Family medicine #15

 

HY lecture notes:

What is IBS? –> Irritable bowel syndrome à classically constipation +/- diarrhea +/- other GI Sx like cramping pain or GERD-like Sx that are relieved with defecation –> there are many ways to Tx IBS, such as starting with psych screen, but if the USMLE asks about meds, they like lubiprostone, which is used for constipation-predominant IBS (PGE1 analogue that causes increased Cl secretion in bowel –> Na follows Cl à water follows Na –> softens stool).

Travel + self-limiting watery or brown/green diarrhea; Dx? –> Traveler diarrhea = ETEC HL or HS toxin.

Bloody diarrhea + poultry consumption –> Campylobacter jejuni or Salmonella spp.

Abx (clindamycin, beta-lactam, cephalosporin) + diarrhea –> C. difficile.

Dx of C. diff –> stool AB toxin test, not stool culture.

Fever of 104 + abdo distension in C diff –> toxic megacolon –> laparotomy.

Tx of C. diff –> vancomycin, not metronidazole (updated guidelines as of Feb 2018).

Bloody diarrhea + travel –> Entamoeba histolytica.

Tx of E. histolytica –> metronidazole + iodoquinol; can give paromomycin.

Close quarters or military barracks or cruise ship + watery diarrhea –> Norwalk virus.

Child <5 years + watery diarrhea –> rotavirus.

Few organisms causing bloody diarrhea –> Shigella.

Bloody diarrhea + appendicitis-like pain (pseudoappendicitis) in a child –>Yersinia enterocolitica.

Bloody diarrhea + reactive arthritis in an adult –> Y. enterocolitica, Campylobacter, Shigella, Salmonella.

Diarrhea + Guillain-Barre syndrome –> Campylobacter.

Vomiting a few hours after eating meat –> aureus preformed heat-stable toxin.

Vomiting (or any unusual Sx like bloody diarrhea) + eating custards, creams, potato salad –> answer = S. aureus preformed HS toxin –> the type of food in this scenario “wins” over the weird bloody diarrhea finding –> bear in mind typical bloody-diarrhea-inducing gram (-) rods like EHEC, Yersinia enterocolitica, Campylobacter, Shigella, Salmonella have ~1-3-day incubation period) –> iow, if you get sick on the scale of hours from food, S. aureus preformed toxin is likely.

25F + intermittent bloody diarrhea for 3 months + intermittent fever + weight loss –> answer IBD (Crohn or UC).

Tx for Crohn + UC –> USMLE wants oral sulfasalazine (or mesalamine) first before oral steroids; for perianal disease in Crohn, topical agents / enemas can be used; NBME won’t make you pick between oral and topical distinguish (that’s more Qbank being pedantic); surgery can be done for UC.

UC + high bilirubin + high ALP –> primary sclerosing cholangitis.

Red shins + Crohn –> erythema nodosum (type III hypersensitivity; panniculitis –> inflammation of subcutaneous fat, not a rash).

Crater with necrotic debris on forearm + UC –> pyoderma gangrenosum.

IBD + eczematoid plaque on forehead + sore joints –> psoriatic arthritis (HLA-B27 –> PAIR à Psoriasis, Ankylosing spondylitis, IBD, Reactive arthritis).

IBD + back pain –> sacroiliitis (or ankylosing spondylitis).

Biopsy in Crohn –> non-caseating granulomas; transmural; UC you don’t see these findings.

Vesicles anywhere on body (not limited for extensors) + Celiac –> dermatitis herpetiformis.

Biopsy of DH –> IgA deposition at dermal papillae.

Biopsy of small bowel in Celiac –> flattening of intestinal villi.

Dx of Celiac –> IgA anti-tissue transglutaminase, anti-gliadin (aka anti-endomysial).

After Celiac Ab positivity, what’s the next best step (no further intervention necessary or duodenal biopsy) –> answer = duodenal biopsy (sounds wrong, but it’s what USMLE wants).

Weird factoid about Celiac –> increased risk of T cell lymphoma.

Biopsy of small bowel in lactose intolerance –> normal villi.

Dx of lactose intolerance –> hydrogen breath test or decreased stool pH.

Vague vignette where it sounds like either Celiac or lactose intolerance but it’s in a young adult who’s had zero symptoms until now –> lactose intolerance (can be adult-onset).

Watery diarrhea in immunocompromised patient –> Cryptosporidium parvum.

How is Giardia transmitted (is the answer “water-borne” or “fecal-oral”?); answer –> water-borne.

Steatorrhea in guy who went swimming or scuba diving –> Giardia.

Tx for Giardia –> metronidazole.

Fever + periorbital edema + muscle aches + went to a BBQ; Dx? –> Trichinella spiralis –> this is a classic triad seen in trichinosis.

How do you get trichinosis? –> bear meat (yes, Alaska is still in the United States and people hunt polar bear) or pork (pork nematode, not cestode).

What is nematode vs cestode vs trematode? –> nematode is roundworm; cestode tapeworm; trematodes are flukes.

Nematode from pork –> Trichinella spiralis.

Cestode (tapeworm) from pork –> Taenia solium.

What does T. solium cause? –> cysticersosis (muscle cysts) or neurocysticercosis (brain cysts).

“Swiss cheese appearance” of brain in someone who traveled abroad –> neurocysticercosis.

Single cystic lesion seen on brain CT in someone who went to Mexico –> neurocysticercosis.

Tx for cysticersosis / neurocysticercosis –> praziquantel or albendazole (the USMLE will never give you both and make you choose between them; for anti-helminth drugs questions, the correct answer will be the only anti-helminth drug listed).