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Cases for PACES Second Edition Stephen Hoole MA, MRCP Andrew Fry MA, MRCP Daniel Hodson MA, MRCP, FRCPath Rachel Davies MA, MRCP Specialist Registrars Cambridge University Hospitals Addenbrooke’s Hospital Cambridge UK
A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication
Cases for PACES Second Edition
Cases for PACES Second Edition Stephen Hoole MA, MRCP Andrew Fry MA, MRCP Daniel Hodson MA, MRCP, FRCPath Rachel Davies MA, MRCP Specialist Registrars Cambridge University Hospitals Addenbrooke’s Hospital Cambridge UK
A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication
This edition first published 2010 C 2010 by Stephen Hoole, Andrew Fry, Daniel Hodson & Rachel Davies Previous editions published 2003 Blackwell Publishing was acquired by John Wiley & Sons in February 2007. Blackwell’s publishing programme has been merged with Wiley’s global Scientific, Technical, and Medical business to form Wiley-Blackwell. Registered office John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, United Kingdom Editorial offices 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, United Kingdom 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148-5020, USA For details of our global editorial offices, for customer services and for information about how to apply for permission to reuse the copyright material in this book please see our website at www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell. The right of the author to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, except as permitted by the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, without the prior permission of the publisher. Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The publisher is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold on the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering professional services. If professional advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Cases for PACES / Stephen Hoole ... [et al.]. – 2nd ed. p. ; cm. Rev. ed. of: Cases for PACES / Stephen Hoole, Andrew Fry, Daniel Hodson. 2003. Includes index. ISBN 978-1-4051-9948-3 1. Diagnosis–Case studies. 2. Physicians–Licenses–Great Britain–Examinations–Study guides. I. Hoole, Stephen. II. Hoole, Stephen. Cases for PACES. [DNLM: 1. Physical Examination–Examination Questions. 2. Ethics, Clinical–Examination Questions. WB 18.2 C338 2010] RC66.H646 2010 616.07 5–dc22 2009046378 ISBN: 9781405199483 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Set in 9/12pt Frutiger Light by AptaraR Inc., New Delhi, India Printed in Singapore 1
2010
Contents
Foreword, vi Preface, vii Acknowledgements, ix Abbreviations, x Station 1: Abdominal and Respiratory, 1 Station 2: History Taking, 34 Station 3: Cardiology and Neurology, 59 Station 4: Ethics, Law and Communication Skills, 106 Station 5: Brief Clinical Consultations, 125 Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine, 141 Appendix: Useful addresses, 195 Index, 197
Foreword
Amidst the turmoil of recent ‘modernization’ of medical careers, the fundamental essentials of the practice of clinical medicine have not changed at all. The doctor needs to be able to take a history from a patient, examine them and decide whether investigations and/or treatment are required. They then need to be able to discuss the various options with the patient in a manner that they can understand, hopefully reaching a sensible mutual understanding about how best to proceed. In some instances the doctor may need to give difficult and distressing information, and must learn how to do this in a manner that eases the pain rather than increases it. And all of these things must be done in a reasonable time frame: the next patient is waiting. The MRCP PACES examination remains the measure that is most generally respected as indicating that a doctor has developed a fair degree of the knowledge, skills and behaviours that are necessary to do the things detailed above. They are not yet the finished article (beware of anyone who thinks they are), but they can proceed from a junior to a senior stage of training. The examination is not easy, with a pass rate of around 40%. Those preparing for it need to immerse themselves in clinical work. There is no substitute for seeing a lot of cases and taking histories and performing examinations, but – and here is where books such as Cases for PACES come in – it is not helpful to endlessly repeat sloppy practice. The physician examining you in the PACES examination is thinking: ‘Is this doctor ready to be my SpR now? Can they sort things out in a reasonably efficient and sensible way? Would I get a lot of people wanting to see me because problems had been poorly explained or dealt with?’ What comes over in Cases for PACES is an approach that does sort the wood from the trees, which cuts pretty rapidly to the chase, and I recommend it to you. If you do what it says on the tin, you will stand a very good chance of passing the examination. Dr John Firth Consultant Physician, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge
Preface
PACES (Practical Assessment of Clinical Examination Skills) was initiated in June 2001 by the Royal College of Physicians as the final stage of the MRCP examination. The initial examination consisted of five stations in a carousel: Station 1: Respiratory/Abdominal (10 minutes each), Station 2: History Taking (20 minutes), Station 3: Cardiology/Neurology (10 minutes each), Station 4: Communication Skills and Ethics (20 minutes) and Station 5: Short Cases (Skin, Locomotor, Eyes and Endocrine: 5 minutes each). The main changes from the original MRCP long and short case format were that candidates had to take a history and communicate medical diagnoses to lay patients in front of their examiners. The viva was replaced by ‘discussions’ that occurred at the end of each case, which concentrated on management issues relating to the case. PACES was refined in October 2009 by restructuring Station 5. There are now two 10-minute ‘Brief Clinical Consultations’ that reflect day-to-day practice at work rather than the four 5-minute cases. Candidates will be expected to take a targeted history and a focused rather than thorough examination each lasting 8 minutes with the remaining time for discussion. The cases previously encountered in Station 5 will be accommodated within the other stations and candidates must still prepare to examine these systems. New topics to Station 5 will include acute and geriatric medicine, previously underrepresented in the PACES examination. Cases for PACES 2nd Edition prepares candidates for the updated PACES examination. It mimics the examination format, and is designed for use in an interactive way. The 2nd Edition is a completely revised text, incorporating the changes to Station 5, as well as new cases. It has useful information on ethical and legal issues, history-taking advice and worked examples. It also provides mock questions for candidates to practise themselves. The short cases that appeared in the original Station 5 remain as an appendix, but Station 5 now contains new Brief Clinical Consultations including worked examples in acute and geriatric medicine. However, seeing medical patients on a busy receiving unit or outpatient department must be the best way to prepare for this new station! Common cases rather than rarities have been deliberately chosen and are set out in an examination format. It is taken as read that candidates will be familiar in examination techniques and the appropriate order in which
viii
Preface
to elicit the various signs. In the book, only the key diagnostic clinical signs are documented, followed by extra points that will ensure you score high marks in the case. What follows in the discussion are some of the potential topics that a candidate could be expected to comment on at the end of the case. Examiners are specifically monitoring for knowledge of the differential diagnosis and organized clinical judgement, whilst managing the patients’ concerns and maintaining patient welfare. The detail is not exhaustive but rather what is reasonably needed to pass. There is additional room for candidates to make further notes as they see fit. This book is designed to enable groups of candidates to practise ‘under examination conditions’ at the bedside. The aim of this book is to put the information that is frequently tested in the clinical PACES examination in a succinct format that will enable capable candidates to pass with ease. Good luck. Stephen Hoole Andrew Fry Daniel Hodson Rachel Davies
Acknowledgements
We thank the doctors who taught us for our own PACES examination, and above all the patients who allow us to refine our examination techniques and teach the next generation of MRCP PACES candidates.
Abbreviations
ABG ACE ACTH AF AFP AICD ANA AR ARVD 5-ASA ASD AVR BIPAP BM BMI CABG CAPD CCF CFA CFTR
CK CML
Arterial blood gas Angiotensin-converting enzyme Adrenocorticotrophic hormone Atrial fibrillation Alpha-fetoprotein Automated implantable cardiac defibrillator Anti-nuclear antibody Aortic regurgitation arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia 5-Aminosalicylic acid Atrial septal defect Aortic valve replacement Bi-level positive airway pressure Bohereinger Manheim (glucose) Body mass index Coronary artery bypass graft Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis Congestive cardiac failure Cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator Creatine kinase Chronic myeloid leukaemia
CMV COPD COMT CRP CSF CVA CXR DIPJ DM DVLA DVT eGFR EBV ECG EMG ESR FBC FEV1 FTA FVC GH Hb HBV HCG HCV HGV
Cytomegalovirus Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease Catechol-o-methyl transferase C-reactive protein Cerebrospinal fluid Cerebrovascular accident Chest X-ray (radiograph) Distal interphalangeal joint Diabetes mellitus Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency Deep vein thrombosis Estimated glomerular filtration rate Epstein–Barr virus Electrocardiogram Electromyogram Erythrocyte sedimentation rate Full blood count Forced expiratory volume in 1 second Fluorescent treponema antibodies Forced vital capacity Growth hormone Haemoglobin Hepatitis B virus Human chorionic gonadotrophin Hepatitis C virus Heavy goods vehicle
Abbreviations xi
HLA HOCM HRT HSMN HSV IBD IDDM IGF INR ITP
IV JVP KCO LAD LDH LFT LMWH LQTS LV LVH mAb MAO MI MND MPTP MR MRI
Human lymphocyte antigen Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy Hormone replacement therapy Hereditary sensory motor neuropathy Herpes simplex virus Inflammatory bowel disease Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus Insulin-like growth factor International normalized ratio Immune thrombocytopaenic purpura Intravenous Jugular venous pressure Transfer coefficient Left axis deviation Lactate dehydrogenase Liver function test Low molecular weight heparin Long QT syndrome Left ventricle Left ventricular hypertrophy Monoclonal antibody Monoamine oxidase Myocardial infarction Motor neurone disease Methyl-phenyltetrahydropyridine Mitral regurgitation Magnetic resonance imaging
Metacarpophalangeal joint MTPJ Metatarsophalangeal joint MVR Mitral valve replacement NIPPV Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation NSAIDs Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs NSCLC Non-small cell lung cancer OA Osteoarthritis Partial pressure (arterial) Pa PBC Primary biliary cirrhosis PCT Primary Care Trust PEG Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy PEFR Peak expiratory flow rate PET Positron emission tomography PIPJ Proximal interphalangeal joint PRL Prolactin PSC Primary sclerosing cholangitis PSV Public service vehicle PTHrP Parathyroid hormone-related peptide PUVA Psoralen ultraviolet A RA Rheumatoid arthritis RAD Right axis deviation RBBB Right bundle branch block RR Respiratory rate RV Right ventricle RVH Right ventricular hypertrophy Rx Treatment MCPJ
xii
Abbreviations
SCLC SIADH
SLE SOA SSRI SVCO T4 T ◦C TIA TIMI
TL CO
Small cell lung cancer Syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuretic hormone Systemic lupus erythematosus Swelling of ankles Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor Superior vena cava obstruction Thyroxine Temperature Transient ischaemic attack Thrombolysis in myocardial infarction Carbon monoxide transfer factor
TNM TOE TPHA TR TSH TTE U&E UC UFH UIP UTI VEGF VSD WCC
Tumour nodes metastasis (staging) Transoesophageal echo Treponema pallidum haemaggutination assay Tricuspid regurgitation Thyroid stimulating hormone Transthoracic echo Urea and electrolytes Ulcerative colitis Unfractionated heparin Usual interstitial pneumonia Urinary tract infection Vascular endothelial growth factor Ventricular septal defect White cell count
Station 1 Abdominal and Respiratory
Chronic liver disease and hepatomegaly This man complains of weight loss and abdominal discomfort. His GP has referred him to you for a further opinion. Please examine his abdomen. Clinical signs Signs of chronic liver disease
r General: cachexia, icterus (also in acute), excoriation and bruising r Hands: leuconychia, clubbing, Dupuytren’s contractures and palmar ery-
thema
r Face: xanthelasma, parotid swelling and fetor hepaticus r Chest and abdomen: spider naevi and caput medusa, reduced body hair,
gynaecomastia and testicular atrophy (in males)
Signs of hepatomegaly
r Palpation and percussion: r Mass in the right upper quadrant that moves with respiration, that you
are not able to get above and is dull to percussion
r Estimate size (finger breadths below the diaphragm) r Smooth or craggy/nodular (malignancy/cirrhosis) r Pulsatile (TR in CCF)
r Auscultation r Bruit over liver (hepatocellular carcinoma)
Extra points Evidence of an underlying cause of hepatomegaly r Tattoos and needle marks r Pigmentation r Cachexia r Mid-line sternotomy scar
Infectious hepatitis/alcohol Haemochromatosis Malignancy CCF
Cases for PACES, 2nd edition. By S. Hoole, A. Fry, D. Hodson & R. Davies. Published 2010 by Blackwell Publishing.
2
Abdominal and Respiratory
Evidence of treatment
r Ascitic drain/tap sites and peritonovenous shunts r Surgical scars
Evidence of decompensation
r Ascites: shifting dullness r Asterixis: ‘liver flap’ r Altered consciousness: encephalopathy
Discussion Causes of hepatomegaly The big three: Cirrhosis (alcoholic) Carcinoma (secondaries) Congestive cardiac failure Plus: Infectious (HBV and HCV) Immune (PBC, PSC and autoimmune hepatitis) Infiltrative (amyloid and myeloproliferative disorders)
Investigations
r Bloods: FBC, clotting, U&E, LFT and glucose r Ultrasound scan abdomen r Tap ascites (if present)
If cirrhotic
r Liver screen bloods: r Autoantibodies and immunoglobulins (PBC and autoimmune hepatitis) r Hepatitis B and C serology r Ferritin (haemochromatosis) r Caeruloplasmin (Wilson’s disease) r ␣-1 antitrypsin
r Autoantibodies and immunoglobulins (PBC and autoimmune hepatitis) r AFP (hepatocellular carcinoma)
r Hepatic synthetic function: INR (acute) and albumin (chronic) r Liver biopsy (diagnosis and staging) r ERCP (diagnose/exclude PSC)
If malignancy
r Imaging: CXR and CT abdomen/chest r Colonoscopy/gastroscopy r Biopsy
Abdominal and Respiratory 3
Complications of cirrhosis
r Variceal haemorrhage due to portal hypertension r Hepatic encephalopathy r Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Child-Pugh classification of cirrhosis Prognostic score based on bilirubin/albumin/INR/ascites/encephalopathy Score 1 year prognosis A: 5–6 100% B: 7–9 81% C: 10–15 45%
Causes of ascites r Cirrhosis (80%) r Carcinomatosis r CCF
Treatment of ascites in cirrhotics r Abstinence from alcohol r Salt restriction r Diuretics (aim: 1 kg weight loss/day) r Liver transplantation
Causes of palmar erythema r Cirrhosis r Hyperthyroidism r Rheumatoid arthritis r Pregnancy r Polycythaemia
Causes of gynaecomastia
r Physiological: puberty and senility r Kleinfelter’s syndrome
r Cirrhosis r Drugs, e.g. spironolactone and digoxin r Testicular tumour/orchidectomy r Endocrinopathy, e.g. hyper/hypothyroidism and Addison’s
4
Abdominal and Respiratory
Haemochromatosis This 52-year-old man was referred after a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus was made by his GP. Please examine him and discuss further investigations. Clinical signs
r Increased skin pigmentation r Stigmata of chronic liver disease r Hepatomegaly
Extra points Scars r Venesection r Liver biopsy
r Joint replacement r Abdominal rooftop incision (hemihepatectomy for hepatocellular carci-
noma)
Evidence of complications
r Endocrine: ‘bronze diabetes’ (e.g. injection sites), hypogonadism and tes-
ticular atrophy
r Cardiac: congestive cardiac failure r Joints: arthropathy (pseudo-gout)
Discussion Inheritance
r Autosomal recessive on chromosome 6 r HFE gene mutation: regulator of gut iron absorption r Homozygous prevalence 1:300, carrier rate 1:10 r Males affected at an earlier age than females – protected by menstrual
iron losses
Presentation
r Fatigue and arthritis r Chronic liver disease r Incidental diagnosis or family screening
Investigation
r ↑ Serum ferritin r ↑ Transferrin saturation
Abdominal and Respiratory 5 r ↓ Total iron-binding capacity r Liver biopsy (diagnosis + staging) r Genotyping
And consider:
r Blood glucose r ECG, CXR, ECHO r Liver ultrasound, α-fetoprotein
Diabetes Cardiac failure Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
Treatment
r Regular venesection (1 unit /week) until iron deficient, then venesect 1 unit,
3–4 times/year
r Avoid alcohol r Surveillance for HCC
Family screening (1st degree relatives aged > 20 years) r Iron studies
If positive: r Liver biopsy r Genotype analysis
Prognosis
r 200 × increased risk of HCC if cirrhotic r Reduced life expectancy if cirrhotic r Normal life expectancy without cirrhosis + effective treatment
Liver transplantation in haemochromatosis
r Only 50% 1-year survival r High mortality: cardiac + infectious complications
6
Abdominal and Respiratory
Splenomegaly This man presents with tiredness and lethargy. Please examine his abdominal system and discuss your diagnosis. Clinical signs General
r Anaemia r Lymphadenopathy (axillae, cervical and inguinal areas) r Purpura
Abdominal
r Left upper quadrant mass that moves inferomedially with respiration, has
a notch, is dull to percussion and you cannot get above nor ballot
r Estimate size r Check for hepatomegaly
Extra points
r Lymphadenopathy r Stigmata of chronic liver disease r Splinter haemorrhages, murmur etc. r Rheumatoid hands
Haematological and infective Cirrhosis with portal hypertension Bacterial endocarditis Felty’s syndrome
Discussion Causes
r Massive splenomegaly (>8 cm): r Myeloproliferative disorders (CML and myelofibrosis) r Tropical infections (malaria, visceral leishmaniasis: kala-azar) r Moderate (4–8 cm): r Myelo/lymphoproliferative disorders r Infiltration (Gaucher’s and amyloidosis) r Tip (<4 cm): r Myelo/lymphoproliferative disorders
r Portal hypertension r Infections (EBV, infective endocarditis and infective hepatitis) r Haemolytic anaemia
Investigations
r Ultrasound abdomen
Then if: r Haematological: r FBC and film r CT chest and abdomen
Abdominal and Respiratory 7 r Bone marrow aspirate and trephine r Lymph node biopsy
r Infectious: r Thick and thin films (malaria) r Viral serology
Indications for splenectomy
r Rupture (trauma) r Haematological (ITP and hereditary spherocytosis)
Splenectomy work-up
r Vaccination (ideally 2/52 prior to protect against encapsulated bacteria): r Pneumococcus r Meningococcus r Haemophilus influenzae (Hib) r Prophylactic penicillin r Medic alert bracelet
8
Abdominal and Respiratory
Renal enlargement This woman has been referred by her GP for investigation of hypertension. Please examine her abdomen. Clinical signs Peripheral
r Blood pressure: hypertension r Arteriovenous fistulae (thrill and bruit), tunnelled dialysis line r Immunosuppressant ‘stigmata’, e.g. cushingoid habitus due to steroids,
gum hypertrophy with ciclosporin
Abdomen
r Palpable kidney: ballotable, can get above it and moves with respiration r Iliac fossae: scar with (or without!) transplanted kidney r Ask to dip the urine: proteinuria and haematuria r Ask to examine the external genitalia (varicocele in males)
Extra points
r Hepatomegaly: polycystic kidney disease r Indwelling catheter: obstructive nephropathy with hydronephrosis r Peritoneal dialysis catheter/scars
Discussion Causes of unilateral enlargement
r Polycystic kidney disease (other kidney not palpable or contralateral
nephrectomy – flank scar)
r Renal cell carcinoma r Simple cysts r Hydronephrosis (due to ureteric obstruction)
Causes of bilateral enlargement
r Polycystic kidney disease r Bilateral renal cell carcinoma (5%) r Bilateral hydronephrosis r Tuberous sclerosis (renal angiomyolipomata and cysts) r Amyloidosis
Investigations r U&E r Urine cytology
Abdominal and Respiratory 9 r Ultrasound abdomen ± biopsy r IVU r CT if carcinoma is suspected r Genetic studies (ADPKD)
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
r Progressive replacement of normal kidney tissue by cysts leading to renal
enlargement and renal failure (5% of end-stage renal failure in UK)
r Prevalence 1:1000 r Genetics: 85% ADPKD1 chromosome 16; 15% ADPKD2 chromosome 4 r Present with: r Hypertension r Recurrent UTIs r Abdominal pain (bleeding into cyst and cyst infection) r Haematuria
r End-stage renal failure by age 40–60 years (earlier in ADPKD1 than 2) r Other organ involvement:
r Hepatic cysts and hepatomegaly (rarely liver failure) r Intracranial Berry aneurysms (neurological sequelae/craniotomy scar?) r Mitral valve prolapse
r Genetic counselling of family and family screening; 10% represent new
mutations
r Treatment: nephrectomy for recurrent bleeds/infection/size, dialysis and
renal transplantation
10
Abdominal and Respiratory
The transplant patient Please examine this man’s abdomen. Clinical signs r Scars:
'Mercedes–Benz' or roof–top scar Liver transplant
Iliac fossa scar Kidney transplant
Liver
r Evidence of chronic liver disease
Renal
r Palpate the scar for underlying transplanted kidney: they can be removed
again!
r Unilateral/bilateral palpable native kidneys (ADPKD) r Other scars: nephrectomy, CAPD catheter and tunnelled neck lines r Arteriovenous fistulae
Extra points Reason for liver transplantation r Pigmentation r Other autoimmune disease r Tattoos and needle marks
Haemochromatosis PBC Hepatitis B, C
Evidence of immunosuppressive medication
r Ciclosporin: gum hypertrophy and hypertension r Steroids: cushingoid appearance, thin skin, ecchymoses etc.
Skin signs
r Malignancy (especially renal transplant recipients): r Dysplastic change (actinic keratoses) r Squamous cell carcinoma (100 × increased risk and multiple lesions) r Basal cell carcinoma and malignant melanoma (10 × increased risk)
Abdominal and Respiratory 11 r Infection: r Viral warts r Cellulitis
Discussion Top three causes for renal transplantation r Glomerulonephritis r Diabetic nephropathy
r Polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD)
Top three reasons for liver transplantation
r Cirrhosis r Acute hepatic failure (hepatitis A and B, paracetamol overdose) r Hepatic malignancy
Problems following transplantation
r Rejection: r Acute or chronic r Infection secondary to immunosuppression: r Pneumocystis carinii r CMV r Increased risk of other pathologies: r Skin malignancy
r Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease r Hypertension and hyperlipidaemia causing cardiovascular disease
r Immunosuppressant drug side effects/toxicity: r Ciclosporin nephrotoxicity r Recurrence of original disease r Chronic graft dysfunction r Psychological
Success of renal transplantation
r 90% 1-year graft survival r 50% 10-year graft survival (better with live-related donor grafts)
Success of liver transplantation r 80% 1-year survival r 70% 5-year survival
Renal bone disease in patients with chronic renal failure
r Hyperparathyroidism: r Bony reabsorption, osteoporosis and ‘telescopic shortening’ of phalanges r Parathyroidectomy scar
12
Abdominal and Respiratory
r Osteomalacia: r Proximal myopathy r Extraskeletal calcification:
r Calciphylaxis (erythematous areas of skin with extensive necrosis) r Periarticular soft tissues (swollen interphalangeal joints) r Red-eyes: band keratopathy (conjunctival precipitation)
Causes of gum hypertrophy
r Drugs: ciclosporin, phenytoin and nifedipine r Scurvy r Acute myelomonocytic leukaemia r Pregnancy r Familial
Abdominal and Respiratory 13
Inflammatory bowel disease This 36-year-old male has been referred for investigation of bloody diarrhoea. Please examine his abdominal system. Clinical signs General
r Pallor/anaemia r Slim build
r Oral ulceration
Abdomen
r Surgical scars, including current/past stoma sites r Tenderness r Palpable masses (e.g. right iliac fossa mass in Crohn’s disease or colonic
tumour in UC)
r Ask to examine for perianal disease
Extra points
r Evidence of treatment: r Steroid side effects r Ciclosporin (gum hypertrophy and hypertension) r Hickman lines/scars r Extra-intestinal manifestations (see below)
Discussion Cause Genetic, environmental and other factors combine to produce an exaggerated, sustained and mucosal inflammatory response
Differential diagnosis
r Crohn’s: Yersinia, tuberculosis, lymphoma (and UC) r UC: infection (e.g. campylobacter), ischaemia, drugs and radiation (and
Crohn’s)
Investigation
r Stool microscopy and culture: exclude infective cause of diarrhoea r FBC and inflammatory markers: monitor disease activity r AXR: exclude toxic dilatation in UC and small bowel obstruction due to
strictures in Crohn’s
r Sigmoidoscopy/colonoscopy and biopsy: histological confirmation
14
Abdominal and Respiratory
r Bowel contrast studies: strictures and fistulae in Crohn’s disease r Further imaging: white cell scan and CT scan
Treatment Medical r Drugs
Mild-moderate disease Severe disease Maintenance therapy
Crohn’s Oral steroid (5-ASA) IV steroid IV infliximab Oral steroid Azathioprine Methotrexate Infliximab
UC Oral or topical (rectal steroid) 5-ASA (e.g. mesalazine) IV steroid IV Ciclosporin Oral steroid 5-ASA Azathioprine
r Antibiotics (metronidazole): in Crohn’s with perianal infection, fistulae
or small bowel bacterial overgrowth
r Nutritional support: high fibre, elemental and low residue diets r Psychological support
Surgery
r Crohn’s: obstruction from strictures, complications from fistulae and peri-
anal disease and failure to respond to medical therapy
r UC: chronic symptomatic relief, emergency surgery for severe refractory
colitis and colonic dysplasia or carcinoma
Prognosis
r Most lead a normal healthy life once treated with no overall increase in
mortality
Complications Crohn’s disease Malabsorption Anaemia Abscess Fistula Intestinal obstruction
Ulcerative colitis Anaemia Toxic dilatation Perforation Colonic carcinoma
Colonic carcinoma and UC
r Higher risk in patients with pancolitis (5–10% at 15–20 years), and in those
with PSC
Abdominal and Respiratory 15 r Surveillance: 3-yearly colonoscopy for patients with pancolitis >10 years,
increasing in frequency with every decade from diagnosis (2-yearly 20–30 years, annually >30 years) r Colectomy if dysplasia is detected
Extra-intestinal manifestations r Mouth: r Skin:
r Joint: r Eye: r Liver: r Systemic amyloidosis (∗ related to disease activity).
Apthous ulcers∗ Erythema nodosum∗ Pyoderma gangrenosum∗ Finger clubbing∗ Large joint arthritis∗ Seronegative arthritides Uveitis∗ , episcleritis∗ and iritis∗ Primary sclerosing cholangitis (UC)
16
Abdominal and Respiratory
Pleural effusion This patient has been breathless for 2 weeks. Examine his respiratory system to elucidate the cause. Clinical signs
r Reduced expansion r Trachea or mediastinum (apex beat) displaced away from the side of the
effusion
r Stony dull percussion note r Absent tactile vocal fremitus r Reduced air entry and breath sounds r Bronchial breathing above (aegophony)
Extra points Signs that may indicate the cause
r Cancer: clubbing and lymphadenopathy r Congestive cardiac failure: raised JVP r Chronic liver disease: leuconychia, spider naevi and gynaecomastia r Chronic renal failure: arteriovenous fistula r Connective tissue disease: rheumatoid hands r Signs of DVT
Causes of a dull lung base
r Consolidation: bronchial breathing and crackles r Collapse: tracheal deviation towards the side of collapse and reduced
breath sounds
r Pleural thickening: signs are similar to a pleural effusion but with normal
tactile vocal fremitus
r Raised hemidiaphragm
Discussion Causes Transudate (protein <30 g/L) Congestive cardiac failure Chronic renal failure Chronic liver failure
Exudate (protein >30 g/L) Neoplasm: 1◦ or 2◦ Infection Infarction Inflammation: RA and SLE
Abdominal and Respiratory 17
Investigation
r CXR: large pleural effusion with no mediastinal shift – indicates associated
collapse and a bronchoscopy is indicated to rule out an obstructing lesion
Pleural aspiration (exudate)
r Protein: effusion albumin/plasma albumin >0.5 (Light’s criteria) r LDH: effusion LDH/plasma LDH >0.6 r Empyema: an exudate with a low glucose and pH <7.2 is suggestive
Investigating an exudate (diagnostic percentage) Pleural fluid cytology (60%): plus CT guided pleural biopsy (70%) plus thoracoscopy (medical or surgical) (90+%) CT thorax
Treatment Transudate
r Treat the cause
Exudate
r Intercostal drainage r Consider chemical pleurodesis with talc or surgical abrasion pleurodesis
for recurrent effusions
Empyema
r A collection of pus within the pleural space r Most frequent organisms: anaerobes, staphylococci and Gram-negative
organisms
r Associated with bronchial obstruction, e.g. carcinoma, and with recurrent
aspiration
Treatment
r Pleural drainage and IV antibiotics r Surgical decortications
18
Abdominal and Respiratory
Bronchiectasis This 60-year-old woman presents to your clinic with a chronic cough. Please examine her and discuss your findings. Clinical signs General: Hands: Chest:
Cachexia and tachypnoea Clubbing Mixed character crackles that alter with coughing. Occasional squeaks and wheeze. Sputum + + + (look in the pot!)
Extra points
r Cor pulmonale: SOA, raised JVP and RV heave r Cause: lymph nodes elsewhere
r Yellow nail syndrome: yellow nails and lymphoedema
Discussion Differential diagnosis ⎫
r Fibrosing alveolitis ⎪ ⎬ r Bronchial carcinoma Differential diagnosis of ⎭CLUBBING + CRACKLES r Chronic lung abscess ⎪
Investigation
r Sputum culture and cytology r CXR: tramlines and ring shadows
r High-resolution CT thorax (‘signet ring’ sign: thickened, dilated bronchi
larger than the adjacent vascular bundle)
For a specific cause
r Bronchoscopy: malignancy; if localized r Immunoglobulins: hypogammaglobulinaemia (especially IgG and IgA) 2 r Aspergillus RAST and skin prick testing: ABPA r Rheumatoid serology r Saccharine ciliary motility test (nares to taste buds in 30 minutes): Karta-
gener’s
r History of inflammatory bowel disease
Causes of bronchiectasis
r Congenital: Kartagener’s and cystic fibrosis r Mechanical: bronchial carcinoma (suspect if localized bronchiectasis)
Abdominal and Respiratory 19 r Childhood infection: measles and TB r Immune OVER activity: allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA);
inflammatory bowel disease associated
r Immune UNDER activity: hypogammaglobulinaemia r Aspiration: chronic alcoholics and GORD
Treatment
r Physiotherapy – active cycle breathing r Prompt antibiotic therapy for exacerbations r Long-term treatment with low dose azithromycin three times per week r Bronchodilators/inhaled corticosteroids if there is any airflow obstruction r Surgery is occasionally used for localized disease
Complications of bronchiectasis
r Cor pulmonale r (Secondary) amyloidosis (Dip urine for protein) r Massive haemoptysis (mycotic aneurysm)
20
Abdominal and Respiratory
Pulmonary fibrosis Examine this patient’s respiratory system, she has been complaining of progressive shortness of breath. Clinical signs
r Clubbing, central cyanosis and tachypnoea r Fine end-inspiratory crackles (like Velcro R which do not change with
coughing)
r No sputum
Extra points
r Signs of associated autoimmune diseases, e.g. rheumatoid arthritis
(hands), SLE and systemic sclerosis (face and hands) and Crohn’s (mouth ulcers) r Signs of treatment, e.g. cushingoid from steroids r Discoloured skin (grey) – amiodarone
Discussion Investigation
r Bloods: ESR, rheumatoid factor and ANA r CXR: bilateral basal reticulonodular changes r ABG: type I respiratory failure (low PaO and normal PaCO ) 2 2 r Lung function tests: r FEV /FVC > 0.8 (restrictive) 1 r Low TLC (small lungs)
r Reduced K CO r Bronchoalveolar lavage: lymphocytes > neutrophils indicate a better
response to steroids and a better prognosis (sarcoidosis)
r High resolution CT scan: distribution of fibrosis to sub-pleural lung is
typical of usual interstitial pneumonia
r Lung biopsy
Treatment
r Immunosuppression, e.g. steroids and azathioprine, but the evidence that
any treatment works is weak
r N-acetyl cycsteine – free radical scavenger r Single lung transplant r NB: Beware single lung transplantation patient – unilateral fine crackles
and contralateral thoracotomy scar with normal breath sounds
Abdominal and Respiratory 21
Prognosis
r Very variable r Highly cellular with ground glass infiltrate – responds to immunosuppres-
sion: 80% 5-year survival
r Honeycombing on CT – no response to immunosuppression: 80% 5-year
mortality
r There is an increased risk of bronchogenic carcinoma
Hamman–Rich syndrome
r A rapidly progressive and fatal variant of CFA; exceptionally rare
Causes of basal fibrosis
r CFA (now called usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP)) r Asbestosis r Connective tissue diseases r Aspiration
22
Abdominal and Respiratory
Old tuberculosis Please examine this man’s respiratory system. Clinical signs
r Chest deformity and absent ribs r Tracheal deviation towards the side of the fibrosis (traction) r Reduced expansion r Dull percussion but present tactile vocal fremitus r Crackles and bronchial breathing
Extra points
r Scars r Thoracoplasty
r Supraclavicular fossa: phrenic nerve crush r Kyphosis: Pott’s fracture
Discussion
r Prior to the development of chemotherapy, inducing apical collapse was a
treatment for TB. It was thought that the lower O2 tension would inhibit TB proliferation
Techniques
r Plombage: insertion of polystyrene balls into the thoracic cavity r Phrenic nerve crush: diaphragm paralysis r Thoracoplasty: rib removal; lung not resected r Apical lobectomy r Recurrent medical pneumothoraces
r Streptomycin was introduced in the 1950s. It was the first drug shown to
be beneficial in a randomized controlled trial New treatments involve combination chemotherapy to avoid resistance
Serious side effects r Isoniazid r Rifampicin
r Ethambutol r Pyrazinamide
Peripheral neuropathy (Rx Pyridoxine) and hepatitis Hepatitis and increased contraceptive pill metabolism Retro-bulbar neuritis and hepatitis Hepatitis
Prior to treating TB, check baseline liver function tests and visual acuity. Tell the patient the following: 1 Look at the whites of your eyes every morning. If yellow, stop the tablets and ring the TB nurse that morning.
Abdominal and Respiratory 23
2 Notice colours – if red becomes less bright than you expect ring the TB nurse that day. 3 You may develop tingling in your toes – continue with the tablets but tell the doctor at your next clinic visit. 4 Your secretions will turn orange/red. This is because of a dye in one of the tablets. If you wear contact lenses they will become permanently stained and should not be worn. 5 If you are on the OCP, it may fail. Use barrier contraception.
Complications of old TB
r Aspergilloma in the old TB cavity ± haemoptysis r Bronchiectasis due to lymph node compression of large airways and trac-
tion from fibrosis
r Pleural effusion/thickening r Scarring from TB predisposes to bronchial carcinoma
Causes of apical fibrosis TRASHE
r TB r Radiation r Ankylosing spondylitis/ABPA r Sarcoidosis r Histoplasmosis/Histiocytosis X r Extrinsic allergic alveolitis (now referred to as hypersensitivity pneumonitis)
24
Abdominal and Respiratory
Pneumonia This patient has been acutely unwell for 3 days, with shortness of breath and a productive cough. Please examine his chest. Clinical signs
r Tachypnoea (count respiratory rate), O mask, sputum pot (rusty sputum 2
associated with pneumococcus)
r Reduced expansion and increased tactile vocal fremitus r Dull percussion note
r Focal coarse crackles, increased vocal resonance and bronchial breathing r Ask for the temperature chart
Extra points
r Complications, e.g. para-pneumonic effusion (pH 7.2–7.4) r Erythema multiforme: target lesions (mycoplasma)
Discussion Investigation
r CXR: consolidation (air bronchogram), abscess and effusion r Bloods: WCC, CRP, urea, atypical serology (on admission and at day 10)
and immunoglobulins
r Blood (25% positive) and sputum cultures r Urine: r Legionella antigen (in severe cases)
r Pneumococcal antigen r Haemoglobinuria (mycoplasma causes cold agglutinins → haemolysis)
Management rO 2 r Antibiotics
Community acquired pneumonia (CAP)
r Common organisms: r Streptococcus pneumoniae 50% r Mycoplasma pneumoniae 6% r Haemophilus influenzae (especially if COPD) r Chlamydia pneumoniae. r Antibiotics: r 1st line: penicillin or cephalosporin + macrolide
Abdominal and Respiratory 25
Hospital-acquired pneumonia
r Common organisms as above plus: r Pseudomonas.
r Staphylococcus aureus including MRSA r Gram-negative bacilli
r Antibiotics: r 1st line: anti-pseudomonal penicillin plus aminoglycoside r Vancomycin for MRSA
Special considerations r Immunosuppressed: r Fungal
r Multi-resistant mycobacteria r Pneumocystis carinii r CMV
Rx Amphotericin
Rx Cotrimoxazole/Pentamidine Rx Ganciclovir r Aspiration (commonly posterior segment of right lower lobe): r Anaerobes Rx + Metronidazole r Post-influenza: r Staph. aureus Rx + Flucloxacillin
Severity score for pneumonia: CURB-65 (2/5 is severe) r Confusion r Urea >7 r Respiratory rate >30 r BP systolic <90 mm Hg or diastolic <60 mm Hg r Age >65
Others: WCC <4 or >12, T ◦ C >38 or <32, PaO2 <8, multiple lobes affected Severe CAP should receive high-dose IV antibiotics initially plus level 2 nursing care (HDU/ITU)
Prevention
R Pneumovax II to high-risk groups, e.g. chronic disease (especially nephrotic and asplenic patients) and the elderly
Complications
r Lung abscess (Staph. aureus, Klebsiella, anaerobes) r Para-pneumonic effusion/empyema r Haemoptysis r Septic shock and multi-organ failure
26
Abdominal and Respiratory
Other causes of consolidation r Tumour r Pulmonary embolus r Vasculitis, e.g. Churg–Strauss
Abdominal and Respiratory 27
Cystic fibrosis Please examine this young man’s chest and comment on what you find. Clinical signs
r Inspection: small stature, clubbed, tachypnoeic, sputum pot (purulent++)
and halitosis
r Hyperinflated with reduced chest expansion and rib recession (Harrison’s
sulci)
r Coarse crackles and wheeze (bronchiectatic)
Extra points
r Examine the precordium: Portex reservoir (Portacath R ) under the skin
or Hickman line/scars for long-term antibiotics
r Cor pulmonale: cyanosis, ankle oedema, RVH and loud P 2
Discussion Genetics
r Incidence of 1/2500 live births r Autosomal recessive chromosome 7q r Gene encodes CFTR (Cl− channel) r Commonest and most severe mutation is the deletion 508/ 508 (70%)
Pathophysiology Secretions are thickened and block the lumens of various structures: r Bronchioles → bronchiectasis r Pancreatic ducts → chronic pancreatitis r Gut → distal intestinal obstruction syndrome (DIOS) in adults r Seminal vesicles → male infertility r Fallopian tubes – reduced female fertility
Investigations
r Screened at birth: low immunoreactive trypsin r Sweat test: Na+ > 60 mmol/L (false-positive in hypothyroidism and Addi-
son’s)
r Genetic screening
Treatment
r Physiotherapy: postural drainage and active cycle breathing techniques r Prompt antibiotics for intercurrent infections
28
Abdominal and Respiratory
r Pancrease R and fat-soluble vitamin supplements r Mucolytics (DNAse) r Immunizations r Double lung transplant (50% survival at 5 years) r Gene therapy is under development
Prognosis Median survival is 35 years but is rising. Poor prognosis if becomes infected with Burkholderia cepacia
Abdominal and Respiratory 29
Chronic obstructive airways disease Please examine this patient’s chest; he has a chronic chest condition. Clinical signs
r Inspection: nebulizer/inhalers/nasal speculums/sputum pot, dyspnoea, cen-
tral cyanosis and pursed lips
r CO retention flap, bounding pulse and tar-stained fingers 2 r Tracheal tug/accessory muscles ++
r Hyper-expanded r Percussion note resonant r Expiratory wheeze (crackles if consolidation too) and reduced breath
sounds
Extra points
r Cor pulmonale: raised JVP, ankle oedema, RV heave and loud P 2 r COPD does not cause clubbing: therefore, if present consider bronchial
carcinoma or bronchiectasis
Discussion
r Chronic bronchitis: clinical diagnosis cough productive of sputum on
most days for >3/12 on >2 consecutive years
r Emphysema: pathological diagnosis destruction of alveolar walls r Degree of overlap with chronic asthma, although in COPD there is less
reversibility (15% change in FEV1 post-bronchodilators)
Causes
r Environmental: smoking and industrial dust exposure (apical disease) r Genetic: ␣ -antitrypsin deficiency (basal disease) 1
Investigations
r CXR: hyper-expanded and/or pneumothorax r ABG: type II respiratory failure (low PaO high PaCO ) 2 2 r Bloods: high WCC (infection), low ␣ -antitrypsin (younger patients/FH+), 1
low albumin (severity) r Spirometry: low FEV (<40% predicted is severe), FEV /FVC < 0.7 1 1 (obstructive) r Gas transfer: low T CO L
30
Abdominal and Respiratory
Treatment
r Medical – depends on severity (GOLD classification): r Smoking cessation is the single most beneficial management strategy r Cessation clinics and nicotine replacement therapy r Mild (FEV1 >80) – beta-agonists r Moderate (FEV1 <60%) – tiotropium plus beta-agonists
r Severe (FEV1 <40%) or frequent exacerbations – above plus inhaled
corticosteroids
r Long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) r Exercise r Nutrition (often malnourished) r Vaccinations
r Pulmonary rehabilitation r Surgical (careful patient selection is important) r Bullectomy (if bullae >1 L and compresses surrounding lung) r Lung reduction surgery r Lung transplant
LTOT
r Inclusion criteria: r Non-smoker r PaO <7.3 kPa on air 2 r PaCO that does not rise excessively on O 2 2 r If evidence of cor pulmonale, PaO <8 2 r 2–4 L /min via nasal prongs for at least 15 hours a day is effective r Improves average survival by 9 months
Treatment of an acute exacerbation
r Controlled O via Venturi mask (24%), monitored closely 2 r Bronchodilators r Antibiotics r Steroids 7–14 days
If acute respiratory failure (↑ PaCO2 , ↓ PaO2 , ↓ pH, ↓ RR and drowsy)
r NIPPV: BIPAP via a face mask r IPPV (if first episode of respiratory failure, remediable cause of deterioration
and good premorbid quality of life with a reasonable level of activity)
Prognosis COPD patients have 15% in-hospital mortality
Abdominal and Respiratory 31
Lung cancer Please examine this patient who has had a 3-month history of chronic cough, malaise and weight loss. Clinical signs
r Cachectic r Clubbing and tar-stained fingers r Lymphadenopthy: cervical and axillary r Tracheal deviation: towards (collapse) or away (effusion) from the lesion r Reduced expansion r Percussion note dull (collapse/consolidation) or stony dull (effusion) r Auscultation: r Crackles and bronchial breathing (consolidation/collapse) r Reduced breath sounds and vocal resonance (effusion)
Extra points
r Hepatomegaly or bony tenderness: metastasis r Treatment: r Lobectomy scar
r Radiotherapy: square burn and tattoo r Complications: r Superior vena cava obstruction: suffused and oedematous face and
upper limbs, dilated superficial chest veins and stridor
r Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy: hoarse with a ‘bovine’ cough r Horner’s sign and wasted small muscles of the hand (T1): Pancoast’s
tumour
r Endocrine: gynaecomastia (ectopic HCG) r Neurological: Lambert–Eaton myasthenia syndrome, peripheral neu-
ropathy, proximal myopathy and paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration
r Dermatological: dermatomyositis (heliotrope rash on eye lids and pur-
ple papules on knuckles (Gottron’s papules associated with a raised CK) and acanthosis nigricans
Discussion
r Commonest malignancy in the Western world
Types
r Squamous 35%, small (oat) 24%, adeno 21%, large 19% and alveolar
1%
32
Abdominal and Respiratory
Causes
r Smoking, Scarring, Soot (asbestos dust) and Smog (air pollution)
Management Investigation order 1 Diagnosis of a mass: r CXR: collapse, mass and hilar lymphadenopathy r Volume acquisition CT thorax (so small tumours are not lost between slices during a breath) with contrast 2 Determine cell type: r Induced sputum cytology r Biopsy by bronchoscopy (central lesion and collapse) or percutaneous needle CT guided (peripheral lesion) 3 Stage (CT/bronchoscopy/mediastinoscopy/thoracoscopy/PET): r Non-small cell carcinoma (NSCLC): TNM staging to assess operability r Small cell carcinoma (SCLC): limited or extensive disease 4 Lung function tests for operability assessment: r Pneumonectomy contraindicated if FEV < 1.2 L 1 5 Complications of the tumour: r Metastasis: ↑ LFTs, ↑ Ca++ , ↓ Hb r NSCLC: ↑ PTHrP → ↑ Ca++ r SCLC: ↑ ACTH, SIADH → Na+ ↓
Treatment
r NSCLC: r Surgery: lobectomy or pneumonectomy r Radiotherapy: single fractionation (weekly) versus hyper-fractionation
(daily for 10 days)
r Chemotherapy: benefit unknown
r SCLC: r Chemotherapy: benefit with six courses
Multidisciplinary approach Palliative care
r Dexamethasone and radiotherapy for brain metastasis r SVCO: dexamethasone plus radiotherapy or intravascular stent r Radiotherapy for haemoptysis, bone pain and cough r Chemical pleurodesis for effusion – talc; tetracycline no longer used r Opiates for cough and pain
Abdominal and Respiratory 33
Prognosis r SCLC (median survival) r NSCLC
Limited Extensive T1N0M0 TnN2M0
Untreated 3/12 6/52
Treated 14/12 10/12 60/12 15/12
Causes of finger clubbing, ‘don’t LIGHT up!’
r Lung: bronchial carcinoma, suppurative lung disease and cryptogenic
fibrosing alveolitis
r Inherited (rare) r Gastrointestinal:
inflammatory bowel disease and cirrhosis/ hepatocellular carcinoma r Heart: infective endocarditis and cyanotic congenital heart disease r Thyroid: Grave’s disease (acropachy)
Station 2 History Taking
Introduction and advice Prior to entering the room you will have 5 minutes to read the ‘GP referral letter’. Then you will take a history from the patient in front of both examiners. At the end of 14 minutes the patient will leave the room and you will have a minute to gather your thoughts before 5 minutes of discussion with the examiners. You should not present the history back to them, but rather produce a problem list to discuss. The format of this section will teach you how to do this. Surprisingly more candidates fail this station than any other. Yet it is often ignored in examination preparation. There are essentially two types of history you will encounter. In one the patient presents with a collection of symptoms and you must attempt to reach a diagnosis. In the other the patient has a chronic disease where the diagnosis is clear but you must review previous investigation, treatments and search out possible complications. Examples of both of these will be presented. Take note of the following points. Many of these are specifically mentioned on the examiner’s mark sheet. r Use preparation time wisely Before you enter the room you will have 5 minutes to read the GP letter. You will be provided with blank paper, which you may take into the room. Use this time to note down a written structure for the interview with key points that you must not forget when the adrenaline is flowing! For example, in a diagnosis question a written list of differentials will prompt you to ask appropriate questions to support or refute each. This helps you reach the final diagnosis in a logical and systematic way and scores more marks than an apparently jumbled sequence of questions. r Take a complete history Systems review, past medical history, family history, drug history, smoking and alcohol are all specifically mentioned on the mark sheet. You will lose Cases for PACES, 2nd edition. By S. Hoole, A. Fry, D. Hodson & R. Davies. Published 2010 by Blackwell Publishing.
History Taking 35
points for neglecting them. Actors may be primed to give you certain information only if specifically questioned upon it. r Explore psychosocial issues The impact of the condition on his or her relationships, family and job is crucial and in the examination, patients will probably not volunteer this unless asked. In most cases this should feature on your subsequent list of problems. r Attempt to develop a rapport The way you interact with the patient is assessed. Attempt to put them at ease. Respond appropriately to things they tell you – do not say ‘good’ after hearing about their recent bereavement! Appear sympathetic if required. Maintain appropriate levels of eye contact. Balance open and closed questions. r Review information with patient Again this is specifically mentioned on the mark sheet but is often neglected. Tell the patient you would like to check you have the story straight. Not only does this confirms the facts but may well clarify things to you that had not been apparent before. r Adhere to a time structure There will be a clock in the room that will be easily visible to you. You have 14 minutes with the patient. You will throw away marks if you do not finish within time. Clearly, each case will vary but as a rough guide aim to spend 5 minutes on the presenting complaint, 4 minutes on past medical, drug and family histories and 4 minutes on social history. This leaves you 1 minute to review information with the patient and then a further minute to get your thoughts straight for the discussion. r Generate a problem list By now you should have generated a list of the main issues pertinent to the case. This may be a single diagnosis but may be an extensive list including medical problems, social problems and concerns or complaints about treatment. This will form the crux of your discussion. r Think ahead about your discussion This is likely to involve questions on further investigation and management, so anticipate this as you go along. Scoring well on this station requires good examination technique. It is rather different to the history you take daily at work and it is also the station that most candidates underestimate during preparation for the examination. What follows are 10 typical examples that we suggest you practise in small groups. The cases are introduced with a GP letter. We also include a briefing to be read only by the person role-playing the patient. At the end
36
History Taking
there is a suggested problem list to compare with your own along with likely discussion points. You must practise these with strict timings and ideally with others observing. You must be used to taking a complete and logical history and having your problem list ready for discussion at the 15-minute point. As in the examination the cases are deliberately varied. Some focus on a single medical problem while others involve multiple medical and social issues. The cases are based on real PACES cases.
Case 1 Dear Dr, I would be grateful if you could see this 50-year-old lady who is new to my practice and has had rheumatoid arthritis for 5 years. Her symptoms are R and coproxamol. currently not well controlled on Arthrotec
Case 2 Dear Dr, I would be grateful for your assessment of this 55-year-old man with poorly controlled diabetes. He has previously been reluctant to attend a diabetic clinic. He is currently taking oral hypoglycaemic medication and bendroflumethiazide. I feel he may need to start insulin soon. I calculated his body mass index today at 36. His last HbA1C was 11.4.
Case 3 Dear Dr, This 26-year-old female attended my surgery today complaining of difficulty walking that had come on over a few days. On examination she has a markedly ataxic gait but no other abnormality. She has no significant past medical history and takes only simple analgesia for headaches. I would be grateful for your urgent assessment.
Case 4 Dear Dr, Thank you for seeing this 35-year-old teacher urgently. I am concerned she has had a pulmonary embolus. She developed central pleuritic chest pain during the course of yesterday; however, she has felt generally unwell for a week. She was on the combined oral contraceptive pill until 1 year ago. She currently takes fluoxetine for depression and nifedipine for Raynaud’s syndrome. On examination she was a little breathless. Pulse 100; BP 170/100. Chest clear.
History Taking 37
Case 5 Dear Dr, I would be grateful if you would see this 22-year-old language student who has had persistent diarrhoea since returning from Russia 2 months ago. Several of her friends on her trip also had diarrhoea whilst abroad but unlike them her symptoms have not settled with antibiotics.
Case 6 Dear Dr, I would be grateful for your opinion on this 78-year-old man who has recurrent dizzy spells and on two occasions he has blacked out at home. He had a pacemaker inserted 2 years ago following an episode of heart block, which complicated an anterior myocardial infarction. I wondered if the pacemaker was malfunctioning, though a recent check was satisfactory. His only other medical history is hypertension. In the surgery today his pulse was 70 regular and BP 135/85.
Case 7 Dear Dr, Thank you for seeing this 56-year-old salesman because his wife has noticed he is yellow. Apart from looking a little jaundiced there was no abnormality on physical examination today. His liver function tests are chronically deranged. An ultrasound of his abdomen was reported as normal. He has a history of ulcerative colitis for which he had a colectomy in 1990. Otherwise he is well and only takes bendroflumethiazide for hypertension.
Case 8 Dear Dr, Thank you for seeing this 30-year-old shop assistant who complains of amenorrhoea for 6 months. She has a history of manic depression for which she is under psychiatric review but is currently well and off medication. A pregnancy test was negative. Her body mass index was calculated at 25.
Case 9 Dear Dr, We have had this 30-year-old man on our asthma clinic registry since he was a teenager although he has never been very diligent about attending his appointments. However, he now complains that his breathing has been getting very much worse over the last few months and his symptoms are not controlled with Ventolin and Becotide. I would be grateful for your opinion.
38
History Taking
Case 10 Dear Dr, Many thanks for seeing this 20-year-old man who feels increasingly fatigued and unwell. On examination he has bilateral cervical lymphadenopathy, which has been increasing for at least 2 months. There are no nodes elsewhere and there is no other abnormality on physical examination.
Case 11 Dear Dr, This 66-year-old female has suffered two episodes of transient loss of consciousness. Apart from these episodes she is in good health. Her medical history includes a myocardial infarct 4 years ago and mastectomy 9 years ago. She takes aspirin 75 mg od, atenolol 50 mg od and enalapril 10 mg od. She is a non-smoker. Physical examination of neurological and cardiovascular systems was normal with blood pressure 110/65 mm Hg. An ECG showed sinus rhythm 60 bpm and inferior q-waves from her previous MI.
Case 12 Dear Dr, I would be grateful for your advice on this 40-year-old male who was diagnosed with antiphospholipid syndrome following a pulmonary embolus 3 years ago. Long-term anticoagulation with warfarin (target INR 2.5) was advised then. Recently he seems increasingly resistant to warfarin requiring doses of 15 mg daily. Despite this his INR is frequently subtherapeutic. In addition, on one occasion he has been admitted via A&E for INR > 20. I have checked his antiphospholipid antibody levels which remain greatly elevated and would be grateful for you advise on his management.
History Taking 39
Case 1 Briefing for patient You are 50 years old. About 5 years ago you first noticed both hands and wrists were intermittently painful and swollen especially in the morning. If asked, these joints were often quite stiff for several hours after getting up each morning. Symptoms eased a little as the day went on. Since then your feet and left hip have also started to become painful. Your previous GP had diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis 4 years ago on the basis of X-rays of the hands and a blood test. You have been taking coproxR and prednisolone since then. The dose of prednisolone amol, Arthrotec has varied between 5 mg and 20 mg depending on symptom severity. He had talked about referring you to a specialist in the past but as the tablets seemed to control symptoms reasonably well you did not really see the need to consult another doctor. Recently, however, the pain and stiffness is worse making it difficult to manage with housework. You have particular difficulty holding heavy saucepans and opening jars, and your husband now has to do much of the cooking. The swelling is starting to make your hands look a little funny. Walking is uncomfortable on the balls of your feet unless you wear padded shoes such as trainers. Your hip rarely causes much trouble. Commonly you wake up at night with a burning pain in both hands. This seems mainly to affect the thumbs, index and middle fingers. It eventually goes away with shaking your hands. Six years ago you had a hysterectomy for heavy periods. You have never had problems with your liver or lungs. You are not breathless. You have never broken a bone. You are otherwise fit and well. Your only tablets are coproxamol, arthrotec and prednisolone 5 mg daily. You are not aware of the need for ‘bone protection’ when on long-term steroids. You worked as a secretary until you had your two children 10 years ago. Since then you have been a housewife. You are happily married and your husband is a solicitor. Your parents are both fit and well as are your children and brother. You have never smoked and drink an occasional glass of wine.
Problem list
r Increasingly symptomatic rheumatoid disease interfering significantly with
daily life. This is despite treatment with NSAIDs.
40
History Taking
r Not previously used disease-modifying agents such as methotrexate.
From the history there is no obvious contraindication.
r Excessive use/requirement for corticosteroids resulting in significant risks
of osteoporosis especially with hysterectomy at a relatively early age. Disease modifying drugs should allow a gradual reduction of steroid dose. Appropriate to consider bone protection, e.g. HRT or alendronate. r Symptoms suggestive of bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. r No other complications of rheumatoid suggested by the history, e.g. pulmonary or pleural involvement or anaemia.
Discussion
r Systemic complications of rheumatoid arthritis. r Treatment of rheumatoid disease and the use of disease modifying drugs
such as methotrexate and infliximab and symptomatic relievers like the Cox-2 inhibitors. r Osteoporosis and bone protection.
History Taking 41
Case 2 Briefing for patient You are 55 years old. Diabetes was diagnosed 10 years ago and initially treated with diet alone. When this was not successful, tablets were introduced by your GP and the doses gradually increased. You currently take metformin 850 mg tds, gliclazide 160 mg bd and bendroflumethiazide 2.5 mg daily. You generally take your tablets as prescribed because your wife nags you to. Your eyesight is good and you have regular checks at an ophthalmologist. You are aware of the importance of looking after your feet and have no foot ulcers. Other than high blood pressure you have no other medical problems. Your cholesterol has never been checked. You work as an HGV driver. You smoke 30 cigarettes a day. You drink very little alcohol. You are aware of that your diet is not good and that you are rather overweight. You take very little exercise. You are happily married with two children aged 5 and 8. Diabetes runs in your family – father and both brothers. Your father had a heart attack at the age of 55 and your brother recently had a bypass operation. This worries you although you have had no heart problems to your knowledge.
Problem list
r Poorly controlled diabetes on maximal oral hypoglycaemic treatment. r Obesity will exacerbate insulin resistance and is likely to be made worse
by starting insulin. Weight loss will improve glycaemic control as well as reducing cardiovascular risk. r High risk for ischaemic heart disease. Smoking must be addressed. Check lipids and if necessary treat. Hypertension should be aggressively controlled ideally with an ACE inhibitor, e.g. ramipril, which has additional cardio-protection properties. r Starting insulin would result in loss of HGV licence.
Discussion
r Management: he is likely to need insulin but this will result in the loss
of his job. A serious attempt to lose weight should first be made. This
42
History Taking
may improve glycaemic control sufficiently to delay the need for insulin. Reduction of cardiac risk is a major component of his management. r Complications of diabetes, e.g. retinopathy, neuropathy, nephropathy and atherosclerosis, their identification and management. r Evidence to support the use of ACE inhibitors in diabetes, e.g. HOPE trial.
History Taking 43
Case 3 Briefing for patient You are a 26-year-old student who is normally fit and well. For the last week you have had difficulty walking and keep stumbling over to the right. As a result you have been unable to play hockey this week. Your friends say you look as if you are drunk. The severity varies a little from day to day but was most severe two nights ago. If specifically asked, this followed a long soak in the bath. Your speech is normal and your arms seem OK. You have not had a fit or a blackout. You get headaches when you are tired or stressed. The headaches are eased with paracetamol. The headaches have perhaps been a little worse recently. They come on late in the day and have never occurred in the morning on waking. They are not associated with nausea. This time last year your speech went funny for a few days while on holiday, but it resolved before you saw a doctor. It is difficult to describe it but it sounded funny and slightly slurred. If specifically asked, you may volunteer the fact that your vision became quite blurred in your right eye for about a week several months ago. The eye also felt painful at the time. Then it came back to normal. Around the same time you had a few episodes when you wet yourself in bed. You were very embarrassed about this but it has not recurred. You have no other medical problems. You take no medications at all. You drink five pints of beer at weekends but not during the week. You do not smoke. Both parents are fit and well. You are an only child.
Problem list
r Truncal ataxia with a background of symptoms suggesting optic neuri-
tis, dysarthria and urinary incontinence. The relapsing/remitting nature of these symptoms, separated in time and location, in a young adult is virtually diagnostic of multiple sclerosis. This is supported further by the presence of Uthoff’s phenomenon (worsening of symptoms by heat – in this case a hot bath). r The headaches sound like simple tension headaches and do not require further investigation.
Discussion
r Investigation and management of multiple sclerosis r Differential diagnosis of headaches r Socio-economic impact of chronic disability
44
History Taking
Case 4 Briefing for patient You are a 35-year-old teacher. You have felt generally unwell and run down for several months. You have felt hot and shivery for a few weeks. Yesterday you noticed pain in the centre of your chest. The pain is sharp and grating. It hurts when you breathe in deeply. The only position you are comfortable in is sitting upright and last night you could not sleep lying down because of the pain. Exertion and eating do not affect the pain. You are not short of breath. Your legs do not swell up; you have not been on an airline recently, and have not been immobilized either. For years you have had Raynaud’s syndrome treated with nifedipine by the GP. Your hands get very cold and turn white, blue and then red if you do not wear gloves in winter. Recently your wrists and hand joints are intermittently painful to the point that it is sometimes hard to write at work. Two years ago you were admitted with sharp pains in left side of chest and suspicion of a clot on the lung. However, the VQ scan was normal and you were discharged. If asked, you have no skin rash currently; however, you react badly to the sun and easily get burned especially across your face. You have felt very depressed recently and have been off work intermittently for 3 months. You feel too run down to work at the moment. Antidepressants are not really working. You work as a relief teacher and are not paid if you do not work. The lack of income is a major problem at home as your husband has recently been made redundant. You do not smoke but admit to drinking too much – roughly a bottle of wine per day. Your parents are both alive and well, and you do not have any siblings. You have one healthy 4-year-old boy (you had three miscarriages in your 20s).
Problem list
r The presenting problem is suggestive of acute pericarditis. r She also describes a background of non-specific ill health with Raynaud’s
phenomenon, polyarthritis, photosensitivity and previous pleurisy.
r This collection of symptoms suggests an underlying connective tissue dis-
ease such as SLE.
r Remember also the hypertension noted by the GP. Possible renal involve-
ment.
r She feels depressed, perhaps due to the symptoms of her disease or
perhaps caused directly by SLE.
History Taking 45 r The disease is causing significant work, family and financial problems. r Her alcohol intake is above the recommended safe levels.
Discussion
r Management of acute pericarditis r Complications of SLE r Further investigation and management of SLE r Given her miscarriages anti-phospholipid syndrome might be discussed
46
History Taking
Case 5 Briefing for patient You are a 22-year-old university language student who returned 2 months ago from a year in Russia as part of your course. Your final examinations are in 3 months time. About 3 months ago while in Russia, you developed diarrhoea. This has continued since then although not as bad. In Russia, the diarrhoea was occurring up to 10 times a day; now it occurs around three times a day. You usually have little warning and are occasionally incontinent. You are very embarrassed about talking about this. On direct questioning, there is red blood mixed in with the diarrhoea normally preceded by cramping lower abdominal pains. Often you have the sensation of needing to go but are unable to produce anything when you try to open your bowels. You have not lost weight nor had any fevers. You ate Russian food for the whole year and it had not previously upset you. A couple of your friends developed diarrhoea. They were told it was giardiasis and they got better with antibiotics. Your GP has tried this but it has not really helped. In the past you have been fit and active although troubled a little recently by lower back pain. This started about a year ago. It is worse in the mornings and usually eases within a few hours of getting up. Sometimes you take ibuprofen when it is bad. No other joints are painful. In Russia you also developed unexplained painful bruising on your shins, which gradually went away after a few weeks. You thought nothing of it and would not mention this unless asked about skin rashes. You do not smoke. You drink in moderation. You live in a hall of residence and are currently studying for your examinations. The only medicine you ever take is ibuprofen for backache. Your mother, father and sister are all fit and healthy.
Problem list
r Persistent bloody diarrhoea and tenesmus is suggestive of ulcerative
colitis.
r A history compatible with both sacroilitis and erythema nodosum is
evident and associated with ulcerative colitis.
r Giardiasis, whilst common in Eastern Europe and Russia, does not cause
bloody diarrhoea. Other infectious causes of bloody diarrhoea, e.g.
History Taking 47
Shigella and Salmonella, should be excluded by stool microscopy and culture. r There is anxiety about incontinence during her imminent examinations.
Discussion
r Differential diagnosis and investigation of bloody diarrhoea r Management of colitis
48
History Taking
Case 6 Briefing for patient You are 78 years old. Over the last 2 months you have suffered from recurrent dizzy spells. Sometimes these are bad enough that you have to sit or lie down for a few minutes before it resolves. The room does not actually spin around but you feel very light-headed and faint. Last week you actually collapsed in your bedroom after getting up to pass water in the night. You did not hurt yourself nor did you wet yourself and once you took it steady you were able to get to the toilet. You were not out for long and knew exactly what had happened afterwards. A similar thing has happened before while you were washing up. As it starts, you sometimes get tunnel vision and feel sweaty before you collapse. You have no chest pain, palpitations or breathlessness either at rest or on exertion. The attacks are not related to moving your head around and you have no ear problems. There have been no problems with your speech or limbs. These attacks have never occurred while sitting or lying down. If you stand up too quickly the symptoms occur. In the past you have had a heart attack and needed a pacemaker afterwards. This was checked 3 weeks ago and was said to be fine. The blackouts you had then were different, occurring without warning whilst sitting or standing. You have mild heart failure but this has been well controlled lately and you are able to walk to the shops easily. You have had high blood pressure in the past but recently this has been lower according to your GP. Your ramipril dose was increased at a hospital appointment about 3 months ago. You live alone. You normally cope fine, but are currently very worried about what would happen if you had a fall and hurt yourself as there is no one nearby that you could phone. You do not smoke or drink.
Problem list
r The story is suggestive of postural hypotension and the ACE inhibitor is
the likely culprit.
r Excluded other causes of dizziness and collapse: r Cardiac: arrhythmia/aortic stenosis
r Neurological: posterior circulation TIAs/epilepsy r Other: micturation syncope, carotid sinus sensitivity and vasovagal
r The patient lives alone and falls jeopardize his independence. Perhaps a
‘lifeline’ alarm system would be appropriate.
Discussion
r Falls and syncope in the elderly r Side effects of ACE inhibitors
History Taking 49
Case 7 Briefing for patient You are 56 years old. Recently your wife has commented you look jaundiced which is why you went to the doctor. Looking back you have been a little tired recently and have lost about 9 lb in weight. Your skin has been intermittently very itchy and you have been scratching a lot. You have had some very minor vague aches in the right side of your abdomen but nothing severe. You have not had a fever. There have been no other symptoms. You have travelled abroad only to France recently. You have never been outside Europe. You have not been in contact with anyone jaundiced. You have never used IV drugs although did smoke cannabis as a student. You have no tattoos. You drink two or three pints of beer at weekends but have never drunk heavily. You do not smoke. You are happily married with two children. Apart from your wife you have had no other sexual partners. You work as a salesman and have no exposure to sewage, drains or outdoor water. You had ulcerative colitis diagnosed as a teenager and finally had a colectomy in 1990. The operation was complicated by a post-op bleed for which you needed to return to theatre. You were given a large blood transfusion. You have had no problems from your UC recently. Your GP started you on bendroflumethiazide 2 years ago for hypertension. You take no other over-the-counter or herbal medication. Both your parents and your brother are fit and healthy.
Problem list
r In the presence of longstanding ulcerative colitis, abnormal liver function
tests with a normal ultrasound and nothing in the history to suggest an alternative cause raises the possibility of primary sclerosing cholangitis. r It is important to explore other causes of abnormal liver function tests, in particular alcohol, medications and risks for chronic viral hepatitis. r The blood transfusion was in 1990 and therefore should be clear of the hepatitis C virus.
Discussion
r Investigation of a jaundiced patient r Investigation and treatment of primary sclerosing cholangitis
50
History Taking
Case 8 Briefing for patient You are a 30-year-old shop assistant. Over the last year your periods have become progressively more irregular and you have now not had a period at all for 6 months. Otherwise you feel well. You do not think you could be pregnant as you have used barrier contraception with your current partner and two pregnancy tests have been negative. You exercise normally but not excessively and eat a normal diet. You have no symptoms of hot or cold intolerance and do not suffer with palpitations or tremor and your bowels are normal. You do not suffer from dizziness or faints or excessive thirst. You do not suffer with indigestion. You do not have headaches. You do not have a problem with your vision, but recently crashed your car because ‘a car came out of no-where’. You have noticed that you have been lactating over the past few weeks. You are embarrassed but also quite worried about this and would only divulge this personal information if asked in a direct but sensitive way. You had an operation on your neck 3 years ago for high calcium levels, which was diagnosed after you had a small kidney stone. You saw a psychiatrist around the same time for depression and take Prozac intermittently when you feel like it. You have taken no other medication. Your mother and sister are fit and well. Your father died in his 50s from a bleeding ulcer for which he had previously had surgery. You think he also had an operation on his neck at some stage. You do not smoke and rarely drink alcohol. You are happily married and keen to start a family in the near future.
Problem list
r Amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea are suggestive of a pituitary adenoma
including a prolactinoma.
r Dopamine antagonists, e.g. anti-psychotics, can cause hyperprolacti-
naemia but rarely SSRIs, and in this case their prescription preceded the symptoms by 2 years. r Other pituitary function appears to be normal. r Crashing the car may have been due to bi-temporal hemianopia. r The background of hyperparathyroidism (‘bones, stones, abdominal groans and psychic moans’) and the family history suggestive of
History Taking 51
hyperparathyroidism and recurrent peptic ulceration (gastrinoma) suggests multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN I). r She wants to have children but is currently likely to be infertile.
Discussion
r Investigation of a pituitary adenoma and management r Details of MEN I r Causes of secondary amenorrhoea. Referral to a fertility specialist and
genetic counselling may be needed once the pituitary lesion has been treated
52
History Taking
Case 9 Briefing for patient You are 30 years old and were first diagnosed with asthma as a teenager. Until recently your symptoms have never been very severe and consisted R has always of cough at night and intermittent wheezy days. Ventolin been very effective. You did not go to your GP asthma clinic because your breathing was never very bad and all they did was nag you about smoking. You have never been admitted to hospital with asthma. Over the last few months, however, your breathing has been getting steadily worse. Your asthma is particularly bad in the evenings with cough, wheezing and breathlessness, which prevent you from going out when severe. Now your breathing is bad most nights. You have not coughed up any sputum and have not had a fever. You have had no pain in your chest. There have been days when your chest is fine and on a recent family holiday to France you had no symptoms at all and your exercise tolerance was unlimited. There is nothing at home that seems to precipitate the asthma. You have no pets or birds. Your sister has a cat that has always made your asthma worse when you visit her house but you have not been there recently. You work in a car factory on a production line. You are not involved in the spray painting although it does happen nearby. You do not wear a mask. The spray sometimes causes a runny nose and cough but does not seem to cause the wheezing as this only comes on later in the afternoons and evening. However, your symptoms do seem to be a bit better at weekends and were much better when away on holiday for a week. You have been doing this job for a year now and enjoy working and earning good money. Previously you were unemployed for nearly 2 years and you had to go on the dole to support your wife and two small children. You almost got a divorce during this time and you blame ‘money problems’ for almost wrecking your marriage. You are currently using a salbutamol inhaler. You have a Becotide inhaler but rarely use this as it makes very little difference. You smoke five cigarettes per day and are trying to cut down. You do not drink alcohol. Your parents and brother are fit and have no respiratory problems.
Problem list
r Deterioration in asthma with a temporal relationship to work suggests
occupational asthma. It is not uncommon for onset of symptoms to be delayed for a few hours after exposure. The history of relief of symptoms
History Taking 53
during holiday is typical. Spray painting is one of the commonest causes of occupational asthma. r Poor compliance and asthma education are also playing a role. r Continued smoking is a problem. r Financial problems and difficulty finding work are relevant.
Discussion
r Might involve further investigation of asthma by peak-flow diaries to con-
firm the relationship between work and asthma.
r Occupational asthma management may also be covered (the only effective
treatment is avoidance of precipitant).
r Employees with occupational asthma are eligible for industrial injury
benefit.
54
History Taking
Case 10 Briefing for patient You are a 20-year-old English student. For the last 4 months you have been troubled by recurrent coughs and colds. You have intermittently coughed up yellow sputum but no blood. You now feel you have no energy and are completely unable to study. You noticed some lumps in your neck recently, which have been enlarging. If asked: You have not had a sore throat or a rash. You have not travelled abroad other than to Spain 2 years ago. You have no contact with TB. You have no pets. You have lost about 14 lb in weight over the last 2 months. You have had to change bedclothes almost daily due to drenching night sweats. You have not used IV drugs. You are homosexual and have had one partner for a year. Neither of you have had an HIV test. You used to drink a lot of alcohol but have recently found that you feel awful when you drink and your neck hurts a lot so you have abstained totally for the last month. You smoke 20 cigarettes per day. You have never been ill before nor taken any medication. Your family members are all fit and well.
Problem list
r Lymphadenopathy, weight loss and drenching night sweats are suggestive
of lymphoma, in particular Hodgkin’s disease
r Other differentials include: r Infection: HIV, glandular fever and TB r Inflammatory: sarcoid and connective tissue disease r Solid tumour: adenocarcinoma and melanoma (smokes but young age) r Drugs
Discussion
r Differential diagnosis r Investigations of lymphadenopathy and diagnosis of Hodgkin’s disease:
Reed–Sternberg cells on lymph node biopsy
r Management
History Taking 55
Case 11 Briefing for patient You are 66 years old. Three weeks ago you collapsed in the kitchen whilst preparing breakfast. Your husband was upstairs at the time and heard a crash followed by some unusual noises. When he came down you initially looked blue and were foaming at the mouth. He could not rouse you or move you. There was some blood because you had banged your head on the table and the teapot was smashed. Your husband fetched a neighbour who helped you onto the sofa as you had come round a little by then. You do not actually remember the collapse itself and do not even remember moving to the sofa. You only really became aware of what had happened later on about the time your daughter arrived – this must have been about 2 hours later. By then you felt OK but very tired and somewhat embarrassed about all the fuss. The following day you felt completely normal again. If asked you would admit that you also wet yourself during the attack but are embarrassed and would not volunteer this information. You did not bite your tongue. You had a mild headache afterwards but this is probably due to banging your head when you collapsed. You had no unusual symptoms or warning of any kind prior to the attack. You did not feel unwell or dizzy prior to the episode and you had no breathlessness or chest pain. Nor have you had any of these symptoms at any stage. You have had no weakness of arms or legs and no speech or visual problem. Two weeks later a very similar episode occurred. You suffered a heart attack 4 years ago at which time you had bad chest pain and went to hospital. Since then you have been on tablets for your heart; these have caused you no side effects and you have had no further heart problems. You had a mastectomy 9 years ago for a small breast cancer. The operation was successful and you were given the ‘all clear’ and discharged from clinic several years ago. You do not smoke. You drink very little alcohol. You take no medication or drugs of any kind other than those prescribed by your GP. You are a retired school teacher. Your husband still works full time. Your GP mentioned that you might have to stop driving for a few weeks but this would be extremely inconvenient for you at the moment as you have just had your first grandchild and your daughter is relying on you to help out with the baby several days each week. She lives in a small village with few links to public transport.
56
History Taking
Problem list
r The history is suggestive of a generalised seizure with post-ictal state. r The possible differential diagnosis of malignant ventricular arrhythmia
following her MI and postural hypotension/bradycardia secondary to cardiac medication should be explored. r The past history of breast cancer makes it important to rule out metastases and planned investigations should address this. r The social implications of driving restriction to this patient should be recognised.
Discussion
r Investigation and treatment of first generalized seizure r DVLA driving restrictions r Emergency management of status epilepticus
History Taking 57
Case 12 Briefing for the patient About 3 years ago you collapsed with chest pain and breathlessness and were diagnosed with a blood clot in the lung. You spent 2 weeks in hospital and were told you were lucky to survive. You started the warfarin tablets at that point. You had not had any clots prior to this. You have had one more clot in your leg 8 months ago. Your leg swelled up and was painful and a scan showed a clot in the thigh. At the time you were on warfarin but your levels were said to be very low. You have not had any clots since. You have never had a stroke. No one in your family has had a blood clot. Your INR levels were good at first but for the last year you have had to have a lot of blood tests and they always seem too high or too low and the GP keeps changing the dose. You are supposed to run between 2 and 3. Recently the level was over 20 and you had to spend a night in hospital. You have not had any abnormal bleeding. You know that it is important to take your warfarin but you do sometimes forget. You usually take it in the evening but sometimes in the mornings depending on when you remember. Recently you have missed more doses but you do not really believe the amount you take has much effect on the INR because the levels do not bear much relation to whether you take it or not. You used to work as a night watchman but have been out of regular employment since the factory closed a year ago. Now you do ad hoc work when you can get it which can be day or night shifts. You drink quite heavily. If pushed you admit you drink too much and a number of your friends have commented on this which irritates you. If pushed you would admit you sometimes drink a bottle of vodka every one to two days sometimes starting in the morning. The time you were admitted to hospital with high levels of warfarin followed a period of very heavy drinking and was around the time your marriage broke up. You had also had a chest infection and had been on antibiotics. You now live alone. You have no children. You have a very poor diet except for when you stay with your mother who makes you eat healthily for a few weeks. She also thinks you are depressed and gives you a tablet that she says works for her for depression. She buys it from the chemist and it does not require a prescription – you take it sometimes as it can’t do any harm. She also gives you multi-vitamin tablets that you take sometimes.
58
History Taking
Problem list
r Antiphospholipid syndrome with recurrent venous thromboembolism in-
cluding a life-threatening PE and a recurrence on warfarin.
r Erratic INR due to: r Poor compliance with warfarin prescription r Alcoholism
r Poor diet with intermittent vitamin supplementation leading to fluctu-
ating vitamin K intake
r Drug interactions – erythromycin contributed to his admission with
high INR. Over the counter St John’s Wort may increase warfarin metabolism
Discussion
r Duration of warfarin treatment for single or recurrent PE/DVT r Screening for prothrombotic states r Management of anticoagulated patients who require invasive procedures,
e.g. liver biopsy to exclude cirrhosis
r Emergency reversal of anticoagulation r Alternatives to warfarin for long-term anticoagulation – e.g. low molecular
weight heparin
Station 3 Cardiology and Neurology
Aortic stenosis This patient presents with increasing dyspnoea. Examine his cardiovascular system to elucidate the cause. Clinical signs
r Slow rising, low volume pulse r Narrow pulse pressure r Apex beat is sustained in stenosis (HP: heaving pressure-loaded) r Thrill in aortic area (right sternal edge, second intercostal space) r Auscultation
S1
A2 P2
ESM
S4
A crescendo-decrescendo, ejection systolic murmur (ESM) loudest in the aortic area during expiration and radiating to the carotids. Severity: soft and delayed A2 delayed (not loud) ESM S4.
Extra points Complications
r Endocarditis: splinters, Osler’s nodes (finger pulp), Janeway lesions
(palms), Roth spots (retina), temperature, splenomegaly and haematuria
r Left ventricular dysfunction: dyspnoea, displaced apex and bibasal
crackles
r Conduction problems: acute, endocarditis; chronic, calcified aortic valve
node
Cases for PACES, 2nd edition. By S. Hoole, A. Fry, D. Hodson & R. Davies. Published 2010 by Blackwell Publishing.
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Cardiology and Neurology
Differential diagnosis
r HOCM (gets quieter on squatting whereas AS gets louder) r VSD
r Aortic sclerosis: normal pulse character and no radiation of murmur r Aortic flow
Discussion Causes: ABCS
r Age (senile degeneration and calcification) r Bicuspid r Congenital (valvular, supravalvular and subaortic membrane) r Streptococcal associated (rheumatic fever and rarely bacterial endocarditis)
Associations
r Coarctation and bicuspid aortic valve r Angiodysplasia
Severity r
Symptoms 50% death rate Angina 5 years Syncope 3 years Breathlessness 2 years r Signs Auscultation features (see figure), biventricular failure (right ventricular failure is preterminal).
Investigations
r ECG: LVH on voltage criteria, conduction defect r CXR: often normal; calcified valve r Echo: gradient >50 mm Hg (>100 mm Hg severe)
r Catheter: aortic gradient and coronary angiography (coronary artery dis-
ease often coexists with aortic stenosis)
Management
r Asymptomatic r None r Regular review: symptoms and echo to assess gradient and LV function r Symptomatic r Surgical r Aortic valve replacement +/− CABG
r Operative mortality 3–5% depending on the patient’s EuroScore
(www.euroscore.org/calc.html)
Cardiology and Neurology 61 r Percutaneous r Transcutaneous aortic valve implantation (TAVI) r Transfemoral or transapical
r Maybe recommended if high surgical risk (logEuroscore >20%) r Balloon aortic valvuloplasty (BAV)
Duke’s criteria for infective endocarditis Major: r Typical organism in two blood cultures r Echo: abscess∗ , large vegetation∗ , dehiscence∗ Minor: r Pyrexia >38◦ C r Echo suggestive r Predisposed, e.g. prosthetic valve r Embolic phenomena∗ r Vasculitic phenomena (ESR↑, CRP↑) r Atypical organism on blood culture Diagnose if the patient has 2 major, 1 major and 2 minor, or 5 minor criteria. (∗ plus heart failure/refractory to antibiotics/heart block are indicators for urgent surgery). Recommendations for antibiotic prophylaxis were revised by NICE in 2007. Prophylaxis should be limited to only those with prosthetic valves, previous endocarditis, cardiac transplants with valvulopathy and certain types of congenital heart disease. Good dental health is recommended.
62
Cardiology and Neurology
Aortic incompetence This patient has been referred by his GP with ‘a new murmur’. He is asymptomatic. Please examine his cardiovascular system and diagnose his problem.
Clinical signs
r Collapsing pulse (waterhammer pulse) r Wide pulse pressure, e.g. 180/45 r Apex beat is hyperkinetic and displaced laterally (TV: thrusting volume-
loaded)
r Thrill in the aortic area r Auscultation
S1
A2
Early diastolic murmur (EDM) loudest at the lower left sternal edge with the patient sat forward in expiration.
P2
There may be an aortic flow murmur and a mid-diastolic mumur (MDM) (Austin−Flint). EDM (Aortic flow)
(MDM)
In severe AR there may be ‘free flow’ regurgitation and the EDM may be silent.
Extra points
r Severity: collapsing pulse, wide pulse pressure and pulmonary oedema r Cause: idiopathic; aging; hypertension; connective tissue disease, e.g.
Marfan’s, ankylosing spondylitis; syphilis (Argyll Robertson pupil), vaculitides, drug: pergolide (dopamine agonist used in Parkinson’s disease causing cardiac fibrosis) r Eponymous signs r Corrigan’s: visible vigorous neck pulsation r Quincke’s: nail bed capillary pulsation r De Musset’s: head nodding r Duroziez’s: diastolic murmur proximal to femoral artery compression r Traube’s: ‘pistol shot’ sound over the femoral arteries
Cardiology and Neurology 63
Discussion Causes
r Congenital, e.g. bicuspid aortic valve or associated with perimembranous
VSD
r Acquired:
Valve leaflet Aortic root
Acute Endocarditis Dissection (type A) Trauma
Chronic Rheumatic fever Connective tissue disease, e.g. RA Dilatation: Marfan’s and hypertension Aortitis: syphilis, ankylosing spondylitis and vasculitis
Other causes of a collapsing pulse r Pregnancy r Patent ductus arteriosus r Paget’s disease r Anaemia r Thyrotoxicosis
Investigation
r ECG: lateral T-wave inversion r CXR: cardiomegaly, widened mediastinum and pulmonary oedema r TTE/TOE:
Severity: LV ejection fraction and dimensions, root dimensions Cause: intimal dissection flap or vegetation r Cardiac catheterization: grade severity and check coronary patency
Management Medical
r ACE inhibitors and ARBs (reducing afterload) r Regular review: symptoms and echo: LVEF, LV size and degree of AR
Surgery Acute: r Dissection r Aortic root abscess/endocarditis (homograft preferably) Chronic: Replace the aortic valve when: r Symptomatic: dyspnoea and reduced exercise tolerance (NYHA > II) OR
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Cardiology and Neurology
r The following criteria are met:
1 pulse pressure >100 mm Hg 2 ECG changes 3 LV enlargement on CXR or EF <50% on echo Ideally replace the valve prior to significant left ventricular dilatation and dysfunction.
Prognosis Asymptomatic with EF > 50% – 1% mortality at 5 years. Symptomatic and all three criteria present – 65% mortality at 3 years.
Cardiology and Neurology 65
Mitral stenosis This patient has been complaining of reduced exercise tolerance. Examine his heart and elucidate the cause of his symptoms. Clinical signs
r Malar flush r Irregular pulse if AF is present r Tapping apex (palpable first heart sound) r Left parasternal heave if pulmonary hypertension is present or enlarged
left atrium
r Auscultation
Loud S1
A2
P2
OS MDM
Loud first heart sound. Opening snap (OS) of mobile mitral leaflets opening followed by a mid-diastolic murmur (MDM), which is best heard at the apex, in the left lateral position in expiration with the bell. Presystolic accentuation of the MDM occurs if the patient is in sinus rhythm. If the mitral stenosis is severe then the OS occurs nearer A2 and the MDM is longer.
Extra points
r Haemodynamic significance Pulmonary hypertension: functional tricuspid regurgitation, right ventricular heave, loud P2 . LVF: pulmonary oedema, RVF: sacral and pedal oedema. r Endocarditis r Embolic complications: stroke and absent pulses r Other rheumatic valve lesions
Discussion Causes Congenital: cleft mitral valve (rare)
Acquired: Rheumatic (commonest) Senile degeneration Large mitral leaflet vegetation from endocarditis
66
Cardiology and Neurology
Differential diagnosis Left atrial myxoma Austin–Flint murmur
Investigation
r ECG: p-mitrale and atrial fibrillation r CXR: enlarged left atrium (splayed of carina), calcified valve, pulmonary
oedema
r TTE/TOE: valve area (<1 cm2 is critical), cusp mobility and calcification and
left atrial thrombus
Management
r Medical: digoxin and -blockers, warfarin, diuretics r Mitral valvuloplasty: for pliable non-calcified valves with minimal regur-
gitation and no left atrial thrombus
r Surgery: closed mitral valvotomy (without opening the heart) or open
valvotomy (requiring cardiopulmonary bypass) or valve replacement
Prognosis Latent asymptomatic phase 15–20 years; NYHA > II – 50% mortality at 5 years.
Rheumatic fever
r Immunological cross-reactivity between Group A -haemolytic streptococ-
cal infection, e.g. Streptococcus pyogenes and valve tissue
r Duckett–Jones diagnostic criteria
Proven -haemolytic streptococcal infection diagnosed by throat swab, rapid antigen detection test (RADT), anti-streptolysin O titre (ASOT) or clinical scarlet fever plus 2 major or 1 major and 2 minor: Major Chorea Erythema marginatum Subcutaneous nodules Polyarthritis Carditis
Minor Raised ESR Raised WCC Arthralgia Previous rheumatic fever Pyrexia Prolonged PR interval r Treatment: Rest, high-dose aspirin and penicillin r Prophylaxis: r Primary prevention: penicillin V (or clindamycin) for 10 days r Secondary prevention: penicillin V for about 5–10 years
Cardiology and Neurology 67
Mitral incompetence This patient has been short of breath and tired. Please examine his cardiovascular system. Clinical signs
r Scars: lateral thoracotomy (valvotomy) r Pulse: AF, small volume r Apex: displaced and volume loaded r Palpation: thrill at apex r Auscultation:
Soft S1
A2
P2 S 3
PSM
Pan-systolic murmur (PSM) loudest at the apex radiating to the axilla. Loudest in expiration. Wide splitting of A2P2 due to the earlier closure of A2 because the LV empties sooner. S3 indicates rapid ventricular filling from LA, and excludes significant mitral stenosis.
Extra points
r Pulmonary oedema r Endocarditis r Severity: left ventricular failure and atrial fibrillation (late). Not intensity
of the murmur
r Other murmurs, e.g. ASD
Discussion Causes
r Congenital (associated with secundum ASD) r Acquired:
Acute Chronic Valve leaflets Bacterial endocarditis Myomatous degeneration (prolapse) Rheumatic Connective tissue diseases Fibrosis (fenfluramine/pergolide) Valve annulus Dilated left ventricle (functional MR) Calcification Chordae/ Rupture Infiltration, e.g. amyloid papillae Fibrosis (post-MI/trauma)
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Cardiology and Neurology
Investigation
r ECG: p-mitrale, atrial fibrillation and previous infarction (Q waves) r CXR: cardiomegaly, enlargement of the left atrium and pulmonary oedema r TTE/TOE:
Severity: size/density of MR jet, LV dilatation and reduced EF Cause: prolapse, vegetations, ruptured papillae and infarction
Management
r Medical r Anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation or embolic complications r Diuretic and ACE inhibitors r Surgical
r Valve repair (preferable) with annuloplasty ring or replacement r Aim to operate when symptomatic, prior to severe LV dilatation and
dysfunction
Prognosis
r Often asymptomatic for >10 years r Symptomatic – 25% mortality at 5 years
Mitral valve prolapse
r Common (5%), especially young tall women r Associated with connective tissue disease, e.g. Marfan’s syndrome and
HOCM
r Often asymptomatic, but may present with chest pain, syncope and palpi-
tations
r Small risk of emboli and endocarditis r Auscultation
S1
EC
A2
P2
S3
Mid-systolic ejection click (EC). Pan-systolic murmur that gets louder up to A2. Murmur is accentuated by standing from a squatting position or during the straining phase of the Valsalva manoeuvre, which reduces the flow of blood through the heart.
Cardiology and Neurology 69
Tricuspid incompetence Examine this patient’s cardiovascular system. He has been complaining of abdominal discomfort. Clinical signs
r Raised JVP with giant CV waves r Thrill left sternal edge r Auscultation
S1
P2 A2
S3
Pan-systolic murmur (PSM) loudest at the tricuspid area in inspiration. Reverse split second heart sound due to rapid RV emptying. Right ventricular rapid filling gives an S3.
PSM r Pulsatile liver, ascites and peripheral oedema
Extra points
r Endocarditis from IV drug abuse: needle marks r Pulmonary hypertension: RV heave and loud P 2 r Other valve lesions: rheumatic mitral stenosis
Discussion Causes
r Congenital: Ebstein’s anomaly (atrialization of the right ventricle and TR) r Acquired:
Acute: infective endocarditis (IV drug user) Chronic: functional (commonest), rheumatic and carcinoid syndrome
Investigation
r ECG: p-pulmonale and RVH r CXR: double right heart border (enlarged right atrium) r TTE: TR jet
Management
r Medical: diuretics, ACE inhibitors and support stockings for oedema r Surgical: valve repair/annuloplasty if medical treatment fails
70
Cardiology and Neurology
Pulmonary stenosis Examine this patient’s cardiovascular system. He has had swollen ankles. Clinical signs
r Raised JVP with giant a waves r Left parasternal heave r Thrill in the pulmonary area r Auscultation
A2
S1
P2
S4
Ejection systolic murmur (ESM) heard loudest in the pulmonary area in inspiration. Widely split second heart sounds, due to a delay in RV emptying.
ESM
Severe: inaudible P2, longer murmur duration obscuring A2.
Extra points
r Tetralogy of Fallot: PS, VSD, overriding aorta and RVH (sternotomy scar) r Noonan’s syndrome: phenotypically like Turner’s syndrome but male sex r Other murmurs: functional TR and VSD r Right ventricular failure: ascites and peripheral oedema
Discussion Investigation
r ECG: p-pulmonale, RVH and RBBB r CXR: oligaemic lung fields and large right atrium r TTE: gradient calculation
Management
r Pulmonary valvotomy – if gradient >70 mm Hg or there is RV failure r Percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation (PPVI) r Surgical repair/replacement
Cardiology and Neurology 71
Carcinoid syndrome
r Gut primary with liver metastasis secreting 5-HT into the systemic
circulation
r Toilet-symptoms: diarrhoea, wheeze and flushing! r Secreted mediators scar and thicken the right-sided heart valves resulting
in tricuspid regurgitation and/or pulmonary stenosis
r Rarely a bronchogenic primary tumour can release 5-HT into the systemic
circulation and cause left-sided valve scarring
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Cardiology and Neurology
Prosthetic valves: aortic and mitral This patient has recently been treated for dyspnoea/chest pain/syncope. Please examine his cardiovascular system. Clinical signs
r Audible prosthetic clicks (metal) on approach and scars on inspection
1 2 3
4
3 4
Midline sternotomy (CABG, AVR, MVR) Lateral thoracotomy (MVR, mitral valvotomy, coarctation repair, BT shunt) Subclavicular (Pacemaker, AICD) Anticubital fossa (angiography)
Also look in the groins for angiography scars/bruising and legs for saphenous vein harvest used in bypass grafts.
1 2
r Auscultation: don’t panic! S1 OC
A metal prosthetic closing click (CC) is heard instead of A2. There may be an opening click (OC) and ejection systolic flow murmur. A heterograft bioprosthesis (porcine) often has normal heart sounds.
CC P2
Flow murmur
Abnormal findings: AR Decreased intensity of the closing click
Aortic valve replacement
CC
A metal prosthetic closing click is heard instead of S1. An opening click may be heard in early diastole followed by a low-frequency diastolic rumble. A porcine valve replacement often has normal heart sounds.
S2 OC
Flow murmur Mitral valve replacement
Abnormal findings: MR Decreased intensity of the closing click.
Cardiology and Neurology 73
Extra points Complications
r Bacterial endocarditis signs r Valve failure: see abnormal findings above r Anticoagulation: bruises (metal valve) and anaemia
Cause
r Multiple valve murmurs/replacements: rheumatic fever r Saphenous vein harvest scars: aortic valve replacement more likely
Discussion management Choice of valve replacement Metal Porcine
For Durable No warfarin
Against Warfarin Less durable (10 years)
Indication Young/on warfarin, e.g. for AF Elderly/at risk of haemorrhage
Prognosis
r Operative mortality: 3–5%
Late complications
r Thromboembolus: 1–2% per annum despite warfarin r Bleeding: fatal 0.6%, major 3%, minor 7% per annum on warfarin r Prosthetic dysfunction and LVF r Haemolysis: mechanical red blood cell destruction against the metal valve r Infective endocarditis: r Early infective endocarditis (<2/12 post-op) can be due to Staphylococcus
epidermidis from skin
r Late infective endocarditis is often due to Strep. viridans by haematoge-
nous spread
r A second valve replacement is usually required to treat this complication r Mortality of prosthetic valve endocarditis approaches 60%
74
Cardiology and Neurology
Implantable devices This patient has had syncope. Please examine his cardiovascular system. Clinical signs
r Incisional scar in the infraclavicular position (may be abdominal) r Palpation demonstrates a pacemaker (often large)
Extra points
r Signs of heart failure: raised JVP, bibasal crackles and pedal oedema r Medic alert bracelet r Local infection: red/hot/tender/fluctuant/erosion
Discussion NICE guidance Implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICD) ‘Shock box’ also delivers anti-tachycardia pacing (ATP) – improves mortality
Primary prevention
r MI > 4 weeks ago r LVEF < 35% and non-sustained VT and positive EP study or r LVEF < 35% and QRSd ≥ 120 milliseconds r Familial condition with high-risk SCD r LQTS, ARVD, Brugada, HCM, complex congenital heart disease
Secondary prevention (without other treatable cause): r cardiac arrest or r haemodynamically compromising VT or r VT with LVEF < 35% (not NYHA IV)
Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) – biventricular pacemakers (BiV) Extra LV pacemaker lead via the coronary sinus – improves mortality/ symptoms
Indications
r LVEF < 35% r NYHA III–IV on optimal medical therapy r Sinus rhythm and QRSd > 150 milliseconds or QRSd >120 milliseconds
and echocardiographic evidence of dyssynchrony
Cardiology and Neurology 75
Pericardial disease Constrictive pericarditis This man has had previous mantle radiotherapy for lymphoma and has a chronic history of leg oedema, bloating and weight gain. Clinical signs
r Predominantly right-side heart failure r Raised JVP r Dominant, brief y-descent due to rapid early ventricular filling and rise
in diastolic pressure Jugular venous pressure waves a
c
v x y
a: atrial systole c: closure of tricuspid valve x: movement of atrioventricular ring during ventricular systole v: filling of the atrium y: opening of the tricuspid valve
Rapid dominant y-descent due to high RA pressures and an early rise in RV diastolic pressure due to poor pericardial compliance. r Kussmaul’s sign: paradoxical increase in JVP on inspiration (may need
to sit the patient at 90◦ rather than 45◦ to observe the meniscus)
r Pulsus paradoxus: r >10 mm Hg drop in systolic pressure in inspiration (not a true paradox
as it normally decreases by 2–3 mm Hg!)
r Ausculatation: r Pericardial knock – it’s not a knock but a high-pitched snap (audible,
early S3 due to rapid ventricular filling into a stiff pericardial sac)
r Ascites, hepatomegaly (congestion) and bilateral peripheral oedema
Extra points
r Cause: r TB: cervical lymphadenopathy r Trauma (surgery): sternotomy scar r Tumour, Therapy (radio): radiotherapy tattoos, thoracotomy scar r Connective Tissue disease: rheumatoid hands, SLE signs
76
Cardiology and Neurology r Infection: purulent r Post-MI (Dressler’s)
Discussion
r Investigation: r CXR: pericardial calcification, old TB and sternotomy wire r Echo: high acoustic signal from pericardium, pericardial effusion (rare),
R → L septal bulge (‘shudder’) and a reduction in aortic and mitral flow during inspiration r Catheter laboratory: r Dip and plateau of the diastolic wave form: square-root sign r Equalization of LV and RV diastolic pressures (RV diastolic pressure is high) r CT: thickened pericardium r Pathophysiology: r Thickened, fibrous capsule reduces ventricular filling and ‘insulates’ the heart from intrathoracic pressure changes during respiration leading to ventricular interdependence – enlargement of one ventricle reduces the size of the other. r Treatment: r Medical: diuretics and fluid restriction r Surgical: pericardial stripping Differentiating pericardial constriction from restrictive cardiomyopathy is difficult!
Cardiology and Neurology 77
COMMON CONGENITAL DEFECTS Ventricular septal defect This patient has developed sudden shortness of breath. Examine his heart. Clinical signs
r Thrill at the left lower sternal edge r Auscultation
S1
A2 P2
ESM or PSM
Systolic murmur well localized at the left stemal edge with no radiation. Second heart sounds are often obliterated. Loudness does not correlate with size (Maladie de Roger: loud murmur due to high-flow velocity through a small VSD). If Eisenmenger's develops the murmur often disappears as the gradient diminishes.
Extra points
r Other associated lesions: AR, PDA (10%), Fallot’s tetralogy and coarctation r Pulmonary hypertension: loud P and RV heave 2 r Shunt reversal: right to left (Eisenmenger’s syndrome): cyanosis and club-
bing
r Endocarditis
Discussion Causes
r Congenital r Acquired (traumatic or post-MI)
Investigation
r ECG: conduction defect r CXR: pulmonary plethora r TTE/TOE: site, size and shunt calculation r Cardiac catheterization: O -saturation measurements quantify shunt size; 2
aortography excludes a PDA and coarctation
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Cardiology and Neurology
Management
R Surgical (pericardial patch) or percutaneous (Amplatzer device) closure of haemodynamically significant defects.
Associations with VSD 1. Fallot’s tetralogy
r Right ventricular hypertrophy r Overriding aorta r VSD r Pulmonary stenosis
Blalock–Taussig (BT) shunts r Corrects the Fallot’s abnormality by anastomosing the subclavian artery to the pulmonary artery r Absent radial pulse Other causes of an absent radial pulse r Acute: embolism, aortic dissection, trauma, e.g. cardiac catheter and death (!) r Chronic: atherosclerosis, coarctation, Takayasu’s arteritis (‘pulseless disease’)
2. Coarctation A congenital narrowing of the aortic arch that is usually distal to the left subclavian artery.
Clinical signs
r Hypertension in right ± left arm r Prominent upper body pulses, absent/weak femoral pulses, radiofemoral
delay
r Heaving pressure loaded apex r Auscultation: continuous murmur from the coarctation and collaterals ra-
diating through to the back. There is a loud A2 . There may be murmurs from associated lesions
Discussion Associations
r Cardiac: VSD, bicuspid aortic valve and PDA r Non-cardiac: Turner’s syndrome and Berry aneurysms
Cardiology and Neurology 79
Investigation
r ECG: LVH and RBBB r CXR: rib notching, double aortic knuckle (post-stenotic dilatation)
Management
r Percutaneous: endovascular aortic repair (EVAR) r Surgical: Dacron patch aortoplasty r Long-term anti-hypertensive therapy r Long-term follow-up/surveillance with MRA: late aneurysms and recoarc-
tation
3. Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) Continuity between the aorta and pulmonary trunk with left to right shunt Risk factor: rubella
Clinical signs
r Collapsing pulse r Thrill second left inter-space r Thrusting apex beat r Auscultation: loud continuous ‘machinery murmur’ loudest below the left
clavicle in systole
Discussion Complications
r Eisenmenger’s syndrome (5%) r Endocarditis
Management
r Closed surgically or via cardiac catheter with an amplatzer PDA occlusion
device
Cardiology and Neurology
80
Atrial septal defect This young woman complains of cough and occasional palpitations. Examine her cardiovascular system. Clinical signs
r Raised JVP r Pulmonary area thrill r Auscultation
S1
A2 P2
Fixed split-second heart sounds that do not change with respiration. Pulmonary ejection systolic flow murmur and tricuspid diastolic flow murmur with large left-to-right shunts. A loud P2 indicates pulmonary hypertension. There is no mumur from the ASD itself.
Pulmonary ESM
Tricuspid flow murmur
Extra points
r Pulmonary hypertension: RV heave and loud P 2 r Congestive cardiac failure r Down’s syndrome: endocardial cushion defect causes a primum ASD and
other atrioventricular valve abnormalities (e.g. AVSD or cleft mitral valve)
Discussion Types
r Primum (nearest the atrioventricular valve apparatus) r Secundum (commonest)
Complications
r Paradoxical embolus r Atrial arrhythmias r Congestive cardiac failure r Endocarditis is rare
Investigation
r ECG: RBBB + LAD (primum) or + RAD (secundum); atrial fibrillation r CXR: small aortic knuckle, pulmonary plethora and double-heart-border
(enlarged right atrium)
Cardiology and Neurology 81 r TTE/TOE: site, size and shunt calculation; amenability to closure r Cardiac catheter: shunt calculation (not always necessary)
Management Indications for closure: r Paradoxical emboli – stroke r L-R Shunt Qp:Qs > 1.5:1 and evidence of RV dilatation/CCF – breathlessness
Closure
r Percutaneous closure device, e.g. Amplatzer R septal occluder r Secundum ASD only, no left atrial appendage thrombus or anomalous
pulmonary venous drainage, adequate rim to anchor device
r Surgical patch repair
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Cardiology and Neurology
Hypertrophic (obstructive) cardiomyopathy This young man has complained of palpitations whilst playing football. Examine his cardiovascular system. Clinical signs
r Jerky pulse character r Double apical impulse (palpable atrial and ventricular contraction) r Thrill at the lower left sternal edge r Auscultation
S1
EC
A2 P2
S4
ESM+/−MVP
Ejection systolic murmur (ESM) at the left sternal edge that radiates throughout the precordium. Associated with MVP: ejection click and late systolic murmur. A fourth heartsound (S4) is present due to blood hitting a hypertrophied stiff LV during atrial systole. ESM is accentuated by reducing blood flow through the heart, e.g. standing from a squatting position or straining during a Valsalva manoeuvre.
Extra points
r Associated mitral valve prolapse (MVP) r Features of Friedreich’s ataxia or myotonic dystrophy r Family history
Discussion Investigation
r ECG: LVH with strain and LAD r CXR: often normal r TTE: asymmetrical septal hypertrophy and systolic anterior motion of the
anterior mitral leaflet on M-mode, gradient (rest/exercise)
r Cardiac MR: identifies apical HCM more reliably than TTE r Cardiac catheterization: gradient at rest, after a ventricular ectopic and
with pharmacological stress and identification of septals
r Genetic tests: sarcomeric proteins
Management
r Rhythm disturbance/high risk for sudden death r ICD
Cardiology and Neurology 83 r LVOT gradient > 30 mm Hg and symptoms (breathlessness, syncope/
presyncope and angina r -blockers (avoid diuretics and nitrates) r Pacemaker r Percutaneous alcohol septal ablation r Surgical septal myomectomy/partial excision of the septal papillary muscle r Avoidance of strenuous sport r Family counselling and screening (autosomal dominant inheritance)
Prognosis
r Annual mortality rate in adults is 2.5% r Poor prognosis factors: r Young age at diagnosis r Syncope r Family history of sudden death r Septal thickness > 3 cm
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Cardiology and Neurology
Dystrophia myotonica This man complains of worsening weakness in his hands. Please examine him. Clinical signs Face
r Myopathic facies: long, thin and expressionless r Wasting of facial muscles and sternocleidomastoid r Bilateral ptosis
r Frontal balding r Dysarthria: due to myotonia of tongue and pharynx
Hands
r Myotonia: ‘Grip my hand, now let go’ (may be obscured by profound
weakness). ‘Screw up your eyes tightly shut, now open them’.
r Wasting and weakness of distal muscles with areflexia. r Percussion myotonia: percuss thenar eminence and watch for involun-
tary thumb flexion.
Extra points
r Cataracts r Cardiomyopathy, brady- and tachy-arrhythmias (look for pacemaker scar) r Diabetes (ask to dip urine) r Testicular atrophy r Dysphagia (ask about swallowing)
Discussion Inheritance
r Autosomal dominant r Onset in 20s r Genetic anticipation: worsening severity of the condition and earlier
age of presentation with progressive generations. Due to expansion of tri-nucleotide repeat sequences within the DMPK gene on chromosome 19. Anticipation also occurs in Huntington’s chorea (autosomal dominant) and Friedreich’s ataxia (autosomal recessive).
Management
r Weakness is major problem – no treatment r Phenytoin may help myotonia r Advise against general anaesthetic (high risk of respiratory/cardiac compli-
cations)
Cardiology and Neurology 85
Common causes of ptosis Bilateral Myotonic dystrophy Myasthenia gravis Congenital
Unilateral Third nerve palsy Horner’s syndrome
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Cardiology and Neurology
Cerebellar syndrome This 37-year-old woman has noticed increasing problems with her coordination. Please examine her and suggest a diagnosis. Clinical signs Brief conversation Outstretched arms Movements: Upper limbs
Scanning dysarthria Rebound phenomenon Finger–nose incoordination Hypotonia Nystagmus Heel–shin Wide-based gait
Eyes Lower limbs
Dysdiadochokinesis Hyporeflexia Foot tapping
Extra points
r Direction of nystagmus: clue to the site of the lesion
R
L
Cerebellar lesion The fast-phase direction is TOWARDS the side of the lesion, and is maximal on looking TOWARDS the lesion.
Fast Vestibular nucleus/VIII nerve lesion phase The fast-phase direction is AWAY FROM Slow the side of the lesion, and is maximal phase on looking AWAY FROM the lesion. In this case the nystagmus could be The direction of the fast phase due to a cerebellar lesion on the LEFT determines the direction of or a vestibular nucleus lesion on the the nystagmus. RIGHT. r Cerebellar vermis lesions produce an ataxic trunk and gait but the limbs
are normal when tested on the bed
r Cerebellar lobe lesions produce ipsilateral cerebellar signs in the limbs
Discussion Mnemonic for signs Dysdiadochokinesis Ataxia Nystagmus Intention tremor Scanning dysarthria Hypotonia/hyporeflexia
Cardiology and Neurology 87
And causes Paraneoplastic cerebellar syndrome Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration Sclerosis (MS) Tumour (posterior fossa SOL) Rare (Friedrich’s and ataxia telangiectasia) Iatrogenic (phenytoin toxicity) Endocrine (hypothyroidism) Stroke (brain stem vascular event)
Aetiological clues
r Internuclear opthalmoplegia, spasticity, r r r r r
female, younger age Optic atrophy Clubbing, tar-stained fingers, radiotherapy burn Stigmata of liver disease, unkempt appearance Neuropathy Gingival hypertrophy
MS MS and Friedrich’s ataxia Bronchial carcinoma EtOH EtOH and Friedrich’s ataxia Phenytoin
88
Cardiology and Neurology
Multiple sclerosis This 30-year-old woman complains of double vision and incoordination with previous episodes of weakness. Please perform a neurological examination. Clinical signs
r Inspection: ataxic handshake and wheelchair r Cranial nerves: internuclear ophthalmoplegia (frequently bilateral in MS),
optic atrophy, reduced visual acuity, and any other cranial nerve palsy
Internuclear ophthalmoplegia R
L
Left frontal gaze centre On looking to the right, the right eye abducts normally but the left eye is unable to adduct. The right eye has nystagmus.
III Midbrain PPRF Pons Medial longitudinal fasciculus lesion
VI
Both eyes look to the left normally.
R
Both eyes converge normally.
Brain stem L
r Peripheral nervous system: Upper-motor neurone spasticity, weakness,
brisk reflexes and altered sensation
r Cerebellar: ‘DANISH’ (see cerebellar syndrome section)
Extra points
r Higher mental function: depression, occasionally euphoria r Autonomic: urinary retention/incontinence, impotence and bowel prob-
lems Uthoff’s phenomenon: worsening of symptoms after a hot bath or exercise Lhermitte’s sign: lightening pains down the spine on neck flexion due to cervical cord plaques
Cardiology and Neurology 89
Discussion Diagnostic criteria Central nervous system demyelination (plaques) causing neurological impairment that is disseminated in both time and space.
Cause Unknown, but both genetic – (HLA-DR2, interleukin-2 and -7 receptors) and environmental factors (increasing incidence with increasing latitude, association with Epstein–Barr virus infection) appear to play a role.
Investigation: clinical diagnosis plus
r CSF: oligoclonal IgG bands r MRI: periventricular white matter plaques r Visual evoked potentials (VEPs): delayed velocity but normal amplitude
(evidence of previous optic neuritis)
Treatment Multidisciplinary approach Nurse, physiotherapist, occupational therapist, social worker and physician.
Disease modifying treatments
r Interferon-beta and Glatiramer reduce relapse rate but don’t affect pro-
gression.
r Monoclonal antibody therapy potentially offers greater benefits; reducing
disease progression and accumulated disability, e.g. Alemtuzumab (antiCD52) – lymphocyte depletion, Natalizumab (anti-␣4 integrin) – blocks T-cell trafficking, Rituximab (anti-CD20) – B-cell depletion. Toxicity may limit their use.
Symptomatic treatments
r Methyl-prednisolone during the acute phase may shorten the duration of
the ‘attack’ but does not affect the prognosis.
r Anti-spasmodics, e.g. Baclofen. r Carbamazepine (for neuropathic pain). r Laxatives and intermittent catheterization/oxybutynin for bowel and blad-
der disturbance.
Prognosis Variable: The majority will remain ambulant at 10 years.
Impairment, disability and handicap
r Arm paralysis is the impairment r Inability to write is the disability r Subsequent inability to work as an accountant is the handicap
Occupational therapy aims to help minimize the disability and abolish the handicap of arm paresis.
90
Cardiology and Neurology
Stroke Examine this patient’s limbs neurologically and then proceed to examine anything else that you feel is important.
Clinical signs
r Inspection: walking aides, nasogastric tube or PEG tube, posture (flexed
upper limbs and extended lower limbs), wasted or oedematous on affected side. r Tone: spastic rigidity, ‘clasp knife’ (resistance to movement, then sudden release). Ankles may demonstrate clonus (>4 beats). r Power: reduced. MRC graded: 0, none 1, flicker 2, moves with gravity neutralized 3, moves against gravity 4, reduced power against resistance 5, normal Extensors are usually weaker than flexors in the upper limbs and vice versa in the lower limbs. r Coordination: reduced often due to weakness (but can be seen in posterior circulation strokes) r Reflexes: brisk with extensor plantars
Offer to
r Walk the patient if they are able to, to demonstrate the flexed posture of
the upper limb and ‘tip toeing’ of the lower limb.
r Test sensation (this is tricky and should be avoided if possible!). Proprio-
ception is important for rehabilitation.
Extra points
r Upper motor neurone unilateral facial weakness (spares frontalis due to its
dual innervation).
r Gag reflex and swallow to minimize aspiration. r Visual fields and higher cortical functions, e.g. neglect helps determine a
Bamford classification.
r Cause: irregular pulse (AF), blood pressure, cardiac murmurs or carotid
bruits (anterior circulation stroke).
Cardiology and Neurology 91
Discussion Definitions
r Stroke: rapid onset, focal neurological deficit due to a vascular lesion
lasting > 24 hours.
r Transient ischaemic attack (TIA): focal neurological deficit lasting < 24
hours.
Investigation
r Bloods: FBC, ESR (young CVA may be due to arteritis), glucose and renal
function
r ECG: AF or previous infarction r CXR: cardiomegaly or aspiration r CT head: infarct or bleed, territory r Consider echocardiogram, carotid Doppler, MRI/A/V (dissection or venous
sinus thrombosis in young patient), clotting screen (thrombophilia)
Management Acute
r Aspirin r Second stroke on aspirin: add clopidogrel or persantin or warfarinize r Referral to a specialist stroke unit: multidisciplinary approach: physio-
therapy, occupational therapy, speech and language therapy and specialist stroke rehabilitation nurses r DVT prophylaxis r Thrombolysis if <3 hours from onset and dedicated service available
Chronic
r Carotid endarterectomy in patients who have made a good recovery, e.g.
in PACS (if >70% stenosis of the ipsilateral internal carotid artery)
r Anticoagulation for cardiac thromboembolism r Address cardiovascular risk factors r Nursing +/− social care.
Bamford classification of stroke (Lancet 1991) Total anterior circulation stroke (TACS)
r Hemiplegia (contra-lateral to the lesion) r Homonomous hemianopia (contra-lateral to the lesion) r Higher cortical dysfunction, e.g. dysphasia, dyspraxia and neglect
Partial anterior circulation (PACS) r 2/3 of the above
Cardiology and Neurology
92
Lacunar (LACS)
r Pure hemi-motor or sensory loss
Prognosis at 1 year (%) TACS 60 35 5
Dead Dependent Independent
PACS 15 30 55
LACS 10 30 60
Dominant parietal-lobe cortical signs
r Dysphasia: receptive, expressive or global r Gerstmann’s syndrome r Dysgraphia, dyslexia and dyscalculia r L-R disorientation r Finger agnosia
Non-dominant parietal-lobe signs r Dressing and constructional apraxia r Spatial neglect
Either
r Sensory and visual inattention r Astereognosis r Graphaesthesia
Visual field defects T
N N
1
T
T
Optic nerve
N
N
T
1
Unilateral field loss
2
Bitemporal hemianopia
3
Homonymous hemianopia
4
Upper homonymous quadrantinopia Temporal lobe lesion
5
Lower homonymous quadrantinopia Parietal lobe lesion
Optic chiasm 2
3 LGN 5
L
4 Optic radiation
R
L
R
Cardiology and Neurology 93
Spastic legs Examine this man’s lower limbs neurologically. He has had difficulty in walking. Clinical signs
r Wheelchair and walking sticks (disuse atrophy and contractures may be
present if chronic)
r Increased tone and ankle clonus r Generalized weakness r Hyper-reflexia and extensor plantars r Gait: ‘scissoring’
Extra points
r Examine for a sensory level suggestive of a spinal lesion r Look at the back for scars or spinal deformity
r Search for features of multiple sclerosis, e.g. cerebellar signs, fundoscopy
for optic atrophy
r Ask about bladder symptoms and note the presence or absence of urinary
catheter. Offer to test anal tone
Discussion Common causes
r Multiple sclerosis r Spinal cord compression/cervical myelopathy r Trauma r Motor neurone disease (no sensory signs)
Other causes
r Anterior spinal artery thrombosis: dissociated sensory loss with preserva-
tion of dorsal columns
r Syringomyelia: with typical upper limb signs r Hereditary spastic paraplegia: stiffness exceeds weakness, positive family
history
r Subacute combined degeneration of the cord: absent reflexes with upgo-
ing plantars
r Friedreich’s ataxia r Parasagittal falx meningioma
Cord compression
r Medical emergency
Cardiology and Neurology
94
r Causes: r Disc prolapse (above L1/2) r Malignancy r Infection: abscess or TB r Trauma: # vertebra
r Investigation of choice: spinal MRI r Treatment: r Urgent surgical decompression r Consider steroids and radiotherapy (for a malignant cause)
Lumbo-sacral root levels L 2/3 L 3/4 L 4/5 L 5/S 1
Hip flexion Knee extension Foot dorsi-flexion Knee flexion Hip extension Foot plantar-flexion
S 1/2
Knee jerk L 3/4
Ankle jerk S 1/2
Lower limb dermatomes
L1 L2
S3,4 L5
S2
L3
Lower limb dermatomes Hints: L3 (knee) L4 (to the floor medially) S2, 3, 4 (keeps the faeces off the floor!)
Right leg
L4
S1
S1 L5
L5 Anterior
Posterior
Cardiology and Neurology 95
Syringomyelia Examine this patient’s upper limbs neurologically. He has been complaining of numb hands. Clinical signs
r Weakness and wasting of small muscles of the hand r Loss of reflexes in the upper limbs r Dissociated sensory loss in upper limbs and chest: loss of pain and tem-
perature sensation (spinothalamic) with preservation of joint position and vibration sense (dorsal columns) r Scars from painless burns r Charcot joints: elbow and shoulder
Extra points
r Pyramidal weakness in lower limbs with upgoing (extensor) plantars r Kyphoscoliosis is common
r Horner’s syndrome (see Ophthalmology section) r If syrinx extends into brain stem (syringobulbia) there may be cerebellar
and lower cranial nerve signs
Discussion
r Syringomyelia is caused by a progressively expanding fluid filled cavity
(syrinx) within the cervical cord, typically spanning several levels. Syrinx expands ventrally affecting: 1 Decussating spinothalamic neurones producing segmental pain and temperature loss at the level of the syrinx.
Dorsal
4
2 Anterior horn cells producing segmental lower motor neurone weakness at the level of the syrinx.
3
1
2
Ventral
3 Corticospinal tract producing upper motor neurone weakness below the level of the syrinx. It usually spares the dorsal columns 4 (proprioception).
r The signs may be asymmetrical. r Frequently associated with an Arnold–Chiari malformation and spina
bifida.
r Investigation = spinal MRI.
Cardiology and Neurology
96
Charcot’s joint (neuropathic arthropathy)
r Painless deformity and destruction of a joint with new bone formation
following repeated minor trauma secondary to loss of pain sensation.
r The most important causes are: r Tabes dorsalis: hip and knee r Diabetes: ankle
r Syringomyelia: elbow and shoulder r Treatment: bisphosphonates can help
Cervical roots C 5/6 C 7/8 T1
Elbow flexion and supination Elbow extension Finger adduction
Biceps and supinator jerks C 5/6 Triceps jerk C 7/8
Upper limb dermatomes
C5
T2
Upper limb dermatomes
Right arm
T1
Hints: C6 thumb C7 middle finger C8 little finger
C8 C6
C6
C8 C7
C7
Palmar
Dorsal
Cardiology and Neurology 97
Motor neurone disease This man complains of gradually increasing weakness. Please examine him neurologically. Clinical signs
r Inspection: wasting and fasciculation r Tone: usually spastic but can be flaccid r Power: weak r Reflexes: absent and/or brisk. (Absent knee jerk with extensor plantar
reflexes.)
r Sensory examination is normal
Extra points
r Speech: dysarthria may be bulbar (nasal, ‘Donald Duck’ speech, due to
palatal weakness) or pseudo-bulbar (‘hot potato’ speech, due to a spastic tongue). r Tongue: wasting and fasciculation (bulbar) or a stiff spastic tongue with brisk jaw jerk (pseudo-bulbar). r There is no sensory, extra-ocular muscle, cerebellar or extra-pyramidal involvement. Sphincter and cognitive disturbance occasionally seen.
Discussion
r MND is a progressive disease of unknown aetiology r There is axonal degeneration of upper and lower motor neurones
Motor neurone disease may be classified into three types, although there is often some overlap: r Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (50%): affecting the cortico-spinal tracts predominantly producing spastic paraparesis or tetraparesis. r Progressive muscular atrophy (25%): affecting anterior horn cells predominantly producing wasting, fasciculation and weakness. Best prognosis. r Progressive bulbar palsy (25%): affecting lower cranial nerves and suprabulbar nuclei producing speech and swallow problems. Worst prognosis.
Investigation
r Clinical diagnosis r EMG: fasciculation r MRI (brain and spine): excludes the main differential diagnoses of cervical
cord compression and myelopathy and brain stem lesions
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Cardiology and Neurology
Treatment
r Supportive, e.g. PEG feeding and NIPPV r Multidisciplinary approach to care
r Riluzole (glutamate antagonist): slows disease progression by an average
of 3 months but does not improve function or quality of life and is costly
Prognosis
r Most die within 3 years of diagnosis from bronchopneumonia and respi-
ratory failure. Some disease variants may survive longer.
r Worst if elderly at onset, female and with bulbar involvement.
Causes of generalized wasting of hand muscles r Anterior horn cell r MND r Syringomyelia
r Cervical cord compression r Polio
r Brachial plexus r Cervical rib r Pancoast’s tumour
r Trauma r Peripheral nerve r Combined median and ulnar nerve lesions r Peripheral neuropathy r Muscle r Disuse atrophy, e.g. rheumatoid arthritis
Fasciculation
r Visible muscle twitching at rest r Cause: axonal loss results in the surviving axons recruiting and innervating
more myofibrils than usual resulting in large motor units
r Seen commonly in MND and syringomyelia
Cardiology and Neurology 99
Parkinson’s disease This man complains of a persistent tremor. Examine him neurologically. Clinical signs
r Expressionless face with an absence of spontaneous movements. r Coarse, pill-rolling, 3–5 Hz tremor. Characteristically asymmetrical. r Bradykinesia (demonstrated by asking patient to repeatedly oppose each
digit onto thumb in quick succession).
r Cogwheel rigidity at wrists (enhanced by synkinesis – simultaneous
movement of the other limb (tap opposite hand on knee, or wave arm up and down)). r Gait is shuffling and festinant. Absence of arm swinging – often asymmetrical. r Speech is slow, faint and monotonous.
Extra points
r BP looking for evidence of multisystem atrophy: Parkinsonism with pos-
tural hypotension, cerebellar and pyramidal signs.
r Test vertical eye movements (up and down) for evidence of progressive
supranuclear palsy.
r Dementia and Parkinsonism: Lewy-body dementia. r Ask for a medication history.
Discussion Causes of Parkinsonism Parkinson’s disease (idiopathic) Parkinson plus syndromes: Multisystem atrophy (Shy–Drager) Progressive supranuclear palsy (Steel–Richardson–Olszewski) Corticobasal degeneration; unilateral Parkinsonian signs Drug-induced, particularly phenothiazines Anoxic brain damage Post-encephalitis MPTP toxicity (‘frozen addict syndrome’)
Pathology
r Degeneration of the dopaminergic neurones between the substantia nigra
and basal ganglia.
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Treatment
r L-Dopa with a peripheral Dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor, e.g. Madopar/
r
r r r r r
co-beneldopa: r Problems with nausea and dyskinesia r Effects wear off after a few years so generally delay treatment as long as possible r End-of-dose effect and on/off motor fluctuation may be reduced by modified release preparations Dopamine agonists, e.g. Pergolide: r Use in younger patients: less side effects (nausea and hallucinations) and save L-Dopa until necessary r Apomorpine (also dopamine agonist) given as an SC injection or infusion; rescue therapy for patients with severe ‘off’ periods MAO-B inhibitor, e.g. Selegiline, inhibit the breakdown of dopamine Anti-cholinergics, can reduce tremor, particularly drug-induced COMT inhibitors, e.g. Entacapone, inhibit peripheral breakdown of L-Dopa thus reducing motor fluctuations Amantadine, increases dopamine release Surgery, thalamotomy, pallidotomy, deep brain stimulation and foetal neural transplantation
Causes of tremor
r Resting tremor: Parkinson’s disease r Postural tremor (worse with arms outstretched): r Benign essential tremor (50% familial) improves with EtOH r Anxiety r Thyrotoxicosis r Metabolic: CO and hepatic encephalopathy 2 r Alcohol
r Intention tremor: seen in cerebellar disease
Cardiology and Neurology 101
Hereditary sensory motor neuropathy This man complains of progressive weakness and a change in the appearance of his legs. Please examine him neurologically. Clinical signs
r Wasting of distal lower limb muscles with preservation of the thigh muscle
bulk (inverted champagne bottle appearance)
r Pes cavus (seen also in Friedreich’s ataxia) r Weakness of ankle dorsi-flexion and toe extension r Variable degree of stocking distribution sensory loss (usually mild)
Extra points
r Gait is high stepping (due to foot drop) and stamping (absent propriocep-
tion)
r Wasting of hand muscles r Palpable lateral popliteal nerve
Discussion
r The commonest HSMN types are I (demyelinating) and II (axonal). r Autosomal dominant inheritance. r HSMN is also known as Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease and peroneal mus-
cular atrophy.
Other causes of peripheral neuropathy Predominantly sensory r Diabetes mellitus r Alcohol r Drugs, e.g. isoniazid and vincristine r Vitamin deficiency, e.g. B and B 12 1
Predominantly motor
r Guillain–Barre´ and botulism present acutely r Lead toxicity r Porphyria r HSMN
Mononeuritis multiplex
r Diabetes mellitus r Connective tissue disease, e.g. SLE and rheumatoid arthritis r Vasculitis, e.g. polyarteritis nodosa and Churg–Strauss r Infection, e.g. HIV r Malignancy
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Friedreich’s ataxia Examine this young man’s neurological system. Clinical signs
r Young adult, wheelchair (or ataxic gait) r Pes cavus r Bilateral cerebellar ataxia (ataxic hand shake + other arm signs, dysarthria,
nystagmus)
r Leg wasting with absent reflexes and bilateral upgoing plantars r Posterior column signs (loss of vibration and joint position sense)
Extra points
r Kyphoscoliosis r Optic atrophy (30%) r High-arched palate r Sensorineural deafness (10%) r Listen for murmur of HOCM r Ask to dip urine (10% develop diabetes)
Discussion
r Inheritance is usually autosomal recessive r Onset is during teenage years
r Survival rarely exceeds 20 years from diagnosis r There is an association with HOCM and a mild dementia
Causes of extensor plantars with absent knee jerks r Friedreich’s ataxia r Subacute combined degeneration of the cord r Motor neurone disease r Taboparesis
r Conus medullaris lesions r Combined upper and lower pathology, e.g. cervical spondylosis with
peripheral neuropathy
Cardiology and Neurology 103
Facial nerve palsy Examine this patient’s cranial nerves. What is wrong? Clinical signs
r Unilateral facial droop, absent nasolabial fold and forehead creases r Inability to raise the eyebrows (frontalis), screw the eyes up (orbicularis
oculi) or smile (orbicularis oris) Bell’s phenomenon: eyeball rolls upwards on attempted eye closure.
Extra points Level of the lesion
r Pons r MS and stroke r Cerebellar-pontine angle r Tumour, e.g. acoustic neuroma r Auditory/facial canal r Cholesteatoma and abscess
r Neck and face r Tumour and trauma
+VI palsy and long tract signs +V, VI, VIII and cerebellar signs +VIII + scars or parotid mass
Discussion Commonest cause is Bell’s palsy
r Rapid onset (1–2 days) r HSV-1 has been implicated r Induced swelling and compression of the nerve within the facial canal
causes demyelination and temporary conduction block
r Treatment: prednisolone commenced within 72 hours of onset improves
outcomes, plus valacyclovir if severe
r Remember eye protection r Prognosis: 70–80% make a full recovery; substantial minority have persis-
tent facial weakness
Other causes of a VII nerve palsy
r Herpes zoster (Ramsay–Hunt syndrome) r Mononeuropathy due to diabetes, sarcoidosis or Lyme disease r Tumour/trauma r MS/stroke
Causes of bilateral facial palsy r Guillain–Barre´ r Sarcoidosis r Lyme disease
r Myasthenia gravis r Bilateral Bell’s palsy
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Myasthenia gravis Examine this patient’s cranial nerves. She has been suffering with double vision. Clinical signs
r Bilateral ptosis (worse on sustained upward gaze) r Complicated bilateral extra-ocular muscle palsies r Myasthenic snarl (on attempting to smile) r Nasal speech, palatal weakness and poor swallow (bulbar involvement)
Extra points
r Demonstrate proximal muscle weakness in the upper limbs and fatigua-
bility. The reflexes are normal
r Look for sternotomy scars (thymectomy) r State that you would like to assess respiratory muscle function (FVC)
Discussion
r Associations: other autoimmune diseases, e.g. diabetes mellitus, rheuma-
toid arthritis, thyrotoxicosis, SLE and thymomas
r Cause: Anti-nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (anti-AChR) antibodies affect
motor end-plate neurotransmission
Investigations Diagnostic tests
r Anti-AChR antibodies positive in 90% of cases r Anti-MuSK (muscle-specific kinase) antibodies often positive if anti-AChR
negative
r EMG: decremented response to a titanic train of impulses r Edrophonium (Tensilon) test: an acetylcholine esterase inhibitor increases
the concentration of ACh at the motor end plate and hence improves the muscle weakness. Can cause heart block and even asystole.
Other tests
r CT or MRI of the mediastinum (thymoma in 10%) r TFTs (Grave’s present in 5%)
Treatments Acute
r IV immunoglobulin or plasmapheresis
Cardiology and Neurology 105
Chronic
r Acetylcholine esterase inhibitor, e.g. pyridostigmine r Immunosuppression: steroids and azathioprine
r Thymectomy is beneficial even if the patient does not have a thymoma
(usually young females)
Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS)
r Diminished reflexes that become brisker after exercise r Lower limb girdle weakness (unlike myasthenia gravis) r Associated with malignancy, e.g. small-cell lung cancer r Antibodies block pre-synaptic calcium channels r EMG shows a ‘second wind’ phenomenon on repetitive stimulation
Causes of bilateral extra-ocular palsies
r Myasthenia gravis r Graves’ disease r Mitochondrial cytopathies, e.g. Kearns–Sayre syndrome r Miller–Fisher variant of Guillain–Barre´ syndrome r Cavernous sinus pathology
Causes of bilateral ptosis r Congenital r Senile
r Myasthenia gravis r Myotonic dystrophy r Mitochondrial cytopathies, e.g. Kearns–Sayre syndrome r Bilateral Horner’s syndrome
Station 4 Ethics, Law and Communication Skills
ETHICS AND LAW IN MEDICINE Principles of medical ethics Most ethical dilemmas can be resolved, at least in part, by considering the four cornerstones of any ethical argument, namely autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice. r Autonomy ‘self-rule’: respecting and following the patient’s decisions in the management of their condition. r Beneficence: promoting what is in the patient’s best interests. r Non-maleficence: avoiding harm. r Justice: doing what is good for the population as a whole. Distributing resources fairly. There is often not a right or wrong answer to tricky ethical problems but this framework enables informed discussion.
Example
r PEG feeding a semi-conscious patient post-CVA:
Autonomy: the patient wishes to be fed, or not. Beneficence and non-maleficence: feeding may improve nutritional status and aid recovery, but with risks of complication from the insertion of the PEG tube and subsequent aspiration. Also, the patient’s poor quality of life may be lengthened. Justice: heavy resource burden looking after PEG-fed patients in nursing homes.
Medico-legal system The legal system of England and Wales (Scottish legal system is different) is defined by Common (Case) Law and Statute (Acts of Parliament) Law Cases for PACES, 2nd edition. By S. Hoole, A. Fry, D. Hodson & R. Davies. Published 2010 by Blackwell Publishing.
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 107
and may be subdivided into Public (Criminal) Law and Private (Civil) Law. Court decisions follow judicial precedent – they follow judgements that have gone before. Medical malpractice is commonly a breach of the Law of Tort (part of Civil Law) and the most important of these are negligence and battery (a part of the tort of trespass). The judge must decide, on the balance of probabilities (rather than beyond reasonable doubt – Criminal law) whether the defendant(s) (doctor and hospital NHS Trust) are liable and whether the Claimant is due compensation.
Negligence This is the commonest reason for a doctor to go to court. Claimants need to prove: 1 The doctor had a duty of care: r Doctors (unless they are GPs in their geographical practice) are not legally obliged to act as ‘Good Samaratans’ (although morally they may be) 2 There was a breach of the appropriate standard of care: r The Bolam test: the doctor is not negligent if he or she acted in accordance with a responsible/reasonable/respectable body of medical opinion (even if that opinion is in the minority) r The Bolitho test: the opinion must also withstand logical analysis 3 The breach of the duty of care caused harm
Competency and consent In accepting a patient’s autonomy to determine the course of management the clinician must be satisfied that the patient is competent. If this is not the case, the doctor should act in the patient’s best interests. Consent is only valid when the individual is competent (or in legal terms, ‘has capacity’). r A patient is not incompetent because they act against their best interests. r Capacity is not a global term but is specific to each decision, i.e. a patient may be competent to make a will but at the same time incompetent to consent to treatment. r A clinician does not have to prove beyond all reasonable doubt that a patient has capacity, only that the balance of probability favours capacity.
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r The three stages in assessing capacity are: r Comprehension and retention of information needed to make the deci-
sion
r Ability to believe the information, i.e. no delusion r Ability to weigh the information and make a decision
r Patients under 16 years of age can consent to treatment if they are deemed
‘Gillick competent’, i.e. are deemed mature enough to understand the implications of their actions. However, refusal of consent to treatment may be overridden by a parent or a court, if it is in the child’s best interest.
Legal aspects A competent patient Every human being of adult years and of sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done to his or her own body. r Assault is a threat or an attempt to physically injure another, whereas
battery is actual (direct or indirect) physical contact or injury without consent. They are usually civil rather criminal offenses. r Implied consent: if a patient goes to hospital and holds out their arm to allow a medical practitioner to take their pulse – written or verbal consent is not necessary. r Consent documentation: If a patient does not receive certain relevant information when consented for a procedure a doctor may be found negligent. It is advisable to tell the patient of all potential serious complications and those with an incidence of at least 1%. A signed consent form is not legally binding – patients may withdraw consent at any time. It is not illegal to operate without a consent form (as long as verbal or implied consent has been obtained). However, it provides admissible evidence that consent has been obtained.
An incompetent patient A doctor, by acting in the patient’s best interests, can treat a patient against their will under common law. r Proxy consent: a relative cannot consent on behalf of an incompetent patient, under common law. However, there is provision under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 for a patient to nominate a personal welfare Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) whilst competent to make limited health care decisions on their behalf, if they were to lose capacity. The remit of the LPA must be clearly stated in a legal document. An LPA cannot consent to, or
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 109
refuse treatment for a mental health disorder. If health care staff believes that the LPA is not acting in the patient’s best interest (especially if they are refusing life saving treatment), they may ignore the LPA whilst disputes are resolved. r Advanced directives (living wills): a patient makes a written statement on their wishes for future medical care before they lose capacity. This is usually an advanced decision to refuse treatment (ADRT). Health care providers are not obliged to provide clinically inappropriate medical care (including cardiopulmonary resuscitation), even if requested to do so by a patient. A doctor who treats a patient in the face of an ADRT could be liable in battery under common law. However, a doctor must be sure of the patient’s intentions if the refusal of treatment is substantially against the patient’s best interest. Advance care planning (ACP) led by a dedicated case manager can facilitate successful implementation of an ADRT by providing a sound contextual framework to inform care providers. The courts will accept advanced directives if it can be shown that: r The patient was competent at the time it was drafted r The patient was free from undue influence r The patient was sufficiently informed r The patient’s refusal applies to the subsequent circumstances r Ward of court: a doctor may apply to a judge to make medical decisions on behalf of the patient. This is advisable if it is not clear what the correct course of management should be and there is opposition from colleagues or relatives against the intended treatment. The Mental Health Act 1983 can only be evoked to treat psychiatric illness in non-consenting patients. Section 5(2): emergency doctor’s holding power r Applied by one physician on an in-patient to enable a psychiatric assess-
ment to be made
r 72 hours duration r Good practice to convert this to a Section 2 or 3
Section 2: admission for assessment order r Applied by two written medical recommendations (usually a psychiatrist
and a GP) and an approved social worker or relative, on a patient in the community r 28 days duration
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r May be converted to a Section 3 r The patient has a right of appeal to a tribunal within 14 days of detention
Section 3: admission for treatment order r Applied as in a Section 2 on a patient already diagnosed with a mental
disorder
r months duration then reviewed
Section 4: emergency admission to hospital order r Applied by one doctor (usually a GP) and an approved social worker or
relative
r Urgent necessity is demonstrable r May be converted to a Section 2 or 3
Confidentiality Confidentiality is an implied contract necessary for a successful doctor– patient relationship. Without it, a patient’s autonomy and privacy is compromised, trust is lost and the relationship weakened.
GMC Guidelines (Confidentiality : Protecting and Providing Information , September 2000, Section 1 – Patients’ right to confidentiality, Paragraph 1)
Patients have the right to expect that doctors will not disclose any personal information which they learn during the course of their professional duties, unless they give permission (preferably in writing). Without assurances about confidentiality patients may be reluctant to give doctors the information they need to provide good care.
Legal aspects
r Patients usually complain to the GMC rather than sue if there has been a
breach of confidentiality.
r Under common law doctors are legally obliged to maintain confidentiality
although this obligation is not absolute.
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 111 r Maintenance of confidentiality is a public not a private interest – it is in
the public’s interest to be able to trust a doctor. Therefore, breaching confidentiality is a question of balancing public interests. r Doctors have discretion to breach confidentiality when another party may be at serious risk of harm, e.g. an epileptic who continues to drive (the GMC advises doctors to inform the DVLA medical officer) or an HIVpositive patient who refuses to tell their sexual partner. They may also share information within the medical team. r Doctors must breach confidentiality to the relevant authorities in the following situations: r Notifiable diseases r Drug addiction r Abortion r In vitro fertilization r Organ transplant r Births and deaths r Police request r Search warrant signed by a circuit judge r Court order r Prevention, apprehension or prosecution of terrorists perpetrators of serious crime
How to do it No breach of confidentiality has occurred if a patient gives consent or the patient cannot be identified. If consent is not given to disclose information but a physician deems that a breach in confidentiality is necessary, the patient should be notified of the reason for disclosure, the content, to whom the disclosure has been made and the likely consequence for the patient. The GMC provides guidelines on when confidentiality may be breached, which do not have the force of the law but are taken seriously by the courts. These guidelines may be consulted at: www.gmc-uk.org.
The Human Rights Act 1998 Article 8: the right to respect for his or her private life r It is unclear if this will influence court decisions on issues of confidentiality.
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End of life decisions This is a contentious area and medical opinion is diverse.
Sanctity of life The view that whenever possible human life should be maintained, could be argued as ethically unjustified if extending that life results in suffering (non-maleficence) and if trivial life extension occurs at enormous monetary expense ( justice).
Killing versus letting die In the former, the doctor actively causes the patient’s death, in the latter the patient’s illness causes death, i.e. ‘nature takes its course’ whilst the doctor is passive. However, some disagree stating the decision to act or to omit to act are both ‘active’ choices, which may make it more difficult to morally justify.
Withholding versus withdrawing treatment Although it may be easier to withhold treatment, rather than to withdraw that which has been started already, there are no legal or necessarily moral distinctions between the two. Withdrawing treatment is considered in law to be a passive act and not killing.
Example A hospital trust was granted permission from the House of Lords to discontinue artificial hydration and nutrition in a young patient in a persistent vegetative state (Airedale NHS Trust v Bland, 1993). This case established the equivalence of withholding and withdrawing care and that the basic provisions of food and water are classified as medical treatments that could be withdrawn.
Doctrine of double effect This is a moral argument that distinguishes actions that are intended to harm versus those where harm is foreseen but not intended.
Example The administration of large doses of morphine intended to palliate a patient with a terminal illness may have the foreseen consequence of respiratory arrest and subsequent death. It is morally and legally acceptable though because the primary aim was to alleviate pain, not cause death.
Do-not-attempt resuscitation (DNAR) orders English law does not require doctors to prescribe futile treatments, even if requested to do so by the patient. Therefore, a DNAR order is an example of withholding treatment that is futile. Other reasons for DNAR may include
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 113
the patient’s sustained wish or when the evaluation of the outcome is not deemed to be worthwhile, i.e. worse than death. Doctors should make a decision as to whether to inform the patient of this decision. It may be inhumane and distressing to raise issues of this nature with terminally ill patients.
Euthanasia Euthanasia is intentional killing, i.e. murder under English law and therefore illegal. Assisted suicide, i.e. helping someone take their own life, is also a criminal offence.
Arguments for
r Respecting a patient’s autonomy over their body r Beneficence, i.e. ‘mercy killing’, may prevent suffering r Suicide is legal but is unavailable to the disabled
Arguments against
r Good palliative care obviates the need for euthanasia r Risk of manipulation/coercion/exploitation of the vulnerable r Undesirable practices will occur when constraints on killing are loosened
(‘slippery-slope’ argument)
Legal aspects The Human Rights Act 1998 Article 2: the Right to life r Life is protected by law and physicians have a positive obligation to protect
life
Examples
r Breast cancer patients threaten to take PCTs to the High Court when denied
Herceptin, as it infringed Article 2 of the Human Rights Act.
r Physicians may be challenged when withdrawing/withholding life saving
treatment, e.g. persistent vegetative state and PEG feeding. A recent judgment set a precedent that this did not constitute a breach of Article 2. It could be argued that any futile treatment is a breach of Article 3.
Article 3: the Prohibition of torture r The prevention of inhumane and degrading treatment
Example
r A patient suffering from motor neuron disease claimed through Article 3
that making assisted suicide illegal infringed her human rights (Pretty v UK,
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2002). The European Court of Human Rights upheld the House of Lords decision that assisted suicide was a criminal offence (Section 2 of Suicide Act, 1961).
Communication skills Breaking bad news If done well this can help the patient come to terms with their illness and minimize psychological distress. There are no hard and fast rules, but a patient-centred approach often helps.
How to do it
r Choose a setting that is private and free from disturbance (give your bleep
to someone else). Have enough time to do it properly.
r Invite other health care workers, e.g. a nurse, for support and to ensure
continuity of information given by all the team.
r Offer the opportunity for relatives to attend if the patient wishes. This
r r r r r
r r
r
is useful for patient support and can help the dissemination of information. Introduce yourself and the purpose of the discussion. Check the patient’s existing awareness and gauge how much they want to be told. Give the bad news clearly and simply. Avoid medical jargon. Avoid information overload. Avoid ‘loose terminology’ that may be misinterpreted. Pause and acknowledge distress. Wait for the patient to guide the conversation and explore their concerns as they arise. If you are unsure as to exact treatment options available, inform the patient that their case is going to be discussed at an MDT (be it cancer or other disease group) and a decision made at that meeting as to best care. Arrange to meet them immediately after this meeting. Recap what has been discussed and check understanding. Bring the discussion to a close but offer an opportunity to speak again and elicit the help of other groups, e.g. specialist cancer nurses or societies, to help the patient at this difficult time. Enquire how the patient is planning on getting home. If distressed, advise them that they should not drive. Offer to ring a relative to collect them or to arrange a taxi home.
Other problems
r Denial: If a patient is in denial reiterate the key message that needs to
be addressed. Confront the inconsistencies in their perceptions and if this
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does not work, acknowledge their denial in a sensitive way. It may be better to leave this to a later date, perhaps when the patient is ready to confront the painful reality. r Anger: This is a natural and usually transient part of the grieving process. ‘Shooting the messenger’ can occur occasionally, particularly if the news is delivered poorly. Acknowledge their anger and empathize with their plight. If this does not diffuse the situation, terminate the session and reconvene later. r ‘How long have I got?’: Answer in broad terms: hours–days, days–weeks, etc. Explore why the patient wants to know.
Dealing with a difficult patient How to do it An angry patient
r Listen without interruption and let them voice their anger r Keep calm and do not raise your voice r Acknowledge they are angry and try to explore why
r Empathize r Apologize if there has been an error r If they feel they wish to take matters further then advise them of the trust’s
complaints procedure
A non-compliant patient
r Explore why they have not taken their medication. Were the side effects
bothering them? Was the drug not working?
r Educate the patient. Perhaps they were not aware how important it was
to take the tablets.
r Offer solutions. Direct supervision of treatment, e.g. anti-tuberculosis treat-
ment. Try alternative therapies.
A self-discharging patient
r Explain why you do not want them to leave. r If they are competent they may leave but do so at their own risk and
against medical advice. To attempt to stop them is assault.
r If they are incompetent, they can be detained by reasonable force, acting
in their best interests under common law. To let them go is negligent. However, if in attempting to detain such a person there is risk of serious injury to the patient or those restraining the patient, then you may have no alternative but to let them go.
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r Patients with smear positive TB (AFBs present in sputum) can be detained,
but not treated, under the Public Health Act.
A patient that continues to drive despite contraindication Although it is the duty of the patient (not the doctor) to declare a disability that precludes him or her from holding a UK driving licence, it is one of the acknowledged circumstances (stated by the GMC) under which a breach of confidentiality may be justified. r Try and persuade the patient to inform the DVLA. Mention lack of insurance cover if they drive and safety issues to themselves and other road users. r Ask them to provide written evidence that they have informed the DVLA if you suspect they have not. r Inform the patient that you will write to the DVLA if they fail to do so. r Write to the DVLA if no evidence is forthcoming and to the patient to inform them you have done so.
Driving restrictions Disease First seizure
ACS
Stroke/TIA IDDM
Private vehicle licence 1 year if fit free/medical review 6 months during treatment changes 1 month if untreated 1 week if treated with stent and normal LV 1 month if no persistent deficit Notify DVLA may drive if no visual impairment and aware of hypoglycaemia
HGV/PSV licence 10 years if fit free off medication
6 weeks if symptom free and no inducible ischaemia 1 year if no persistent deficit Banned
Any illness where the doctor feels that the patient’s ability to drive is significantly impaired should be referred to the DVLA for further action and the patient is told not to drive in the mean time.
Other issues to address
r Explore the impact on the patient’s job and lifestyle. r How is the patient going to get home from your clinic?
For full guidelines: http://www.dvla.gov.uk/medical/ataglance.aspx
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 117
Information delivery Communication skills are frequently assessed by the candidate’s ability to inform the patient about their medical condition.
How to do it
r Introduce yourself and establish the reason for the discussion. r Assess the patient’s level of knowledge. r Give the information required in simple language avoiding medical
jargon.
r Facilitate questions and answer them, but avoid digressing too much. r Formulate a plan of action with the patient. r Reiterate your discussion with the patient to ensure understanding. r Offer further information sources, e.g. leaflets, societies or groups. r Organize appropriate follow-up. r Close the interview.
Tips
r Read the case scenario carefully and structure your interview in 5 minutes
beforehand.
r This is a role-play station so use your imagination. r If you are asked a question by the patient and you do not know the answer,
say that you are unable to answer at present but you will find out next time (as you would in real life!). r Be aware of possible legal and ethical facets to the case and pre-empt the examiners by tackling them in the case before the discussion. r Body language speaks volumes.
Worked examples Epilepsy An 18-year-old woman who is trying to become a professional model has had her second grand mal seizure in 3 months, which was witnessed by her GP. She has had a normal CT head and metabolic causes have been excluded. She has returned to your outpatient clinic for the results. Please discuss the diagnosis with her.
Points to discuss
r The diagnosis is epilepsy. Explain what this means to the patient in lay
terms: disorganized electrical activity in the brain (see ‘Information delivery’ section).
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r Explore social aspects: r She has been drinking a lot of alcohol recently and staying out late at all
night parties.
r She drives to modelling agencies and relies heavily on her car. r She hates taking tablets.
r Discuss treatment options to limit her seizure activity: r Avoid excess alcohol and sleep deprivation. r Avoid precipitants, e.g. flashing disco lights.
r
r r r
r
Drugs: there are some newer anti-epileptic medications, e.g. lamotrigine, that have fewer side effects. This is important to her as she is a model! Stress compliance (if poor compliance see ‘Dealing with a difficult patient’ section): r It is imperative that if she is on the oral contraceptive combined pill, she is told the risks of pill failure. This is important, as anti-epileptics are teratogenic. Advise alternative forms of contraception, e.g. barrier or if this is unacceptable switch to a higher dose oestrogen pill or progesterone pill. r If she wants to become pregnant, it is a balance of risk between a seizure when pregnant, which carries a significant risk of miscarriage and the potential teratogenic side effects of the drugs. Most physicians encourage female patients wishing to start a family to continue on their epileptic treatment. Remember folate supplements! Safety issues r Avoid swimming or bathing alone and heights. r Driving restrictions (if she continues to drive see ‘Dealing with a difficult patient’ and ‘Breaking confidentiality’ sections). Recap the important points and formulate an agreed plan. Check understanding and answer her questions. Other information: offer leaflets, British Epilepsy Society (www.epilepsy. org.uk), contact numbers and an appointment with epilepsy specialist nurse. Conclude the interview.
Huntington’s chorea A 26-year-old son of your patient has requested to see you, to discuss his mother’s diagnosis. She has developed a dementing illness and chorea in her late forties. Her father committed suicide at the age of 60. A diagnosis of Huntington’s chorea has been made on genetic testing. She currently lives in her own home but is not coping. She has also asked her son to help her die. Discuss the relevant issues with her son. He is ‘trying for a family’.
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 119
Points to discuss
r Ascertain that his mother has consented to this discussion to avoid the
r
r
r r
r r r
r r
confidentiality pitfall, and a rather short interview! Remember if the mother is your patient and the son is not, you only have a duty of care to the mother. If she does not want you to discuss the diagnosis with her son, then to do so would breach confidentiality. Explain Huntington’s chorea and its inheritance to the son (see ‘Information delivery’ and ‘Breaking bad news’ sections). Emphasize that there is no cure and management is supportive. How the diagnosis relates to him and his family. Anticipation, i.e. if he is affected the onset may be at an earlier age. Genetic screening and family planning. Prenatal screening. This would involve abortion – briefly explore this with the patient. Life insurance and employment implications. How the diagnosis relates to his mother. Social aspects: community care or nursing home placement plans. Legal aspects: advanced directives, power of attorney and ward of court may be discussed (see ‘Consent and competency’ section). Assisted suicide is illegal (see ‘End of life decisions’ section). Recap and formulate an agreed plan. Check understanding and answer questions. Other information: offer leaflets, Huntington’s society contact numbers and an appointment with a geneticist. An appointment with a social worker would be useful to organize residential care for his mother. Arrange follow-up ideally with all the family as it affects all of them. Conclude the interview.
Paracetamol overdose A patient arrives in the emergency medical unit having taken 50 paracetamol tablets 4 hours ago. She says she wants to die and does not want to be treated although she would like painkillers for her abdominal pain. Negotiate a treatment plan with this patient.
Points to discuss
r Be clear on the amount of paracetamol taken and the time of ingestion as
this will influence the management, i.e. calculating the treatment level of paracetamol. r Alcoholism or anti-epileptic medication lowers the treatment line. r Assess the suicidal intent, e.g. letter. r Previous psychiatric history.
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r Negotiate an agreed treatment plan if possible. r Organize a referral to the deliberate self-harm team. r Recap and check understanding. r Conclude the interview.
Treatment debate
r Competency: r Does she understand that this overdose is life-threatening and what the
treatment involves?
r Is the paracetamol overdose affecting her judgment? r Is a psychiatric illness affecting her judgment, e.g. delusional?
r If deemed incompetent then you must act in her best interests and treat
her against her will under common law.
r If competent she has a right to refuse treatment.
If you do not treat and the patient dies, you may have to defend this decision in court. If you treat her in the face of her wishes, you could be charged with battery. Most courts will not find physicians that act in the patient’s best interests guilty. r Implied consent: May be invoked to defend treatment of a patient that arrives in hospital having taken an overdose but they may have been taken there against their will, or they may have attended hospital to palliate their symptoms. r Advanced directives: Notes stating they do not wish to be treated may be ignored, because the attending physician often cannot be sure of the circumstances in which it was written, e.g. under duress, or that the patient has not changed her mind. r The Mental Health Act cannot be invoked to treat overdose patients, even if they have depression. r Attempted suicide is no longer illegal in the UK. Assisting someone to commit suicide is illegal. If in doubt it is prudent to treat overdose patients under common law, acting in their best interests. It may be advisable to seek legal advice.
Brain stem death and organ donation You are working in intensive care and you have recently admitted a 30-year-old man who was hit by a car. He has sustained a severe head injury and his second assessment of brain stem tests show he is brain stem dead. You have found an organ donor card in his wallet. Please discuss the diagnosis with his mother and father and broach the subject of organ donation with them.
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 121
Points to discuss Brain stem death
r Explain that he has had a severe brain injury and that he is brain dead (see
‘Breaking bad news’ section).
r Inform them about brain death. r ‘He has died and only the ventilator is keeping his other organs
working’.
r Pause for reflection and questions.
Organ donation
r Broach in a sensitive way: ‘I know this is a very difficult time for you both
but did you know that your son carried a donor card?’
r Points that can be addressed may include: r The need for an operation to ‘harvest’ the organs. r HIV testing prior to donation. r Not all the organs taken may be used.
r Time delays involved prior to the certification of death and the release
of the body.
r Avoid information overload and be guided by the relative’s questions and
the time available.
r Offer to put them in touch with the transplant coordinator for the
region. They will be able to counsel them further.
r Remind them that a decision has to be made swiftly but avoid harassing
the relatives unduly (offer to come back when they have had a chance to think about it). Being too involved in the transplantation program may be ethically wrong for an ITU physician, due to potentially conflicting interests. A donor card is sufficient legal authority to proceed (advanced directive although the signature is not witnessed). However, it is good practice to assess the relatives’ wishes and few centres would proceed if the relatives did not assent to organ donation. r Recap and formulate a plan. r Check understanding at each stage and answer their questions. r Offer other information: leaflet on transplantation. r Conclude the interview.
Brain stem death and organ donation As in this case, discussion with a coroner must occur prior to organ donation if it is a coroner’s case. Permission may be withheld if a death is due to a criminal action.
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Human Tissue Act (1961) and Human Organ Transplant Act (1989) Statute law defining codes of practice on organ retrieval, consent and diagnostic tests of brain death. To establish brain stem death two consultants assess independently that: r The cause of death is known and all potentially treatable causes for the patient’s state have been excluded, e.g. hypothermia, biochemical derangement and drugs, i.e. the unconscious state is irreversible and permanent. r The brain stem reflexes, e.g. pupil, corneal, motor cranial nerve responses, vestibulo-ocular, gag and cough reflexes are absent and there is no spontaneous respiratory drive at a PaCO2 > 50 mm Hg. All organs are usually harvested with minimum warm ischaemic time, i.e. with a beating heart up to the moment of harvesting (except corneas); hence, these difficult discussions need to be addressed early. r Contraindications: infections, e.g. HIV and prion disease; metastatic tumours; severe atherosclerosis. r Be aware of the introduction of ‘non-heart beating organ donation’. For further information see GMC guidelines at www.gmc-uk.org.
Non-compliant diabetic An 18-year-old female insulin-dependent diabetic has been admitted with yet another ketoacidotic episode. She has family problems. You notice she is very thin and has lanugo hair on her face. Please counsel her regarding her poor diabetic control and weight loss.
Points to discuss
r Diabetic education: r Review insulin regimen, injection sites and compliance (may be non-
compliant due to weight gain or family problems).
r Educate about the importance of tight glycaemic control and the dangers
of diabetic ketoacidosis.
r Ask about other cardiovascular risk factors, e.g. smoking.
r Dieting and anorexia nervosa: r Emphasize the importance of a balanced diet and diabetic control. r Explore her dietary intake. r Ask her about her weight, body image and self-esteem. r Assess for depression (associated with anorexia).
Ethics, Law and Communication Skills 123 r Family problems: r Explore these and counsel. Patients suffering from anorexia often have
r r r r
problems at home. Family therapy can be useful in treating anorexia nervosa. Recap and formulate a plan. Check understanding and answer questions. Offer other information: leaflets and Anorexia Nervosa Society. Conclude the interview.
Legal issues
r Competency: due to the effects of malnutrition on cognition, an anorexic
patient may not be competent to refuse treatment.
r Anorexia nervosa can be treated under the Mental Health Act (1983) as
an outpatient or in severe cases on a specialist unit.
r Food is deemed a treatment for a mental illness and can be given against
the patient’s will under the Mental Health Act.
Sample questions Information delivery
r This 60-year-old man is about to leave hospital, 7 days after an uncompli-
r
r
r
r
cated MI. He has some concerns regarding his return to normal life. What advice would you give him regarding his condition? A 23-year-old newly-diagnosed asthmatic has been recently discharged from hospital and arrives in your outpatient clinic for a review of his illness. He works as a veterinary nurse and smokes 15 cigarettes per day. Educate him about his illness, arrange further tests and instigate a treatment plan. A 32-year-old woman has been recently diagnosed with multiple sclerosis following a second episode of optic neuritis. Discuss her diagnosis, prognosis and likely treatment options. A 29-year-old man with a 14-year history of ulcerative colitis treated with steroids and ciclosporin has come to your follow-up clinic. He is concerned with some of the side effects he has been having on his medication. Address this and counsel him in the further management of his condition. A 50-year-old heavy smoker presents with his fifth exacerbation of COPD this year. He tells you he does not take his inhalers because he thinks they make him worse. His blood gas on air reads a PaO2 of 6.8. Discuss treatment options with him.
Communicating medico-legal and ethical principles
r A patient with metastatic breast carcinoma attends your clinic. She has
read on the Internet that there is a new treatment that might be helpful.
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r
r
r
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Ethics, Law and Communication Skills
Unfortunately, your trust has decided not to fund this treatment at present. Counsel her on these matters. A patient’s relatives arrive to be told that their father was unfortunately ‘dead-on-arrival’ to hospital. It is likely he suffered a large myocardial infarction. Break this bad news to them and guide them with regard to the need for a coroner’s post-mortem. For religious reasons they would like the body released today. A 90-year-old woman who has recently had a debilitating stroke is classified as ‘do not attempt resuscitation’. Her daughter has found out that this decision has been made without her consent and demands that her mother be for resuscitation. Discuss the management of this patient with the daughter. A patient with motor neurone disease who is now wheelchair-bound has come to your clinic. She believes she is a burden to her family and wants your advice regarding the best way to end her own life. Please counsel her. A 24-year-old doctor has come to your clinic. She has recently been on elective to Africa where she sustained a needle stick injury. Initial tests show she is hepatitis C positive. She is reluctant to stop working. Please counsel her.
Station 5 Brief Clinical Consultations
Introduction The format of Station 5 changed in 2009 to include brief clinical consultations. The candidate will be assessed on their ability to extract a focused history from a patient and perform a targeted examination that clearly demonstrates the salient features of a case. Each will take 10 minutes including time for discussion. This is aimed to reflect actual daily clinical practice in a busy medical admission unit (MAU) or out-patient department. Geriatric medicine and acute medicine cases will now be assessed. To prepare for this new station, candidates are encouraged to spend a period of time in a busy MAU and/or out-patient department to hone their clinical skills. Here we present 10 clinical histories/examinations outlined in the clinical referral, including the key questions or clinical signs pertinent to the diagnosis and the common differential diagnoses. There follows a short discussion. Be prepared to justify your approach to the examiners – we have tried to do so!
Chest pain This 54-year-old male smoker has chest pain . . . Diagnosis: myocardial ischaemia Differential diagnosis: pleuritic (PE), musculoskeletal, oeosophageal reflux/spasm
History Symptoms
r Character: dull ache, band-like and tightness r Position/radiation: substernal into arm/jaw
Cases for PACES, 2nd edition. By S. Hoole, A. Fry, D. Hodson & R. Davies. Published 2010 by Blackwell Publishing.
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Brief Clinical Consultations
r Exacerbating and relieving factors: r ↑ heavy meals, cold, exertion and emotional stress r ↓ rest and/or sublingual GTN (although may relieve oesophageal spasm
as well)
r Associated symptoms: nausea, sweating and breathlessness
Risk factors
r Smoking, diabetes, family history, cholesterol, ↑BP, age and ethnic origin
(South Asian)
Differential diagnosis
r Productive cough (pleuritic), heavy lifting (musculoskeletal), history of pep-
tic ulcers/acid brash especially when supine (oesophageal)
Other
r Profession: LGV and PCV licence holders should notify the DVLA and stop
driving
r Contraindications to antiplatelet agents/anticoagulants/thrombolysis r PVD – femoral access for angiography r Varicose veins – surgical conduits for grafting
Examination Diagnosis
r Unilateral crackles, bronchial breathing, rub – pleurisy r Focal tenderness and swelling over costochondral joints – Tietze’s syn-
drome
r Epigastric tenderness – peptic ulcer
Cause
r Tar-stained fingers (smoking), xanthelasma (cholesterol), anaemia, hyper-
thyroidism, weight and height (BMI)
Complications
r Cardiogenic shock: pulse and BP r Aortic dissection: peripheral pulses r VSD/MR: pan-systolic murmur r Heart failure: bibasal crackles
Other
r Contraindications to exercise stress testing: r Severe aortic stenosis and uncontrolled hypertension r Femoral pulse palpable for angiography
Brief Clinical Consultations 127
Discussion Initial investigations
r Acute: 12-lead ECG and CXR, troponin, FBC, creatinine (eGFR), fasting
lipid profile and glucose
Emergency treatment
r Antithrombotic/antiplatelet: aspirin, clopidogrel, LMWH-/UFH; GpIIb/IIIa in-
hibitor if high risk (TIMI risk score ≥ 4)
r Antianginal: GTN and beta-blocker r Risk modifiers: statin and ACE inhibitors r Coronary angiography (if troponin positive): r Angioplasty and stent r Surgery: CABG
r Further investigations (if troponin negative): r Functional tests to confirm ischaemia: exercise stress test, MIBI scan and
stress echo
TIMI risk score r Age > 65 r > 3 risk factors r Known CAD r Taking aspirin on admission r Severe angina (refractory to medication) r Troponin elevation r ST depression > 1 mm
Point 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Headache This university student has a headache and skin rash . . . Diagnosis: bacterial meningitis Differential diagnosis: subarachnoid haemorrhage and migraine
History Symptoms
r Meningitis: r Meningism: neck stiffness, headache and photophobia r Nausea and vomiting
r Focal neurological deficit, constitutional symptoms of infection, rash
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Brief Clinical Consultations
Risk factors
r Meningitis: immunosuppressed, close meningitis contact and foreign travel r Subarachnoid haemorrhage: hypertension r Migraine: triggers, e.g. stress, tiredness, chocolate and red wine
Differential diagnosis
r Subarachnoid haemorrhage: sudden onset, severe ‘thunderclap’ head-
ache, may be preceded by ‘warning’ sentinel headaches
r Migraine: The mnemonic POUNDing headache (Pulsating, duration of
4–72 hOurs, Unilateral, Nausea, Disabling). May have aura, e.g. scintillating scotoma or focal neurological deficits in 30%
Other
r Allergies to penicillin
Examination Diagnosis
r Neck stiffness r Photophobia on fundoscopy r Kernig’s sign: hip flexion and knee: flexion→extension is painful and re-
sisted (avoid causing pain in the exam!)
r Fever
Cause
r Meningococcal meningitis: petechial rash indicates associated septicaemia
Complications
r Septic shock: pulse and BP r Cerebral abscess:
r Localizing signs: upper limb: pronator drift; lower limb: extensor plantar;
cranial nerve palsy
r Cerebral oedema/increasing intracranial pressure: r Reduced GCS, unilateral dilated pupil (third nerve palsy) and papil-
loedema
Discussion Investigation
r Blood culture r Lumbar puncture: r Will need head CT to exclude raised intracranial pressure if localizing
signs or altered conscious state
Brief Clinical Consultations 129 r Send CSF sample for MC + S, glucose (with blood glucose) and protein: r Bacterial: low glucose, high protein, neutrophils and gram + cocci r Viral: normal glucose and protein, mononuclear cells
r Differentiate bloody tap from subarachnoid haemorrhage by assessing
xanthochromia (bilirubin from degraded RBCs turn CSF yellow)
Treatment
r Do not delay antibiotics: r Penicillin: high dose, intravenous immediately if diagnosis is suspected r Meningitis is a notifiable disease: r Treat close contacts
Swollen calf This obese woman has a swollen leg . . . Diagnosis: deep vein thrombosis Differential diagnosis: ruptured Baker’s cyst and cellulitis
History Symptoms
r Unilateral swollen and tender calf
Risk factors
r Medical conditions, e.g. active cancer or heart failure (prothrombotic
states)
r Immobility, e.g. flight, surgery (especially orthopaedic), stroke etc. r Previous personal or family history of DVT or PE r Oral contraceptive use in women
Differential diagnosis
r Previous knee trauma or joint problem
Complications
r Pleuritic chest pain or breathlessness consistent with PE
Other
r Contraindications to warfarin
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Brief Clinical Consultations
Examination Diagnosis
r Calf swelling (10 cm below the tibial tuberosity) >3 cm difference r Superficial venous engorgement and pitting oedema
Cause
r Examine abdomen and pelvis (exclude mass compressing veins)
Complications
r Thrombophlebitis: local tenderness and erythema r Pulmonary embolus: pleural rub and right heart failure
Other
r Peripheral pulses for compression stockings
Discussion Investigations
r D-dimer (sensitive but not specific test – can rule out diagnosis if negative
in low/intermediate risk cases)
r Doppler/compression ultrasound if D-dimer elevated
Treatment
r Anticoagulation 3 months (6 weeks if below knee and surgically provoked,
lifelong if persistent high risk)
r Compression stockings reduce post-phlebitic syndrome
Altered conscious state This male with diabetes mellitus has been found in a drowsy and confused state . . . Diagnosis: diabetic ketoacidosis Differential diagnosis: meningitis and alcohol/drug intoxication
History Symptoms
r Polyuria and polydipsia r Preceding acute illness/fever r Recent high BMs/increased insulin requirement r Associated symptoms: nausea, sweating and breathlessness
Brief Clinical Consultations 131
Risk factors
r Poor compliance with insulin – young, change in social circumstances
Differential diagnosis
r Smelling of alcohol (take care not ketotic), history of drug abuse r Alcohol and drug history
Examination Diagnosis
r Hyperventilation or Kussmaul’s breathing – acidosis r Medic alert bracelet/finger prick marks – diabetes
Precipitating factors
r 4 I’s – Insulin forgotten, Infection, Infarction and Injury
Complications
r Haemodynamic compromise: pulse and BP r Aspiration: r Gastroparesis due to diabetic autonomic neuropathy r Severe acidosis (metabolic)
Discussion Investigations
r Finger-prick BM r Urine dipstick for ketones r ABG:
r Metabolic acidosis with respiratory compensation (↓PaCO ) 2 r Montitor acidosis with venous bicarbonate
r FBC, U&E, LFT and glucose r ECG (silent MI) r Blood and urine cultures (sepsis) r CXR (pneumonia or aspiration)
Treatment
r ABC: r May require ITU support r Fluid resuscitation: crystalloid: r Consider K+ supplementation r IV Insulin sliding scale until BM <15 then continue with 5% dextrose until
urine is ketone free
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Brief Clinical Consultations
r Consider: r NG tube to prevent aspiration r S/C heparin for VTE prophylaxis r Antibiotic cover as necessary
Agitation and tremor This young woman with a goitre is agitated . . . Diagnosis: thyrotoxic crisis Differential diagnosis: sepsis and alcohol/drug abuse
History Thyroid storm
r Known thyroid disease r Weight loss r Sweating r Diarrhoea r Anxiety/irritability r Triggers:
r Infection, trauma and childbirth r Poor compliance with anti-thyroid medication
Differential diagnosis
r Drug and alcohol history
Examination Evidence of thyroid disease r Goitre r Thyroid eye disease
Evidence of hyperthyroidism
r Fine tremor/sweaty palms r High temperature r Agitated and confused; maybe frankly psychotic r Brisk reflexes
Complications
r Cardiac arrhythmias – particularly AF
Brief Clinical Consultations 133
Discussion Initial treatment
r A, B, C’s – cardiopulmonary/haemodynamic resuscitation r Propylthiouracil more effective than carbimazole in the acute setting r Propranolol r Consider: r Hydrocortisone r Active cooling
Anaemia This elderly woman has a microcytic anaemia . . . Diagnosis: iron deficiency anaemia (dietary) Differential diagnosis: chronic GI bleeding; coeliac; inherited haemoglobinopathy e.g. -thalassaemia trait
History Symptoms
r Tiredness, lethargy and breathlessness
Differential diagnosis
r GI blood loss: r Stools: altered bowel habit r Weight loss r Indigestion history and use of NSAIDs r Family history of GI malignancy, PMH: inflammatory bowel disease and
polyps
r Travel history; hookworm
r Menstrual history in women r Malabsorption: r Diarrhoea, weight loss, abdominal pain/bloating, steatorrhoea, wheat
intolerance: r Coeliac r Surgery: small bowel resection r Diet: vegan, ‘tea and toast’ (elderly) r Foreign travel: tropical sprue
Other
r Ethnic origin (Mediterranean – thalassaemia, Afro-Caribbean – sickle) r Previous blood transfusions/transfusion reactions
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Brief Clinical Consultations
Examination r Pale sclerae r Cause:
r Nails: koilonychia (iron deficiency) r Mouth: glossitis, angular stomatitis (iron and vitamin B deficiency) r Sentinel cervical lymph node: r Abdominal mass and hepatomegaly (GI malignancy) r Epigastric tenderness
r Offer to do a rectal examination
Discussion Dietary deficiency causing anaemia is a diagnosis of exclusion
Investigations
r Full blood count: microcytic anaemia and target cells: r Iron↓, ferritin↓, total iron binding capacity↑ (folate and vitamin B12) r Haemoglobin electrophoresis: r Thalassaemia and Hb E r Faecal occult blood r Endoscopy: gastroscopy and colonoscopy r CT abdomen/barium studies
Treatment
r Treat the cause r Dietary advice and iron supplementation r Blood transfusion indicated only in extremis
Haemoptysis This male smoker has had a blood stained cough . . . Diagnosis: bronchial CA Differential diagnosis: pulmonary embolus, pneumonia, pulmonary oedema
History Symptoms
r Cough: chronicity, mucous colour and blood r Breathlessness
Brief Clinical Consultations 135 r Chest pain: pleuritic r General: weight loss (cachexia), bone pain (metastasis) and tiredness
(anaemia)
Risk factors
r Smoking history: r Calculate number of pack years (20 years smoking 40 cigarettes/day =
40 pack years)
r Occupation: industrial chemicals, coal dust etc.
Differential diagnosis
r Risk factors for DVT/PE r PMH of IHD and CCF r Constitutional symptoms: fever and productive cough
Other
r Rare manifestations of CA bronchus, e.g. paraneoplastic neuropathy r Abdominal pain: metastasis or hypercalcaemia r Headache: brain metastasis
Examination
r Tattoos from previous radiotherapy r Cachexia
r Nail clubbing and tar-stained fingers (smoking) r Cervical lymphadenopathy r Tracheal deviation: lobar collapse
r Dull percussion note: consolidation and effusion r Reduced air entry/bronchial breathing r Craggy hepatomegaly: liver metastasis
r Spinal tenderness on percussion with heal of hand: bone metastasis
Discussion Investigation
r CXR: mass, pleural effusion and bone erosion r CT chest/staging CT r Bronchoscopy/CT-guided biopsy or lymph biopsy/excision – tissue diagnosis
Treatment
r Surgical: lobectomy r Medical:
r Chemotherapy: cisplatin/gemcitabine
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Brief Clinical Consultations
r Radiotherapy r Palliative: r Bronchial stents
r Opiate and antiemetic r MacMillan nurses, hospice etc.
Immobility in the elderly Please can you assess this elderly, frail woman who has problems with her mobility . . . Diagnosis: UTI Differential diagnosis: drug side effects, pneumonia and stroke
History Pre-morbid social history
r Independence → dependence (identify carer role/frequency) r Mobility issues: Parkinsonism, stroke etc.: r Unaided → stick → frame r Falls recently r Housing (important for discharge planning)
Precipitant
r Infection: r Urinary symptoms: dysuria, frequency and incontinence r Pneumonia: cough and breathlessness
r Drug changes recently: benzodiazepines (sleepiness), diuretics and BP
medication (postural hypotension), antipsychotic (extrapyramidal side effects), steroids (proximal myopathy) r Systemic enquiry: sites of pain
Other
r Advanced directives or living wills: r DNAR and other treatments
Examination
r A lot of information can be obtained by asking the patient to stand and
walk unaided (ensure patient safety): r Proximal lower limb motor strength: rising from a chair r Gait: wide based/ataxic (cerebellar), hemiplegic (stroke) and shuffling (Parkinson’s syndrome)
Brief Clinical Consultations 137 r Romberg’s sign: r Positive if patient stumbles forward on closing his or her eyes (protect
the patient from falling when assessing this)
r Balance requires sensory input from at least two sources: r Vision r Vestibular
r Proprioception r If bed bound assess lower limbs: r Inspection: wasting
r Tone: ankle clonus r Power: ‘lift foot off the bed’ r Coordination: ‘run your heel up and down the shin of your other leg’ r Reflexes: knee jerk and plantar jerks
r Postural dizziness: r Assess lying and standing BP: r >20 mm Hg drop in systolic BP is significant
Discussion Investigations
r Sepsis screen: urine, blood cultures and CXR r If fall and altered conscious state/confusion consider CT head: r Subdural haematoma: atrophic brain
Management
r Stop unnecessary poly-pharmacy and rationalize drug treatments r Antibiotics r MDT case conference: nurse, social worker, OT and physiotherapy: r Stick/frame r Home improvements or residential care r Resuscitation decision
Persistent fever Please assess this young man with fever and malaise for the last 3 months . . . Diagnosis: infection (endocarditis) Differential diagnosis: drug induced, malignancy (lymphoma) and inflammatory disease
History
r Temporal pattern: r Fever at night – malaria
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Brief Clinical Consultations
r Contacts: r TB r SH:
r Foreign travel: r Malarial regions r Sexual:
r HIV risk r Drug abuse: r Endocarditis and HIV risk r Psychiatric history/stress (factitious): r Medical professional
r DH: r After change in medication (drug induced) r Malignant hyperpyrexia syndrome: r Antipsychotic medication
r Associated with muscle pain r Allergies to antibiotic and antibiotic history
r Weight loss (malignancy): r Painless lymphadenopathy (lymphoma and HIV) r Smoker, breathlessness and chest pain (lung) r Altered bowel habit (colon)
Examination
r Look for needle tracks r Lymphadenopathy r CVS:
r Murmur: endocarditis: r Splinter haemorrhages (fingers), Roth spots (fundoscopy)
r Abdominal examination: r Craggy liver or mass (malignancy) r Splenomegaly (infection, inflammatory and malignancy) r Dip the urine: haematuria (endocarditis) r Joints, skin and eyes: r Inflammatory conditions
Discussion Investigation
r Septic screen: r Blood including repeated thick and thin film (parasitaemia) r Urine, bone marrow aspirate and CSF r HIV testing
Brief Clinical Consultations 139 r CRP, ESR, autoantibodies, immunoglobulins and complement levels r CK (malignant hyperthermia) r TOE: vegetations, aortic root abscess and myxoma
Management
r Avoid early antibiotics until identification of the cause r Consider stopping all drugs and reinstituting them one-by-one
r Admit the patient and monitor them closely: r Fever that resolves during close observation may be factitious!
Dyspnoea Please assess this young woman with sudden onset breathlessness . . . Diagnosis: asthma Differential diagnosis: PE and pneumothorax
History Asthma
r Sudden onset wheeze, SOB and cough (non-productive) r Triggers r Allergy: r Pets, food, dust and pollen r Atopic: allergic rhinitis and eczema r Anaphylaxis r Allergy testing clinic
r Upper respiratory tract infection: r Sore throat, fever etc.
r Severity: r ITU admissions (brittle asthma): r Intubation risk r DH: r Compliance with preventor medication r Inhaler technique r EpiPen
Differential diagnosis
r Pneumothorax: r Spontaneous in asthmatics r Permanent pacemaker or central line r Symptoms and risk factors for DVT causing PE
Brief Clinical Consultations
140
Examination Severity (does this patient need ITU?)
r Conscious level r Respiratory rate: r Count 1–10: how far do they get on one breath? r Pulse and blood pressure
Chest
r Expansion and percussion note increased bilaterally due to lung hyper-
expansion: r Unilateral (pneumothorax) r Polyphonic wheeze: r Silent chest is a sign of severity
Upper airway
r Stridor, angioedema and tongue swelling (anaphylaxis)
Skin
r Urticaria (anaphylaxis)
Differential diagnosis
r Unilateral reduced air entry, reduced breath sounds and increased reso-
nance on percussion (pneumothorax): r Tracheal and/or apex beat deviation away (tension pneumothorax) r Calf swelling (DVT→PE)
Discussion Investigations
r Arterial blood gas: r Hypoxaemia
r Normal or rising PaCO suggests a tiring patient requiring respiratory 2
support (should have a respiratory alkalosis)
r CXR in exhalation (pneumothorax)
Treatment
r Asthma: r Bronchodilators and steroids (not routine antibiotics as often viral) r Asthma specialist nurse: r Inhaler technique r Allergy clinic r Pneumothorax: r Needle aspiration or chest drain r May need talc or surgical pleurodesis if it is recurrent
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine Psoriasis Examine this man’s skin and discuss the therapeutic options. Clinical signs Chronic plaque (classical) type r Multiple, well-demarcated plaques with a ‘salmon-pink’, scaly surface r Predilection for extensor surfaces r Nail involvement: r Pitting r Onycholysis r Hyperkeratosis r Discoloration r Also check behind ears, scalp and umbilicus
Extra points
r Koebner phenomenon: plaques at sites of trauma r Joint involvement r Skin staining from treatment (see below) r Other types of psoriasis:
r Guttate: multiple ‘drop-like’ lesions on trunk and limbs r Flexural (not scaly) r Palmo-plantar pustular psoriasis
Discussion Definition Epidermal hyperproliferation and accumulation of inflammatory cells.
Treatment Avoid precipitants (stress, alcohol, cigarettes and -blockers) Topical (in- or outpatient) r Emollients r Controls scale r Calcipotriol r Vitamin D analogue r Safe, odourless and does not stain
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Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
r Coal tar r Smelly, inconvenient (long contact time) and occasionally irritant r Stains brown r Dithranol r Stains purple and burns normal skin r Usually effective r Hydrocortisone
Phototherapy
r UVB r Psoralen + UVA (PUVA)
Systemic
r Cytotoxics r Methotrexate and ciclosporin r Highly effective, but have side effects r Anti-TNF
r Adalimumab (humira) – monoclonal antibody to TNF-␣ r Retinoids r Acitretin r Safe, but teratogenic
Complications
r Psoriatic arthropathy (10%)
Five forms of arthropathy: r DIP involvement (similar to OA) r Large joint mono/oligoarthritis r Seronegative (similar to RA) r Sacroilitis (similar to ankylosing spondylitis) r Arthritis mutilans r Erythroderma
Guttate psoriasis
r Associated with streptococcal throat infection r Resolves in 3 months
Causes of nail pitting r Psoriasis r Lichen planus r Alopecia areata
r Fungal infections
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 143
Koebner phenomenon seen with r Psoriasis r Lichen planus r Viral warts r Vitiligo r Sarcoid
144
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
Eczema Examine this woman’s skin and discuss your treatment options. Clinical signs Chronic: r Erythematous and lichenified patches of skin r Predominantly flexor aspects of joints r Fissures (painful), especially hands and feet r Excoriations r Secondary bacterial infection
Extra points Differential diagnosis
r Exogenous r Primary irritant dermatitis: may just affect hands r Endogenous r Atopic (see above) r Discoid: well-demarcated patches on the trunk and limbs r Pompholyx: bullae on palms and soles r Seborrhoeic dermatitis
Discussion Investigations
r History of atopy, e.g. asthma, hay fever and allergy r Patch testing
Treatment
r Avoid precipitants r Emollients
r Topical: r Steroids r Tacrolimus (protopic) – small increased risk of Bowen’s disease r Anti-histamines for pruritis r Antibiotics for secondary infection r UV light therapy r Systemic therapy (prednisolone) in severe cases
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 145
Leg ulcers Examine this man’s legs. Clinical signs Venous
r Painless r Gaiter area of lower leg r Stigmata of venous hypertension:
r Varicose veins or scars from vein stripping r Oedema r Lipodermatosclerosis r Varicose eczema r Atrophie blanche
Arterial
r Painful r Distal extremities and pressure points r Trophic changes: hairless and paper thin shiny skin r Cold with poor capillary refill r Absent distal pulses
Neuropathic
r Painless r Pressure areas, e.g. under the metatarsal heads r Peripheral neuropathy
Extra points Cause
r Venous: look for an abdominal/pelvic mass r Arterial: check for atrial fibrillation or cardiac murmur r Neuropathic: look for diabetic signs, Charcot’s joint
Complications
r Infection: temperature, pus and cellulites r Malignant change: Marjolin’s ulcer (squamous cell carcinoma)
Discussion Other causes
r Vasculitic, e.g. rheumatoid arthritis r Neoplastic, e.g. squamous cell carcinoma
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Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
r Infectious, e.g. syphilis r Haematological, e.g. sickle-cell anaemia r Tropical, e.g. cutaneous leishmaniasis
Investigations Venous
r Doppler ultrasound of venous system
Arterial
r Ankle–brachial pressure index (0.8–1.2 is normal, <0.8 implies arterial
insufficiency)
r Arteriography
Note that many patients have contact dermatitis to previous topical treatments and dressings.
Treatment Venous
r Remove exudate and slough with regular cleaning r Treat surrounding venous eczema r Four-layer compression bandaging r Vein surgery
Arterial
r Angioplasty r Vascular reconstruction r Amputation
Causes of neuropathic ulcers r Diabetes mellitus r Tabes dorsalis r Syringomyelia
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 147
Diabetes and the skin This 32-year-old female has type 1 diabetes mellitus. Please examine her skin. Clinical signs Hands
r Cheiroarthropathy r Tight waxy skin that limits finger extension (‘Prayer sign’) r Granuloma annulare (10% associated with type 1 diabetes): r Flesh-coloured papules in annular configurations on the dorsum of the
fingers (and feet)
Shins
r Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum: r Well-demarcated plaques with waxy-yellow centre and red–brown edges r Early – may resemble a bruise r Prominent skin blood vessels r Female preponderance (90%) r Diabetic dermopathy: r Red/brown, atrophic lesions
Feet and legs
r Ulcers: arterial or neuropathic (see leg ulcer section) r Eruptive xanthomata:
r Yellow papules on buttocks and knees (also elbows) r Caused by hyperlipidaemia
Injection sites
r Lipoatrophy r Fat hypertrophy
Cutaneous infections
r Cellulitis r Candidiasis (intertrigo)
Extra points
r Vitiligo (associated auto-immune disease) r Other diabetic complications
For example, Charcot joints associated with neuropathic ulcers.
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Discussion Treatment for necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum r Topical steroid and support bandaging r Tight glycaemic control does not help
Xanthomata
r Hypercholesterolaemia: tendon xanthomata, xanthelasma and corneal
arcus
r Hypertriglyceridaemia: eruptive xanthomata and lipaemia retinalis r Other causes of secondary hyperlipidaemia: r Hypothyroidism r Nephrotic syndrome r Alcohol r Cholestasis
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 149
Skin malignancy Examine this woman’s skin/a specific lesion or area of skin. Basal cell carcinoma Clinical signs
r Usually on face/trunk: sun-exposed areas r Pearly nodule with rolled edge r Superficial telangiectasia r Ulceration in advanced lesions
Extra points
r Local invasion and distant metastasis (lymph nodes or hepatomegaly) r Other lesions
Discussion Natural history
r Slowly grow over a few months r Local invasion only, rarely metastasize
Treatment
r Curettage/cryotherapy if superficial r Surgical excision +/− radiotherapy
Squamous cell carcinoma Clinical signs
r Sun-exposed areas (+ lips + mouth) r Actinic keratoses: pre-malignant (red and scaly patches) r Varied appearance r Keratotic nodule r Polypoid mass r Cutaneous ulcer
Extra points
r Local invasion and distant metastasis (lymph nodes or hepatomegaly) r Other lesions
Discussion
r Squamous cell carcinoma in situ (Bowen’s disease)
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Diagnosis
r Biopsy suspicious lesions
Treatment
r Surgery +/− radiotherapy r 5% metastasize
Malignant melanoma Clinical signs
r Patient’s appearance: mention risks r Fair skin with freckles r Light hair r Blue eyes r Appearance of lesion
Asymmetrical Border irregularity. Colour (black—often irregular pigmentation, may be colourless). Diameter >6 mm. Enlarging
Extra points
r Local invasion and distant metastasis (lymph nodes and/or hepatomegaly) r Other lesions
Discussion Diagnosis/treatment
r Excision r Staged on Breslow thickness (maximal depth of tumour invasion into
dermis): r <1.5 mm = 90% 5-year survival r >3.5 mm = 40% 5-year survival Beware the man with a glass eye and ascites: ocular melanoma!
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Tuberous sclerosis Please examine this woman’s skin. What is the diagnosis? Clinical signs
r Facial (perinasal – butterfly distribution) adenoma sebaceum (angiofibro-
mata)
r Periungual fibromas (hands and feet) r Shagreen patch: roughened, leathery skin over the lumbar region r Ash leaf macules: depigmented macules on trunk (fluoresce with
UV/Wood’s light)
Extra points Respiratory
r Cystic lung disease
Abdominal
r Renal enlargement caused by polycystic kidneys (ADPKD and TS = Chr 16)
and/or renal angiomyolipomata
r Transplanted kidney r Dialysis fistulae
Eyes
r Retinal phakomas (dense white patches) in 50%
CNS
r Mental retardation may occur r Seizures
Signs of anti-epileptic treatment, e.g. phenytoin: gum hypertrophy and hirsuitism
Discussion
r Autosomal dominant (TSC1: Chr 9, TSC2: Chr 16), variable penetrance r 80% epileptic
Investigation
r Skull films: ‘railroad track’ calcification r CT/MRI head: tuberous masses in cerebral cortex. Often calcify r Echo and abdominal ultrasound: hamartomas and renal cysts
Previously known as EPILOIA EPIlepsy LOw Intelligence Adenoma sebaceum
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Neurofibromatosis Examine this patient’s skin. Clinical signs
r Cutaneous neurofibromas: two or more r Cafe´ au Lait patches: six or more, >15-mm diameter in adults r Axillary freckling r Lisch nodules: melanocytic hamartomas of the iris
Extra points
r Blood pressure: hypertension (associated with renal artery stenosis and
phaeochromocytoma)
r Examine the chest: fine crackles (honeycomb lung and fibrosis) r Neuropathy with enlarged palpable nerves r Visual acuity: optic glioma/compression
Discussion
r Inheritance is autosomal dominant r Type I (Chr 17) is the classical peripheral form r Type II (Chr 22) is central and presents with bilateral acoustic neuromas
and sensi-neural deafness rather than skin lesions
Associations
r Phaeochromocytoma (2%) r Renal artery stenosis (2%)
Complications
r Epilepsy r Sarcomatous change (5%) r Scoliosis (5%) r Mental retardation (10%)
Causes of enlarged nerves and peripheral neuropathy r Neurofibromatosis r Leprosy r Amyloidosis r Acromegaly r Refsum’s disease
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 153
Other skin problems Examine this patient’s skin. Pseudoxanthoma elasticum Clinical signs
r ‘Plucked chicken skin’ appearance: loose skin folds especially at the neck
and axillae, with yellow pseudoxanthomatous plaques
r Hyperextensible joints
Extra points Eyes
r Blue sclerae r Reduced visual acuity r Retinal angioid streaks (cracks in Bruch’s membrane) and macular degen-
eration
Cardiovascular
r Blood pressure: 50% are hypertensive r Mitral valve prolapse r CVA and/or CCF from atherosclerosis
Gastrointestinal r Gastric bleed
Discussion
r Inheritance: 80% autosomal recessive (ABCC6 gene – Chr 16) r Degenerative elastic fibres in skin, blood vessels and eye r Premature coronary artery disease
Ehlers–Danlos Clinical signs
r Fragile skin: multiple ecchymoses, scarring – ‘fish-mouth’ scars especially
on the knees
r Hyperextensible skin: able to tent up skin when pulled (avoid doing this) r Joint hypermobility and dislocation
Extra points
r Mitral valve prolapse r Abdominal scars: r Aneurysmal rupture and dissection r Bowel perforation and bleeding
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Discussion
r Inheritance: autosomal dominant r Defect in collagen causing increased skin elasticity r No premature coronary artery disease
Osler–Weber–Rendu (hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia) Clinical signs
r Multiple telangiectasia on the face, lips and buccal mucosa
Extra points
r Anaemia: gastrointestinal bleeding r Cyanosis and chest bruit: pulmonary vascular abnormality/shunt
Discussion
r Autosomal dominant r Increased risk gastrointestinal haemorrhage, epistaxis and haemoptysis r Vascular malformations: r Pulmonary shunts r Intracranial aneurysms: subarachnoid haemorrhage
Erythema nodosum Clinical signs
r Tender, red, smooth, shiny nodules commonly found on the shins (although
anywhere with subcutaneous fat)
r Older lesions leave a bruise
Extra points
r Associated fever, joint tenderness and swelling r Signs of a cause: r Red, sore throat (streptococcal infection) r Parotid swelling (sarcoidosis)
Discussion
r Pathology: inflammation of subcutaneous fat (panniculitis) r Associations: r Streptococcal infections r Sarcoidosis r Streptomycin r Also TB, IBD and lymphoma
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 155
Other skin manifestations of sarcoidosis r Nodules and papules: red/brown seen particularly around the face, nose, ears and neck. Demonstrates Koebner’s phenomenon r Lupus pernio: diffuse bluish/brown plaque with central small papules commonly affecting the nose
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Rheumatoid arthritis Examine this woman’s hands. Clinical signs
r Symmetrical and deforming polyarthropathy r Volar subluxation and ulnar deviation at the MCPJs r Subluxation at the wrist r Swan-neck deformity (hyperextension of the PIPJ and flexion of the DIPJ) r Boutonniere’s deformity (flexion of the PIPJ and hyperextension of the DIPJ) ` r ‘Z’ thumbs r Rheumatoid nodules (elbows) r Muscle wasting (disuse atrophy)
Assess disease activity
r Red, swollen, hot, painful hands imply active disease
Assess function
r Power grip: ‘Squeeze my fingers’ r Precision grip: ‘Pick up a coin’ or ‘Do up your buttons’ r Key grip: ‘Pretend to use this key’ r Remember the wheelchair, walking aids and splints
Extra points
r Exclude psoriatic arthropathy (main differential): r Nail changes r Psoriasis: elbows, behind ears, scalp and around the umbilicus r Surgical scars: r Carpal tunnel release (wrist) r Joint replacement (especially thumb) r Tendon transfer (dorsum of hand)
r Steroid side effects r C-spine stabilization scars r Systemic manifestations (see below)
Discussion Systemic manifestations of RA r Pulmonary: r Pleural effusions r Fibrosing alveolitis
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 157 r Obliterative bronchiolitis r Caplan’s nodules
r Eyes: r Dry (secondary Sjogren’s) ¨ r Scleritis r Neurological:
r Carpal tunnel syndrome (commonest) r Atlanto-axial subluxation: quadriplegia r Peripheral neuropathy
r Haematological: r Felty’s syndrome: RA + splenomegaly + neutropaenia r Anaemia (all types!) r Cardiac: r Pericarditis r Renal:
r Nephrotic syndrome (secondary amyloidosis or membraneous glomeru-
lonephritis, e.g. due to penicillamine)
Investigations
r Elevated inflammatory markers r Radiological changes: r Soft tissue swelling r Loss of joint space r Articular erosions r Periarticular osteoporosis
r Positive rheumatoid factor in 80%
Diagnosis – 4/7 of American College of Rheumatology criteria r Morning stiffness r Arthritis in 3+ joint areas r Arthritis of hands r Symmetrical arthritis
r Rheumatoid nodules r Positive rheumatoid factor
r Erosions on joint radiographs
Treatment
r Symptomatic relief: NSAIDs and COX-2 inhibitors r Early introduction of disease-modifying anti-rheumatoid drugs (DMARDs)
to suppress disease activity:
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Methotrexate Hydroxychloroquine Sulphasalazine Corticosteroids Azathioprine Gold complexes Penicillamine
Serious side effects Neutropenia, pulmonary toxicity and hepatitis Retinopathy Rash and bone marrow suppression Osteoporosis Neutropenia Thrombocytopaenia, rash Proteinuria, thrombocytopaenia rash
Monitor CXR, FBC, LFT Visual acuity FBC
FBC FBC FBC and urine
Ongoing disease activity requires step up in therapy including: Anti-TNF therapy: Infliximab/Etanercept/Adalimumab: r Side effects include rash, opportunistic infection (exclude TB: Heaf test and CXR) B cell depletion therapy: Rituximab (anti-CD20 mAb): r Explanation and education r Exercise and physiotherapy r Occupational therapy and social support r Surgery (joint replacement, tendon transfer, etc.)
Prognosis
r 5 years – 1/3 unable to work; 10 years – 1/2 significant disability
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 159
Systemic lupus erythematosus Please examine this woman’s skin and discuss your findings. Clinical signs Face
r Malar ‘butterfly’ rash r Photosensitivity r Discoid rash +/− scarring (discoid lupus) r Oral ulceration r Scarring alopecia r Anaemia
Hands
r Vasculitic lesions (nail-fold infarcts) r Raynaud’s phenomenon r Jaccoud’s arthropathy (mimics rheumatoid arthritis but due to tendon con-
tractures not joint destruction)
Elsewhere
r Livedo reticularis r Purpura
r Peripheral oedema (nephrotic syndrome)
Extra points
r Respiratory: r Pleural effusion r Pleural rub r Fibrosing alveolitis r Neurological: r Focal neurology r Chorea r Ataxia r Eyes: r Dry (Sjogren’s) ¨
r Renal: r Hypertension r Proteinuria and nephrotic syndrome
Discussion Diagnostic investigation
r Serum autoantibodies (ANA and anti-dsDNA)
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Disease activity
r Elevated ESR but normal CRP (raised CRP too indicates infection) r Elevated immunoglobulins r Reduced complement (C ) 4 r U&Es, urine microscopy (glomerulonephritis)
Diagnosis – 4/11 of American College of Rheumatology criteria r Malar rash r Discoid rash r Photosensitivity r Oral ulcers
r Arthritis r Serositis (pleuritis or pericarditis) r Renal involvement (proteinuria or cellular casts) r Neurological disorder (seizures or psychosis) r Haematological disorder (autoimmune haemolytic anaemia or pancy-
topenia)
r Immunological disorders (positive anti-dsDNA or anti-Sm antibodies) r Elevated titre of anti-nuclear antibody (ANA)
Treatment
r Mild disease (cutaneous/joint involvement only): r Topical corticosteroids
r Hydroxychloroquine r Moderate disease (+ other organ involvement): r Prednisolone r Azathioprine r Severe disease (+ severe inflammatory involvement of vital
organs): r Methylprednisolone r Mycophenolate mofetil (lupus nephritis) r Cyclophosphamide r Azathioprine
Cyclophosphamide side effects
r Haematological and Haemorrhagic cystitis r Infertility r Teratogenicity
Prognosis
r Good: 90% survival at 10 years
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 161
Systemic sclerosis Please examine this woman’s skin. Clinical signs Hands
r Sclerodactyly r Calcinosis (may ulcerate) r Raynaud’s phenomenon (Raynaud’s disease is idiopathic!)
Face
r Tight skin r Beaked nose
r Microstomia r Peri-oral furrowing r Telangiectasia r Alopecia
Other skin lesions
r Morphoea: focal/generalized patches of sclerotic skin r En coup de sabre (scar down central forehead) the disease (see below).
Extra points
r Blood pressure: r Hypertension r Respiratory:
r Interstitial fibrosis (fine and bibasal crackles) r Cardiac: r Pulmonary hypertension (RV heave, loud P and TR) 2 r Evidence of failure r Pericarditis (rub) r Raynaud’s (colour change order: white (vasoconstriction) → blue (cyanosis)
→ red (hyperaemia))
Discussion Classification
r Localized: morphea to patch of skin only r Systemic: limited and diffuse
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Limited systemic sclerosis r Distribution limited to below elbows and knees and face r Slow progression (years)
Diffuse systemic sclerosis r Widespread cutaneous and early visceral involvement r Rapid progression (months)
r Includes CREST:
Calcinosis Raynaud’s phenomenon Esophageal dysmotility Sclerodactyly Telangiectasia
Investigations
r Autoantibodies: r Anti-nuclear antibody positive (in 90%) r Anti-centromere antibody = limited (in 80%)
r Scl-70 antibody = diffuse (in 70%) r Hand radiographs: calcinosis r Pulmonary disease: lower lobe fibrosis and aspiration pneumonia: r CXR, high resolution CT scan and pulmonary function tests r Gastrointestinal disease: dysmotility and malabsorption r Contrast scans, FBC and B12/folate r Renal disease: glomerulonephritis r U&E, urinalysis, urine microscopy (casts) and consider renal biopsy r Cardiac disease: myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmias r ECG and ECHO
Treatment Symptomatic treatment only: r Camouflage creams r Raynaud’s therapy: r Gloves, hand-warmers, etc. r Calcium channel blockers r ACE inhibitors r Prostacyclin infusion (severe) r Renal: r ACE inhibitors: prevent hypertensive crisis and reduce the mortality from renal failure r Gastrointestinal: r Proton-pump inhibitor for oesophageal reflux
Prognosis Mean 5-year survival of diffuse systemic sclerosis is 50%. Most deaths are due to respiratory failure.
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 163
Ankylosing spondylitis Examine this patient’s posture and then proceed to demonstrate any other features of this disease. Clinical signs
r Question mark posture caused by fixed kyphoscoliosis and loss of lumbar
lordosis with extension of cervical spine
r Reduced range of movement throughout entire spine r Protuberant abdomen due to diaphragmatic breathing r Reduced chest expansion (<5 cm increase in girth) r Increased occiput–wall distance (>5 cm)
r Schober’s ¨ test: Two points marked 15 cm apart on the dorsal spine expand
by less than 5 cm on maximum forward flexion
Extra points Complications you should look for: r Anterior uveitis (commonest 30%) r Apical lung fibrosis r Aortic regurgitation (4%) r Atrio-ventricular nodal heart block (10%) r Arthritis Remember psoriatic arthropathy may present in a very similar way so look for plaques.
Discussion Genetics
r 90% association with HLA B27
Treatment
r Physiotherapy r Analgesia r Anti-TNF
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Marfan’s syndrome Examine this man’s hands and then proceed to examine anything else that will help you make a diagnosis. Clinical signs General (spot diagnosis)
r Tall with long extremities (arm span > height)
Hands
r Arachnodactyly: can encircle their wrist with thumb and little finger r Hyperextensible joints: thumb able to touch ipsilateral wrist and adduct
over the palm with its tip visible at the ulnar boarder
Face
r High arched palate with crowded teeth r Iridodonesis (with upward lens dislocation)
Chest
r Pectus carinatum (‘pigeon’) or excavatum r Scoliosis r Scars from cardiac surgery
Extra points Cardiac
r Aortic incompetence: collapsing pulse r Mitral valve prolapse r Coarctation
Chest
r Pneumothorax: scars from chest drains
Abdominal
r Inguinal herniae and scars
CNS
r Normal IQ
Discussion Genetics
r Autosomal dominant and Chr 15 r Defect in fibrillin protein (connective tissue)
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 165
Management
r Surveillance: monitoring of aortic root size with annual transthoracic
echo
r Treatment: -blockers and angiotensin receptor blocker to slow aortic
root dilatation and pre-emptive aortic root surgery to prevent dissection and aortic rupture r Screen family members
Differential diagnosis
r Homocystinuria r Mental retardation and downward lens dislocation
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Paget’s disease Examine this man and discuss his diagnosis. Clinical signs
r Bony enlargement: skull and long bones (sabre tibia) r Deafness (conductive): hearing-aid r Pathological fractures: scars
Extra points
r Cardiac failure (high output): elevated JVP, ankle oedema and dyspnoea r Entrapment neuropathies: carpal tunnel syndrome r Optic atrophy and angioid streaks
Discussion Symptoms
r Usually asymptomatic r Bone pain and tenderness (2%)
Investigations
r Grossly elevated alkaline phosphatase, normal calcium and phosphate r Radiology: r ‘Moth-eaten’ appearance on plain films: osteoporosis circumscripta r Bone scans (↑ uptake).
Treatment
r Symptomatic: analgesia and hearing-aid r Bisphosphonates
Other complications
r Osteogenic sarcoma (1%) r Basilar invagination (cord compression) r Kidney stones
Causes of sabre tibia r Paget’s r Osteomalacia r Syphilis
Causes of angioid streaks r Paget’s r Pseudoxanthoma elasticum r Ehlers–Danlos
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Other joint problems Examine this man’s hands. Tophaceous gout Clinical signs
r Asymmetrical swelling of the small joints of the hands and feet (commonly
first MTPJ)
r Gouty tophi (chalky white deposits) seen around the joints, ear and tendons r Reduced movement and function
Extra points
r Associations: r Obesity r Hypertension r Urate stones/nephropathy: nephrectomy scars r Cause: r Drug card: diuretics r Lymphadenopathy: lymphoproliferative disorder r Chronic renal failure: fistulae
Discussion Cause
r Urate excess
Investigation
r Uric acid levels (unreliable) r Synovial fluid: needle-shaped, negatively birefringent crystals r Radiograph features: ‘punched out’ periarticular changes
Treatment
r Acute attack: r Treat the cause
r Increase hydration r High dose NSAIDs r Colchicine and high fluid intake
r Prevention: r Avoid precipitants r Allopurinol (xanthine oxidase inhibitor)
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Osteoarthritis Clinical signs
r Elderly patient ± walking stick r Asymmetrical distal interphalangeal joint deformity with Heberden’s nodes
(and sometimes Bouchard’s nodes at the proximal interphalangeal joint)
r Disuse atrophy of hand muscles r Crepitation, reduced movement and function
Extra points
r Carpal tunnel syndrome or scars r Other joint involvement and joint replacement scars
Discussion Prevalence: 20% (common)
Radiographic features
r Loss of joint space r Osteophytes r Peri-articular sclerosis and cysts
Treatment
r Simple analgesia r Weight reduction (if OA affects weight bearing joint) r Physiotherapy and occupational therapy r Joint replacement
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Diabetic retinopathy This patient has had difficulty with his or her vision. Please examine his or her eyes. Clinical signs
r Look around for clues – a white stick, braille book or glucometer r Fundoscopy: check for red reflex (absent if cataract or vitreous haemor-
rhage) Tip: find the disc (inferonasally) then follow each of the four main vessels out to the periphery of the quadrants and finish by examining the macular ‘look at the light’.
Extra points
r Check for coexisting hypertensive changes (they always ask!)
Discussion Screening
r <40 years old: every 2 years r >40 years old or more than 10 years since diagnosis: annual
Test acuity, fundoscopy and retinal photography/fluoroscein angiography r Background retinopathy usually occurs 10–20 years after diabetes is diagnosed r Young type I diabetics often get proliferative retinopathy whereas older type II diabetics tend to get exudative maculopathy
Treatment Tight glycaemic control
r Lower blood sugar (HbA < 7.5%) is associated with less retinopathy 1c r There may be a transient worsening of the retinopathy initially
Treat other risk factors
r Hypertension; hypercholesterolaemia; smoking cessation
Photocoagulation indications
r Maculopathy r Proliferative and pre-proliferative diabetic retinopathy
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170
Background retinopathy
1
1 Hard exudates 2 Blot haemorrhages 3 Microaneurysms Routine referral to eye clinic.
3 2
Pre-proliferative retinopathy
5
4
Background changes plus 4 Cotton wool spots 5 Flame haemorrhages Also venous beading and loops and IRMAs (intraretinal microvascular abnormalities). Urgent referral to ophthalmology.
Proliferative retinopathy
6
Pre-proliferative changes plus 6 Neovascularization of the disc (NVD) and elsewhere 7 Panretinal photocoagulation scars (treatment) Urgent referral to ophthalmology.
7
Diabetic maculopathy Macular oedema or hard exudates within one disc space of the fovea. Treated with focal photocoagulation. Urgent referral to ophthalmology.
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 171
Pan-retinal photocoagulation prevents the ischaemic retinal cells secreting angiogenesis factors causing neovascularization. Focal photocoagulation targets problem vessels at risk of bleeding. Accelerated deterioration occurs in poor diabetic control, hypertension and pregnancy.
Complications of proliferative diabetic retinopathy r Vitreous haemorrhage (may require vitrectomy) r Traction retinal detachment r Neovascular glaucoma due to rubeosis iridis
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Hypertensive retinopathy Examine this patient’s fundus. Clinical signs Vein 2 4
3 1 5
1 Silver wiring 2 AV nipping 3 Flame haemorrhages 4 Cotton wool spots 5 Papilloedema Grade 4 hypertensive retinopathy
Artery
Grade 1: silver wiring (increased reflectance from thickened arterioles). Grade 2: plus AV nipping (narrowing of veins as arterioles cross them). Grade 3: plus cotton wool spots and flame haemorrhages. Grade 4: plus papilloedema. There may also be hard exudates (macular star).
Extra points Causes
r Essential 94%: age, obesity, salt and alcohol r Renal 4%: renal bruit or enlarged kidneys r Endocrine 1%: acromegaly, Cushing’s or phaeochromocytoma r Coarctation: radio-femoral delay r Eclampsia: pregnancy
Discussion Malignant hypertension r Medical emergency
Treatment
r Grade III and IV retinopathy and hypertension
Oral anti-hypertensives and non-invasive blood pressure monitoring.
r Plus encephalopathy/stroke/myocardial infarction/left ventricular failure.
Parenteral venodilators and invasive blood pressure monitoring. Over-rapid fall in blood pressure can lead to ‘watershed’ cerebral and retinal infarction.
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Papilloedema Blurring of disc margins/elevation of disc/loss of venous pulsation/venous engorgement.
Causes
r Raised intracranial pressure: space occupying lesion, benign intracranial
hypertension and cavernous sinus thrombosis
r Malignant hypertension r Central retinal vein occlusion
Differential diagnosis Papilloedema: normal visual acuity, obscurations and tunnel vision Papillitis: reduced visual acuity, central scotoma and pain
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Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) Examine this elderly patient’s fundi. She complains of recent loss of vision. Clinical signs
r Wet (neovascular and exudative) or dry (non-neovascular, atrophic and
non-exudative)
r Macular changes: r Drusen (extracellular material) r Geographic atrophy r Fibrosis r Neovascularization (wet)
Extra points Associations Wet AMD have a higher incidence of coronary heart disease and stroke.
Discussion Risk factors
r Age, white race, family history and smoking
Treatment
r Ophthalmology referral
Wet AMD may be treated by intravitreal injections of anti-VEGF (though can increase cerebrovascular and cardiovascular risk).
Prognosis Majority of patients progress to blindness in the affected eye within 2 years of diagnosis.
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Retinitis pigmentosa This man has been complaining of difficulty seeing at night. Please examine his eyes.
Clinical signs
r White stick and braille book (registered blind) r Reduced peripheral field of vision (tunnel vision) r Fundoscopy
Peripheral retina 'bone spicule pigmentation', which follows the veins and spares the macula. Optic atrophy due to neuronal loss (consecutive). Association: cataract (absent red reflex).
Extra points ‘At a glance’ findings can help make the diagnosis: r Ataxic: Friedreich’s ataxia, abetalipoproteinaemia, Refsum’s disease, Kearns–Sayre syndrome r Deafness (hearing-aid/white stick with red stripes): Refsum’s disease, Kearns–Sayre syndrome, Usher’s disease r Ophthalmoplegia/ptosis and permanent pacemaker: Kearns–Sayre syndrome r Polydactyly: Laurence–Moon–Biedl syndrome r Icthyosis: Refsum’s disease
Discussion Inherited form of retinal degeneration characterized by loss of photoreceptors.
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Causes
r Congenital: often autosomal recessive inheritance, 15% due to rhodopsin
pigment mutations
r Acquired: post-inflammatory retinitis
Prognosis
r Progressive loss of vision due to retinal degeneration. Begins with reduced
night vision. Most are registered blind at 40 years, with central visual loss in the seventh decade. r No treatment although vitamin A may slow disease progression.
Causes of tunnel vision r Papilloedema r Glaucoma r Choroidoretinitis r Migraine r Hysteria
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Retinal artery occlusion Examine this man’s fundi. Clinical signs
r Pale, milky fundus with thread-like arterioles r ± Cherry red macula (choroidal blood supply)
Extra points
r Cause: AF (irregular pulse) or carotid stenosis (bruit) r Effect: optic atrophy and blind (white stick)
Note that branch retinal artery occlusion will have a field defect opposite to the quadrant of affected retina.
Discussion Causes
r Embolic: carotid plaque rupture or cardiac mural thrombus.
Rx: aspirin, anti-coagulation and endarterectomy. r Giant cell arteritis: tender scalp and pulseless temporal arteries. Rx: high dose steroid urgently.
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Retinal vein occlusion Examine this patient’s fundi. Clinical signs
r Flame haemorrhages +++ radiating out from a swollen disc r Engorged tortuous veins r Cotton wool spots
Extra points
r Cause: look for diabetic or hypertensive changes (visible in branch retinal
vein occlusion).
r Effect: Rubeosis iridis causes secondary glaucoma (in central retinal vein
occlusion), visual loss or field defect.
Discussion Causes
r Hypertension r Hyperglycaemia: diabetes mellitus r Hyperviscocity: Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinaemia or myeloma ¨ r High intraocular pressure: glaucoma
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Cataracts Examine this patient’s eyes. She complains of blurred vision and glare from bright lights. Clinical signs
r Loss of the red reflex r Cloudy lens
Extra points
r May have relative afferent pupillary defect (with normal fundi if visible) r Associations: dystrophia myotonica (bilateral ptosis)
Discussion Causes
r Congenital (pre-senile): rubella, Turners syndrome r Acquired: age (usually bilateral), drugs (steroids), radiation exposure,
trauma, diabetes and storage disorders
Treatment
r Surgery (outpatient): r Phacoemulsification with prosthetic lense implantation r YAG laser capsulotomy
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Abnormal pupils Examine this patient’s eyes. Horner’s pupil Clinical signs 'PEAS' Ptosis (levator palpebrae is partially supplied by sympathetic fibres) Enophthalmos (sunken eye) Anhydrosis (sympathetic fibres control sweating) Small pupil (miosis)
Horner's
May also have flushed/warm skin ipsilaterally to the Horner's pupil due to loss of vasomotor sympathetic tone to the face.
Extra points
r Look at the ipsilateral side of the neck for scars (trauma, e.g. cen-
tral lines, carotid endarterectomy surgery or aneurysms) and tumours (Pancoast’s).
Discussion Cause Following the sympathetic tract’s anatomical course: Brain stem MS Stroke (Wallenberg’s)
Spinal cord Syrinx
Neck Aneurysm Trauma Pancoast’s
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 181
Holmes–Adie (myotonic) pupil Clinical signs Holmes–Adie pupil
Moderately dilated pupil that has a poor response to light and a sluggish response to accommodation (you may have to wait!)
Light source
Extra points
r Absent or diminished ankle and knee jerks
Discussion A benign condition that is more common in females. Reassure the patient that nothing is wrong.
Argyll Robertson pupil Clinical signs A–R pupil Small irregular pupil Accommodates but doesn't react to light Atrophied and depigmented iris
Light source
Extra points
r Offer to look for sensory ataxia (tabes dorsalis)
Discussion
r Usually a manifestation of quaternary syphilis, but it may also be caused
by diabetes mellitus
r Test for quaternary syphilis using TPHA or FTA, which remain positive for
the duration of the illness
r Treat with penicillin
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Oculomotor (III) nerve palsy Clinical signs Ptosis usually complete Dilated pupil The eye points 'down and out' due to the unopposed action of lateral rectus (VI) and superior oblique (IV)
III nerve palsy
Extra points Nasal
Test for the trochlear (IV) nerve On looking nasally the eye will intort (rotate towards the nose) indicating that the trochlear nerve is working
r If the pupil is normal consider medical causes of III palsy r Surgical causes often impinge on the superficially located papillary fibres
running in the III nerve
Discussion Causes Medical Mononeuritis multiplex, e.g. DM Midbrain infarction: Weber’s Midbrain demyelination (MS) Migraine
Surgical Communicating artery aneurysm (posterior) Cavernous sinus pathology: thrombosis, tumour or fistula (IV, V and VI may also be affected) Cerebral uncus herniation
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 183
Optic atrophy Examine this woman’s eyes. Clinical signs
r Relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD): dilatation of the pupil on moving
the light source from the normal eye (consensual reflex) to the abnormal eye (direct reflex): RAPD
Light source
Light source Marcus–Gunn pupil
r Fundoscopy: disc pallor
Extra points Look for the cause.
On examining the fundus
r Glaucoma (cupping of the disc) r Retinitis pigmentosa r Central retinal artery occlusion
r Frontal brain tumour: Foster–Kennedy syndrome (papilloedema in
one eye due to raised intercranial pressure and optic atrophy in the other due to direct compression by the tumour)
At a glance from the end of the bed
r Cerebellar signs, e.g. nystagmus: multiple sclerosis (internuclear oph-
thalmoplegia), Friedreich’s ataxia (scoliosis and pes cavus)
r Large bossed skull: Paget’s disease (hearing aid) r Argyll–Robertson pupil: Tertiary syphilis
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Discussion Causes: PALE DISCS PRESSURE∗ : tumour, glaucoma and Paget’s ATAXIA: Friedreich’s ataxia LEBER’S DIETARY: ↓B12 , DEGENERATIVE: retinitis pigmentosa ISCHAEMIA: central retinal artery occlusion SYPHILIS and other infections, e.g. CMV and toxoplasmosis CYANIDE and other toxins, e.g. alcohol, lead and tobacco SCLEROSIS∗ : MS (∗ denotes commonest cause)
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 185
Hyperthyroidism and Graves’ disease This lady presents with a lump in her neck. Please examine it. Clinical signs
r Smooth, diffuse goitre
Eye signs
Peripheral signs
Specific to Graves’ r Proptosis r Chemosis r Exposure keratitis r Ophthalmoplegia r Thyroid acropachy r Pretibial myxoedema
Hyperthyroidism r Lid retraction r Lid lag
r Agitation r Sweating r Tremor r Palmar erythema
r Sinus tachycardia/AF r Brisk reflexes
Extra points Thyroid status
r Graves’ disease patients may be hyperthyroid, euthyroid or hypothyroid
depending on their stage of treatment.
Eyes
r Keratitis due to poor eye closure. r Optic nerve compression: loss of colour vision initially then development
of a central scotoma and reduced visual acuity.
r Papilloedema may occur.
Discussion Investigation
r Thyroid function tests: TSH and T /T 3 4 r Thyroid autoantibodies r Radioisotope scanning: increased uptake of I131 in Graves’, reduced in
thyroiditis
Treatment
r -blocker, e.g. propranolol r Carbimazole or propylthiouracil (both thionamides) r Block and replace with thyroxine r Titrate dose and monitor endogenous thyroxine
186
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
Stop at 18 months and assess for return of thyrotoxicosis. One-third of patients will remain euthyroid. If thyrotoxicosis returns, the options are r A repeat course of a thionamide r Radioiodine (I131 ): hypothyroidism common r Subtotal thyroidectomy Severe ophthalmopathy may require high-dose steroids, orbital irradiation or surgical decompression to prevent visual loss. The NOSPECS mnemonic for the progression of eye signs in Graves’: No signs or symptoms Only lid lag/retraction Soft tissue involvement Proptosis Extraocular muscle involvement Chemosis Sight loss due to optic nerve compression and atrophy
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 187
Hypothyroidism Examine this patient – she has been complaining of the cold. Clinical signs r Hands: r Slow pulse r Dry skin
r Cool peripheries r Head/face/neck: r ‘Peaches and cream’ complexion (anaemia and carotenaemia) r Eyes: peri-orbital oedema, loss of eyebrows and xanthelasma r Thinning hair r Goitre or thyroidectomy scar
r Legs: r Slow relaxing ankle jerk (tested with patient kneeling on a chair)
Extra points Complications
r Cardiac: pericardial effusion (rub), congestive cardiac failure (oedema) r Neurological: Carpel tunnel syndrome (Phalen’s/Tinel’s test), proximal my-
opathy (stand from sitting) and ataxia
Other autoimmune diseases
r Addison’s disease, vitiligo and diabetes mellitus
Discussion Investigation
r Blood: TSH (↑ in thyroid failure, ↓ in pituitary failure), T ↓, autoantibodies 4
Associations: hyponatraemia, hypercholesterolaemia, macrocytic anaemia, consider short Synacthen test (exclude Addison’s) r ECG: pericardial effusion and ischaemia r CXR: pericardial effusion and CCF
Management
r Thyroxine titrated to TSH suppression and clinical response
NB. 1. Can precipitate angina 2. Can unmask Addison’s disease → crisis
188
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
Causes
r Autoimmune: Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (+goitre) and atrophic hypothy-
roidism
r Iatrogenic: Post-thyroidectomy or I131 , amiodarone, lithium and anti-
thyroid drugs
r Iodine deficiency: dietary (‘Derbyshire neck’) r Dyshormonogenesis r Genetic: Pendred’s syndrome (with deafness)
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 189
Acromegaly Please examine this man who has been complaining of headaches.∗ Clinical signs: ‘spot diagnosis’
r Hands: large ‘spade like’, tight rings∗ , coarse skin and sweaty∗ r Face: prominent supra-orbital ridges, prognathism, widely spaced teeth
and macroglossia (∗ Signs of active disease)
Extra points Complications to look for: A, B, C. . . Acanthosis nigricans BP ↑∗ Carpal tunnel syndrome Diabetes mellitus∗ Enlarged organs Field defect∗ : bitemporal hemianopia Goitre, Gastrointestinal malignancy Heart failure, Hirsute, Hypopituitary IGF-1 ↑ Joint arthropathy Kyphosis Lactation (galactorrhoea) Myopathy (proximal)
Discussion Investigations Diagnostic
r Non-suppression of GH after an oral glucose tolerance test r Raised plasma IGF-1 r CT/MRI pituitary fossa: pituitary adenoma r Also assess other pituitary functions
Complications
r CXR: cardiomegaly r ECG: ischaemia (DM and hypertension) r Pituitary function tests: T , base line PRL and testosterone 4 r Glucose: DM r Visual perimetry r Obstructive sleep apnoea (in 50%)
190
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
Management Aim is to normalize GH and IGF-1 levels 1 Surgery: trans-sphenoidal approach Medical post-op complications: r Meningitis r Diabetes insipidus r Panhypopituitarism 2 Medical therapy: Somatostatin analogues (Octreotide), Dopamine agonists (Cabergoline) and growth hormone receptor antagonists (Pegvisomant) 3 Radiotherapy in non-surgical candidates
Follow-up Annual GH, PRL, ECG, visual fields and CXR ± CT head
MEN (multiple endocrine neoplasia) I Inherited tumours: autosomal dominant, chromosome 11 r Parathyroid hyperplasia (Ca++ ↑) r Pituitary tumours r Pancreatic tumours (gastrinomas)
Causes of macroglossia r Acromegaly r Amyloidosis r Hypothyroidism
r Down’s syndrome
Acanthosis nigricans
r Brown ‘velvet-like’ skin change found commonly in the axillae.
Associations: r Obesity r Type II diabetes mellitus r Acromegaly r Cushing’s syndrome r Ethnicity: Indian subcontinent r Malignancy, e.g. gastric carcinoma and lymphoma
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 191
Cushing’s Examine this lady and tell us what is wrong. She has been gaining weight. Clinical signs: ‘spot diagnosis’
r Face: moon-shaped, hirsute, with acne r Skin: bruised, thin, with purple striae r Back: ‘buffalo hump’ r Abdomen: centripetal obesity
r Legs: wasting (‘lemon on sticks’ body shape) and oedema
Extra points
r Complications: r Hypertension (BP) r Diabetes mellitus (random blood glucose) r Osteoporosis (kyphosis) r Cellulitis
r Proximal myopathy (stand from sitting) r Cause: r Exogenous: signs of chronic condition (e.g. RA, COPD) requiring steroids r Endogenous: bitemporal hemianopia and pigmentation (if ACTH ↑)
Discussion Cushing’s disease: glucocorticoid excess due to ACTH secreting pituitary adenoma. Cushing’s syndrome: the physical signs of glucocorticoid excess.
Investigation 1 Confirm high cortisol r 24-hour urinary collection r Low dose (for 48 hours) or overnight dexamethasone suppression test Suppressed cortisol: alcohol/depression/obesity (‘pseudo Cushing’s’) 2 If elevated cortisol confirmed, then identify cause: r ACTH level r High: Ectopic ACTH secreting tumour or pituitary adenoma r Low: Adrenal adenoma/carcinoma r MRI pituitary fossa ± adrenal CT ± whole body CT to locate lesion r Bilateral inferior petrosal sinus vein sampling (best test to confirm pituitary vs. ectopic origin; may also lateralise pituitary adenoma) r High-dose dexamethasone suppression test may help >50% suppressed cortisol: Cushing’s disease
192
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
Treatment Surgical: Trans-sphenoidal approach to remove pituitary tumours. Adrenalectomy for adrenal tumours Nelson’s syndrome: bilateral adrenalectomy (scars) to treat Cushing’s disease, causing massive production of ACTH (and MSH), due to lack of feedback inhibition, leading to hyper-pigmentation and pituitary overgrowth. Pituitary irradiation Medical: Metyrapone
Prognosis Untreated Cushing’s syndrome has 50% mortality at 5 years (ischaemic heart disease due to diabetes and hypertension).
Causes of proximal myopathy Inherited: r Myotonic dystrophy r Muscular dystrophy Endocrine: r Cushing’s syndrome r Hyperparathyroidism r Thyrotoxicosis r Diabetic amyotrophy Inflammatory: r Polymyositis r Rheumatoid arthritis Metabolic: r Osteomalacia Malignancy: r Paraneoplastic r Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome Drugs: r Alcohol r Steroids
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine 193
Addison’s Examine this man; he was admitted as an emergency 4 days ago with hypotension. Clinical signs
r Medic alert bracelet r Hyper-pigmentation: palmar creases, scars, nipples and buccal mucosa r Postural hypotension
Extra points
r Other associated autoimmune diseases, e.g. hyperthyroidism, diabetes and
vitiligo
r Signs of TB or malignancy
Discussion Investigation order 8 a.m. cortisol: no morning elevation suggests Addison’s disease (unreliable) R test Short Synacthen r Exclude Addison’s disease if cortisol rises to adequate levels R test Long Synacthen r Diagnose Addison’s disease if cortisol does not rise to adequate levels Pituitary imaging (MRI or CT)
Other tests Blood FBC: eosinophilia U + E: ↓ Na+ (kidney loss), ↑ K+ , ↑ urea (dehydration), ↓ glucose Adrenal autoantibodies CXR: Malignancy or TB Visual fields
Treatment Acute
r 0.9% saline IV rehydration +++ r Hydrocortisone r Treat the cause
NB. 1. Anti-TB treatment increases the clearance of steroid therefore use higher doses. 2. May unmask diabetes insipidus (cortisol is required to excrete a water load).
194
Short Cases: Skin, Musculoskeletal, Eyes and Endocrine
Chronic
r Education: compliance, increase dose if ‘ill’, steroid card, Medic alert
bracelet
r Titrate hydrocortisone (and fludrocortisone) dose to levels/response
Prognosis
r Normal life expectancy. r In 80% of cases Addison’s disease is due to an autoimmune process. Other
causes include adrenal metastases, adrenal tuberculosis and Waterhouse– Friederichsen syndrome (meningococcal sepsis and adrenal infarction). r Pigmentation is due to a lack of feedback inhibition by cortisol on the pituitary, leading to raised ACTH and MSH (melanocyte-stimulating hormone).
Appendix: Useful Addresses
Royal College of Physicians of London 11 St Andrews Place London NW1 4LE Tel: 020 7935 1174 Fax: 020 7486 4514 http://www.rcplondon.ac.uk Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 9 Queen Street Edinburgh EH2 1JQ Tel: 0131 2257324 Fax: 0131 2252053 http://www.rcpe.ac.uk Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow 242 St Vincent Street Glasgow G2 5RJ Tel: 0141 2216072 Fax: 0141 2483414 http://www.rcpsglasg.ac.uk MRCP (UK) Central Office 11 St Andrews Place London NW1 4LE Tel: 020 7935 1174 Fax: 020 7486 4514 http://www.mrcpuk.org.uk College publications: MRCP (UK) Part 2: Clinical Examination (PACES) Clinical Guidelines MRCP (UK) Regulations and Information for Candidates: r Guidance on examination structure and content r Examination mark sheets http://www.medical-masterclass.com r Interactive cases tailored to the MRCP PACES examination
196
Appendix: Useful Addresses
General Medical Council 178 Great Portland Street London W1W 5JE Tel: 020 7580 7642 Fax: 020 7915 3631 http://www.gmc-uk.org r Good medical practice r Guidance on confidentiality, consent and other ethical issues National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) MidCity Place 71 High Holborn London WC1V 6NA Tel: 0845 0037780 Fax: 0845 0037784 http://www.nice.org.uk r Guidance on cost effectiveness of clinical treatments Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) Swansea SA6 7JL Tel: 0870 2400009 Fax: 0870 2401651 http://www.dvla.gov.uk r Advice regarding driving restrictions for medical conditions
Index
␣-1 antitrypsin, 2, 29 ␣-fetoprotein, 5 abdominal examination, 138 abdominal scars, 153 abnormal findings, 72 abnormal pupils, 180–82 absent distal pulses, 145 acanthosis nigricans, 190 acromegaly, 152, 189–90 actinic keratoses, 10, 149 acute hepatic failure, 11 acute myelomonocytic leukaemia, 12 Addison’s, 193–4 adenoma sebaceum, 151 advanced decision to refuse treatment (ADRT), 109 age-related macular degeneration (AMD), 174 agitation, 132–3 alcoholic cerebellar degeneration, 87 alcohol toxicity, 2–3, 5, 34, 100 allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA), 19 allergy clinic, 140 alopecia, 161 alopecia areata, 142 altered conscious state, 2, 130–32 amantadine, 100 amputation, 146 amyloidosis, 8, 152, 190 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, 97 anaemia, 13, 133–4 anaphylaxis, 140 angiodysplasia, 60 angioid streaks, 166 angioplasty, 146 ankle-brachial pressure index, 146
ankylosing spondylitis, 22–3, 163 anterior uveitis, 163 antibiotics, 14 anti-cholinergics, 100 anticoagulation, 73 anti-nuclear antibody (ANA), 160 anti-tachycardia pacing (ATP), 74 anti-TNF therapy, 158 aortic flow, 60 aortic incompetence, 62–4, 164 aortic regurgitation, 163 aortic sclerosis, 60 aortic stenosis, 59–61 apical fibrosis, 23 apical lung fibrosis, 163 apomorpine, 100 Argyll Robertson pupil, 181 arteriography, 146 arteriovenous fistulae, 8, 10 arthralgia, 66 arthritis, 160, 163 asbestosis, 21 ascites, 2–3 aspergilloma, 22–3 aspiration, 21 aspirin, 91 assault, 108 asterixis, 2 asthma, 52–3, 139 ataxia, 86 ataxia telangiectasia, 87 atlanto-axial subluxation, 157 atrial septal defect, 80–81 atrio-ventricular nodal heart block, 163 atrophic lesions, 147 atrophie blanche, 145 auscultation, 1, 31, 62, 65, 75 Austin–Flint murmur, 66
198
Index
autoantibodies, 162 autoimmune disease, 10, 20, 104, 187, 193 autoimmune hepatitis, 2 autonomy, 106–7, 110, 113 autosomal dominant, 154 autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, 9 -blockers, 83 basal cell carcinoma, 10, 149 battery, 107 B cell depletion therapy, 158 Bell’s palsy, 103 bilateral enlargement, 8 bilateral extra-ocular palsies, 105 bilateral facial palsy, 103 bilateral Horner’s syndrome, 105 bilateral hydronephrosis, 8 bilateral inferior petrosal sinus vein sampling, 191 bilateral ptosis, 105 bilateral renal cell carcinoma, 8 biopsy, 2 biventricular pacemakers (BiV), 74 Blalock–Taussig (BT) shunts, 78 bleeding, 73 blindness, 174 blood glucose, 5 blood pressure, 152 blot haemorrhages, 170 bone marrow, 6 bony tenderness. See hepatomegaly bowel contrast studies, 14 Bowen’s disease, 149 brain stem death and organ donation, 120–21 brain stem vascular event, 87 brief clinical consultations, 125 bronchial breathing, 16 bronchial carcinoma, 18–19 bronchiectasis, 18–19, 23 bronchioles, 27 bronchoalveolar lavage, 20
bronchodilators, 30 bronchogenic primary tumour, 70 bronchoscopy, 18, 32 bullectomy, 30 cachexia, 135 caeruloplasmin, 2 calcinosis, 161 calciphylaxis, 12 calcipotriol, 141 Caplan’s nodules, 157 carbamazepine, 88 carcinoid syndrome, 71 carcinoma, 2 cardiac arrhythmias, 132 cardiac catheterisation, 82 cardiac murmur, 145 cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT), 74 cardiac thromboembolism, 91 carditis, 66 carotid endarterectomy, 91 carpal tunnel release, 156 carpal tunnel syndrome, 157 cataracts, 179 cavernous sinus pathology, 182 cellulitis, 11 central retinal artery occlusion, 183 cerebellar syndrome, 86–7 cerebral abscess, 128 cerebral oedema, 128 cervical lymphadenopathy, 135 cervical myelopathy, 93 Charcot’s joint, 95–6, 145 chemotherapy, 32 chest pain, 125–7, 135 cholestasis, 148 choroidoretinitis, 176 chronic bronchitis, 29 chronic graft dysfunction, 11 chronic liver disease, 1, 4, 6, 16 chronic lung abscess, 18 chronic obstructive airways disease, 29–30
Index 199 chronic plaque, 140 chronic renal failure, 11–2, 16 chronic symptomatic relief, 14 ciclosporin, 10, 13 ciclosporin nephrotoxicity, 11 cirrhosis, 3 Child-Pugh classification, 3 complications, 3 hepatomegaly, 2 coal tar, 142 coarctation, 79 collapse, 16 collapsing pulse, 62–3 colonic carcinoma, 14–15 colonoscopy, 2 communication skills, 114–15 community acquired pneumonia (CAP), 24 competency and consent, 107–10 COMT inhibitors, 100 confidentiality, 110–11 congestive cardiac failure, 2, 16 conjunctival precipitation, 12 connective tissue disease, 16, 21, 75 consent documentation, 108 consolidation, 16 constitutional symptoms, 135 constrictive pericarditis, 75 cor pulmonale, 18, 27, 29 corneal arcus, 148 cough, 134 craggy hepatomegaly, 135 cranial nerves, 88 Crohn’s disease, 13–14 CT thorax, 18 Cushing’s disease/syndrome, 191–2 cutaneous leishmaniasis, 146 cutaneous ulcer, 149 cyclophosphamide, 160 cystic fibrosis, 27–8 dealing with a difficult patient, 115–16 De Musset’s sign, 62 dermatomyositis, 31
dexamethasone, 32 diabetes, 5, 147–8 diabetic maculopathy, 170 diabetic nephropathy, 11 diabetic retinopathy, 169–71 disuse atrophy, 98 dithranol, 142 diuretics, 3 do-not-attempt resuscitation (DNAR) orders, 112–13 dopamine agonists, 100 Down’s syndrome, 80, 190 Dressler’s MI, 76 driving restrictions, 116 drugs, 14 Duckett–Jones diagnostic criteria, 66 Duke’s criteria, 61 dull lung base, 16 dull percussion, 24 dysdiadochokinesis, 86 dyshormonogenesis, 188 dysphasia, 92 dyspnoea, 139–40 dystrophia myotonica, 84–5 early diastolic murmur (EDM), 62 eczema, 144 Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, 153–4 Eisenmenger’s syndrome, 77 ejection systolic murmur (ESM), 70 embolic complications, 65 embolic phenomena, 61 emollients, 144 emphysema, 29 empyema, 17 end of life decisions, 112–14 endocarditis, 63 endocrine disorders, 185–94 endocrinopathy, 3 endovascular aortic repair (EVAR), 79 enophthalmos, 179 epilepsy, 150 episcleritis, 15 erythema marginatum, 66
200
Index
erythema multiforme, 24 erythroderma, 142 ethics, 106–24 expiratory wheeze, 29 extensor plantars, 102 extra-intestinal manifestations, 15 extrinsic allergic alveolitis, 23 eyes, 169–84 facial nerve palsy, 103 Fallopian tubes, 27 Fallot’s tetralogy, 77–8 fasciculation, 98 Felty’s syndrome, 6, 157 ferritin, 2 fibrosing alveolitis, 18 focal coarse crackles, 24 fragile skin, 153 Friedreich’s ataxia, 82–3, 93, 102 frontal brain tumour, 183 gas transfer, 29 gastrointestinal bleeding, 154 gastrointestinal disease, 162 gastroscopy, 2 Gaucher’s, 6 genetic anticipation, 83 genotype analysis, 5 genotyping, 4 Gerstmann’s syndrome, 92 Gillick competence, 108 glaucoma, 176, 183 glomerulonephritis, 11, 162 goitre, 132 GOLD classification, 30 Graves’ disease, 105, 185–6 Guillain–Barre syndrome, 105 gum hypertrophy, 12 guttate psoriasis, 142 gynaecomastia, 31 haematuria, 8, 138 haemochromatosis, 2, 4–5, 10 haemodynamic compromise, 131 haemoglobinuria, 24
haemolysis, 73 haemolytic anaemia, 6 Haemophilus influenzae (Hib), 7, 24 haemoptysis, 25, 134–6 haemorrhagic cystitis, 160 Hamman–Rich syndrome, 21 Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, 188 headache, 127–9 hemiplegia, 91 hepatic encephalopathy, 3 hepatic malignancy, 11 hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), 5 hepatomegaly, 1–2, 4, 6, 8 hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia, 154 hereditary sensory motor neuropathy, 101 hereditary spherocytosis, 7 Herpes zoster, 102 Hickman lines, 13, 27 high-dose dexamethasone suppression test, 191 higher cortical dysfunction, 91 high intraocular pressure, 178 high resolution CT scan, 20 histiocytosis X, 22–3 histoplasmosis, 22–23 history taking, 34–58 HIV testing, 138 Holmes–Adie (myotonic) pupil, 181 homocystinuria, 165 homonomous hemianopia, 91 Horner’s syndrome, 85, 95 hospital-acquired pneumonia, 25 Human Organ Transplant Act, 122 Human Tissue Act, 122 Huntington’s chorea, 118–19 hydrocortisone, 142 hydronephrosis, 8 hypercholesterolaemia, 148, 169 hyperextensible skin, 153 hyperglycaemia, 178 hyperlipidaemia, 147 hyperparathyroidism, 11 hypersensitivity pneumonitis, 22
Index 201 hypertension, 8, 11, 178 hypertensive retinopathy, 172–3 hyperthyroidism, 3, 132, 185–6 hypertriglyceridaemia, 148 hypertrophic (obstructive) cardiomyopathy, 82–3 hyperventilation, 131 hyperviscocity, 178 hypogammaglobulinaemia, 19 hyporeflexia, 86 hypothyroidism, 87, 148, 187–8, 190 hypotonia, 86 hypoxaemia, 140 hysteria, 176 iliac fossae, 8 immobility in the elderly, 136–7 immunoglobulins, 18 immunological disorders, 160 immunosuppressive medication, 10 implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICD), 74 implantable devices, 74 implied consent, 108 indwelling catheter, 8 infective endocarditis, 73 infertility, 160 inflammatory bowel disease, 13–15, 18 information delivery, 117 intention tremor, 86, 100 intercostal drainage, 18 internuclear ophthalmoplegia, 88 interstitial fibrosis, 161 interview structure, 34 intracranial aneurysms, 154 ipsilateral cerebellar signs, 86 isoniazid, 22 Jaccoud’s arthropathy, 159 jaundice, 37, 49 joints, 15 arthropathy, 4 replacement, 156 justice principle, 106, 112
Kartagener’s fibrosis, 18 Kearns–Sayre syndrome, 105 keratotic nodule, 149 Kernig’s sign, 128 Kleinfelter’s syndrome, 3 Koebner phenomenon, 143, 155 Kussmaul’s sign, 75, 131 kyphosis, 22 Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS), 31, 105 Legionella antigen, 24 leg ulcers, 145–6 leprosy, 152 Lewy-body dementia, 99 Lhermitte’s sign, 88 lichen planus, 142 lipodermatosclerosis, 145 liver biopsy, 2, 4 liver disease, 1–3 liver transplantation, 10–11 lobectomy scar, 31 R long Synacthen test, 193 long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT), 30 lumbar puncture, 128 lumbo-sacral root levels, 94 lung abscess, 25 lung cancer, 31–3 lung function tests, 20 lupus pernio, 155 Lyme disease, 102 lymphadenopathy, 6, 31, 166 lymph node biopsy, 6 lymphoproliferative disease, 6, 11 macroglossia, 190 malaria, 6 malar rash, 160 malignancy, 10 malignant hypertension, 172 malignant melanoma, 10, 150 MAO-B inhibitor, 100 Marfan’s syndrome, 68, 164–5 Marjolin’s ulcer, 145 medic alert bracelet, 7
202
Index
medico-legal system, 106–7 meningitis, 129 Mental Health Act, 109 mental retardation, 152 methylprednisolone, 160 metronidazole, 14 microaneurysms, 170 midbrain demyelination (MS), 182 midbrain infarction, 182 mid-diastolic murmur (MDM), 65 migraine, 176 mitral incompetence, 67–8 mitral stenosis, 65–6 mitral valve prolapse (MVP), 68, 82, 153 mitral valvotomy, 66, 72 mitral valvuloplasty, 66 mononeuritis multiplex, 101 mononeuropathy, 102 morphoea, 161 motor neurone disease, 93, 97–8 multidisciplinary approach, 32, 91 multiple endocrine neoplasia I, 190 multiple sclerosis, 88–9, 93 multisystem atrophy, 99 myasthenia gravis, 85, 102, 104–5 mycophenolate mofetil, 160 Mycoplasma pneumoniae, 24 mycotic aneurysm, 19 myelofibrosis, 6 myeloproliferative disorders, 2 myotonic dystrophy, 85 N-acetyl cysteine, 20 nail pitting, 142 necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum, 148 negligence, 107 neovascular glaucoma, 171 nephrectomy, 9–10 nephrotic syndrome, 148 neurofibromatosis, 152 neurological disorder, 160 neuropathic arthropathy, 96 neutropenia, 158
non-small cell carcinoma, 32 Noonan’s syndrome, 70 nystagmus, 85–6 occupational therapy, 168 oculomotor (III) nerve palsy, 182 ophthalmoplegia, 175 optic atrophy, 183–4 oral ulceration, 13, 159 organ donation, 120–22 osteoarthritis, 168 osteogenic sarcoma, 166 osteomalacia, 166 Paget’s disease, 166 palliative care, 32 palmar erythema, 3 palmo-plantar pustular psoriasis, 140 Pancoast’s tumour, 98 pancreatic ducts, 27 pan-systolic murmur, 68 papilloedema, 173, 176 paracetamol overdose, 119 paraneoplastic cerebellar syndrome, 87 para-pneumonic effusion, 24–5 parasagittal falx meningioma, 93 Parkinson’s disease, 99–100 parotid swelling, 154 partial anterior circulation, 91 patent ductus arteriosus (PDA), 79 percussion myotonia, 83 percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation (PPVI), 70 pericardial disease, 75–6 peripheral neuropathy, 98, 101, 152 peripheral oedema, 159 peritoneal dialysis catheter, 8 persistent fever, 137–9 pes cavus, 101 phacoemulsification, 179 phaeochromocytoma, 152 phenytoin toxicity, 87 phrenic nerve crush, 22 physiotherapy, 27
Index 203 pituitary irradiation, 192 pleural aspiration, 17 pleural effusion, 16–17, 23 pleural fluid cytology, 17–18 pleural thickening, 16 pleuritic chest pain, 129 plombage, 22 pneumococcal antigen, 24 Pneumocystis carinii, 11 pneumonia, 24–6 pneumothorax, 140, 164 Pneumovax II, 25 polio, 98 polyarthritis, 66 polycystic kidney disease, 8, 11 polydactyly, 175 polypoid mass, 149 portal hypertension, 6 postural dizziness, 137 postural tremor, 100 Pott’s fracture, 22 pregnancy, 12 pre-proliferative diabetic retinopathy, 169 pre-proliferative retinopathy, 170 primary sclerosing cholangitis, 15 progressive bulbar palsy, 97 progressive muscular atrophy, 97 progressive supranuclear palsy, 99 proliferative diabetic retinopathy, 171 proliferative retinopathy, 170 prophylaxis, 66 prosthetic valves, 61, 72–3 proteinuria, 8 proton-pump inhibitor, 162 proximal myopathy, 12, 192 pseudoxanthoma elasticum, 153, 166 psoriasis, 141–3 psoriatic arthropathy, 142 psychological support, 14 ptosis, 85 pulmonary embolus, 26, 130 pulmonary fibrosis, 20–21
pulmonary hypertension, 65 pulmonary rehabilitation, 30 pulmonary stenosis, 70–71 pulsus paradoxus, 75 pyrazinamide, 22–3 pyrexia, 66 radiotherapy, 31 Raynaud’s phenomenon, 159, 161 Raynaud’s therapy, 162 recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy, 31 Refsum’s disease, 152, 175 renal artery stenosis, 152 renal cell carcinoma, 8 renal enlargement, 8–9 renal transplantation, 11 resting tremor, 100 retinal artery occlusion, 177 retinal vein occlusion, 178 retinitis pigmentosa, 175–6, 183 retinopathy, 158 rheumatic fever, 60, 63, 66 rheumatoid arthritis, 3, 98, 156–8, 159, 192 rifampicin, 22 right ventricular failure, 70 Romberg’s sign, 137 sabre tibia, 166 saccharine ciliary motility test, 18 sarcoidosis, 22 scanning dysarthria, 86 scarring alopecia, 159 Schober’s test, 163 sclerodactyly, 161 scoliosis, 152 secondary hyperlipidaemia, 148 sensorineural deafness, 102 sensory loss, 92 sepsis screen, 137 serum ferritin, 4 short Synacthen test, 193 sickle-cell anaemia, 146 sigmoidoscopy, 13
204
Index
skin, 15 malignancy, 149–50 prick testing, 18 problems, 153–5 small cell carcinoma, 32 smoking, 30, 135 spastic legs, 93–4 spirometry, 29 splenectomy, 7 splenomegaly, 6–7 squamous cell carcinoma, 10, 149–50 steroids, 10 stool microscopy, 13 Streptococcus pneumoniae, 24 stroke, 90–92 subcutaneous nodules, 66 superficial telangiectasia, 149 superior vena cava obstruction, 31 sweating, 132 swollen calf, 129–30 syphilis, 146 syringomyelia, 95–6, 98, 146 systemic amyloidosis, 15 systemic lupus erythematosus, 159–60 systemic sclerosis, 161–2 tabes dorsalis, 146 tachypnoea, 24 tapping apex, 65 telangiectasia, 161 tendon transfer, 156 tendon xanthomata, 148 teratogenicity, 160 tertiary syphilis, 183 testicular tumour, 3 Tetralogy of Fallot, 70 thoracoplasty, 22 thromboembolus, 73 thrombolysis, 91 thrombophlebitis, 130 thyroid eye disease, 132 thyroid storm, 132 thyrotoxicosis, 63
TIMI risk score, 127 tophaceous gout, 167 total anterior circulation stroke (TACS), 91 tracheal deviation, 31 tracheal tug, 29 traction retinal detachment, 171 transferrin saturation, 4 transient ischaemic attack (TIA), 91 transplant patient, 10–12 trauma, 75 tricuspid incompetence, 69 tuberculosis, 22–3 tuberous sclerosis, 8, 151 ulcerative colitis, 14 ultrasound abdomen, 6, 9 upper motor neurone spasticity, 88 urine cytology, 8 Uthoff’s phenomenon, 88 valve failure, 73 varicose eczema, 145 varicose veins, 145 vascular malformations, 154 vasculitic phenomena, 61 vasculitis, 26 vein surgery, 146 venous hypertension, 145 ventricular interdependence, 76 ventricular septal defect, 77–9 vertical eye movements, 99 viral warts, 11, 143 visual acuity, 152 vitiligo, 143 vitreous haemorrhage, 171 Wilson’s disease, 2 xanthelasma, 148 xanthomata, 148 yellow nail syndrome, 18