video for amputation surgery
video for amputation surgery
5 Levels of amputation surgical video :
* transfemoral
* knee disarticulation
* transtibial
* partial calcanectomy
* transmetatarsal
Collection of free Downloadable Medical Videos,
Lecture Notes, Literature & PowerPoint Presentations
video for amputation surgery
5 Levels of amputation surgical video :
* transfemoral
* knee disarticulation
* transtibial
* partial calcanectomy
* transmetatarsal
http://www.ampsurg.org/html/amplevels.html
Gallstone Disease
By:Tad Kim, M.D.
Overview
* Gallstone pathogenesis
* Definitions
* Differential Diagnosis of RUQ pain
* 7 Cases
Gallstone Pathogenesis
* Bile = bile salts, phospholipids, cholesterol
o Also bilirubin which is conjugated b4 excretion
* Gallstones due to imbalance rendering cholesterol & calcium salts insoluble
* Pathogenesis involves 3 stages:
o 1. cholesterol supersaturation in bile
o 2. crystal nucleation
o 3. stone growth
Definitions
Infection within bile ducts usu due to obstrux of CBD. Charcot triad: RUQ pain, jaundice, fever (seen in 70% of pts), can lead to septic shock
Cholangitis
Gallstone in the common bile duct (primary means originated there, secondary = from GB)
Choledocho-lithiasis
GB inflammation due to biliary stasis(5% of time) and not stones(95%). Seen in critically ill pts
Acalculous cholecystitis
Recurrent bouts of colic/acute chol’y leading to chronic GB wall inflamm/fibrosis. No fever/WBC.
Chronic cholecystitis
Acute GB inflammation due to cystic duct obstruction. Persistent RUQ pain +/- fever, ↑WBC, ↑LFT, +Murphy’s = inspiratory arrest
Acute cholecystitis
Wax/waning postprandial epigastric/RUQ pain due to transient cystic duct obstruction by stone, no fever/WBC, normal LFT
Symptomatic cholelithiasis
Differential Diagnosis of RUQ pain
* Biliary disease
o Acute chol’y, chronic chol’y, CBD stone, cholangitis
* Inflamed or perforated duodenal ulcer
* Hepatitis
* Also need to rule out:
o Appendicitis, renal colic, pneumonia or pleurisy, pancreatitis
Case 1
* 46yo F w RUQ pain x4hr, after a fatty meal, radiating to the R scapula, also w nausea. Pt is pain-free now.
* No prior episodes
* Minimal RUQ tenderness, no Murphy’s
* WBC 8, LFT normal
* RUQ U/S reveals cholelithiasis without GB wall thickening or pericholecystic fluid
* Diagnosis: ?
Symptomatic cholelithiasis
* aka “biliary colic”
* The pain occurs due to a stone obstructing the cystic duct, causing wall tension; pain resolves when stone passes
* Pain usually lasts 1-5 hrs, rarely > 24hrs
* Ultrasound reveals evidence at the crime scene of the likely etiology: gallstones
* Exam, WBC, and LFT normal in this case
* Treatment: Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Spectrum of Gallstone Disease
Cholelithiasis
Asymptomatic
cholelithiasis
Symptomatic
cholelithiasis
Chronic
calculous
cholecystitis
Acute
calculous
cholecystitis
* Symptomatic cholelithiasis can be a herald to:
o an attack of acute cholecystitis
o or ongoing chronic cholecystitis
* May also resolve
Case 2
* Same case, except pt has had multiple prior attacks of similar RUQ pain
* No fever or WBC
* Ultrasound reveals gallstones, thickened GB wall, no pericholecystic fluid
* Diagnosis: ?
Chronic calculous cholecystitis
* Recurrent inflammatory process due to recurrent cystic duct obstruction, 90% of the time due to gallstones
* Overtime, leads to scarring/wall thickening
* Treatment: laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Case 3
* Same pt, now > 24hrs of RUQ pain radiating to the R scapula, started after fatty meal, a/w nausea, vomiting, fever
* Exam: Palpable, tender gallbladder, guarding, +Murphy’s = inspiratory arrest
* WBC 13, Mild LFT
* U/S: gallstones, wall thickening (>4mm), GB distension, pericholecystic fluid, sonographic Murphy’s sign (very specific)
* Diagnosis: ?
* Curved arrow
o Two small stones at GB neck
* Straight arrow
o Thickened GB wall
* GB also appears distended
Acute calculous cholecystitis
* Persistent cystic duct obstruction leads to GB distension, wall inflammation & edema
* Can lead to: empyema, gangrene, rupture
* Pain usu. persists >24hrs & a/w N/V/Fever
* Palpable/tender or even visible RUQ mass
* Nuclear HIDA scan shows nonfilling of GB
o If U/S non-diagnostic, obtain HIDA
* Tx: NPO, IVF, Abx (GNR & enterococcus)
* Sg: Cholecystectomy usu within 48hrs
* 87yo M critically ill, on long-term TPN w RUQ pain, fever, WBC
* Ultrasound: GB wall thickening, pericholecystic fluid, no gallstones
Acute acalculous cholecystitis
* In 5-10% of cases of acute cholecystitis
* Seen in critically ill pts or prolonged TPN
* More likely to progress to gangrene, empyema, perforation due to ischemia
* Caused by gallbladder stasis from lack of enteral stimulation by cholecystokinin
* Tx: Emergent cholecystectomy usu open
* If pt is too sick, perc cholecystostomy tube and interval cholecystectomy later on
Complications of acute cholecystitis
Less commonly, perforates into adjacent viscus = cholecystoenteric fistula & the stone can cause SBO (gallstone ileus)
Occurs in 10% of acute chol’y, usually becomes a contained abscess in RUQ
Perforated gallbladder
More commonly in men and diabetics. Severe RUQ pain, generalized sepsis. Imaging shows air in GB wall or lumen
Emphysematous cholecystitis
Pus-filled GB due to bacterial proliferation in obstructed GB. Usu. more toxic, high fever
Empyema of gallbladder
Case 5
* 46yo F p/w RUQ pain, jaundice, acholic stools, dark tea-colored urine, no fevers
* Known history of cholelithiasis
* Exam: unremarkable
* WBC 8, T.Bili 8, AST/ALT NL, HepB/C neg
* Ultrasound: Gallstones, CBD stone, dilated CBD > 1cm
Choledocholithiasis
* Can present similarly to cholelithiasis, except with the addition of jaundice
* DDx: cholelithiasis, hepatitis, sclerosing cholangitis, less likely CA with pain
* Tx: Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)
o Stone extraction and sphincterotomy
* Interval cholecystectomy after recovery from ERCP
Case 6
* 46yo F p/w fever, RUQ pain, jaundice (Charcot’s triad)
* If also altered mental status and signs of shock = Raynaud’s pentad
* VS tachycardic, hypotensive
* ABC’s, Resuscitate
o 2 large bore IV, Foley, Continuous monitor
o 1-2L fluid bolus, repeat until resuscitated
* Diagnosis: ?
Cholangitis
* Infection of the bile ducts due to CBD obstruction 2ndary to stones, strictures
* Charcot’s triad seen in 70% of pts
* May lead to life-threatening sepsis and septic shock (Raynaud’s pentad)
* Tx: NPO, IVF, IV Abx
* Emergent decompression via ERCP or perc transhepatic cholangiogram (PTC)
* Used to require emergency laparotomy
Case 7
* 46yo F p/w persistent epigastric & back pain
* Known history of symptomatic gallstones
* No EtOH abuse
* Exam: Tender epigastrum
* Amylase 2000, ALT 150
* Ultrasound: Gallstones
* Diagnosis: ?
Gallstone pancreatitis
* 35% of acute pancreatitis 2ndary to stones
* Pathophysiology
o Reflux of bile into pancreatic duct and/or obstruction of ampulla by stone
* ALT > 150 (3-fold elevation) has 95% PPV for diagnosing gallstone pancreatitis
* Tx: ABC, resuscitate, NPO/IVF, pain meds
* Once pancreatitis resolving, ERCP w stone extraction/sphincterotomy
* Cholecystectomy before hospital discharge
Take Home Points
* As always, ABC & Resuscitate before Dx
* Understanding the definitions is key
* Is this acute cholecystitis? (fever, WBC, tender on exam with positive Murphy’s)
* Or simply cholelithiasis vs ongoing chronic cholecystitis? (no fever/WBC)
* Is patient sick or toxic-appearing, to suspect empyema, gangrene or even perforation?
* Elicit h/o jaundice, acholic stools, tea-colored urine
* Rule out cholangitis, because this will kill the patient unless dx & tx early
Gallstones Disease.ppt
Lower Respiratory Tract Infections
By: Divya Ahuja, M.D.
Lower respiratory infections: anatomic classification
* Tracheitis; bronchitis; tracheobronchitis
* Bronchiolitis
* Bronchopneumonia
* Segmental pneumonia
* Lobar pneumonia
* Interstitial pneumonia
Case #1
* 40-year-old man
* no underlying lung disease
* 7-day history of mild shortness of breath with exertion, and a productive cough.
* Temperature = 37°C, pulse 84 beats/min, and his respiratory rate 17 breaths per minute.
* no rales are heard; scattered wheezes are heard in the lung bases.
Acute bronchitis (“chest cold”)
* Usually of viral etiology(influenza, rhinovirus, parainfluenza, RSV, human metapneumovirus)
* A common cause for overuse of antibiotics
* Bacteria implicated are
o Bordetella pertussis (whooping cough)
o Mycoplasma pneumoniae
o Chlamydia pneumoniae
Acute bronchitis
* Similar to URIs but more prolonged
* Cough persists > 5 days (upto 40 days)
* 40% will have reduction in pulmonary function
* Main differential includes
o Asthma/ bronchiolitis
o Bronchiectasis
o Chronic bronchitis (cough and sputum for 3 months during 2 years
Acute Bronchitis
* Cough in the absence of fever, tachycardia, and tachypnea suggests bronchitis, rather than pneumonia
* Antimicrobial agents are not recommended in most cases of acute bronchitis
* Antimicrobial therapy is indicated when a treatable pathogen is identified (influenza, Bordetella pertussis )
Acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis
* Chronic bronchitis is associated with cigarette smoking and COPD
* Extent to which specific bacterial pathogens explain exacerbations is controversial.
* However, repeated bacterial infections (especially H. influenzae) contribute to deterioration of lung function.
Case # 2
* 54 year male, chronic cough x 1 year. no hemoptysis. Denies fevers, shakes, chills. No sick contacts
Bronchiectasis
* Abnormal dilatation of bronchi with chronic productive cough.
* Can be clue to cystic fibrosis in younger patients (associated with S. aureus and Pseudomonas species)
* Uncommon associations: immunodeficiency disorders, dyskinetic cilia syndrome
Case # 3
* 54 year old male
* Flu like illness 2 weeks ago
* 5 day history of chills, fever, difficulty breathing, right sided pleuritic chest pain, cough and yellow sputum
Pneumonia
* 6th leading cause of death in U.S.A.
* About 3 million cases per year; > 500,000 hospital admissions
* About 50% of cases and the majority of deaths are due to bacteria
* Precise diagnosis is usually desirable but difficult to obtain
Acute pneumonia
* History
* Symptoms-cough, sputum, fever, malaise
* Clinical setting-community acquired, nosocomial
* Defects in host defense- HIV, neutropenia
* Possible exposures
Organisms in community acquired pneumonia
Organisms:
S pneumoniae
H influenzae
o P aeruginosa
o S aureus
o Atypicals
+ Chlamydia, Legionella
+ Mycoplasma, Bordetella
Pneumonia (2)
* Streptococcus pneumoniae the most common cause of community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization
* Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis are increasing in frequency
* Legionella species and Chlamydia pneumoniae have emerged
* Pneumocystis carinii (HIV disease)
Pneumonia: pathogenesis
* Endogenous vs. exogenous (inhalation)
* Bronchogenous vs. lymphohematogenous
* “Pulmonary clearance”: mucociliary blanket, alveolar macrophages
* Factors that impair pulmonary clearance: viral URI; smoking; alcohol; uremia; bronchial obstruction; 100% oxygen; others
“Typical” versus “atypical” pneumonia
* “Typical” (virulent bacteria): abrupt onset; productive cough with purulent sputum; pleuritic chest pain; impressive physical findings; leukocytosis or leukopenia
* “Atypical” (viral, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, others): gradual onset, nonproductive cough; substernal chest pain; unimpressive physical exam; white blood count normal
Typical versus atypical pneumonia
Classic pneumococcal pneumonia
* Antecedent upper respiratory infection
* Sudden onset with single violent chill, then fever
* Pleuritic chest pain
* Signs of lobar consolidation on exam
* If untreated, terminates gradually by “lysis” or suddenly by “crisis”
Atypical pneumococcal pneumonia
* Caught early: signs of consolidation may be absent
* Elderly: fever, classic history may be absent
* COPD: CXR and physical findings are distorted
* Ethanolism: blunted history; prostration, leukopenia
* Epilepsy: lack of history; fever and tachycardia may be attributed to seizures; anaerobes may co-exist
* Recurrent pneumonia: In same area, suggests obstruction or bronchiectasis
Some current problems with pneumococcal disease
* Failure of antibiotic therapy to improve survival during first 3 days
* Vaccine efficacy and distribution
* Resistance to penicillin G
* Overwhelming sepsis in asplenic persons
* Need for developing better diagnostic techniques
Group A streptococcal pneumonia
* Rare, except during influenza epidemics
* Large empyema (“pus in the chest”) is characteristic
Hemophilus influenzae pneumonia
* 2% to 18% of community-acquired pneumonias;
* Predisposition: underlying lung disease, alcoholism, recent URI, advanced age
* Often a patchy segmental pneumonia or bronchopneumonia
* Virtually-diagnostic Gram’s stain: small, pleomorphic gram-negative coccobacilli
Moraxella catarrhalis pneumonia
* AKA: Neisseria catarrhalis; Branhamella catarrhalis
* A large gram-negative diplococcus
* Causes pneumonia and bronchitis especially in persons with chronic lung disease
* Often a patchy bronchopneumonia
Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia
* The classic “primary atypical pneumonia”
* Typically occurs in younger adults, often the parents of young children
* Subtle presentation
* Favors lower lobes
* Pleural effusion may occur (up to 20%)
Some nonrespiratory manifestations of Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia
* Myringitis (sometimes bullous)
* Hemolytic anemia
* Arthritis, arthralgias, myalgias
* Pericarditis, myocarditis
* Hepatitis (mild)
* Erythema multiforme, other rashes
* Meningitis, meningoencephalitis, neuropathy
Chlamydia pneumoniae pneumonia
* Accounts for <5% of community-acquired pneumonias
* C. pneumoniae more commonly causes pharyngitis and hoarseness
* Bronchitis is often insidious
* Pneumonia usually mild and localized but difficult to eradicate
Legionella pneumophila pneumonia
* Up to 23% of community-acquired pneumonias but with wide geographic distribution
* L. pneumophila is not part of the normal flora; a true inhalation disorder
* CXR: patchy or nodular infiltrates that may progress rapidly; up to 50% are bilateral
Legionella pneumophila pneumonia (2)
* Relative bradycardia in 65%
* Neurologic findings in 26%
* Gram’s stain may show purulence without a predominant microorganism
* Laboratory: may have hyponatremia; elevations of AST (SGOT), alkaline phosphatase, and bilirubin; proteinuria, hematuria, and renal failure
Treatment
* S. pneumoniae resistance is increasing
* Options are cephalosporins, amox/clvulanic acid, macrolides, doxycycline, a respiratory fluoroquinolone
* All atypicals are covered by the macrolides , doxycycline and the fuoroquinolones
* Judge the severity to see if outpatient treatment will suffice
Aspiration (“mouth flora”) pneumonia
* usually presents as a subacute illness in patients with some combination of alcoholism, malnutrition, homelessness, and poor dentition
* sputum often has foul odor
* Necrotizing pneumonia; lung abscess(es) with air-fluid levels; empyema
Pneumonia: some clues
* Tularemia: rabbits and hares; ticks and fleas; inhalation (e.g., after mowing over carcasses)
* Psittacosis: birds
* Plague: ground squirrels, chipmunks, rabbits, prairie dogs, rats
* Legionnaire’s disease: contaminated aerosols (air coolers; hospital water supplies)
* Histoplasmosis: dust from soil enriched with bird or bat droppings; Mississippi and Ohio River valleys
* Coccidiodomycosis: southern California (esp.. San Joachin Valley); southwest Texas, Arizona, N Mexico
* Pneumocystis carinii: HIV risk factors
* Relative bradycardia: viral infection; Mycoplasma pneumoniae; Psittacosis; Tularemia; Legionella
* Q fever (Coxiella burnetii): goats, cattle, sheep
* Meliodosis: travel to S.E. Asia, East Indies, Australia, Guam, South or Central America
* Brucellosis: cattle; goats; pigs; abattoir works and veterinarians
* Anthrax: cattle, swine, horses; goat hair, wool, or hides
Pneumococcal pneumonia: Predisposing factors
* Sickle cell disease
* Asplenia
* IgG disorders: agammaglobulinemia, myeloma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia
* Nephrotic syndrome
* Cirrhosis
* Alcoholism
Case # 4
* RA 57 year Caucasian male
* Cough , dyspnea, diarrhea for weeks
* No response to cephalexin
* CT sinuses - normal
* Progressive malaise and presented to ER
* pO2 on 100% NRB- 90, Creatinine 1.8, WBC: 12
* CXR-read as normal, HIV positive
Pneumonia in AIDS patients
* When in doubt, respiratory isolation for Tb
* S. pneumoniae is the number 1 cause
* Investigations
o Obtain sputum for gram stain and culture
o Other serology and antigen testing as indicated (histoplasma, cryptococcus, PCP, coccidio, etc.
o AFB stain if indicated(sensitivity with 3 specimens is about 60%)
PCP: Diagnosis (Imaging)
Chest x ray: PCP pneumonia with bilateral, diffuse granular opacities.
Credit: L, Huang, MD, HIV InSite
Chest x ray: PCP pneumonia with bilateral perihilar opacities, interstitial prominence, hyperlucent cystic lesions. Credit: HIV Web Study, www.hivwebstudy. org, © 2006 University of Washington
PCP
* PCP is a SUBACUTE pneumonia, CD4 usually <200
* Dyspnea, dry cough, chest discomfort
* In 30% patients
o CD4 > 200
o CXR normal
* TMP/SMX and steroids if hypoxic
Tuberculosis in HIV patients
* Occurs at any CD4 count
* Primary TB
o Occurs especially in people with advanced HIV infection
o Comprises about 1/3 of TB cases in HIV patients
* Reactivation of latent TB
o More likely in HIV-infected patients
o 7-10% annual risk in HIV-infected patients with positive tuberculin skin test (TST)
+ In HIV uninfected, 5-10% lifetime risk
* Patients with TB have HIV viral loads and faster progression of HIV
Case # 5
* 45 year female
* Intubated in the ICU for 7 days
* Now has worsening fever, leukocytosis and increased oxygen requirement
Nosocomial pneumonia
* Role of oropharyngeal colonization, especially of gram-negative rods (Pseudomonas, acinetobacter, etc.) : by end of one week, 45% of ICU patients are colonized; pneumonia develops in 23% of colonized patients versus 3.3% of non-colonized patients
* Risk factors to colonization: more advanced illness, longer duration in the hospital, antibiotics, intubation, azotemia, underlying pulmonary disease
Case # 6
* 23 year male, acute leukemia and bone marrow transplant
* Is severely neutropenic due to chemotherapy
Cavitary pneumonia
* Tuberculosis
Actinomyces
Nocardia
Klebsiella
Staphylococcus aureus
Anaerobic organisms
* Fungal infection Histoplasmosis
Coccidiomycosis, aspergillus
Complications of pneumonia
* Pleuropulmonary: lung abscess; adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); pleural effusion; empyema; bronchopleural fistula; bronchiectasis; fibrosis; slow resolution
* Extrapulmonary: meningitis; brain abscess; endocarditis; pericarditis; arthritis; osteomyelitis
Lung Abscess
* Lung abscesses are usually caused by mouth flora(viridans strep, anaerobes, etc.)
* They need prolonged courses of antibiotics
* Options are the clindamycin, amox/clavulanic acid, pip/tazo, carbapenems
Pneumonia: Summary
* 6th leading cause of death and most common nosocomial infection causing death
* Precise diagnosis desirable but all-too-often not obtained
* Bronchoalveolar lavage and endobronchial sampling are now standard in nosocomial or difficult to diagnose pneumonia
Lower Respiratory Tract Infections.ppt
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