Therapeutics ID Nelson Test Questions – Flashcards

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Common Cold: Treatments
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  1. Analgesics (APAP, ASA, IBU, Naproxen)
  2. Antihistamines
  3. Decongestants

Topical (oxymetazoline, xylometazoline)

-short term use only to prevent rebound congestion

Systemic (pseudoephedrine)

-can raise blood pressure

 

4. Other Treatments

-Cromolyn Sodium (duration of cold shortened, symptoms decreased final 3 days)

-interferon nasal spray

-zinc gluconate lozenges

-high dose Vit C

 

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Etiology for Rhinosinusitis
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  1. Viral
  2. Strep. pneumoniae
  3. H. influenzae
  4. Moraxella catarrhalis
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Classification and Duration of Rhinosinusitis
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Acute: < 4 weeks

Subacute: 4 - 12 weeks

Chronic: > 12 weeks

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Signs and Symptoms of Rhinosinusitis
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Common:

 

sinus tenderness, cough, sinus pressure, nasal obstruction, headache, postnasal drainage, discolored nasal discharge, sore throat

 

Possible:

 

halitosis, malaise, fever/chills, maxillary toothache, periorbital swelling

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Risk Factors for Rhinosinusitis
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  • Allergies
  • GERD
  • Structural abnormalities
  • Immunodeficiency
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Differential Diagnosis for Rhinosinusitis
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Perennial Rhinitis (seasonal allergies)

Viral sinusitis (7-10 days)

Acute bacterial sinusitis (Sx > 10 days)

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High Dose Amoxicillin for Bacterial Rhinosinusitis
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90 mg/kg/day, 2 divided doses
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Low Dose Amoxicillin for Bacterial Rhinosinusitis
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45 mg/kg/day, 2 divided doses
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Symptomatic Treatment for Rhinosinusitis
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1. Topical and Systemic Decongestants

-relieves nasal congestion

-may not promote sinus drainage

2. Antihistamines

-useful in patients with allergic rhinitis

3. Intranasal Corticosteroids

-provides relief of facial pain and tenderness, turbinate swelling

-not for first sinus infection, but for repeated episodes

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Etiologies for Pharyngitis
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1. Bacterial (more severe, see PCP)

-Strep. pyogenes (Group A Beta Hemolytic)

-Group C and G Strep.

-Arcanobacterium hemolyticum

-Mycoplasma pneumoniae

-Chlamydia pneumoniae

 

2. Viral (monitor at home)

-Rhinovirus

-Coronavirus

-Adenovirus

-Parainfluenza virus

-HSV

-Influenza

-Coxsackievirus

-Epstein Barr Virus

-CMV

 

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Signs and Symptoms of Pharyngitis
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  1. Acute onset sore throat
  2. Fever
  3. Tonsilar Exudate
  4. Swollen, tender anterior cervical lymph nodes
  5. Group A Streptococci

-erythematous throat with patches of purulent exudate (white to gray) on tonsils and posterior pharynx

-erythema of uvula and tongue

-fever > 38 degrees C

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Diagnosis of Pharyngitis
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1. Throat Culture

-swab posterior pharynx and plate

-lengthy (requires 18-24 hrs incubation)

- >90% sensitive and highly specific

 

2. Rapid Antigen Test

-throat swab testing requiring 5 minutes

- 60-90% sensitive and very specific

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Pharyngitis Treatment: DOC, alternatives to allergies, and alt. drugs
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DOC: PCN

 

PCN allergy type 1: Erythromycin

PCN allergy (non-type 1): 1st gen Cephalosporins

 

Alternatives:

 

Ampicillin/Amoxicillin

1st gen. cephalosporins

Macrolides

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Pharyngitis Complications
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1. Suppurative

-peritonsilar abscess

-retropharyngeal abscess

-cervical lymphadenitis

-otitis media

-sinusitis

-mastoiditis

 

2. Toxin-Mediated

-scarlet fever

-streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome

 

3. Non-Suppurative

-rheumatic fever

-acute glomerulonephritis

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Definition of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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AKA Viral Croup

 

Viral illness that causes inflammation and edema of the tracheal wall, narrowing of the lumen, and restriction of airflow

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Etiologies of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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  1. Parainfluenza virus
  2. Adenovirus
  3. RSV
  4. Influenza A virus
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Signs and Symptoms of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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  1. Rhinorrhea
  2. Mild pharyngitis
  3. Cough (sounds like a seal)
  4. Low grade fever
  5. Inspiratory stridor (sounds like dog whining)
  6. Hoarseness
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Duration of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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Improvement after 1-2 days

Resolution by 3-7 days

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Diagnosis of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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X-Ray

CT scan

Laryngoscopy

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Symptomatic Treatment of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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  • Analgesics (APAP, IBU)
  • Adequate hydration
  • Cool mist therapy
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Treatment for Severe Airway Narrowing as a result of Acute Laryngotracheobronchitis
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  • Nebulized epinephrine
  • Corticosteroids

Dexamethasone 0.6 mg/kg PO/IM x 1 dose (max: 10 mg)

Nebulized Budesonide

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Etiologies of Acute Epiglottitis
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  • H. influenzae type B
  • B-Hemolytic Strep.
  • S. pneumoniae
  • S. aureus
  • Aerobic G- Bacteria
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Signs and Symptoms of Acute Epiglottitis
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  • Fever
  • Irritability
  • Sore throat
  • Rapidly progressive stridor with resp. distress
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Treatment of Acute Epiglottitis
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Endotracheal intubation/Emergency tracheostomy

 

IV antibiotics: cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, or ampicillin/sulbactam

 

Postexposure prophylaxis -- Rifampin for household if:

  •  child < 4 yo
  • child < 12 months and has not received Hib vaccine series
  • immunosuppressed child
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Risk Factors for Bronchiolitis
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  • Season
  • Age (premature infant)
  • Underlying lung disease
  • Congenital heart disease
  • Immunocompromised
  • Tobacco smoke exposure
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Etiology for Bronchiolitis
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  • RSV
  • Metapneumovirus
  • Parainfluenza viruses (Type 1, 2, 3)
  • Secondary bacterial infection

 

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Signs and Symptoms of Bronchiolitis
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  • Irritability/Restlessness
  • Mild fever
  • Cough
  • Rhinitis
  • Vomiting/Diarrhea
  • Abnormal Breathing

-inspiration crackles

-labored with retractions

-tachypnea

-nasal flaring

-grunting

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Diagnosis and Duration of Bronchiolitis
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Diagnosis

  • Clinical examination
  • Chest X-Ray (to rule out pneumonia)
  • Pulse oximetry (severity of resp. distress)
  • Nasopharyngeal aspirate

Duration

  • Normal/Healthy Child: symptoms improve in 3-4 days but airways may remain sensitive for weeks
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Outpatient Management of Bronchiolitis
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  • nasal saline with bulb suctioning
  • antipyretics
  • rehydration if needed
  • infection control
  • avoid tobacco smoke exposure
  • education of disease progression
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Inpatient Management of Bronchiolitis
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Standard Measures:

  • Supplemental O2
  • nasal saline with deep suctioning
  • antipyretics
  • rehydration
  • infection control

Questionable Measures:

  • Bronchodilators (only effective in patients with asthma)
  • Corticosteroids (no proven efficacy)
  • Ribavirin (RSV) - not routinely recommended, questionable efficacy, potential toxic effects for exposed HCP (pregnant nurses), expensive, black box warnings
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Bronchiolitis Prevention
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Palivizumab

  • Humanized Mouse Monoclonal Antibody
  • Exhibits neutralizing and fusion-inhibitory activity against RSV
  • Only recommended for select infants
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Patients that Qualify for Palivizumab Therapy
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Patients < 2 yo with:

  • chronic lung disease requiring medical therapy within 6 months of RSV season
  • hemodynamically significant congenital heart disease

Premature Infants:

  • < 1 yo born at < 28 weeks gestation
  • < 6 months of age born at 29-32 weeks of gestation
  • Consider if < 6 months of age born at 32-35 weeks of gestation with risk factors
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Otitis Media Pathophysiology
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  • Allergy or URI causes congestion and swelling of nasal mucosa, nasopharynx, and eustachian tube
  • Obstruction of eustachian tube isthmus results in accumulation of middle ear secretions
  • Secondary bacterial or viral infection of effusion causes suppuration and features of Acute Otitis Media
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Risk Factors for Otitis Media
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  • Age
  • Daycare Attendance
  • Environmental Factors
  • More than 1 sibling living at home
  • Pacifier use
  • Previous antibiotic use
  • Previous otitis media
  • Season (winter and fall)
  • Gender (Male > Female)
  • Ethnicity
  • Underlying pathology
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Clinical Presentation of Otitis Media
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  • Otalgia (denoted by pulling of ear)
  • Irritability
  • Fever
  • Otorrhea
  • Hearing loss
  • URI present
  • Symptoms of URI
  • Nonspecific symptoms
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Diagnosis of Acute Otitis Media
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All 3 Criteria Must Be Met:

  1. History of acute onset signs and symptoms
  2. Presence of middle ear effusion
  3. Signs and symptoms of middle ear inflammation
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Acute Otitis Media Etiology
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Bacterial

Strep. pneumoniae

H. influenzae

Moraxella catarrhalis

Group A Strep

Staph. aureus

Anaerobic organisms

G- Enteric bacilli

 

Viral

RSV

Rhinovirus

Adenovirus

Influenza virus

Parainfluenza virus

Enterovirus

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