Outcomes from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow Undergraduate Conference - January 15th 2010
Dr Pauline Gross – Acute Medicine
· Acute Medicine is a subspeciality which has only been recognised for about 10 years.
· It is possible to specialise between general medicine and acute care
· Top 10 A&E admissions – no.1 cause for presentation is chest pain.
· Non rebreather mask and a reservoir mask are the same thing.
· Respiratory rate is often not measured accurately yet it is the most sensitive physiological parameter of acute illness.
· Even if you have a low index of suspicion for sepsis, take blood cultures – wont harm the patient!
· Shock is inadequate tissue perfusion, not just hypotensive. Elevated lactate levels are a simple test. Elevated in patients who will be in shock.
· Cardiogenic shock will lead to an increase in JVP.
· Septic / hypovolaemic shock will cause a decrease in JVP.
· Fluid challenge is a useful diagnostic tool.
· Creatinine levels should always be compared with what is NORMAL for the patient.
· Remember after finishing ABCDE, RESTART at the beginning.
· Sepsis is often missed in its early stages yet early recognition is proven to improve outcomes.
· SIRS = a clinical response arising from a non-specific insult. When infection is confirmed, it is sepsis.
· Less fluids over a fast period of time leads to better outcomes than lots of fluids over a long period of time.
· Management of organ failure = early involement of critical care and HDU.
Dr David McCarey – Rheumatology
· Osteoarthritis is much more common than rheumatoid arthritis.
· ANAs is a sensitive test for all inflammatory rheumatology disorders.
· Joint pain – is it inflammatory or degenerative? Inflammatory will include morning stiffness, joint swelling and synovitis. Also rapid onset and functional loss.
· Inflammatory back pain vs degenerative can be hard to distinguish. Does the pain move site?
· Reactive arthritis is a more likely diagnosis if recent infection eg. UTI, LRTI.
· Pseudogout causes calcium pyrophosphate crystals.
· Very early use of methotrexate in patients with raised antiCCP antibodies and single joint pain can halt early onset of RF symptoms and changes.
· Ultrasound scans have an important role in diagnosing joint disease.
· MRI scan = gold standard but is not a routine diagnostic tool due to costs.
· Three key DMARDS: methotrexate, sulfasalazine and hydroxychloroquine.
· Anti-TNF alpha and other biological therapies eg Etanercept – can cause as much as £10,000 per patient!
Dr John Leach – Neurology
· Speed of onset is very important when assessing neurological disease. Ie. Fast onset is likely to be vascular.
· A pyramidal posture is a spastic posture.
· UMN lesions cause a ‘spastic’ increase in tone ie. clasp knife appearance.
· Parkinsonian disorders cause a ‘lead pipe’ consistent resistance to tone.
· Corneal reflex is a CNV test. Sensation to the eyeball.
· MRC Muscle Grading = 0 to 5. Tone, Power, Reflex, Sensation and Coordination.
· Full testing of sensation should include: light touch, pin prick, vibration and proprioception.
· A cervical myelopathy could cause UMN signs in the legs and LMN signs in the arms.
Dr Allan James – Oncology
· Usually you cannot have invasion of cancer without metastases.
· Endometriosis is an example of a metastasising benign process.
· It is usually metastases which ultimately lead to the patient’s death.
· Staging is describing a primary cancer and the extent to which it has spread from the site of origin ie. ‘PROGNOSTICATING’ the patient.
· Therapy: Is this a treatable cancer? Is this a treatable patient?
· MDT is the cornerstone of cancer treatment. Don’t engage in a discussion about this in the exam without mentioning the MDT!
· Radiotherapy causes molecular DNA damage. This may be enough to cause cell death.
· All cancer can be eradicated by radiotherapy. The skill is delivering it without causing the undesireable side effects which can be short term or long term (long term are much more worrying).
· Good cancer medicine is often not knowing WHO to treat but knowing who NOT to treat.
· Don’t forget about oncological emergencies such as neutropaenic sepsis, spinal cord compression, stridor and hypercalcaemia.
Dr Mitchell – Palliative Care
· Good palliative care is the responsibility of ALL doctors.
· Intrathecal local anaesthetic drug delivery into the CSF: leads to a lower incidence of side effects. It is a subcutaneous device and knowing about its existence is important.
Dr Colin Perry – Medical Training
· Look up postgraduate medical training: The Gold Guide.
· This contains the Core Medical Training curriculum.
· Try and sit Part 1 of the MRCP exam as an FY2. There is still credit for trying even if it leads to failure because it shows commitment to the specialty.
· The MRCP has 3 parts: Part 1, Part 2 and PACES.