as furuncle
Nodular Episcleritis
local redness in the sclera, caused by arthritis, lupus, zoster, sjogrens
acute sinusitis is suggested by
local tenderness of frontal and maxillary sinuses alon with pain, fever, and nasal discharge
What frontal/maxillary sinus findings suggest acute sinusitis?
local tenderness, together with symptoms such as pain, fever, and nasal discharge
Brain Tumor Headache
location varies with location of the tumor. aching, steady, variable with intensity tumor. may be aggravated by coughing, sneezing, or sudden movements of teh head. pain intermittent
sty
lumps and swellings in and around eyes: a painful tender red infection in a gland at the margin of the eyelid
chalazion
lumps and swellings in and around eyes: a subacute nontender usually painless nodule involded in a blocked meibomian gland. may become acutely inflamed but unlike a sty usually point inside the lid rather on the lid margin
inflammation of the lacrimal sac (dacryocystitis)
lumps and swellings in and around eyes: a swelling between the lower eyelid and nose. an acute inflammation (example) is painful red and tender. chronic inflammation is associated with obstruction of the nasolacrimal duct. tearing is prominent and pressure on the sac produces regurgitation of material through the puncta of the eyelids
pinguecula
lumps and swellings in and around eyes: harmless yellowish triangular nodule in the bulbar conjunctiva on either side of the iris. appears frequently with aging, first on nasal and then on the temporal side
episcleritis
lumps and swellings in and around eyes: localized ocular inflamm of the episcleral vessels. vessels appear movable over the slceral surface. may be nodule or show only redness and dilated vessels. Seen in RA, sjogren's syndrome and herpes zoster
xanthelasma
lumps and swellings in and around eyes: slightly raised, yellowish, well circumscribed plaques that appear along the nasal portions of one or both eyelids. may accompany lipid disorders
Submandibular nodes
lymph nodes at the middle of the jaw line (midway between the angle and the top of the mandible)
Gradual vision loss causes (2)
macular degeneration or cataracts
Hard or fixed lymph nodes suggest
malignancy
hardened nodes suggest
malignancy
Tracheal deviation may signify
masses in the neck, mediastinal mass, atelectasis, or a large pneumothorax
tracheal deviations may signify:
masses in the neck, problems in thorax such as a mediastinal mass, atelectasis, or a large pneumothorax
thunderclap headaches
max intensity over several minutes, 70% of SAH pts, proceeded by sentinel leak HA
which sinus is the largest
maxillary
thunderclap headaches
maximal intensity over several minutes occur in 70% of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Parotid Gland Enlargement Facies
may be associated with obesity, diabetes, cirrhosis, and other conditions. swelling occurs anterior to ear lobes and above angles of the jaw. gradual unilateral enlargement indicates neoplasm. acute enlargement is seen in mumps.
acute narrow angle glaucoma
may be caused by iris bowing abnormally foward, forming a very narrow angle with the cornea (causes a crescetic shadow when examined). acute narrow angle glaucoma is a sudden increase in intraocular pressure when drainage of the aqueaous humor is blocked.
vitreous floaters
may be seen as dark specs or strands between the fundus and the lens; cataracts are densities in the lens
Drug Toxicity Vertigo
may or may not be reversible, hearing may be impaired and tinnitus may be present. presents with nausea and vomiting and is associated with diuretics, amingoglycosides, salicylates, alcohol
Tympanogram
measures motion of the tympanic membrane, and if there is an effusion it won't move normally.
tooth names (from medial to lateral)
medial incisor, lateral incisor, canine (cuspid), premolars (bicuspids), 1st molar (6 year molar), 2nd molar (12-year molar), 3rd molar (wisdome tooth
what is convergence
medial tracking of eye when focus is shifted from far to near
Tear fluid drains
medially through two tiny holes called lacrimal puncta which then pass into the lacrimal sac and on into the nose through the nasolacrimal duct
Sudden bilateral vision loss (painless)
medications may be the cause (cholinergics, anticholinergics, steroids)
painless bilateral visual loss
medications such as cholinergics, anticholinergics and steroids
If vision loss is bilateral and painless what should you consider?
medications that change refraction such as cholinergic, anticholinergics and steroids may contribute
If sudden bilateral visual loss that is painless occurs, consider medications that may contribute:
medications that change refraction such as cholinergics, anticholinergics, and steroids
painless bilateral vision loss
medications that change refraction such as cholinergics, anticholinergics, and steroids
when tinnitus is associated with hearing loss and vertigo you should think
menieres
superclavicular node enlargement pathology
metastasis from thoracic or abdominal malignancy
Levator Palpebrae
muscle that raises the upper eyelid, innervated by cranial nerve 3
difficulty seeing far
myopia
what is the term for nearsightedness
myopia
the ____ part of the ear is an air-filled cavity in the temporal bone
middle
Torus Palatinus
midline bony growth in the hard palate that is fairly common in adults.
submental nodes
midline, behind tip of mandible
submandibular nodes
midway between angle and tip of mandible
heacache with nausea and vomiting
migrain, brain tumors, subarachnoid hemorrhage
Unilateral headache occurs in
migraine and cluster headaches
unilateral headaches occur in _______ and ______.
migraine and cluster headaches
What types of headaches are episodic and tend to peak over several hours
migraine and tension headaches
episodic, peak over several house headache pathology
migraine, tension HA
Primary Headaches:
migraine, tension, cluster, and chronic daily headaches
Primary headaches include
migraine, tension, cluster, and chronic daily headaches
primary headache types
migraine, tension, cluster, chronic daily
non ocular conditions of photophobia
migraines meningitis TBI
unilateral headaches
migrane and cluster headaches
tinnitus with vertigo and HL
mineires disease
midline thyroid structures
mobile hyoid bone, thyroid cartilage with superior notch, cricoid cartilage, tracheal rings, thyroid gland
Retinal Arteries in Hypertension
n hypertension, the arteries may show areas of focal or generalized narrowing. The light reflex is also narrowed. The arterial wall thickens and becomes less transparent
Obtaining Near Visual Acuity
near vision with a special hand-held chart helps identify the need for reading glasses have patients pick their own distance to read presbyopia (impaired near vision) *presbyopic person often sees better when the card is far away
myopia
nearsightedness
myopia
nearsightedness (cant see far)
myopia
nearsightedness - cant see far away so you give them concave lens
edema, puffy eyes often accompany pale skin
nephrotic syndrome (anasarca)
Attributes of tumor, abscess, or mass lesion
new and persisting and progressively severe headaches.
disorders of the cranial nerves
new onset of dysconjugate gaze in adult life is usually the result of cranial nerve injuries, lesions, or multiple sclerosis, syphilis, and others
Proliferative Retinopathy, With Neovascularization
new preretinal vessels arising on the disc and extending across the disc margins. Visual acuity is still normal, but the risk for visual loss is high. Photocoagulation reduces this risk by >50%
Tiny white ovoid granules that adhere to hairs may be:
nits (lice eggs)
Conjunctivitis (Pupil)
no affected
primary headaches
no identifiable underlying cause
Physical Findings of Glaucoma
no ocular discharge, pupil fixed and dilated, cornea steamy/cloudy
circular redness (episcleritis) seen in:
nodular episclertitis, rheumatoid arthritis, and lupus
Fresh blood or crusting on the nasal septum
septal perforation: from trauma, surgery, intranasal use of cocaine or amphetamines
amber drum...
serous effusion
Causes for decreased eardrum mobility
serous effusion, thickened earfrum, purulent otitis media
amber ear drum
serous effusions
normal results of whispered ear test
repeat initial sequence correctly or responds incorrectly 1st time but 3/6 letters correct on second
Conductive hearing loss
results from problems in the external or middle ear. noisy environments may actually be helpful.
Cause of sensorineural loss
results from problems in the inner ear, the cochlear nerve (acousto-vestibular nerve), or its central connections in the brain
Quadrantic defects
results in visual loss on one side of the eye (1/4 field)
what is in the inner layer of the eye
retina
fixed defects (scrotomas) suggest lesions in the
retina or visual pathway
Arterial wall = opaque No blood is visible within
retinal arteries with silver wiring
upper or lower field visual loss in one eye suggests
retinal detachment
Symptoms of Diabetic Retinopathy
retinal hemorrhages, microaneurysm, neovascularization, hard exudate
vagus nerve test CN X
say ah, rise of soft palate
what is in the external eye layer
sclera and cornea
Redness and scaling of the scalp may indicate
seborrheic dermatitis or psoriasis
redness and scaling in hair may indicate
seborrheic dermatitis, psoriasis
AC>BC
sensorineural hearing loss
Rinne test=(AC>BC)
sensorineural hearing loss; normal hearing
what is the macula
site of central vision and color perception
3 functional portions of the ear by function
skin sinus brain
Chronic Otitis Externa
skin of the ear canal is often thickened, red, and itchy
normal fundus of a light skinned person
slightly darker fovea is just discernable, no light reflex visible in the object. note the striped or tessellated character of the fundus . redder
Macular degeneration attributes
slow central loss of vision, painless, unilateral.
Acute Iritis (pupil)
small and irregular
Petechiae
small red spots caused by blood that escapes from capillaries into the tissues.
where is the posterior chamber
space behind the lens
in the mouth what is the vestibule
space btwn the buccal mucosa and the outer surface of the teeth and gums
visual aura with migraine
spark photopsias, fortifications, scotomata (1/3 of migraines)
Hippus
spasm of the pupil
nystagmus
spazing back and forth of the eyes
pts with sensorineural loss have trouble understanding
speech
what is the audiometric study for speech reception threshold
spondees
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma (cornea)
steamy, cloudy
Sensorineural hearing loss
stems from problems in the inner ear, cochlear nerve, or central connections in the brain. These people have particular trouble understanding speech, often complainign that others mumble. Noisy environments make hearing harder
what are the ducts that are outlets of the parotid gland
stensens
Causes of posterior pathway defects include
stokre and chiasmal tumors
Tetracycline Exposure
teeth are poorly formed
where do tension headaches often arise?
temporal areas
Horner's Syndrome
the affected pupil though small, reacts briskly to light and near effort; ptosis of the eyelid is present, perhaps with loss of sweating on the forehead
horner's syndrome
the affected pupil, though small, reacts briskly to light and near effort. ptosis of the eyelid is present perhaps with lss of sweating on the forehead. In congenital horner's syndrome, the involed iris is lighter in color than its fellow (heterochromia). small pupil and normal size
when doing the weber test in conductive hearing loss the pt will hear in
the bad ear
What does acute otitis externa look like?
the canal is often swollen, narrowed, moist, pale, and tender, may be reddened
Aqueous humor drains out through
the canal of schlemm
Aqueous humor is produced by
the ciliary body
the middle ear is external to
the oval window of the cochlea
Name the two paired salivary glands that lie near the mandible
the parotid gland (superficial to and behind the mandible) and the submandibular gland (located deep to the mandible)
Exudative Pharyngitis
the white stuff! common in strep
Are spontaneous venous pulsations (SVPs) in the fundus exam normal?
these rhythmic variations in the caliber of the retinal veins as they cross the fundus are present in 90% of normal patients; loss of SVPs occurs with high ICP (above 190mm H2O) that change the pressure gradient b/w cerebral spinal fluid pressure and intraocular pulse pressure in the optic disc
in chronic OM the skin of the canal is often
thickened red and itchy
arcus senilis
thin gray white arc or circle caused by lipid deposits
Lid Lag is seen in...
thyroid problems (both eyes) neurologic disease bells palsy MG
tenderness of thyroid in
thyroiditis
perceived sound with no external stimulus
tinnitus
New and persisting, progressively severe headaches raise concerns of
tumor, abscess, or mass lesion
large, regular, but unilateral pupil: run to light is very slow or absent
tonic pupil (adie's pupil)
Lymph node at the angle of the mandible
tonsillar
These lymph nodes drain portions of the mouth and throat as well as the face
tonsillar, submandibular, and submental nodes
rounded bony growths on the inner surfaces of the mandible
tori mandibulares
what is a midline bony growth in the hard palate that is fairly common in adults
torus palatinus
midline bony growth in hard palaate
tous palatinus
Physical examination of the NOSE step 5 (final step)
transilluminate the sinuses - Frontal: under the eyebrow if clear should see light on forehead - Maxillary: shine down nose- look in mouth should see light
Normal Conjunctiva
translucent, flat, sclera visible beneath
Local causes of epistaxis include
trauma (esp nose picking), inflammation, drying and crusting of the nasal mucosa, tumors, and foreign bodies
local causes of epistaxis
trauma, inflammation, drying/crusting of nasal mucosa, tumors, FBs
septal perforation causes
trauma, surgery, intranasal use of cocaine/amphetamines
sensorineural HL symptoms
trouble understanding speech, complaints of mumbling, noisy environments make it worse
a feeling of being pulled suggests
true vertigo from an inner ear problem or a central or peripheral lesion of CN VIII
New and persisting, progressively severe headaches raise concerns of _____, ____ or _____.
tumor, abscess or mass lesion
new persisting progressively severe HA pathology
tumor, abscess, mass lesion
normal eardrum
tympanic membrane is pinkish gray. note malleus lying behind the upper part of the drum. above the short process lies the pars flaccida. the remainder of the drum is the pars tensa. from the umbo the bright cone of light fans anteriorly and downward. post. to the malleus, part of the incus is visible behind the drum. the small blood vessels along he handel of the malleus are normal
large, chalky white patch with irregular margins
typanosclerosis- seen with severe otitis media
WHen looking at the tympanic membrane, what normal landmark is seen?
umbo
in emmetropisa (normal state) objects at distance are seen clearly with the _______ eye
unaccommodated
secondary headache causes
underlying structural, systemic, infectious (meningitis, SAH) LIFE THREATENING
Drusen
undigested cellular debris in the back of the eye, they are soft and confluent with altered pigmentation
Aniscoria
unequal size of the pupils. unilateral blindness does not cause this as long as sympathetic and parasympathetic innervation to the irises is normal. A light directed in the good eye causes a consensual reaction in the blind eye, but light in the blind eye will not cause constriction in either eye. If pupillary reactions are normla, aniscoria is considered benign.
Xanthelasma
yellow raised plaques that appear along nasal portions of one or both eyelids. Seen in lipid disorder.
The color of the optic disc is normally
yellowish orange to creamy pink (white or pigmented crescents may ring the disc, a normal finding)
The size and color of the central physiologic cup if present is normally
yellowish white; horizontal diameter is usually less than 1/2 the horizontal diameter of the disc
Anatomy of the INNER EAR
you will not be able to see the internal structures (beyond the malleus)