UWORLD 3-4
diagnosis of acute pancreatitis?
2 of the following: characteristic epigastric pain serum amylase/lipase >3 times imaging
Acute necrotic collection (ANC)?
A collection containing variable amounts of both fluid and necrosis associated with necrotizing pancreatitis; the necrosis can involve the pancreatic parenchyma and/or the peripancreatic tissues
Walled-off necrosis (WON)?
A mature, "encapsulated" collection of pancreatic and/or "peripancreatic" necrosis that has developed a well defined inflammatory wall. WON usually occurs >4 weeks after onset of necrotizing pancreatitis.
Treatment of acute pancreatitis
Aggressive IV fluid Pain control NPO, nasopharyngeal feed if oral intolerance > 3-4 days
Pancreatic pseudocyst?
An "encapsulated" collection of fluid with a well defined inflammatory wall usually outside the pancreas with minimal or no necrosis. This entity usually occurs more than four weeks after onset of interstitial edematous pancreatitis to mature.
classification of leukocytoclastic vasculitis?
IgA vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura) Acute hemorrhagic edema of infancy Urticarial vasculitis Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis Erythema elevatum diutinum Granuloma faciale ANCA-associated vasculitis Arthropod bites Platelet dysfunction or deficiency Cholesterol emboli Septic emboli Livedoid vasculopathy
when to do ERCP in the course of acute pancreatitis?
In patients with "gallstone pancreatitis", urgent (<24 hours) ERCP and sphincterotomy for patients with cholangitis
which diuretics cause photo-sensitivity?
Thiazides
CT scan of necrotizing pancreatitis with peripancreatic necrosis?
pancreas enhances "homogeneously" (arrow) but there is evidence of peripancreatic necrosis (arrowhead).
In patients with infected necrosis who fail to respond to antibiotics or who are clinically unstable do what?
pancreatic debridement
dermatitis herpetiformis
seen in Celiac dx
perianal skin tag
seen in Crohn's dx
pyoderma gangrenosum
seen in Crohn's dx
lichen planus
seen in HCV
porphyria cutanea tarda
seen in HCV
Explosive onset of multiple itchy, seborrheic keratosis is associated with what conditions?
GI cancer
neuropathic pain in MS
Gabapentin Duloxetine
severe seborrhic dermatitis is associated with what conditions?
HIV parkinson
Pseudocyst vs WON?
"Reguar" wall border
CT scan of acute interstitial edematous pancreatitis
"heterogeneous" appearance of the pancreas (arrow) and peripancreatic fat stranding (arrowhead)
WON CT scan?
"irregular" wall border
Contrast-enhanced computed tomography criteria for APFC?
1. Occurs in the setting of interstitial edematous pancreatitis 2. Homogeneous collection with fluid density 3. Confined by normal peripancreatic fascial planes 4. NO definable wall encapsulating the collection 4. Adjacent to pancreas (NO intrapancreatic extension)
Contrast-enhanced computed tomography criteria for pseudocyst?
1. Well circumscribed, usually round or oval 2. Homogeneous fluid density 3. No non-liquid component 4. Well defined wall (ie, completely encapsulated) 4. Maturation usually requires ">4 weeks" after onset of acute pancreatitis; occurs after interstitial edematous pancreatitis
Acute pancreatitis can be divided into two broad categories?
1. edematous, interstitial 2. necrotizing
what are skin conditions associated with HIV?
1. sudden-onset severe psoriasis 2. recurrent herpes zoster 3. Disseminated molluscum contagiosum
acute peripancreatic fluid collection (APFC) vs. Pseudocyst?
APFC=> first 4 weeks pseudocyst=> "AFTER" 4 weeks
Tamponade signs?
Beck triad: hypotension, JVD, muffled heart sounds pulsus paradoxus (SBP ~>10 with inspiration)
leukocytoclastic vasculitis?
Cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis, also known as hypersensitivity vasculitis, cutaneous leukocytoclastic vasculitis, hypersensitivity angiitis, cutaneous leukocytoclastic angiitis, cutaneous necrotizing vasculitis and cutaneous necrotizing venulitis.
dupuytren contracture risk factors?
DM male, >50yo, family hx smoking alcohol
skin tags are associated with what conditions?
DM obesity metabolic sx insulin resistance pregnancy colonic polyps
Diagnosis of cardiac tamponade
ECG: low voltage, elec. alternans CXR: clear lung, enlarged cardiac silhouette Echo: RA and RV "collapse", plethora of IVC
Treatment of infected necrosis in acute pancreatitis?
Empiric antibiotics "NOT CT-guided fine needle aspiration"
DOC for narcolepsy?
Modafinil
Routine abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan is.......... recommended at initial presentation in patients with acute pancreatitis unless there is..............about the diagnosis
NOT Uncertainty
When to do CT scan in the course of acute pancreatitis?
Patients with severe acute pancreatitis, signs of sepsis, or clinical deterioration 72 hours after initial presentation, should undergo a "contrast-enhanced CT scan" to assess the presence of pancreatic or extrapancreatic necrosis and local complications.
APFC features?
Peripancreatic fluid associated with interstitial edematous pancreatitis with NO associated peripancreatic necrosis. This term applies only to areas of peripancreatic fluid seen within the first four weeks after onset of interstitial edematous pancreatitis and without the features of a pseudocyst.
DOC for cataplexy?
SNRI SSRi TCA
Both ANC and WON are initially sterile but may become infected. T/F?
T.
thyroid hormon resistance
^TSH ^T3, T4 diffuse goiter NL SHBG NL alpha-subunit
pregnancy and MS
acute exaecerbations are managed the same higher risk of asissted delivery and cesarean
how to treat Fatigue in MS?
amantadin stimulants
why stop estrogen receptor modulators before surgery?
assoaciated with DVT stop 4wks prior surgery
Treatment of sarcoidosis
asymptomatic=> no Rx symptomatic=>12-24months of steroid most cases resolve over time and DO NOT recur
cherry angioma
benign no Rx
what drugs in MS can decrease frequency of exacerbations?
beta-interferon glitamer
Ehrlichiosis vs chikungunya fever?
both have arthralgia, fever etc. but in Ehrlichiosis, there is significant lab abnormality (leukopenia, low plt, high LFT)
Acute pancreatitis Etiology
chronic alcohol use gallstone dx hyper TG, hypercalcemia valporate, diuretics infection (CMV, HIV, ascariasis) trauma, ischemia, post-ERCP
pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis?
mutations affecting filaggrin & other key components of epidermal permeability barrier
if pt develops DVT while on menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) do what?
discontinue MHT begin "SSRI/SnRI" FOR HOT FLASHES!!!!!
what about EF in chronic MR?
effective EF is lower than estimated echo findings due to MR. Hence in chronic MR, EF<60% is considered impaired LV systolic function
spider angioma
esterogen dependent seen in cirrhosis
strawberry hemangioma
grow rapidly regress spontaneously manage consertaviley "beta-blockers" for ulcerating lesions
Rx of dupuytren contracture
hand tools needle aponeurotomy intralesional steroid surgery
lab findings in atopic dermatitis
high IgE Eosinophilia ^leukocyte phosphodiesterase
Lab features of sarcoidosis
hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria ^serumACE levels
what are electrolyte causes of MAT?
hypokalemia hypomagnesemia
When to suspect infected necrosis in acute pancreatitis?
in patients with pancreatic or extrapancreatic necrosis who deteriorate (clinical instability or sepsis physiology, increasing WBCt, fevers) or fail to improve after 7 to 10 days of hospitalization.
leukocytoclastic vasculitis?
inflammation of small blood vessels (usually "post-capillary venules" in the dermis), characterized by palpable purpura. It is the most common vasculitis seen in clinical practice.
acanthosis nigricans is associated with what conditions?
insuln resistance GI cancer
intussusception
target sign
Urge urinary incontinency in MS
timed voiding fluid restriction anticholinergic (oxybutinin, tolterodine)