t Blue C 123 C 186 eReflex etC et et n n n n . . . . X X X X ok ok ok ok o o o o B w.B w.B w.B w w w w w w t t t t .ne .ne .ne .ne X X X X ok ok ok the latest guidelines, the ook reflect Fully revised too o Bo B B new junior .doctors’ contract, and the most .B . w w to the Foundation Programme w changes recentw ww w the Oxford Handbook forwthew curriculum, I ok N • FIF EDIT .Bo e X.n H EDIT 5 I N • FIF t .ne X ok .Bo T O o Bo t .ne X ok 1 9780198813538_CVRmech.indd .Bo Presents a new Psychiatry chapter, and key topics including the medical certificate of cause of death N • FIF 5 2 et n . kX Reflects the latest changes to the Foundation Programme curriculum and junior doctor contracts D H E I TI O T Updated in line with the latest guidelines O N • FIF t t .ne .ne Praise for previous editions: X X X a fantastic resource. Every ok Realistic and focussed, o ok okit'shave o o a copy. should doctor junior new Bo B B 3 fluids and .renal . .Bo w w w BMAw 4 haematology ww w Book Awards ww 5 skin and eyes t t t t e n . 6 emergency department .ne .ne .ne X X X X ok 7 procedures ook ok ok o o Bo B B B 8 interpreting w. results w. w. w w w w w w appendices et et et et n n n n . . . . X X X X ok ok ok ok o o o o B w.B w.B w.B w w w w w w Consultant editors: James Dawson, Stephan Sanders, Simon Eccles O t .ne Tim Raine | George Collins Catriona Hall | Nina Hjelde I t .ne neurology X k 2 psychiatry Hjelde of the year awards—4th edition 2015; 3rd edition 2012; 2nd edition 2009 H endocrinology T 0 the foundation programme EDIT what you really need to know as a new doctor being a doctor and off the wards, from practical t e et on et guidance et n n n n how best to adapt to at the patient’s bedside to . . . . 2 life on the wards X X X X your new, day-to-day ok ok ok life. ok 3 history and examination o o o o survival guide to the.B With this indispensable B B w.B w.Programme you need never w Foundation 4 prescribing w w wbe alone the wards again. onw w w 5 pharmacopoeia t e6t resuscitation et et eRaine n n n n . . . . feedback. your value We X 7 cardiovascular kX X X Visit www.oup.com/uk/medicine/handbooks ok o ok ok Collins o o o o respiratory 8 book. this on comments your us give to B w.B w.B w.B Hall 9 gastroenterology w w book commended at the BMA medical Highlyw w w w oxford handbook for H w ww t t .ne .ne X X k ok oo o B mentor, this handbook distils the Your pocket.B . w of four authors across multiple wNHS knowledge w w in an easy-access format, environments w w covering T X ok o .B Foundation Programme returns in a brand new edition to keep you up-to-date and give you the information and confidence you need to excel in your first two years as a doctor. oxford handbook for o Bo t .ne the foundation programme t .ne X k what medical school should have taught you t 27/06/18 5:23 PM o .Bo Emergency topics Arrests Adult resuscitation E pp. 232–3 Obstetric resuscitation E p. 244 Neonatal resuscitation E pp. 242–3 Paediatric resuscitation E pp. 238–40 Trauma resuscitation E pp. 236–7 Emergencies Abdominal pain E p. 294 Aggressive behaviour E p. 370 Anaphylaxis E pp. 484–5 Bradyarrhythmia E p. 262 Breathlessness E p. 276 Burns E pp. 480–1 Chest pain E p. 246 Clotting abnormalities E p. 418 Coma E pp. 344–5 Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) E p. 330 Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) E p. 417 GI bleed E p. 304 Hepatic encephalopathy E p. 318 High INR E p. 418 Hyperglycaemia E p. 330 Hyperkalaemia E p. 399–403 Hyperosmolar non-ketotic state (HONK) E p. 332 Hypertension E p. 268 Hypoglycaemia E p. 328 Hypokalaemia E pp. 399–403 Hypotension E p. 488–9 Hypoxia E p. 276 Limb pain E p. 458 Liver failure E p. 318 Overdose E p. 506 Paediatric seizure E p. 349 Psychosis E p. 378–81 Rash E p. 424 Red eye E pp. 440–2 Reduced GCS Epp. 344–5 Renal failure/kidney injury E p. 386 Shock E pp. 490–5 Shortness of breath E p. 276 Stridor E p. 290 Stroke E p. 354 Tachyarrhythmia E p. 254 Seizures E p. 348 Normal values Despite national efforts to standardise laboratory testing and reporting, exact ranges vary between hospitals, these figures serve as a guide. Haematology see E p. 580 Hb–men Hb–women 130–180g/L 115–160g/L WBC MCV 76–96fl Plts 150–400 x 10 /l Ferritin TIBC 12–200micrograms/l B12 42–80µmol/l Folate • NØ • LØ 9 • EØ 4–11 x 109/l 2.0–7.5 x 109/l (40–75%) 1.3–3.5 x 109/l (20–45%) 0.04–0.44 x 109/l (1–6%) 197–866pg/ml 2–20micrograms/l Clotting see E p. 581 INR PT Fibrinogen 0.8–1.2 11–16s 1.5–4.0g/l APTTr APTT D–dimer 0.8–1.2 35–45s <0.3mg/ml (<300ng/ml) Ca2+ (adjusted) PO43– Mg2+ HCO3– Cl– 2.2–2.6mmol/l 0.8–1.5mmol/l 0.7–1.0mmol/l 22–29mmol/l 95–108mmol/l 30–130units/l 3–35units/l 10–55units/l Bilirubin Albumin Total protein 3–21micrograms/l 35–50g/l 60–80g/l 0–120units/l 3.5–6.0mmol/l 24–37g/l <6mmol/l 0.5–1.9mmol/l CRP ESR CK LDH PSA <5mg/l <20mm/h 25–195units/l 70–250units/l 0–4ng/ml PaO2 PaCO2 10.6–13.3kPa 4.7–6.0kPa U+Es see E p. 582 Na+ K+ Urea Creatinine Osmolality 133–146mmol/l 3.5–5.3mmol/l 2.5–7.8mmol/l 70–150µmol/l 275–295mOsmol/kg LFTs see E p. 583 ALP ALT γGT Other Amylase Fasting glucose Immunoglobulins Cholesterol Triglycerides Blood gases see E pp. 598–9 pH Base excess 7.35–7.45 ±2mmol/l OXFORD MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS Oxford Handbook for the Foundation Programme Published and forthcoming Oxford Handbooks Oxford Handbook for the Foundation Programme, 5e Oxford Handbook of Acute Medicine, 3e Oxford Handbook of Anaesthesia, 4e Oxford Handbook of Applied Dental Sciences Oxford Handbook of Cardiology, 2e Oxford Handbook of Clinical and Healthcare Research Oxford Handbook of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 3e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Dentistry, 6e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Diagnosis, 3e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Examination and Practical Skills, 2e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Haematology, 4e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Immunology and Allergy, 3e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine – Mini Edition, 9e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine, 10e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Pathology Oxford Handbook of Clinical Pharmacy, 3e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Rehabilitation, 2e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Specialties, 10e Oxford Handbook of Clinical Surgery, 4e Oxford Handbook of Complementary Medicine Oxford Handbook of Critical Care, 3e Oxford Handbook of Dental Patient Care Oxford Handbook of Dialysis, 4e Oxford Handbook of Emergency Medicine, 4e Oxford Handbook of Endocrinology and Diabetes, 3e Oxford Handbook of ENT and Head and Neck Surgery, 2e Oxford Handbook of Epidemiology for Clinicians Oxford Handbook of Expedition and Wilderness Medicine, 2e Oxford Handbook of Forensic Medicine Oxford Handbook of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, 2e Oxford Handbook of General Practice, 4e Oxford Handbook of Genetics Oxford Handbook of Genitourinary Medicine, HIV, and Sexual Health, 2e Oxford Handbook of Geriatric Medicine, 3e Oxford Handbook of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, 2e Oxford Handbook of Key Clinical Evidence, 2e Oxford Handbook of Medical Dermatology, 2e Oxford Handbook of Medical Imaging Oxford Handbook of Medical Sciences, 2e Oxford Handbook of Medical Statistics Oxford Handbook of Neonatology, 2e Oxford Handbook of Nephrology and Hypertension, 2e Oxford Handbook of Neurology, 2e Oxford Handbook of Nutrition and Dietetics, 2e Oxford Handbook of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 3e Oxford Handbook of Occupational Health, 2e Oxford Handbook of Oncology, 3e Oxford Handbook of Operative Surgery, 3e Oxford Handbook of Ophthalmology, 3e Oxford Handbook of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Oxford Handbook of Orthopaedics and Trauma Oxford Handbook of Paediatrics, 2e Oxford Handbook of Pain Management Oxford Handbook of Palliative Care, 2e Oxford Handbook of Practical Drug Therapy, 2e Oxford Handbook of Pre-Hospital Care Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry, 3e Oxford Handbook of Public Health Practice, 3e Oxford Handbook of Reproductive Medicine & Family Planning, 2e Oxford Handbook of Respiratory Medicine, 3e Oxford Handbook of Rheumatology, 3e Oxford Handbook of Sport and Exercise Medicine, 2e Handbook of Surgical Consent Oxford Handbook of Tropical Medicine, 4e Oxford Handbook of Urology, 3e Oxford Handbook for the Foundation Programme Fifth Edition Tim Raine Consultant Gastroenterologist, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK George Collins Cardiology Registrar Barts Health NHS Trust, UK Catriona Hall General Practitioner, James Wigg Practice, Kentish Town, London, UK Nina Hjelde Anaesthetic registrar, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, UK Consultant Editors James Dawson Consultant Anaesthetist, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, UK Stephan Sanders Assistant Professor, UCSF School of Medicine, USA Simon Eccles Consultant in Emergency Medicine, St Thomas Hospital, UK 1 1 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford, OX2 6DP, United Kingdom Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries © Oxford University Press 2018 The moral rights of the authors have been asserted First Edition published in 2005 Second Edition published in 2008 Third Edition published in 2011 Fourth Edition published in 2014 Fifth Edition published in 2018 Impression: 1 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, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by licence or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer Published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016, United States of America British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Control Number: 2018938674 ISBN 978–0–19–881353–8 Printed and bound in China by C&C Offset Printing Co., Ltd. Oxford University Press makes no representation, express or implied, that the drug dosages in this book are correct. Readers must therefore always check the product information and clinical procedures with the most up-to-date published product information and data sheets provided by the manufacturers and the most recent codes of conduct and safety regulations. The authors and the publishers do not accept responsibility or legal liability for any errors in the text or for the misuse or misapplication of material in this work. Except where otherwise stated, drug dosages and recommendations are for the non-pregnant adult who is not breast-feeding Links to third party websites are provided by Oxford in good faith and for information only. Oxford disclaims any responsibility for the materials contained in any third party website referenced in this work. v Preface It seems that every new edition of this book has arrived fresh on the tail of some major change impacting the training and lives of junior doctors in the NHS. Previous new appointments into the Foundation Programme had to contend with the traumas of the introduction of ‘Modernising Medical Careers’. More recently, we have seen the treatment of junior doctors reach the national media once more with the new junior doctors’ contract and the ensuing, unprecedented industrial relations dispute of 2015–2016. If there is a theme, beyond the constant upheaval that our junior doctors are being subjected to, it is the increasing void between those delivering healthcare on the ‘shop floor’ and those planning what is best for the health service, often based upon misinformation and misunderstanding. In a landscape where a Secretary of State for Health so wilfully misquotes data as to lead to questions regarding his honesty and his intelligence, what message of hope can we send to newly appointed junior doctors? And as we wrote in a previous preface, through all of this turbulence, the fact remains that the leap from being a final year medical student to a junior doctor remains immense. No matter what elements may be introduced to final year curricula, or to Foundation Programme inductions, the psychological and professional gear-shift is a change that many feel unprepared for. Overnight the new doctor inherits huge responsibility, an incessantly active bleep, and an inflexible working rota. But something else happens, overnight. The new doctor also becomes a valued member of the medical team, someone who patients look to for help and someone with the capacity to provide that help to both patients and their relatives. Despite changes in training structure, the new doctor has the potential and flexibility to learn and shape a career in just about any area of medicine they wish to pursue. And if the assault of politicians might well distress some, take solace in over two decades of UK polling data, showing doctors as representing the profession consistently rated highest for trustworthiness, with politicians languishing consistently at the very opposite end of the spectrum. Nevertheless, such is the burden that comes with the new professional status, that nothing can make the transition that a student doctor must go through easy. At the very least, we hope that this book can act as a guide, a manager of expectations, but above all else, as a companion on this difficult journey. Carry the book with you. Turn to it when you feel most exposed or most worried. We have tried to make sure that, whatever the situation, there will be at least something that you can read and use to start you off along the right path. And if there isn’t? Don’t panic—make sure you have spoken with someone senior, and take heed of the advice on p. xxviii. Finally, when the dust has settled, please take the time to let us know and to help us continue to improve this book by sending comments and suggestions to: Mohfp.uk@oup.com TR, 2017 et .n kX o o w.B ww et .n kX o o w.B ww t ok e X.n ww o w.B To every doctor who’s ever stood there thinking: ‘What on earth do I do now?’ vii Acknowledgements The authors would like to say a huge ‘thank you’ to many people for their wisdom, knowledge, and support: • Tim thanks Lucy for her patience and support and Beatrice, Felix, and Max for their carefree good humour • George would like to thank Mel, Mark and Charlie, whose support and space made this authorship possible • Catriona would like to thank her former Foundation colleagues for their friendship, encouragement, and resilience, and her colleagues in General Practice for their mentorship and unfailing support • Nina would like to dedicate this work to her husband for his endless support through yet another one of her ventures Specific thanks for assistance with specialist material go to Dr Daniel Neville (Respiratory), Dr Sam O’Toole (Endocrinology), Dr Simon Vann Jones (Psychiatry), Drs Bjorn Thomas and Duncan Leadbetter (Skin and eyes), and Dr Elaine Church (Emergencies). This book builds upon the efforts of authors of all previous editions. In particular, we are grateful for the vision of Simon Eccles and the hard work of James Dawson and Stephan Sanders, without whom this book would never have come to be. We would also like to thank all the staff at Oxford University Press for their help and for making our writing into a book. In particular, Liz Reeve and Kate Smith for their terrific efforts and support in making the OHFP5e such a pleasure to work on, along with the rest of the OUP team: • Michael Hawkes • Fiona Chippendale ix Contents Symbols and abbreviations Introduction 10 tips on being a safe junior doctor 10 tips on being a happy doctor 1 Being a doctor 2 Life on the wards 3 History and examination 4 Prescribing 5 Pharmacopoeia 6 Resuscitation 7 Cardiovascular 8 Respiratory 9 Gastroenterology 10 Endocrinology 11 Neurology 12 Psychiatry 13 Fluids and renal 14 Haematology 15 Skin and eyes 16 Emergency department 17 Procedures 18 Interpreting results Appendices Index x xxv xxvii xxviii 1 67 125 169 183 225 245 275 293 327 343 369 385 405 423 447 523 579 613 629 x Symbols and abbreviations K I E T 2 3 M i d l ± > < ♀ ♂ A+E AAA ABG ABPI ABx ACCS ACEi ACF ACR ACS ACTH ADH ADL AED AF AFB αFP (AFP) AIDS AKI ALL definition topics covered elsewhere cross reference supplementary information emergency don’t dawdle website increased decreased leading to plus/minus greater than less than female male accident and emergency abdominal aortic aneurysm arterial blood gas ankle–brachial pressure index antibiotics acute care common stem angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor(s) academic clinical fellowship albumin:creatinine ratio acute coronary syndrome adrenocorticotrophic hormone antidiuretic hormone activities of daily living automated external defibrillator/anti-epileptic drug atrial fibrillation acid-fast bacilli α-fetoprotein acquired immunodeficiency syndrome acute kidney injury acute lymphoblastic leukaemia Symbols and abbreviations ALP ALS ALT AML AMPH AMPLE ANA ANCA AoMRC AP APH APLS APTT AR ARB ARDS ARVC AS ASA ASAP ASD AST AT ATLS ATN AV AVN AVR AXR Ba BAL BBB BCG bd BE β-hCG BIH BiPAP BKA BLS alkaline phosphatase Advanced Life Support® alanine aminotransferase acute myeloid leukaemia approved mental health professional Allergies; Medications; Past medical history; Last meal; Events leading to presentation antinuclear antibody antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody Academy of Medical Royal Colleges anteroposterior antepartum haemorrhage Advanced Paediatric Life Support activated partial thromboplastin time aortic regurgitation angiotensin receptor blocker acute respiratory distress syndrome arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy aortic stenosis American Society of Anesthesiologists as soon as possible atrial septal defect aspartate transaminase angiotensin Advanced Trauma Life Support acute tubular necrosis atrioventricular atrioventricular node aortic valve replacement abdominal X-ray barium bronchoalveolar lavage bundle branch block bacille Calmette–Guérin (TB vaccination) bis die (twice daily) base excess β-human chorionic gonadotrophin benign intracranial hypertension biphasic positive airways pressure below knee amputation Basic Life Support xi xii Symbols and abbreviations BM BMA BMI BNF BNP BP BPH BX C+S Ca Ca2+ CABG CAD CAH CAPD CBD CBG CBT CCF CCG CCT CCU CD CDT CEA CEPOD CEX cf CHD CI CJD CK CK-MB CKD CLL CLO CML CMV CNS CO Boehringer Mannheim meter (capillary blood glucose) or bone marrow British Medical Association body mass index British National Formulary brain natriuretic peptide blood pressure benign prostatic hypertrophy biopsy culture and sensitivity carcinoma calcium coronary artery bypass graft coronary artery disease congenital adrenal hyperplasia continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis case-based discussion/common bile duct capillary blood glucose cognitive behavioural therapy congestive cardiac failure clinical commissioning group Certificate of Completion of Training coronary care unit controlled drug Clostridium difficile toxin carcinoembryonic antigen Confidential Enquiry into Perioperative Deaths Clinical Evaluation Exercise compared with coronary heart disease contraindication Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease creatine kinase heart-specific creatine kinase (MB-isoenzyme) chronic kidney disease chronic lymphocytic leukaemia Campylobacter-like organism chronic myeloid leukaemia cytomegalovirus central nervous system carbon monoxide Symbols and abbreviations CO2 COAD COC COPD CPAP CPK CPN CPR CQC CRP CRT CSF CSU CT CTCA CTG CTPA CVA CVP CVS CXR d D+C D+V DBS DC DCCV DCM DEXA DH DHS DI DIB DIC DIPJ DKA DLB DM DMARD DNA DNAR carbon dioxide chronic obstructive airway disease combined oral contraceptive chronic obstructive pulmonary disease continuous positive airway pressure creatine phosphokinase community psychiatric nurse cardiopulmonary resuscitation care quality commission C-reactive protein capillary-refill time/cardiac resynchronization therapy cerebrospinal fluid catheter specimen of urine computed tomography/Core Training/Core Trainee CT coronary angiogram cardiotocograph CT pulmonary angiogram cerebrovascular accident central venous pressure cardiovascular system chest X-ray day(s) dilatation and curettage diarrhoea and vomiting Disclosure and Barring Service direct current direct current cardioversion dilated cardiomyopathy dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) drug history/Department of Health dynamic hip screw diabetes insipidus difficulty in breathing disseminated intravascular coagulation distal interphalangeal joint diabetic ketoacidosis dementia with Lewy bodies diabetes mellitus disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug deoxyribonucleic acid/did not attend do not attempt resuscitation xiii xiv Symbols and abbreviations DOAC DoB DOPS DRE DSM-5 DTP DU DVLA DVT d/w Dx EBM EBV ECG Echo ECV ED EDD EEG EMD EMG ENP ENT EO EPO ERCP ERPC ESM ESR ESRF ET EtOH ETT EUA EVD EWTD F1/F2 FAST FB direct oral anticoagulant date of birth Direct Observation of Procedural Skills digital rectal examination Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th edition diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis duodenal ulcer Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency deep vein thrombosis discuss(ed) with diagnosis evidence-based medicine Epstein–Barr virus electrocardiogram echocardiogram external cephalic version emergency department (formerly A+E) expected due date (pregnancy) electroencephalogram electromechanical dissociation or pulseless electrical activity (PEA) electromyogram emergency nurse practitioner ear, nose, and throat eosinophil erythropoietin endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography evacuation of retained products of conception ejection systolic murmur erythrocyte sedimentation rate end-stage renal failure endotracheal ethanol (alcohol) endotracheal tube examination under anaesthetic extra-ventricular drain European Working Time Directive Foundation year one/two focused assessment with sonography in trauma foreign body Symbols and abbreviations FBC FDP FEV1 FFP FH FiO2 FNA FOB FOOSH FP FPP FRC FSH FTSTA FVC G+S G6PD GA GB GBS GCS GFR γGT (GGT) GH GI GMC GN GORD GOSWH GP GTN GTT GU(M) h h@N HAART HAI HAV Hb HbA1c HBV full blood count fibrin degradation product forced expiratory volume in one second fresh frozen plasma family history/foetal heart fraction of inspired oxygen fine needle aspiration faecal occult blood fall on outstretched hand Foundation Programme flexible pay premia functional residual capacity follicle stimulating hormone fixed-term specialty training appointment forced vital capacity group and save glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase general anaesthetic gall bladder Group B Streptococcus/Guillain–Barré syndrome Glasgow Coma Scale glomerular filtration rate gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase growth hormone/gynae history gastrointestinal General Medical Council glomerulonephritis gastro-oesophageal reflux disease guardian of safe working hours general practitioner glyceryl trinitrate glucose tolerance test genitourinary (medicine) hour(s) hospital at night highly active antiretroviral therapy hospital-acquired infection hepatitis A virus haemoglobin glycosylated haemoglobin hepatitis B virus xv xvi Symbols and abbreviations HCA HCC hCG HCM HCSA HCT HCV HDL HDU HEE HELLP HHS HIV HLA HMMA HOCM HONK HPA HPC HR HRCT HRT HSP HSV HTN HUS HVS I+D IBD IBS ICD ICD-10 ICP ICS ICU ID IE IFG Ig IGT healthcare assistant hepatocellular carcinoma human chorionic gonadotrophin hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association haematocrit hepatitis C virus high-density lipoprotein high dependency unit Health Education England haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets (syndrome) hyperglycaemic hyperosmolar state human immunodeficiency virus human leucocyte antigen 4-hydroxy-3-methoxymandelic acid (phaeochromocytoma) hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy hyperosmolar non-ketotic state Health Protection Agency history of presenting complaint heart rate/human resources high-resolution computed tomography scan hormone replacement therapy Henoch–Schönlein purpura herpes simplex virus hypertension haemolytic uraemic syndrome high vaginal swab incision and drainage inflammatory bowel disease irritable bowel syndrome implantable cardiac defibrillator International Classification of Diseases 10th revision intracranial pressure inhaled corticosteroid intensive care unit identification/infectious diseases infective endocarditis impaired fasting glucose immunoglobulin impaired glucose tolerance Symbols and abbreviations IHD ILS IM Imp IN INH INR ITP ITU IU IUCD IUP IV IVDU IVI IVP IVU Ix JDC JVP K-nail kPa KUB K-wire L LA LABA LACS LAD LAMA LBBB LDH LDL LETB LFT LH LHRH LIF LMA LMN LMP ischaemic heart disease Immediate Life Support intramuscular impression (clinical) intranasal by inhalation international normalized ratio idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura intensive care unit/intensive therapy unit international unit intrauterine contraceptive device intrauterine pregnancy intravenous intravenous drug user intravenous infusion intravenous pyelogram intravenous urogram investigation(s) Junior Doctors’ Committee of BMA jugular venous pressure Küntscher nail kilopascal kidneys, ureter, bladder (X-ray) Kirschner wire litre(s) local anaesthetic/left atrium long-acting β-agonist lacunar circulation stroke left axis deviation/left anterior descending long acting muscarinic agonist left bundle branch block lactate dehydrogenase low-density lipoprotein Local Education and Training Board liver function test luteinizing hormone luteinizing hormone releasing hormone left iliac fossa laryngeal mask airway lower motor neuron last menstrual period xvii xviii Symbols and abbreviations LMWH LN LØ LOC LP LRTI LSCS LTFT LTOT LUQ LVEF LVF LVH MAOI mane MAP M,C+S MCPJ MCV MDR MDT MDU ME MEWS mg MI min mL MMC mmH2O mmHg MMR MMSE MND MPS MR MRA MRCP MRI MRSA MS low-molecular-weight heparin lymph node lymphocyte loss of consciousness lumbar puncture lower respiratory tract infection lower segment Caesarean section less than full-time training long-term oxygen therapy left upper quadrant left ventricular ejection fraction left ventricular failure/left ventricular function left ventricular hypertrophy monoamine oxidase inhibitor in the morning mean arterial pressure microscopy, culture, and sensitivity metacarpal phalangeal joint mean cell volume multi-drug resistant multidisciplinary team Medical Defence Union myalgic encephalitis Modified Early Warning Score milligram(s) myocardial infarction minute(s) millilitre(s) Modernising Medical Careers millimetres of water millimetres of mercury measles, mumps, and rubella Mini-mental State Examination motor neuron disease Medical Protection Society mitral regurgitation/modified release/magnetic resonance mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography magnetic resonance imaging meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus multiple sclerosis/mitral stenosis Symbols and abbreviations MSF MSSA MST MSU MTPJ mth MVR N+V NAD NAI NBM NEB NG NHS NHSI NICE NICU NJ NNU NØ NOAC nocte NPA NPSA NSAID NSTEMI NTN NVD NYHA OA Obs OCD OCP od OD OGD OHA OHAM OHCC OHCLI OHCM multisource feedback meticillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus morphine sulfate mid-stream urine metatarsal phalangeal joint month(s) mitral valve replacement nausea and vomiting nothing abnormal detected non-accidental injury nil by mouth by nebulizer nasogastric National Health Service NHS improvement National Institute for Health and Care Excellence neonatal intensive care unit nasojejunal neonatal unit neutrophil non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulant at night nasopharyngeal aspirate National Patient Safety Agency non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction national training number normal vaginal delivery New York Heart Association osteoarthritis observations obsessive–compulsive disorder oral contraceptive pill/ova, cysts and parasites omni die (once daily) overdose oesophagogastroduodenoscopy Oxford Handbook of Anaesthesia Oxford Handbook of Acute Medicine Oxford Handbook of Critical Care Oxford Handbook of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine xix xx Symbols and abbreviations OHCS OHEM OHFP OHGP OHOG om on ORIF OSA OSCE OT OTC P PA PaCO2 PACS PAD PAN PaO2 PAT PBC PCA pCO2 PCOS PCR PCT PCV PD PDA PE PEA PEEP PEFR PERLA PET PICU PID PIP PIPJ PMETB Oxford Handbook of Clinical Specialties Oxford Handbook of Emergency Medicine Oxford Handbook for the Foundation Programme Oxford Handbook of General Practice Oxford Handbook of Obstetrics and Gynaecology omni mane (in the morning) omni nocte (at night) open reduction and internal fixation obstructive sleep apnoea objective structured clinical examination occupational therapy over the counter pulse posteroanterior partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide partial anterior circulation stroke/picture archiving and communication systems peripheral arterial disease polyarteritis nodosa partial pressure of arterial oxygen Peer Assessment Tool primary biliary cirrhosis patient-controlled analgesia partial pressure of carbon dioxide polycystic ovary syndrome polymerase chain reaction primary care trust packed cell volume Parkinson’s disease patent ductus arteriosus pulmonary embolism pulseless electrical activity positive end-expiratory pressure peak expiratory flow rate pupils equal and reactive to light and accommodation positron emission tomography paediatric intensive care unit pelvic inflammatory disease peak inspiratory pressure proximal interphalangeal joint Postgraduate Medical Education and Training Board (obsolete) Symbols and abbreviations PMH PMT PND PNS PO pO2 PoC POCS PONV POP PPH PPI PR PRHO PRN PROM PRV PSA PSH PT PTH PU PUD PUO PV PVD qds RA RAST RBBB RBC RDW REM RF Rh RhF RIF ROM ROS RR past medical history pre-menstrual tension paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea peripheral nervous system per os (by mouth) partial pressure of oxygen products of conception posterior circulation stroke postoperative nausea and vomiting plaster of Paris/progesterone-only pill postpartum haemorrhage proton pump inhibitor per rectum (by rectum) pre-registration house officer (old training system but still occasionally used) pro re nata (as required) premature rupture of membranes (pregnancy) polycythaemia rubra vera prostate-specific antigen/prescribing safety exam past surgical history prothrombin time parathyroid hormone passed urine/peptic ulcer peptic ulcer disease pyrexia of unknown origin plasma viscosity/per vagina peripheral vascular disease quater die sumendus (four times daily) rheumatoid arthritis radioallergosorbant test right bundle branch block red blood cell red cell distribution width rapid eye movement (sleep stage) rheumatic fever rhesus rheumatoid factor right iliac fossa range of movement review of systems respiratory rate xxi xxii Symbols and abbreviations RS RSI RTA RTI RUQ RVH Rx s SABA SAH SALT SAMA SARS Sats SBE SBP SC SCBU SCC SE SH SHDU SHO SIADH SIRS SJS SL SLE SOA SOB SOBAR SOBOE SOL SOT SpO2 SpR SR SSRI STAT ST respiratory system rapid sequence induction road traffic accident road traffic incident right upper quadrant right ventricular hypertrophy prescription second(s) short-acting β-agonist sub-arachnoid haemorrhage speech and language therapy short acting muscarinic agonist severe acute respiratory syndrome O2 saturation sub-acute bacterial endocarditis systolic blood pressure subcutaneous special care baby unit squamous cell carcinoma side effects social history surgical high dependency unit senior house officer (old training system but still widely used) syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion systemic inflammatory response syndrome Stevens–Johnson syndrome sublingual systemic lupus erythematosus swelling of ankles short of breath short of breath at rest short of breath on exertion space-occupying lesion shape of training oxygen saturation in peripheral blood specialist registrar (old training system but still widely used) slow release/sinus rhythm selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor statim (immediately) Specialty Training/Trainee Symbols and abbreviations STD STEMI STI STOP StR SVC SVR SVT Sx T3 T4 TAB TACS TB TBG TCA tds TEDS Temp TEN TENS TFT THR TIA TIBC TIMI TIPS TKR TLC TMJ TNM TnT TOE TPHA TPN TPR TSH TTA TTO TTP TURP sexually transmitted disease ST elevation myocardial infarction sexually transmitted infection surgical termination of pregnancy Specialty Training Registrar superior vena cava systemic vascular resistance supraventricular tachycardia symptoms tri-iodothyronine thyroxine Team Assessment of Behaviour total anterior circulation stroke tuberculosis thyroxine-binding globulin tricyclic antidepressant ter die sumendus (three times daily) thromboembolism deterrent stockings temperature toxic epidermal necrolysis transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation thyroid function test total hip replacement transient ischaemic attack total iron binding capacity Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction transjugular intrahepatic porto-systemic shunting total knee replacement total lung capacity/tender loving care temporomandibular joint tumour, nodes, metastases –cancer staging troponin T transoesophageal echocardiogram treponema pallidum haemagglutination assay total parenteral nutrition total peripheral resistance thyroid-stimulating hormone to take away to take out thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura transurethral resection of prostate xxiii xxiv Symbols and abbreviations TWOC Tx u/U U+E UA UC UMN UO URTI US(S) UTI UV V/Q VA VC VDRL VE VF VMA VP shunt VSD VT VZV WB WBC WCC WCT WHO wk WPW wt X-match yr ZN trial without catheter treatment units (write out ‘units’ when prescribing) urea and electrolytes unstable angina ulcerative colitis upper motor neuron urine output upper respiratory tract infection ultrasound scan urinary tract infection ultraviolet ventilation/perfusion scan visual acuity vital capacity venereal disease research laboratory (test) vaginal examination/ventricular ectopic ventricular fibrillation vanillylmandelic acid ventriculoperitoneal shunt ventriculoseptal defect ventricular tachycardia varicella-zoster virus weight bear(ing) white blood cell white cell count wide complex tachycardia World Health Organization week(s) Wolff –Parkinson–White (syndrome) weight crossmatch year(s) Ziehl–Neelsen Introduction Introduction Welcome to the 5th edition of the Oxford Handbook for the Foundation Programme—the ultimate FP doctor’s survival book. It is set out differently from other books; please take 2 minutes to read how it works: Being a doctor (E pp. 1–66) covers the non-clinical side of being a junior doctor: • The FP (E pp. 2–3) how to get a place, what it’s all about, the ePortfolio • Starting as an F1 (E p. 12) essential kit, efficiency, being organized • Communication (E pp. 20–1) breaking bad news, translators, languages • Quality and ethics (E pp. 27) confidentiality, consent, capacity • When things go wrong (E p. 32) errors, incident forms, hating your job • Boring but important stuff (E pp. 38–9) NHS structure, money, benefits • Your career (E p. 45) exams, CVs, getting ST posts, audits, research. Life on the wards (E pp. 67–123) is the definitive guide to ward jobs; it includes advice on ward rounds, being on-call, night shifts, making referrals, and writing in the notes. A section on common forms includes TTOs and ‘fit’ notes. There’s an important section on death—covering attitudes, palliative care, certifying, death certificates, and cremation forms as well as new material on the structure of the NHS. Ward ­dilemmas including nutrition, pain, death, and aggression are covered in detail, along with a section designed to help surgical juniors pick their way through the hazards of the operating theatre and manage their ­patients perioperatively. History and examination (E pp. 125–67) covers these old medical school favourites, from a ‘real-world’ perspective, to help you rapidly identify pathology and integrate your findings into a diagnosis. Prescribing (E pp. 169–82) and Pharmacopoeia (E pp. 169–82) cover how to prescribe, best practice, complex patients, interactions, and specific groups of drugs; commonly prescribed drugs are described in detail, with indications, contraindications, side effects, and dosing advice. Clinical chapters (E pp. 225–44) These chapters cover common clinical and ward cover problems. They are described by symptoms b ­ ecause you are called to see a breathless patient, not someone having a PE: • Emergencies The inside front cover of this handbook has a list of emergencies according to symptom (cardiac arrest, chest pain, seizures) with page references. These pages give step-by-step instructions to help you resuscitate and stabilize an acutely ill patient whilst waiting for senior help to arrive • Symptoms The clinical pages are arranged by symptom; causes are shown for each symptom, along with what to ask and look for, relevant investigations, and a table showing the distinguishing xxv xxvi Introduction features of each disease. Relevant diseases are described in the pages following each symptom • Diseases If you know the disease you can look it up in the index to find the symptoms, signs, results, and correct management. Procedures (E pp. 523–77) contains instructions on how to perform specific procedures, along with the equipment needed and contraindications. Interpreting results (E pp. 579–611) provides a guide to understanding investigations including common patterns, the important features to note, and possible causes of abnormalities. Appendices (E pp. 613–27) are several pages of useful information including contact numbers, growth charts, unit conversion charts, driving regulations, blank timetables, and telephone number lists. 10 tips on being a safe junior doctor 10 tips on being a safe junior doctor These tips are adapted from the National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death (NCEPOD) report An Acute Problem?1 NCEPOD is an independent body which aims to improve the quality and safety of patient care. The report summarizes a survey over one month of admissions to UK intensive care units. The findings are now more than a decade old, but sadly remain as relevant and current as when they were first written. 1) More attention should be paid to patients exhibiting physiological abnormalities. This is a marker of increased mortality risk (E p. 226) 2) The importance of respiratory rate monitoring should be highlighted. This parameter should be recorded at any point that other observations are being made (E p. 226) 3) Use of early warning scores can help to monitor patients and trigger appropriate escalation of care. Use them with care as they can still miss some acutely unwell patients (E pp. 226–7) 4) It is inappropriate for referral and acceptance to ICU to happen at junior doctor (<ST3) level (E pp. 228–9) 5) Training must be provided for junior doctors in the recognition of critical illness and the immediate management of fluid and oxygen therapy in these patients (E p. 230) 6) Consultants must supervise junior doctors more closely and should actively support juniors in the management of patients rather than only reacting to requests for help 7) Junior doctors must seek advice more readily. This may be from specialized teams such as outreach services or from the supervising consultant 8) Each hospital should have a track and trigger system that allows rapid detection of the signs of early clinical deterioration and an early and appropriate response (E pp. 226–7) 9) All entries in the notes should be dated and timed and should end with a legible name, status, and contact number (bleep or telephone) (E p. 76) 10) Each entry in the notes should clearly identify the name and grade of the most senior doctor involved in the patient episode (E p. 76). The full report and several other NCEPOD reports are available online1 and are well worth reading; there are many learning points for doctors of all grades and specialties. 1 An Acute Problem? NCEPOD (2005) at Mwww.ncepod.org.uk/2005aap.html See also Emergency Admissions: A journey in the right direction? (2007) at Mwww.ncepod.org.uk/2007ea.html, Deaths in Acute Hospitals: Caring to the End? (2009) at Mwww.ncepod.org.uk/2009dah.html, and Knowing the risk (2011) at Mwww.ncepod.org.uk/2011poc.html xxvii xxviii 10 tips on being a happy doctor 10 tips on being a happy doctor 1) Book your annual leave Time off is essential; failing to take leave doesn’t make you hard-working or any more likely to get ahead, but making a major error due to cumulative fatigue will have repercussions for both the affected patient and your career. Spend leave doing something you really enjoy with people you really like. If you have fixed leave, at least you'll get what you're owed (hopefully), but swaps can be a pain and take a lot of persistence. If you have to book time off, it will usually be your responsibility to swap on-calls. You usually need to book your leave 6wk in advance and summer is always popular. Sit down early with your team and discuss your leave plans 2) Be organized This is important but difficult when you first start as a doctor. Come in early, keep a list of useful names and numbers (there are pages in the appendix to help you with this, E p. 622), and pick up hints and tips from your predecessors 3) Smile You cannot cure most diseases, you cannot make procedures pleasant, you cannot help the fact that you, ward staff, and patients are in the hospital, but smiling and being friendly can make all the difference. Above all else, never shout at anyone. Shouting or being insulting is unprofessional. If you have a problem it should be addressed in private. The job rapidly becomes unpleasant if you get a reputation for being rude and reputations (good and bad) travel quickly 4) Don’t underestimate the impact of night shifts on your energy levels and health Consider your plans before, during, and after night shifts carefully to allow sufficient time to sleep and recover. Everyone will give advice on how best to cope with night shifts, so try various approaches until you find the best routine for you 5) Ask for senior help Never feel you cannot ask for help, even for something you feel you ‘should’ know. It is always better to speak to someone senior rather than guess, even if it is in the middle of the night 6) Check in the BNF If you are not familiar with a drug then always check in the BNF before you give it. Trust nobody: it will be your name next to the prescription 7) Look at the obs Acutely ill patients nearly always have abnormal observations. Always remember to look at the respiratory rate as this is the observation most commonly ignored by junior doctors Stay calm It is easy to panic the first time you are called to an acutely 8) ill patient, but staying calm is important to help you think clearly about how to manage the situation. Take a deep breath, work through the ‘ABC’ while performing initial investigations and resuscitation (the emergency pages will guide you through this) and call someone senior 9) Be reliable If you say you are going to do something then do it. If you are unable to do so then let someone know—nursing staff in particular also have many things to remember and constantly reminding doctors of outstanding jobs is frustrating 10) Prepare for the future Medicine is competitive, you need to give yourself the best chance. Over the first 2 years you should: • Present interesting cases • Think about your career • Organize specialty taster sessions • Create a CV and portfolio • Get good referees and mentors • Consider sitting examinations • Enjoy being a ‘proper’ doctor. • Participate in audit t .ne X k oo B . w ww t .ne X k oo B . w ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww et .n kX o .Bo w ww et et X.n k oo w.B w w X.n k o .Bo w ww w.B w w et n . kX oo ww w et n . X ok o .B B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 1 1w t t t .ne Being a doctor .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww The Foundation Programme Boring but important stuff The Foundation and contracts 38 t t e et Pay Programme 2 Making more money 40.ne n n . . X Applying to the Foundation Money and debt 42kX kX ok Programme o 4o NHS entitlements o oo 44 B B B The FP curriculum and . . Your career w 8 assessment wwtraining 45 Specialty ww in the UK 11 w ww Healthcare Specialty training Starting as an F1 applications 46 et Before you start 12 .net Career structure 47 .net n . first day 13 Specialty training options X Your X 48 k14X Occupational health Specialty training ok ok o o o o What to carry competition B .B15 .B 50 How to be an F1 16 Choosing a job 52 w w Getting Specialties wworganized 18 ww in medicine 53 ww Being efficient 19 Your curriculum vitae 54 Post-Foundation et Communication et Programme CV 56 .net n Patient-centred care 20 .n . Interviews 58 X Communication andkX X Membership exams ok ok59 conduct 22 oo o o Continuing.your B B education 60 Breaking bad.B Audit 61w w news 24 Cross-w cultural Presentations w ww and teaching 62 ww communication 25 Teaching medical students 65 Outside agencies 26 et Quality and ethics .net Research and academia .66net n . governance/ X X Clinical k kX quality 27 ok o o o o o Medical ethics 28 B Patient confidentiality w.B 29 w.B w w Capacity w 30 w ww Consent 31 things go wrong et When et et n n n Medical errors 32 . . . X Complaints 33 kX X ok o34 ok Incident reporting o o o B Bproblems 35 Colleagues and w.job w.B Hatingw your 36 w w 37 w ww Relaxation Bo o et n . kX Causes of stress 37 et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 2 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne Foundation Programme .ne .ne The X X X ok oforkthe next 30 years’ ok o o safety Bo K ‘Training is patient B B . w. The conceptww w w Programme (FP) was established w in 2005 as part of a ww The UK Foundation series of reforms to UK medical training, known collectively as Modernising Medical (MMC). The intention was to provide uniform, 2-yeear t et Careers etdoctors n n n structured training for all newly qualified working in the UK, to build . . . X medical school educationkX form the basis for subsequent kXtraining. ok upon o and Sadly, much of the introduction of MMC was a shambles. o Inorelative terms o o B .B the early days were notwwithout .B problems and the FP fared well, although wcriticized in 2010 it was still for lacking a clearlyw articulated purpose. Two w w that were taken forward ww reports gavewa number of recommendations through a series of workstreams that were reviewed in 2015. Though the t FP continues to evolve, this review did in a number of eimet domains, etfind progressa­ ssessment n n n . . portant including trainee.empowerment, outcomes, X the variety of rotations kavailable X to trainees. Nationally,kaXnew curok and o o oo locally the riculum was introduced ino2016 (for review in 2021); however, B B . changes necessaryw to.B deliver better training are still filtering w through. This process is an iterative ww one that trainees are encouraged ww to get involved in. ww 1 2 3 Significant changes have been afoot since the 2013 ‘Shape of Training report’ (see Box 1.18, E p. 45). t The nestructure net net . . . X X X FP lasts 2 years, and ink>90% of programmes, each year ok The o4-month placements, whichomay okbeinvolves otating through 3 different in hoso Bo ­rpital B B or community-.based medicine. About a quarter . of programmes w w involve a placement in a ‘shortage specialty’w(where the number of wwis likely to fall short of future w consultant needs), and ww current trainees despite a shift towards the management of chronic disease in the community,t much of the FP emphasis remains on the acute care of adult paein a hospital setting. At the .start etof the n n netto tients FP, you will be required . . X X X registration’kwith the General Medical Council (GMC) k final ok hold ‘provisional othe first FP year (F1) represents othe 1.1; E p. 3). Strictly, year o o Bo (Table B B . . remains responof basic medical education and your medical school w w sible for signingwyou off; this r­esponsibility may delegated for those wbetheir w w F1 in a different regionwfrom doctors completing medical school. w After successfully completing F1, you will be issued with a Certificate t for full GMC registration eandt of Experience, which entitles you to e apply eF2.t Successful n start completion of.n F2 results in the awarding of a.n foun. Xdation achievement of competence X document (FACD) whichkX opens the k k o o or GP training (E p. 45).oo ocore, Bo door to higher specialty, B . w w.B w w w w ww 1 ok Bo Professor Sir John Temple, ‘Time for Training’, 2010 Crown Copyright available free at Mwww.mee.nhs.uk/pdf/JCEWTD_Final%20report.pdf Professor John Collins, ‘Foundation for Excellence: An Evaluation of the Foundation Programme’ available at Mwww.mee.nhs.uk/pdf/401339_MEE_FoundationExcellence_acc.pdf Health Education England, ‘Better Training, Better Care’, available at Mhttps://www.hee.nhs.uk/ our-work/hospitals-primary-community-care/learning-be-safer/better-training-better-care-btbc t t e X.n 2 3 t e X.n ok ww o B . w e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w w w w The Foundation Programme 3w t t et The .neFoundation Programme .nOffice .ne X X X aspects of k FP are overseen by the UK k ok All administrative o thewhich o Foundation o o Office (UKFPO) provides many important docuBo Programme B B . . ments at Mwww.foundationprogramme.nhs.uk, including the appliw w cation handbooks, ‘rules’), w reference guide (the w w curriculum (list of ww educational w objectives), and advice for overseas applicants. et1.1 The FP hierarchy .net et Table n n . . X X kX for setting the standards Overalloresponsibility ok The GMC okfor o o medical practice and training in the UK o B B applications to and delivery The UKFPO of the FP w.Manages w.B w w Local Education Part of the Department ofw Health’s ‘Health Education w ww Training Boards England’. Deliver the FP regionally and support financial (LETBs) costs of training and trainee salaries (E p. 38) et schools Deliver the FP.locally. et May overlap with the LETB .net Foundation n n . X X of Responsible overseeing all medical training kXfor ok Director o(E okin a hospital p. 39) postgraduate o o o education B .B wand.Bquality control of Foundation ww Responsible for the management w training w the FP in a hospital. Oversees w the panel that reviews ww programme director (FTPD) t Acute .ne Trust/ Local Education X k Provider et o Bo o t Educational .ne supervisor X k t o o w.B ww ok ww FP representative t e X.n ok o w.B ww t e X.n The Foundation Doctor ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n o w.B Local administrator ok .n kX t e X.n Academic supervisor ww et .n kX o ww Bo o o w.B ww o w.B Clinical supervisors ok .n kX et o Bo et .n kX o w.B ww Bo your annual progress. Responsible for signing off on successful completion of each foundation year Acute trusts provide the employment contract, salary, and HR for foundation doctors. For community placements (eg GP practice), the responsibility for education passes to this ‘Local Education Provider’ but the contract of employment remains with the acute trust. There can be conflicts between the needs of the acute trusts (doctors on the wards delivering services to patients) and some of the educational requirements of the FP (E p. 59) Doctor responsible for the training of individual foundation doctors. Ideally for a whole year but occasionally for a single attachment. Will review your progress regularly, check that your assessments are up to date, and help you plan your career Doctors who supervise your learning and training, day to day, for each attachment. In some posts (often your 1st) the roles of the educational supervisor and clinical supervisor may be merged Those undertaking an academic FP (which includes a designated period of research) will be assigned an individual to oversee academic work and provide feedback Individuals in each trust and Foundation school who help with FP registration and administration Leadership position(s) where willing trainees voluntarily facilitate two-way feedback between their peers and their local or regional educationalists This is you! You are an adult learner with responsibilities for your own learning. You are expected to integrate with the educational processes of the FP, including providing feedback on the programme to your supervisors, trainee representatives, and via local and national training surveys e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 4 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Applying to the Foundation Programme X X X ok applications to the FPooarekthrough the online FP Application ok System o Bo All B B (FPAS) at Mwww.foundationprogramme.nhs.uk. stages. w.FPAS You will need to bewThere w. are several w Registration for nominated. For final year ww w w students in the UK your medical school will do this for you. Those applying from outside the UK should contact the UKFPO Eligibility Office in good etotallow checks to take place..nBefore et nomination you can register efort time n n . . an account but cannot access the application form. X X X ok Completing the application ok form Within a designated ok window o o o B each year (usually in .early October), nominated applicants wB w.B will be able to w access the application form. This has a number of parts: w w w contact details, DoB, and relevant w personal health. w Personal Name, Eligibility GMC status, right to work in the UK, and immigration status. Fitness convictions and fitness proceedings. etCriminal etto practise eoft n n n . . . Referees Details of 2 referees (1 academic, 1 clinical). Their knowledge Xyour performance is more important X than their seniority because X ok contribute ok checks ofork work)they o o o to your pre- e mployment (re suitability raB .B .B ther than your actual programme allocation. w w w Competencesw Educational qualifications ± postgraduate ww experience. ww 4 Evidence You will be asked to list any additional degrees for scoring against a very specific system and to upload a copy of certificates; 5 total percentage points are available for your degree, with 2 further points for publications (proof is required and will be assessed). Clinical skills You will be asked to self-assess against a list of practical skills—this does not form part of the assessment process but will be used by Foundation schools to coordinate training. Academic selection If applying to the academic FP (E p. 6). UoA preferences Foundation schools are grouped into Units of Application (UoA) that process applications jointly. You will be asked to rank all UoA in order of preference, with successful applicants allocated to UoA in score order (you will be allocated to your highest preference UoA that still has places when your turn comes). Tables showing vacancies and competition ratios for previous years are available on the UKFPO website but these do tend to vary between years (see Box 1.1). Equal opportunities To monitor NHS recruitment practices. Declaration You are required to sign various declarations of probity. Linked applications Two applicants can join their applications (E pp. 6–7). Scoring Your application will be scored based upon 2 components: Educational Performance Measure (50 points) This comprises a score between 34 and 43 based upon which decile your medical school decides your performance falls in, relative to your peers (this is locally determined) with 7 further points for education achievements detailed on the application form as previously mentioned. Situational Judgement Test (50 points) See Boxes 1.2 and 1.3. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B k o Bo e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ok ww ww t e X.n e X.n ok These include evidence of the right to work in the UK; of having taken medical training solely in English or having IELTS scores of ≥7.5; of complying with GMC requirements for provisional registration which may include passing Professional and Linguistic Assessment Board test; a statement of support from your medical school dean; academic transcripts; proof of medical qualifications; and a practical clinical assessment exam. You should allow sufficient time for this complex process of verification. o B . w ww t e X.n ww 4 .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww o B . w ww B .B w w w .B w w w w Applying to the Foundation Programme 5w t t net .ne1.1 Units of Application .neand 2017 competition .data Box X X X k k ok Anglia 257 (47%) ooNW o(84%) o Wales 322 of England 786 Bo East B B Wessex 292 (100%) Essex, Beds and Herts . w (99%) w. Midlands Central Northern 381 (77%) wWest 304 (25%) w w ww Leicester, Northampton, and Northern Ireland w 176 (131%) West Midlands North 240 (100%) Rutland 153 (54%) (32%) Oxford 215 (99%) Trent 294 t (75%) t (77%) 250 t e e West Midlands Southne Peninsulan189 NCnThames 160 (348%) . . . 159 (54%) Scotland 792 (99%) NE Thames 178 (164%) X London 237 (265%) Severn X X and ok NW ok 261 (147%) Yorkshire okHumber o o 557 (90%) South Thames 781 (95%) o B B in April 2017 NC .B The 21 UoA shown arew the Foundation Schools for the 2017 application. w.Note, and NE Thames merged into the North Central and East London Foundation School. Vacancy w w numbers for 2017 ware shown, with figures in brackets representing w the number of applicants ww ranking the UoA as their first preference, expressed as a percentage of this number of jobs. Source: data from Mwww.foundationprogramme.nhs.uk et 1.2 Situational Judgement et Test (SJT) et n n n . . . K Box X X X ok These computer-markedotests okof 70 questions sat under examination ok cono o B ditions over 2h 20min.B you with situations in which you might be w confront w.B There placed as an F1w doctor, and ask how you wouldw respond. are two basic response w formats: (i) rank five possiblewresponses in order and (ii) ww choose three from eight possible responses. Marks are assigned according to how close to an ‘ideal’ answer you come, with marks for near misses and no negative marking. Raw scores are subject to statistical normalization and scaling to generate a final mark out of 50. Officially, you cannot ‘revise’ for the test, as it is an assessment of attitudes, but there is a strong weighting on medical ethics which can be revised, and you can familiarize yourself with what is expected and try to understand model answers.5 When introduced into FP selection for 2013 appointments, problems with SJT marking led to hundreds of altered offers. Ongoing controversy surrounds SJTs as a means of selection, the thin evidence base behind them, and the heavy weighting they receive. One prominent researcher and SJT advocate closely involved in the pilots is also a director of a company that provides SJTs, as well as being a key figure behind the selection process that so spectacularly failed during the 2007 MMC reforms. Nonetheless, it is difficult to argue that previous systems based upon answering generic questions or students competing to get references from a few blessed Professors were any better. Our advice for now: ‘Get studying!’ et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww t t e X.n e X.n ok t ok ok Prescribing is a fundamental part of the FP and it is now a requirement for UK FP applicants to demonstrate their knowledge of the safe and effective use of medicines through completion of this national pass/fail prescribing skills assessment. Piloted in 2010 in response to a GMC-sponsored survey which showed that 9% of hospital prescriptions contain errors, applicants are tested on common prescriptions, medications, drug calculations, and monitoring regimens that are encountered during the FP. Exams take place at UK medical schools between February and June each year, and non-UK trainees can sit it during F1.6 o w.B o w.B ww ww t t e X.n ok 5 6 e X.n k oo B . wSituational Judgement Test Practice paper available on UKFPO website. Mock questions available in (Oxford Assess and Progress), third edition (Metcalfe D, et al.), 2018. Oxford University Press. More information available at Mhttps://prescribingsafetyassessment.ac.uk ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww e X.n K Box 1.3 The Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) Bo ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww ww B .B w ww 6 Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t net The .neAcademic Foundation .Programme .ne X X X those interested in research, k teaching, or management,othek Academic ok Foroffers owith o 7450 programmes set aside for academic Bo FP B Bo work (either . across time a rotation or timew spread the year) (E p. w 12,. p. 66). Aside from extra sections w on academic suitability, the application w form is the same, w ranking up w to 2 ‘Academic’ UoAs (which w differ slightly from standard w UoAs) and some Academic FPs within them. Shortlisted candidates t are interviewed offers made ineadvance of the main FP selection et so that and et n n n . . process, unsuccessful applicants can still compete for a .regular X X X ok FP position. ok ok o o o B Results .B w.beB used to determine your w Your total score will place in the queue for w w w matching tow a FP, and you will be offered aw place in your highest prefer- w ence UoA which still has FP vacancies when your turn comes. Results will be communicated by email and you willt have a limited window to accept et e is done based on your.ntotal et n n this. Allocation to an individual programme . . X X X UoAs score and your ranking programmes. k ok application ok ofhaveindividual o Some where (eg those with more programmes) a two-stage match process o o o B .B before ranking the programmes .B within the group you rank groups of trusts wbeen wUoAs to which you have allocated. However, most use a one-stage w w w w you simply rank all of the individual w programmes process where from the w 7 7 outset. Further information is available on each UoA website. t t Posts netin .ne .ofnethree placements of 4mth: .one A typical F1 year usually consists X X X ok a general medical specialty, okone in a general surgical specialty; ok options o o Bo for the third specialty B B vary widely in just about all areas . consist of three 4mth jobs;wfor . 80%ofofmedicine. w F2 posts also typically F2s one w w w of these willw be a GP placement. Allocationw to F2 posts varies between w UoAs, with some assigning all F1 and F2 posts at the outset, while others may invite to select F2 posts during F1 year. Once you are apet to you eant your et pointed the FP, you are guaranteed F2 post in the same Foundation n n . . .npost X X X school, but often in a different acute trust. If you do not get an F2 k interested in, most will allow ok specialty you are particularly ok individual oo providing o Bo inFPadoctors B B to swap .rotations, they have the support their w Some Foundation schools w.will organizeof‘swap educational supervisors. w w shops’ to facilitate w this process, but swapping w can be notoriously diffi- ww cult. You can also arrange ‘taster weeks’ in another specialty to help plan your career; these talk to your supervisor, clinical et andto arrange et educational et n n supervisor, a consultant in the.n relevant specialty. . . X X kX applications ok ok Linked o o o o During the FPAS application process, it is possible for.B any two individuals B to link their applications. w.B In this case, you mustwboth w supply each other’s w w email addresses w in the relevant section of thewapplication form, and rank w all UoAs in identical order. The score of the lower scoring applicant will o Bo et n . kX 7 et n . kX t .ne X ok .Bo The ‘Rough Guide to the Academic Foundation Programme’ contains more information about the Academic FP and can be found at Mhttp://www.foundationprogramme.nhs.uk/download. asp?file=academic_rough_guide_2013_interactive_web_version_final.pdf o o B . w ww w ww ww B .B w w w .B w w w w Applying to the Foundation Programme 7w t t t then Although .nebe used to allocate bothXapplicants .ne to the same UoA. X .ne X UoAs,klinking does not necessarily guarantee apok policies varytobetween o or town—check individualoUoA ok websites the same trust o Bo pointment B B . a place on an for their policies. Note accepts w. also that if one of youwisw Academic FP orw is put on the reserve list, the link broken. w w ww If you are unsuccessful In recent the supply of applicantst has threatened to exceed places t years, eFP. eplace them below the cut-off.ntoebet on.the Those whose FPAS scores n n . Xguaranteed a FP post will bekplaced X on a reserve list and arekoften X able ok to gain a training post when oan unexpected event befallsoanother o candio o B date. If you are notwsuccessful first.time do not .B in securing a postmarked w Byouround give up hope! Ifw you feel you have been unfairlyw may be able to appeal; discuss w this with your medical school w dean. Try to seek feed- ww back from the application process in order to identify weaknesses that you may to amend in case youthave to wait to reapply the next et be able eafter you know you have qualified et year. Should you still be without a post n n n . . . X medical school, contactkLETBs X hospitals directly; some kXofsoyour ok from o up theirandposts ofailure peers may not be able tootake due to exam you o o B may be able to apply B B directly to these standalone posts. . . w w Another optionwis to consider taking a year out, w ww either to strengthen ww your application by doing research, further study, or other activities that add to your skills. Also consider applying overseas; it has been possible in previous years to do some or all of foundation training in Australia or New Zealand with prior approval of posts from a UK LETB. Alternatively, it is possible to apply to any post within the EU or to consider equivalency exams for other countries. et o Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B Finally, there is always the option of a career outside of medicine. Advice on this and other options will be available from your university careers office, from websites such as Prospects (Mwww.prospects.ac.uk) or certain courses/conferences (eg Mwww.medicalsuccess.net). ww ww ww t t t .ne circumstance X.ne .ne Special X X ok For those who meet theovery okspecific criteria, it may beopossible ok to be allocated to a specific Foundation school, regardless of your FPAS Bo pre- B B . score. These casesw include if: w. w w • You are a w parent or legal guardian of a child w<18yr, for whom you ww have significant caring responsibilities • You are relative t a primary carer for a closedisability e et for which ongoing follow- eutp • You have a medical condition or n n n . . . absolute requirement. Xin the specified location is ankX X ok If any of these apply to oyou, o discuss with your medical oschool ok dean or o B tutor well in advance w.ofBthe application processwopening. w.B w Less than w full-time training w ww Those wishing to train less than full-time should apply through the FPAS alongside other candidates; upon successful appointment, they should et their etto discuss et contact new Foundation school training opportunities n n n . . . X plans. Programmes havekX arrangements for LTFT, kXwhereby ok and orata’good trainees are paid on a ‘pro basis for all work done, o asoa proportion o o B of the full-time salary. w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 8 ww w Chapter 1 t t et .ne FP curriculum .nand .ne The assessment X X X k for what you will be expected ok FP Curriculum acts asoaoguide ok to achieve o Bo The B B over the 2 years of the FP, how you will get there, and how you will be w.20 Foundation w. (Box ­assessed. Thereware training outcomes 1.4) that are w w w to the GMC’s ‘Good Medical w Practice’. To grouped ­according complete w the FP you must keep a record of your experiences, reflections, and study (the NHS t ePortfolio) to demonstrate t for each of the outcomesneyout eacquired ethat n have the minimum level of.n competence required. . . kXBox 1.4 Foundation oProfessional kX kX o o Capabilities Bo Bo .Batoall times 11 Uses the history .and w w 1 Acts professionally w centred care and to formwawdifferential examination 2 Deliversw patient- diagnosis and ww management plan maintains trust in the profession 3 Maintains ethical and legal duties 12 Requests and interprets relevant tests t their practice up to date 13etPrescribes safely 4 e Keeps et n . through teaching and learning .n 14 Performs procedures safely .n X in career planningkX 15 Is trained in and manageskX ok 5Engages o 6 Is an effective communicator arrest o oo 16 cardiorespiratory opromotion B B B 7 Is an effective team member Understands health and . . w 8 Demonstratesw leadership skills illness prevention w w 9 Recognizes, 17 Manages w assesses, and w palliative and end of life care ww manages acutely unwell patients 18 Recognizes and works within the 10 Recognizes, assesses, and manages limits of personal competence patients with chronic illness 19 Prioritizes patient safety 20 Contributes to quality improvement et et .n kX .n kX oo oo B B . . wThe ePortfolio is an electronic wrecord of your pro- w NHS ePortfolio w w gress through the FP. The syllabus lies at its centre, to which you can w w w link evidence of achievement of competence using a number of tools. Alongside lies your supervisor and end- of-year reports. The ePortfolio t ealsot bethisused et interviews may for specialty training to show competence n n . . .ne X X X and achievement and as a library for a wide range of support material ok (see Boxes 1.4, 1.5, and 1.19, okE p. 8, p. 10, p. 57). It is vital okthat you eno o Bo gage with your ePortfolio B B early on and keep it updated, as it . . is the primary w wrequired measure by which you are assessed. While the effort is not small, w w the time and wenergy your supervisors needwto review your ePortfolio ww should also not be underestimated. You are both helped by keeping your electronic paper portfolios organized, current, and complete t E p. and e1.19, et et (Box 57). n n n . . . XAssessment Assessment kisXbased on observation in clinical X ok tice, o supporting curriculum competence ok praco o o your ePortfolio evidence (see B .B .B Table 1.2), evidence of engagement in learning, w and proficiency in the w w GMC’s corewprocedures. Direct observation comes from your super- ww ww Bo o et .n kX Source: data from Mwww.foundationprogramme.nhs.uk visors but also other work colleagues in the form of a Team Assessment of Behaviour and feedback from your Placement Supervision Group. Formative assessments are ways of seeking feedback whereas summative assessments are to demonstrate competence— both are equally important. The burden of what many see as a tick-box exercise is still significant, though improving slowly with each FP curriculum revision. Assessment culminates in the Annual Review of Competence Progression (ARCP), which determines your eligibility to move on to training. t ok Bo t e X.n t e X.n ok ww o B . w e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w The FP curriculum and assessment 9w t et you need to record in.nyour et Meetings .ne There are a numberXof.nmeetings X X ok ePortfolio. These are detailed okin Box 1.6. ok o o Bo Table 1.2 Supervised B B w. learning events (SLEs) andwassessments wto.curriculum items, K SLEs are a wayw to evidence your learning by linking them w speaking they are a way of gettingwuseful feedback from trainers ww however practically and reflecting on the learning events you encounter, all vital parts of the learning process. are many types of SLE but each an important purpose. et ecantThere et servesretrospectively. n n They be planned in advance and/or.completed Whenever . .nan Xappropriate learning opportunity kpresents X X itself, ask a trainer whether they would k k o mind providing some feedbackooand if possible, completing an SLE ‘ticket’ o for you, osome which you will need their email. Bear in mind that they can.take time to Bo for B B . complete and that your seniors will be grateful for gentle reminders, plenty of time, w w w w a word of thanks, and perhaps a ‘form’ in return. w w ww Direct observation of doctor/patient encounter: ≥9 per year—including Mini-clinical evaluation exercise (mini-CEX) ≥6 mini-CEX (≥2 per t et Directeobservation of procedural skills (DOPS)et attachment)* n n n . . . For mini- C EX, you will be observed speaking to and/ o r examining a patient X receive feedback on your performance. X X you will be observed ok and ok feedbackForonDOPS, okthe patient. o o o performing a clinical skill and receive your interaction with B B .B w.year Case-based discussionw (CbD) ≥6 per (≥2 per w w w wattachment) ww B You will present and discuss a case (or an aspect of a complex case) you have been closely involved in and discuss the clinical reasoning and rationale. Developing the clinical teacher ≥1 per year This requires you to deliver an observed teaching session—you will receive feedback based on your preparation, teaching, knowledge and audience interaction. K Assessments differ from SLEs in that they are summative—they evaluate your progress and achievements. In addition to your end-of-placement and end-of-year assessments with your supervisors, you will also complete two other assessments: Core procedure assessment forms 1 per procedure during F1 By the end of F1 you need to be signed off as competent in 15 core procedures: • Venepuncture • Injection of local anaesthetic to skin • IV cannulation • SC injection (eg insulin or LMWH) • Preparing and administering IV • IM injection medications and injections • Perform and interpret an ECG • ABG • Perform and interpret peak flow • Blood culture (peripheral) • Urethral catheterization (♀) • IV infusion including prescription • Urethral catheterization (♂) of fluids • Airway care including simple • IV infusion of blood and blood products adjuncts Team assessment of behaviour (TAB) 1 per year You will be required to engage in a Maoist process of self-criticism, then select a minimum of 10 colleagues who will be invited to provide anonymous feedback, including at least 2 consultants/GPs, 1 other doctor >FY2, 2 senior nurses >band 5, and 2 allied health professionals/other team members (eg ward clerks, secretaries, and auxiliary staff). Similar feedback comes from your Placement Supervision Group but they are nominated by your supervisor rather than by you. Your educational supervisor will then collate all the results and share them with you. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . kX ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o Bo .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k o w.B t .ne X ok .Bo oo B . w w *There is no minimum ww number of DOPS requiredwperwyear. ww ww B .B w ww 10 Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .neBox 1.5 Keeping theXePortfolio .ne .ne T X X k ok well as recording youroostructured ocank upload a learning events, you o Bo As B B wide range of other.documents to your ePortfolio to. serve as evidence wSome suggestions include: ww of your progress. ww w ww Clinical work • Copies of discharge/referral letters (anonymized) • Copies et of clerkings (anonymized) et learning points) et n n . . •.n Attendance at clinic (date, consultant, X X kX observing, performing, oorkteaching) (list of type,owhen, ok •• Procedures o o o Details of any complaints made against you and their resolution B .Bhave been involved in (useful • Incident formsw you reflective w.forBfrom w practice andw demonstrating that you have learned mistakes) w w ww • ‘Triumphs’—difficult patients you’ve diagnosed/treated • Praise—all thank you letters/cards/emails. et teaching, audit, and.research et et Presentations, n n n . . X• Copies of presentations given X X ok • Details of teaching you’ve okdone (with feedback if possible) ok o o o B • Copies of audit or.B research you’ve been involved.B wpublications. w in • Copies of your w w w ww Training w 8 8 • • • • Details of courses and exams (with certificates) Online course modules completed Reflective practice notes on key learning experiences Study leave and associated forms (F2 only). t .ne X k oo et .n kX t .ne X k oo oo B B . . T Box 1.6 Meetings during the FP w ww wwyou should record in your ww There are aw number of required meetings which ePortfolio. The onus is on you to schedule and prepare for these meetings:eyou t and your supervisors are allnebusy t clinicians, and it can sometimes t be .ndifficult to arrange these in aXtimely . manner. Be flexible but persistent! .ne X X start of each you should meet with ok Induction At the okplacement okbothandyour o o and clinical supervisors to agree learning B objectives reBo educational B . are available during the placement. . view what opportunities w w Midpoint Meetings ww in the middle of each placement ww with your supervisors ww to review progress are encouraged, particularly where you or they have concerns, but are not compulsory. You may also decide to have a mid- t with your educational nsupervisor. ereview et et year n n . . . X of placement Both your supervisors X X meet with youkseparately ok End ok pass onshould oof the team, to review your achievements, the observations o o o B provide advice, and listen w.B to your feedback. ww.B to discuss your w End of year Youw should meet your educational supervisor w w w B 9 total progress. Your supervisor will complete a report for the panel performing your annual review to inform their decision to sign you off. et n . kX 8 o Bo 9 et n . kX t .ne X ok .Bo Remember that all data you upload is subject to the Data Protection Act. This means that you should avoid recording patient identifiable information within your ePortfolio, since this is not the purpose for which it was collected. Using hospital numbers rather than names, or completely obscuring personal details is considered acceptable. Separate meetings: your clinical supervisor should address what is expected of you and what is available to you; your educational supervisor should take an overview of your progress and goals. In reality, for some placements they will be the same person. o o B . w ww w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w wHealthcare in the UK 11ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Healthcare in the UK X X X k employer and while impossible ok NHS is the world’s 5thoolargest ok to appreo Bo The B B ciate fully, a general understanding helps contextualize your role. Since its in. . that wcare ception in 1948,w thew NHS has aimed to provide quality is free at the w w point of use and is an important part of our UK w w based on clinical need alone. It w identity and by global standards, per capita, is good value for money. et n . kX t et n . kX oo Government Since 1999, devolved governments in Wales, Scotland, and o Bo e X.n N Ireland have had control over their NHS and healthcare budgets. Funding comes almost entirely from taxation, totalling £120bn/yr in England. Department of Health Government department led by the Health Secretary responsible for healthcare policy and overseeing the NHS in England. Health and Social Care Act A 2012 parliament act and the largest NHS reorganization since 1948, legislated for more healthcare regulation and patient involvement, and decentralization of healthcare/budget responsibility. Allowed business to compete with NHS providers for service provision. Commissioners With two-thirds of the total NHS budget, GPs, nurses, hospital doctors, and lay members now lead >200 clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) in buying (commissioning) local services (including secondary care, mental health, and community services). GPs themselves as well as highly specialized services are still commissioned nationally. Providers Commissioners purchase services from providers, which can be GPs, the private sector, voluntary sector, or hospitals. Most trusts are ‘Foundation’ Trusts, that is, have more financial and managerial freedom (the intention being to provide more flexibility to better suit local patient needs). ok o w.B et n . X ok Bo .B w ww ww et n . X ok o B . w ww ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww ww netlength bodies Non-departmental net public bodies that are X net Arm’s- associated . . . X X some independence the Department of Health. Health k from has ok with but have oworkforce okhealthcare England Ensures the the skills to support o o Bo Education B B and drive improvements. through and 13 . Coordinates training locally w . 4 LETBs deans, including thew 20 Foundation schools (E p. 3). Healthcare regulators The w w Care Qualityw Commission (for care quality) and w NHS Improvement (for fi- ww nances) are responsible for monitoring, inspecting, and reporting on providers to ensure they provide quality care within the resources available. Both have t etto advise and intervene if necessary. powers net National Institute for Health .nExcellence .neandof Care (NICE) By balancingX the. potential gains in quality and quantity X X k financial costs, NICE guidance to patients and on ok life against okprovide oproviders o o efficacy and cost-effectiveness of new treatments andBtechnologies over Bo the B . . previous ones. w w Outside agencies ww (E p. 3, p. 12) ww ww Trade unions Represent doctors and if supported by members can call for industrial taction over employment disputes. for better conditions t Campaign e eMedical et and comment on health issues. British Association The largest docn n n . . . X trade union, for GPs andkX X doctors alike. HospitalkConsultants ok tors’ o hospital o General and Specialists Association Focuses on the needs of hospital o doctors. o o for the ofB Medical Council An independent .B regulator responsibleentry .Bmaintaining ficial register of UKw medical practitioners, controllingw onto the register, w w and removingw members where necessary. Thew GMC sets the standards that ww et n . kX o Bo doctors and medical schools should follow. Medical Royal Colleges Independent professional bodies that develop and provide training in the various medical specialties. 21 are members of the Academy of Royal Colleges which promotes and coordinates their work. Faculty of Medical Management and Leadership A faculty of the Academy of Royal Colleges that is dedicated to medical leadership. A good resource for trainees interested in medical leadership and management. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 12 Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne you start X.ne .ne Before X X ok ok ok organizations o o Bo Important B B . frequently; they are intended The prices quotedw change win. theas aUKguide. w w General Medicalw Council (GMC) To work as a doctor you need w with a licence to practise;w GMC registration £50 for F1 (provisional regis- w tration), £150 for F2 (full registration), and £390 thereafter. t eindemnity ethet financial consequences of.nmiset NHS insurance This covers n n . . takes you make at work, providing you abide by guidelines and protocols. X X X ok It automatically covers allodoctors ok in the NHS free of charge. ok o o B Bis essential; do not work without Indemnity insurance This .Bit. These organizaw.advise tions will support and you in any complaints orwlegal matters that arise w w w from your work. work outside. There are three w w They also insure you against w main organizations; all offer 24h helplines (E pp. 614–15): • Medical Protection Society (MPS)—£ t 10 for F1, £20 for F2 net et Defence • .Medical Union (MDU)— £e 10 for F1, £20 for F2 n n . . X• Medical and Dental DefencekUnion X X of Scotland—£10 for F1,k £35 for F2. k o Medical Associationoo (BMA) Membership benefits include oo employBo British B B . . ment advice, a contract checking service, a postal library, and a weekly subscription tow thewBMJ. Annual costs are £115w forw F1s and £226 for F2s. w w ww B Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association Alternative trade union for those planning a career in hospital medicine. Benefits include employment advice, contract checking, personal injury service, and legal services. Annual cost is £100 for foundation trainees. Income protection Pays a proportion of your basic salary ± a lump sum (rates vary) until retirement age if you are unable to work for health reasons. Check if it covers mental health problems, and if it still pays if you are capable of doing a less demanding job. NHS sickness benefits are not comprehensive (providing F1s 1mth full pay, 2mth half pay, and F2s 2mth full pay, 2mth half pay): Available from various providers, typically starting at £24/ mth as an F1, rising according to age, pay, illness, and risks. 2015 NHS Pension Scheme A proportion of your pay is put into the scheme to be returned, with additional interest and employer contributions, during your retirement. Despite bringing the retirement age in line with the state pension, an increase in the cost of personal contributions, and a shift from final salary to career-averaged earnings, the 2015 NHS Pension Scheme remains the best pension available; do not opt out. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t t ok Bo P45/P60 tax form When you leave a job you will receive a P45; if you continue in the same job you will receive a P60 every April. These need to be shown when starting a new job. Bank details Account number, sort code, and proof of address. Hepatitis B You need proof of hep B immunity and vaccinations. You should keep validated records of your immunizations and test results. GMC registration certificate This proves you are a registered doctor. Disclosure and Barring service (DBS) certificate (formerly CRB checks) It is the employer’s responsibility to perform these checks. You must complete all paperwork in good time, but payment is the responsibility of the trust.10 ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o Bo .ne X k ww o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww ww t w .ne X ok .Bo In theory, the medical staffing department of your trust should sort a lot of this out in advance of your first day; in reality, do not underestimate their ability to mislay your paperwork and request multiple copies—keep plenty of photocopies and do not part with originals. 10 ww et n . X Important documents for your first day e X.n ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Your first day 13w t t t .ne first day X.ne .ne Your X X ok ok practice This mandatory ok week of o o for professional Bo Preparation B B . online and face-to-face butwthere . is a difference paid induction is usually wwant w w between what you to know before starting and w w what trusts are ob- ww liged to tell you. The best people to talk to are your predecessors, but a little background reading about your first rotation specialty also helps. et the cost of face-to-face.ninduction et there is a trend towards et To n reduce n . . eLearning, but the BMA is clear: induction is work and if done outside X or with time off in lieu.kX of kXwork should be reciprocatedokfinancially o oo Bo Pay roll It can takewover B .Boa month to adjust pay arrangements . so it is vital w to give the finance dept your bank details on orw before the first day if you w w w ww want to be paid that month. Hand in a copy of your P45/P60 too. Parking Check with other staff about best places to park and etdeals’; etot gettheseveral et ‘parking you will probably need people to sign a.n form. n n . . X X you kXsafe storage for bikes and sometimes Trusts usually provide ok Cycling onew okschemes. o o o can save money on repairs/ purchases with ‘cycle to work’ B .B wto.B w ID badge Used access secure parts of the hospitals. If you need w w more accessw than most (e.g. crash team members) w then request ‘access all ww areas’. If the card doesn’t give access then return it or get it fixed. IT n et access allows you to.naccess et results, the Internet, and.nyour et . Computer trust email. Also ask for an NHS.net account so you can access it seX X X k same email when moving between and keepothe ok curely fromallhome ok trusts. o o the passwords, usernames, etc and keep any documents Bo Memorize B B handed out. Ask for wthe. IT helpdesk phone number win.case of difficulty. w w w w your medical staffing de- ww Rota coordinator You should get to know partment well as they can make your life a lot easier. If you haven’t receivedeyour t rota in advance then getninetouch t with them. et .n and social mediaXInduction . may be the last time forXa.nwhile Mobiles X k rota ok you are all in one place. Exchanging ok numbers makes socialooactivities, o easier to organize, but there will usually Bo swaps, and learningwopportunities B B . w.If not, create one/ w be rolling, trust-wide WhatsApp groups you can join. w w ask your FP representative to coordinate efforts w w (Box 1.7). w Important places in the hospital Try to etget a map; many hospitals.nhave et evolved rather than been ede-t n n . . signed. There are often shortcuts. X X kXcan put ok Wards Write down any oaccess ok codes and find out where oyou o o be.shown including the crash B your bag. Ask to w B where things are kept w.B trolley and blood-taking equipment. w w Canteen Establish w where the best food options w are at various times of ww et n . kX o Bo day. Note the opening hours—this will be invaluable for breaks on-call. Cash and food dispensers Hospitals are required to provide hot food 24h a day. This may be from a machine. Doctors’ mess Essential. Write down the access code and establish if there is a fridge or freezer. Microwave meals are infinitely preferable to the food from machines. For problems, contact the mess president. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 14 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Occupational health X X X ok ok okis responhospitals have an occupational health departmentothat o Bo Most B B sible for ensuring that. the hospital is a safe environment and your w making sure that doctorswwork w. infora you patients. This includes safe manner. w w ww You can findw your local unit at Mwww.nhshealthatwork.co.uk Common visits etthe FP, your contact with .occupational et eonet During health is likely to .be n n n . Xof the following: X X ok Initial check Depending onoothek procedures you will be undertaking, ok you o o B B to show you do not have B C or HIV; may require a blood.test w photographic w.hepatitis they will need to see proof of identity, eg a passport. w w w This depends on local policies w and your antibody levels. ww Hepatitis B booster Needle-stick/sharps injury/splashes (E p. 108). t that affects your abilityntoetwork may require a consultation. IllnesseIllness et n n . . . X X X control ok Infection ok by pathogens from the hospital ok and ward Patients are commonly infected o o o B Bmore likely to be resistant towantibiotics .B and can be staff. The infections are wto.reduce fatal. It is important the risk you pose to your patients: w w whave gastroenteritis ww • If you arew ill, stay at home, especially if you • Keep your clothes clean and roll up long sleeves to be bare below the elbows in clinical areas • White coats, ties, and long sleeves are generally discouraged • Avoid jewellery (plain metal rings are acceptable) and wrist watches • Clean your stethoscope with a chlorhexidine swab after each use • Wash your hands or use alcohol gel after every patient contact, even when wearing gloves; rinsing all the soap off reduces irritation. Clostridium difficile spores are resistant to alcohol, so always wash your hands after dealing with affected patients • Be rigorous in your use of aseptic technique • Use antibiotics appropriately and follow local prescribing policies. For more information, contact your local infection control team. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B o o w.B ww ww t ok t ok o w.B ok e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n ww Bo .n kX As a doctor you will come into contact with bodily fluids daily. It is important to develop good habits so that you are safe on the wards: • Wear gloves for all procedures that involve bodily fluids or sharps. Gloves reduce disease transmission if penetrated with a needle— consider wearing two pairs for treating high-risk patients • Dispose of all sharps immediately; take the sharps bin to where you are using the sharps and always dispose of your own sharps • Vacutainers are safer than a needle and syringe. Most hospitals now stock safety cannulas and needles for phlebotomy, use of which decreases the risk of needle-stick injuries yet further • Mark bodily fluid samples from HIV and hepatitis B+C patients as ‘High Risk’ and arrange a porter to take them safely to the lab • Consider wearing goggles if bodily fluids might spray • Cover cuts in your skin • Avoid wearing open-toed shoes or sandals • Make sure your hepatitis B boosters are up to date. e X.n ww et .n kX Sharps and bodily fluids Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w What to carry 15w t t t .ne to carry X.ne .ne What X X ok ok ok o Bo Essentials w.Bo B . Black pens These are the most essential piece ofwequipment. Carry a w w few as people often lose theirs. Blood bottles are usually labelled with ww w w printed stickers but specimen bottles may still need a ballpoint pen. Stethoscope A Littmann Classic II or tequivalent is perfectly adequate, et better e sound. et however models do offer clearer n n n . . . X and cards Out-of-hourskloose X change is useful for foodkdispensers X ok Money o o but most places will takeo cards. o o B ID badge Should bewsupplied B a printer fob. .B on day 1 and may come .with w w w Bleep Often w at switchboard, in handover, with wcolleagues or on the ward. ww Optional extras Mobile phone of medical apps can make your life much easier; et signalA plethora et forget et n n however, can be variable so .don’t your bleep. Always.n check . X has written your apps andkwhether X is a reliable source. Most kXOxford ok who o are now itavailable oAlthough Handbooks, including thisoone, as an app. preo o B vious rules restricting B B . . their use have largely been eased, it does not look good to be always wwon your phone, and it remains wwthe case that they can ww interfere withw monitoring equipment in ICUs, w CCUs, and surgical theatres. B ® Clipboard folder E p. 18. Pen-torch Useful for looking in mouths and eyes; very small LED torches are available in ‘outdoors’ shops or over the Internet and can fit onto a keyring or be attached to stethoscopes to prevent colleagues borrowing and not returning them. Tendon hammer These are hard to find on wards. Collapsible pocket-sized versions can be bought for £12–15. Alcohol gel Clip-on alcohol gels are cheap, will mean you never have to go searching, and can be more ‘predictable’ than those on the ward. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t Ward .ne dress .ne .ne X X X moreorespect it k for well-dressed doctors, ok Patients and tostaffbe have okhowever o yourself;obe guided by comments from patients or staff. Bo isHairimportant B B and piercings Long should be tied back. Facial can be easily w. hair w.metal w w removed while at work; while ears are OK, other piercings draw comments. ww w w Shoes A pair of smart, comfy shoes is essential—you will be on your feet for hours need to move fast. t t andformay e enott Scrubs Ideal on- calls, especially.n in e surgery. Generally they should n n . . X X X ok be worn for everyday work. okCheck local policy. ok o o o K Box 1.7 Social B .Bmedia .B wand w The GMC, BMA, individual trusts publish guidance for doctors w w w use of social media. Whilew Facebook, Twitter, and ww regarding their WhatsApp have many benefits for us as professionals and individt and professional lifenand uals,eallt blur the line between public,eprivate, et n none guarantee confidentiality. In.n using them we must remember our . . X of confidentiality, to treat Xcolleagues fairly, and to maintain X trust ok duty okshould oonk patients, o o o in the profession. Any posts consider the impact B .B .orBoffensive comyourselves, and the avoiding derogatory wprofession, wGMC. ments. Misusew can lead to action by trusts or the w w w ww B 16 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne to be an F1 X.ne .ne How X X ok an F1 involves teamwork, okorganization, and communication— ok qualities o o Bo Being B B . during finals. As well as settling that are not easily assessed new work w w. andintothea rest environment, you have to integrate with your colleagues of the w w w wYou are not expected to knoww hospital team. everything at the start of your w post; you should always ask someone more senior if you are in doubt. Aseant F1, your role varies greatly (ask predecessor) but includes: eton-your et n n • .Clerking patients (ED, pre-op clinic, call, or on the ward) .n . X X where patients are (E p.k18) X patient lists and knowing ok •• Updating okto review o Participating in ward rounds patient management o o o B B and chasing their resultsw.B • Requesting investigations w.specialties/ • Liaising with other healthcare professionals w w w ww • Practical procedures, eg taking blood (E pp.w528–9), cannulation (E pp. 532–3) • Administrative tasks, eg theatre lists et et(E p. 114), TTOs (E pp..80–1), et n n n . . re­ w ri­ t ing drug charts (E pp. 171–2), death certificates (E pp. 98–9) X X X ok • Speaking to the patientoand okrelatives about progress/roesults. ok o B .B Discharge letters.B w wthem Discharge letters are your responsibility and without cannot w w w w Not only are well patientswvery keen topatients leave the hospital. be at home, w B unwell patients needing admission also need to leave the Emergency Department and come into their bed. This process is called patient flow and is vital in the day-to-day running of the hospital and making sure patients are being cared for in the right environment. While there are many factors that slow down patient flow, patients, clinicians, and management staff will thank you if high-quality discharge letters are prepped well in advance. Keeps tabs on estimated discharge dates and if you’re not sure, enquire with your colleagues about who may be going home tomorrow. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w Breaks .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t breaks does not make youneappear t hard-working—it reduces Missing net .neefficiency . yourself time .(chocX X X your and alertness. Give to rest and eat ok okcount); you are entitled to o30min ok for every from the ward doo not Bo olates B B 4h worked. Use the .time to meet other doctors in the mess; referring is wknow the team you are making wthe. referral much easier if you to. w w w w ww Know your limits If you are unsure of something, don’t be embarrassed to ask a senior, et if a patient is unwell..Ifneyout are stuck on simple tasks.n(e.g. et particularly n . Xcannulation), take a break and either try later or ask a colleague Xto try. ok Responsibility ookX ok o o B .B may have poF1s may have to make of w.Bdifficult decisions, somewthe wwhich tentially seriousw consequences. Always consider case scenario w w andworst- and how to w avoid it. Be able to justify your actions document every- w thing carefully. et et et Expectations n n n . . . X all patients under your care, X seniors will reasonably expect X to ok For olist,k medication, oofkany you know the current problem and the details recent o o o B B B procedures or investigations, including key recent blood results. Initially . . this may well seem andw careful practice, your wwimpossible, but with timeww ww memory forw such details will improve. B .B w ww .B w w w w How to be an F1 17w t t t Your .nebleep .ne .ne X X X first seems like a badge having ‘made it’ quickly becomes the ok Whatofatyour oktheofbleep okwrite down o o existence. When goes off repeatedly, Bo bane B B . them in turn. Try to dealwwith . queries over the the numbers then w answer phone; if not, make a list of jobs and prioritize w them, tell the nurses how w w long you willw be, and be realistic. Ask nurses tow get useful material ready for w when you arrive (eg an ECG, urine dipstick, the obs chart, notes, equipment tmake a list of routine jobs instead you may Encourage ward staff to et need). eshould eandt n n n . . of .bleeping you repeatedly. The bleep only be for sick patients X tasks. Learn the numberkX kXto be an switchboard since this is o likely ok urgent oline.ofCrash o o o outside caller waiting on the calls are usually announced B bleep holders via switchboard. .B If your bleep is unusually .Bquiet, checktotheall w w batteries. Consider over your bleep to aw colleague when breaking ww tohanding ww bad news, speaking relatives, or performingw a practical procedure. Dropping the bleep in the toilet This is not uncommon; recover the bleep t sterile gloves. Wash thoroughly enon- et in running water (the damage et using n n n . . . has already been done) and inform switchboard that you dropped it into X X X ok your drink. ok ok o o o B Other forms of bleepwdestruction pay for a damaged .B You should not havewto.B bleep, no matter how dire the threats from switchboard; consider asking w w for a clip-onw safety strap. w ww Learning You need interpretation and management skillseas net to be proactive to learnX.most netof the decisions n bet .will an.F1. This is especially true when you make X X k k senior by a senior almost o immediately. Despite this, ‘Bloods, CXR, ok reviewed owith oand o v’ is not an adequate.plan represents a failure to engage learning Bo r/ B B . andamanageopportunity. Formulate an impression, differential diagnosis, w w w patient you see and compare ment plan forw each this with your senior’s ver- ww ww sion; ask about the reasons for significant differences. See Box 1.8. t t t T .neBox 1.8 Service provision .nevs training? .ne X X X k disneed doctors to so that they can beotreated, ok Acute trusts oksee patients o o and the trust B reimbursed. Behind this simple fact lies an important Bo charged, B . of the individual point of tension between those w. the aims of the trust and w w w doctor who will want to develop and acquire new skills. As a foundation w w ww doctor, you are in an educationally approved post, for which the LETB releases funds to the trust. It is therefore important that you should be t opportunities to train andndevelop, given ethe et and that you should be.nreet n . . leased from routine ward work to attend all dedicated training sessions. X the same time, the discharge Xsummaries need to be typed,kX the drug ok At ok endless o o ooresited. charts rewritten, and a seemingly number of venflons The B B B . . challenge for all involved is to achieve educationally useful outcomes within w w w FP—all doctors within ww these constraints. to the wwThis situation is not unique w et n . kX o Bo the NHS have to balance these demands and some of those tasks you aspire to be able to perform will be the same tasks that have become routine and even frustrating for your seniors. There are no magic answers, but a preparedness to work hard, a keenness to seize educational opportunities whenever they present, and a supportive educational supervisor will all go a long way. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 18 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne .ne .ne Getting organized X X X ok organizational abilities okmay be valued above your oclinical ok acumen. o Bo Your B B . you became a doctor, beingworganized . While this is not why will make wensure you more efficient, you go home on time, and free up time to w w w of learning opportunities as w ww make the most and when they arise. Your ward All departments have different ways of working and these et have evolved this way.nover et time for good reason. Equally, et willnusually n . . some things may have become out of date and may need updating. If you X predecessors and seniors and Xconsider kXhave an idea, discuss it withoyour k k o o an .audit project. Bo taking the lead on w Boor quality improvementw .Bo Folders andwclipboards These are an excellent way to hold paw wlists, handbooks, and spare paperwork ww along tient lists, job with a port- w able writing surface. Imaginative improvements can be constructed with bulldog etclips, plastic wallets, and dividers. et et n n n . . . Contents Spare paper, drug charts, DNAR forms, phone numbers, X X kX job ok lists, patient lists, theatreolists, okspare pens, and ward access ocodes. o o B Patient lists Juniors often entrusted with keeping .B a record of the w.Barethose wcalled team’s patientsw (including on different wards, ‘outliers’) along w w w and management plans. ww with their background details, investigation results, B With practice, most people become good at recalling this information, but writing it down reduces errors. They are usually electronic and may be manually or automatically generated, allowing every team member to carry a copy. Lists can be invaluable for discussing/referring a patient while away from the ward but must be kept confidential and disposed of securely (E p. 83). t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k Job lists During the ward round make a note of all the jobs that need doing either on your list or on a separate piece of paper. At the end of the round, these jobs can be distributed among your other team members. w ww t t et blood results in the notes, .ne results Instead of simply .nwriting .netry Serial X X X (with a column for each day’s ok writing them on serial results otoksheets ok results). o o spot and saves time. Bo This makes patternsweasier B B . . Timetables w Along with ward rounds and clinicalw jobs there will be many w extra meetings, w teaching sessions, and clinicswto attend. There are three ww blank timetables at the end of this book to use for this purpose. t to get through to switchboard Important It can take e ages et a listnumbers eyout n n n . . . so carrying of common numbers will save you hours (eventually X remember them). At the kendXof this book there are three kblank X phone ok will o Blank stickers on the back ofooID badges o o number lists for you to fill in. can B .B .B hold several numbers. w w wwequipment Finding equipment ww on unfamiliar wards ww Ward cover wastes time and is frustrating. You can speed up your visits by keeping a supply tof equipment in a box. Try to filltthem with equipment from storee instead of clinical areas. Alternatively, e if you are bleeped by .annurse et n n rooms . . X put in a cannula, you couldktryXasking them nicely to preparekX ok toment o you arrive (it works occasionally). o the equipready for you for when o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Being efficient 19w t t t .ne efficient X.ne .ne Being X X k k ok the years spent o atomedical school preparing foroo finals and beBo Despite B B . efficient is one of the mostwimportant . coming a doctor, being skills you can learn in thew FPw and one that you will value throughout your career. w w w ww Working hours While you are contracted to work a fixed number of hours you will usually work more, especially towards the beginning of t To make your day runnasesmoothly t ecareer. ear-t your as possible consider n n . . . riving early, before your seniors, to prepare for the day (e.g. review unwell X overnight events, nursing X test kX concerns, patient lists, and klatest ok patients, o o o o o B results). w.BYou will nearly always w w.B Time management seem pressed for time, so w wto organize your day efficiently.wPrioritize tasks in such a way ww it is important that things such as blood tests can be in progress while you chase other t t early in the day is important jobs. e Requesting radiology investigations eblood eandast n n n . . . lists get filled quickly, whereas writing forms for the next day X X on. Prepare dischargeksummaries X warfarin can waitktill ok prescribing oto avoidlaterbeing o o o and TTOs well in advance the rate-limitingostep in getting B patients home. w.B w.B w w On-call It will wseem like your bleep never stops w going off, especially when ww you are at your busiest. Always write down every job, otherwise you run the risk of forgetting what you were asked to do. Consider whether there is anyone else you could delegate simple tasks to, such as nurse practitioners or ward staff while you attend to more urgent tasks. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo How to be efficient B B . w. bleeps/extensions (Ewp.w622) • Make a list of common w ww •Establish aw timetable of your firm’s activitiesw (E p. 623) • Make a folder/clipboard (E p. 18) • Prioritize t through jobs in order.nTry et your workload rather than eworking et n tongroup jobs into areas of the hospital. If you’re unsure of the urgency . . . X X X are requesting an investigation, ask yourkseniors ok of a job or why youwith ok foundation o jobs at the another trainee, splitothe o Bo • Ifendyouofaretheworking B B . . ward round so that you share the workload w list throughout the daywtowreview progress • Run through the ww patient ww • Submit phlebotomy requests at the start/ew nd of each day (find out what time the phlebotomists come); if a patient will need bloods for the next 3 days then fill them all out together with clear dates Be aware of your limitations, eg consent should only be taken by the doctor performing the procedure or one trained in taking consent for that particular procedure Bookmark online or get a copy of your hospital guidelines/protocols, eg pre-op investigations, anticoagulation, DKA, pneumonia etc. Get a map of the hospital if you haven’t got your bearings Remember the names and faces of your colleagues and patients Talk to your predecessors to get hints and tips specific to your ward. t e X.n • ok Bo • • • • Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 20 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne .ne .ne Patient- c entred care X X X ok traditional medical omodel ok made the patient a passive okrecipient of o Bo The B B care. Healthcare was. done to people rather than with wwith this. w. them. Many pa- w tients were happy w w w w w Our task as clinicians is to find out our patients’ expectations of their relationship with their doctors and then try to fulfil these. From ‘whatever et is best doc’ to reams of .printouts et and self-diagnoses from ethet younfeel n n . . Internet, neither extreme is wrong and our task is to help. X X ok Patient expectationsookX ok o o B .Bpatient wants guidance regarding Find out whether w your w.B what treatment w may be best. w w w w w Respect their right to make a decision you believe may be wrong. If you feel that are doing so because theyt do not fully understand the situeort they e alert your team to this so.nethatt ation because of flawed logic, n then n . . things can be explained again. X X X ok Find out their other influences, ok these can be very powerful. ok Examples o o o B .B illness of relainclude: religious beliefs, andwdeath/ w.B friends, the Internet, w tives with similar conditions. w w w ww B Treatment expectations t .ne X k oo et t .ne X k Patients may have clear expectations of their treatment (eg an operation or being given a prescription). These expectations are important sources of discontentment when not fulfilled. Find out what their expectations are and why. Useful questions may include: ‘What do you think is wrong with you?’ ‘What are you worried about?’ ‘What were you expecting we’d do about this?’ oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww w Yourself in their shoes o Bo Make time to imagine yourself in your patient’s shoes. Isolation or communication difficulties will heighten fear at an already frightening time. Long waits without explanation are sadly common. Aggression from friends or relatives is often simply a manifestation of anxiety that not enough is being done. Ask yourself ‘How would I want my family treated under these circumstances?’ then do this for every patient. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B ww t et n . kX o Bo oo B . w .n kX Hospitals can rob people of their dignity. Wherever and whenever possible help restore this: • Keep your patients covered (including during resuscitation) •Ensure the curtains are around the bed on the ward round • Make sure they have their false teeth in to talk and glasses/wigs on whenever possible • Help them self-care when possible. e X.n ok Bo et .ne X k Ensuring dignity .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w wPatient-centred care 21ww t t t Over- .neexamination .ne .ne X X X clerked over four times for a single admission. ok Patients areforoften okseen ok This is o them and often as indicative of a lack o of coordination Bo frustrating B B . may need to be clerkedwand . examined more within the hospital.w Patients than once, but w the context of this should be explained carefully—is this w w w ww o Bo to gain more insight about their condition or to allow a training doctor to learn? People rarely mind when they understand the reasons. Keep examinations which are invasive or cause discomfort to an absolute minimum. et n . kX ok o w.B et n . X ok et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo o oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww Bo et n . kX oo .B w ww ww Bo B t e X.n .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 22 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t .ne .neconduct .ne Communication and X X X k and colleagues is a vital part ok opatients okof the job. communication with o o Bo Good B B All communication w. w. w w Whenever you are communicating with another health professional (see ww w w Box 1.9), include your name and role, the patient’s name, location, and primaryt problem, what you would like tthem to do and how urgently, and ethey can contact you if there.are eany problems et how n n n . . X X X ok T Box 1.9 Handover ok ok o o o B .B Reductions in working shift-based rotas, and w.B hours, a move towardsww w the increased w cross-cover between specialties w mean the number of ww doctors caring for a patient during their stay has increased, making the effective transfer of information more important. Handover occurs at et and end of every shift, and eit tis vital that it is given enough.ntime et the start n n . . and thought. Some are formal handover meetings chaired by a senior X X kX must ok while others are more informal. ok Either way, the incomingoodoctor o o get a clear idea of the situation including the names, locations, and B .B .Breview, as well w clinical details forwunwell patients and those needing other outstanding ww tasks that need going. Giving ww and receiving a good ww handover is a key skill and one you should pride yourself on perfecting. Written net communicationX.net net . . X X p. 76. letters E p. 84. ok ClinicalnotesnotesEEp. 82. ok Referral ok o o TTOs E pp. 80–1. Bo Sick B B . wants to discharge themselves, Self-discharge If your wpatient w. speak to them, w w w ask why, manage their concerns, and explain why they need hospital manw w w agement and what may happen if they leave. If they have capacity, then ask them to sign a ‘self-discharge form’ and do a TTO as normal. t t t Professional conduct .ne .ne .ne X X X you are a respected member of society and a representative ok As a doctor oandk people okin a certain medical profession, will expect you tooact o Bo ofway.theWhile B B this does. not mean you cannot be yourself, there is a big w school and you must be aware w.of expectations: change from medical w w w yourself, especially overwthe telephone or when ww • Always introduce answering a bleep; ‘Hello’ is not enough t • Wear ID badge at all times in hospital et your estaff; et n n n . . • .Never be rude to colleagues/ward you will get a bad reputation X X how they treat you kX be rude to patients, k ok •• Never o nohitmatter o o oo sandals Never: shout, swear, scream, things, or wear socks with B B B . . • Do not gossip about your work colleagues; address any w w problems you have with a colleague ww directly and in privateww ww et n . kX o Bo • When you do something wrong, apologize and learn from your mistake; it’s a natural part of the learning curve • If you are going to be late, let the person know in advance especially for handover or ward rounds • If you think it is not appropriate for you to do a job then run it by the ward staff or your seniors. Ask for help if you feel overrun with tasks. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Communication and conduct 23w t t t Patients’ .ne relatives .ne .ne X X X with relativeskcan be difficult if done badly, orkrewarding ok Communication o o be in the oand done well. They may o Bo iffrustrating B be scared, assuming theon.worst .B positionw of. not knowing what is going w They could have a full-time job thatw them coming in duringw day: wcallprevents wwellthethen ww • If you are on- and do not know the patient be honest about this, but attempt to answer simple questions as best possible using the t staff will be present net notes; what times the usual ward etot explain ediscuss n n . • .Try arrange a time when you can the patient’s progress. in a X kXquiet room (ask a colleagueoktoXhold your bleep) o oork ask them o o o • To avoid repeating yourself, speak to the family collectively B B to appoint a representative wis.B w.medical w w • Check the patient happy to have their confidential details wbe present if possible ww discussed w (E p. 29) and encourage them to • Address concerns and answer each question in turn t about your limitations and t seniors where necessary • Be e honest einvolve et n n n . . . • Document the date, time, what was discussed, and who was present. X X X ok Patient communication ok ok o o o B A patient’s perception Bof your abilities as a doctor B largely on .depends w.skills. ware your communication Remember that patients in an alien envirw w wfeel powerless, and are worried w about their ww onment, often health. B Introductions Always introduce yourself to patients and clearly state your name and position. Ask your patient how they wish to be addressed (eg Denis or Mr Smith). Patients meet many staff members daily so reintroduce yourself each time you see them (see Box 1.10). General advice Try to avoid using medical jargon. Be honest with your replies to them, and give direct answers when asked a direct question. If you do not know the answer, be honest about this too. Results Explain why a test was done, what it shows, and what it means. Diagnosis Try to give the everyday name rather than a medical one (heart attack instead of MI). Explain why this has happened. A patient who understands their condition is more likely to comply with treatment. Prognosis Along with the obvious questions about life expectancy (E p. 86), patients are most interested in how their life will be affected. Pitch your explanation in terms of activities of daily living (ADLs), walking, driving (E p. 619), and working. Bear in mind that patients may want to know about having sex, but are often too embarrassed to ask. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww oo B . w .n kX t T Box 1.10 Hello my name is... ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et n . X Kate Granger was a geriatrician, patient, and campaigner for compassionate and personalized care who sadly died at the age of 34 in 2016. She was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2011 and spent her subsequent years campaigning for better communication between doctors and patients. Frustrated at the lack of introductions from healthcare staff caring for her in hospital, she started the #hellomynameis campaign in 2013. Founded on the simple idea of reminding staff that a confident introduction is often all that is needed to put patients at ease, the campaign raised £250,000 for cancer charities and has received widespread public and professional support. It is a reminder to us all never to forget something as simple as introducing ourselves properly. et n . kX o Bo .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 24 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne .ne .ne Breaking bad news X X X k always be done by a senior ok oshould okat a predebreaking bad news o o Bo Ideally, B B termined time when.relatives and friends ± specialist. nurses can be preware likely to be involved inw w bad news, often w sent. In reality,w breaking wItyou w while on-call. can be a positive experiencew if done well. Preparation Read the patient’s notes carefully and ensure that all ret Be clear in your mind nabout earet up to date and for the right epatient. et sults n n . . . the sequence of events and the meaning of the results. Consider the X discuss with a senior. kX furkXther management and likelyoprognosis— k o o oo Bo Consent and confidentiality B . (E p. 31, p. 29) .ABpatient has a right w w before the in- w to know what w is going on or to choose not tow w know.If Ask vestigations w are done and document their response. a patient does not w want their relatives to know about their diagnosis you must respect this. Always etask, do not assume—many.nfamilies et have complex dynamics..net n . Warning shot Give a suggestion that X X bad news is imminentksoXit is not ok completely out of the blue, oegk ‘I have the results from . .o. would o you like o o B B anyone else here when I tell you them/shall we go to .aB quiet room?’. . w w How to do itw w The SPIKES model is often used: ww ww B Setting Ask a colleague to hold your bleep, set aside suitable time (at least 30min), silence your mobile phone, use a quiet room, and invite a nurse who has been involved in the patient’s care. Arrange the seats so you can make eye contact and remove distractions. Introduce yourself and find out who everyone is. Perception Find out what the patient already knows by asking them directly; this will give you an idea of how much of a shock this will be and their level of understanding to help you give appropriate information. Invitation Explain that you have results to give them and ask if they are ready to hear them. It helps to give a very brief summary of events so they understand what results you are talking about. Knowledge Break the bad news, eg ‘A doctor has looked at the sample and I’m sorry to say it shows a cancer’. Give the information time to sink in and all present to react (shock, anger, tears, denial). Once the patient is ready, give further information about what this means and the expected management. Give the information in small segments and check understanding repeatedly. Prognosis can be difficult; never give an exact time (‘months’ rather than ‘4 months’). Be honest and realistic. Try to offer hope even if it is just symptom improvement or leaving hospital. Empathy Acknowledge the feelings caused by the news; offer sympathy. This will take place alongside the ‘Knowledge’ step. Listen to their concerns, fears, and worries. This will guide what further information you give and help you to understand their reactions. Summary Repeat the main points of the discussion and arrange a time for further questions, ideally with a senior and yourself present. Give a clear plan of what will happen over the next 48h. Document the discussion in the patient’s notes (diagnosis, prognosis, expectations) with your name and contact details. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Cross-cultural communication 25w t t t .ne cultural communication .ne .ne Cross- X X X ok patients who can’t understand ok or speak the same language ok as you, o o Bo For B B the consultation can leave them feeling isolated, frustrated, w.on a third w.you (seeandBoxanxious. You may have to rely party to translate for 1.11). w w w w ww Professional interpreters Professional can be arranged ask t orinterpreters t before the appointment— t e e e ward staff phone switchboard. n n n . . . X• Allow extra time for the consultation and check the interpreter X is ok acceptable to the patientookX ok o o B • Address both thewpatient .B and the interpreter andwlook.Bat the patient’s non-verbal response to gauge their level of understanding w • Ask simple, wdirect questions in short sentences wwto avoid overloading or ww confusing the interpreter; avoid jargon • Use pictures or diagrams to explain things possible; provide t et audiovisual et wherever written/ material in the patient’s own language to take.away n n ne . . X X X • If you cannot organize an interpreter, you may be able to contact a ok telephone interpreting service ok who can translate for youoand okthe patient Bo directly over thewphone B .Bo(ask nurses or switchboard) . w with their name • Document that interpreter has been used w a trained and contact so that the same interpreter wdetails ww can accompany the ww patient for future appointments. Never assume you know what the patient wants without asking them. t t t .ne members as interpreters .ne .ne Family X X X k not be many reasons why and friends o should ok Thereasareinterpreters. okfamily members o o Nevertheless, in emergency situations, Bo used B B . the patient directly andwlook . carefullythisatmay prove necessary. Address w w to gauge their understanding. wRecord the fact thatthea ww patient’s response w w family member was used for interpretation in the notes. Friends tand relatives They are commonly used as informal interpreters. e drawbacks are the lack.nofetconfidentiality ethet The main and the bias n . .nwhen X X X relative may have on the patient’s decision- m aking— p articularly k (you may be unaware oofkthese). ok underlying family issues are opresent o Bo Children They can interpret B . for their parents from an early .Bage,o but again their w w views can bias the and its outcomew sexual health and vulw consultation w wand w (eg nerable adults) even routine clinical questions can be very frightening or w inappropriate for children. Use only as a point of last resort. Conflict the conversation or etof interests If you think the relative etyouis biasing etotit n n n . . is an important issue, then explain.that are professionally obliged X a trained interpreter.kX kX ok request o on behalf of adults (Eop.o31). o o Consent Relatives cannot consent B w.B w.B w w Box 1.11 w Who can interpret? w ww Hospital interpreters Local interpreting agencies Hospital staff (switchboard may have a list) Telephone service with which the hospital has a contract Family and friends—as a last resort. et n . kX o Bo • • • • • et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 26 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t .ne .ne .ne Outside agencies X X X ok okenquire about your patients okinclude: poagencies who could o o Bo Outside B B . lice, media, solicitors,. fire brigade, paramedics, GP, researchers, and the wPatient confidentiality mustwbewrespected. patient’s employer. w w w ww The rules • Do you know who you are talking tunlessto?certain et andreally e et • .Check arrange to call them back n n n . . X• Do they have any right to the Xinformation they are seeking?kX ok GPs, healthcare professionals, ok and ambulance staff may o well o o omany do, police have limited rights (see later in this topic), B B B . . others do notw w witwbe a more senior • Should you be the one discussing this or should w w ww member of the team? • Do not talk to the media about a patient/ et have et andyour hospital unless: .net You the patient’s permission, n n . . X You have permission from X X ok issues), ok your consultant/management ok(for trust and o o o B You are accompanied .B by the trust public relations w.Bofficer • Do not ‘chat’w tow a police/prison officer aboutw a patient, no matter what the allegedwcircumstances; all patients havew an equal right to privacy ww • • • • • Breaching a patient’s confidentiality without good cause is treated as misconduct by the GMC. t t t .ne .ne .ne Confidentiality and the police X X X investigation of assaults The police may well ask the conok Immediate o‘Iskit life- okclinical o o of an assault victim. t hreatening, doctor?’ The purpose of Bo dition B B . . this question is tow know how thoroughly to investigate w the crime scene. w wto give It is reasonable them an assessmentw of w severity. w w In the public interest In situations where someone may be at risk of serious injury, disclosure is permitted by the GMC. t edecision. et This should be a consultant- level n n net . . . X X X Traffic Act Everyonekhas a duty to provide the policekwith inforok The Roadwhich may lead to identification of a driver who oothe oo is alleged to Bo mation B B . have committed a driving offence. You are obliged .to supply the name w details. Discuss with your and address, not wclinical wwseniors first. w w ww Being a witness in court Inform tyour clinical supervisor; they tshould accompany you to court. e you are a professional.witness e to the court so your evidence et Remember n n n . . facts. Do not get rattled the Xshould be an impartial statement kXnotofgivetheopinions, kXofbyyour ok barristers—stick to the facts, odo olimits explain the o o o knowledge/experience. Address your remarks to the judge. B .B Dress smartly. w.B Get an expenses form from the witness unit to claimw your costs back. w w w w ww Medical research et n . kX o Bo You may be asked to provide patient details for research. Ask the researcher to provide you with ID and if they have consent from the patient. Unless the researcher has specific permission to screen medical notes, they may ask you to seek initial permission from any potential participant before passing on the patient’s details to the researcher. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Clinical governance/quality 27w t t t .ne governance/ .nqeuality .ne Clinical X X X k NHS ok definition: ‘Clinical governance ok is the system through owhich o o Bo DH B B are accountable for continuously the quality their services w. standards ofimproving w.anofenvironment and safeguarding high care, by creating in w w w ww which clinicalw excellence will flourish.’ What this means for you as an individual t responsible for your clinical t eare epractice et • .You which you should be n n n . . Xaiming to continuously improve kX the standard of your opractice kX ok • You need a mechanismoforoassessing o o trainer as part B • While in training,wthis.Bis done for you by your consultant/ .B have wmay of your regular appraisal process. Additionally, you audits and w w regular departmental meetings w w ww • You should be aiming to continuously learn and improve your care for patients. while still in training, tthis almost goes without saying; t et forAgain, e diplomas helps too. .ne revising endless examinations.nand n . X X kX this means for you part of a team ok What oktoasdepartmental oprotocols o o o • You should ensure you stick or hospital B .Bprocedures for which you have and don’t undertake been trained w.Bnotaudits, wwto participate w • You will bew asked in regular departmental usually w ww of morbidity and mortality. These are used to ensure consistency of practice and to pick up problems early • You should attend departmental and hospital-wide audit meetings and grand rounds to keep up to date with changes • You should answer any responses to complaints promptly. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . The clinical governance w structure in every hospital wwincludes: w w ww • Audit of practice (eg reattendances within 1wk or wound infections) • Appraisal and revalidation structures t and mortality) to allow t • Regular meetings (eg morbidity net departmental .clinicians .nehighlight common concernsX.ne to compare their care and X X routes of accountability all staff. It can be obviousowhen k these ok • Clearbroken okto for o down, leading problems which everyoneocan identify Bo have B B . is responsible for fixing w. but seemingly now one w • A risk management structure to identify practices jeopardize wpatient care ww which ww high-quality (critical incident reporting, E p. 34) • A complaints department to respond to complaints and ensure lessons et are learned from them; may ebet part of the risk management et n n n . . . department X X kX governance/quality structure whichooversees ok • Aandclinical ok allcommittee o o o ensures compliance with of the above. B w.B governance/quality mechanisms w.B are measured w Compliance with clinical w w both regionally w and nationally through qualitywboards. w B Clinical governance/quality mechanisms Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 28 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne .ne .ne Medical ethics X X X ok ok ok o o is medical ethics? Bo What B B Ethics are moral values, w. and in the context of medicine w. are supported by w w w four main underlying principles: w w w Autonomy This is the right for the individual to make decisions for themselves, tand not be overtly pressurized or swayed by others (namely e nurses, relatives, etc). Patients et should et doctors, be allowed to contribute n n n . . . Xwhen decisions are made about their care. If an individual lacks Xcapacity ok (E p. 30) then it might onotokbeXappropriate to let them omake okimportant o B autonomous decisions. .B w.Bfor the patient and w Beneficence Thisw isw concerned with doing what w is right w best interests. This does notwnecessarily mean we should w what is in their do everything to keep a 90-year-old patient alive who has widespread metastatic disease. There will be times it is beneficent to keep etcomfortable, etot diewhen eta n n n patient and allow them naturally. . . . X maleficence This ensureskX X to givers refrain from doing ok Non- o orcare- okof harm o o o the patient, whether physical psychological. An example a breach B .B be if a patient came towharm .B as a result in nonmaleficencew would of a w inadequate training or ww doctor performing ww a procedure in which theywhad B supervision. Justice This requires that all individuals are treated equally and that both the benefits and burdens of care are distributed without bias. Justice also covers openness within medical practice and the acknowledgement that some activities may have certain consequences—specifically legal action. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww Two further principles are important to consider: Dignity This should be retained for both the patient and the people delivering their healthcare. Honesty This is a fundamental quality which doctors (as well as other care-givers) and patients should be expected to exhibit in order to strengthen the doctor–patient relationship. ww o Bo t .ne X k t .ne X k w t o o w.B Ethical conflict et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX Ethical dilemmas frequently arise in clinical practice and are probably not discussed enough. While the principles listed do not necessarily provide an immediate answer, they do create a framework on which the various components of the conflict can be teased out and addressed individually. All doctors should be able to discuss common ethical dilemmas by analysing how each principle is relevant and weighing them up against one another. In ethics there are no right answers, but careful thought and discussion of situations can allow a harmonious solution to be found. ww t e X.n ww .ne X k t ww et n . X ww k ok oo oo Bo Ethics and communication B B . . wwthat apparently complexwethical wwissues arise because ww It is quite common w of a failure in communication between the patient or their loved ones and healthcare professionals. The solution most of these conflictstis et et to lines the establishment of effective and.transparent of communication. n n . .ne X X X k k ok oo oo Bo B B . . w w ww ww ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Patient confidentiality 29w t t t .ne .ne .ne Patient confidentiality X X X ok breach patient confidentiality ok is unlawful and unprofessional; ok several o o Bo To B B doctors are disciplined. and even struck off the medical each year wbe careful when talking aboutwpatients w. register for this. You should in public places, w w wthe hospital environment, andw including within only disclose patient informa- w tion to recognized healthcare staff as appropriate. Pieces of paper with patient information on must never leave e the t t hospital and should be shredded eare et n n n if they no longer required. Do not leave patient lists lying around. Personal . . . X X be disguised so individual databases of patients kXpatients ok electronic ok should cannot be identified. Electronic devices on which patientoo information is o o B stored outside of thewhospital B under the .B should be encrypted and registered w.(names Data Protectionw Act. You avoid giving any information nature of w w wpolice, press, or other enquirers;wask your seniorsorfor injuries) to the advice w when dealing with these (E p. 26). Publications Medical journals will often et et insist that any article which ein-t n n n . . . volves a patient must be accompanied by written consent from the patient X the publication of the material, Xirrespective of how difficultkitX ok for okpatient. o o oo would be to track down and identify that B B B . . w wabout a patient to a Presentations and images If you are talking group of healthcare ww workers in your own hospital ww you do not need to ww obtain consent, but doing so is courteous. If you are talking to an audience from outside your hospital it is advisable you seek the patient’s consent unless the patient is fully anonymized. Equally, if you want to keep copies of radiographs or digital images, ensure these are made anonymous and if this isn’t possible obtain the patient’s written consent. Bear in mind that presentations can easily end up online and be accessed by those other than your original audience.11 Relatives Your duty lies with your patient and if a relative asks you a question about the patient, it is essential you obtain verbal consent from the patient to talk to the relative; alternatively offer to talk to the relative in the presence of the patient. Relatives do not have any rights to know medical information. If the patient lacks capacity then seek senior advice before talking to the relatives. Document all conversations in the notes. Children As described for adults, if the child has capacity to give consent (see ‘Gillick competence’/Fraser guidelines E p. 30), you must seek verbal consent from the patient to tell the relatives (parents) about their health. If the patient refuses, then offer to talk to the patient about their condition in the presence of their relatives. If you sense the situation will be difficult, seek senior advice/support. Telephone calls Wards receive many telephone calls asking how patients are and if they have had tests or operations yet. The potential to break patient confidentiality here is great. Often there is a telephone by each bed, so encourage callers to speak to the patient directly. Otherwise, inform the patient who the caller is and relay a message from the patient to the caller. Apologize to the caller for not being able to offer any further information and suggest that you could talk things over with both themselves and the patient when they visit. See ‘Outside agencies’ E p. 26. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B ok e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ok o B . w ww ww t e X.n e X.n ok o B . w For a good discussion of the ethical issues, see Draper H, Rogers W. Re-evaluating confidentiality: using patient information in teaching and publications APT 2005;11:115, available free at Mapt.rcpsych.org/content/11/2/115.full.pdf 11 ww t e X.n ww Bo .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww ww B .B w w wBeing a doctor 30 o et o o w.B .n kX o o w.B Someone who has capacity can comprehend and retain information material relevant to the decision, especially as to the consequences of not having the intervention in question, and must be able to use and weigh this information in the decision-making process. For a patient to have capacity they must: • Be able to understand the information relevant to making the decision and consequences of refusal • Retain the information long enough to allow for decision-making • Weigh up the information to arrive at a decision • Be able to communicate the decision they have made. Remember that: • Patients may have the capacity to make certain decisions and not others • Capacity in the same patient may fluctuate over time. Capacity is most often impaired by chronic neurological pathology such as dementia, learning difficulties, and psychiatric illness, but is also impaired by acute states such as delirium, acute severe pain, alcohol and drug intoxication (both recreational and iatrogenic—eg morphine). Children and capacity Children under 16yr of age were once regarded as lacking capacity to give consent, but now if the child meets the criteria then they are regarded as having ‘Gillick’ competence (Fraser guidelines12), and may give consent (Box 1.12). It is always advisable, however, to involve the parent or guardian in discussions about the patient’s care if the patient allows (see also E p. 417). ww t t e X.n ok Bo ok o w.B ok Bo ok o w.B t ok o B . w e X.n ok o B . w ww et et .n kX o .n kX o o w.B ww ww No capacity When the patient does not have capacity and is over 18, family and friends are not able to make a decision on the patient’s behalf; their views should, however, be listened to. Where the patient lacks capacity and there is no next of kin to consult, an Independent Mental Capacity Advocate (IMCA)13 may need to be appointed who advises clinicians in making decisions on behalf of the patient in their best interests. In an emergency situation, the patient is treated under the ‘doctrine of necessity’, that is, doing what is in the patient’s best interests until they attain capacity to make the decisions themselves. et et .n kX o o .n kX o o w.B ww ww t t ok Bo e X.n ok ok o w.B ww ww t t e X.n ok Bo e X.n Although 16 years is the usual age at which people are automatically allowed to give their own consent, younger people can consent to most treatments or operations if they are capable. This follows a famous case in 1986 when Victoria Gillick went to the courts to get authority to be informed if her daughters sought contraceptive treatments. The law disagreed and decided that if a child was competent, he/she could consent to treatment without parental knowledge—this is often referred to as being ‘Gillick’ competent when a child meets the criteria in that case. o w.B ok o B . w ww ww t e X.n e X.n ok o B . w Wheeler R. Gillick or Fraser? A plea for consistency over competence in children. BMJ 2006;332:807. 13 Mental Capacity Act (2005); Mwww.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2005/9/section/35 12 ww t K Box 1.12 Gillick competence/Fraser guidelines e X.n ww et .n kX o w.B ww et .n kX o w.B ww t e X.n ww o e X.n ww t e X.n ww t e X.n ww Bo et .n kX ww Bo ww w Chapter 1 t .ne Capacity X k Bo .B w w ww ww B .B w ww t .ne Consent X k o Bo w w oo B . w t .ne X k Consent et o w.B o Understanding consent and obtaining it satisfactorily can be difficult. If you are ever unsure, seek senior help. ww ww tient should be aware of the risks and benefits and be able to communicate the procedure in a language that the patient will understand. If you do not regularly perform the procedure yourself or are not trained to take consent for the procedure then you must not obtain consent for it. Obtaining consent satisfactorily is a skill that can be learned from senior colleagues, so initially shadow your seniors when they are taking consent from a patient to learn how to do it properly, then have a senior colleague supervise you the first few times to ensure you include all the relevant information. et n . kX t ok .B w ww ww Informed consent In order to give informed consent, patients must ok et n . X Bo et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo t o B . w ww et ww oo B . w ww .ne X ok first be deemed to have capacity to consent under the specific circumstances (E p. 30). Consent should reflect the fact that the patient is aware of what is going to happen and why. They should be aware of the consequences of not undergoing the procedure, the potential benefits, and any alternatives, and be free from any coercion. The common risks and side effects should be discussed, as should the potentially rare but serious consequences of the procedure. As a rule, any risks which might affect the decision of a normal person should be discussed—plus any risks that might be of specific importance for the individual patient, such as where the profession of the patient makes a normal trivial risk of special importance (eg a tiny risk of postoperative vertigo might be of particular importance for a window cleaner). The patient should be provided with information well in advance of the procedure to allow them to think it over and prepare any questions they may wish to ask. o B . w ww et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B 31w .n kX Obtaining consent The individual who obtains consent from the pa- o Bo B .B w w .n kX w oo B . ww Types of consent There are three main types of consent: ww t .ne X k ww tThe patient offers you theirnearmt as you approach them with ta Implied .ne and syringe to take blood. . .ne needle X X X kthat you are going to perform You explain ok Expressed—byverbal oprocedure ok a lumbar o o describing the and potential complications, and Bo puncture, B B the patient agreesw to .have it done. w. w w Expressed—ww ritten The patient is given an extensive w explanation of the ww procedure and complications and informed of the alternatives. A record of the tconsultation is made which both t patient and doctor sign. This e e et document should be completed prior to the planned treatment ornpron n . . . Xcedure, and consent verified katXthe time of the procedure. kX ok Difficult situations There o o situations whereoproblems arise o B with consent issues.wIf.Bin odoubt,areseekmany senior advicew or.B consult one of the medical defencew 24hw telephone support. w unions (E p. 2) which have w ww If a patient has capacity to give or withhold consent, and chooses not to receivettreatment even in the face of tdeath, then treating that patient e their will is potentially a criminal e offence. This includes patients et against n n n . . . Xwith psychiatric illness. Note kthat X this situation is distinct fromkXthat of a ok patient with a psychiatric oillness o who may lack capacity toomake o decisions o B regarding psychiatricwtreatment, B and may be detainedwand Bgiven psychiatric . . (but not medicalw treatment) under the Mental Health Act (E p. 371). w ww ww B 32 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t .ne .ne .ne Medical errors X X X ok ok from the trivial and correctable ok to the sedoctor makes mistakes, o o Bo Every B B vere and avoidable. . w w. w w What to do at once/ w ithin an hour w w ww • Stabilize the patient, call for senior help early • Do not the error by tryingt to cover it up or ignoring it et compound eto the patient as appropriate.net • .Correct where possible, apologizing n n . X• Don’t underestimate the seriousness X of the situation kX ok • If serious and you haveotime, ok start documenting events,oincluding o times o • If after the error you wish to add more details, then.do so but make it B B B . w clear when theyw w were added. This is perfectly wacceptable • Amendingw notes, without making it clear that your entry was made w ww retrospectively and with a clear date and time, is serious misconduct. t Serious et untoward incidents— erare et n n n . . . • An apology is not an admission of guilt, so apologize and explain to X patient early. Apologizekthat X the event has taken placek(Box X ok the oconfession’ o 1.13), o o o it is not necessary to ‘give at this stage B B your error .believe • Inform your senior/ immediately. If you w.Bconsultant wshould w w has caused the patient significant harm then you speak to your ww w w defence organization (E p. 614) as soon as practical. t you from working temporarily neexclude net pending preliminaryXenquiries. net may . . . X X a judgemental act but a quick and calm investigation, ok This isbenotinformed okallows ok notbutto you why youohave been excluded. You may beoasked talk Bo must B B . organization at to others involved. If .this happens, speak with your defence w w once. You should be given a named person to contact the hospital and w within w ww for more than 2wk withoutwreview. cannot be excluded Let the hospital and w others know how to get hold of you. Less serious errors should be treated as training and dealt with by youreconsultant or tutor. A period of close t t et issues n n supervision or retraining may be appropriate. . . .ne X X X ok Sources of help ook ok o Bo Clinical events Consultant, B B supervisors and defence organizations. . w w.dean, the BMA. Non-clinical events Your consultant, the postgraduate w w w these events resolve very ww Don’t forgetw friends and family, and remember slowly, sometimes years in big cases, so don’t expect answers quickly. et et et n n n . . . K Box 1.13 Duty of candour X kXprofesok Candour is being openooandkXhonest. While our ethicalooand o B sional duties of candour trusts and .B are well established, since w w.B2015 their employees have a legal duty of candourwtowards their patients. w If an unexpected/ w unintended incident occurs w that could/did result in ww Disciplinary procedures If you have made a serious error the hospital et n . kX o Bo death, psychological harm for >28d, permanent reduction in function or non-permanent but significant physical harm needing an increase in treatment (e.g. longer admission, another procedure, treatment cancellation, transfer to higher-level care), then trusts are legally obliged to apologize and explain to the patient, and notify them as investigations evolve. Failure to do so may result in prosecution by the CQC. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww w t .ne Complaints X k o Bo oo B . w w Complaints t .ne X k 33w et o w.B .n kX o Every doctor has complaints made about them. These can be about your clinical ability, conduct, or communication skills. They may be justified or spurious but they are inevitable, therefore do not feel your world has fallen apart when you are told a complaint has been made about you. ww ww ww How the system handles complaints There are two types of o Bo et n . kX t ok o w.B .B ww How to respond to a complaint et n . X ok et n . X ok o B . w t .ne X k oo t .ne X k o o w.B oo B . ww w ww ww et n . kX o o B . w ww ww et n . X ok o w.B • Preventable death of a patient • Significant harm to a patient, in a predictable way • Disciplinary offences including: • substance abuse • being drunk on duty • sexual/racial harassment. et n . kX .n kX t Box 1.14 Serious errors o oo B . w o o w.B ww et .ne X k .ne X k ww t .ne X k ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww ok Bo t et oo B . w ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o w ww • All formal complaints are collated centrally in the hospital. In the rare event you are sent a complaint personally, do not respond but pass it to the complaints department. In most trusts, the department that handles complaints is known as PALS (Patient Advice and Liaison Service). They also provide more general advice and support for patients • If a patient makes a complaint to you about care they have received from a colleague (doctor, nurse, or other) then listen to them but try to avoid appearing to agree or support their position, no matter how much you may share their opinions. Depending on the seriousness of their allegations (Box 1.14), either offer to feedback the comments or advise them to discuss matters further with PALS • If a complaint has been made about the care of a patient you saw, you may be asked for a statement. This is an internal document and should be written as a letter, but bear in mind that if the case goes to court, this document could be requested by the patient’s lawyers • Simply state the facts as you see them, do not try to apportion blame. You may be able to expand on your notes, particularly the details of conversations which may not have been documented • Do not take it personally • If you feel it is clear how any error could be avoided in future then state this as well. Patients are often satisfied by knowing that any mistake they suffered will not be repeated for others • All the statements made by the staff involved are then collated and a letter is written on behalf of the chief executive (and usually signed by them) to the patient. This usually ends the matter • There are further steps, both with the trust and then regionally, if this is not enough. ww Bo et n . kX oo e X.n complaints—formal and informal. If a patient complains to you informally it is in everyone’s best interest, and will save many hours of clinical time, if you are able to resolve the situation to the patient’s satisfaction there and then. If you are unable to do so, but feel the problem may be solvable by more senior input, then call for help. Don’t agree to do something which you are unable to carry out. Bo B .B w w w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 34 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Incident reporting X X X ok okare defined as: ok o o incidents B These Bo Clinical B . patients’ care or disruptswcritical . treatment • Anything whichw w harms w • An event w which could potentially lead to harm if allowed to progress w ww (‘near misses’). They range from minor incidents, eg incorrect results, to life- group t threatening, eg wrong blood t in a blood transfusion.net e e n n Non- c linical incidents These include: . . . kX• Incidents which involve staff, kXrelatives, or visitors kX o o o o Bo • Incidents whichwinvolve .Bonon-clinical equipment orwproperty. .Bincidents The aim of incident reporting is to highlight adverse or ‘near w was a result. Ultimately misses’, assess them, and review clinical practice it is ww w w designed to reduce clinical risks and improve overall quality of patient care. t occurs When a clinical incident/nearemiss et sure et n n . • .Make the patient is safe .n X X kX reporting form (usually online) a trust critical o incident ok •• Complete ok if o o o Forward the form to the clinical risk coordinator (usually automatic B form is electronic) w.Bare aware of what has happened w.B w w •Ensure your seniors w w ww • Consider completing some formal reflective practice in your ePortfolio. t net samples from two different nepatients net • .Blood being confused . . X X X or follow-k ok • Failure to report o up abnormal results ok failure o o Bo •Equipment B B • Drugs prescribed to who have a documented w. mpatients w. allergy • Delay in treatment/ anagement. w w w w ww Completing incident forms • Fill intan incident form as soon as yout can after the event so that yout e ne forget any relevant information ne .don’t .nform. .online • Check you are filling in the correct All NHS trusts now use X X X ok incident reporting systems okthough there may be paper backups ok o o Bo • Include the time,wdate, B B staff involved, as well as the issues being . . form reported wthe • Check if the w named consultant needs to fill in/ sign w • If you are w reporting an incident involving your wcolleagues, inform them ww and explain the situation. Learn from their mistakes without judging them. t risk directors for evaluation The critical incident form is copied toeclinical et meetings, et n n n . at.panel where changes.to clinical practice are discussed. X X X ok Hints and tips ook ok o o B • If a critical incident.B is filed involving yourself, .don’t w form w B assume you’re a badw doctor; use it as a learning experience w wreason and circumstances andwclarify the situation with the ww • Find out the Examples of all-too-common clinical incidents 14 person filing the report • Go over the incident and review your actions, asking if there is anything you would change; if it helps, discuss it with a colleague. t ok Bo t e X.n e X.n ok o B . w t e X.n ok o B . w See Mhttps://improvement.nhs.uk/documents/2266/Never_Events_list_2018_FINAL_v5.pdf for a list of events that should never happen (but sadly, still sometimes do). 14 ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Colleagues and problems 35w t t t .ne .ne .ne Colleagues and problems X X X k ok ok with a colleague who oworried of us may have oworked us o Bo Many B B . want to be treated by Dr .X’. When does this professionally—‘I wouldn’t w w become enoughwto do something? And what dow w w you do? ww Clinical incompetence • The GMC is quite clear that we all havet a clinical duty to report t who t e e colleagues we believe to be incompetent. This does not equate toe n n n . . . that you Xpointing out every fault of every Xother doctor but it does meankX ok cannot ignore serious concerns ok if you believe patients areoatorisk of harm o o B • Serious concernswabout B a trainee should be passedwto.Bthe relevant . consultant. Ask to see them in private. It may be easiest to open the conversation with a question, to ask them to ww wputwyour mind at rest: ww ‘I don’t know if you are aware that Dr X does not use chaperones? I’ve always told we should use them fortintimate examinations. I’m here t et been ehad felt uncomfortable with Dr .X.’ne because two women told me that they n . .nthen X X X • If the problem is with a consultant either talk ok another consultant or, ifoitoiskvery serious,youtheshould okto medical director o o B • If you are unsurewwhether then .B a problem exists, or how w.Bseriousoritais,clinical talk to a friendly consultant informally (eg your supervisor w w lecturer you wgot on with at medical school).w ww Recreational drugs/alcohol t is a clear difference between t • There nemuch neatdoctor occasionally drinking .too .ne while off-duty and X one. who helps themselves to controlled X X has developed ok drugs or who ok an alcohol problem between ok what o regardless.B of o substance, there is a difference Bo • Likewise, B someone does that w only affects themselves andwactions w. which affect w quality of patient care. Any colleague who appears w w on duty while badly ww hungover is a potential risk to patient care and should be removed from clinical (and should be encouraged to recover in the mess or go t t should et duties ekind home). Repetitive behaviour of this be discussed with n n n . . . thee colleague, and/or their educational supervisor X X X k arriving drunk, or use of ocontrolled k ok • Drinking during workingoohours, o and you have a duty to alert your Bo drugs are totallywunacceptable B B . w. the GMC consultants to any such problem. They will consider w w guidance and w following a meeting with thewindividual involved will ww decide if GMC referral is appropriate or if a local warning and period of ‘probation’ is needed These problems are better tackled early t etsolvable than et patient while left until they.n cause harm and ruin a career. n . .ne X X X k k problems ok Psychological oo serious psychological illnesses oo just like year, doctors B develop Bo •Every B . . the rest of the population and doctors are just as diagnosis w wwbad atandself- • The more common hypomania, ww problems include frankwdepression ww et n . kX o Bo the rare include psychosis and schizophrenia (E p. 14); the symptoms often come on gradually such that even close colleagues may not notice the transition from mildly eccentric to frankly pathological • Depression is commonly masked well while at work • Talk to an individual directly, or their consultant, if you are concerned about their health. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 36 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne your job X.ne .ne Hating X X k is common and usually transient. ok owork ok If you problems at o o Bo Experiencing B B . try to identify the problem. . However diffifind things do not improve, wpolite, cult things are w at w work, you should always remain and w wdon’t, you may be the one perceived w to be thepunctual, ww helpful. If you problem. Stress at the workplace et et a doctor, the demands of.nyour et The responsibility that comes with.nbeing n . expectations from peers and patients Xjob, fear of litigation, and highkX X can ok leave you physically and omentally o exhausted. If you feel things okare getting o o on top of you, reassess B .B your workload. Speak towcolleagues .B to find out if there are easierw ways of doing things. Take annual leave and upon your w w return approach w your work schedule differently w to help regain control ww of things. Ensure you have time to relax away from work and keep up your outside If things don’t timprove, talk to a friend, contact et (Einterests. ediscuss the situation with a trusted et the BMA p. 614) for advice, .or n n n . . X or mentor. X X ok senior ok ok o o o Handing in your resignation B .B .B If you can find now other option and you are clearw medicine isn’t for you, w w you can always leave your job. Find out how much notice you are re- ww w w quired to give and who to direct your letter of resignation to. During your last weeks, stay an active member of the team rather than taking a short-timer’s attitude. Complete any outstanding work and tidy up loose ends before leaving. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k ok ok at work oo o Bo Bullying B B .your seniors, peers, other healthcare Bullying can be from wrelatives. w. professionals, w patients, or their If you feel you are being bullied, discuss it w w w either at work or independently w (eg the BMA). Speak to w with someone, your predecessors to find out if they had similar difficulties and how they t the problem. Keep a diarynoferelevant t events, together withnewit-t handled .ne and approach your consultant. . If it is your consultant who nesses, is the X X X. counk problem, approach anotherokconsultant you trust or contactokBMA o Bo selling (E p. 614).w.Bo .Bo w Sexual harassment This may start wwvery innocently and gradually wwescalate into intimidating ww behaviour which may affect your work, social life, and confidence. In the first instance, make it clear that their advances are not welcome and confide in someone you trust. Find out if other colleagues are also being harassed and report the harassment to your educational supervisor. Again, the BMA can be a useful source of advice. t e X.n .ne X k t et n . X k ok o oo Bo Discriminationw.Bo B . w ww policy that includes ww All employers must abide by an equal opportunities w w standards on treating all employees. Before deciding to take things further, confide Keep a record of any events t in a trusted senior colleague. et documenting eandt thatne stand out as being discriminatory, dates, times, n n . . . witnesses. Contact the BMA for advice. You may have to submit X X toa kX so make sure you areokprepared ok formal letter outlining your oconcerns, o o o pursue a formal complaint before committing yourself on paper. B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w t .ne Relaxation X k o Bo oo B . w t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o ately. Leave the ward, ask someone to hold your bleep, and take 5min to unwind. Take deep breaths and concentrate on the feeling of the air rushing in and out of your lungs. Count the breaths and try to clear your mind. Try squeezing the muscles in your feet then feeling them relax; do this with all the muscle groups from your legs to your neck. Think about something you are looking forward to. Do not let medicine take over your life. In particular, value and cultivate your non-medical friendships—these can be hard to sustain under the strains of shiftwork but you will value an external perspective on life beyond the NHS. It may not take much to make life seem better; try to: et n . kX ww t ok o w.B .B w ww • Go for a walk • Watch a film • Go shopping •Exercise • Watch a comedy • Take a long bath • Go out for a meal et n . X • • • • • • • Talk to friends Watch sport Play a game Have a good cry Go to the pub Have a massage Cook et n . X ok o B . w ww • • • • • • • ww et n . kX oo e X.n ww ok Bo 37w Have a break There are few problems that must be solved immedi- ww o Bo w Causes of stress Plan a holiday Talk to parents Have a lie-in Listen to music Have an early night Join a class/club Read (another) book. ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww ww Try to avoid t t net .ne sleeping tablets .ne • .Smoking • Drugs/ X X X ok •Excessive alcohol ook •Excessive caffeine. ok o Bo B B w. w. w Causeswofw stress w ww Attitude t you have no control over;neit tis Thereeist no point worrying about things .n to feel concerned aboutXfuture .ne events natural but almost everything X X. will k turn out well in the end, even k k if it is not as you have planned it. o o o o Bo The job .Bowith time; these w.B w See E p. 19 onw being efficient. The job gets much easier w skills becomew second nature and you performw individual tasks quicker. ww Yourself t e X.n ok Bo .ne X k t et n . X Be honest with yourself: are you tired? Everything is harder, slower, and more stressful when you have not had enough sleep. Think about what makes you stressed and whether this is a problem with your attitude, the way you do the job, other people, or the nature of the job. Try to accept, change, or avoid these stressors. ok o o w.B ww Other people ww o w.B If someone is annoying you then consider telling them so. Plan how you will tell them, do it in private, and do not blame them; just explain how it makes you feel. Most people will be apologetic and try to change. et n . kX et n . kX ww t .ne X k o 2 If you feel it is all getting otooomuch and/or nobody cares, try speaking oo200to:169 Bo BMA counselling (you B B . . don’t need to be a member) 08459 w w Samaritans ww ww 08457 90 90 90 ww B 38 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne and contractsX.ne .ne Pay X X ok ok ok o o doctors’ contract Bo Junior B B . junior doctors’ terms andwconditions . In August 2017, the of service wwnew w replaced thew previous 2002 contract (updated in 2008). The most signifi- ww w cant changes were pay increments rewarding responsibility rather than time served, new safeguards against poor training and overwork (Box 1.15), and et of normal working hours etuntil 9pm on weekdays. However, et an n extension n n . . . many details were contentious and despite concessions on both sides, X X the country bore witnesskXto an unok sticking points remained.oAsoka result, o o oNHS precedented and lengthy dispute between the BMA and Employers B B B . . w of the contract (see Box 1.16). wEven now, employers, w over the precise terms w w trainers, andw trainees are getting to grips withwthe details, with national re- w views planned for 2018 and transitional arrangements until 2022. You should read your carefully as we provide only a summary, the details are et contract et unfamiliar et important, and your seniors may be.n quite with its intricacies. n n . . X X X ok Box 1.15 Limits onoworking ok hours ok o o B .B are responsible for doctors’ .Bsafe working •Employees and doctors winclude wduring • Limits on hours no more than 48h work the average w w w Working Time ww working w week (56h if opted out of the European B directive), or 72h in any 7d stretch. The average working week is defined as starting at midnight between Sunday and Monday, is averaged over 26wk, and includes locums (E p. 40) Mandatory 11h rest between shifts, with time off within 24h if less No shift (except non-resident ‘availability’ shifts) should exceed 13h Consecutively no more than 8d of work, 5 long shifts (10h+), 4 long shifts that finish after 11pm, or any 4 shifts that include 3 of the hours between 11pm–6am (with 2d mandatory break after each) 30m break during a 5h shift or 2 during a 9h shift; not within an hour of starting/finishing, ideally in the middle, and can be merged into 1h Safeguards are there for breaches or inadequate training (E p. 39). t .ne X k • oo • • • o et •.n X k et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X k w t .ne X k ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . The following elements w vary depending on yourwrota w but are added up to w w generate your salary (payslip E p. 41): w w w Basic salary Depends on grade and responsibility, based on 40h/week. Additional hours An allowance for up tot8h extra per week. et allowance ebasic salary depending on the efre-t Weekend A % added to .the n n n . . X of weekends you work X(3% for 1 in 7, 10% for 1 in 2).kX ok quency okbasic Night duty 37% on top ofothe salary for hours worked o oo9pm–7am. B B B . . Availability allowance 8% on top of the basic salary for when you can be at w home but mayw be telephoned for advice or called wwin to work. w w w Flexible pay premia Supplements for those in GP, academic, oral and w maxillo-facial, and hard-to-fill programmes to support workforce develt extra degrees required. net opment, et time out of training, and/.norethe n . . to Exceptional pay premia Supplements for activities of broader interest Xthe NHS (e.g. time out of training X X k k k to assist in public health crises). o oo Money received from fines o(Eo p. 39). Bo Pay in exception circumstances B B . . w floor to protect the wages Pay protection A cash already in wwof indoctors training programmes 2016/2017. ww when the new contractwstarted ww Bo Pay arrangements B .B w ww .B w w w Pay and contracts 39ww t t t Safeguards .ne .ne .ne X X X protect against poor training k and excessive service provision: k ok Theseschedule oplan oand o o Contractual for your service provision training Bo Work B B . agreed in advance with yourwsupervisors. . provided by trustsw and w if doctors are worked ww Fines Departments ww are fined at 4× the hourlywrate o Bo B et n . kX t ok o w.B et n . X .B w ww et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo et n . kX oo e X.n ww ok Bo >48h during the average working week (Box 1.15), >72h in any consecutive 7d, or have <8h rest between consecutive shifts. Contractual breaches not meeting these criteria are reciprocated with time off or pay for all work done. Complete an ‘exception report’ as soon as possible. Exception reporting The way of informing trusts when work varies from the agreed schedule (e.g. differences in hours, breaks, patterns, training, or support). If patient safety is at risk, it must be raised orally at the time to the responsible senior clinician, otherwise electronic forms distribute the details and should be submitted within 14d (7d if claiming pay, 24h if patient safety breach). Outcomes may be fines, extra income, time off, a work schedule review, or system change. Work schedule review To ensure that schedules remains fit for purpose. Triggered in writing by doctors, supervisors, employers, exception reports, or the guardian of safe working hours. If dissatisfied, escalate to a level 2 work schedule review and then a ‘formal grievance procedure’. Guardian of safe working hours (GOSWH) ‘Independent’ champion of safe working hours (but employed by the trust and approved by junior doctors). Responsible for escalating working hours problems to senior management, distributing money from fines, and reviewing exception reports. Accountable to junior doctors and the executive board. Junior doctors’ forum A forum for junior doctors to raise concerns and decide on the allocation of fines (from fines, 1.5× basic pay goes to the individual and 2.5× to training/trainees). Made up of elected junior doctor representatives, the GOSWH, the chair of the local negotiating committee, and the director of postgraduate education. Director of postgraduate education Responsible for training in the trust. t .ne X ok o B . w ww et ww oo B . w ww .n kX w oo B . ww ww t .ne X k ww t t net .ne contract dispute X.ne K. Box 1.16 The junior doctors’ X X k k keeping ok oand and employees both want improved patient care oothe o Bo Employers B B contracts up to date.with demands of current healthcare is part of . w wbegan this. Negotiations between the BMA and employers in 2012, conw w tinuing on and w off for 3 years. By 2015, the Secretary w of State for Health ww Jeremy Hunt threatened to ‘impose’ a new contract as the debate became increasingly political and emotional. One sticking point was Hunt’s insist-t eont extending etwithout e ence core working hours increasing the total.n‘pay n n . . X X X envelope’, citing concerns regarding higher mortality at weekends while k ok overlooking a weight of statistical okwas unreoo evidence suggesting that othis Bo lated to junior doctor B staffing levels. Hunt’s continued.B use of misleading . figures, combined wwwith the accumulated perception wwof a political rather ww than clinicalw agenda, all set against a backdropw of understaffing, rota gaps, and low morale, contributed to a backlash from junior doctors that culminated intan overwhelming vote for striketaction. In total there were 8 dayst e action and the first withdrawal e of.n industrial .ne of emergency care ever .innthe UK. Some employer concessions were made, which along with a damaging X X X k in ok series of mistakes by theoBMA ok leadership contributed tooaodecrease By late 2016, the dispute drew to.aB close, with lasting Bo ­effective opposition. B . w to morale and reputationswonwboth sides. damage perhaps done ww w ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 40 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Making more money X X X k money in addition to yourobasic k income ok omake are several ways to o o Bo There B B . and declare these (Fig. 1.1). You must keep of all additional income w. torecords w in your self-assessment the Inland Revenue at the end of each tax year. w w w projects being undertaken ww Research w There are usually several research in most hospitals which require volunteers. These range from a 5min intert view e tot a week-long study and in most circumstances the volunteerseare etThese n n n . . . rewarded financially (eg £5 to >£1000). may carry a risk of harm. X X kXsickness ok Locums Most hospitalsoemploy ok locum doctors to coveroostaff o or busy periods. They can be internal or external. Internal locums have B w.Bat the hospital and arewworking w.B additional hours w their substantive post w from the NHS are working away from their w w staff bank. External locums w base hospital (or do not have one), often on behalf of private locum agencies. There locum agencies that can register with; they are t are many eadvertised et youspending ekeyt often in BMJ Careers. To reduce on locums, two n n n . . . Xmeasures have been introduced. XThe first of these, caps on total X hourly ok rates, seems to have hadolittle oksuccess. The capped ratesoareokmuch lower o B than those previously.B such that trusts that enforce them have a wfillingoffered w.B much harder time rota gaps, resulting in unfilled slots and increased w w w strain on other clause allowing the w w doctors. An ‘exceptional circumstances’ w 15 cap to be broken has been widely used by many trusts, with several continuing to pay rates similar to or above those offered before the introduction of the cap. Rates of pay will vary and can still be negotiated, but an F1 can expect pre-tax rates of £20–30/h, and F2s £25–35/h. The second new measure is a clause in the 2016 junior doctors’ contract specifying that those doctors planning to take locum work must initially offer their services for the proposed shift time to their employing trust staff bank. The trust must respond in a timely manner indicating if they require the doctor’s services. The doctor is under no obligation to take any extra shifts on, but would not be able to take an agency locum if the trust had offered staff bank work at an appropriate level (not a lower grade). Importantly, you should discuss locum shifts with your supervisor and include them in your work schedule to ensure contractual limits on individual and average weekly working hours (48h or 56h depending on if you’ve opted out of the EWTD) are not exceeded. Cremation certificates The cremation form has two parts (E pp. 100–1). The first is completed by a ward doctor (usually the F1) and the second by a senior doctor, often from another department. Under arrangements prior to 2017, junior doctors were paid around £70 for completing the form; this fee is under review as part of ongoing reforms (E pp. 100–1). The bereavement office handles the forms and issues any cheques. Make sure you see the body, checking identity and that there is no implantable device that needs removing (E p. 100); they really do explode if incinerated. Gifts The GMC is clear in its message that you should not encourage patients or their families to give, lend, or bequeath gifts to yourself, others, or to organizations.16 If you are given a gift, then it is acceptable to take it as long as it has negligible financial value. If you are given money, then pass this to the ward sister to put into ward funds. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B ok 15 16 e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n e X.n ok Mwww.hmrc.gov.uk/sa/index.htm. Mwww.gmc-uk.org/guidance/good_medical_practice.asp ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n ww Bo .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w Making more money 41ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Always check your payslips carefully, before storing them safely: make backups of electronic payslips and never throw paper copies away. They can be a useful record of tax, pension, and loan payments long after you have enjoyed spending the money. If you think a mistake has been made, contact the salaries and wages division of the HR office for your trust, quoting your assignment number (employee number). In the event of significant underpayment, you can request an interim payment be made pending the resolution. et n . X ok Bo B et n . X ok o B . w ww 1 t .ne X k oo 2 3 4 5 o Bo 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 oo B . w o Bo oo B . ww t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w Fig. 1.1 A sample wwpay slip. 16 17 18 .n kX ww et n . kX 14 15 ww et e X.n ok Bo o B . w ww This is the total annual basic salary for your nodal pay point (‘1’ for FY1s, ‘2’ for FY2s). Latest updates are released as ‘Pay Circulars’ on the NHS Employers website Mwww.nhsemployers.org This is the date when you are next due to go a point up the pay scale, usually 12 months of full time employment after your previous date (or date of first starting working as a doctor). When changing trusts mistakes can be made so always check this date is correct. Your tax code shows the amount of income you are entitled to earn in the current tax year that you do not pay any tax on. This figure should be multiplied by 10 to give your total allowance. This will be the basic personal allowance for the tax year, as set by the government, adjusted to take account of any under- or over-payments you may have made in previous years. Each tax year runs from April to April. After your first tax year in paid employment, you will receive a P60 summarising your tax paid during that year with the code that should apply to you in the next tax year. A copy should also be sent to your trust, but if you move trusts around this time, the new trust may not receive the correct information unless you show them your copy of the P60. If your new trust does not know the correct code for you, they will use an ‘emergency’ code, set as the basic personal allowance, which may or may not be correct. The letter after the code should be an ‘L’ unless very specific circumstances apply to you. See also Mwww.hmrc.gov.uk This will be approximately 1/12 of your basic annual salary. This lists the pay you receive on top of your basic pay for additional hours over 40h, nights, and weekends. Details of how these are calculated are provided in the pay circulars and related junior doctor contract information available from the NHS employers website. Do check that the medical staffing department have provided correct details of your rota to the payroll team since early evidence from the introduction of the new contract would suggest a number of instances of errors in this regard. Under the ‘Pay as you earn’ scheme (PAYE), your trust will automatically deduct your tax from your income each month. Both your basic pay and your pay for additional hours, nights, and weekends are taxable. In your first few months of employment, you may not pay any tax until your income has risen above the personal allowance for that year. Enjoy this while it lasts! National Insurance contributions pay for certain state benefits, including your state pension. These are not optional, and will be deducted automatically, according to thresholds. The current rate is 12% of income over £157/week, though this is subject to annual review. The NHS pension scheme remains a very good deal, although terms and conditions have been changed significantly in recent years and are subject to further negotiations. Your pension contributions are not taxed and will also be deducted automatically according to various earnings thresholds, unless you opt out of the scheme. Pension contributions are calculated from your basic pay (including any London weighting) - pay for additional hours, nights, and weekends is not subject to any deductions. See also Mwww.nhsbsa.nhs.uk/nhs-pensions Repayment for any student loan is taken automatically from your pre-tax earnings when your income reaches a certain threshold. Although the landscape around tuition fees, repayment thresholds and interest rates is constantly changing, in 2017/2018 the minimum contribution is 9% of earnings above the threshold. Specific thresholds and repayment timings then depend on when and where you trained. If you trained in Scotland or Northern Ireland, or in England or Wales and started before 1st September 2012, repayments start in the April of the first year after you graduate (the start of the financial year) and are taken from any pre-tax earnings above an annual threshold of £17,775. In this case pay slips before April in the first year after you graduate may not contain loan deductions. If your course was in England or Wales but started on or after 1st September 2012, student loan contributions are taken as soon as you graduate on any monthly pre-tax earnings over £1,750 (equivalent threshold of £21,000 per year). You can repay faster if you wish. Keep a record of all payments you make and check them against annual statements. Errors are common when changing trusts. Payments that appear to have gone missing can be credited to your account easily if you can provide a copy of your payslips. See Mwww.studentloanrepayment.co.uk. The numbers in this section will keep a tally of your total payments from that employer during the current tax year. If you change trusts, the numbers will be reset, but your tax thresholds should not be. Your NI letter reflects the contribution group you fall into. For almost all of those in the NHS pension scheme, this will be ‘A’. Pensionable pay does not include any pay for additional hours, nights, and weekends. Pay dates will vary between trusts but are generally around the last Thursday in the month. It can be difficult to get paid on time at the start of employment with a new trust. Trusts will transfer the money into your bank account by BACS transfer. These can take up to 3 working days. Your taxable pay includes your basic pay (including London weighting) and pay for additional hours, nights, and weekends, less any pension contributions. Don’t get too excited by this number… …and try not to get too sad about this one… ... because this is what you’re going to have to spend until next month comes around. t .ne X k 6 t .ne X ok w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 42 Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t .ne and debt X.ne .ne Money X X k years. ok level of medical graduate okdebt has increased markedlyoinorecent o Bo The B B . in tuition fee loans, On average, new FP trainees from England owe £40,000 w. if you wloans. sometimes up to £80,000 include maintenance Financial manw w w w have therefore changed drastically. w agement priorities This section is not w comprehensive but aims to give some important pointers and warnings. etclearance et et Debt n n n . . . XMost graduates have three different X types of debt: X ok (1) Short-term High-interest okdebts (eg credit cards ± overdraft, ok if at o o o full charge). Pay .these B B back first and as fast aswpossible. .B Try not to extend them w just because you have an income w w (2) Medium-w term Commercial loans (eg a high w street bank graduate ww studies loan). These should be paid back next, as spare funds allow (3) Student- pay these back last. t et loans At very low ratesnofetinterest— n . .neatPay close attention to the annual .percentage rate (APR) and charges X X X k to any loan arrangement. free loans or credit can ok tachedin the oka cards ooensure Interest- owith short termB but you don’t get saddled high APR Bo help B . . later. Loans are aw competitive market so shop around— especially for ww offers the best rate. ww something like w w a car loan where the car dealer wrarely 17 Think ‘total cost’ not just ‘monthly repayments’. Some basic rules for financial planning t t t Short .neterm Clear debts with theXhighest .ne interest as soon as possible. .ne X X term Try to accumulate ok Mediumsavings. ok about 1 month’s net salary ok as ‘emero o Bo gency’ B B . Scheme remains the best . available at present Long term The NHS wPension w w w and you will bew automatically enrolled in it unless you opt out. With this wyou could think about trying w taken care of, to save for the deposit on a w property (even if just £100/mth). With interest rates currently low, home t is an attractive option if you t raise a deposit. Bear in mindnethatt ownership .neare large .necan there up-front costs toX house buying (eg legal fees), youX will. be reX k sponsible for all maintenanceoand k k will not be able to take theoproperty with o o part of the country. .Bo Bo you when you movewto.Banother Financial advice ww w wwhave a salary that increases w Since you now incrementally and is virtually w guaranteed for life, finance companies will swarm round you like wasps roundetjam. Beware of some very slick et sharks—their aim is only.ntoegett n n you to buy their products. There is no altruism here: . . X independent financialkadvice X is hard to obtain—ask how X ok • Truly o ok independent they really are o o o B .Bwhat commission will be received .B for any • Firms must noww show w product you w choose, both to the individual who sold it to you as well as w w w ww to their company • Do not buy from the first or most persuasive salesperson, but take your time to consider what you really want and need. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX o o B . w ww Ercolani MG, et al. The lifetime cost to English students of borrowing to invest in a medical degree: a gender comparison using data from the Office for National Statistics. 2015;5:e007335. 17 w ww t .ne X ok .Bo BMJ Open ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Money and debt 43w t t t Financial .ne and other products .ne .ne X X X cover and incomekprotection E p. 12. Check if itkstill pays if ok Criticalareillness o o capable of doingoa less demanding job. Check o if it pays for all Bo you B B . . conditions you may get at work. w out a lump sum if you die;wonly w really makes sense w wpays Life insurance This w w w if you have dependants. Pension The NHS scheme is still better than commercial alternatives. You should etrevisit your retirement planning etat regular intervals through.nyour et n n . . career. You will also receive a state pension through your national insurXance (NI) payments. X kX ok BMA oknon-clinical matters, eg wrongoosalary o o and HCSA Protection for or poor B accommodation; thewtrade .B unions for doctors (E w .B p. 12). Tax ww ww ww Now that you are earning a salary you will be paying tax. Most will be collected by PAYE (Pay As You Earn). tIf you have no other sources of etthen e(Box 1.17). If you have any.nother et n n income you can leave it at that . . X then you should ask for X X ok income ok a tax return and completeooit.k Tax codes E p. 41. o o B Tax deductible It is possible .Byou paid on: claim back the income w.B(egtostethoscope); wtax • Job-related expenses makew sure you keep receipts w w w ww • Professional subscriptions, eg GMC, BMA, MDU/MPS, Royal College •Examination fees and course fees (previously not deductible, but HMRC has relented on this since 2012). Tax reclaims may be made through full self-assessment, but this is not essential. If you pay tax through PAYE, simply send a letter to HM Revenue and Customs, Pay As You Earn, PO Box 1970, Liverpool. L75 1WX, stating your name, NI number, and detailing your professional expenses as listed above. You must also include details of any additional, undeclared income, including cremation forms. Your tax code for subsequent years will be adjusted accordingly. Tax returns A tax return is an online form asking for details of all the money you have received which may have tax owing on it. This includes your salary and other income whether earned (eg locum shifts or cremation fees) or unearned (eg lodger/flatmate, bank interest, and dividend yields). • If you are asked to complete one then obtain a Government Gateway ID (Mwww.gov.uk) and password. This takes time, don’t leave it until January • Fill it in online and the maths is done automatically • Return it before 31 January otherwise you will be fined £100 (if <3mth late), or more if >3mth late (depends on how late, and how much is due) • Claim your deductible allowances but also list your additional income. The Inland Revenue has been known to ask an undertaker to list all payments to doctors and then cross-check. If your tax is simple then tax returns are not hard to do, otherwise pay a company/accountant to do it for you. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok .n kX o o w.B ww t t e X.n ww ww t e X.n ok o w.B ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX e X.n ok o w.B ww ww et sent every April to all employees et et n n n . . . P60— X kXyou change trust kX sent to you everyotime ok P45— ocopies o o o Pay slips— i ssued every month— i f electronic, then save B .Bincome—eg locums w.B Record of additional w w Annual interest statements from bank, savings/ w wwshares—issued annually. ww Box 1.17 Documents to keep safe for at least 7 years • • • • • B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 44 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne entitlementsX.ne .ne NHS X X k under ok a doctor working in theoNHS ok you have certain entitlements, odefined o Bo As B B your ‘Terms and Conditions Service’. Those relating to salary are discussed w.(E pp.of38–9). w.listed in ‘Pay and contracts’ Some others are here. Your first w w w w for any questions is your medical w staffing department point of contact and the w Foundation school. Always ask for copies of their written policies. et et et Accommodation n n n . . . X• Doctors in their first year after Xgraduation are no longer entitled X to ok free accommodation atotheir ok employing trust, except inoWales ok where, o for the time being .atBleast, funding for accommodation B .B is still available • Rooms may wellwbe available on site at a marketw rate and can w w be useful w when attached to a trust for a short w period that would ww otherwise make finding local accommodation difficult. Leave et entitlement et et n n n . . . • You are entitled to a total of 27d/ y r of paid leave or 9d/ 4 mth. You X also entitled to all bankkholidays X X or compensatory ok are o to workinonaddition— okholiday o o o days off if you are scheduled any part of a bank B B off, eg after working nights,wor.Bpre-allocated • If a compensatory won.day w w to an extra day off ww annual leave falls a bank holiday, you arew entitled w • You are rarely allowed to carry leave over between jobs/years • You need to give 6wk notice for leave; arrange this in good time and have your form signed by your consultant. There may be local allowances if rotas are received late or you are changing trust • If you need leave in a forthcoming post (eg getting married), write to let them know. Ask for the rota position which is off for those dates • Study leave is available for F1s but only for regular scheduled teaching. F2s have 30d per year that includes scheduled teaching but spare days can be used for courses/exams. Discuss leave with your supervisor. et o Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B ww .n kX o o w.B ww ww t paternity leave net t Maternity/ newomen .nebe • .All are entitled to up to.52wk of maternity leave and must X X X to return to work ok allowed okafter this. Those who have worked ok for the NHS for 12mth by theo11th wk of pregnancy are theno entitled to full Bo B B . for 18wk, and any remaining pay for 8wk, halfwpay w.Statutory Maternity w w Pay for the remaining 13wk (pay calculators w available online ). Those w of pregnancy are w who havew worked for <12m by the 11th week entitled to Statutory Maternity Pay only • Fathers entitled to up to 2wk paid paternity leave if they have et et are etqualify n n . . .n worked for over 6mth. You may also for shared parental leave X where existing maternity leave Xcan be transferred Xleave k k k to paternity o oo F1 or F2 post for any reason oforo>4wk, you are absent from Bo • Ifareyouunlikely B .Byour . to bew signed off and will need to arrange to complete your w return. For practical reasons,wyour wwfoundation school training on your w ww may ask you to repeat the whole year—ask your educational supervisor. Less than t full-time/flexible training edoctors et et n n n • .FP are entitled to train less than full-time if they have a valid.reason . X X (eg having a baby orkillXhealth) list of valid ok • Aandcomprehensive okisreasons advice on how to o apply available from your Foundation o oo school. B B B . . w w ww ww ww 18 14 18 Mhttps://www.gov.uk/pay-leave-for-parents B .B w w .B w w w w w Specialty training 45w t t t .ne .ne .ne Specialty training X X X ok the FP you need tooapply ok for specialty training. Although ok changes o Bo After B B . 2 main options: are on the horizon (see at present there are w(ST). orBoxcore1.18), wjunior • Specialty training training (CT)—m ost w w w interested indoctors ww • Academic w clinical fellowship (ACF)—for those research, recruitment occurs earlier to allow unsuccessful applicants to apply for e regular t ST/CT posts (E p. 66neandt Mwww.nihr.ac.uk). net n . . . Routes CCT kXThe goal oftospecialty kisXto award a Certificate of Completion kX of training o o o (CCT). This.allows onto the GMC’s specialist/ Bo Training Bo you .Bo GP register and to become a consultant/ GP. After the FP thereware 2 routes to CCT: w w In some specialties (paediatrics, Run-through w training ww GP, neurosurgery) ww competitive entry at ST1 leads to a 4–8yr ‘run-through’ programme within at single region, with no further competitive entry points. e In other ‘uncoupled’ .specialties, et competitive et Core training entry at CT1 n n n . . Xleads to a ‘core training’ programme X followed by another application X to ok ‘higher specialty training’ o(cardiology, ok ok Core colorectal) on completion. o o B training programmes can be 2 years (Medicine, Anaesthetics, Surgery) .B w.B or 3 years (Psychiatry, Acute Care Common Stemw E pp. 48–9). w w CESR For those w who do not follow a straightforward w career path through ww to CCT, periods of time spent in training posts and experience gained may all be taken into consideration as part of an application to the GMC for a ‘certificate of eligibility for specialist registration’ (CESR). This route is especially useful for those who have spent considerable time overseas. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o o w.B ww The ‘Shape of Training’ report marks the evolution of a number of previous reports (‘Modernising Medical Careers’, ‘Time for Training’, ‘Foundation for Excellence’) examining how we can best adapt training programmes to the changing needs of society. Published in 2013 by Professor David Greenaway, it sets out a structure by which changes in patients (e.g. multiple comorbidities, complex conditions, ageing populations) and healthcare (rapidly shifting technologies and NHS restructuring) might be matched by medical training, without destabilizing current training and service delivery. In brief, the report advocates training clinicians who are more generalist, engaged, and adaptable to change. The 19 wide-ranging recommendations include full GMC registration after medical school, broader and longer training programmes after the FP (e.g. women’s health, child health, mental health), transferrable competencies allowing easier transition between programmes, postgraduate opportunities to work in recognized related fields (similar specialties, management, education), and subspecialty ‘credentialing’ (subspecialization only after ‘Completion of Specialty Training’ as driven by patient and work-force needs). Although officially independent, questions of political interference were raised after a Freedom of Information request uncovered minutes from a series of previously undisclosed meetings between representatives from the Department of Health, the GMC, and Professor Greenaway. The recommendations were accepted by the government. Organizations including the AoMRC and GMC have ongoing workstreams mapping out the practical implications of the report. Early changes are expected in the next few years, with longer-term changes likely to take between 10 and 15 years. et et .n kX o o o w.B ok Bo o o w.B t ok o w.B e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n ww ok .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX K Box 1.18 The ‘Shape of Training’ report (SOT) ww Bo et .n kX e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 46 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Specialty training applications X X X ok ok ok o o process Bo Recruitment B B . varies between specialtieswand. is rapidly evolving. The application process w w Most recruitment is organized nationally by the w w w appropriate Royal College ww or a ‘lead’ LETB using a web-based application system. A small number of specialties still recruit through local applications. There is no limit to the number et of specialties you can apply.nto,etproviding you fulfil the eligibility ecri-t n n . . teria set out in the ‘person specification’. Begin preparing well in advance. X a specialty/specialties (E kXp. 53) Considering personospecifications kX ok Choose o o o o and competition rates B .Bavailable at Mspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk. w.B eg GMC regis- w Check your eligibilityw For applying to a training programme, w w tration, rightw to work in the UK, language skills, w prior experience. w Find suitable jobs (E p. 52) These will be advertised by recruitment offices taccording to a nationally agreedt timetable. e the application form Paying.nclose e attention to deadlines. For et Complete sevn n . . X specialties a single application X portal called Oriel is used.kX ok eral ok applicants o interview; in Wait As applications are reviewed are shortlistedofor o o B B certain specialties (eg .GP) a further assessment is used .inBshortlisting. w (E p. 58) You should receive wat least 5d notice, but Interview/selection centre wwadhered to; you need to bring wwa long list of supporting ww this is not always documentation, including your portfolio (E p. 8). Formats will vary between a traditional panel-based interview (eg core training programmes) or performing a number of exercises in front of assessors (eg GP). Offers Are made electronically through the UK offers system according to a coordinated timetable. You will be asked to rank all LETBs where you would accept a job; successful applicants are then allocated to LETBs in score order (you will be allocated to your highest preference that still has places when your turn comes). You then have 48h to review offers and decide whether to accept, hold, or reject. You may also elect to receive automatic ‘upgrades’ if a higher ranking choice becomes available. Re-advertisement To unfilled posts will take place in a 2nd application round. If you accept a job in round 1, you may still apply for a different post in round 2, but you need to inform all those concerned. Employment checks And contract signing—remarkably NHS employers claim to need up to 2 months after you start work to get around to issuing a contract and some manage to miss even this. Speak to your BMA representative in the event of contract problems. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B ww .n kX o o w.B ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . X Xallowance can trust yourself when kX all men doubt you, But make ok Kfor ‘Iftheiryoudoubting okdreams too ... o If oyou can dream—and not make your o o B B B master ... If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster And treat those two im. . w ... Yours is the Earth and everything w that’s in it, And— w postors just the w same w you’ll be a Man, my son!’ ww w which is more— The nature of a competitive jobs field is that not everyone will get their first t choice on first application. In thiseinstance, a miss and a mile are very etpost efart n n n . . . different entities and it is important to ask for feedback to establish how X of the mark you were andkX X to a you need to consider ok wide o whether okapplying o o o less competitive specialty. Discuss your options with your clinical and B B how else you may enhance .consider .B your CV. educational supervisors and w w ww ‘ ’ ww ’ ww ‘ Unsuccessful applications 19 19 Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936): If , first published in Rewards and Fairies (1910). B .B w ww .B w w w w Career structure 47w o Bo t .ne X k t o ww o w.B ok Bo Bo o et n . kX oo B . w ww t e X.n .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww et n . X ww t o o B . w ww et .n kX ok o o w.B Fig. 1.2 Career structure for NHS doctors. VTS, Vocational Training Scheme. t t t .ne structure X.ne .ne Career X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 48 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne .ne .ne Specialty training options X X X ok ok schemes that an F2 canoapply ok for (see are 21 different training o Bo There B B . clinical fellowships Table 1.3). In most specialties are also academic w. for ACFsthere w (ACFs). Applications occur before the main recruitment prow w w cess so thatw unsuccessful applicants can stillwapply for a regular training w post. Most ACFs allow for run-through training, even in specialties that would etnormally have separate core.nand et higher specialty applications. et n n . . Acute care common stem (ACCS) X X X ok For trainees with an interest oinkacute specialties, ACCS provides ok a core 2yr o o o experience in acute medicine, B B and critical .B anaesthetics, emergency .medicine, wstreams care, with a furtherw training year spent in one of three (acute mediw w w cine, anaesthetics, emergency medicine). Choice of stream is determined at w w w the point of application to ACCS. Although the curricula and competences gained tare transferable between ACCS tstreams, it is not possible to move e career paths without further ecompetitive selection. et between n n n . . . X medicine CT1 and CT2kinXACCS specialties then a CT3kyear X spent ok Acute o of CT3 it is theoretically possible o to switch in acute medicine. At theoend o o B specialties from acute.B medicine to a general internal .medicine w w B specialty. w Anaesthetics CT1 and CT2 in ACCS specialtieswthen an extra CT2 year w w w w B of anaesthetics; competitive entry to ST3 anaesthetics requires having passed the Primary FRCA (E p. 59). Anaesthetics can also be applied for directly as a 2yr core anaesthetics training programme. Emergency medicine CT1 and CT2 in ACCS specialties then a CT3 year of emergency medicine; competitive entry to ST4 emergency medicine requires having passed the MCEM (E p. 59). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX General Practice Specialty Training ww o oo B . ww t .ne X k w General practice has run-through training coordinated through a nationwide application. The application consists of four stages: • Application form (establish eligibility) • Computer-based testing (clinical problems and professional dilemmas) • Assessment centre selection (communication and written exercises) • Job allocation and offer. t .ne X k t .ne X k ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . Successful applicants undertake 18mth spent in hospital specialties, folww wwthe MRCGP lowed by 18mth as a GP registrar during w which must be ww w completed to join the GP register and get a job. Core Core Medical Training etSurgery/ et schemes. You apply for.ncore et n n . . These are popular uncoupled training X with most deanerieskallowing X choice of specific rotations X only ok training, o into post.aAfter ok (CT1– o o o after successful appointment 2yr of core training B B .B application for ST3 w CT2) there is a competitive in a. specific surgical or w w w medical specialty. To apply for ST3 in surgery you need full MRCS memw your interview; for medicalwST3 posts you need Part 1 ww bership before of MRCP to apply, but need full MRCP by the date of starting your ST3 t specialties other than those post.eItt should be possible to applyefor etin n n n . . . which you did your core training if you can demonstrate appropriate X kcanXarrange taster weeks, auditokorXresearch it helps if you ok competences; oapplying o o o in the subspecialty you are for. B B B . . w w ww ww ww Bo B .B w w .B w w w w w Specialty training options 49w t t t Table .ne 1.3 Specialty training programmes .ne at CT1/ST1 (2018) X.ne X X Recruitment ok Specialty ok contact details ook o Bo Run-through specialties B w.NIHR Trainees CoordinatingwCentre w.BMnihr.ac.uk ACFs w w Health Education WessexwMwessexdeanery.nhs.uk ww Cardiothoracic surgery t Midlands Meastmidlandsdeanery. et pathology Health Education eEast et Chemical n n n . . . nhs.uk X X X ok Clinical radiology London okrecruitment Mhttp://www.lpmde.ac.uk/ ok o o o B .B Community sexual and .B w Health Education East of England wMheeoe.hee.nhs.uk/ reproductive health w w w National GP recruitmentwMgprecruitment.hee.nhs.uk ww General practice Histopathology London recruitment Mhttp://www.lpmde.ac.uk/ t and the Humber net et eYorkshire Neurosurgery Health Education n n . . Mhttp:// w ww.yorksandhumberdeanery.nhs.uk/ X X X. k k k o Obs and gynae Health ooEducation North West Mnwpgmd.nhs.uk oo Bo Ophthalmology w.B B . Health Education South West Mseverndeanery.nhs.uk w MaxFax surgery w w Health Education South West wwMseverndeanery.nhs.uk ww * Paediatrics et Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Mwww.rcpch.ac.uk Health Education East Midlands Meastmidlandsdeanery.nhs.uk et .n kX Public health o Bo o o w.B o o w.B ww et et .n kX o .n kX Uncoupled specialties ACCS—acute Royal College of Physicians Mwww.ct1recruitment. medicine org.uk ACCS—anaesthetics Health Education West Mids Manro.wm.hee.nhs.uk ACCS—emergency London recruitment Mhttp://www.lpmde.ac.uk/ medicine Anaesthetics Health Education West Mids Manro.wm.hee.nhs.uk Core medical training Royal College of Physicians Mwww.ct1recruitment. org.uk Core surgical training London recruitment Mhttp://www.lpmde.ac.uk/ Core psychiatry Health Education North West Mnwpgmd.nhs.uk/ training ww Bo et .n kX .n kX o o w.B t et .n kX o o w.B ww e X.n ww ww t e X.n ww t e X.n *Source: data from Mspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk—this website is the best starting point. k ok Person specificationsook oo B B . . These list the required In making an w competences for thatwtospecialty. wprove that application, w youwwill need to provide evidence you have ww w achieved the specified competences. Consult these as soon as you anticipate an application to a scheme so that you can see what you need to etdetails are available at Mspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk et et do.n Full n n . . . If you are applying for an Academic Clinical Fellowship (ACF), you X to meet the criteria inkboth X the clinical person specification kX will for ok need o o o o o and level and the ACF person specification. B your chosen specialty B B . . w w ww ww ww Bo B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 50 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Specialty training competition X X X k varies, as does competition ok ospecialties ok for the for different o o Bo Competition B B . parts of the country. w. same specialty in different ww w applicants to view the ww Competition w ratios are published annually tow allow previous year’s ratios. These typically show the number of applications received for each specialty and the number of posts available; a compet is derived by dividing theneformer t (number of applications) eratio ebyt tition n n . . . the latter (number of posts). This ratio roughly represents the number X kX post (see Table 1.4). okX ok of people applying for each oavailable o o B .B candidates will stand a w .Boat getting a job Only the highest scoring chance w in specialties with for with a lower w a high competition ratio;meet wspecialties w competitionw ratio the applicant must still w the minimum require- w ments for the job to be offered it. Remember that applicants can apply for multiple et posts so the actual chances et of getting a job are higher.nthan et n n the ratio shown. . . X previous years, applicantskhave X had to factor in not only kcompetition X ok Inratios o by deanery. o recruito o o by specialty, but also The move to national B B element—you can rankwall.Bdeaneries/LETBs ment has removed w.this w wwithout disadvantaging ww where you w would be prepared to accept awjob your chances in any one region. After completion of the assessment process you will be ranked nationally, and assigned to your highest choice deanery that still has a vacancy when your turn in the queue comes. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X it is important tokconsider what your own priorities ok Thataresaid,adamant owant to stay in one particular okarea ofare.theIf that you o o Bo you B B . be very popular country, you may need to recognize that the area may wyou. happy wspecialty (eg London). Are to pick a less popular w w w w Equally, if you are determined w that you wanttotoincrease your chances? enter a w highly competitive specialty, are you willing to pick a region potentially t from your current home t the competition there is nmuch t mileseaway as .n These are decisions whichXshould .ne be talked through withXfriends, . e less? X supervisor. ok family, mentors, and youroeducational ok ok o in the UK Bo Specialty training B B w. to specialty training arewcoordinated w. Although applications throughout w the UK, within w each of the four countrieswa degree of local structure ww remains. EnglandtMspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk t e Ireland Mwww.nimdta.gov.uk e et Northern n n n . . . XScotland Mwww.scotmt.scot.nhs.uk X X ok Wales ok ok Mwww.walesdeanery.org o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww t t e X.n ok Bo t e X.n ok ww o B . w e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Specialty training competition 51w t net net .ne 1.4 Competition ratios X Table for .CT1/ST1 applications (2018) X. X ok ok okFill rate o o Applications Posts Competition Bo Specialty B B ratio . w. w w ACCS emergency 675 340 w 1.9 91% w ww medicine w Anaesthetics inc ACCS 1296 2.2 97% t surgery t 60110 e et Cardiothoracic 64 ne 6.4 88% n n . . . XClinical radiology X100% 267 3.8 k99X ok Community o1021 ok 100% sexual and 4 24.8 o o o B reproductive health .B w w.B w Core medical training 2343 1657 w 1.4 91% w w 1.3 ww Core psychiatric training 623 495 65% Core surgical training 1608 629 2.6 100% t et practice et 3857 n General 5097 .n 1.3 84% . .ne X X X Histopathology 174 95 1.8 72% k k ok oo 152 oo 100% 29 5.2 Bo Neurosurgery B B . . w w2.1 Obstetrics and 555 263 100% gynaecology ww ww ww * Ophthalmology Oral and maxillofacial Paediatrics Public health 405 20 580 718 net . kX o Bo net . kX o o w.B 77 8 437 77 5.3 2.5 1.3 9.3 100% 100% 89% 100% et .n kX o o w.B *Source: data from Mspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk—visit website for most recent data. Data is not available for all training programmes. Applications and posts are for Round 1 only and do not count subsequent re-advertisements. Competition ratio represents the number of applicants per post—bear in mind that candidates may apply for multiple training posts. Fill rate is the final number of posts in each specialty that were filled—including appointments made in additional rounds of re-advertisement. ww ww et et .n kX o Bo o o ww t ww t e X.n ok t e X.n ok o w.B e X.n ok o w.B ww ww t ww t e X.n ok Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX o w.B t e X.n ok ww o B . w ww e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w wBeing a doctor 52 ww w Chapter 1 t t t .ne .ne .ne Choosing a job X X X k ok okto choose you have securedoaotraining rotation, you still need o Bo Once B B which specific jobs to. do. There are also jobs outside.of specialty training wa local application process.wThis w section gives ideas w rotations that w have wfind w w about how to and choose jobs. Priorities Before looking for a job, write a list of factors that matter to etmaking this potentially life-.cnhanging et decision. Important consideret younin n . . ations include: X X X ok Partner/spouse Can they get oakjob nearby? ok o o o B Location Could you move? far would you commute? wfar.BawayHow w.B Family/friends How are you willing to go? w w w w ww Career Is the job in the right specialty/specialties? Duration Can you commit to several years in the same area? epayt What banding and rota do.nyou et want or need? et Rota/ n n . . X hospital Large teachingkhospital X vs district general. kX ok IfTypeyouofhave ointentions then o o oo and rota no firm career choose byBlocation B B . . since these will affect your life most over the next few w w months. Look w for suitable jobs wwon Mwww.jobs.nhs.uk, Mspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk, ww w deanery websites, or in the BMJ. whereby net all job offers are madeXat.ntheetsame time. This allows you ntoeac-t . . X X highest ranked job k you applied for. Bear in mind ok cept thechange o thatafter ok that you your job rankings submitting your application. o o Bo cannot B B . Competition Medical are competitive; it isw important to maximize w. ajobs w w your chances of getting job. Apply for several specialties; rank as many ww w w regions as possible; check competition ratios and person specifications (E p. 51, Mspecialtytraining.hee.nhs.uk); consider a back-up choice, eg a t t t lessncompetitive specialty or region. A . e .negood CV also helps (E pp.X56–7). .ne X X a job Adverts give a true reflection of k a job. Phone ok Researching okandrarely odoing hospitals within the region ask to speak to the person job o o Bo up B B . available,the at the moment. Quiz. them on the types of placements hours, w w support, teaching, w conditions, and what theirwinterview w was like. Would ww they accept w the job again? Contacts HR departments andtstructured interviews, the days tof et justWith e jobs being a consultant phone .call n neaway have gone. There isXno.ndoubt . that some networking still occurs, with mixed results. Senior contacts are X X ok useful for tailored careeroguidance, ok CV advice, and giving orealistic ok views of o B where your CV can get .B w.Byou. wonline w Accepting aw job With a move towards unified, application prow w ww Job offers A national timescale for FP and ST/CT job applications exists cesses, strict and automated rules are essential to ensure a rapid and fair allocation to posts. In order to allow for choice, under certain circumstances it may be possible to accept, or hold, an offer, and later upgrade, or apply to a different post, providing you notify all those concerned. Outside of this formal process, it is unacceptable to turn down a post you have already accepted unless you have an extremely good reason. The GMC take a clear position on your obligation to protect patient care by not compromising the recruitment process in this way, though notice periods vary by seniority. t ok Bo t e X.n t e X.n ok ww o B . w e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w wSpecialties in medicine 53ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Specialties in medicine X X X ok Certificate of Completion ok of Training (CCT) can beoawarded ok in nuo Bo The B B merous specialties shown as follows. A selection of. subspecialties are w. points: w also shown withw bullet w ww ww 20 Acute internal medicine Allergy Anaesthesia • Paediatric anaesthesia • Obstetric anaesthesia • Pain management Audiovestibular medicine Aviation and space medicine Cardiology Cardiothoracic surgery • Congenital cardiac surgery Chemical pathology • Metabolic medicine Child and adolescent psychiatry Clinical genetics Clinical neurophysiology Clinical oncology Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics Clinical radiology • Interventional radiology Community sexual health and reproductive medicine Dermatology Diagnostic neuropathology Emergency medicine (EM) • Paediatric emergency medicine • Pre-hospital emergency medicine Endocrinology and diabetes mellitus Forensic psychiatry Gastroenterology • Hepatology General internal medicine General practice General psychiatry • Liaison psychiatry • Rehabilitation psychiatry • Substance misuse psychiatry General surgery • Breast surgery • Colorectal surgery • Upper GI surgery • Vascular surgery Genito-urinary medicine Geriatric medicine • Stroke medicine • Orthogeriatrics Haematology Histopathology et n . kX et•• Cytopathology et Forensic pathology n n . . X Immunology kX Infectious diseases o ok o o o o Intensive care medicine B Medical microbiology w.B w.B w w Medical oncology w wophthalmology ww Medical Medical psychotherapy Medical t t virology e e et n n n Neurology . . . X X Neurosurgery kX ok ok Nuclear medicine oo o o Obstetrics and gynaecology B .Boncology • Gynaecological w.B w w w • Materno- foetal medicine w w ww B t .ne X k oo oo B . w ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww o w.B t e X.n ok Bo o Bo et .n kX o o w.B oo B . ww t oo B . w et .n kX t ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ok So You o .B For more details on the career options available to doctors, including all of the above, see Want To Be A Brain Surgeon? (Eccles S et al.), Oxford University Press, 2009. 20 ww ww o o B . w ww t .ne X k w .ne X k .ne X k ww et n . kX • Reproductive medicine • Urogynaecology Occupational medicine Old age psychiatry Ophthalmology Oral and maxillo-facial surgery Otolaryngology (ENT surgery) Paediatric cardiology Paediatric surgery Paediatrics • Child mental health • Community child health • Neonatal medicine • Paediatric oncology Palliative medicine Pharmaceutical medicine Plastic surgery Psychiatry of learning disability Public health medicine Rehabilitation medicine Renal medicine Respiratory medicine Rheumatology Sport and exercise medicine Trauma and orthopaedic surgery • Hand surgery • Spinal surgery Tropical medicine Urology Vascular surgery w ww ww ww B 54 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t .ne curriculum X .ne .ne Your vitae X X k ok oLatin ok of life’. In o o is a CV? This is a phrase which means ‘course Bo What B B . modern days it means advertise yourself to a w. a document by which you w w w potential employer: a summary of you. w w ww When will I use a CV? You will need a CV for many of the jobs you will apply locum agency, they will use your et for after graduating. If you.njoin etaalso etto n n CV when finding you work. You should upload your current.CV . X X annual review. X ok your ePortfolio in advanceoofokevery ok o o What is included.B a CV? The most important to inB w indetails, w.Binformation clude are your contact a list of your qualifications (those already w w acquired andwthose you are studying for), any woutstanding achievements, ww a summary of your employment to date, and the details of your referees. Other tinformation can be included, buttdo not overcrowd your CV. e ebe a static piece of work—it.should et n n n . . CV philosophy Your CV should not X with you and reflect your X skills and attitudes. ItkisX ok evolve okandchanging o o oo it toimportant to keep your CV up to date, from time to time reformat freshen B B B . . it up. Use your CVw to demonstrate how you have learnt from your experiw w will be much more ww ences rather than wwjust listing them; a potentialwemployer impressed if you indicate you learnt about the importance of clear communication while working at a holiday resort, than by the actual job itself. t net help HR departmentsXand needucational nead-t Getting supervisors can give . . . X X on writing a CV, and often you can find people’s CVs or templates on ok viceInternet ok‘CV’. ok by searchingofor Try to keep your CV individualized, so o Bo the B B . . do not simply copy someone else’s template. w w Before writing ww your CV Ascertain what wwa potential employer is ww looking for when sending in your CV; check the essential and desirable criteriatand try to echo these. You needt to alter the emphasis in your CV t e the position you are applying to n communi.match .ne for, eg highlighting your X .ne cation skills or leadership experience. X X ok ok ok of CVs o Your CV shouldolook impressive; for many jobs hundreds Bo Layout B B are received and yours tow be. clearly laid out and w. must stand out. It needsmost easy to follow.w The key information and your w important attributes w should standwout prominently. Think aboutw the layout before you start w writing. t for a basic CV (and an optional et Two sides of A4 paper are eideal et Length n n n . . . X page); add more as yourkcareer X progresses. X ok front o the candidates okvery similar o o o Remember For most jobs, applying will have B B .Bto be short-listed qualifications and w so .the only way you may standw out w for interview isw via your CV. Make it as interesting as possible, without it w w ww looking ludicrous. et n . kX et n . kX t Personal details Name, address which you use for correspondence, o Bo .ne X ok .Bo contact telephone numbers (home, work, mobile), and email address are essential. You must state your type of GMC membership (full/provisional) and number. Stating gender, date of birth, marital status, nationality, and other information is optional. o o B . w ww w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Your curriculum vitae 55w t t et an optional section. Some Personal .ne statement This isXvery.nmuch .nefeel X X a little about yourself andkwhere you ok it gives you an opportunityotoofeelkoutline it is an irritating waste of space. oo Bo see yourself in 10yr;wothers B B . . Education List your qualifications in date order,w starting with the most wand progressing backwardswin w recent or current time. Indicate where each ww w was undertaken, the dates you were there, and grade. Highlight specific coursest or modules of interest. GCSEt and A-level results are less ime once you have graduated. .ne et portant n n . . X X kX you and work List the placements ok Employment oF1kandexperience omost o o o have undertaken during the F2 years starting with the recent. B Include the dates, wspecialty, .B your supervising consultant, .B and address of w the employer; consider ww adding key skills that you wwattained. ww Interests An optional section which gives you a chance to outline what you liket to do outside of medicine. Atwell-written paragraph here can epotential employers that you.are einteresting as well as intelligent. et show n n n . . X kXyet got your name in print,oktryXto get a If you haveonot ok Publications o o o put the letter in a medical journal (E p. 60). If you have got publications, B most recent first; ensure B B . . they are referenced in a conventional style (see w w Mwww.pubmed.com ww for examples). ww ww Referees Your referees should know your academic record as well as your e t to interact with others.nState et their relationship to you (such et nability as .personal tutor) and give contact.address, telephone number, and.n email X X X to provide a reference, give them k a copy ok address. Ensure they are ohappy ok you when are applying for jobs. oo Bo of your CV, and tellwthem B B . . Headers and footers Having the month and w year in either a header w w or footer shows date. w the reader you keep it up tow ww Photographs Some people include a small passport-sized photograph t near the start of theirneCV; t this is optional but not necesof themselves et .nerecommended. sarily Why should. your physical appearance be of.nreleX X X ok vance for selection for anyojob okoutside perhaps fashion andomedia? ok Bo The finished CV B B Use the spell- c hecker and get a tutor or friend to w. mistakes and make constructive w. criticism; read over it to w identify be prew pared to make right. wnumerous alterations to get itw ww Technical points Use just one clear font throughout. To highlight text of importance et use the underline, .bold e,tor italic features. When printing et n n n . . your CV use good quality white paper and a laser printer if possible. X X kX send a ok The covering letter oWhenever ok you apply for a job, you omust o o B covering letter withwyour .B CV and application form.wThis .Bshould be short and to the point. Indicate the position you are applying for and briefly say w w w why the job w appeals to you, and highlight whyw you are suitable for the job. w Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 56 .B w ww Chapter 1 .B w w ww w Being a doctor t t t .ne Foundation X .ne .ne Post- Programme CV X X ok ok J Flint ok o o Charles Bo Name: B B Address: w. 14 Abbeyvale Crescent ww. w McBurney’s Point w w ww McB1 7RH Home:t 0111 442 985 t e e et n n n . . . Mobile: 0968 270 250 X X X charles.flint@mcburney.ac.uk ok Email: ok ok o o o Date of birth: 12 June 1994 B w.B0121231 (full) w.B GMC: w w w w ww Personal statement I am e ant outgoing doctor with an enthusiastic mature outlook. I have et yet et n n n . . . strong communication skills and experience of working independently, X as a team member andkXleader. I am conscientious, trustworthy, X ok both o new skills. My long-term aim oiskto practise o o o quick to learn, and to employ B .B the hospital environment.w.B an acute specialtyw within w ww ww Educationw B 2010–2015 University of McBurney, McBurney’s Point, McB1 8PQ MBChB: 2015 BMedSci (Hons): Upper Second Class, 2013 t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww Employment history 5 Dec 17–to date o Bo t .nJule17–4 Dec 17 31 X k 3 Apr 17–30 Jul 17 ww 5 Dec 16–2 Apr 17 t e X.n t o 31 Jul 16–4 Dec 16 ww w F2 to Dr Fungi, Microbiology McBurney Royal Infirmary F2 to Dr Golfer, General Practice Feelgood Health Centre, Speakertown F1 to Mr Grimshaw, General Surgery McBurney City Hospital F1 to Dr Mallory, Gastroenterology McBurney City Hospital F1 to Dr Haler, Respiratory Medicine McBurney City Hospital o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX ww .ne X k t ww et n . X k ok ooexperience oo Bo Postgraduate clinical B B . . wI developed my clinical and w w skills and became w During my F1 year practical ww confident with the day-to-day organization ofwemergency and elective ad- w missions in both medicine and surgery. Since commencing F2 I have built upon these skills and now appreciate the in the et running et wider role of the doctor teams et n n smooth of acute admissions and liaison with the community.n . . X to, and after, hospital discharge. X kX Formal skills I have include: ok prior ok • ALS provider (2016) oo o o B B • Basic surgical skills,.B w including suturing and fracture w.management. w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Post-Foundation Programme CV 57w t t t Research .ne and audit X.ne .ne X X involved in akresearch project comparing capillary ok • I am currently o ok o gas analysis withoarterial blood gases in acute asthmatics Bo • Iblood B B undertook an audit of antibiotic prescribing on surgical wards to w.patients win.accordance investigate whether were being managed with w w w I presented the data at a departmental w ww trust guidelines. meeting and repeated the audit after 2 months, demonstrating increased compliance • During et my SSM I researched the.nroleetof caffeine on platelet function. et n n . . XInterests X X ok I am a keen rock and ice climber ok and have continued to improve ok my grade o o o B since leaving university. I have organized several climbing to Scotland wI.B w.Btrips and one to the w Alps. am interested in medical w journalism and have spent wJournal of Thrombophlebitis. ww a week in thew editorial office of the International Publications etCJ. Letter: Student debt. Students’ et Journal 2016;35(2):101 .net • Flint n n . . • Flint CJ and West DJ. Multiple Sclerosis X X in social class three. kJournal X of ok Social Medicine 2016;12(9):118 ok o o o o of platelet B • Lee S, Flint CJ andwWest .B DJ. Caffeine as an activator .B2014;54(3):99. w aggregation. International Journal of Thrombophlebitis ww ww ww References Dr Ian Haler, Educational Supervisor, Department of Respiratory Medicine, McBurney’s Medical Centre, McBurney’s Point, McBurney, McB1 7TS Tel 0111 924 9924 ext 2370. ian.haler@mcburney.ac.uk t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k ok oportfolio ok o o Bo Box 1.19 Thewpaper B B . w. evidence of your w Most interviews require a folder containing physical w w achievements. w Use the following structurewas a guide to gather evi- w dence long before interviews. Sections should be subdivided for ease of navigation. t t net print on high quality paper. Curriculum the.back, .ne vitae At the front or X .ne X X form For interviewers to refer back to. k ok Copy of application ok oPhD, o o and qualifications Diplomas, PGCerts, BSc, MSc,BMD, etc. Bo Degrees B . . postgraduate. Prizes, awards, andw grants Local/national, undergraduate/ w Oral and poster presentations Local, regional, national, ww ww or international. ww Books, abstracts, and other publications First/last author or co-author. Teaching experience Small group, lectures, or courses (with feedback). Clinical audit and quality improvement Results, reports, and presentations. Commitment to specialty Skills, membership exams, experience, etc. Courses and conferences attended Local, national, or international. References, testimonials, and feedback Feedback/ testimonials from patients and colleagues can show reflective practice and professionalism. Research projects Give a summary, your exact role, and any reports. Logbook of practical procedures Including supervised and unsupervised. Work-place based assessments Notable DOPS, CBDs, and CEX forms. Management and leadership Trainee representation, committees, etc. Reflective practice To demonstrate that you learn through reflection. Achievements outside medicine Shows that you are well-rounded. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 58 .B w ww Chapter 1 ww w Being a doctor t .ne Interviews X k o .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . the interview itself; them as much notice wtry toforgiveinformation w as possible. Look at wwebsite w the recruitment about the format, questions, and ww w w what to bring; try to talk to previous applicants and arrange mocks. Interview at the interview plenty of time, allow for tall t with eoft delaysdayonArrive eeven e sorts the roads or train, if this means you have to read n n . . .ncandiX X X the newspaper for an hour. Relax and be yourself with the other k ok before you are calledooin;kmost of them will have similar ooqualifications Bo dates B B and experience as yourself and will be just as nervous. Dress smartly in a . . w or skirt). You will simple suit andw tiew for men and suit for women w (trouser w specific instructions as to what w documentation to bring, ww normally receive which you should follow exactly; as a minimum, bring a copy of your CV (E pp.t54–5) and a summary printout from ePortfolio (E p. 8). t einterview Relax. The worst.nethatt canyour n . .nenot The happen is that you are X X X k of the world. The formatoofk interviews job, which is notothe ok offeredbutthethere o 2–3 end o to each of are usually interviewers; introduceB yourself Bo varies, B . . the panel and wait w to be offered a seat. For some posts there w will be a series of panels, each with ww a different brief (eg CV verification, ww clinical scenarios, per- ww Bo B Interview preparation Employers must allow you time off to attend sonal skills), and you will rotate between panels. Take a few moments to think about the questions before answering and ask for a question to be rephrased if you don’t understand it. Always make good eye contact with all members of the panel and be aware of your own body language. Common questions It is impossible to predict the questions you will be asked, but they are likely to include questions about your portfolio, relevant clinical scenarios, and current medical news/issues. Many questions have no correct answer and will test your communication skills, common sense, and ability to think under pressure: • Talk us through your portfolio; what are you most proud of in it? • What is missing from your portfolio? • What qualities can you offer our training programme? • Why have you chosen a career in . . .? • What do you understand by ‘clinical governance’? • Tell us about your audit. Why is audit important? • If you were the Secretary for Health, where would your priorities lie? • How would you manage . . . [specific clinical scenario]? • Where do you see yourself in 5, 10 years’ time? • If you were the CT1 in the hospital alone at night and you were struggling with a clinical problem, what would you do? • Tell us about your teaching experiences. What makes a good teacher? Clinical scenarios Interviewers should not ask you specific medical questions (eg ‘What is the dose of . . .’); they can pose scenarios to discuss your management of a situation. These often focus on key issues such as communication, prioritization, calling for senior help when appropriate, multidisciplinary teams, and clinical safety. For some specialties, a few formal OSCE-style stations may be included—you should be told about this in advance. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww et n . kX ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k o w.B ww et n . X o Results and feedbackoIfoyou are unsuccessful, try to obtain oksome verbal o o B or written feedback about you could improve your .CV your interview w.Barehow wwillBfindor something. skills. Remember, there always medical jobs sow you w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Membership exams 59w t t t .ne .ne .ne Membership exams X X X k you will need to complete ok progress beyond the oSToyears okthe memo Bo To B B bership exams of your chosen specialty and meet the level w. exams w. appropriate of competency.wThe are difficult and w expensive (though often w E p. 43). Most membership w exams take place 2–3 ww tax deductible times a year. You need to apply about 2–4mth before each exam. In the past, e Foundation doctors have received t et advice not to sit membership et n n examinations— this may well allow.n focus on other areas of development . . X you may then miss earlykopportunities X X to start buildingkthis ok but o o aspect of your CV. o o o B Medicine Regionalwexamination .B .Band overseas; all centres throughout wUK w centres use the w same exams. The MRCP has three sections: w w ww • Part 1 Written basic science, £419, ≥12mth after graduation • Part 2 Written clinical, £419, <7yr since Part 1 et clinical skills, £657, <7yr.since et Part 1. et • PACES n n n . . ST3 post, XYou need to have already passedXPart 1 to apply for a medicalkX ok and pass all parts of MRCPooinkorder o to commence such ao post. o B Surgery Regionalwexamination .B .Band overseas; all centres throughout UK wyou centres use thew same exams. The MRCS has 2 parts, w w Part A, and 4 attempts to pass wpart B: are permitted 6 ww attempts to pass B • Part A MCQ (Basic sciences and Principles of Surgery in General), £513, eligible from graduation • Part B OSCE £930, eligible after part A. To apply for an ST3 position in surgery you need to have completed the entire MRCS. General practice You need to be a GP registrar to take the MRCGP exams. There are 3 parts and no time limits though the GP registrar post is a year long; 10% fee reductions apply to associate RCGP members: • AKT (written exam) £501 • CSA (clinical skills) OSCE stations, £1325 • ePortfolio similar to the FP portfolio. Access costs £611, but is free among other benefits for RCGP members (£163 registration, plus £369 annual cost). You need to complete the MRCGP to become a GP. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww Other membership exams in the Foundation years Emergency medicine (MRCEM) Three-part exam (two written and one clinical) required to apply for ST4. Part A may be sat as early as F1, but all parts must be passed within 7 years of passing Part A. Anaesthetics (FRCA) Full primary (MCQ and OSCE) exam only open to anaesthetic trainees, though F1 and F2 doctors can attempt MCQ component. Applications to ST3 are only permitted when all parts of the primary FRCA are passed. Obstetrics and Gynaecology (MRCOG) Part 1 (written) eligible after graduation; part 2 (written + OSCE) within 7 years of passing part 1. Pathology MRCPath normally completed during ST. Paediatrics (MRCPCH) 3 written papers (attempted in any order after graduation); clinical exam after 12mth paeds experience and passing all written. Radiology (FRCR) Can only be attempted after gaining training post. Psychiatry (MRCPsych) Different requirements for part A (GMC registration), part B (psychiatry training), and the practical (24mth experience). t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 60 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t .ne .ne .ne Continuing your education X X X ok ok You will be assessed othroughout ok the o requirements Bo Educational B B . are developing as a doctor w . FP to ensure that w and learning new skills. w you w This will bew done by Foundation assessments (E p. 8), your ePortfolio ww w (E p. 8), meetings with your clinical supervisor, informal feedback from ward staff, presentations, and attendance at teaching sessions. These aset should not be difficult but.niteistessential that you complete.nthem. et sessments n . X leave F1 study leavekisXonly for mandatory teaching,khowever X F2 ok Study o including taster weeks in specialties o of your study leave is more flexible, o o o B B but this will choice. You may be allowed study leave for specific .courses wof.Byour clinical w be at the discretion supervisor and policies vary widely bew w w schools. w ww tween Foundation Studyt expenses F2s may get a study budget of £300–400 per e though again this varies by.nFoundation et leave school. et 12mth Check with your n n . . postgraduate centre. X X kX ok Postgraduate courses oThere oandk the costs o o o are hundreds of these B .B per day, most are about range from free tow>£1000 £100–150 per day. wis.B w During the FP w years, Advanced Life Support (ALS) w w important and may ww be compulsory. Check the BMJ advert section for potential courses and try to speak to other people who have done the course. et on a career plan (E.p.ne53),t Exam net planning Once you have ndecided . . X X will need to consider taking the appropriate membership kXexaminok you oarek difficult oessential ation. Membership exams and expensive but for o o o B Bstart early. See E p. 59wor.Bthe relevant Royal career progression, .so w College websitew (E p. 615) for more detail. w w w ww Getting published Havingtpublications on your CV will tgive you a huge advantage when et applying understand what sort of.nthing .ne for jobs. It will be farXeasier .na efewto regularly. journals are looking for if you read There are many ways X X ok to get your name in printoand ok you don’t have to write aobook ok (which is Bo not great for the social B B life). . . winterest Book reviews Get inw touch with a journal and express in reviewing w w w you don’t have to be a professor w to give an opinion on ww books for them; whether a book reads well or is useful. t If you see something ninteresting, Case e reports very classical eift possible;rare,getora just et n . . then try writing it up. Include images senior co-.an uthor X ensure you obtain patientkX Xpolicy. in line with the journal’s ok and o consent okliners o o o Fillers Some journals have short stories or funny/ m oving one- subB B others might .B Write up anything you see .which mitted by their readers. w w be interested in; wwensure you obtain patient consent. ww ww et n . kX o Bo Letters If an article is incorrect, fails to mention a key point, or has relevance in another field then write to the journal and mention this; it might be worthwhile asking a senior colleague to co-author it with you. Research papers If you have participated in research make sure you get your name on any resulting publications. If your audit project had particularly interesting results you may be able to publish it. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne Audit X k o Bo oo B . w .B w w w w t .ne X k Audit et o w.B .n kX o Audit is simply comparing practice in your hospital with best practice or clinical guidelines. There are six main stages to the ‘audit cycle’: (1) Define standards (eg replace cannulas every 72h) (2) Collect data (duration of placement for 50 consecutive cannulas) (3) Compare data to standards (87% of cannulas replaced in 72h) (4) Change practice (present data to colleagues and propose new approaches, eg date of placement written on cannula dressings) (5) Review standards (replace cannulas every 72h unless final dose in 2h) (6) Reaudit (repeat data collection after 3mth—has anything changed?). ww et n . kX ww t e X.n 61w ww et n . kX oo k oo B B your audit . Without reaudit, the wcycle is not complete and those w.assessing w w will look forw evidence of this. w ww Why does audit matter? The aim of audit is to improve the quality of patient care; it allows a unit to applaud eoft weakness. et areas of strength and improve et n n areas Audits will also.n benefit you as a FP doctor since they . . X important in job applications X X one it and without atkleast ok are oTryk toanddointerviews will be hard to get a ST job. ≥2 during your FP. oo o o B w.BAlmost any aspect of w w.Bward life can be w Choosing an audit hospital/ w audited. Choose w something simple that interests w you; alternatively look at w relevant guidelines and choose one that is simple to measure. t standards Try searchingnethet National Library for Guidelines t Defining .ne via Mwww.library.nhs.uk); . alternatively, define bestXpractice .ne (accessible X X ok yourself by asking seniorsoandoksupervisors about what is expected. ok o Bo Collecting datawThe B B your audit, the quicker .wayssimpler . and easier this will w be. There are many of doing this including checking clinical notes, w w questionnaires, w and monitoring activities yourself. w Try to make your ww o Bo methods objective so that you do the same for every set of notes/subject. Compare et method for doing this depends net data to standards net .nThe .statison.the type of data you have collected; it is easy to do some simple X X X ok tical tests on data—seek advice ok from your educational supervisor ok or other o o Bo seniors. B B w.Try to present your audit towrelevant w. clinicians, eg an w Change practice w w or a ward meeting; use your w findings to propose feas- w FP teaching session ible changes to practice and discuss these with the audience. et standards You may feel.nthatetthe original standards you defined et Review n n . . Xare still suitable; alternatively, ktheXprocess of auditing may havekshown X you ok that these standards needoupdating. o o o o B Close the loopwRepeat .B the data collection towsee.Bif the changes to practice have made a difference; it is a good wayw w w fantastic on a CV. w to stay in touch with old ww wards and looks Example A few ideas: t audits eECGs eint ED patients with chest pain? et • .Are performed within 20min n n n . . X drugs prescribed in accordance X with local guidelines? kX ok •• Are ok thromboprophylaxis Do all patients have appropriate prescribed? o o oo B • Do patients admitted B B with chest pain have their cholesterol . . w measured? ww w ww ww B 62 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t net .ne .teaching .ne Presentations and X X X ok thought of having tooogivek an oral presentation provokes ok anxiety in o Bo The B B most of us. Being able relay information to an audience a valuable w.getsto easier w. isthough skill and one which with time andwexperience, it is w w ww helped by a w logical approach. Types of presentation There are four main types of presentat research, journal club (critical eaudit/ et appraisal of research), case.npreset tion: n n . . entation, and a teaching session. X X X ok When is the presentation? ok If you have months to prepare ok then you o o o B .Byou need to concan really go to town,.B hours w while if you have only a few w centrate on thew essentials. w w w ww How long should it last? A 5min presentation will still need to be thorough, than that lasting an hour. The length of the et butwilllessalsodetailed et the topic. et presentation aid you in choosing n n n . . . X is the topic? Clarify X as possible the topickyou X are to ok What ok asof early odiscussing. o o o present and any specific aspect the topic you should be B .B select something you either .Bknow about or areIf you can choose the topic, w w interested in researching. ww ww ww Audience Are you presenting to your peers, seniors, or juniors? Are t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k How far away is the audience, k how and means of o delivery ok Venue oyou o o is the screen (so allB your text and diagrams are clear)? Will use your Bo big B . Back-up on memory stickwin.current as well laptop or their computer? as an w older versionw ofw PowerPoint in case your computer wwisn’t up to date. ww Sources of information Do you already have books on the subject? Readeabout t the topic on the Internetnebyt undertaking a search with anwebt site recent .nsuch as Mwww.bmj.com. Search . PubMed using keywords; X . ereX X ok view articles are a good place okto start. ok o o information If you cannot find enough Bo If there is no w B B . . staffinformation wlibrary then it is likely you are not searching correctly; ask for help. w w If there really is a lack of information then consider changing the topic, or ww w w choose an easier approach to it. t how much detail is present Howetmany slides? This dependseon eont n n . . each slide. On average 20–25 slides.n will last about 30min. X X ok Slide format Don’t getootookX okavoid borclever. Slides should be simple; o o B ders and complex animation. PowerPoint has numerous .B pre-set designs, wit .isBthe content though remember of your talkw thewaudience needs to be w focused upon. wConsider using a remote slidewadvance device (<£15). ww they ignorant of the topic or world experts? This information will determine the level of depth you need to go into. Presentation format The presentation is in essence an essay which Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t .ne X ok .Bo the speaker delivers orally. It should comprise a title page with the topic, speaker’s name, and an introduction which states the objectives. The bulk of the presentation should then follow and be closed with either a summary or conclusion. Consider ending with a slide acknowledging thanks and a final slide with simply ‘Questions?’ written on it to invite discussion. o o B . w ww w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Presentations and teaching 63w t t t Titles .ne Give each slide a title toXmake .nethe story easy to follow. X.ne X k the text colour contrasts ok Font Should be at least size ok with the oo24.textEnsure o on blue background). Avoid using lots Bo background colourw(eg.Byellow B . of effects; stick to one or two colours, bold, italics, w or underline features. w w w graphics to support the presentation; w do not simply have ww Graphics Use graphics adorning the slide to make it look pretty. t information Avoidneovercrowding t emuch etot How slides; it is better n n . . . X three short slides than onekXhectic one. Each slide should kdeliver ok use oin six bullet points or fewer. oo X one message and this should be o o B Bullet points Use .B w.toBhighlight key words, notwfullwsentences. w weffects Keep slides simple. Avoid w text flying in from all dir- ww PowerPoint ections and don’t use sound effects as these distract the audience. et Go through the presentation et a few times on your own esot Rehearsing n n n . . . you know the sequence and what you are going to say. Then practise X X X it in ok front of a friend to check otiming ok and flow. ok o o B Specific types ofw.presentation B wthe.Baudit or research w w w Audit/research Ensure you give a good reason why w w w B was chosen and what existing research has already been undertaken. State your objectives, your method, and its limitations. Use graphs to show numerical data and clearly summarize your findings. Discuss limitations and how your audit/research may have been improved. Draw your conclusions and indicate where further research may be directed. Thank the appropriate parties and invite questions/ discussion. See audit/ research section E p. 61, p. 66. Journal club Begin with a brief explanation of why you have chosen to discuss the particular clinical topic and list the articles which you have appraised. Aim to include why the study was undertaken, the appropriateness of the study, the methods and statistics used, the validity of the study, and make comparisons between different studies. Include latest guidelines and invite discussion regarding how the research may affect current clinical practice. Finish with a summary of the studies undertaken, their results, and where they were published for future reference (see Box 1.20). Case presentation The presentation should tell a story about a patient and let the audience try and work out the diagnosis as though they are clerking the patient for the first time. Name the talk something cryptic, eg ‘Headache in the traveller’. Refer to your patient by initials only and make sure patient details are blanked on all images and test results. Present the history and physical examination. Invite audience suggestions for the diagnosis and management. Give the results of investigations and again invite the audience to comment. Give the diagnosis and discuss subsequent management. Summarize with an outline of the topic and management; end with a question/discussion session. Teaching session It is helpful to base a topic around a patient if this is appropriate. Keep the session interactive; have question slides where the audience can discuss answers. Summarize with learning points; it is helpful to provide a handout of your slides for people to take away (E p. 65). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 64 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w ww w t t t Giving .ne the presentation X.ne .ne X X Make sure there k projector/computer available k and that ok Equipment oisinacase oequipment. o o works. Leave enough time you need to find new Bo itTiming B B . check your slides project correctly. Arrive earlyw and w. Leave the title w w page projectedw so the correct audience attends. w w w Speaking Speak loudly so you are heard at the back. A good speech delivered inaudibly disappoints more than a bad one delivered audibly. t Stand at the front nandetavoid obstructing the projector. elanguage et Body n n . . . Talk directly to your audience to appear more confident and see their X X X ok response. ok ok o o o Beginning Introduce yourself and your position, outline B .Btheyou.topic, and exw.it.BAsk whether whear plain why you chose everyone can w w To use notes w or not You shouldn’t need notesw but have them available. ww Style Keep it professional, but show you are human; it is acceptable to be light-hearted t and make the audiencenelaugh. t eYou et n n Pacing will talk faster than you. think. Take your time and use silence. . . X X Decide before if o you want questions during or after. kX kAnticipate ok Questions oknow. o o o what they might be and prepare for them. Say if you don’t B w.B w.B Feedback w w w Whenever possible from the comments. Consider w w ask for feedback and learnw sending a ‘Developing the clinical teacher’ assessment (E p. 9). t t t .ne1.20 Critical appraisal .ne .ne Box X X X ok Critical appraisal is the assessment ok of data in scientific articles. ok Though o o ased resources are available, a basic understanding of Bo many evidence-bw B B . . w academic skills such as critical appraisal forms part of the postgraduate wis a fundamental part of being curriculumw and wwa good doctor. During ww the FP, your skills may be tested via a journal club, research project, or by a complex patient. Becoming proficient is a lengthy process because t et writing et intimidating scientific can seem strange and and research.n iseby n n . . its nature highly specialist. The following is a useful structureX to focus X X ok the mind when reading,ocontextualizing, ok ok papers: and critiquing scientific o Bo Introduction What question B B interesting, . is being asked? Is it important, wWhat w. original, logical, and testable? does it add to what wew already know? w w ‘TROPES’ is useful: ww Methods Dow the methods answer the question? • Type of study—interventional or observational, retrospective or prospective? etfactor—if observational, is the eriskt factor or disease clearly defined? et n n n . . . • Risk X X secondary or tertiary/kexploratory X primary (usually ok •• Outcomes— ok clinical), o your o o o Population— w ho was included/ e xcluded; do they represent B .B .B patients? w w w w •Ethical issues— w was there funding, a conflict w of interest and/or ww et n . kX o Bo ethical approval? • Size—sample size and length of follow-up. Results Was follow-up long enough? Were the statistics appropriate? Discussion Was the study valid internally (the study itself ) and externally (generalizability to clinical practice)? Were biases identified/reduced? Remember that correlation does not equal causation. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Teaching medical students 65w t t t .ne .ne .ne Teaching medical students X X X ok ok as the recipient; it will challenge ok you to fill will benefit you as much o o Bo Teaching B B any gaps in your knowledge organize your thinking.on the subject. You w.know and wstudents but you are w may not feel that you enough to teach medical w ww w probably thew best teacher on the ward for them, for two reasons: • You have recently passed the finals exam that they are trying to pass, often same medical school et etatarethemeant et n n n • .Finals to test core medical knowledge; this is what you do . . X X kXmanage a patient. ok every day when you clerk oand ok o o o B Portfolio w.B w.B (consider using w Keep a record of teaching sessions, ideally with feedback w w a simple online w survey tool). At least once awyear you will need to com- w plete a ‘Developing the clinical teacher’ form assessment (E p. 9). Teaching et principles et et n n n . . . Whatever information you are trying to convey, it is important to follow X simple guidelines: kX X ok a• few o ok o o o Be clear about your objectives B • Plan what you arewgoing .B to teach to give it structure w.B w w • Be interactive; this means that the students do some of the work and w w ww also are more likely to remember it • Try not to use too much medical jargon • Give relevant examples • Check the students’ understanding throughout and invite questions. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k ok ok patients oo o Bo Suitable B B . of being a medical studentwis.finding suitable paOne of the worst w parts tients to take aw history from or examine. You w can use your patient lists w w first-hand experience of thewpatients (E p. 18) and to guide medical w students to conscious, orientated, and friendly folk or those with clinical t still, offer to introducentheetstudent. t signs.eBetter .n . .ne Clinical examination X X X k a patient and give feedback ok Offer to watch the studentooexamine ok on their o Bo technique. You arewlikely B B to examine more patients in your month as . wso. yourfirstclinical a doctor than inwall your years as a medical student skills w will have advanced w very quickly. w ww FP applications t e X.n ok Bo .ne X k t ww ww o w.B ww You can also teach ‘how to be a doctor’-type skills that are rarely passed on. The trick is to choose a simple subject you know lots about, eg: • Managing chest pain/breathlessness • Fluid management and volume assessment • Writing in notes. et n . kX o ok o o w.B Clinical approach Bo et n . X With all the recent changes to medical training, many students feel bewildered about what lies ahead. Once again you are in the ideal position to advise since you have already successfully applied for the FP. Simple advice about which are the best jobs, how to fill in the application form, or even showing a copy of your own form can be a great help. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 66 .B w ww Chapter 1 Being a doctor .B w w w ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Research and academia X X X k ok ok you see your future careerooheading o WhateverB direction in, the Bo Research B . a period of research willwhelp . you gain insight opportunity to undertake w w w into this vitalwarea that underpins all of medical w practice as well as to de- ww velop the skills necessary to understand research output. You don’t need to cure cancer—often the most successful projects are those that set out et a simple, well-formulated.nquestion. et et to answer n n . . X Xyour back on clinical medicine, X but raThis is not turning ok Academia okto your ok academic ther adding a new dimension clinical experience:omost o o B doctors do research .alongside clinical work. There are w Bconferences, w.Bmanyyouradvantages (interest, worldwide really understanding w w w w but pay is not one of them. w There are various subject, making a difference) training w routes for academics detailed as follows—there is no one single way in; if t you want to do researchnoreta PhD there are always opportunat anyestage et n n . . . ities if you look and ask. X X kX FPs ok Foundation years There okare small numbers of 2yrooAcademic o o B (E p. 6). These are.B often a normal F1 year with a.B 4mth academic attachment in F2 (egw academic rheumatology); a feww have academic compow w nents scattered w throughout F2 ± F1. w ww ST years There are also academic ST positions called Academic Clinical t Fellowships. of these are availableetfor entry either at ST1 or ST3 level et n alongside 25% of working .naree 2–3yrMost .rotations .ntime and long, including clinical X X X k first year will be almost entirely work.oThe the ok set aside offortheacademic okclinical; o second B andothird years is to give you the opportunity to design Bo purpose B . . a PhD/MD research apply for funding. wproject, generate preliminarywdata, wand Once you successfully Fellowship. ww get funding, you enter thewTraining ww Training fellowship This is a 3yr research project designed by you with the of getting a PhD (or alternatively a 1–2yr MD) with small t t et ofaimprotected emaintain n n amounts clinical time.to your skills. . .ne X X X k can apply lectureship With a PhD/MD under your belt,o you ok Clinical okThis o o a 3–4yr lectureship post. will give you clinical experience while Bo for B B . training to consultant research w.level, and allow you to pursue wpostdoctoral w w interests. You wwill again need to apply for funding, w eg a Clinician Scientist ww Fellowship. Once you have completed this post you will be eligible for consultant tor senior lecturer positions. e a project Although .some et academic posts will come.nwith et n n . Finding X already tied to a specific X rewarding kX ok funding ok laboratory or project, theomost owith o projects are often those o that you design yourself, together a senior B B B . . academic mentor.w It is important to speak to a range of people and read w and discuss broadly. ww Keep three things in mind: ww(1) do I get on with the ww supervisor and have other clinicians had good experiences in the group? (2) Does the project interest me? (3) Where will the project lead (eg will you be able to apply for the career or subspecialty that you want?)? et et et n n n . . . X Xof academic medicine is thatkXyou often One of the challenges ok Funding okfor yourself need to raise funding to o pay and your research. o ooThe process B B B can take time (eg >6mth) and involves filling in multiple forms. Always talk . . w w to your potential supervisor for advice on the best options. ww ww ww B .B w ww Chapter 2 w .B w w w 67w t t t .ne Life on the .newards .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww The medical team 68 multidisciplinary team 70 t The e et et Daily ward duties 71 n n n . . . Ward rounds 72 X Being on-call 74 kX kX ok o o o o o Night shifts .75 B B Writing inw the notes 76 w.B w w Common w symbols in the notes 78 w ww Anatomical terms and planes 79 et Forms etTTAs) 80 et n n n Discharge summaries (TTOs/ . . . X Fitness to work noteskX82 X ok ok Referrals 83 oo o o B Referral letters 84 w.B w.B Investigation requests 86 w w w 87 w ww Radiology Common ward dilemmas t et Pain 88 n net . .ne Thinking about death X 92. X X Palliative care 93 ok ok ok o o The dying patient 94 Bo B B . Death 96w w. w w Nutrition 104 w w ww Nutritional requirements 105 patients 106 t t et Difficult Aggression and violence 107 n . .ne .ne Needle-stick injuries 108 X X X ok ok ok Surgery o o Bo B B Pre-op assessment w. 109 w. Bowelw preparation 111 w w terminology 112 w ww Surgical Preparing in-patients for surgery 113 t Booking theatre lists 114 et e et n n . . Surgical instruments 115.n X The operating theatrekX116 X ok o ok o o o Post-op care 118 B Post-op problems w.B 119 w.B w w Wound management 120 w elective operations 121 w ww Common Stomas 123 t e et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 68 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne medical teamX.ne .ne The X X ok changes to medical otraining ok have caused confusion about okthe names o Bo The B B . usually consists of and roles of different .trainees. The medical team or ‘firm’ w four grades of responsibility: (1) consultant level,w (2)w registrar level, (3) SHO w w may have more than one ww level, and (4)w F1 (house officer level). Many firms doctor at each grade of responsibility. Indeed, doctors of the same grade may have circumstances, detailed as follows.et et subtly different professional et n n n . . Consultant level These are the most senior doctors on X the. team; Xthere are several posts at thisklevel: X k k o o o Bo Academic Doctorswwho Bosplit their time betweenwresearch Bo and clinical . . medicine. Theyw are often called ‘honorary consultants’ alongside an academic gradew (eg senior lecturer, reader, professor). ww ww Consultant The most common post at this level is reached by obtaining the CCT p. 45), formerly known et (E et as the CCST, or via proof eoft n n n equivalent training known as the CESR. . . . X X consultant-level ability andkexperience X specialist A doctor ok Associate oCkwith othe accounto o o who has not got a CCST/ CT/ C ESR. They do not have B ability or management w.Bcommitments of consultants. w.B w w w Consultant role for everything that happens w w Consultants are responsible w B on the ward including the actions of junior doctors. They may lead ward rounds, work in clinics, supervise a laboratory, or spend time in theatre; their level of involvement in the day-to-day running of the ward varies between specialties and management styles. They will perform your FP appraisals (E p. 27) and are a good source of advice for careers, audits, and presentations. If ever you need help and only the consultant is available then do not hesitate to contact them. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X k w Registrar level If you describe yourself as ‘a registrar’ most people will o Bo assume that you are at this grade. All of these doctors will share an on-call rota that is usually separate from the SHO-level on-call rota. The posts have a natural hierarchy according to experience: Specialist registrar (SpR) Doctors training under the old system; virtually none of these remain, but you will still hear the term. Staff grade/specialty doctor A non-training post with equivalent experience to a SpR but not working towards a CCT award. Clinical fellow A specialty doctor who is undertaking research; they may need to secure an ST3/4 post afterwards. Clinical lectureship The academic equivalent of ≥ST3/4 they will split their time between clinical and research. Senior specialty training registrar (StR, ≥ST3/4) In most specialties this grade starts at ST3; however, it is ST4 in emergency medicine, paediatrics, and psychiatry. These are posts that work towards the CCT award and a consultant post. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B ok Bo .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B ww Registrar role These doctors supervise the day-to-day running of the ward; they perform similar jobs to consultants (ward rounds, clinics, theatre) but without the management responsibilities. Registrars usually receive referrals from other teams and will spend time reviewing these patients. Their presence on the ward varies between specialties. et n . kX o Bo et .ne X k ww t e X.n ww et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w The medical team 69w t et there are a range of.nposts et SHO .nelevel Like the registrar-Xlevel.nposition X X similar roles with akhierarchy of experience: k ok performingclinical oThe academic equivalent ofooST1– o fellowB (ACF) 2/3 and Bo Academic B . they will perform a similarwrole. except that CT1–2/3 at this level they w w time set aside for research.wThe w situation can be conhave 25% of their w ww fused in certain posts where the ACFs are appointed at ST3 level. Junior specialty training registrar (StR, ST1–2/3) Doctors in specialties with et training (E p. 45) who ewillt progress to registrar-level.nspeet run- through n n . . competencies or exams.XDespite Xcialist training unless they fail toXattain‘a registrar’. k ok the title, it is misleading tooocallkthem o oo training B Core training (CT1–w2/.3B B ) Doctors in specialties with .uncoupled (E p. 45) whowcan apply for registrar-level specialist posts if ww Thetraining w they attain the difference be- w w relevant competencies andwexams. tween ST and CT posts is the specialty, not the experience. Fixed-teerm t specialty training appointmentet(FTSTA) A post for doctorsnwho et n were unwilling or unable to secure.n an ST/CT post. The post lasts.1 year . X will be at ST1, ST2, or ST3 X at the end of the yearkXthey can ok and ok at level; apply for an ST or FTSTAopost the next level if they have o ooattained the B relevant competencies. B B . . w wwFP; this will often be ww F2 These are doctors ww in the second year ofwthe their first experience in the specialty and at SHO level. At the end of the year they will apply for ST/CT/FTSTA posts. Expectations vary: in some trusts/specialties, F2s will share a rota with F1 doctors. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X These doctors are your call for help. They can adok SHOonrolepatient okwardfirstjobs,portandofsupervise ok procedo o management, practical Bo vise B B . alongside F1s on the ward though ures; they often work w w. they may have w w w clinic and theatre commitments too. They are an excellent source of adw applications, exams, trainingwcourses, etc. w vice on careers, F1 level with limited registration. They t et These are doctors in their.first neortyearPRHOs are.n still sometimes called house officers from the old system. .ne X X X k ok okincluding F1s manage theoo day-to-day running of the ward o Bo F1wardrolerounds, B B ward .jobs, procedures, and reviewing wdetail. w. unwell patients; w E p. 71 for more w w w w w Other team members Mid-level practitioners A collective term of healthcare profesetincluding etfor a group et n n n sionals advanced nurse practitioners (senior nurses with add. . . X training) and physiciankassociates X (graduates of a dedicated 2yr kX but ok itional o responsibilities oevolving master’s programme). Specific vary and are o o o B alongside doctors w and.B under supervision they can perform w.B clerkings, in- w vestigation requests, and medical procedures. w w w w w et n . kX o Bo Medical students Medical students are present in most hospitals and should be allowed and encouraged to be part of the medical team. Medicine is both a science and a vocation, and although studying for exams is important, many of the clinical and non-clinical skills needed to succeed as a doctor are not written in textbooks and can only be learned in a supervised way either on the wards or in the clinic. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 70 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne multidisciplinary .ne team .ne The X X X ok Nurses These have a ‘hands- okon’ role, ranging from administering ok medio o Bo cations to attendingwdoctors’ B B rounds. Don’t be afraid to ask . . their advice— wMost their experience means they can often help youw out. can take blood w w and performw ECGs, some can cannulate andw insert male urinary catheters w (all female nurses should be able to insert female catheters). t t stressed people who nareetin Bedemanagers These tend to beehighly n n . . charge of managing the hospital beds and arranging transfers and .admisX They will frequently askkyou X ok sions. o when patients are likely tookbeXready for o discharge so they can planoahead for routine admissions. o B .B physiotherDischarge coordinators w.B These work with social wworkers, w w apists, and occupational therapists to expeditew patients’ discharges, and often ww w help in finding social and intermediate care placements (E Box 2.1 p. 73). Healthcare (HCAs) These perform more basic nursing eegt help assistants et recording et tasks, with personal care.n and observations including n n . . X prick glucose. They cannot X kX dispense medication or give ok finger- ok injections, but many can take blood.oo o o B Bsenior nurses who .B These are specially trained Nurse practitioners wunwell w.procedures can assess acutely patients, perform practical (eg canw w w w ww B nulation), and assist in theatre. Most cannot prescribe, although there are some who are qualified to use the nurses’ formulary (E p. 70). Specialist nurses These include stoma, respiratory, pain, cardiac, diabetes, tissue viability, and Macmillan nurses. They are excellent for giving advice and are an important first port of call for the junior doctor. Occupational therapists These work with patients to restore, ­develop, or maintain practical skills such as personal care. Assess patients’ homes for changes required to help with activities. Many elderly patients require OT assessment before discharge—nurses usually make the referral. OTs work in primary and secondary care (E Box 2.1 p. 73). Pharmacists These dispense drugs and advise you on medication. They check the accuracy of every prescription that is written. Some hospitals have a medicines information line which you can call for prescribing advice. Phlebotomists These are professional vampires who appear on the wards with the sole aim of taking blood. They often appear at unpredictable times and may not come at all at weekends, so leave blood forms out early. Some can take blood from central lines and perform blood cultures. If asked nicely they may accept requests mid phleb-round. Physiotherapists These use physical exercises and manipulation to treat injuries and relieve pain. Chest physios are commonly found on respiratory and surgical wards to help improve respiratory function and sputum expectoration by teaching specific breathing exercises. Involve them early in patient management—nurses usually make the referral, but do not hesitate to discuss your patient’s needs or progress directly with them (E Box 2.1 p. 73). Social workers These support patients’ needs in the community. They assess patients and help organize care packages (invaluable for elderly ­patients). Where residential care is required, they help guide the family and patient through the decision-making process and financial issues. They are also involved in child protection and vulnerable adult safeguarding work. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Daily ward duties 71w t t t .ne ward dutiesX.ne .ne Daily X X ok ok ok o o thing Bo First B B . •You’re expectedw to be the first doctor on the ward w.in the morning w w • Ask the night team (nurses and doctors) about any w w events overnight ww • Submit any missing or extra blood/CXR/ECG requests • Review any new or acutely unwell patients. etround et et n n n Ward . . . XE pp. 72–3 for ward roundkX kX ok •• Attempt o duties, try to keep a jobs list oward o o to start simpleojobs (eg TTOs, requests) during round. B .B .B w After the wardw round • Spend a few minutes comparing and allocating ww wwjobs between the ww other team members; try to group jobs by location and urgency • Radiology (USS, CT, MRI) t et torequests ecardiology/psychiatry .net • .Referrals other teams, eg surgery/ n n . X X TTOs and otherk forms kXunable ok •• Complete owhom obeen Take blood from patients the phlebotomists have o o o B to bleed or that have the ward w.Bbeen requested during w w.B round. w Lunch w w ww • Do you need to do anything for yourself, eg book holidays, pay bills? •You may have teaching/grand round/journal clubs. t t t After .ne lunch .ne .ne X X X patients you are worried Liaise with nurses about ok • Review ok andabout. ok any o problems they have identified attend to routine tasksothey may have Bo • Check B B . results; serial results sheets and record wblood w.help • Check other w results; chase outstanding requests or results w ww • Spend timewtalking to patients ± relatives w • Submit blood and other investigation requests for the next day t the patients’ drug cards—ndoeany t need rewriting? t • Check .ne you . .ne X X X Before go home ok ok jobs with other team members; ok make results and outstanding o o Bo • Review B B a note of anything that needs doing the next day . w. and wwritten up • Check that allw warfarin insulin doses have w been w IV fluids for patients overnight w where safe to do so ww • Prescribe sufficient •Handover patients who are sick or need results chasing by the on-call doctor p. 74); write down theireward, t name, DoB, and hospitalet et (E n n number and exactly what you want the doctor to do (ie not just.n . . X‘check bloods’). X X ok Before ok ok o o o weekends B • Only submit blood B for patients who really need them w.requests w.B w w • Try to prescribe w 3 days of warfarin doses where w safe to do so ww et n . kX o Bo • Make sure that no drug cards will run out over the next 2 days, rewrite them if they will (this is infuriating to do as an on-call job) •Handover to the weekend team according to local protocol; thorough patient summaries on Friday ward rounds help the weekend team immensely. Make sure they are aware which patients are unwell and what the weekend plans are (eg escalation plans if they deteriorate). et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 72 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne rounds .ne .ne Ward X X X ok smooth ward round requires ok thought and careful planning, okwith prepo o Bo Aaration B B . questions and of notes, investigations, Try to predict w. armed withandtheresults. wanswers. start the wardw round appropriate See Fig. 2.1 w ww for guidancew on recording rounds in patientw notes. Before the ward round t location, summary ofnet et the patient list with patient edetails, •Update n n . . clinical problems, key investigations/ results, referrals made, X and. jobs Xhave changed kX• Ask the nurses if any patients k k condition overnight o o o o o and try to avoid any nasty surprises on the round; briefly.B review individual Bo B . w patients where appropriate wdrugwcards, obs charts, X-rays,wandwblood • Check notes, results are present ww w • Clearly document all relevant investigation results and reports in the notest with a brief summary on your patient list e all notes have continuation.nsheets et headed et • .Check with the patient’s n n . name, DoB, and hospital number/ a ddress (use a hospital sticker) X kX problem list/summary obeforehand kX ok • Consider writing out theoopatient’s o o B • If your patients have .moved, find out where they have been transferred to and wB w.B plot an efficient route through the hospital to visit all your outlying patients w w • Check or w chase the dates/times for outstanding w investigations ww •Learn your consultant’s favourite questions from your predecessor • Consider multidisciplinary issues which may alter further management or delay discharge for the patient (eg home situation, see Box 2.1) • Think about management dilemmas you want/need answers to. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o the ward round Bo During B B . for their • It is good to have wa. nurse join the ward round,tooboth wbusy, contributionsw and to aid handover. If they’rew handover later. w w ww • If there are two junior doctors then one can prepare the notes, obs, drug cards, and X-rays for the next patient while the other presents t in the same logical way, egnet • When presenting a patient, always begin netSmith .‘Mrs .nepresented . of is a 64-year-old lady who with a 4-day history X X X k worsening shortness of breath’ k k then proceed to past medical history, o o o o and then your management blood B results, Bo • Ifinvestigation, .moment, .Boplan you have a spare start filling in formsw or doing the jobs w generatedw onw the ward round (eg prescribing fluids) ww ww • If you have any queries about the next step of management or investigation results, ask during the ward round. Also ask about rationale for imaging if unsure as this makes requesting imaging easier for you (E p. 87)! ... ‘Just for my learning, what is the reason for...?’ • Referrals made in the presence of your consultant are often more readily accepted and queries can be discussed directly • If you have not done something or cannot recall details, be honest. t e X.n ok Bo .ne X k t ww ww After the ward round o w.B • Discuss with your team the plan for the day. You may need senior help with some jobs (eg if there are too many or you need specific input). Seniors may need to go to theatre or clinic. Time-permitting, try to join occasionally: extra educational opportunities like this are good for your career planning as well. • Prioritize the jobs and group by location, eg outlying wards, radiology • Clarify any gaps in your understanding of the patients’ management. et n . kX o Bo ok o o w.B et n . X et n . kX t o o B . w ww ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo w oo B . w et n . kX ok ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo o ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww ww et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww Bo ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n ww Bo o w.B .n kX ww o w.B t .ne X k o t .ne X k ww w t o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX Fig. 2.1 Sample of a sample patient list and a ward round entry in the patient’s notes. ww ww Box 2.1 Discharge planning This is a multidisciplinary process that should start on admission and continue throughout. Medical, discharge planning, and therapy teams complete social needs assessments, asking 4 key questions: (i) what support is there? (ii) Now they have become unwell, do they need more? (iii) Is there potential to improve? (iv) Where would they prefer to go? We aim to give patients both safety and independence. Options include (i) social care (from home adaptations, mobility aids and home carers to residential homes and nursing homes), (ii) intermediate care for those with potential to improve (home re-ablement, rehabilitation, or community hospitals), and (iii) community healthcare (district nurses, nursing agencies, and community therapy). It is a complex process due to variations in personal preferences, family situations, local services, national structures, and funding streams, but take the time to learn the local process. Your contribution to this important multidisciplinary conversation can be critical and failure to engage will inevitably lead to discharge delays. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B 73w et t et n . X w Ward rounds t .ne X k ww o Bo B .B w w w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 74 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne on-call .ne .ne Being X X X k k involves ok oincreasing oand ‘on-call’ occupies an amount of your time o o Bo Being B B care for a different range and specialties.than during normal w. of patients w are different. w working hours.w Requirements, expectations, and wpriorities w w w What’s important •Ensure you have a clear handover about which patients are waiting to t how urgently they neednseeing, eseen, et and where they are .net be n . . X• Know who you are on-call kwithXand how best to contact them X ok • Identify and focus on sickoopatients, and get help early ook o • Prioritize effectively.B and stay organized B wfor.Ba cup of water •Eat and stay wellwhydrated—there is always time w w and you will wbe much less efficient if you don’t w look after yourself. ww How to handle the bleep when tired • Always et try to answer promptly;.nwhen et you don’t, it will be the boss eort n n . . someone really unwell X Write down who called andkthe X job required X ok ••Learn o numbers ocallkfrom o o o common extension so you can spot the B .B or your consultant’s office. switchboard, the wmess, w.B w w w on-call w ww Being organized B • Document every task, otherwise you will forget something—do not use scraps of paper. Use sides of A4 structured into a grid. •Have a means of identifying when you’ve done it (i.e. an empty box needs doing, a half-full box is part done, and a full box is a job done) • Visit all the areas you cover in order and tell the wards this is what you’ll be doing; ask them to compile a list of non-urgent tasks for when you arrive • When you order a test on-call, make a note to check the result as it’s easy to forget. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t Prioritizing net net .Sick .you .ne X X X • patients need seeing first; if have more than one really sick k friends! ok patient then tell your senior. okThe ITU outreach nurses are oyour o o Bo • If the patient’s condition B B is clearly life- t hreatening then consider . wyour w.way there asking the ward to bleep senior while you’re onw your w • Check if aw task has a deadline (eg before pharmacy w closes) ww • If you see an abnormal blood result, check the patient/notes/previous blood (E pp. 580–585) t eift results et n n • .Ask a job can wait until you’re.n ine that area, tell the nurses when this . X will be and try to stick to it.kX X ok Taking o ok o o o breaks B .B .Bover 5h and two You are entitled tow one 30min paid break for every wshift w w for shifts over w9h. While you must not ignorewa sick patient, there will be ww a constant supply of work that can usually wait. Breaks are not just about food, they keep you alert and reducetstress and tension headaches.tIt t patients’ eyour is in interests that you n ne . .ne recharge. Drink plenty Xof .water. Where possible, arrange to take breaks with the other members of the X X k k ok team on-call—it allows you ooto catch up and stops you.Bfeeling oo isolated. Bo B . w w ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w t .ne shifts Night X k o Bo oo B . w w Night shifts t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o Few doctors look forward to their night shifts, especially if they are doing several in a row. Don’t underestimate how tired you feel during and after a run of nights. That said, on nights you will gain a lot of experience. ww ww Things to take with you 75w ww • Food, both a main meal and several quick snacks • Stuff for gaps in workload—eg books for private study. et et et n n n . . . X to check (on thekfirst X X ok Things o are younight) ok o o o • What areas and specialties responsible for? B • The contact details .B they are w.ofByour colleagues and seniors,wwhat covering, andw how best to get hold of them w w ww • When andw where is handover? Whattis expected of you t e up on time; your colleague.will ebe et n n • .Turn late home if you don’t .n X X work according tokurgency— bleeped to a sick kXpatient ok • Prioritize o ECG towbehendone oget ask for, eg obs, bloods, o cannula, while you there o o B • Tour the wards you B B . . are covering regularly and delegate simple tasks w • Document allw interventions in the notes. ww w w ww Hospital at night (H@N) This system in place in many hospitals to improve efficiency and t number et isofnow elimited et the.n standard care provided by the of doctors on n . .nduty at night. Some hospitals use mobile phone apps or a night sister to help X X X ok filter and allocate tasks tooindividuals ok most suited to complete ok them, eg o but you should assess an unwell patient. Bo nurses may be ablewto.Bcannulate B . w Learning at w wnight ww ww Nights can be a good learning opportunity. Ensure the other doctors on at night know if you have particular skills you wish to learn at that time (eg lumbar punctures). They can then call you to observe or be supervised. o Bo t .ne X Pitfalls k t o o w.B ww t e X.n .ne X k t shift; getting up early the morning before can help with this • Go to bed for at least 7h each day, even if you don’t sleep you’ll rest • Make your room dark and quiet—eye masks/earplugs help; ensure anyone else in the house knows you are working nights •Eat plenty and have regular meals, even if you don’t feel like it • Travel home safely. If you feel too tired to travel home safely, trusts are obliged to provide a place to rest or transport to take you home. et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et n . X k oo oo B B . . How to cope when not at work ww ww • Try to sleep a few hours during the daywbefore your first night wfor et n . kX o Bo oo B . w .n kX The potential to make mistakes during night shifts is greater than during the day. If you are unsure, double check. The following are some of the common problem areas: • Poor handover; ensure you know who needs review (E p. 22) • Failing to appreciate a sick patient and not calling for help • Fluid prescriptions (eg failing to note renal/heart failure, DM, electrolyte imbalance) • Warfarin prescriptions with INRs coming back out of hours. • Check you’ve got the right patient when documenting/seeing results. ww ok Bo et .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 76 .B w ww Chapter 2 Life on the wards .B w w ww w t t t .ne .ne .ne Writing in the notes X X X ok okabout writing in medical notes ok since this new F1s are unsure o o Bo Most B B is rarely practised as. a medical student. There are. a few rules which everyone, irrespective to (Fig. 2.2): ww of grade, should conform ww w wThe Notepaper patient’s name, DoB, andw hospital number or address w should identify every sheet (using a hospital sticker is preferable). et ethave the date and time. It is.nuseful et Documentation Each entry should n n . . to have a heading such as ‘WR ST2 (Smith)’ or ‘Discussion with patient and Xyour surname and bleep number Xclearly. kXfamily’. Sign every entry andoprint k k o o orelevant changes Bo What to writew Document condition of the patient, .Bo thefindings, .Bnew w to the history, obs, examination the results of any investigations, w and end withwa clear plan. The notes should contain ww enough information so ww that in your absence someone else can learn what has happened and what is plannedt for the patient. Always allow yourself of space when writing enotes, especially if documenting eta wardplenty emayt in .the round—your seniors n n n . . X a point of the plan early X (which needs to go at thekend X of the ok mention ok onexamination o document entry) but then perform aodetailed which you should o o B in the space you have.B Try to document everything.B that is discussed or w left. frustrating observed—it isw extremely for a seniorw tow ask a series of detailed wmedicolegal implications and thenwto find nothing documented. ww questions with Problem lists It is helpful to write a problem list in the notes either every t day ifethere changes (eg new admissions or in ICU/HDU),etor et should .nfrequentlyareforfrequent .nThis less chronic conditions. include medical and X X X.fornsocial k problems (E Box 2.1 p. 73).oHaving k k problem lists also makes itoeasier on- o o o teams to understand the patient if they are asked to review them, as well Bo call B B as refreshing your memory w. at the start of the nextwward w.round. See Fig. 2.3. What notw towwrite Patients can apply tow read their medical notes and ww notes are always used in legal cases. Never write anything that you do not wish the patient in court. Documenting t to read or that would benfrowned t upon esubjective et facts iseaccepted (eg obese lady) but .not material (eg annoying n . .ntime- waster). Never doodle in the notes and do not write humorous comments. X X X ok ok in black; poorly legibleonotes ok result in to write Writeoclearly Bo How B B errors and are indefensible Use only well- abbreviw. aboutin court. w.recognized ations and don’t worry length as long as sufficient information is w w w wAlways write in the notes at w documented. the time of the consultation, w even if it means asking the ward round to wait a few moments. t changes If you wish tonecross t something out simply nputeta Making eline n . . single through the error and initial the mistake. Never crossXit.out so X kXit cannot be read as this looks k k not be suspicious. Previous entries o should o o o entry indicating the change.Borodifference. aBnew Bo altered, instead make . Notes and thew law It is unlikely that your notes be used in court. wwandwillclear- If they are, you caring thinking indi- ww wwwant them to show you as a w et n . kX o Bo vidual; make that clear from how you write. As far as a court is concerned, if it’s not documented then it didn’t happen. Hints and tips Bullet points are a useful and clear means of documentation. It is acceptable to write about a patient’s mood and it is useful to document if you have cheered them up or discussed some bad news (E p. 24). It is also acceptable to document ‘no change’ if this is the case. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w wWriting in the notes 77ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww ok Bo B et n . X et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo t .ne X ok o B . w ww et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww ww t .ne X k ww t et net .n2.2 Example .ne Fig. of entries in medical.notes. X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B .B w.B Fig. 2.3 Example ofw a problem list. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 78 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .nethe notes X.ne Common symbols in X X ok okHome ok o o Bo B B w. w. Normal w w Plan w w ww Left Right et t e et n n n . . . Temperature X X X ok dd/DD/δδ/∆∆ okDifferential diagnosis ok o o o x/Dx/∆ Diagnosis B w.B Impression w.B Imp w w Rx Prescription or drugs w w ww Sx Symptoms Tx et Treatment et et n n n . . . Ix Investigations X /OEx Xexamination X ok O/E okOn ok o o o – v e Negative B +ve w.B Positive w.B w w +/– Equivocal w w ww B + ++ +++ h/o d/w WR r/v f/u ATSP IP OP c/o Pt c– @ E+D N+V D+V BO PUing blds °/x/− ° 2° mane N/S . kX o o o Bo net et oo B . w ww t .ne X k o ww o w.B o Bo oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX ww t et n . kX .n kX t e X.n ok Bo Presence noted Present significantly Present in excess History of Discussed with or discussion with Ward round Review Follow-up Asked to see patient In-patient Out-patient Complains of or complaining of Patient With At Eating and drinking Nausea and vomiting Diarrhoea and vomiting Bowels open Passing urine Bloods No/negative (as in °previous MI) Primary Secondary Tomorrow morning Nursing Staff .ne X k o o w.B ww t o w.B et n . kX o et n . X ok ww o B . w ww ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Anatomical terms and planes 79w t t t .ne .ne planes .ne Anatomical terms and X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B The anatomical .position Anatomical w w. planes Coronal or w w w ww frontal planew Sagittal plane et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Axial, transverse or horizontal t t e e et plane n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Fig. 2.4 The anatomical position and anatomical planes. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X terms and their meanings k ok Table 2.1 Commonly usedoanatomical ok Bo Anterior/ventral w.Bo Front of the body w.Bo Contralateral On the opposite side w w wplane ww Coronal/frontal Divides anteriorw from posterior Distal Away from the trunk tcaudal t t Inferior/ Away from e n . .thenesamethesidehead .ne Ipsilateral On X X X ok okAway from the midline ook o Bo Lateral B . .B Medial Towards the midline w w w w Palmar Pertaining to the palm of the hand w w ww Plantar Pertaining to the sole of the foot Posterior/ Back of the et dorsal et body et n n Prone Face.n down position . . X X to the trunk kX ok Proximal okClose oforearm o o o Radial The lateral (thumb) aspect of the B .B w.B Divides left side from w Sagittal plane right side w w w w ww Superior/cephalic Towards the head Face up position Supine et n . Ulnar kX et n . kX o Bo o o B . w ww t .ne X ok .Bo Transverse/horizontal/axial plane Divides upper and lower sections The medial (little finger) aspect of the forearm w ww ww B 80 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne (TTOs/TTAs) X.ne Discharge summaries X X ok okor away) are summaries of otheokpatient’s ador ‘TTAs’ (to takeoout Bo ‘TTOs’ B mission from the ward sent to the patient’s GP and are often the w. doctors ware.Bwritten most completew summary written (Box 2.2). TTOs on a comw w w by hand with carbon copies); wyou should receive puter (very rarely training w on the local system as part of induction. They form a point of reference at futureeclinic t visits or admissions. Theynealso t provide clinical coding informaet n tion with which the hospital bills primary care for care provided. .n . . X X X ok Box 2.2 TTOs should okcontain the following information ok o o o B .B DoB, hospital number, address • Patient details:w name, w.B • Consultant w and hospital ward w wcomplaint, clinical findings, andwdiagnosis ww • Presenting • Investigations/procedures/operations/treatment, including any complications et et to the GP, including all.net n . •.n Treatment on discharge and instructions X medications started or stopped kX and reasons why okX ok • Follow- o(be o o ofor these) u p arrangements clear who is responsible B B B . . •Your name, position, and bleep number. ww ww w When to w write TTOs TTOs should bew written as soon as you know w B the patient is likely to be discharged. This allows the drugs to be dispensed from pharmacy as soon as possible so that the patient’s discharge is not delayed. See Fig. 2.5. • Begin to enter information on the TTO at the earliest opportunity; check any queries with your team, particularly regarding the principal diagnosis • Check the duration of the medication for discharge (eg ABx) and stop any unnecessary drugs (eg prophylactic low-molecular-weight heparin) • Check drug doses and frequencies with the BNF, your seniors, a pharmacist, or by calling your hospital’s drug information-line • Check required follow-up appointments, give details, and be clear on who will arrange them (eg the ward clerk or the clinic administrators) • Phone the GP if the patient needs an early check-up, has a poor social situation, or self-discharges. It may take several days for a TTO to reach the GP: written instructions such as ‘check K+ in 3/7’ are unsafe •Hand the TTO and the patient’s drug chart to the patient’s nurse or inform them that you have completed it to avoid unnecessary bleeps • If you are unsure whether the TTO has been done check the drug chart; there is often a tick in a box showing if TTOs have been dispensed • Discuss the diagnosis, results, and discharge plan with your patient; if they understand the management plan they are more likely to comply. Controlled drugs for TTOs These are slightly more complex, but can still be written by F1 doctors in most trusts. They must include all the information in Table 2.2. CD prescriptions are only valid for 28d from the date of signing and only 30d of CDs can be dispensed on a single prescription. See also Fig. 2.6 and Box 2.3. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww .ne X k .n kX t ww et n . kX oo B . w ww et n . kX ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k o w.B ww et n . kX o Morphine, diamorphine,oopethidine, fentanyl, alfentanil,ooremifentanil, o B .B tramadol. methadone, methylphenidate w.B (Ritalin ), cocaine, wzopiclone, w w w w ww Box 2.3 Examples of controlled drugs ® B .B w ww .B w w wDISCHARGE SUMMARIES 81ww t t t .ne 2.2 Controlled drug TTOsXmust .nemeet the following requirements .ne Table X X ok ok and work address ok The prescriber’soname o Bo Content B B rules Signed and .dated by the prescriber w w. All the information included in a regular TTO w w w drug name, dose, frequency, andwroute ww Drug The rules drug is a ‘preparation’ (ie liquid), state the concentration t IfThethetotal volume (mL) or weight of the preparation or the et e et (mg) n n . . total number of tablets/capsules/ patches in words and figures.n X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et n . X ok Bo B et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo o Bo o B . w ww ww et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X k t .ne X ok o ww w t Bo . w Fig. 2.5 Sample TTO. ww t .ne X k et .ne X k ww oo B . w .n kX ww t Morphine oral solution (10mg/5ml); etdose: 10ml/12h PO for .net n . 5 days. Total = 100ml (one Xhundred millilitres) X ok ok ok o o o B .BMR 10mg capsules; dose: 10mg/12h Morphine sulfate wTotal w.BPO w w for 14 days. = 280mg (two hundred and eighty milligrams) w w ww Fentanyl 50 patch; dose: one patch et Total etevery 72 hours for 14 days. .net n n . . = 5 (five) patches X X X ok Fig. 2.6 Sample TTOs for controlled ok drugs excluding the patient andoprescriber’s ok details. o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww e X.n B .B w ww 82 Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Fitness to work notes X X X ok the most junior memberooofkthe team, the writing of ‘fit notes’ ok(Statement o Bo As B B . Med 3) will usually fall to you. of Fitness for Work, Form notes provide w w.These evidence that your patient has a condition that willw impact their fitness to work w w sick pay and social securitywpayments. You can advise that ww and enables statutory a patient is ‘not fit for work’ or ‘may be fit for work’ under restricted conditions. A separate trequired for periods of timenspent et form (Form Med 10) maynbe eavailable et as.anhospital inpatient. These forms .are in both electronic and. paper X from the Department kforXWork and Pensions—ask the ward kXclerk for ok formats advice. A sample is shown o in o Fig. 2.7. Patients can self-certify as illofor 7 days. o o B .B surgical patients who have Usage Typical uses been admitted rouwinclude w.B w w tinely for a procedure and require time off work to recover postoperatively. ww w w Medical patients may also require time to convalesce, while patients with woundst or injuries may require workplace during their recovery t adjustments e on return to work. Patients.can eself- eanyt period certify for the first week of n n n . . illness so do not require a note if they will be able to return to work within X X X this ok time. Never instruct a patient otok‘see your GP for a sick note’owhere ok the need o o for this can be anticipated at the time of discharge—the duty B .B to provide a Med w.B wpatient. 3 rests with the doctor with clinical responsibility for the w w w w ww B 1 Format You should fill in the patient’s name, a brief explanation of their needs (sickness absence, adjustments to the workplace, or modified duties), and accurate clinical diagnosis (without mentioning intimate details that might be damaging to the well-being of patient for their employer to discover). Sign and date the form. You need to give an appropriate amount of time for the patient to recover from their illness as reasonably anticipated at the time of discharge, up to a maximum of 3mths. If recovery takes longer than you anticipate, the patient can then see their GP for a further note. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww o Bo ww t et n . X ok o o w.B ww et n . kX oo B . w .n kX PLE .ne X k SAM ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k ww o w.B et n . kX ww t .ne X ok .Bo Fig. 2.7 Example of Statement of Fitness for Work (Med 3). Reproduced from M https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/ file/349915/fitnote-hospital-guide.pdf. Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. o o B . w ww w Useful guidance available at M https://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/guidelines-policy/completionstatement-fitness-work 1 ww ww B .B w ww t .ne Referrals X k o Bo .B w w oo B . w o w.B t o ok et n . X .B w ww et n . X ok o B . w ww ww et n . kX oo e X.n ww ok et ww o w.B 83w .n kX Referring a patient to another medical team can be one of the most difficult parts of the job. The other doctor is often very busy and will inevitably know more about the patient’s condition than you (hence the referral). At times it can feel like they are trying to make you feel stupid—this is rarely the case. Consider this from the point of view of the other doctor: They need to establish: •How unwell the patient is •How urgently they need to be seen • What investigations have already been done and what still need to be done to assist them in their review • If they are the right person to see the patient. You will often be asked to refer a patient by your senior. Ask them directly: • To help my referral and for my learning, why do they need referring? • What do they want the other team to do (advise over the phone, formal review, take over care, see in clinic, procedure/operation)? •How urgent is the referral? Next, think about what information the other doctor will want. Many specialties have additional components to history and examination that you will need to be able to describe, see the pages in the history and examination chapter (Box 2.4); if necessary, go and see/examine the patient yourself: et n . kX Bo Referrals t .ne X k ww o Bo w w ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww ww t t et 2.4 Additional components I.nBox .ne covered elsewhere .ne X X X ok Breast surgery E p. 143 Haematology ok E p. 142 PsychiatryookE pp. 162–4 o Neurology Renal.B E p. 387 Bo Cardiology E pp. 130–1 B . Obstetrics EE pp.pp. 134–8 w w Dermatology E pp. 140–1 160–1 Respiratory w Oncology E p. 142wwRheumatology EE pp.p. 132148–54 ww w Endocrine E p. 139 ENT Ophthalmology E pp. 144–5 Urology E p. 146 E pp. 156–7 t t Gastroet Orthopaedics E E p. 133 pp. 148–54 Vascular E pp. 130–1 e .n E pp. 158–9 PaediatricsX.nE pp. 166–7 surgery .ne Gynaecology X X ok ok ok o o Bo Before referring makewsure B B you have the following in front of . . you:and ward wnumber, •Hospital notes with patient’s name, DoB, hospital w w • Obs chartw (including latest set and trends) and w the patient’s drug card ww • Most recent results or serial results sheet. t relevant specialist, introduce Phoneethe etyourself, and say, ‘My consultant et n has.nrequested that I refer one of.n our patients who has [medical con. X with the view to [takingkX X care, advising on treatment, ok dition] o over oklooketc]’. o o Offer a brief summary ofotheir condition and management; up the B relevant conditionwor.B .B referral page (Box 2.4) before calling so that you w know what youw acceptable w to make a referral ww w are talking about. It is never w for a patient you know little about just because it’s on the jobs list. et n . kX o Bo Always know what investigations have been performed so far, and what the results were—sit at a computer with these already called up when you make the call. Before you put the phone down determine exactly what action the specialist will do and when this will take place. Write the referral and outcome in the notes along with the specialist’s name and bleep number. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 84 Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Referral letters X X X k ok basics These mayobeoused ok(using a speo for within-hospital referrals Bo The B B . for referral to outpatient clinics cific referral form)w other hospitals w. orletters w ornotepaper). w (use hospitalw headed Try to make referral as profes- ww w sional as possible. It is essential that the referral contains the following information: et you are and how to contact.nyou et et • Who n n . . X• Who the patient is (full name, XDoB, hospital number, ± address) X ok • Why you want them toobe okseen. ok o o B .B Fig. 2.8 is an example of a referral letter for you towfollow. w.B w w DiagnoseswList all the patient’s active diagnoses w and relevant past diag- ww noses; try to put the ones most relevant to the specialty you are referring to neartthe top. e ea tstatement telling the other .doctor et n n n . . Presenting complaint Start with X you would like them to dokX X written on the ward, in clinic, orkgive ok what o (egof see oand manageo o o advice). Give a brief description the patient’s presentation B ment during this admission a discharge w.B as if you were writingw w.B summary. w Medical information This will form the w wbulk of the referral. Think ww B 2 carefully about what information will help the other doctor in deciding when to see the patient and how to manage them; see the relevant history and examination page (E pp. 126–7). Try to set the referral out like a brief medical clerking and make sure you include: • Relevant investigation results •Latest medications • Relevant social history (particularly if this will affect how they are seen in clinic, eg poor mobility, language difficulties). t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k w Finishing the referral You should write your name, post, and ww t t consultant’s If sending an outpatient hospital referral, neyout .ne also name. .nise copiedor tointer- .carbon should include who the letter (‘cc’ stands for X X X k and GP. It is recommended to ok copy) which will include the onotes oandkpractice o o though this varies between trusts doctors. Bo send a copy to thewpatient B B . . w Print off several w Sending the w Ask your ward clerk for w assistance. w letter w copies, sign them, and ensure it is clear wherew each copy should be sent. Faxing a letter If you need to fax a copy then include a header sheet. eis tsimply a piece of paper saying etwho the fax is to, who it .isnfrom et This n n . . Xand the number of pages (and Xwhether this includes the header X sheet). ok You may need to add a number ok to the fax number to getoanokoutside line, o o eg ‘9’. File the faxed .letter and the sent message confirmation (with date B B B . wpatient’s notes. w and time sent) in the ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2 Non-urgent outpatient referrals to other specialties should go through the patient’s GP, since ­ ayment comes from their budget. If this is required, a note should be made on the discharge p summary with specific details of why this referral is being recommended. Urgent referrals (­especially for suspected malignancies) can still be made directly. Check with the consultant recommending the referral. B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo w oo B . w et n . kX et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo o t o B . w ww ww et oo B . w t .ne X k oo B . ww o o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w .ne X k .n kX ww t et n . X ok o o w.B ww ww ww t e X.n t .ne X k w t ww ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww Bo ww .B w ww ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n ok ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww o w.B 85w et t et n . X w Referral letters t .ne X k ww o Bo B .B w w ww o w.B ww et et et n n n . . . X X kX ok Fig. 2.8 Example of a referralooletter. ok o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 86 .B w ww Chapter 2 Life on the wards .B w w ww w t t t .ne .ne .ne Investigation requests X X X ok ok electronically. For paper forms, okcomplete: are almost always handled o o Bo These B B • Full name and at least one other patient identification (ie DoB, wor. address); w. detail hospital number, G+S/X-match w requires at least two more w ww • Status (in-w patient/out-patient) and locationw (ward or home address) • Name, position, and contact details of doctor ordering the test • Date, et test(s) requested, and reason etfor request. et n n n . . . Clinical information Appropriate information on request forms Xand reported; too much information X af-is kXfects how the test is performed k k o o o o consider than too little..Justify investigation requested. Bo better Bo nothematter .BAlways w w if a test is really required, how trivial— daily ‘routine’ bloods w patient discomfort. ww are often unnecessary, ww waste resources, andwcause Blood tests Brief clinical details may be acceptable, eg ‘chest pain’, ‘suspectedtPE’. Some tests require more tinformation, eg blood films, antie hormones, drug levels (doses eand timing of doses), genetics. et bodies, n n n . . . X X appearance of the tissuekX Describe the macroscopic ok Histology ok findings, o as well as the clinical suspicions, radiology and any specificoquestions. o o B B (eg urine) and .Bminimum include the sample Microbiology As a w bare wyou.type current/recentw antibiotics; the more information include the better w w w ww the microbiologist will be able to interpret laboratory results. Radiology E p. 87. t t t .TneBox 2.5 ‘Chasing’ results .ne .ne X X X ok junior doctor, a large proportion ok of your time will be spentochecking ok results. o Bo AsThisa used B B to involve ‘chasing’ endless pieces of paper which. were prone to going w.to full computerization, w are now easily avail- w astray. With thew move most w reports able: simply w keep track of the investigations youw have requested then check the w results systems regularly. Nonetheless, there are a few tips to consider: • For urgent results, particularly where there might be a delay in transcription t reports) or uploading onto t system (eg biochemistry/ net eradiology nethe .n(eg haematology) you can call the lab, or. reporting room (or attend in person). X X X. You k will be interrupting a colleague k k doing their job, so do not abuse this privilege o o o samples reaching the in the day will be processed first; it can help Bo • toBlood Bohit labtheearly .Bdootheir beat the rush that.will labs after the phlebotomists rounds w w • Rarer tests may only be run on samples reaching the lab by a certain time, or w w w on certainw days of the week, or may even needw to be send to an outside lab— w find out local policies and, if in doubt, call the lab before taking the sample • Bloods requiring urgent processing should marked as such; indiscriminatet etof this et beresults. use facility will delay genuinely critical Arrange an urgent ne n n . . porter (or take to the lab yourself ). At top speed, biochemistry results X X X.take k around 20–30min and haematology k k results around 30min o o o o is usually For microbiology results,opreliminary evidence of positive cultures Bo • reported .B consider telephoning thewlab.atBthis at 48h; otherwise stage to see w if there is anyw preliminary growth. Positive resultsw will be further cultured and w w ww tested over subsequent days to give a more detailed analysis et n . kX o Bo • For histology, all biopsies taken with a provisional diagnosis of malignancy should be processed urgently, but this depends upon sample being correctly marked at the time; call the pathology secretaries if there is any doubt or delay. Be careful not to make important decisions on preliminary results—if there is an urgent clinical situation in which you are unsure whether to act on a specific result, ask your seniors. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne Radiology X k o Bo w oo B . w o w.B o ww t ok .B w ww ww ok Bo et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo o t .ne X k o o w.B oo B . ww o w .n kX t ww 3 oo B . w ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k .ne X k ww t .ne X k ww t e X.n et n . kX o B . w ww t ww ok Bo t .n kX ww ww .ne X ok et oo B . w ww et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B et n . X Bo et X-rays These exploit the different absorbance of a pulse of X-ray radiation by different anatomical structures and foreign bodies. This allows the visualization and distinction of metal, bone, soft tissue, fat, fluid, and air. Fluoroscopy This uses X-ray images acquired in real time, often with addition of a contrast material, eg coronary angiogram or barium swallow. CT This uses a series of 2D X-ray images acquired in different planes to construct cross-sectional 3D images. IV or PO contrast can be used to accentuate, eg blood vessels or the GI tract. MRI This uses strong magnetic fields to align hydrogen nuclei (protons) within tissues. Disturbance of the axis of these protons by radiowaves allows the recording of radiowaves emitted as the protons return to baseline. MRI offers excellent soft tissue imaging and does not require ionizing radiation exposure. Image acquisition can be slow and require multiple different ‘sequences’ while the patient lies in a cramped space. Ultrasound This exploits the differential reflection of high-frequency sound waves to visualize structures, including soft tissues in real time. Overlying air and fat compromise signal quality, and bone penetration is poor. Nuclear medicine This depends upon the detection of radiation emitted by the decay of radiolabels attached to substances with affinity for certain body tissues. Positron emission tomography (PET) is a specific form of nuclear medicine that typically uses radiolabelled glucose analogues to detect regions of metabolic activity, eg in cancer. These techniques are especially powerful when combined with anatomical imaging approaches such as CT/MRI to increase localization (eg PET/CT or PET/MRI). Requesting Selecting, performing, interpreting, and managing medical imaging resources falls to the specialty of radiology. These doctors often have little direct contact with your patient and depend upon effective communication from you to select and prioritize imaging modalities (including appropriate use of contrast agents and imaging sequences), as well as inform their image interpretation; always include specific clinical questions on request forms. Radiologists have a vital duty to limit unnecessary exposure to ionizing radiation. Doses involved can range from minimal (eg CXR: <1% annual background radiation exposure) to substantial (eg contrast CT C/A/P: 710yr background radiation). Even a trivial radiation exposure will be associated with an appreciable cancer risk to a population if performed often enough.3 Always ensure you know why any investigation you are asked to request is needed, how urgent it is, and how it will change the patient’s management. For less urgent investigations or simple X-rays, it is usually enough to submit a request giving sufficient clinical information. For more urgent or specialist imaging, request the scan or fill in the form, then phone or go to the radiology department, and speak to the duty radiologist. Be polite, explain why the test has been requested (and by whom), and ask if there is any way it could be performed today if necessary. If this fails and the test is very urgent, your registrar should discuss with the radiologist directly. et n . kX 87w .n kX K Since Wilhelm Röntgen’s first hazy images of the bones of his wife’s hand in 1895, radiological imaging has revolutionized the approach of physician and surgeon alike in diagnosis and treatment. ww Bo w Radiology t .ne X k Imaging modalities o Bo B .B w w w .ne X ok .Bo Converting low-dose radiation exposure to cancer risk is fraught with difficulty; attempts to extrapolate from cancer rates in those exposed to very high dose radiation are unsound. The general principle must be to keep exposure As Low As Reasonably Possible (ALARP). ww ww B .B w w wLife on the wards 88 o et et .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B 2 Worrying features diHR, diBP, diRR, dGCS, sweating, vomiting, chest pain. ww ww Think about Headache (E pp. 362–5), chest pain (E pp. 247–53), abdominal pain (E pp. 295–303), back pain (E pp. 360–1), limb pain (E p. 462), infection (E pp. 496–505). Common Postoperative, musculoskeletal, chronic pain. t t e X.n ok ok o w.B e X.n ok o w.B ww ww t t e X.n ok Bo ok ok ww et o et o o w.B o ww t t e X.n e X.n ok Weak opioids ok o ✓ B w. NSAIDs Paracetamol ww .n kX o w.B ww Strong opioids Step 1 ✓ ✓ ✓ Step 2 ✓ Step 3 X.n k ✓ oo .B w ww t ok Bo ✓ Step 4 ww t e X.n ok ok ww t t e X.n ok e X.n o w.B ww Bo t Paracetamol Contraindications Moderate liver failure. Side effects Rare. • Paracetamol 1g/4h, max 4g/24h PO/PR/IV. NSAIDS Good for inflammatory pain, renal or biliary colic, and bone pain; Contraindications (BARS) Bleeding (pre-op, coagulopathy), Asthma, Renal disease, Stomach (peptic ulcer or gastritis). 10% of asthmatics are NSAID-sensitive, try a low dose if they have never used them before. Avoid use in the elderly. Increased risk of CVA/MI; Side effects Worsen renal function, GI bleeding (upper and lower—co-prescribe a PPI or high-dose H2-blocker for those at risk: ≥65yrs, ­previous peptic ulcer, use of other medicines with GI side effects, or major comorbidity). Both NSAIDs and COX-2 inhibitors are associated with increased risk of MI and CVA; use with caution in those at risk. • Ibuprofen 400mg/6h, max 2.4g/24h PO, weaker anti-inflammatory action, but less risk of GI ulceration • Diclofenac 50mg/8h, max 150mg/24h PO/PR (also IM/IV, see BNF). o w.B ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww et ✓ ✓ Source: data from M http://www.who.int/cancer/palliative/painladder/en e X.n ww et .n kX Table 2.3 WHO pain ladder Bo e X.n o B . w ww .n kX ww t e X.n o B . w ww t e X.n Ward round Assess daily the effectiveness of analgesia (whether pain hinders activity (coughing, getting out of bed etc)) and about side effects (drowsiness, nausea, vomiting, and constipation). Ask about (SOCRATES) Site, Onset, Character, Radiation, Alleviating factors, Timing (duration, frequency), Exacerbating factors, Severity, associated features (sweating, nausea, vomiting). PMH Stomach problems (acid reflux, ulcers), asthma, cardiac problems; DH Allergies, tolerance of NSAIDs, analgesia already taken and perceived benefit; SH ?Drug abuse. Obs iHR and iBP suggests pain; RR, pupil size and GCS if on opioids. Look for Source/cause of pain, masses, tenderness, guarding. Investigations These should be guided by your history and examination; none are specifically required for pain. Treatment No patient should be left in severe pain, consider titrating an IV opioid after an antiemetic (E pp. 310–11). Use the steps of the WHO pain ladder (Table 2.3). Ensure regular analgesia is prescribed, with adequate PRN analgesia for breakthrough pain. If a patient has moderate or severe pain start at step 3 or 4; using paracetamol and NSAIDs reduces opioid requirement and consequently side effects. Bo Bo ww w Chapter 2 t .ne Pain X k Bo .B w w e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pain 89w t t et and share an increased COX- .n2einhibitors These are similarXto.nNSAIDs .nerisk X X CVA, but with lesskrisk of gastroduodenal ulceration. ok of MI and oand tolerance to opioids do onotokoccur with o opioids Dependence Bo Weak B . pain. Consider prescribingwregular .B laxatives and short-term use forw acute w w PRN antiemetics, use with caution if head injury, iICP, respiratory dew intoxication; Side effects N+V, w constipation, drows­iness, ww pression, alcohol hypotension; Toxicity dRR, dGCS, pinpoint pupils (see Table 2.4). • Codeine 4h, max 240mg/e2t4h PO/IM, constipating et 30–60mg/ et n n n . . . • Dihydrocodeine 30– 6 0mg/ 4 h, max 240mg/ 2 4h PO, constipating X X kX400–600mg/24h PO/IM, stronger 50–100mg/4h, o max ok • Tramadol ok than o o o others and less constipating for long- t erm use. B .B wopioid w.B Table 2.4 Weak to oral morphine converter w w w w ww Drug and dose (oral route) Equivalent to oral morphine Codeine 8mg 0.7mg et 30mg/ et oral morphine et n n n Codeine 6h 10mg oral morphine/24h . . . X X oral morphine X 10mg ok Dihydrocodeine ok 1mg ok o o o Dihydrocodeine 30mg/ 6 h 12mg oral morphine/ 2 4h B .B w.B Tramadol 50mg w 5mg oral morphine w w w 6h ww Tramadol 100mg/ 40mg oralw morphine/24h B Paracetamol and weak opioid combinations Useful for TTO analgesia; it is better to prescribe the components separately in hospital: • Co-codamol 30mg codeine and 500mg paracetamol; two tablets/6h PO, nurses must give 8/500 dose if 30/500 not specified • Co-dydramol 10mg dihydrocodeine and 500mg paracetamol; two tablets/6h PO • Co-proxamol Contained dextropropoxyphene and has been withdrawn owing to its potential toxicity and poor analgesic properties. Some patients may still be taking this, but it is not prescribed to new patients. Strong opioids Morphine is used for severe pain. Use regular fast-acting opioids for acute pain with regular laxatives and PRN or regular antiemetics. See ‘weak opioids’ for cautions, side effects, and toxicity. Use only one method of administration (ie PO, SC, IM, or IV) to avoid overdose: • Oral eg Sevredol® or Oramorph® 10mg/2–4h • SC/IM Morphine 10mg/2–4h or diamorphine 5mg/2–4h • IV titrate to pain; dilute 10mg morphine into 10mL H2O for injections (1mg/mL), give 2mg initially and wait 2min for response. Give 1mg/2min until pain settled observing RR and responsiveness. Long-acting opioids These are used after major surgery or in chronic pain. Use standard opioids initially until morphine requirements known (E p. 95) then prescribe a regular long-acting dose along with PRN fast- acting opioids to cover breakthrough pain (equivalent to 15% or one- sixth of daily requirements). Laxatives will be needed. • Oral MST® dose = half total daily oral morphine requirement (E p. 95) given every 12h, usually 10–30mg/12h, max 400mg/24h • Topical Fentanyl patch lasts 72h, available in 12–100micrograms/h doses. Naloxone This given orally antagonizes the constipating effects of opioids, but is metabolized on ‘first pass’ through the liver and does not interfere with analgesic effects. Compound preparations oxycodone/naloxone preparations (eg Targinact®) may be of benefit for chronic pain relief in those who develop painful constipation despite regular laxatives. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 90 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t Other adjuncts .ne analgesic options/X .ne .ne X X opioid analgesia be given with paracetamol, ok Nefopam Aandnon- ok that canEpilepsy ok Side o o opioids; Contraindications and convulsions; Bo NSAIDs, B B ­effects Urinary retention, w. pink urine, dry mouth,wlight- w. headedness. • Nefopam 30–w 90mg/8h PO. w w ww Hyoscine butylbromide This gives good analgesia in colicky abdo pain; Contraindications Paralytic ileus, prostatism, glaucoma, myasthenia gravis, et Side effects Constipation,.ndryetmouth, confusion, urine retention. et porphyria; n n . . • Buscopan (hyoscine butylbromide) 20mg/ 6 h PO/ I M/ I V. X X kX relaxant, eg spasm withokback ok Diazepam This acts as oa omuscle pain; o o B B Contraindications Respiratory compromise/failure, sleep.B apnoea. Side effects . Drowsiness, confusion, (use ww physical dependencew wforwshort-term only). ww • Diazepamw 2mg/8h PO. Quinine This is used for nocturnal leg cramps; Contraindications Haemoglobinuria, optic neuritis, arrhythmias; Side effects et 200mg/ et Abdo pain, tinnitus, confusion. et n n n . . • .Quinine 24h PO—at night. X X kXa bolus ok Patient-controlled analgesiao(PCA) ok This is a syringe driver that ogives o o of IV opioid (usually morphine, but occasionally tramadol B B or fentanyl) .B .infusion w when the patient w activates a button. A background rate, bolus w to prevent dose, and maximum over- ww ww bolus frequency can bewadjusted B ® dose/pain; changes to the PCA are usually undertaken by the pain team (see Box 2.6). The patient must be alert, cooperative, have IV access, and their pain under control before starting. Check hospital protocols. Epidurals These are inserted by the anaesthetist in theatre usually prior to surgery. A local anaesthetic infusion (± opioid) anaesthetizes the spinal nerves, and usually produces a sensory level below which the patient has little or no feeling; if this level rises too high (higher than T4 (nipples)) there is risk of respiratory failure. The anaesthetist or pain team (see Box 2.6) usually look after epidurals and their dosing post-op. Complications include local haematoma, abscess (causes cord compression, E p. 361), or local infection; if there are concerns about an epidural speak to the anaesthetist covering acute pain immediately. Syringe driver These are used mainly for palliative analgesia and symptom control (E p. 95). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et n . X Most hospitals have pain teams, often subdivided into acute and chronic services. These comprise nurses and a pain specialist (usually an anaesthetist). The acute pain service is sometimes run by the Outreach Team. In-patients with pain issues can be referred to the teams for assessment, though ensure all simple measures have been undertaken to address the patient’s pain first, namely identify and treat cause of pain, and ensure the patient is receiving adequate simple analgesia (regular paracetamol, NSAIDs (if not contraindicated), and an opioid, if appropriate). et n . kX o Bo oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .ne X k K Box 2.6 Pain team ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Pain 91w t t t Neuropathic and chronic pain .ne .ne .ne X X X pain is caused bykdamage to or chronic stimulation ok Neuropathic o ok of nerve o eg radiculopathy o (nerve root pain), peripheral neuropathy, and Bo fibres, B B . pain tends to be difficult towdescribe . phantom limb pain. The or pinpoint w and is often aching, throbbing, or shooting in nature. Chronic w wwcauseburning, ww pancreatitis, conditions can significant pain, eg chronic arthritis, w post-traumatic, DM, trigeminal neuralgia; there is frequently a psychot genic e component. Standard analgesia e istoften ineffective and the services et n . of .anchronic pain specialist should.n be sought. See Box 2.7. Commoner X pain therapies include:kX X ok chronic o at a low dose; Contraindications okrecent MI, o o o Tricyclic antidepressants Given B arrhythmias; Side w .B .B effects Dry mouth, constipation,wsedation. This is the w w first-line treatment w for neuropathic pain according w to NICE guidance. ww • Amitriptyline 10–75mg/24h PO. Pregabalin Hypersensitivity, lactation; Side t Contraindications t Canpregnancy, eDizziness, esigns. et ­effects tiredness, cerebellar be used instead of amin n n . . . Xtriptyline as first-line treatmentkXfor neuropathic pain. X ok • Pregabalin 75–300mg/1o2hoPO. ok o o B Duloxetine Contraindications Uncontrolled hypertension, .Bpregnancy, seizw.B dizziness, wmouth. ures; Side effectsw Nausea, somnolence, dry First line for w w neuropathy. Avoid abrupt discontinuation. w ww painful diabetic 4 • Duloxetine 60–120mg/24h PO. If first-line drugs are unsuccessful, combination therapy with two or more agents can be considered. If this is unsuccessful then referral for a specialist opinion should be considered. The following are examples of more advanced therapies a pain specialist may prescribe. TENS Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation is believed to affect the gate mechanism of pain fibres in the spine and/or to stimulate the production of endorphins. Use at a high frequency for acute pain or slow frequency for chronic/neuropathic pain. Steroids and nerve blocks Injections of steroids combined with local anaesthetic into joints or around nerves can reduce pain for long periods. This needs to be done by a specialist. Sympathectomy and nerve ablation The ablation of sensory and sympathetic nerves by surgery or injection; used as a last resort in some forms of chronic pain. Acupuncture Effective in some trials and with a greater evidence base than most complementary therapies. Counselling and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) to develop coping strategies are widely studied in chronic pain and may be considered by appropriately skilled specialists. Concern remains that it makes things worse for some patients. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B e X.n ok ww o w.B ww ww Allodynia Seemingly harmless stimuli such as light touch can provoke pain Hyperpathia A short episode of discomfort causes prolonged, severe pain Hyperalgesia Discomfort which would otherwise be mild is felt as severe pain t t e X.n ok 4 e X.n ok ww o B . w ww t e X.n Box 2.7 Some terms in chronic pain Bo .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX t e X.n ok ww o B . w NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG173 ww B 92 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Thinking about death X X X k delay it. ok Death is inevitable and okeven the best medicine canooonly o Bo KPatients B B often die in .hospital and as a trainee you will. have a vital role in wand relatives through it. Aswwith w supporting patients in mediw ww knowledge, w everything cine this requires skills, and compassion, and getting it right w can be challenging but rewarding. The following should help guide you. t of dying, however be naware etIt is natural for patients to.benescared et Fears n . . that many are not and are entirely at ease with the idea. If they are afraid, X to find out why. It may bekX X the loss of dignity/control, o theksymptoms ok try o o o o (suffocation or pain),.B their relatives seeing them suffering, B .B or the unpleasant death of w a loved one. Many of these canw now be carefully manw w aged or avoided. w When death is not expectedwor deterioration is sudden, ww then your role in talking to the patient and allaying their fears cannot be overstated. This will be emotionally difficult etsupport et and you must never hesitate et to seek yourself. n n n . . . X X X bad news E p.k24. ok Breaking o Even with sudden deteriorations ok there are o o o Other sources of help B many other sources wof.Bhelp: w.B w w • Macmillanw nurses and the palliative care team w (E p. 93) ww B • The acute pain team (usually part of anaesthetics) • The chaplaincy. Do not forget you’re working with nursing staff who may know the patient much better than you, so discuss their care with them. Sorting arrangements Needless to say, marching in and offering a priest and solicitor will be insensitive, but the hospital will be able to provide legal support or an appropriate religious official if asked. Many patients’ strongest wish is to die in comfort, often in their own home. Get the Macmillan and/or palliative care team involved early as this can frequently be arranged. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t et nenot netat Do resuscitate orders.n Towards the end of life, attempts . . X X X can be more harm than good; however, the decisions k are ok ­resuscitationaround oforms okinitiated and DNAR complex and shouldobe at a o Bo discussions B B . level. Patients must now bewinvolved . in discussions registrar or consultant w unless it may lead w to ‘psychological harm towthe w patient’ (see Box 2.8). ww Nursing staffw must always be informed. K Box et 2.8 Tracey v Cambridge etUniversity Hospitals 2014 et n n n . . . decisions XThis case helped clarify the law on when to not discuss DNARkX ok with patients. Janet TraceyoohadkXterminal cancer with a prognosis o of 9mth o o and was admitted to.B ITU with a cervical spine injury.B after a road traffic B w despite a desire to w accident. After extubation, be w involved in her care, a w DNAR wasw placed without consulting her orw her family. The DNAR was ww then removed, however the judge ruled that the DNAR was in breach of UK and law (Convention ontHuman Rights, Article 8, ‘right to et European e DNARs can be distressing .tonepa-t a.private life’) because while discussing n n . Xtients, unless doctors feel thatk‘the X distress might cause physicalkorXpsychook logical harm’ the risks of otheodiscussion obenefits (eg are outweighed byo the o B B to autonomy, dignity,.B and their right to a private life and second opinion). . w w ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Palliative care 93w t t t .ne .ne .ne Palliative care X X X k k fook ooriginally care is the non- co urative treatment of a disease; o o Bo Palliative B B . but now covers other w . cused on terminal cancer, disorders. In practice, cancer patientsw arew still able to access more services, including the excelw w nurses who should be involved w as early as possible. The ww lent Macmillan aim is to provide the best quality of life for as long as possible—this may include t etadmission to a hospice (often etemporarily). et n n n . . . Pain (E pp. 88–91) This is a common problem in palliative care; opioids X X X ok are often used. It is important okto use all modalities of treatment. okConsider: o o o (urinary retention, bowel spasm, bony mets) B • Treating the source w.B(nerve blocks, TENS, neuropathic w.B pain) • Non-opioid analgesia w w • Alternative wroutes (intranasal, PR, transdermal, w SC, IM, IV). ww Table 2.5 is a guide to converting between opioids, it is not an exact scit changes need to be monitored ence e and et for over-or under-dosing..net n n . . X 2.5 Opioids and theirkpotency X relative to PO morphine kX ok Table oTypical dose o o o Opioid Route 24h max Bo Relative B B . . 0.1 w Codeine PO 60mg/4h 240mgw w 0.1 Dihydrocodeine 30mg/4–6h wwPO w240mg ww B Tramadol Oral morphine Oxycodone Morphine Diamorphine Fentanyl . kX o o net PO PO PO SC/IM/IV SC Topical 50mg/4h 10mg/1–4h 5mg/4–6h 5mg/1–4h 2.5mg/1–4h 25micrograms/h oo B . w ww t .ne kX 600mg N/A 400mg N/A N/A 2400micrograms oo B . ww w 0.2 1 2 2 3 100–150 t .ne X k Other symptoms Many of the treatments listed in Table 2.6 can be ww t t et information on prescribing used For.n further .nein non-palliative patients. X .nein palliative problems see E BNF and OHCM10 p. 532. X X ok ok ok o o Bo Table 2.6 Symptom B B care . w. management in palliative w w w Symptom wwTreatments w w Breathlessness O , open windows, fans, diamorphine, benzodiazepines, steroids, helium and oxygen t t (for stridor), SC furosemidenet e e Constipation E pp. 316–17, also bisacodyl n n . X. simple/codeine linctus,kmorphine X. Saline nebs, antihistamines, kXCough k o o o ice or pineapple chunks, Bo Dry mouth Chlorhexidine, .Bo(thrush)sucking .Bo consider Candida infection, synthetic w saliva w w Hiccups eg Maalox , Gavisconw , chlorpromazine, haloperidol wwAntacids, ww Itching Emollients, chlorphenamine, cetirizine, colestyramine jaundice), ondansetron t et vomiting (obstructive et Nausea/ E pp. 310–11, also levomepromazine and haloperidol.ne n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2 ® ® B .B w w .B w w wLife on the wards 94 ww w Chapter 2 t t t .ne dying patientX.ne .ne The X X ok patients who have reached ok the final stage of their illness okand are not o o Bo For B B expected to survive,. the decision may be taken by.a senior doctor to w wthe patient comfort- w withdraw active and focus on keeping wtreatment wwemotive able. Thesew decisions and discussions are highly and should be w handled with consideration and skill (E p. 92). Much emphasis has been placed better deaths foreallt dying patients (see Box 2.9). et eton achieving n n will often (but not always)Xbe.nbed- . Identifying the dying The patient Xbound with minimal oral intakekand X.reduced GCS. This simpleodefinition k k has o oo for recovery, while timescales o can be difficult specificity, with potential Bo poor B B . . to predict. Since considerable uncertainty will always effective and wpersist, ww is vital, along with regular wreview honest communication of treatment deciw w ww sions by the senior responsible clinician. Communication Wherever possible, discussions should happen with t et and their relatives well.nineadvance; et thenpatient all views should be n docu. . mented and used to draw up a care plan. Even where an illness progresses X the withdrawal of active X treatment needs to be carefully kX conok rapidly, okto discuss owithdrawal o o o sidered and every effort made with the relatives; of B .B .B care by junior staffw during out-of-hours periods should be avoided. w w Stopping w medications Administering drugs wwmay cause unnecessary ww 5 distress, particularly those aimed at prophylaxis of long-term conditions. Review all medications with a senior and stop those deemed to be unnecessary. The decision to stop antibiotics can be a particularly difficult one, but again, this is made easier by well-documented prior conversations. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o o w.B ww During our lives, the care we receive focuses on increasing both the quality and quantity of life, and with advances in modern medicine the options available for both are vast. However, as we approach death, life-prolonging treatments start to fail, therapies pursuing quantity of life become futile and therefore harmful, and the care we receive rightly focuses on quality of life instead. At these crucial junctures in life, the support we offer must be complete, flexible, and holistic, focusing on each patient’s individual physical, psychological, familial, spiritual, and social needs. In recent years, many reports have identified serious misgivings with the way this process is managed in the UK. A 2015 report from the Health Service Ombudsman found inadequacies in the recognition of dying patients, effective symptom control, communication, out-of-hours cover, and advanced care planning.6 Therefore, in 2016 the government committed to a series of ambitious and far-reaching independent recommendations striving for ‘excellence in palliative care for every dying person’.7 These include improving care quality (eg sharing best practice, investing in research, and MDTs), personalizing care (eg individualized care plans, personal budgets, care coordinators, and named consultants), better education (eg improved workforce training and community resilience programmes), and more accountability (eg CQC inspections, and quality standard frameworks). A 2017 review found good progress but expect to see significant changes in the provision of palliative care until at least 20218. et et .n kX o o o w.B ok Bo o o w.B t ok o w.B 5 6 7 8 e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n e X.n ok o B . w Mhttps://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng31 Mhttps://www.ombudsman.org.uk/publications/dying-without-dignity-0 Mhttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/choice-in-end-of-life-care-government-response Mhttps://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/645631/ Government_response_choice_in_end_of_life_care.pdf ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n ww ok .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX K Box 2.9 Current changes in end of life care ww Bo et .n kX ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w The dying patient 95w t t t Resuscitation Attempts at cardiopulmonary resuscitation in patients .ne .ne .ne X X X stage disease are inappropriate (see Box 2.9). Although k ok with end- oresponsible, ok thein derests with the senior patients must beoinvolved the o Bo cision B B . feel it would cause them .‘physical or psychoconversation unless clinicians w w logical harm’ tow w discuss it (E p. 92 and Box 2.8wp.w90). ww Investigations These may be unnecessary. This includes routine blood tests, where the outcome will not influence clinical management, but will et to the taking of nursing .observations et in the final stages of .illness. et alsonextend n n . X and fluid A loss of appetite X terminal stages of diseasekisXcommon ok Food oknotinbetheforced. o fluids should and at this stage nutrition should The intake of o oral o o B be supported as longwas.B tolerated, even if this incurs a risk .ofBaspiration. Beyond wonly where it increases w this stage, artificial (IV or SC) should be used wwhydration wwBear comfort, although regular mouth care may continue. in mind that studies w have shown no clear benefit to length or quality of life in a palliative setting. t and overuse of syringe drivers et Not all dying patients are.ninepain, et Analgesia n n . . is inappropriate. However, where present, it is vital to control pain while X oversedation (E p. 93).kX X Always exclude a treatable cause, ok avoiding opatient ok eg urinary o o o retention, constipation. If the is currently in pain give an immediate B morphine bolus (2.5– .B .Bon diamorphinedia-or 5mg SC max 1hrly if not currently w w give 1/6th ofw 24hw dose 1hrly if already on diamorphine). ww Where pain is regular ww 9 and predictable, discuss starting a syringe driver with a SC diamorphine infusion giving a total 24h dose equivalent to current cumulative opioid requirements (use Table 2.5 (E p. 93) to convert between opioids). t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X This may be a sign ok Agitation okof pain. Try PRN doses initially; okadd a syro driver (with additional PRN dose) if regular doses areorequired: Bo inge B B PRN Levomepromazine w. 12.5–25mg SC 6–12hrly,worw. w PRN Midazolam 2.5– w 5mg/4h SC max 4hrly w ww Syringe driver Levomepromazine 50–150mg/24h and/or midazolam 10– 20mg/2t4h SC (higher doses up to 60mg/ 24h may be required). t e and vomiting Continue etexisting n n Nausea antiemetics in a syringe . . .ne X X X are controllingkthe symptoms; if there is no nausea then ok driver if they oadd a syringe driver if it is needed okregularly. PRN cyclizine and o o Bo prescribe B B . required use a 5HT antagonist . (eg ondansetron).If further antiemeticsw are w PRN Cyclizine 50mg/ ww 8h SC ww ww Syringe driver Levomepromazine 5–12.5mg/24h SC. Secretions patient’s breathing may t Thewith t become rattly due to the nbuild- esecretions eupt up.of a poor cough/ se wallow reflex. Sitting the patient n n . . promptly. Xslightly may help; medication improves X the symptoms if startedkX ok Start with a PRN dose andoadd oka syringe driver if regular doses oare required: o o B PRN Glycopyrronium 200–400micrograms SC 6hrly wSC.B6hrly. w.B or hyoscine w butylbromide 20mg w w w w w 3 Syringe driver Glycopyrronium 1.2–2mg/24h SC or hyoscine butylbromide 90–120mg/24h SC. et n . kX et n . kX t .ne X k oo Database .BCochrane Further care Review the patient regularly. Ask the patient and/or rela- o Bo tives if there are any new symptoms and adjust medications accordingly. If you are unable to control symptoms, ask for a palliative care review. 9 o o B . w ww Good P, et al. Medically assisted hydration to assist palliative care patients. Syst Rev 2014;4:CD006273 . Mwww.cochrane.org/CD006273/SYMPT_medically-assisted- hydration-to-assist-palliative-care-patients w ww ww B .B w ww 96 Chapter 2 ww w Life on the wards t .ne Death X k o .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . You will often be w to declare that a patient has This is not an wbutasked ww died. urgent request, the patient cannot be w transferred to the mortuary ww w until it is done. There may be other members of staff who can do this if you are busy and unable to attend in a timely fashion. If you are uncomet doing this alone, or are .doing et it for the first time, ask another et fortable n n n . . member of staff to accompany you. X kXColleges has guidance onothekXdiagnosis ok The Academy of MedicalooRoyal o B B from which the following Bo is adapted, .advice and confirmation of .death w w but your hospital w you should follow. ww wwmay have specific guidelineswwhich 1. Confirming cardiorespiratory arrest You should the patient for a minimum of five minutes to confirm et observe et occurred: et irreversible cardiorespiratory arrest has n n n . . . X•Listen for heart sounds in two Xplaces, for one minute in each Xplace ok (total two minutes), then ok ok o o o B • Palpate over a central (carotid/femoral) for one .Bartery .B minute, then wsounds w •Listen for breath in two places, for one minute in each place w w (total twow minutes). w ww Bo B Declaring death 10 It is common to hear transmitted gastrointestinal sounds when auscultating the chest, which should be ignored. However, in a very recently deceased patient it is also not uncommon for a lone complex to appear on the ECG, or for them to take a ‘last’ (agonal) breath. This or any other spontaneous return of cardiac or respiratory activity during your period of observation should prompt a further five-minute observation from the next point of cardiorespiratory arrest, unless the patient is for active resuscitation. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X k w 2. Confirming the absence of motor response o Bo t .ne X k t et After five minutes of continued cardiorespiratory arrest confirm the absence of motor response in the patient: • Absence of the pupillary response to light; the pupils will often be dilated and they should not change when exposed to a bright light source (eg pen torch) • Absence of the corneal reflex; passing rolled up cotton wool over the edge of the cornea should not elicit a blinking response • Absence of any motor response to supra-orbital pressure; applying firm supra-orbital pressure should not elicit any motor response. o ww o w.B .ne X k oo B . w ww .n kX ww ww et et et n n n . . . X3. Documentation kX X ok The time of death is recorded o as the time at which theseocriteria ok are fulo o B filled (Fig. 2.9). Remember w.B to sign and print yourwname w.Band bleep number. w w w w w et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Academy of Medical Royal Colleges ‘A Code of Practice for the Diagnosis and Confirmation of Death’, 2010. Mhttp://www.aomrc.org.uk/publications/reports-guidance/ukdec-reports-and- guidance/code-practice-diagnosis-confirmation-death/ 10 B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo .B w w oo B . w o Bo Death t .ne X k ww et n . kX w w et o w.B .n kX o ww t ok ww et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B .B w ww ww 97w ww et et et n n n . . . X happens to the patient X after death? X ok What ok prepare okclosing the When a patient dies the o nurses the body, including: o o B curtains, lying the w body .Bflat with one pillow, closingwthe .Beyes and closing the jaw (this may need to be propped closed with a rolled towel under the w w w wthe body, using pads to absorb w chin), washing any leakage from the urethra, w vagina, or rectum, and removing attachments (eg fluids, pumps). Lines and tubes will t are not removed since these t be inspected if a post-mortem net examination patient .ne is undertaken. The X .neis completely covered withXa.sheet. X k k have been declared and the body has been ok Oncearetheytaken oo dead oo prepared, to the.B mortuary in a portable coffin. .Curtains and portBo they B able partitions arew used to try and screen this fromw other patients. ww around death ww ww Communication On occasion, it will be your duty to inform others of the death of a t This will produce strongneemotions, t lovedeone. even when the news etis .n and calls for skilful and . sensitive communication (EX.p.n24). expected, X X mentally ready break this news (ask a nurse acok Ensure youyouarewherever ok to know ok toin the o o possible), the identity of everyone Bo company B B . the notes beroom, and that the w.environment is appropriate. wStudy forehand so that you can answer questions relating to events leading up w w w w ww Fig. 2.9 Example of what to write in the notes when a patient dies. 11 to the death—if you are still unsure of details, be honest and offer to check. Ask if they would like to see the body at that time, and be clear that there will be later opportunities too. The most important element is to give those receiving the news time—both silence and emotion are completely acceptable and to be expected and should not be talked over or hurried. You will not be able to remove sorrow, but your empathy and professionalism may just help to soften a painful memory that will be mentally revisited many times in the coming months and years. t e X.n ok Bo .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww et n . X ww o w.B Always remember to inform the GP of the patient’s death, especially if it was unexpected. This is both courteous and prevents any unfortunate phone calls from the GP enquiring about the patient’s health. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o B . w ww o .ne X ok Nursing o Times B . ww Henry C, Wilson J. Personal care at the end of life and after death. 8 May 2012, available free online at: Mwww.nursingtimes.net/Journals/2012/05/08/h/i/z/120805-Innov- endoflife.pdf 11 ww w ww B .B w ww 98 Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t Medical .ne Certificate of Cause .nofe Death .ne X X X in the United Kingdom k registrar’s ok K All deaths ok must be registered withoa olocal In order for this toohappen, a doctor may issue a ‘medical certificate Bo office. B B . confusingly often referred .to as a ‘death of cause of death’ w (MCCD), certifiw cate’. Alternatively, where the cause of death isw not clear or there are any w wrequiring clarification, the coroner’s w office must be informed ww circumstances (E p. 102). In Scotland, different legislation applies and a slightly different MCCD etis used and the procurator fiscal ettakes the coroner’s role. .net n n . . Eligibility In hospital, it is ultimately the responsibilityX to ensure X but consultant’s kXthe MCCD is properly completed k it can be delegated tooakmember of o o othe patient in the last 14d of life o in Northern team who ‘attended’ (28d Bo the .toBthose .Bcare Ireland). This applies involved in the patient’s and who reliw w w and course of in-patientwstay. w Where circumstances ably know the history w ww ­require involvement of the coroner’s office/procurator fiscal (E p. 102), do not complete the MCCD unless they instruct you to do so. et the MCCD Most of the.entries et are self-explanatory: .net Completing n n . X• Name of deceased: full namekXof the deceased X ok • Date of death as statedotoome: ok eg fifteenth day of Augusto2016 o B • Age as stated to me:.B 92 years .B w eghospital, wdied • Place of death: ward, and city where w they w • Last seen w alive by me: eg fourteenth day ofw August 2016 ww B Then circle just one of these (most commonly option ‘3’): 1. The certified cause of death takes account of information obtained from post-mortem. 2. Information from post-mortem may be available later. 3. Post-mortem not being held. 4. I have reported this death to the Coroner for further action. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t o ww o w.B oo B . w .n kX t ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w .ne X ok .Bo As part of the reforms to death certification that are being proposed, the new role of Medical Examiner (Medical Reviewer in Scotland) will provide an additional source of advice (E p. 102). 12 ww ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n Bo w Then circle just one of these (most commonly option ‘a’): a. Seen after death by me. b. Seen after death by another medical practitioner but not by me. c. Not seen after death by a medical practitioner. Cause of death This can be difficult: it is important to take advice from the consultant the patient was under.12 It is important to think of this as a sequence of events leading up to the death of the patient. The pathology listed in I(a) is whatever ultimately resulted in the patient dying (eg intraventricular haemorrhage, myocardial infarction, meningococcal septicaemia); avoid using modes of death (Table 2.7) as this may lead to delays later in the process. The I(b) and I(c) entries should be the pathology/sequence of events which led up to I(a). Include pathology in II which likely contributed to death but might not have necessarily been part of the main sequence of events leading up to the death. It is not compulsory to have entries in I(b), I(c) or II and these can be left blank. Avoid abbreviations. Approximate interval between onset and death This gives the sequence of events a time frame. An example I(a) Pulmonary embolism 6 hours (b) Fractured femur 7 days (c) Osteoporosis 30 years II Ischaemic heart disease 30 years t .ne X k ok Bo t .ne X k ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Death 99w t t et The.n death might have been due to or contributed .ne to by the employmentXfollowed .ne X X by the deceased Ifkyou think the death was in any k related ok at some time oindustrial disease you should refer oway employment or an the case to o o Bo tothetheir B B coroner/procurator for their consideration.. w.Thisfiscal w wwand medical qualifica- ww Signing the certificate requires your signature w w tions, alongside which your local office will usually ask you to print your name and often your GMC number. For Residence it is acceptable to t For deaths in hospital: younalso ethet name of the hospital and.the ecity. et enter n n . . need to enter the name of the patient’s consultant at the time of death. X X kXside of ok Completing the sides Makeosure okyou complete the stubs onooeither o B the main form, copying exactly your entries off the main wIf.Byou w.B form. w Completing the back have spoken to thew coroner’s or procurator w for you to complete ww fiscal’s office,w and they have decided it is appropriate the MCCD, they may ask you to circle one of the options and initial in t the reverse of the MCCD.net box Aeon et n n . . . Post- m ortem There are two types of post- m ortem (PM): those mandated X X X ok by the coroner or procurator okfiscal, and those undertakenoafter ok a medical o o B request (a ‘hospitalwPM’). .B w.B The coroner’s PMw(Procurator fiscal in Scotland.)wUndertaken to find out wdied and to inform the decision w on whether an inquest is ww how someone B needed or not. The next of kin is informed, but not asked for permission, as the law requires a PM to be performed. A hospital PM This is usually undertaken at a doctor’s request to provide more information about an illness or the cause of death. Consent must be given by the patient before they died, or by the next of kin after their death. The hospital bereavement office can assist with this should you be asked to gain consent. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX ww Table 2.7 Causes and modes of death w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t Causes of death .ne of death (use these terms) .ne Modes .ne X X X (avoid these terms) k ok oarrhythmia ok infarction, cardiac Cardiac arrest, syncope o o Bo Myocardial B B . Sepsis, hypovolaemia, Hypotension, whaemorrhage, w.shock, off legs anaphylaxis w w w w ww Congestive cardiac failure, pulmonary Heart failure, cardiac failure, oedema failure t t ventricular e e et Bronchopneumonia, pulmonary embolism, Respiratory failure, n n n . . . asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary respiratory arrest X kX kX ok disease o o o o o Cerebrovascular accident Collapse B .B failure, uraemia w.B diabetic Liver failure, wrenal Cirrhosis, glomerulonephritis, w w nephropathyw w ww Carcinomatosis, carcinoma of the . . . Cachexia, exhaustion t t e e et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w w .B w w wLife on the wards 100 ww w Chapter 2 t t t Cremation forms .ne .ne .ne X X X individual crematoria k or regions may have slightly k different ok Statute While othey oand o o cremation forms, all follow a similar pattern very Bo looking B B . .cremation ask similar questions.wGuidance on how to complete forms is w freely availablew online, though the bereavement w office will also be able ww to guide youw and answer your questions. w Cremation form nomenclature The main form to be completed for adult cret mation Ireland)—see ‘Completing etis ‘Cremation 4’ (Form B .inneNorthern et n n . . Cremation 4’ E p. 101. The senior doctor (who must be fully registered kX>5 years) who checks and overifies kX the details in Cremation 4osubsequently kX for o o cremation ‘Cremation.B 5’ o (Form C in Northern Ireland). Bo completes .BOther forms are availablew for stillbirths, and for the cremation of body parts. w w in hospital, it is expectedwthat w the person completing ww Eligibility Forw deaths Cremation 4 treated the deceased during their last illness and to have seen the deceased within 14 days of death. Medical practitioners cometCremation et to practise et pleting 4 must hold a licence with the GMC,.n which n n . . Xincludes temporary or provisional X registration. X ok Examining the body If youooarek completing a cremation oform ok you were o B Bpatient’s identity previously required .to the body to check the w B see w.them (wrist band and physical appearance) and examine to see if they w w w which may cause a problem w during cremation (see ww have any implant 13 14 Box 2.10). Under the proposed reforms, this responsibility will transfer to the Medical Examiners. If you are required to view the body, check the notes, ECGs, and X-rays for possible implants, but also examine the patient for scars or palpable implants (pacemakers are usually, but not always, on the anterior chest wall). If you believe there is an implant, talk to the mortuary staff who will be able to remove it. Remuneration Under prior arrangements junior doctors were paid around £70 for completing the form (E p. 40); this fee is under review as part of the new reforms. Any fee comes from the patient’s relatives via the funeral director who keeps the money if you fail to take it. The reason you are paid is because this is not a standard NHS service and you are taking responsibility for the fact the body will not be able to be exhumed for evidence if there is any doubt in the future as to the cause of death. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww ww ww Box 2.10 Problematic implants for the cremation of human remains t t e X.n ok Bo e X.n ok ok o w.B ww ww t ok Bo t e X.n t e X.n • Pacemakers; implantable cardioverter defibrillators; cardiac resynchronization therapy devices; implantable loop recorder • Ventricular assist devices • Implantable drug pumps including intrathecal pumps • Neurostimulators and bone growth stimulators •Hydrocephalus programmable shunts • Any other battery-powered implant • Fixion nails (intramedullary nails for fixing long bone fractures) • Brachytherapy implants o w.B e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n ok o B . w In Scotland, the information previously contained on the cremation form will be included on the revised MCCD. Arrangements in the rest of the UK are under review. 14 Eg For England and Wales: Mwww.justice.gov.uk/downloads/burials-and-coroners/cremations/ cremation-doctors-guidance.pdf 13 ww ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Death w 101 t t et .ne .ne Completing Cremation X 4 .n X X k explanatory: ok oself- ok of the questions are o o Bo Most B B • Details of the deceased: name, address, occupation . wdeath, w. • Date and time of place of death w w • Are you aw relative of the deceased? w ww • Have you, so far as you are aware, any pecuniary interest in the death of the deceased? et you et practitioner? Generally it .isnthe et n n • .Were the deceased’s usual medical . X Xas the usual medical practitioner GP who is regarded kXlast ok • patient’s oyouk attended otheir Please state for how long the deceased during o o o B illness? eg 5 days .B wthe.Bdeceased’s death w • Please state w thew number of days and hours before w w saw them alive? eg 1 day, 12 hours w w that you last • Please state the date and time that you saw the body of the deceased and that you made of tthe body? eg date, time, external etthe examination echeck et n n n examination to confirm identify.and for implantable devices . . X your medical notes, andkX X the observations of yourself andkothers ok • From oplease immediately before andoatothe time of the deceased’s death, o o B B and other conditions whichw Byour conclusions describe the symptoms led.to wof .death. about the cause Outline the symptoms in the period leading w w ww up to thew patient’s death; include the datew of admission to hospital B • Has a post-mortem examination been made? Usually the answer to this is no, but if it has, tick yes and give details • Please give the cause of death. Copy what appears on the MCCD • Did the deceased undergo any operation in the year before their death? If yes, give brief details • Do you have any reasons to believe that the operation(s) shortened the life of the deceased? If yes, the case should be discussed with your seniors/Medical Examiner/coroner’s office/procurator fiscal • Please give the name and address of any person who nursed the deceased during their last illness. Usually enter the name of the sister responsible for the ward where the patient died, eg Sister Jayne Smith, Ward 26 • Were there any persons present at the moment of death? If yes, give details, as above • If there were persons present at the moment of death, did those persons have any concerns regarding the cause of death? If yes, give details • In view of your knowledge of the deceased’s habits and constitution do you have any doubts whether about the character of the disease or condition which led to the death? Yes or no • Have you any reason to suspect the death of the deceased was: violent (yes or no) or unnatural (yes or no)? • Have you any reason at all to suppose a further examination of the body is desirable? If yes, give details • Has the coroner been informed about the death? If yes, give details • Has there been any discussion with a coroner’s office about the death of the deceased? If yes, give details • Have you given the certificate required for the registration of death? If no, give the details of who has completed the MCCD • Was any hazardous implant placed in the body? See Box 2.10. • If yes, has it been removed? Yes or no • Sign, date, and enter your contact details. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 102 Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t Death coroner .ne certification, registrars, .neexaminers, and the X .ne X X in registering a death k If a medical practitioner ocompletes k the ok Steps involved onext o o this is given to the of kin, usually by the bereavement office; Bo MCCD, B B .complete a MCCD, the coroner . sends the relevant if the doctor cannot w w paperwork directly w to the registrar after establishing w a cause of death to the w best of his/w her satisfaction, through a post-w mortem and/or investigation w and/or inquest. Only once the registrar has the relevant paperwork can the t entered into the register andneatdeath certificate issued to thennext deathebe et n . . of.kin, permitting a burial or cremation to take place. X Certification Reforms Inkresponse X to the Shipman InquirykX more ok Death o o o oo AllandMCCDs recently the Francis Inquiry, a new system is being introduced. B B B . . will be scrutinizedw by a Medical Examiner, who will wbe able to make cer- w wcase tain changesw tow the MCCD after examiningw the notes or talking to w staff involved in the patients care and to the individual who initially completed tthe MCCD, if the cause of deatht is inaccurate. Junior doctors may eto their local Medical Examiner ebefore completing the MCCD efort speak n n n . . . guidance. Any case which would normally have been referred to the corX X kXcoroner, but if not accepted ok oner will still be referredotoothe okby the coro o oner will then be subsequently scrutinized by the Medical Examiner. The B w.BExaminer system is to:wensure w.Bmore accurate re- w purpose of the Medical w porting of disease w processes; to better identify w unusual patterns of death w B which may have public health or local clinical governance implications; to ensure the individual completing the MCCD understands the cause of death; and to provide an opportunity to raise other matters which might require the death to be reported to the coroner. Medical Examiner These are medical practitioners from any speciality background who are licensed to practise by the GMC and with at least 5 years’ experience. As well as scrutinizing MCCD and guiding doctors to complete these, they will also discuss the cause of death with the family and act on any additional information the family provides. They will work closely with the coroner’s service and registrations services, and feed information back to clinical governance structures to aid in future healthcare planning and provision. The Coroner The coroner15 is a government official and is usually a lawyer but may have joint degrees in law and medicine; their job is to investigate a death when the cause of death is unknown or cannot readily be certified as being due to natural causes (see E ‘A death should be referred to HM Coroner if:’ p. 103). The Coroner’s Office This is staffed by Coroner’s Officers. They are not usually medically or legally qualified and are often serving, or ex-police officers. They take the majority of enquiries, and will filter which cases are escalated to the coroner. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . X ww o w.B The term ‘coroner’ as used here applies to the coronial service in use in England and Wales and Northern Ireland, as well as the role of the Procurator Fiscal in Scotland. Although these are all covered by different legislation, the same basic roles and rules apply. Likewise the new role of ‘Medical Examiner’ in England and Wales is equivalent to ‘Medical Reviewer’ in Scotland. 15 Bo o et n . kX et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Death w 103 t et nethet Making Any.ncase which meets the criteria.in .ne a referral to the coroner X X X be referred to the coroner’s office for their consideration; ok box should okcoroner’s okit is approdiscussing the case,othe officer may suggest o Bo after B B priate for the referring w. doctor to complete the MCCD. w. Occasionally the w coroner’s officer will either take over the case,w or wish to discuss it dirw wcoroner first, and in these situations w the MCCD should not w ectly with the be completed by the referring doctor unless instructed to do so. et or not to refer? If you are.inneanyt doubt about whether to.nrefer et To .refer, n Xto the coroner or not, speak first to your seniors, or the local XMedical ok Examiner for advice. ookX ok o o B .B wbe w.Bif: A death should referred to HM Coroner w w w w ww • the cause of death is unknown • it cannot certified as beingt due to natural causes t be readily edeceased et • the was not attended n byethe doctor during his/her last n n . . . illness or was not seen within the last 14 days or viewed after death X X kX or history of violence ok • there are any suspicious ocircumstances ok o o o • the death may be .linked to an accident (whenever.B it occurred) B w Bof self-neglect or neglect w • there is any question by others w w • the deathw has occurred or the illness arisen w during or shortly ww B after detention in police or prison custody (including voluntary attendance at a police station) the deceased was detained under the Mental Health Act the death is linked with an abortion the death might have been contributed to by the actions of the deceased (such as a history of drug or solvent abuse, self-injury, or overdose) the death could be due to industrial disease or related in any way to the deceased’s employment the death occurred during an operation or before full recovery from the effects of an anaesthetic or was in any way related to the anaesthetic (in any event a death within 24 hours should normally be referred) the death may be related to a medical procedure or treatment whether invasive or not the death may be due to lack of medical care there are any other unusual or disturbing features to the case the death occurred within 24 hours of admission to hospital (unless the admission was purely for terminal care) it may be wise to report any death where there is an allegation of medical mismanagement.16 t • .ne • X k oo • • o oo B . w • • • • o ww o w.B t t .ne X k w t e X• .n ok Bo oo B . ww ww t .ne X k • Bo et .n kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k t ww et n . X ww k oo oo B B . . This note is for guidancew only, it is not exhaustive and in part may represent w desired local practice rather than the statutory requirements. If in any doubt, contact the coroner’s office for further w w w w ww advice. et etot Law and Practice et n n n Coroners’ Courts: A .Guide . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Taken from: Dorries, C. University Press, 2014. 16 , 3rd edition, Oxford B 104 .B w ww Chapter 2 o oo B . w ww w Life on the wards t .ne Nutrition X k Bo .B w w t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o A patient’s nutritional state has a huge effect on their well-being, mood, compliance with treatment, and ability to heal. You should consider ­alternative nutrition for all patients without a normal oral diet for over 48h. IV fluids are only for hydration, they are not nutrition. See Table 2.8 (E p. 105) for nutritional requirements. ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . XOral Most patients manage to consume sufficient quantitieskofXhospital ok food to stay healthy. If onotok(egXdue to inability to feedoself, o increased o demand due to malnutrition) ­ consider simple remedies, eg assisted B B B . . feeding, favouritew foods from home, medicationswfor reflux/heartburn w w w (E p. 300)w or nausea (E p. 188). If theyw are still not consuming ad- w equate nutrition then discuss with the dietician who can advise on nutritional supplements and high-energy drinks. t e et procedure) This is a good.nshort- et n n . . Nasogastric (NG) (E p. 563 for insertion X measure, however placing X may be uncomfortablekX some ok term okthethetubetubeuncomfortable o o ooit is and people find the sensation of once in. Liquid B B B . . foods and most oral medicines (except slow-release w and enteric-coated w ww preparations) can be given via NG tube; advicew regarding medications via w w this route may be required from a pharmacist. Tubes can also be endo- w scopically placed naso-jejunally if required, eg gastric outlet obstruction. Gastrostomy endoscopic gastrostomy), net Often called ‘PEGs’X(percutaneous net net . . . X X are a good long-term k of feeding for patients k cannot ok theseorally. o method o who They are typically sited endoscopically, though surgical and o o Bo feed B B radiological approaches possible (a radiologically inserted w. Itareis also w. gastrostomy is referred to asw a RIG). possible to placew a jejunostomy if required. w w ww Enteral feeding (via the gut) Parenteral feeding (via the blood) o Bo Parenteral nutrition (PN) or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) requires central access because extravasation of the feed causes severe skin irritation. Central access can be via a long-line (eg peripherally inserted central catheter) or central line (eg Hickman). It is used when the patient cannot tolerate sufficient enteral feeds (eg short gut syndrome) or when gut rest is required. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww There is significant risk associated with PN use including line insertion, line infection, embolism/thrombosis, and electrolyte abnormalities. It is essential to monitor blood electrolytes regularly including Ca2+, PO43–, Mg2+, zinc, and trace elements, particularly in those starting PN after a period of malnutrition (see next paragraph). t e X.n .ne X k t et n . X ww k ok Refeeding syndromeoo oo feeds must Bo After a prolonged w B of malnutrition or parenteral B period nutrition, . . welectrolyte imbalance, be reintroduced slowly (over a few days) to prevent particularly dPO ww . It can be fatal but is entirely wwavoidable if blood tests ww are checked daily during the at-risk period (for 3–5d, until full feeding rate ­established) et and any electrolyte abnormalities et are corrected promptly..net n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 3– 4 B .B w ww .B w w w w Nutritional requirements w 105 t t t .ne .ne .ne Nutritional requirements X X X ok ok ok o o requirements Bo Table 2.8 Nutritional B B w. w. Deficiency w w Name Sources Daily requirement w w ww Carbohydrate Almost all foods 300g Malnutrition Proteint dairy, vegetables, 50g Kwashiorkor t e Meat, et grain n n . . .ne X X X Fat Nuts, meat, dairy, oily 56g Malnutrition k ok ok foods oo o Bo Calcium Dairy,wleafy B .Bvegetables . 1g Osteoporosis w seafood, enriched 150micrograms ww Hypothyroid ww Iodine wFish, w salt Iron Meat, vegetables, grains 15mg Anaemia t t et Dairy, leafy vegetables,.ne420mg Magnesium Cramps ne n . . meat X X X ok Potassium Fruits, vegetables ok 3.5g ok Hypokalaemia o o o B Selenium Meat, fish, vegetables 55micrograms .B Keshan disease w.Bfoods, w Hyponatraemia Sodium Processed salt 2.4g w w ww ww B Zinc Cereals, meat t Vitamin .ne A (retinoid) X k B oo Vitamin (thiamine) 1 o Bo 11mg et .n kX Dairy, yellow or green 900micrograms leafy vegetables, liver, fish Bread, cereals 1.2mg oo B . Meat,w dairy, bread ww o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k .ne X k t o o w.B ww ww et n . kX w ww ww et .n kX Neurological problems, paraesthesia Anaemia ww Dermatitis et n . X Anaemia ok oAnaemia B . w Scurvy o o B . w ww Pellagra oo B . w ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k oo B . ww Ariboflavinosis Vitamin B2 1.3mg (riboflavin) Vitamin B3 Meat, fish, bread 16mg (niacin) Vitamin B5 Meat, egg, grains, potato, 5mg (pantothenic vegetables acid) Vitamin B6 Meat, fortified cereals 1.7mg (pyridoxine) Vitamin B7 Liver, fruit, meat 30micrograms (biotin) Vitamin B9 Bread, leafy vegetables, 400micrograms (folate) cereals Vitamin B12 Meat, fish, fortified 2.4micrograms (cobalamin) cereals Vitamin C Citrus fruits, tomato, 200mg (ascorbic acid) green vegetables Vitamin D Fish, liver, fortified 5–15micrograms cereals Vitamin E Vegetables, nuts, fruits, 15mg cereals Vitamin K Green vegetables, cereals 120micrograms t .ne X k Hair/skin problems Night blindness Beriberi Rickets/ osteomalacia None ww t .ne X ok iPT .Bo ww B 106 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Difficult patients X X X ok okexcessive alcohol consumption okcan present o o PatientsBwith Bo Alcoholism B . with a range of problems, either directly related tow their alcohol abuse or w. dependency w w to unmasking of alcohol during enforced abstinence during ww w w their admission for unrelated medical problems. The assessment and management of these patients is discussed on E p. 372. et patients They often take.nmany et medications, making interactions et n n Elderly . . X side effects more common.kX X doses Declining renal function meansk ok and oexcreted o lower may be needed for renally drugs. Likewise, elderly patients are o o o B B IV fluids. Other more prone to heart.B w failure from fluid boluses/wexcessive w.higher problems include: increased susceptibility to infections; pain threshold w w w or other acute pathology); w atypical disease (can mask fractures presenta- w tions; poor thermoregulation (easily develop hypothermia); malnourishmente(ift unable to obtain/prepare food); history taking can be difficult et with etif n n n . hard of hearing. Elderly patients can.suffer ­depression and other.psychiX illness (E p. 380) and social X X ok atric ok circumstances must alwaysobekconsidered o prior to discharge—liaise o with OT, physiotherapy, and socialoservices. B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Aggression and violence w 107 t t t .ne .ne .ne Aggression and violence X X X ok majority of patientsohave ok respect for NHS staff; however, ok under o Bo The B B certain circumstances. anyone can become aggressive:. w • Pain (E pp. 88–91) ww ww (E pp. 374–5) ww • Reversiblew confusion or delirium, eg hypoglycaemia • Dementia (E pp. 376–7) • Inadequate fear/frustration et communication/ et (E p. 20) et n n n • .Intoxication (medications, alcohol, recreational drugs) . . XMental illness or personalitykdisorder X (E pp. 378–81). kX ok •The o Ask a nurse o when aso o oyou aggressive patient to accompany B sessing aggressive w B .B Position yourselves . patients. between the exit and the w that other staff know where wyouware. The majority of ww patient and ensure w w patients can be calmed simply by talking; try to elicit why they are angry and ask specifically about pain and worry. Be calm but firm and do not t make threats. If this does not t offer an oral sedative orngive shouteor ehelp, et n n . . . emergency IV sedation (E p. 370) or call hospital security. X X kX fear, ok The aggressive relative okRelatives may be aggressiveoothrough o o They usually respond.B to talking, though B frustration, and/orwintoxication. .B w discussing their w make sure you obtain consent from the patient before w w medical details. w Consider offering to arrange w a meeting with a senior w B doctor. If the relative continues to be aggressive, remember that your duty of care to patients does not extend to their relatives; you do not have to tell them anything or listen to threats/abuse. In extreme cases you can ask security or police to remove the relative from the hospital. Violence Assault (the attempt or threat of causing harm) and battery (physical contact without consent) by a patient or relative is a criminal offence. If you witness an assault or are assaulted yourself, inform your seniors and fill in an incident form including the name and contact details of any witnesses. If no action is taken on your behalf, inform the police yourself. Abuse Abuse is a violation of an individual’s human and civil rights and may consist of a single act or repeated actions. It may be physical, sexual, financial, psychological, or through neglect. Patients of any age can be abused. Do not be afraid of asking patients how they sustained injuries or asking directly if someone caused them. Inform a senior if you suspect a patient has been abused (see Box 2.11). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww K Box 2.11 Safeguarding and protection t e X.n ok Bo t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et n . X As a doctor you will often meet your patients at their most vulnerable moments. In most instances, the forces of nature will have conspired to weaken the individual to bring them to this point. But in sad and rare cases, vulnerable individuals are not afforded the protection they need, and a presentation to acute healthcare services may be a manifestation of abuse. Two groups are particularly at risk: vulnerable adults (those in need of community services because of mental or other illness, disability or age) and children. While government policy on protecting these groups continues to evolve, and new statutory regulations are likely to be introduced, your local healthcare organization should have clear policies on child protection and adult safeguarding. In all instances, your first and most important action if you believe a patient may be subject to any form of abuse is to bring your concerns to the attention of your consultant. et n . kX o Bo .ne X k ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 108 .B w ww Chapter 2 Life on the wards .B w w ww w t t t .ne stick injuries .ne .ne Needle- X X X k conok okneedle-stick injuries without oserious doctors have received o o Bo Many B B sequences (see Table. 2.9). However, if you have just. been exposed, get advice as soonw as w possible. ww w w ww Immediately Stop what t you are doing. If it is urgent, t phone your senior/colleague tto e e do.n it.eYour future health is your top priority. n n X.sharp) Squeeze around thekwound X. so exposure (needlekor kXPercutaneous o o o that blood comes out and wash with soap and water; avoid scrubbing or o Bo pressing the woundwdirectly. B .Bo . w Mucocutaneous w exposure (eyes, nose, mouth) Rinse ww with water (or 1L of ww 0.9% saline w through a giving set for eyes/nose). Within hour et anshould: et et A .colleague n n n . . X• Talk to the patient alone, explain X what has happened and ask Xabout ok risk factors: ok ok o o o B injecting drugs, blood transfusions, tattoos or piercings in w.Bunprotected w.inBlast 3mth, foreign countries, sex (particularly in w w a developing w country or, if male, with awman), prior testing for ww • hepatitis B+C or HIV and the results • Ask to take a blood sample for testing for hepatitis B+C and HIV. t t et .nshould: .ne .ne You X X X health ok • Phone occupational okif during office hours or go tooothek ED and o their advice exactly Bo • follow B . in the patient’s notes and complete .B an Document the event w w incident form. ww ww ww Post-exposure prophylaxis t be prescribed antiretrovirals t(triple therapy, within 1h), nhepaYou may et titis 24h), .nBeimmunoglobulin (within X .neor hepatitis B booster (within . 24h) X X ok according to the significance okof the exposure. There is currently ok no post- o forohepatitis C. Bo exposure prophylaxis B B . wassociated w. Table 2.9 Viruses with needle-stickw injuries w w Hepatitis B wHepatitis C HIV ww UK prevalence <0.1% et risk <0.5% et <0.5% et n n Transmission 1 in 3 (without vaccine) 1 in 50 1 in 300.n . . X X Vaccines at k None kX ok Vaccination o 1, 2, +or12mth oNone o o o Post- e xposure Immunoglobulin booster None Triple therapy B .B .B w w ww ww ww Over the next few weeks et n . kX o Bo The patient’s blood tests should take <2d for HIV and hepatitis B+C results. Following high-risk exposure you may be advised to have a blood test in the future (2–6mth); during this time you should practise safe sex (condoms) and not donate blood. You cannot be forced to have an HIV test. Discuss with occupational health about involvement in surgery. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Pre-op assessment w 109 t t t .ne op assessment .ne .ne Pre- X X X ok ookp clinics well before their operation ok to: patients attend pre- o o Bo Elective B B . operation?) • Assess the patient’s. problem (ie do they still need the w fitness for an anaesthetic w • Gauge their medical andw surgery w wpre-op investigations (see NICEwguidelines, Table 2.10) ww • Request any • Check consent (this should only be obtained by the surgeon performing theeprocedure or a person competent t etto undertake it, E p. 128).net n n • .Answer any questions the patient may have. . X X X ok Pre-op investigationsooSeekTable 2.10. ok o o B Table 2.10 Preoperative w.B investigations* ww.B w w w ww Ix Indication FBC All major surgery, or intermediate surgery if CVS or renal disease. Sickle-ect ell All patients with a positive family et history of sickle cell disease .net n n . . U+E If at risk of AKI plus (i) ASA 1 X X and major surgery, (ii) ASAk2Xand intermediate surgery ok okor (iii) ASA 3/4 and minor surgery o o o ofailure, B B B Clotting (i) intermediate/ major surgery if ASA 3/4 with.liver or . w taking an oral anticoagulantww (ii) in a patient w wpatients with diabetes and no HbA1c w in last 3mth ww HbA1c All † β-hCG ECG Urine β-hCG if any doubt whether a patient may be pregnant If (i) minor surgery, ASA 3/4 and none in last 12mth, (ii) intermediate surgery and cardiovascular, renal or diabetic disease and ASA 2 or (iii) major surgery, >65yr, and none in last 12mth Echo Any patient with a either (i) signs/symptoms of heart failure or (ii) a murmur with SOB, presyncope, syncope, or chest pain PFT/ABG Discuss with anaesthetist if intermediate or major surgery and ASA 3/4 due to known or suspected respiratory disease. t .ne et kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et ww et *NICE guidelines: Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG45 † Surgeries are either minor (eg skin excision, breast abscess), intermediate (eg inguinal hernia, varicose vein excision, tonsillectomy, knee arthroscopy), or major (eg hysterectomy, discectomy, prostate resection, joint replacement, lung operations, colonic resection). American Society of Anaesthesiologists Physical Status Classification. ASA 1 (healthy), ASA 2 (mild systemic disease), ASA 3 (severe disease) or ASA 4 (life-threatening severe disease). .n kX o .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww ww Requesting blood pre-op Each hospital will have guidelines on the transfusion requirements for most elective operations; become familiar with these. Blood for transfusion is in limited supply and should only be cross-matched when necessary. Table 2.11 shows common blood requirements for elective surgery. t t e X.n ok Bo ok o w.B ww t e X.n e X.n ok o w.B Table 2.11 Summary of operations and blood requirements ww ww Blood request Operation Minor day-case surgery (carpal tunnel, peripheral lipoma) No request Group and save Laparoscopy, appendicectomy, cholecystectomy, hernia, hysterectomy, liver biopsy, mastectomy, varicosity, thyroid X-match 2units Colectomy, arthroplasty, laparotomy, TURP, hip replacement X-match 4units Abdominoperineal resection, hepatic/pancreatic surgery X-match 6units Aneurysm repair (book ICU bed post-op) t t e X.n ok Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX e X.n ok ww o B . w ww t e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B 110 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t Patients .ne with medical problems .ne .ne X X X pp. 334–6) Put the patient on the operating list.k ok DM (E oifkpatientsfirsthave o oo pain, an unInform the anaesthetist had recent chest Bo CVS B B . . diagnosed murmur, or symptoms of heart failure. The anaesthetist w an Echo or may see the patient w personally. may w want you to request w w w the anaesthetist as these w Rheumatoid w arthritis/ankylosing spondylitis Inform patients may be difficult to intubate or have an unstable C-spine—the anaesthetist et may want to see the .patient et or request radiological imaging. et n n n . . Contacting the anaesthetist/ I CU Find out the anaesthetist for your X list and tell them aboutkany X patients who may need further kXinvestigaok patient’s o o o o o tions or a review preoperatively. an ICU bed post-op B .B If your patient will need .B inform ICU well in w advance (contact details available w from the anaesthetic dew w partment office) w and confirm with ICU on the day w that the bed is still available. ww Special circumstances t steroids must have nextra Steroids (E p. 179) Patients takingeregular et cover etif n steroid during surgery and.nbe converted to IV preparations . . X Discuss each patient’skneeds X with your team and the anaesthetist. X ok NBM. o be stopped ok with Anticoagulants Warfarin should at least 5d preoperatively, o o o B .B heart valves a target INR of <1.5.for w B most surgery; those with420–2). wprosthetic may need IV/Sw C heparin cover instead (E pp.w DOACs 1d w w risk surgery or 2d beforewhigh bleedingStop before low bleeding risk surgery, ex- w B cept in CKD patients (CrCl <50mL/min) on dabigatran who need it holding for 2d (low bleeding risk surgery) or 4d (high bleeding risk surgery). Seek haematology advice if unsure. Those needing spinal/epidural anaesthetics may have different rules—discuss with the anaesthetist. Antiplatelets Clopidogrel must be stopped 7–10d before surgery; aspirin is usually continued unless otherwise instructed by senior surgeon (if in doubt check with the operating surgeon/consultant). Oestrogens and progestogens HRT can be continued as long as DVT/PE prophylaxis is undertaken. Progestogen-only contraceptives can be continued, but combined oral contraceptives should be stopped 4wk prior to surgery and alternative means of contraception used. Bowel preparation See Table 2.12 E p. 111. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o t .ne X k t .ne X k w t .ne X k ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . w to check include: w save yourself timew any allergies. Things w later. Document Prophylactic anticoagulation (E pp. 420–2). ww w w Antibiotics Consider pre-op antibiotics (check local guidelines). Bowel preparation and IV fluid (E p. 111). etdrugs Review etup those which should be.nconet Regular these and write n n . . Xtinued in hospital (stop COCP, Xclopidogrel as above, etc). kX ok TED stockings Prescribe these okfor all patients. o o oo The anaesAnalgesia and antiemetics (E pp. 88–91 and E pp. 310–11) B B B . . w thetist will usuallyw write these up during the operation. wwfor the patient ww ww Instructions • Where and when to go for admission (write this down for them) t usually be on clear fluidsneatt • If they to have bowel prep, theyeshould et24harebefore n n . . . least the operation (E p. 113) X• Tell the patient about any drains, X X k k k NG tubes or catheters which may be o inserted during the operation oo oo Bo • Tell B B . . them if theyw are being admitted to ICU post- wop. ww ww ww Bo Writing the drug chart Try and do this at pre-admission clinic to B .B w ww .B w w w Bowel preparation 111 ww t t t .ne preparation .ne .ne Bowel X X X ok okGI surgery procedures, patients ok are given endoscopy and some o o Bo Before B B laxatives to clear the.bowel (Table 2.12). For surgery, aim is to rew op anastomotic leak andwinfections. w. theAccumulating duce the risk ofwpost- w that it does not improve wcomplication rates and may ww evidence suggests o Bo even be harmful,17 hence use of bowel preparation prior to surgery is declining. Check your local policy for guidance. Where bowel preparation is required, it is vital that patients are instructed properly and the importance of good compliance is stressed. For example, during colonoscopy inadequate bowel preparation can lead to pathology being missed or the procedure being aborted (see Box 2.12). et n . kX t et n . kX oo e X.n ok o w.B w.B w w w for bowel preparation ww Table 2.12wProcedures and the potential need Boweltpreparation Procedure e et et n n n None OGD, ERCP, closure (reversal) ileostomy . . . X X haemorrhoidectomy, examination X Anal k enema ok Phosphate o fissure, ok under anaesthetic (sigmoid colon/rectum/ o o o (on day of surgery) B area), flexible sigmoidoscopy w.Bperianal w.B Full bowel prep w Colonoscopy, rectopexy, w right hemi-/left hemi-/ w wanterior resection, ww (see Box 2.12) sigmoid/pancolectomy, abdominoperineal resection, Hartmann’s reversal t t t e .n .ne .ne X X X ok Box 2.12 Full bowelopreparation ok ok o Bo A variety of oralwbowel B B UK. In . cleansing products are available . anin the wissued 2009, the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) alert in rew w sponse to safety w incidents including a reported w death following bowel ww o Bo preparation. In particular, patients at risk of renal impairment and electrolyte imbalance need careful identification and prescribing. • Sodium picosulfate/magnesium citrate combinations (eg Picolax®) give excellent bowel preparation and are relatively acceptable to patients; they are relatively contraindicated in those with stage 4 or 5 CKD or those at risk of electrolyte imbalance, cardiac or liver failure • Polyethylene glycols/macrogols (eg Klean-Prep®, MoviPrep®) require large volumes of liquid to be drunk, but are safer in at-risk groups. Consider admitting elderly patients and those with comorbidities for IV fluids and monitoring during bowel preparation. Oral medications should not be taken 1h before or after administration of bowel cleansing preparations; where reduced absorption could prove catastrophic (eg immunosuppressives post- transplant) consider admission for IV ­administration. Advise patients taking the OCP to take alternative precautions during the week following taking the bowel preparation. Offer patients written dietary advice on low-residue foods for the 2d prior to their procedure (local documents should be available); those taking insulin will require specific advice and guidance for management. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B ok Bo o Bo .ne X k t ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X .ne X ok .Bo Cochrane Guenaga K, et al. Mechanical bowel preparation for elective colorectal surgery. Database Syst Rev 2005;1:CD001544. 17 ww ok o o w.B ww et n . kX oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n et .ne X k w ww ww B 112 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Surgical terminology X X X ok ok ok o o Bo Prefix/suffix Meaning B B w. and example ww. Angio- Relating to a vessel w w Angioplasty—reconstruction ofwa blood vessel ww Chol- Relating to the biliary system t Cholecystitis—inflammation e et of the gallbladder et n n n . . . Hemi- Meaning half of something X Xexcising half the colon X Hemicolectomy— ok Hystero- othekuterus ok o o o Relating to B B Hysterectomy— removal of the uterusw. w.B w w Lapar- to the abdomen w Relating w ww Laparotomy—opening the abdomen Nephr- Relating to the kidney t et e to the kidney et Nephrotoxic—damaging n n n . . . X Total/every X ok Pan- ok complete removal of the colonookX Pancolectomy— o o B Per- Going .B w.Bthrough agstructure Percutaneous— oing through the skinw w w w Near or around a structure w ww Peri- B net Proct- . kXPyelo- o o Thoraco- Trans- o Bo t -ectomy .ne X k -gram -olith t e X.n -oscope -ostomy -otomy -plasty et n . kX o Bo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o o w.B t .ne X k ww w t ww -itis ok Bo Perianal—near the anus/around the anus Relating to the rectum Proctoscopy—examination of the rectum Relating to the renal pelvis Pyelonephritis—inflammation of the renal pelvis Relating to the thorax Thoracotomy—opening the thorax Going across a structure Transoesophageal—across the oesophagus Surgical excision Nephrectomy—removal of a kidney A radiological image often using contrast medium Angiogram—contrast study of arteries Inflammation of an organ Pyelonephritis—inflammation of the renal pelvis Stone-like Faecolith—solid, stone-like stool A device for looking inside the body Sigmoidoscope—device for looking into the distal colon An artificial opening between two cavities or to the outside Colostomy—opening of the colon to the skin Cutting something open Craniotomy—opening the cranium (skull) Reconstruction of a structure Myringoplasty—repair of the tympanic membrane .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX ww .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Preparing in-patients for surgery w 113 t t t .ne .ne for surgery X.ne Preparing in- p atients X X ok ok ok o o Bo Checklist B B . Before your patient goes to theatre, you have a responsibility to check w. wwbeen w the followingw have done: w ww • The consent form has been signed by the patient and surgeon • The patient has been seen by the anaesthetist t eoperation ebyt the surgeon (imperative if.ntheet • The site has been marked n n . . operation could be bilateral, eg inguinal repair) Xare in thehernia X kX• The preoperative blood results k notes o o ok o o o preoperative ECG and/or CXR are available .B B •• The w.BTED stockings, and antibiotics w have been Prophylactic LMWH, w w<12h prescribedw where relevant (do not give heparin pre-op if having w ww spinal/epidural) • The patient received bowel preparation necessary t has epatient et (see ifnext et • .The has been adequately.fasted section) n n n . • Blood has been crossmatched and is available if required (E pp. 412–17) X X X ok • Check if the patient hasoany oklast-minute questions or concerns ok and is o o still happy to proceed B .Bwith the operation. w.B wand Oral fluids pre- post-op w w ww ww In general, patients should not eat for at least 6h before going to theatre but can have clear fluids until 2h. In emergencies this rule may be overruled, but the risk of aspiration of gastric contents will be increased. net net net . . . X X X are having an operation preparation, k which requires boweloallowed k while ok If patients local guidelines as o toowhat oral intake the patient is o Bo check B B taking the laxatives, usually . it is either clear fluidswonly. or a low-residue diet (E p. 111).ww w w Nil by mouth w (NBM) Patients cannot have anyw oral food or significant fluid w intake; hydration must be maintained with IV fluids. However, oral medit antiarrhythmics) may be ntaken catione(eg a sip of water, if not taking et with et .n would put the patient at more . risk. .nsuch them Non-essential medication X X X k omitted; check with your seniors. k supplements mayobe ok as vitamin oblack o o fluids Include non- c arbonated drinks such as black tea, coffee, Bo Clear B B water, squash drinks w.(not milk or fruit juice). ww. w w w hour orally, usually given w Sips 30mL water/ for the first day after major w abdominal surgery involving bowel anastomoses. t This includes food such asnsoup Soft diet jelly. Once patients have etolerating et and ebet n n . . . been clear fluids postoperatively for at least 24h, they may X X ok allowed to start a soft diet.ookX ok o o B Most patients canwsafely .B drink clear fluids up to 2hwbefore .B surgery. The following increase the risk of aspiration: w w • Pregnancyw w ww Being elderly Obesity Stomach disorders, eg hiatus hernia, reflux Pain (+ opioids). et n . kX o Bo • • • • et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 114 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Booking theatre lists X X X ok ok ok o o Bo Box 2.13 Elective B B w. lists w. w w In some centres w this is done by the surgeon w or their secretary, how- ww ever in many places this task may fall to the surgical FP trainee. If you are required book elective lists thist will likely be electronically using et systemtowhich e training for (very occasionally et a.local you should .receive n n n . X systems are still in place). X You should find out aboutkyour X ok paper ok lists. o local procedures for bookingoelective o o B Bthe list with your consultant/ Discuss the order of egistrar (you may w.operating w.rB need to obtain the list from your consultant’s secretary or w w w ww direct fromw theatre). The list usually must be submitted by the afternoon before the operating et day. You should include:.net et n •.n Theatre number . X X of the consultant surgeon kX ok •• Name oknumber, and location of eachoopatient Name, sex, age, hospital o o B .B • Special patient requirements (eg DM, blood requested, w.B ICU bed booked) ww w wand side in full (eg open repairwleft inguinal hernia) ww • Operation • Sign and leave your bleep number • If the order of the list needs to be changed, contact theatres and inform them as soon as possible. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok okorder of operations ook o the Bo Box 2.14 Booking B . .B w w In general, surgeons tend to prefer a specific order of patients: ww before younger (except children) ww ww • Older patients • Patients with comorbidities (eg DM) before healthy • Clean before dirty (eg bowel t resection) t et operations ebefore n n •Longer, more complex operations shorter. . . .ne X X X ok okemergency operationsook o Bo 3 Box 2.15 wBooking B . .B wregistrar •Ensure you w discuss the case with the ST1/2w and on-call w on the list ww and that w they have agreed to put the patient •Enter the patient’s details as previously outlined, noting the time at which the patient last ate • Inform the anaesthetist covering the emergency theatre about the patient (usually the on-call anaesthetic registrar) • Check the patient has been consented and make sure the results of any relevant investigations are available (including a G+S sample and a pregnancy test in women of child-bearing age) •You also need to inform the theatre coordinator. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w wSurgical instruments 115 ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Surgical instruments X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B (a) (b) w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n . . (c) (d).n X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww (e) (f) et n . X (g) ok Bo Bo ok o B . w ww Needle-holders Scissors Dissecting forceps Tissue forceps et X.n ok o o o w.B ww t .ne X k ww w t et .ne X k .ne X k o o w.B (n) ww oo B . ww (j) oo B . w .n kX ww (m) t e X.n ok Bo .n kX (k) ww (l) o B . w ww et oo B . w t .ne X k t .ne X ok (a) Mayo (b) Halsey (c) curved (d) McIndoe (e) non-toothed (f) toothed (g) Allis (h) Littlewoods ww (i) Bo et n . X(h) t ww et n . X ok (o) ww o w.B ww (i) Mosquito Halstead (j) Spencer Wells t t forceps (k) Kocher’seartery e et n n n . . . (l) Langenbeck (m) Morris (n) Doyen (o) Deaver Retractors X X X ok Fig. 2.10 Surgical instruments. ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Haemostatic forceps B 116 .B w ww Chapter 2 Life on the wards .B w w ww w t t t .ne operating theatre .ne .ne The X X X ok ok ok o design Bo Bo Theatre B . . Operating theatres an operating area, awscrubbing-up area, a wwainclude w preparationw room, sluice (area for dirty equipment and dirty laundry), ww w and an anaesthetic room. There will also be a whiteboard (to document date, operation, and number of swabs/blades/sutures used), a display etfor viewing radiology, and an.narea et to write up the operation.nnotes et system n . and histopathology forms. Above the operating table, there are usually X X more mobile units (satellites). X ok main sets of lights, as welloasoksmaller, ok o o B Theatre staff w.B w.B Each operatingw theatre has a team of assistants who clean and maintain w woperation to select instru- ww the theatre.w The ‘scrub nurse’ scrubs for each ments as requested by the surgical team. One other trained nurse and an auxiliary for the scrub nurse et nurse act as ‘runners’ .tonfetch et andequipment eont n n . . and to monitor the number of swabs sutures used (displayed X whiteboard). An operating Xmaintains kXdepartmental assistant (ODA) ok the oand ok operation o o o the anaesthetic equipment assists the anaesthetist. Each B Bof the patient, name of the B is logged, with details surgeon, w.and w.operating w w patient’s consultant, anaesthetist. w w ww Theatre clothing Fresh scrubs should be worn for each operating list and should be changed t net lists, or between casesXif they nebecome net between dirty or potentially infected . . . X X Theatre shoes are for safety purposes k and you will ok withbeMRSA. ok essential oshoes allowed to enter o without them. Theatre scrubs and should o Bo not B B . outside of theatres except w . emergency. not be worn uncovered in an w w Scrubbingwup ww ww Scrubbing up is an art and a key part of minimizing infection risk to the patient.t If in doubt, a theatre nurse cantshow you how to do it. t • .Prior ne to scrubbing, remove jewellery .ne and put your mask andXa .ne theatre hat on X X ok • Open a gown pack and drop ok a pair of sterile gloves on top ok o Bo • When scrubbingwup.Bforothe first patient, scrub under B your . nails using a brush with iodine or chlorhexidine. Wash hands w for a further 5min w w •Unravel your w gown; ensure that it does notwtouch the floor ww • Touching its inner aspects only, put it on with the end of the sleeves covering your hands eont your etoutside of your gloves with.nyour et • .Put gloves. Do not touch the n n . X bare hands X kXand ok • For okCaesarean, HIV +ve) double- oglove high-risk operationso(eg o o B protect your eyes with or safety spectacles .B w.Btoatievisor • Wait for an assistant your scrub gown from behind w ww w becomes non-sterile, changewyour ww • If your hand glove. If your gown becomes non-sterile you need to rescrub; change your gown and gloves. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w The operating theatre w 117 t t t Theatre .ne etiquette .ne .ne X X X are scrubbed up: k ok • If you o to adjust the lights for youook o ask someone not scrubbed Bo B . .B do not pick upwinstruments which fall to the ground w if you are handed an instrument by someone who is not scrubbed, w w w you can touch it before accepting w it ww check that • In operations involving the abdomen and the perineum, if you are asked t from the perineum to thenabdomen t you must rescrub. Thisneist to move enecessary eabdomen n . . . not when swapping from to perineum X leave the operation kX• If you sustain a needle-stickokinjury, kX to andoreport o occupational health (E Bo • Always .Bgoop.to108) .toBano operating list. eat/drink and the toilet before going w w w Watchingw an operation ww ww Make sure you can see; get a stool or stand at the patient’s head if the anaesthetist Although you aretnot actively participating in the et useallows. e techniques. If you can’t .follow et n n n operation, the time to learn surgical . . X going on, ask. As the operation X X forms fill in any histology ok what’s ok histologyfinishes, okaccurately. or TTOs if appropriate. Check samples are labelled o o o B WHO SurgicalwSafety .B Checklist w.B w w In 2009, thewNPSA released guidance onw the WHO Surgical Safety ww • • • Checklist, a process by which all members of the theatre team have a discussion about the operation and the patient in advance of ­undertaking the procedure. The aim of this is to improve patient safety and prevent errors such as wrong- site surgery, retained throat- packs, avoidable ­delays in obtaining blood products, or senior help should an unexpected incident arise. Most trusts have devised their own checklist so these vary between hospitals, but are all based on the NPSA guidance.18 et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww The checklist is read out loud before the anaesthetic is given, before the operation starts, and after the operation is completed. Before the operation everyone in theatre introduces themselves, the patient’s ­ ­details, the procedure about to take place, and the site are confirmed, relevant equipment is checked to be present, and VTE prophylaxis measures are declared. At the checkout after the operation, swab counts, instrument and sharps counts are checked, the operation note is confirmed, and specimens labelled. Plans for postoperative management are also confirmed. et et .n kX o o o w.B o o w.B t ok Bo ok o w.B 18 e X.n ok o w.B ww t ww t e X.n t e X.n ok o B . w e X.n ok o B . w Mwww.nrls.npsa.nhs.uk/resources/clinical-specialty/surgery/?entryid45=59860 ww ww t e X.n ww ok .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww ww B .B w ww 118 Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne op care .ne .ne Post- X X X k after the ok well as seeing patientsopreoperatively, ok othem you should review o Bo As B B operation. This means can review and discharge .day cases with your w. you w after the operation. w team, as well asw making sure the in-patients are w stable w w w Discharging day cases (This may be done by nursing staff.) Before tsending day surgery patients home, you should make sure they e have eaten and had fluids.nwithout et vomiting, et are alert, have passed.n urine, n . the Xare mobilizing without fainting,kXand have adequate pain relief.kInspect ok operation site and checkotheir o observations. Go throughoothe X operation o B procedure, findings, and follow-up with the patient. .B w.Bfollow- wif they need dressing w Organize appropriate up care and clarify w w removal dates, and where this ww changes, suture can be done (GP surgery, w ED, or ward). If the patient develops any post-op temperatures, pain, or bleeding, et they should contact their.nGPetor come to the ED. .net n . Common questions about discharge X kXfor work for up to a totaloofk7dX can self-certify as ok • Patients ounfit o o o time off (including time spent as in- patient); if you anticipate required B B B . . work will routinely a Fitness w be longer than this, issuew w to Work/Med 3 note (E wp.w82) for the total expected time; w this is the responsibility ww B of the hospital team, not the patient’s GP. Unanticipated extensions to the recovery period can be handled by the GP Patients requiring proof of hospital admission (for sick pay or social security payments) should be issued with a Form Med 10 (E p. 82) Tell the patient if their sutures are dissolvable or if they need to return to have them removed (give dates; often GP practice nurses will do this) Patients can shower and commence driving again 48h after minor surgery (as long they can perform an emergency stop; E p. 619) Advise patients not to fly for 6wk following major surgery. t • ne . X k oo • • • et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t post-op care net In-pe et .noatient . Post- p patients are at risk of X complications associated with X the.n operX directly (eg haemorrhage) or indirectly (eg PE). ok ation, either ok document oofkdays since o o reviewing post- o p patients, the number Bo When B B . . the operation andw the operation they underwentw (eg 2d post left mastw w ectomy). ww w w Ask about pain, ability to eat and drink, nausea/vomiting, urinary output and colour, bowel movements/flatus, mobilization. et wound et legs, drains, stoma bags, etIV n n n Examine site, chest, abdomen, . . . X X site, amount drained, colour X catheter bag, drainkentry ok cannulae, o ok of any fluid being drained. o o o B B (total input Look at the observations: pyrexia, HR, BP, RR, 24h fluid w.B w.balance and output (including drains) and net balance);w document all findings. w w w ww Review the drug chart for analgesia, antibiotics, fluids. Check postoperative Hb; transfuse if necessary (E pp. 412–17). etother members of the MDT eiftnecessary, eg stoma nurse,.npain et Involve n n . . Xteam, physiotherapists, socialkworker, X occupational therapist.kX ok o o o oo B B B . . w w ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Post-op problems w 119 t t t .ne op problemsX.ne .ne Post- X X ok ok ok (E pp. 486–7) o o Bo Hypotension B B . input, epidural, drugs, pain. Ask about Pre-op BP, wfluid w. w w Look for Repeat BP, HR, fluid input/ u rine output, w w temperature, GCS, ww orientation, skin temp, cap-refill, signs of hypovolaemia/sepsis, wounds, drain, abdomen, any signs of active bleeding. t Hypotension e et post-op and does not .always et n n n Management is common . . X intervention. Tachycardia X worrying feature suggesting shock. kXmonitor ok ­rIfequire ok areis apresent oand this or other adverse features do 15min obs o o o B hourly urine outputw(catheterize .B .B flat, and give bladder). Lie the patient w oxygen. Get IVwaccess, consider fluid challenge (eg 500mL crystalloid w w STAT, E p. w 490). Send bloods for FBC andw crossmatch (blood cultures w if you suspect sepsis). Apply pressure to any obvious bleeding points. Call for etsenior review early. .net et n n . . Pyrexia Temp 37.5°C, investigate if this persists/ i ncreases after the X X ok first 24h post-op (E pp.o496–505; ok see Box 2.16). ookX o B Ask about Cough/SwOB,.Bwound, dysuria/frequency,wabdo .B pain, diarrhoea. w w Look for BP, HR, w temp, wound, catheter, IV cannulae, w chest, abdomen. ww Management Urine M,C+S; blds FBC, U+E, CRP, blood cultures; Imaging CXR, consider abdominal USS or CT, echo if new-onset murmur. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok Box 2.16 Possible causes ok of post-op pyrexia ook o Bo • Day 1–2 Atelectasis; B B and . treat with salbutamol/saline .nebs w chest physioww w chest physio w wand ww • Day 3–4 Pneumonia; treat with antibiotics • Day 5–6 Anastomotic leak; need to take back to theatre • Day 8 Wound infection; treat byeopening up wound, antibiotics,et t et7–need n may to return to theatre..n . .n X X X k k k o of breath/ odoO sats (E pp. 277–89) oo Bo Shortness B B . . Ask about Chronicwlung/CVS disease, previous w PE, chest pain, ankle swelling, new- nset cough. wow ww ww Look for BP, HR, temp, pallor, lungs (consolidation, crackles, air entry), signs e oftfluid overload, leg oedema/ce alft swelling. et n n n . . . blds FBC, ABG; CXR, ECG. Consider 0.9% XManagement Sit up and give Ok;X kX chest physiotherapy. If o you suspect a ok saline nebs, antibiotics andooregular o o (medical registrar B PE (E p. 284) callwfor.Bsenior help and specialist advice w.B on-call). See also Box 2.17. w w w w ww 2 2 I Box 2.17 Post-op problems covered elsewhere Bo o et n . kX Pain Nausea and vomiting Low urine output o B . w ww o et n . kX w ww t .ne X ok .Bo E pp. 88–91 E pp. 310–11 E pp. 392–3 ww B 120 .B w ww Chapter 2 .B w w ww w Life on the wards t t t .ne .ne .ne Wound management X X X ok ok ok o o Bo Types of woundwhealing B B . w. wound edges are w Primary closure This is most common in surgery, where w w opposed soon after the time of injury and held in w w place by sutures, Steri- w Strips™, or staples. The aim is to minimize the risk of wound infection with minimal tissue formation (Table t 2.13). used in ‘dirty’ orntrauet primaryscarclosure ecommonly et Delayed This is more n n . . . X wounds. The wound kis Xcleaned, debrided, and thenkinitially X left ok matic ocover may be given until theoowound open for 2–5d. Antibiotic is reo o B B viewed for closure. .B . w is much less commonlywencountered w Secondary closure surgery. w wwThisintention wthe wound is leftinopen Healing by secondary happens when and w heals slowly by granulation. This is used in the presence of large areas of excised infection, or significantettrauma, where closing the wound etbetissue, et n n . . would impossible or would give.n rise to significant complications. X X X ok Table 2.13 Abdominal owound ok complications ok o o B .B Examine Management Askw about w.B w w Superficial wPink serous Skin and fat w Not an emergency but ww B dehiscence net . kXDeep dehiscence o o discharge, burst sutures Pink serous discharge, haematoma, bowel protrusion oo B . w o Bo o ww t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX swelling .ne X k ask for senior review— wound may need packing ± antibiotics Call for senior help urgently. Cover the bowel with a large sterile swab soaked in 0.9% saline. Check analgesia and fluid replacement, give antibiotics Wound swab, broad- spectrum antibiotics initially (E p. 181), discuss with your senior oo B . ww w t Tenderness, .ne odorous X k discharge, Pyrexia, pain, erythema, white, yellow or bloody exudate from wound site o w.B t .ne kX ww t Infection .ne X k cavity exposed (rectus sheath closed) Separation of wound edges with bowel exposed oo B . w .n kX ww ww t ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et o o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Common elective operations w 121 t t t .ne .ne .ne Common elective operations X X X ok ok ok o o cholecystectomy Bo Laparoscopic B B Operation to remove w. the gallbladder. w. w w Indications Symptomatic gallbladder stones, asymptomatic patients at risk ww w w of complications (diabetics, history of pancreatitis, immunosuppressed). Pre-op No bowel prep required, 6h fasting t pre-anaesthetic (E p. 111). et This eabdomen et n n n Procedure involves insufflating.the with CO , inserting 3 or . . X through the anteriorkabdominal X wall to enable laparoscopy X ok 4theports o to remove ok and use of operating instruments the gallbladder. o o o B Post-op Patients canweat.Bas soon as they recover from B anaesthetic, can w.the w usually go homew later in the day or the following morning. Not all patients are w in clinic ww followed up; w some consultants like to review patients after 6–8wk. Complications Haemorrhage, wound infections, bile leakage, bile duct stricet stones; may require conversion et to more major open surgery. et ture, retained n n n . . . X X ok Colectomy oorkall of the colon (Fig. 2.11). ookX o o Operation to remove part B Indications Malignancy, B no.longer be managed w.Bperforation, IBD which can w w w medically. w w ww B 2 Pre-op Full bowel prep rarely required, 6h fasting pre-anaesthetic (E p. 111). Procedure This involves a midline longitudinal laparotomy incision and resection of the diseased bowel if done open, can be done laparoscopically. A stoma may or may not be formed. Post-op Sips of fluid orally for 24h post-op, gradually built up to free fluids and then light diet. Hospital stay 3–7d (‘enhanced recovery pathways’ used to streamline post-op recovery). All patients followed up in clinic. Complications Haemorrhage, wound infection, wound dehiscence, anastomotic leak. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww .ne X k oo B . w ww .n kX ww t et n . X ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k ww o w.B ww et et et n n n . . . X 2.11 Common large bowelkresections X (the shaded area represents X ok Fig. o the operation). ok the o o o section of colon removed during B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 122 .B w ww Chapter 2 Life on the wards .B w w ww w t t t Anterior .ne resection X.ne .ne X X the rectum k 5cm) and ok Operation totheresect ok with a sufficient margin (usually oSee o left side o of the colon with the rectal stump. Fig. 2.12. Bo anastomose B B . . Indications Rectal w carcinoma. w Pre-op Full bowel wwprep rarely required, phosphate ww enema 1h pre-op, 6h ww fasting pre-anaesthetic (E p. 111). Procedure involves a midline longitudinal incision and reetofThis et open.laparotomy et section the diseased rectum if .done Can be done laparoscopn n n . . Xically. X X ok Post-op Sips of fluid orallyoforok24h otok free fluids post-op, gradually builtoup o B and then light diet. Hospital 4–10d. All patients followed up in clinic. w.B stay w.Bdehiscence, Complications Haemorrhage, wound infection, w wound anasw w w ww tomotic leak. Anterior resection et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww t et Anterior resection. .net Fig. .n2.12 .ne X X X resection ok Abdominoperineal ok (AP resection) ookcolostomy. o to resect the rectum/anus and form a permanent Bo Operation B . .B See Fig. 2.13. w w Indications Low wwrectal carcinoma where it would wwbe impossible to resect ww the tumour without removing the anus, can also be performed as part of a panproctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis. t et phosphate enema 1h pre-.onp,e6ht Pre- ope Full bowel prep rarely required, n . .nstoma X X X fasting pre- a naesthetic (E p. 111), nurses to be involved. k longitudinal ok Procedure This involves oa omidline okincision and laparotomy o o B .B resection of the diseased w.B rectum and anus. wwbuilt w Post-op Sips of w fluid orally for 24h post-op, gradually up to free fluids wdiet. Hospital stay 4–10d. All w and then light patients followed up in clinic. w Complications Haemorrhage, wound infection, wound dehiscence, stoma et et et retraction. n n n . . . X X X ok ok AP resection ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w Fig. 2.13 AP resection. ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w t .ne Stomas X k o w Stomas t .ne X k w 123 et .n kX oo oo B B . . Common locations LIF ww or right hypochondrium.www reversal; mucosa ww Features Mayw be permanent or planned for subsequent sutured directly to skin. t solid stool; intermittently t eSoft/ epassed. et Output n n n . . . X X kX enColorectal cancer, disease, trauma,oradiation ok Indications okdiverticular o o o teritis, bowel ischaemia, obstruction, Crohn’s disease. B .B w.B Ileostomy ww w w RIF. w ww Common locations Featurest May be permanent or plannedt for subsequent reversal; bowel e sutured to form a ‘spout’.toneavoid skin contact with bowel.nconet mucosa n . tents which are irritating (not flush with skin). X X kX ok Output Liquid stool (may obeobile- ok o o s tained); passed continuously. B B .B wcancer, w.enteritis, Indications GI tract IBD, trauma, radiation bowel isw w chaemia, obstruction. w w ww Bo Colostomy Urostomy t t t Sometimes pelvis. .ne referred to as a nephrostomy .ne if originating in renal X .ne X X ok Common locations Left or oright okflank, lower anterior abdominal okwall. o Bo Features A uretericw.catheter B may be protrudingwfrom B . the skin into the stoma. ww ww ww Output Clear urine passed continuously. Indications Renal tract cancer, urinary tract ethydronephrosis, et obstruction, spinal column edis-t n n n orders, urinary fistulae. . . . X X X ok Common complications ok ok o o o B •Electrolyte/fluidwimbalance .B (E pp. 399–403) w.B • Ischaemia/necrosis shortly after formation w • Obstruction/ w prolapse/parastomal hernia ww ww • Skin erosion/infection • Psychosocial t et implications. .neare ethet n It .isnimportant to refer patients who likely to need stomas .to X care nurse prior to thekoperation. X X need Patients with stomas ok stoma oexcess flatulence okalso o o o to alter their diet to avoid or overly watery stool, so B should also be referred .B to the dietician. Troublesome .B ‘high- output’ w w stomas leadingw w to fluid balance problems worwexcessive need for bag ww emptying require specialist gastroenterologist advice. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww ww Bo et t et n . X ww w ww o Bo B .B w w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 3 w 125 t t t .ne History and .ne examination .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww Basic history 126 examination 128 t Basic e et et Recording your clerking 129 n n n . . . X Medicine X X ok ok ok Cardiovascular o 130 o o B Respiratory .132 w B 133 w.B Gastrointestinal w w w w ww Neurological 134 Endocrine 139 Skin 140 t t e e142 et n n n Oncological/haematological . . . X Surgery X X ok ok 143 ok o o o Breast (male and female) B .B Eyes 144w w.B w w Head and neck 146 w w ww Musculoskeletal 148 Urological 156 net Other specialties net . X Female reproductiveksystem 158 Obstetric 160 oo B .B Psychiatric 162 w Neonatal examination 165 ww 166 Paediatric t t .ne .ne X X ok ok o Bo B w. w w . kX o o t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . ww et oo B . w .n kX ww ww t ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww w o o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 126 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne history .ne .ne Basic X X X ok oisk an essential skill as a junior okdoctor and a thorough history o o Bo Taking B B . basic features of something you will become extremely practised at.The w. of how wexamination a history, withw details to perform a basic are dew w w chapter. How to refine thesewapproaches is further scribed in this de- w scribed for specific situations you may encounter. t et a history (E OHCM10.np.e26) et Taking n n . . X•Try to be in a setting that offers X privacy and has a bed ok • Establish the patient’s name okand check their date of birthookX o o • Introduce yourself.and questions. B B begin with open-ended w .B wWhy Presenting complaint has the patient comew to hospital? Let them tell w w their story. w Write their main problem(s) inw their own words along with w duration of symptoms and who referred them; if the referral letter has a different this too. et presenting complaint then.ndocument et et n n . . History of presenting complaint(s) Ask questions aimed at differentiating X X kX Try ok the causes of the presenting ok complaint and assessing oitsoseverity. o o to exclude potentially B .Blife-threatening causes first. Ask.Bspecifically about previous episodeswand investigations/treatments.wUse the SOCRATES w questions for w pain (Site, Onset, Character, wwRadiation, Associations, ww Timing, Exacerbating/relieving factors, Severity). Ask about the effect on their activities of daily living (ADLs). If there are multiple problems, ask if they come on together or are related. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok Risk factors Document recognized ok risk factors for important okdifferentials. o o Bo Past medical historywAsk B B operations . about previous medical . ICU admissions, wproblems/ and attempt tow gauge the severity of each (eg w hospital/ exercise tolerance w (ET), treatment); use thewdrug history to prompt the ww patient’s memory. Consider documenting specifically about asthma, DM, angina,tiBP, MI, stroke, VTE, epilepsy, tmalignancy. t .nehistory Document all drugsXalong .ne with doses, times taken,Xand .neany Drug X document drug allergies along with ok recent changes.OrAlways okdrug allergies okthe reaction o o no known (NKDA). B Remember to ask Bo precipitated. B . Ask about compliance too. . about OTC medications. w w w w (eg heart problems, ww Family historyw Ask about relevant illness in the wfamily DM, cancer). What age were they at diagnosis? Are other family members well et at the moment? et et n n n . . . Social history This is essential: Home Ask about who they live with, the Xresidential home), any homekhelp, X own kXkind of house (eg bungalow, k o o o o (stick/frame), (cooking, dressing, Bo ADLs .Bowashing); Mobility Walking .Baids exercise tolerancew(how far can they walk on level ground? Can they w w wk), smoking (cigar- ww climb stairs?); Lifestyle Occupation, alcoholw (units/ ww ettes/d and pack-years), recreational drugs: • Alcohol: 1 unit = ⅓ pint of beer, ½ glass of wine, 1 measure of spirits. • Smoking: 20 cigarettes/d for 1yr = 1 pack-year. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Basic history w 127 t t et Systems the.n HPC; .ne review Relevant systemsXreview .ne will often be part of X X review iskonly necessary if you are unsure what is ok a thoroughor systems o explain the symptoms. SeeoTable ok 3.1 are strugglingoto and Bo relevant B B . E OHCM10 p. 28. . w w w Table 3.1 w Key symptoms to assess on systems review ww ww pain, palpitations, SOB, ankle swelling, orthopnoea CVS t Chest e et SOB et Resp Cough (?blood), sputum, wheeze, n n n . . . X X bowel habit (?blood), stool kX pain, nausea/vomiting, ok Abdo Abdo ok distension, o colour and consistency, dysuria, frequency,ourgency, o o haematuria .B B B . wphotophobia, neck stiffness, weakness, w change in Neuro Headache, sensation, ww balance, fits, falls, speech, changes wwin vision/hearing ww Systemic Appetite, weight loss/gain, fever/night sweats, malaise, stiff/swollen et joints, fatigue, rashes/itch, sleep etpattern et n n n . . . X X X Ask if there are any other problems that have not been ok Summarizing oaksummary okpatient o o o discussed and repeat back of the history to the to B check that they agree B B . . (Box 3.1). It is a good idea tow use the ICE questions w (Ideas, Concerns, ww Expectations) at this point— wwask the patient if they ww have any idea or suspicion of what might be wrong with them, if there’s anything in particular that they’re worried about (this may prompt them to admit specific concerns, eg having cancer), and what they expect will happen to them while they are in hospital. The art of ‘ICE’ is to ask naturally, so patients feel able to open up to you. Doing this while examining the patient can work well for some. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . Most patients have w no idea about tests and investigations ww and find being w admitted to w hospital a frightening event; theyw often value the opportunity w to talk about possible options and ask questions. Always specifically if the patient has e any tfinish your history by asking t t further .ne questions or any otherXissues .nethey would like to discuss, .asnfreX X shy/reticent to ask. k ok quently they will be too embarrassed/ ok o oo Bo T Box 3.1 Should B B . . wclerking? ww you take noteswwhile wwhile ww There is now simple answer to this. Taking notes the patient talks may allow you to record important details accurately or even to write up your extremely useful during busyt t allows et clerking as you go. This can ebe n n on- calls. Alternatively, not taking.notes you to give the patient . .ne X X X your undivided attention and the opportunity to record the clerking ok okpicture. In the end it comesodown ok to indiconsidered the whole o Bo having B B . . vidual preference and workload. w w ww ww ww B After the history et n . kX o Bo By the end of taking the history you should have a reasonable idea of the differential diagnosis. Try to think of specific signs that would be present on examination to confirm or refute these differentials. A basic examination is described in the next topic (E p. 128). et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 128 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne examinationX.ne .ne Basic X X ok is good practice to perform oka brief CVS, RS, abdo, and neuro okexam on all o o Bo Itpatients B B but focus your examination according to their history. w.RR, w. Check obser- w vations (temp, BP, HR, O sats): w w •Ask a nurse wto chaperone you if necessary w w • Get consent before touching the patient, ask where it hurts • First tassess briefly whether the patient tlooks well or ill. e (E p. 154) e et n n n Hands . . . X kXof disease. kX Of the hands forosigns ok Inspection o o o o Palpation Check the pulse for rate, rhythm, and character (eg ?collapsing pulse). B w.B w.B Mouth w w w w cyanosis, mucous membranes, w Inspection Central stomatitis, beefy w tongue (diron), candidiasis, ulcers, dental hygiene (risk factor for SBE). t Cardiovascular system (E pp. e 130–1) et et n n n . . . Inspection JVP (very useful if visible), swollen ankles. X X X ok Palpation Temp of hands,ocapillary- ok refill, carotid pulse (volume ok and charo o acter), apex beat, heaves/ B .B thrills, hepatomegaly. w.B(timing, volume, w Auscultation Heartwsounds, added sounds/ murmurs w w ­radiation), carotid w bruits, basal crackles. w w 2 Respiratory system (E p. 132) t t Inspection (flap), stridor, JVP,eRR effort (accessory muscles, n t andoedema. .ne Asterixis .peripheral .ne recession), chest wall movement, X X X k expansion. ok ok Palpation Trachea, cervicalhyperresonant, olymphadenopathy, o dull, stony dull. Bo Percussion Symmetrical, B . crackles, wheeze, bronchialwbreath .Bosounds, rub. w Auscultation Air entry, w ww ww Abdomenw (E p. 133) Inspection Jaundice, scars, distension, hernias, oedema. t t patient’s face: tenderness, t Palpation away from pain and .ne Start .newatch .ne peritonism (guarding, rebound,X rigidity, percussion tenderness), masses, X X ok liver, spleen, kidneys andoAAA ok (expansile mass), hernias,o±okgenitalia, PR Bo (masses, stool, tenderness, B . prostate, blood/mucus/ .mBelaena). w wspleen. Percussion Ascites (shifting dullness, fluid thrill), w liver, w ww Auscultation w Bowel sounds (absent, reduced,w increased, tinkling). Peripheral nerves (E pp. 136–8) et Posture, movement of limbs. et et Inspection n n n . . . X Tone; power (5 normal, 2X not even kX4 weak, 3 against gravity only, ok Palpation oksensation. against gravity, 1 twitch, o 0o none); reflexes (tendons, plantars); o o B Coordination Finger–n.ose, slide heel down opposite leg. w(EBp. 135) w.B w w Cranial nerves w w ww et n . kX o Bo Inspection GCS, mental state (E pp. 163–4), facial symmetry, scars, ­obvious gaze palsies, speech, posture. Eyes (II, III, IV, VI) Acuity, pupil reactivity, fields, movements, fundi. Face (V, VII) Sensation and power. Mouth (IX, X, XII) Tongue movements, uvula position, cough. Other (VIII) Hearing, balance, gait (XI), shrug, head movements. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w Recording your clerking w w 129 t t t .ne .ne .ne Recording your clerking X X X ok initial clerking of a opatient ok is one of the most important ok steps in o Bo The B B their journey through. the hospital. It will be reread .by every team that w and used as a benchmarkwfor w measuring the pro- w looks after the w patient w gives gress of thew patient’s condition. A good clerking the patient the w best opportunity to receive the correct investigations and treatment. et Your name, position, location, et date, time; state clearly why ethet Heading n n n . . . patient is being clerked (eg referred from ED with chest pain). X X X ok Format Follow a logicaloorder ok setting out each section under ok the heado o B ings shown in this w .BIf a piece of information from topic. w.Ba different section w is really important then write it in the historyw of presenting complaint w wthe social history. w w and/or under Sources State where you got important information from (eg patient, et(with etnotes, et relative name and relationship), computer records). This n n n . . . makes it easy to check if the information is of critical importance. X X X ok Use the notes Don’t rely oonk a patient’s account of theiroprevious ok medo o B ical history, especially .B .B to find the offifor investigations and results. winvestigations wonTry w w cial record of key rather than relying another doctor’s w w ww comments. et cord least. nalletof the information described nonetthese pages at the very X nUse . . . X X ‘nothing abnormal by all means, but be ok ‘NAD’ totorecord ok youdetected’ okdo not(‘not write it for aosystem have not examinedoproperly Bo tempted B B actually done’)—this .is inaccurate and dishonest and.even if the system w seems unrelatedwtowthe presenting complaint, may lead to problems later ww problem with that ww if the patientwsubsequently develops an unexpected system causing colleagues to refer back to the admission clerking. t obvious What appears t t State now may not be .ne the .nenextobvious .neto someone reading the notes or on the shift, eg below-knee prosthetic X X X ok leg, crying constantly. ook ok o Bo Differential diagnosis B B . to explain the What diseases are likely w.What serious w patient’s symptoms? diseases need to be excluded? Make w w wafter the examination. Considerwrecording the most critical ww a list of these evidence for and against each diagnosis. t et ewillt Management plan This should.n beea detailed list of the steps you n n . . written in Xtake to diagnose and treat thekdifferential X diagnosis. It should bekX ok order of priority. Alongside oinvestigations and treatment consider o nursing o o o B measures, frequency Bevent of deteriin the .ofBobservations, what to doward, .HDU). w w oration, referrals, best location (eg respiratory w If you have w referred the w patient to another specialty, record w the name, bleep, and time ww Be thorough These pages represent a basic clerking; you should re- patient was accepted. Likewise if you have handed the patient over to a colleague at a shift change. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok are not telling the patient oabout ok a serious illness then stateowhy. ok o B E p. 76 for otherwtips.Babout writing in the notes.w.B ww ww ww State what the patient was told This prevents confusion. If you B 130 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne .ne .ne Cardiovascular X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B w.or heaviness, dyspnoea (exertional, w. orthopnoea, par- w Symptoms Chest pain w w oxysmal nocturnal) (see Table 3.2), ankle/ l imb swelling, w w palpitations, syncope w or presyncope, limb pain (at rest or on exertion), fatigue, numbness, ulcers. Past medical IHD, MI, hypertension, palpitations, syncope, clotet history etsurgery, et ting problems, rheumatic fever, cardiac recent dental work, liver n n n . . . X X kX disease. ok problems, renal problems,oothyroid ok o o Table 3.2 Functional B .Bclassification of heart failurew(NYHA) .B wpresent Class I Disease but no symptoms duringw ordinary activity w w w ww Class II Angina or dyspnoea during ordinary activity (eg walking to shops) Class III Angina or dyspnoea during minimal activity (eg making cup of tea) eIVt Angina or dyspnoea at rest.net et Class n n . . X data from Dolgin M, et al. Nomenclature Xof the and criteria for diagnosis of diseases kX Williams ok Source: oLippincott oMA),k 1994, heart and great vessels, 9th edition, and Wilkins (Boston: and o o o B B B Criteria Committee, New.York Heart Association, Inc. Diseases of the heart and blood vessels. . wfor diagnosis, 6th edition, Little, BrownwandwCo. (Boston: MA), 1964. Nomenclature and criteria ww w ww B Drug history Cardiac medications (and compliance), allergies (and reaction). Social history Tobacco, alcohol, and caffeine consumption, illicit drug use (?IV, cocaine), occupation, exercise tolerance on flat and stairs. Family history IHD, ilipids, cardiomyopathy, congenital heart disease, sudden cardiac death. Coronary artery disease risk factors Previous IHD, smoking, iBP, ilipids, family history of IHD, DM, obesity and physical inactivity, male sex. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k K Box 3.2 Palpation of central and peripheral pulses ww t t t Central .ne .ne .nande • Carotid Two fingers, medial X to the sternocleidomastoid muscle X X ok lateral to the thyroid ocartilage ok (do not palpate both sides oktogether) o of both hands, applied halfway between Bo • Abdominal aortawFingertips B B . w. umbilicus and xiphisternum. w w w w ww Arms • Radial Two fingers pressed on the radial aspect of the inner wrist t aspect of the inner wristnet • Ulnar ulnar et Two fingers pressed on the ethe n . . •.n Brachial Two fingers pressed into medial X antecubital fossa, justkX kX to the biceps tendon (ask k patient to flex arm against resistance to o o o o find the tendon). Bo Bo B . . w w Legs • Femoral Two middle of the crease in wwfingers pressed firmly into the ww ww the groin, halfway between the symphysis pubis and the anterior superior spine et Askiliacpatient etput both your thumbs either.side et •.n Popliteal to flex their knee, n n . X the patella and press firmly X fossa your fingertips into the popliteal kXwith1cm ok • ofPosterior opressed ok malleolus tibial Two fingers posterior to the medial o o o B .B2nd metatarsals. • Dorsalis pedis Two fingers w.B pressed between thew1stwand w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Cardiovascular w 131 t t et Examination (lying at 45°) .n .ne .ne X X X cyanosis, pallor, facial flushing, ok General inspection Dyspnoeaooatkrest, ok Marfan’s, o rheumatological disorders, acromegaly. Bo Turner’s, Down’s syndromes, B B . w. Box 3.2), clubbing, w Hands Radial pulsesw (right and left, collapsing pulse) (see w w splinter haemorrhages, Osler’s nodes, peripheral cyanosis, xanthomata. w w w Face Eyes (pallor, jaundice, xanthelasma), malar flush, mouth (cyanosis, t palate, dentition). net high-aerched et n n . . . Neck JVP, carotids (pulse character) (see Box 3.2). X X X ok Precordium Inspection (scars, ok deformity, apex beat), opalpate ok (apex o o B beat, thrills, heavew(Table .B 3.3)), auscultate (heartwsounds .B (Table 3.4), murmurs—alsow auscultate with the patient in both left lateral and sitting w w w ww forward positions). Back Scars, sacral oedema, pleural effusions, pulmonary oedema. t kidneys, percuss for ascites, et Palpate liver, spleen, aorta, eballot et Abdomen n n n . . . X and renal artery bruits, X kXradiofemoral delay. ok femoral oBox ok oedema, o o o Legs Peripheral pulses (see 3.2), temperature, ulceration, B calf tenderness, venous .Bof hair, gangrene, loss w.Bguttering, thin shiny skin, w w varicose veins, w eczema, haemosiderin pigmentation of the skin (particuw w ww B larly above the medial malleolus), lipodermatosclerosis (‘inverted champagne bottle leg’). Blood pressure Lying and standing, consider also left and right arms separately. Other Urine analysis, fundoscopy, temperature chart. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX Table 3.3 Characteristics of valve defects oo B . ww t .ne X k w diastolic rumbling murmur, loud wMid- w 1st HS, opening snap, ww malar flush, AF, tapping apex, left parasternal heave murmur radiating to the axilla, soft 1st HS, 3rd HS t et Pansystolic etparastenal present, thrusting apex,nleft heave n . . .ne X X X Ejection systolic murmur radiating to the neck, 4th HS, ok ok slow rising pulse, systolic thrill ok reversed HSosplitting, o Bo B B . murmur (best heard in expiration), . collapsing Early diastolic wwide wCorrigan’s pulse, BP, pistol-shot femoral pulse, sign, w w wQuincke’s sign, de Musset’s sign w ww et3.4 Heart sounds et et Table n n n . . . X X X blockingkof blood flow after closing of the mitral ok 1st (S ) Physiological; o ok (M ) o o and tricuspid (T )o valves B 2nd (S ) Physiological; blocking of blood flow after closing w.B w.ofBthe aortic (A ) w and pulmonary (P ) valves; aortic precedesw pulmonary and splitting w w ww Mitral stenosis Mitral regurgitation Aortic stenosis Aortic regurgitation 1 1 1 2 2 2 et n . kX o Bo can be heard during inspiration 3rd (S3) Sometimes pathological; caused by blood rushing into the ventricles after S2; suggests increased volume of blood in athletes, pregnancy or heart failure 4th (S4) Pathological; blood pushing open a stiff ventricle before S1; suggests LVF, aortic stenosis, cardiomyopathy et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 132 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne .ne .ne Respiratory X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B . . Symptoms Cough,w sputum, shortness of breath,wwheeze, chest pain, w w fevers and sweats, weight loss, hoarseness, snoring, w w day sleepiness (ob- ww structive sleep apnoea). t t Past medical history Chest infections/ (as child or adult),etuet HIV epneumonias n n n . . . berculosis, status and risk factors, allergy, rheumatoid disease. X X X ok Drug history Respiratory drugs ok(inhalers, steroids, etc), vaccination ok history o o o (especially BCG, Hib,.B drugs known .toBcause respiratory B w pneumococcus), problems (bleomycin, methotrexate, amiodarone,w etc), allergies. w w ww Social historyw Tobacco use (expressed in pack- years—ie 20 cigarettes/d w for 1yr = 1pack-year) and social exposure to tobacco smoke if non- smoker, exposure to other family e(TBt pets, et members with respiratory.nprobet n n . . lems etc), illicit drug use (crack cocaine, cannabis). X X X ok Occupational history Past oandokpresent okabout dust jobs, asking specifically o o B exposure, asbestos, .animal w Batopy,dander. w.B w w Family history Asthma/ cystic fibrosis, emphysema. w w ww Examination (lying at 45°) t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k peripheralocyanosis, tar staining, wasting/ ok Hands Clubbing, owkeakness of o o muscles, HR, B fine tremor of β-agonists, flapping tremor of CO Bo intrinsic B retention. w. w. w w w syndrome, anaemia), mouth w (central cyanosis), voice. ww Face Eyes (Horner’s Neck Trachea position (± scars), JVP. t et net radiotherapy marks),Xpalpate Chest Inspect (shape, .scars, .neanteriorly nodes, .napex X X (supraclavicular axillary nodes, expansion, vocal fremitus, ok parasternal heave),opercuss, ok auscultate. ok o Bo beat, B B Chest posteriorly Inspect, w. palpate (including cervical w. nodes), percuss, w w auscultate. ww w w Other Peripheral oedema, calf erythema/tenderness, temperature chart, breast texamination (if suspect malignancy), abdominal examination, e(see Box 3.3), sputum pot. .net et n n PEFR . . X X X ok K Box 3.3 Recording okPEFR ok o o o B wis.B w.B mouthpiece. w Ensure the meter set to zero and fit a neww disposable w Stand the patient w up (or sit up if unable towstand) and give them clear w General inspection O2 requirements, cough, audible wheeze or stridor, rate and depth of respiration, use of accessory muscles, body habitus. 2 et n . kX o Bo instructions. They should take as deep a breath as possible, before placing the meter in their mouth and closing their lips around the mouthpiece. Encourage them to blow out as hard and as fast as possible. Record the reading obtained, then document the best of 3 efforts. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww w .B w w Gastrointestinal w w 133 t t t .ne .ne .ne Gastrointestinal X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B . w. association with eating,ww Symptoms Abdo pain, vomiting, or opening w bowels, weight loss, appetite, bruising, bleeding, nausea, vomiting ww w w (­appearance), dysphagia, odynophagia. dysuria, urinary frequency and ­urgency,t possibility of pregnancy. Stool Change habit, frequency, e colour, pain on passing, etrecurrentin bowel eort consistency, urge, blood (bowl n n n . . . Xpaper), offensive smell, mucus.kX X ok Past medical history GI bleeds, o GORD, varices, gallstones,oliver okproblems, o o B jaundice, IBD, haemorrhoids, w.B polyps, blood transfusions. w.B w w Drug history w NSAIDs, anticoagulants, hepatotoxic w drugs (E p. 174), ww ­opioids, laxatives, recent antibiotics (Clostridium difficile). t Foreign travel, illicit drugneuset (?IV), sexual history. net Socialehistory n . XAlcohol Intake per day (in units,kEXp.. 126), CAGE questions (EkXp. .372). k o o oo liver disease, Bo Family history IBD, w Bo cancer. B . . w Examinationw(lying flat on back) General inspection w Oedema, wasting, jaundice, wwanaemia, lymphadenop- ww athy, breath odour, mouth ulcers, gynaecomastia, spider naevi, bruises. HandseClubbing, nail colour, palm colour, nt net flap, Dupuytren’s. X.net . . X X Distension (fat, faeces, flatus, fluid, foetus), prominent tenok Abdomen(guarding, okmasses, okveins, rebound), organomegaly (seeoTables 3.5 and o Bo derness B B 3.6), ascites, hernial orifices (inguinal, femoral, incisional), w. fissures w. bowel sounds. w w PR Visible haemorrhoids, and skin tags, w anal tone, prostate, rectal w w w masses, appearance of faeces ± blood. t3.5 Common abdominal masses— t if in doubt, check with USSnet Table .ne RUQ, extends to RLQ, X .ne Liver unable to get above, dull to percussion X X. k Spleen LUQ extends to RLQ, k k o o o unable to get above, notch o o Bo Kidney RUQ and/ Bsmooth o.rB LUQ, ballotable, able to get above.it, outline w w w w Faeces Indentable mass away from umbilicus w w ww Tablet3.6 Common causes of enlargedt liver and spleen e e et n n n . . . Hepatomegaly Alcohol, hepatitis, EBV, CMV, thin patient, autoimmune X X metastases, lymphoma, leukaemia, X hepatitis, toxins, ok ok liveramyloidosis, ok chest, haemochromatosis, hyperexpanded o o o B .B weg.BCOPD, heart failure wwdisease, Splenomegaly w Chronic liver disease, autoimmune w thrombocytopenia, EBV, CMV, w hepatitis, HIV, ww haemolytic anaemia, leukaemia, lymphoma, endocarditis, thalassaemia, cell, myelofibrosis, t sickle et emalaria, et sarcoid, amyloidosis, leishmaniasis n n n . . . X XCMV, chronic liver disease, leukaemia, kX ok Hepatosplenomegaly Hepatitis, okEBV, lymphoma, myelofibrosis, amyloidosis oo o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 134 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne .ne .ne Neurological X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B w.Onset, duration, coursew(improving, w. Presenting complaint worsening, w relapsing–remitting), aggravating or alleviating factors, change with time ww w w of day, trauma. t weakness, tremor, twitching, Symptoms pain, numbness, e tingling, et Headache, et n n n . . abnormal movements, loss of consciousness, seizures, ­abnormal .smells, X (loss, diplopia, flashing klights), X hearing, swallowing, speech, Xbalance, ok vision o oork retention, o o vertigo, nausea, vomiting,ocoordination, urinary incontinence B .B impotence, faecalw incontinence, constipation, personality, w.B memory, lan- w w w guage, visuospatial skills, change in intellect. w w w Collateral history In many neurological conditions the patient may not be able totdescribe all the symptoms, eg seizure; e or family member. .net try to get a history.from eta witness n n . X medical history Similar episodes, X meningitis, migraines, strokes, X ok Past ok DM, ok seizo o o ures, heart problems, hypertension, psychiatric problems. B .B w.B drugs (eg antiepileptics, wParkinson’s Drug history Neurological medicaw w tions), psychiatric w drugs (eg antipsychotics,wantidepressants), all others ww (especially cardiac and hypoglycaemic drugs). t Draw a family tree with t grandparents and allntheir t Familyehistory .n and grandchildren, .neall four . edischildren askX specifically about learning difficulties, X X k psychiatric problems. ok ok ability, epilepsy, dementia,ooCVAs, Bo Social history Alcohol, B . smoking, illicit drugs, occupation, .Botravel abroad, w w dominant hand.w w ww ww Examination Obs GCS, BP (lying and standing), HR, RR, glucose. t et mobility aids. .net General .ne appearance Posture, neglect, .nnutrition, X X kMini-Mental State Exam (Eokp.X377) or Tested using the ok Cognition o o o 10-point Abbreviated.B Mental State Exam (E p. 375). B .Bo w w Meningism Photophobia, neck stiffness, Brudzinski’s sign (involuntary wwand knees when neck flexed wwdue to neck stiffness), ww flexion of hips Kernig’s sign (unable to straighten leg when hip fully flexed in supine ­patient), t on passively flexing thenhip). et straight leg raise (hamstring espasm et n n . . . Skin Birthmarks, vitiligo, café- a u- l ait spots, ash leaf macules, lumps, tufts X X X ok of hair/dimples at the base oofk the spine. ok o o o B B See Table 3.7 for cranial w.B nerve examination, andwFig. w.3.1. w w w ww Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Neurological w 135 t t t .ne 3.7 Cranial nerve examination .ne .ne Table X X X ok ok ok Function Tests o o Bo Nerve B B . I w Olfactory Smell Rarely tested w. w IIw Vision Optic Visual acuity, visual fields, w w ww (Fig. 3.1) pupil reflexes, fundoscopy Oculomotor III Eye movements, lift the movements, pupil t t Eye e e et eyelid, pupil constriction reflexes n n n . . . Move eye down and out XTrochlear IV Superior oblique X X ok Trigeminal V Sensation otokface, okpower, Facial sensation,ojaw o o B corneal reflex .B of jaw wmovement w.B muscles w w w eye laterally ww Abducens wVI Lateral rectus muscle Move VII Facial muscle movement, Facial power Facial t taste (anterior ⅔), et e et n n n salivary and lacrimal . . . X X X stapedius ok Vestibulo- VIII glands, ok muscle Whispering numbers, okWeber’s o o Hearingoand balance B .B cochlear (forehead),.Rinne’s wTaste w B (behind ear) IX w w Glosso- (posterior ⅓), Saying ‘Ahh’, swallow, gag w ww pharyngeal w parotid gland, sensation reflex of pharynx, nasopharynx, middle ear t t t e X Sensation of pharynx .n .ne Saying ‘Ahh’ (uvula deviates .ne Vagus X X X and larynx, k of away from defect), cough, ok omovement ogagkreflex pharynx, larynx swallow, speech, o o Bo Accessory XI wpalate, B B . of Movement Shrug shoulders, w. turn head sternomastoid and w w w trapezius w ww XII Movement of tongue Hypoglossal o Bo t .ne X k ok ww Visual field Left t .ne o w.B 4 2 5 6 Bo o et n . kX 3 w ww ww et .n kX ww Left Right e X.n Optick chiasma o .BoLateral geniculate Optic nerve X ok Bo oo B . w Normal Right 1 Stick Tongue out (deviates Towards defect), speech et X.n t1 nucleus Optic radiation et n . kX Visual cortex Bitemporal hemianopia ok 3 5 6 et n . X Unilateral vision loss 2 4 Normal fields o w.B Homonymous hemianopia ww Upper quadrantanopia Lower quadrantanopia Homonymous hemianopia (with central sparing) ww t .ne X ok .Bo Fig. 3.1 Optic pathways and effect of a lesion on the visual fields at various locations. o o B . w ww w ww ww B 136 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t Peripheral .ne nerve examination .ne .ne X X X tremor,k muscle wasting, fasciculation,k abnormal ok Appearance Posture, oo and symmetry, neglect..Boo facial expression Bo movements, B . Hold out hands With palms up and eyes closed; look drift (pyramidal w forof position worwinvoluntary w(loss defect), tremor, finger movement sense). ww w w Tone Tone at wrist, elbow, knee, and ankle (increased, decreased, clasp knife, cog- beats is abnormal). t wheeling), clonus at the nankle eIsolate esot (≥5 eyout n n Power each joint with one hand that only the muscle group . . . X testing can be used for thekmovement; X X 3.8). compare each sidek(Table ok are o of main limb movements. o o o o See Table 3.9 for root levels B B w.Research wof.Bmuscle power Table 3.8 Medical Council (MRC) grading w w w No movement w ww Grade 0 Grade 1 Flicker of movement et2 etgravity et Grade Movement but not against n n n . . . Weakness but movement XGrade 3 X against gravity ok Grade 4 okmovement against resistance ookX Weaknesso but o B B Grade 5 Normal w.Bpower w.Nervous w w © Crown Copyright. The Aids to the Examination of the Peripheral System w w ww (Memorandum No. 45) is licensed under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Used with the permission of the Medical Research Council. t t et Table .ne 3.9 Root levels of mainXlimb.nmovements .ne X X ok Joint Movement ookRoot Joint Movement ok Root o Bo Shoulder Abduction B B C5 Hip Flexion L1–2 w. w. Adduction C5–7 Adduction 3 w w w w Extension L2– ww Elbow Flexion C5–6 L5–S1 C7 L5–S1 tKnee Flexion t et Extension Wrist Flexion C7–8.ne Extension L3–.4ne n . X X X Extension Ankle Dorsiflexion k L4 ok okC7 o oo S1–2 Plantarflexion C8 Bo Fingers Flexion B B . . Extension C7 Big toe Extension L5 w ww Abduction T1 w ww ww Reflexes Deep tendon reflexes comparing each side (Table 3.10)—if ­absent asknthe plantar reflexes. etpatient to clench their teeth.n(reinforcement); et et n . . X X X ok Table 3.10 Tendon reflexes ok ok o o o B Grading of tendon reflexes Root levels of tendon w.B w.B reflexes 0 Absentw Reflex Root Reflex Root w w w ww et n . kX o Bo ± + ++ +++ ++++ Present with reinforcement Reduced Normal Increased Increased with clonus Bicep Supinator Tricep et n . kX C5–6 C5–6 C7–8 o o B . w ww w ww Knee Ankle L3–4 S1–2 t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Neurological w 137 t t et Coordination tapping, heel–shin. .n .ne Finger–nose, dysdiadochokinesia, .ne X X X is tested withopatient k standing with eyes openothen k closed, ok Romberg’sif This o o more unbalanced with eyes closed; suggests sensory Bo positive B B . touch, vibration, joint position; . the spinalataxia. Sensation Pinprick, w light dermat­ w wand back are shown in Fig.w omes of thew front 3.2.w For spinal tract anatomy ww and function, see Table 3.11 and Fig. 3.3. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX ww o Bo t o ww o w.B ww w Fig. 3.2 Dermatomes of the front (L) and back (R). t .ne X k oo B . ww t .ne X k et .ne X k ww oo B . w .n kX ww et et et n n n . . . XFig. 3.3 Cross-section of the spinal Xcord showing spinal tracts. kX ok ok o o oo Table 3.11 Spinal tracts and anatomy B B B . . w ww w Tract Modality Crosses (decussates) at w w ww Lateral corticospinal (pyramidal) Motor Medulla Anterior Motor t Level of exit of the cord t et corticospinal e n n Posterior columns (dorsal) Light.touch, Medulla . .ne X X X vibration, position k ok ok touch, pain, Level of entry ooto the cord Bo Spinothalamic w.Bo Hard B . temperature w ww ww ww B 138 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t neFig. Nerves 3.4. .ne of the hand See Table 3.12 .and .ne X X X k movements ok Table 3.12 Innervation ofohand ok o Bo Movement w.Bo B w. Nerve w w Finger abduction and adduction Ulnar w w ww Thumb opposition and abduction Median Finger textension Radial t e e et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Fig. 3.4 Sensation of the hand. et et et n n n . . . X This forms an essentiallykand X highly informative part of ktheXexaminok Gait o peripheral o Table 3.13. ation of both the centralo and nervous systems;osee o B B B . . wexamination w Table 3.13 Gait ww ww ww B Gait Antalgic Description Painful gait, limping, short weight-bearing on painful side Apraxic Unable to lift legs despite normal power, magnetic steps/stuck to floor Ataxic Uncoordinated, wide based, unsteady (as if drunk), worse with eyes shut if sensory Festinating A shuffling gait with accelerating steps Hemiparetic Knee extended, hip circumducts and drags leg; elbow may be flexed up Myopathic Waddling, leaning back, abdomen sticking out Shuffling Short, shuffled steps, stooped, no arm swing Spastic Restricted knee and hip movements, slow, shuffling, ‘wading through water’ Steppage High steps with foot slapping, ‘foot drop’ . kX o o net oo B . w t .ne kX ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX w .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww et .n kX Proximal myopathy Parkinson’s ww Pyramidal tract lesion, eg MS Peripheral neuropathy o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B t .ne X k Parkinson’s Hemiplegia, eg CVA oo B . w ww t e X.n ok Bo oo B . ww t o w.B Cause Mechanical injury, sciatica Hydrocephalus, frontal lesions Cerebellar, sensory w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w t .ne Endocrine X k o w Endocrine t .ne X k w 139 et .n kX oo oo B B . . Symptoms Weight w loss, weight gain, appetite, sweating, heat/cold intol­ wweakness, ww erance, tremor, tiredness, dizziness, hirsutism, joint pain/ ww w w swelling, change in appearance (skin, hair, nails, face, eyes), change in clothes/ size, altered sensation, t ulcers, visual problems. net et shoe/hatfeatures ebreathlessness, n n . . Cardiorespiratory Chest pain, palpitations,. sleep X X kXapnoea. k o o ok o o o Diarrhoea, B GI/urinary features w .B constipation, nausea,wvomiting, .B abdominal pain, thirst, polyuria. w w winfertility, gynaecomastia, ww Reproductive w features Menstrual irregularities, galactorrhoea, impotence. et features Anxiety, mood changes, et memory problems. .net Psychiatric n n . . X kXfield defects, bulging eyes.okX ok Eye features Blurred vision,oovisual o o affects lipid (thyroid function B Past medical historywHypercholesterolaemia B B . . levels), thyroid surgery, stroke, heart failure, liver w adrenal surgery, brainwsurgery. wwfailure, renal artery ww stenosis, renal wfailure, Bo History Drug history Steroids, diuretics, OCP, HRT, levothyroxine, insulin. t t Family net tumours. .nehistory DM, thyroid disease, .pituitary .ne X X X k ok Examination (lying atoo45°) ok o habitus, ‘buffalo hump’, facial appearance Bo General inspectionwBody B B . .hyperpigmentation, w (‘moon face’), striae, bruising, muscle wasting, w jaw and brow ridge,wgoitre, w gynaecomastia, hir- ww coarse skin, w prominent sutism, acanthosis nigricans, vitiligo, acne, necrobiosis lipoidica, pre-tibial myxoedema. t t et .neTemperature, sweating, size, .ntremor. .ne Hands X X X ok Eyes Lid lag, proptosis, exophthalmos, ok ok cranial bitemporal hemianopia, o o palsy, fundoscopy. Bo nerve III, IV, or VI w B B . w. Neck Goitre, thyroid lumps. w w w w ww Cardiorespiratory idHR, idBP, postural hypotension, irregular pulse, peripheral toedema, bibasal crackles (LVF).t e Cranial nerve III/IV/V.nI palsy, e peripheral neuropathy,.nslow et n . Neurological X X kX ok relaxing reflexes, weaknessoo(myopathy). ok o o B Other Joints, skin,wgenitalia, .B fundoscopy, urine analysis, .B U+E, early morning cortisol, TFTs, short Synacthen test (Ew p. 585), GTT—more w w specialist tests won advice from an endocrinologist. w ww ® Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 140 .B w ww Chapter 3 ww w History and examination t .ne Skin X k o .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . Presenting skin complaint Timing How long present w or gradual ww or worse; wsitefor,andsudden onset, getting better Location Original subsequent sites ww w w affected; Symptoms Itch (localized or generalized), pain, burning, bleeding, weeping; factors Dietary components, drugs, sunlight (seat Exacerbating evariability), et water; Relieving et sonal pet dander, night- time, factors Emollient n n n . . . Xcream, topical/systemic steroids. X X ok Current health Anorexia, odiarrhoea, ok fever, headache, fatigue, okweight loss, o o B depression, sore throat, w.B joint pain. w.B w w Past medical w history Previous skin disease, DM, w IBD, asthma/atopy, vari- ww cose veins, peripheral arterial disease, cardiac problems, endocrine disease, coeliac disease, neurological problems, ulcers, trauma, sarcoid, et SLE, malignancy, sensitivity etof skin to sun exposure, .lifelong et porphyria, n n n . . history of sun exposure or use of sun beds. X X kXtheir efok Drug history Dermatological okagents being used at present oand o o o B Btopical steroids, fects, previous drugs.B and their effects, oral and wtaken,usedimmunosuppressants, w.allergies. other drugs being drug w w w w ww Bo B History Allergy Hayfever, pet dander, dust mite, etc. Occupational history Current and previous jobs and effect of work upon skin, exposure to chemicals; hobbies and recreational activities. Family history Anyone else in the family affected; need to differentiate inherited pathology versus infectious pathology. Travel history Recent foreign travel and relationship of any travel to skin disease—vaccinations/prophylaxis taken for foreign travel. Function Restricted actions, effect on life, mobility, occupation, dominant hand, hobbies/sports, smoking, social support. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Examination X X X k k combody should beoexamined in good natural light;o patients ok The whole o arm may well otale of a rash on.B their have other.B tell- signs elseBo plaining where on the body. w Ask patients to fully undress wto enable a full skin w w w inspection. w Remember the importance of gaining w consent and having a w chaperone present. Distribution Solitary lesion, flexor aspects of limbs/ trunk, extensor et of limbs/ et gutters et n n n aspects trunk, scalp/eyebrows/ of nose, sun-exposed . . . X tip of nose, helix of ear,kwebspaces X X of hands or feet, periumbilical. ok sites, o the appearance ok using the o o o Morphology Noting or describing of the rash B .B diagnoses. terms defined in Boxes of w differential w.B3.4–3.7 refines the list w w Hair Alopecia w(hair loss) may be generalized orwlocalized and scarring/non ww scarring. Hirsutism (hair in the typical male distribution), hypertrichosis (excessive t hair growth). eClubbing, et nail loss, thinning of nail.nplate, et n n . . Nails pitting, ridging, onycholysis, X X X ok discolouration. ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Skin w 141 t t net .nelesions .ne K. Box 3.4 Non-palpableXskin X X ok ok from blood leaking intoothe okskin. Bruising; discolouration o Bo Ecchymosis B B . area of altered skin pigmentation. Macule Flat, well-dw efined w. w w Petechia Non- b lanching, pinpoint- s ized purple macule. w w ww Purpura Purple lesion resulting from free red blood cells in the skin, non-blanching. et Abnormal visible dilatation et of blood vessels (spider naevi). et n n n . . . Telangiectasia X X X ok ok ok o o o B K Box 3.5 Palpable w.B skin lesions ww.B w Nodule Solid, wmostly subcutaneous lesion (>0.5cm w diameter). ww Papule Raised, well-defined lesion (<0.5cm diameter). Plaque etRaised, flat-topped lesion, usually et >2cm diameter. et n n n . . . Weal Transient, raised lesion with pink margin. X X X ok Urticaria Weals with paleocentres ok and well-defined pink margins. ok o o B w.B w.B w w K Box 3.6 w Blisters w ww B Abscess Fluctuant swelling containing pus beneath the epidermis. Bulla Fluid-filled blister larger than a vesicle (>0.5cm diameter). Pustule Well-defined pus-filled lesion. Vesicle Fluid-filled blister (<0.5cm diameter). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Abrasion Scraping off superficial layers of the skin (a graze). Atrophy Thinning and loss of skin substance. Crust Dried brownish/yellow exudates. Erosion Superficial break in the continuity of the epidermis. Excoriation Linear break in the skin surface (a scratch). Fissure Crack, often through keratin. Incisional wound Break to the skin by sharp object. Laceration Break to the skin caused by blunt trauma/tearing injury. Lichenification Skin thickening with exaggerated skin markings. Scale Fragment of dry skin. Ulcer Loss of epidermis and dermis resulting in scar. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX ww t e X.n ok Bo ww w K Box 3.7 Skin defects Bo t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 142 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w w History and examination ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Oncological/ h aematological X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B . w. fatigue, cough, w Symptoms Weightwloss, anorexia, weakness, lethargy, w w haemoptysis, shortness of breath, postural dizziness, nausea, vomiting, w w w diarrhoea, constipation, PR bleeding, lumps, swelling, pain, fractures, tbone pain, polyuria, prostatism, bruising, recurrent epistaxis, e etrecurrent et haemarthrosis, heavy menstrual .loss, miscarriage, recurrent n n n . . XVTE, fevers, infections, focalkneurology. X kX ok Past medical history DM, oasthma, o iBP, IHD, liver disease,oojaundice, o thyB .B malignancy (and radiotherapy), .B epilepsy, gastric roid problems, anaemia, w w or small bowelw surgery, malabsorption, chronic wwdisease (eg RA), blood ww transfusions,w splenectomy. Drug history (regimen, tdate of last dose, response, side et iron,Chemotherapy e anticoagulants, vaccinations et effects), vitamin B / folate,.naspirin, n n . . X splenectomy, long-termkantibiotics, X X OCP, allergies. ok post- o family support, ok home o o o Social history Smoking, alcohol, living circumstances, B .B exposure to dyes/asbestos/ .B coal tar, racial help, occupation,w previous w w w origin, diet (vegan, vegetarian), recreational drug use. w w ww 12 Family history Malignancy, thalassaemia, sickle- cell anaemia, haemophilia, von Willebrand’s disease, pernicious anaemia, spherocytosis, thrombophilia. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok Examination ok pigmentation, rashes oand ok nodules, o inspection Bruising, Bo General B B ulceration, cyanosis, ­ w. plethora, jaundice, excoriations, w. racial origin w w w (haemoglobinopathies and thalassaemias). w w w Hands Nails (koilonychias, pallor, clubbing), palmar crease pallor, arthropathy. et et et .nEyes .n(gum .nulcerFace (jaundice, pallor), mouth hypertrophy or bleeding, X X X ok ation, candida, atrophic glossitis, ok angular stomatitis, gingivitis). ok o o Bo Lymph nodes Cervical, B B . axillary, epitrochlear (elbow),winguinal. . winwsternum, spine, clavicles,wscapulae. w Bones Bony w pain ww Abdomen Hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, para-aortic nodes, ascites. et et et n n n . . . X Fundi (haemorrhages, engorged X veins, papilloedema), temperature X ok Other ok ok chart, urinalysis. o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Legs Vasculitis, bruising, pigmentation, ulceration, neurological signs. B .B w ww .B w w w w Breast (male and female) w 143 t t t .ne (male andXfemale) .ne .ne Breast X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B . w.bleeding/inversion, w Lump Size, duration, pain, nipple discharge/ wwmobility, w skin changes,w previous breast lumps. w w Past obs/gynae history Number of pregnancies, age of first pregnancy, breastfeeding, et menarche, menopause. et et n n n . . . IHD, clotting problems, XPast medical history DM, asthma, X liver kX iBP,epilepsy. ok disease, anaemia, previousoomalignancy, ok o o B FH Breast cancer (male/ aw ge.B of relative at their w.B female), gynae cancer— diagnosis. w w w w ww DH HRT, COC use. Examination (lying at 45°) eta chaperone et et n n n . . . Ensure is present and document their details in the notes X job title). X X ok (name, okside first): ok o o o Examine both breasts (normal B .B w.Bscars, skin changes, nipple wdischarge/ Inspection Asymmetry, inversion, w w skin tethering, w erythema, oedema. Ask thewpatient to tense pectoral ww wall by putting their hands on hips and tensing. Ask the patient to lean forward. Look for any skin tethering. t t et .ne Ask the patient to showXyou .newhere the lump is, palpateXall.nfour Palpation X k tail, assess any palpableomasses. k ok quadrants (see Fig. 3.5) and oaxillary o o Bo Lymphadenopathy Axilla, B B cervical, supraclavicular. The must be w.to adequately w. patient fully relaxed forwyou palpate thew axillary nodes. Take the w arm in yours as you palpate.w ww weight of their Other Liver, spine. t t net .n(a)e .ne(b) Supraclavicular X. X X lymph nodes ok ok ok o o Bo B B upper w. 15% w. 50% upper w inner quadrant w w ww outerw 18% nipple quadrant Axillary t t lymph nodes e e et n n n . . . 11% lower X outer X X klower ok quadrant o6% ok inner quadrant o o o B .B w.Bshowing proportion w Fig. 3.5 Anatomy ofw the breast. (a) Quadrants of the breast w w of breast cancer wby location. (b) Glands and lymphatics w of the right breast. w Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 144 .B w ww Chapter 3 o ww w History and examination t .ne Eyes X k .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . wred eye, discomfort w Symptoms Reduced/ vision or visual loss, wwimpaired wtissues (gritty or FBwsensation), pain of the eye orw soft around the eye, w dry eyes or excessive watering, itch, swelling, photophobia or haloes aroundtlights, floaters or flashing lights,tdiplopia, discharge. e e et n n . . Past ophthalmic history Glaucoma,.n myopia, cataracts, previous surgery, X X X ok glasses/contact lens prescription ok and last optometry check- oukp. o o o Past medical history .Numerous systemic diseases can affect the eye, B B wvascular w.Bdisease, including DM, iBP, disease, RA, SLE, thyroid MS. w w w anticholinergics, medica- ww Drug history w Ophthalmic medications, steroids, tions for coexisting disease; allergies. t Glaucoma, retinoblastoma. ehistory et et Family n n n . . . X history Ability to self-care, X X ok Social ok impact eye disease has oupon okADLs and o o home support received/ needed. B w.B w.B Upper eye lid w w w w Limbus ww Bo Bo History Pupil ok et X.n oo B . w Lateral canthus wwLower eye lid Conjunctiva over sclera t .ne t .ne X Medial canthus ok o B w. kX ww Iris with lens beneath ww t t Fig. 3.6 net .ne Surface anatomy of the right .eye. .ne X X X ok Examination ok ok o o Bo Inspection Exophthalmos, B B proptosis, jaundice, pallor, xanthelasma, w.red eye, corneal arcus, periorbital w. cellulitis (Fig.eyelids (cysts, inflammation), 3.6). w w w ww Visual acuity w This must be tested in all patients: • Use a Snellen chart at 6m to test visual acuity • Make patient is using the correct glasses for the test (reading et sureifthein doubt, eint a piece etvs n n n distance); use a pin-h.ole of card . . X visual acuity is very bad, kassess X ability to count fingers, awareness X ok • Ifmovement oor perception ok of (waving hand), of light (pen torch). o o o B B Check the pupils arewequal, .B reacting to light Pupillary response and w.reflexes w w and accommodation w (PERLA) and for a relative w afferent papillary defect. ww Look for the red reflex (absent in dense cataracts). An absent red reflex at the 6wk baby check is a red flag (treat this as a same-day urgent referral). t Confrontation testing toneidentify t any visual field loss and efields etto Visual n n . . . X if the defect is unilateral kX or bilateral (E p. 135). okX ok establish odiplopia, o o o or nystagmus. Ocular movements Look for loss of conjugate B gaze B B . . w w ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Eyes w 145 t t t Ophthalmoscopy .ne .ne .ne X X X ophthalmoscope set +10 the cornea and anteriorkchambers ok • Withbetheexamined. ok onof fluorescein oo ulcers, 1 or 2odrops highlights corneal Bo can B B . . abrasions, and foreign bodies, especially under the blue light w w • With the ophthalmoscope set on 0 the user w can visualize the retina. It wtowdilate the pupil ww is important with 1 or 2w drops of a weak mydriatic (Box 3.8) (eg 0.5% or 1% tropicamide) to allow full visualization of the retina. et The risk of causing acute.glaucoma et with mydriatics is small. et n n n . . X X X ok K Box 3.8 Descriptive okterms in ophthalmology ok o o o B Accommodation Alteration near/far objects. w.B in lens and pupil to focus won.B w w Acuity Abilityw of the eye to discriminate fine detail. w ww Anterior chamber Between cornea and iris, containing aqueous. t of the eye. Aqueous et Fluid-like jelly in the anterior echamber et n n n . . . Blepharitis Inflammation/ i nfection of eyelids. X X X ok Canthus Medial or lateralojunction ok of the upper and loweroeyelids. ok o B Chemosis Conjunctival.B w oedema. w.B Choroid Layer sandwiched between retina and sclera. w w w w ww B Conjunctiva Mucous membrane covering sclera and cornea anteriorly. Cycloplegia Ciliary muscle paralysis preventing accommodation. Dacryocystitis Inflammation of the lacrimal sac. Ectropion Eyelids evert outwards (away from the cornea). Entropion Eyelids invert towards the cornea (lashes irritate cornea). Fovea Highly cone-rich area of the macula (yellow-spot). Fundus Area of the retina visible with the ophthalmoscope. Hyphaema Blood in the anterior chamber seen as a red fluid level. Hypopyon Pus in the anterior chamber seen as a white fluid level. Limbus Border between cornea and sclera. Macula Rim around the fovea, rich in cone cells. Miotic Agent resulting in pupillary constriction (eg pilocarpine). Mydriatic Agent resulting in pupillary dilatation (eg tropicamide). Optic cup Depression in the centre of the optic disc. Optic disc Optic nerve head seen as white opacity on fundoscopy. Posterior chamber Chamber between the iris and lens. Presbyopia Age-related reduction in near acuity (long-sightedness). Ptosis Drooping eyelid(s). Sclera The visible white fibrous layer of the eye. Scotoma Defect resulting in loss of a specific area of vision. Strabismus Squint, loss of conjugate gaze. Tonometer Apparatus for indirectly measuring intraocular pressure. Vitreous Jelly-like matter which occupies the globe behind the lens. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 146 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne and neck X.ne .ne Head X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B . As well as a good w general history, specific symptoms w.to note include: w w w ears, wax, discharge, tinnitus, w deafness, unilateral/ ww Ears Pain, blocked ­bilateral features, vertigo, trauma, itching, FBs, noise exposure, occupation. t t eBlocked esneezing, et n n n Nose nose, watery discharge, itching, coughing, .change . . X voice, altered sensation kofXsmell/taste, external deformity/ X recent ok intrauma, o ask about daytime variation oink symptom epistaxis, sinusitis; o o o B ­severity, pattern of obstruction, effects on speech and w.B w.Bsleep. Are symp- w toms uni/bilateral? w w w w w Throat Dysphagia, pain on swallowing, hoarseness, difficulty opening jaw (trismus), stridor, sleep apnoea/snoring; ask about neck lumps, vomiting, heartburn, waterbrash (acid regurgitation or filling of mouth with saliva). et n . X et n . X t .ne X ok k ok Examination oo o pinna or masB B . Ears Inspect The pinna, auditory meatus, tenderness.over w all four quadrants of the w toid; Otoscopy w Examine eardrum (see Fig. 3.7) w retraction, perforation, exudate); ww Test hearing See fol- ww (colour, bulging/ lowing ‘Hearing tests’ text. t et Nose deformities, tilt the head net Rhinoscopy .neLook for Obvious scars, deviations/ .3.8); .nback and look down each nostril (Fig. (AdministerX lidocaine X X k ok spray first), look for polyps, ooinflamed turbinates, pus..Book Bo Throat Inspect Thewlips,.Baround and inside the mouth; w Examine The tongue and tonsils using wwa torch and tongue depressor, wwcheck palate movements ww Bo by asking the patient to say ‘ah’ (Fig. 3.9). t Swellings, asymmetry,nescars; t Ask The patient to swallow, NeckeLook net .n thefor tongue; protrude Palpate The.neck from behind and ask the .patient X X X kfor Tracheal deviation, lymphadenopathy, ok to take a sip of water;ForoFeeloa bruit; opp.k472–3). o Examine Any lumpsB (E Bo tenderness; Auscultate B w. w. w w Hearing tests (E OHCS10 p. 540) w w ww Whisper Whisper a different number into each ear, standing 30cm away while blocking the other ear. Ask the patient to repeat it in turn. et et et n n n . . . XTuning fork tests X kXon the patient’s mastoid bone ok Rinne’s test Place the tuning ofork ok until it is o o o B no longer heard; then place the fork near the external meatus w.B w.earBauditory where it is still heard in a normal ear, but not in an with conductive w w deafness. Normally w air conduction >bonewconduction. Confusingly, a ww normal result is called Rinne positive. et test Place the tuning fork .innthe et middle of the forehead and easkt Weber’s n n . . which side the sound is loudest; in sensorineural deafness the sound is X in the normal ear, in kconductive X deafness the sound kis X loudest in ok loudest o o o o o the abnormal ear. .B B w w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Head and neck w 147 t .ne X k t t membrane .neTympanic .ne X X (pars flaccida) o ok ok o o Handle of malleus Bo B B w. w. w w w w Antero-superior ww quadrant t t e e et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o Tympanic membrane B .B (pars w.B wtensa) w w w wAntero-inferior ww Postero-superior quadrant quadrant t t e e et Postero-inferior Cone of light n n n . . . quadrant X X kX as ok Fig. 3.7 Structures and quadrants okof the right tympanic membrane o(eardrum) o o o B seen on otoscopy. w.B w.B w w w w ww tFrontal sinus t t .ne .ne .ne X X X Superior k ok Middle turbinate ook oturbinate o Sphenoid sinus Bo B B . . w w Inferior turbinate ww ww Eustachian tube ww Nasopharynx et Nostril et n n net . . Soft palate X. X X Hard k palate ok ok oo o Bo Fig. 3.8 Anatomy ofwthe.Bnose. B w. w w w w ww Central incisor First premolar t wall Posterior e et Hard palate et Second n n n . . of .oropharynx Lateral Palatine premolar X PalatoX kX incisor ok pharyngeal oraphe ok First molar o o o Soft B arch w.B palate Canine ww.B Second w molar Uvula Palatow w ww et n . kX o Bo glossal arch Dorsum of tongue Third molar (wisdom tooth) Palatine tonsil et n . kX o o B . w ww Fig. 3.9 Anatomy of the mouth and oropharynx. w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 148 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne .ne .ne Musculoskeletal X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B w. swelling, deformity, morning w.stiffness, instability, w Symptoms Joint pain, w w sensory changes, back pain, limb pain, muscle/ w w soft tissue aches, cold w fingers and toes, dry eyes and mouth, red eyes, systemic symptoms (fatigue, loss, tight skin, fever,t rash, diarrhoea), injury/trauma et weight e since), bleeding tendency..net (mechanism, timing, change in symptoms n n . . X medical history Previous ktrauma/ X surgery, recent infections kX(streptook Past o odisease o o coccal, gonorrhoeal, TB,oetc), insect/tick bites, IBD, skin (psorB .B haemophilia. .B iasis), childhood arthritis, w w w antiarthritic agents (NSAIDs, Drug history w Previous ww steroids (oral/intra- ww articular), DMARDs) with beneficial/side effects, long-standing steroids, Ca supplements, vitamin D analogues, other concurt bisphosphonates, et eetc), et rent medications (antihypertensives allergies. n n n . . . X of daily living Ability kto:Xbathe, dress (and undress), eat, kXtransfer ok Activities ouse of the toilet; ?change with osymptoms. from bed to chair and back, o o o B Social history Domestic w.Barrangements (who elsewiswat.Bhome, location of w w bathroom inw relation to bed), smoking history, w drug and alcohol use. w 2+ Family history Rheumatoid, gout, osteoarthritis, haemochromatosis, IBD, haemophilia. t t t .ne .ne .ne Examination X X X k routine, though the ok Each joint has a specificooexamination okunderlying ojoint similar. Always examine .the above and Bo principles for eachware.Bvery B w below too. w and their gait. wwOverall appearance of thewpatient ww General inspection Look Close inspection of the joint, comparing left to right if possible. t t et Feel of warmth, tenderness, .nAssessment .ne crepitus, effusions, etc.X.ne X X kthe joint) and passive (examiner ok Move Active (patient moving ojoint ok moving o where appropriate. Bo Bo joint) movements;wstressing B . w. of joint laxity. Measure Rangew of movements (in degrees) andw degree w w ww Ilium t t e e et n n n Anterior superior . . . X X X iliac spine Pubis ok ok ok o o o B Femoral head in Pubic tubercle w.B w.B acetabulum w w w w ww Obturator foramen Bo o et Ischium n . kX Lesser trochanter Greater trochanter et n . kX o o B . w ww Fig. 3.10 Anatomy of the left hip joint. t .ne Femur kX oo B . w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Musculoskeletal w 149 t et Fig. 3.10; E OHCS10 p..682) net Hip .n(See .ne X X X k rointernal ok Inspection Leg shortening, ok rotation (hip dislocation), oexternal o of o femur), scars, sinuses, cellulitis, bruising. Bo tation (fractured neck B B w. landmarks (greater trochanter, w. anterior superior w Palpation Check bony w w iliac crest) are symmetrical, warmth, crepitus and w w clicks on movement. w Supine Active and passive range of movement; flexion (straight leg flexion tflexion with knee bent 0–135°), 0–90°, e(0– etabduction (0–50°), adduction,(with ein-t n . ternal 45°) and external (0–45°).n rotation, fixed flexion deformity.n X in lumbar lordosis, checkkthe X popliteal fossa can touch thekXcouch). ok hand o o o o(0–o20°). range of movement; extension B Prone Active and passive B B . . wgait (E p. 138), walking aids. Gait Trendelenburg ww ww(Fig. 3.11) and lower spine/wsacroiliac ww Other joints Knee (E p. 151). Kneee(E t OHCS10 p. 688) net et n n . . Inspection Swelling, erythema, resting position, varus (bow-legs) or.valgus X knees) deformity, scars, X cellulitis, muscle wasting X ok (knock- ok sinuses, ok of thigh o o o muscles compared to the other side (especially vastus medialis). B .B medial and latw.Bbony landmarks (head wof wfibula, Palpation Temperature, w eral joint lines, wpatella), effusion (if large infra- wpatella sulci will be bulging ww B outwards with a positive patella tap, if small try milking fluid down from thigh and stroking fluid from one side to the other), crepitus, clunks or clicks on movement, patella position, tenderness, and mobility. Supine Active and passive movement; flexion (0–135°), extension (0°). Prone Popliteal fossa cysts or aneurysms. Stressing Cruciates Flex knee to 90°, immobilize the patient’s foot by sitting on it and check the integrity of the anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments by pulling and pushing the lower leg, respectively; Collaterals Flex knee to 30°, fix the thigh with your left hand and test medial collateral (pull lower leg laterally) and then lateral collateral (push lower leg medially). Gait Limp, walking aids. Other joints Hip (see previous section) and ankle (E p. 150). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww t ok Bo e X.n w t o w.B Lateral Femur t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k t ww Medial et n . X ww k oo oo B B . . Lateral collateral Medial ww wwcollateral ligament wligament w ww Articular cartilage Medial meniscus Lateral meniscus t t Head of fibula e e et n n n . . . X X X Tibia ok ok ok o o o B Fig. 3.11 Anatomy w .Bright knee joint. of the w.B w w w w ww Patella B .B w ww 150 Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t Ankle .ne (See Fig. 3.12; E OHCS10 .np.e694) .ne X X X erythema, resting position (consider fracture– ok Inspection Swelling, oksenior okdeviation o o and get immediate help if there is marked of Bo dislocation B B . (E pp. 448–51). w. the foot followingw trauma w and lateral malle- ww Palpation Temperature, bony landmarks w (medial ww olus, tibiotalar joint), crepitus, pain, swelling, effusion, crepitus. After trauma Palpate proximal fibula head to exclude its fracture, check foot et(E p. 130), distal sensation.nand etcap-refill. et pulses n n . . plantarflexion (0–50°), dorsiXMovement Active and passivekmovement; X ok flexion (0–15°), inversiono(0– o 30°), eversion (0–15°). ookX o B Gait Limp, walking aids, ability to walk 2 paces unaided. .B w.B w150). Other joints Knee (E pp. 149–150) and foot (E p. w w w w ww $ Ottawa ankle rules Ankle X-ray only required in adults and children >6 if any pain in malleolar area and bony tenderness over any of: distal 6cm of posterior edge of tibia or fibula, or tip of medial or lateral malleolus or if unable to bear weight both immediately and in the ED for 4 steps. et n . X ok Bo Bo et n . X k oo B . Fibula w Lateral malleolus Calcaneus ok oo B . w Cuboid ww Talus t .ne Navicular kX Fig. 3.12 Anatomy of the right ankle joint. Foot (See Fig. 3.13) o B . w wwMedial malleolus Tibia ww et X.n t .ne X ok w oo B . ww ww t .ne X k ww t Swelling, erythema, restingneposition, t Inspection high arch, bunions. et .ne Temperature, .n and Palpation pain X or .crepitus along each metatarsal X X k k k forefoot bones (navicular, and medial, intermediate and o phalanx,cuneiform), oo (E p.cuboid ooand cap-refill. foot pulses 130), distal sensation, Bo lateral B B . . Movement As for w examination but also adduction w ankle and ww and abduction ww across the talonavicular calcaneocuboidw joints. w Gait Limp, walking aids, ability to walk 2 paces unaided. Other joints Ankle (E p. 150). et Proximal et et n n n . . . phalanx First metatarsal Cuneiforms X X X Medial phalanx ok ok(of great toe) (lateral, middle,omedial) ok o o Distal phalanx B Navicular .B Talus w.B w w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok Cuboid Calcaneus o o o B B Metatarsals Tarsals wof .thePhalanges w.B Fig. 3.13 Anatomy left foot. w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Musculoskeletal w 151 t t et Back .ne(See Fig. 3.14; E OHCS10 .p.n672) .ne X X X k Deformity, loss oroexaggeration of thoracic kyphosis ok Inspectionlateral okor lumbar o deviation from the midline (scoliosis). Bo Bo lordosis, B . standing in front, palpate each Palpation With patient w. vertebra for pain; w wwpalpate w with patient w prone each side of pelvis for w sacroiliac tenderness. w Movement Active Flexion (touch toes with knees together and legs straight;t most people can touch theirtshins), extension (leaning backe lateral bending (lateral flexion) e and rotation (best assessed.nwith et wards), n n . . X seated so pelvis is fixed); X Passive With patient supine, kXperform ok patient okeach leg straight leg raise by elevating in turn (0–85°). oo o o B Measure Schober’swtest .Bfor lumbar flexion (markwthe.Blevel of the posterior iliac spine in the midline; make a further marks, one 5cm w w w one 10cm above this; the distance ww twobetween below this and these two w new marks measured when the patient is standing and then in full flexion— an increase of <5cm suggests et spondylitis). et limited lumbar flexion) (eg ean-t n n n kylosing . . . X X kXknee (E p. 149). ok Other joints Hip (E p. 149)ooand ok o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo et X.n ok Cervical et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww Thoracic o Bo t .ne X k ok ww t e X.n o w.B ww wThoracic et X.n Lumbar Sacrum t .ne X k kyphosis oo B . w et .n kX w lordosis w ww Lumbar .ne X k t et n . X k Coccyx o ok o oo Bo Fig. 3.14 Anatomy w B B . . of the spine. w ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 152 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t Pelvis .ne .ne .ne X X X joints in the pelvis are kfixed, however the sacroiliac joint be ok The o ok acan o alpated for tenderness o from behind; in a trauma emergency, senior Bo ­pmember B B . See Fig. 3.15. of the trauma forw instability. w. team may test the pelvis w w Sacrum wSacroiliac joint w ww promontory Ilium t Sacral t Anterior superior e e et n n n . . . iliac spine X X X ok ok ok o o o Pubis B Obturator w.B w.B w w foramen Ischium w w ww Symphysis t tpubis e e et n n n . . . Fig. 3.15 Anatomy of the pelvis. X X X ok ok ok o o o B B E OHCS10 p. 664) w.B Shoulder (See Fig. .3.16; werythema, Inspection Swelling, deformity, resting w w ww position, (check from ww B the front, side and back), scars, sinuses, cellulitis, swelling, muscle wasting (deltoid, supraspinatus, infraspinatus). Palpation Temperature, bony landmarks (acromion, clavicle, spine of scapula, cervical and upper thoracic vertebrae), crepitus, clicks. Movement Active and passive movement; abduction (0–90° with elbow flexed, 0–180° with elbow extended), adduction, internal (0–90°) and external (0– 65°) rotation, flexion (0– 180°) and extension (0– 65°), passive abduction should be undertaken carefully if painful. Stressing Impingement test Arm held at 90° abduction and internally ­rotated, if pain detected it is a positive test; Scarf test Patient’s left hand placed over their right shoulder and vice versa, if pain detected it is a positive test (acromioclavicular joint pathology). Other joints Elbow (E p. 153) and back (E p. 151). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o o w.B ok Bo ww et n . X Acromion ok o w.B ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t Scapula o o B . w ww ww Acromioclavicular joint et n . X Spine of scapula ww Humerus et n . kX o Bo Greater tuberosity Lesser tuberosity oo B . w .n kX Posterior view Clavicle ww et .ne X k Anterior view ww et n Acromion . X t .ne X k Fig. 3.16 Anatomy of the right shoulder joint. w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Musculoskeletal w 153 t t t Elbow .ne (See Fig. 3.17; E OHCS10 .np.e668) .ne X X X Swelling, erythema, ok Inspectionplaques okinflamed bursae, rheumatoid oknodules or o overB theoolecranon, scars. Bo psoriatic B . bony landmarks (medial and Palpation Temperature, w.lateral epicondyles, w ww clicks, w olecranon), w crepitus, instability. w w Movement Active and passive movement; flexion (0–150°) and extension (0°); pronation, supination. t Shoulder ejoints et et n n n Other (Fig. 3.16) and wrist (Fig. 3.18). . . . X X X Anterior view k Medial ok o supracondylar Posterior view ok o o o B B .B crest w.Olecranon Medial condylew Coronoid fossa w w Lateral w condyle w Olecranon fossa ww Medial Lateral epicondyle epicondyle Lateral epicondyle t e et et Capitulum n n n . . Head of radius. X X X of radius Trochlea Neck of ok Head okCoronoid okradius Neck of radius o o o process B w.B w.B w w Fig. 3.17 Anatomy w of the right elbow. w ww Wrist (See Fig. 3.18; E OHCS10 p. 670) t t t .ne Swelling, erythema, deformity .ne (eg Colles’ fracture), features .neof Inspection X X X disease (E p. 468), scars. k ok rheumatoid oklandmarks oradius, o o Temperature, bony (styloid process of head Bo Palpation B B . . and styloid processw of ulna), scaphoid (base of thew anatomical snuff-box). w (0–75°), extension ww Movement Active ww and passive movement; wflexion (0–75°), radial (0–20°), ulnar deviation (0–20°), pronation, supination. t Elbow (E p. 153) and hand t (E p. 154). t Otherejoints .n .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o Capitate Bo Bo B Trapezoid w. w. Metacarpals Hamate w w w wPisiform ww Trapezium Triquetrum Carpals Scaphoid Lunate t t e e et Radial styloid process n n n . . . Ulnar styloid X X X process Radius ok ok ok Ulna o o o B .B w w.B Fig. 3.18 Anatomy of the wrist and hand. w w w w ww Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 154 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t Hand .ne (See Fig. 3.19; E OHCS10 .np.e670) .ne X X X swelling, features of ok Inspection(EErythema, okbreaks to(Ethep. skin, okrheumatoid o o p. 468) orB osteoarthritis 468), deformity, dislocation, Bo disease B . . muscle wasting, nail pitting. w w Palpation Temperature, ww palpate each metacarpal wwand phalanx for pain or ww crepitus, distal cap-refill and sensation. Movement and passive movement; t flexion and extension of nevery etPIPJ,Active eadduction et n n MTPJ, and DIPJ, abduction and of every MTPJ, .oppos. . X and circumduction of the X to: hold a kXthumb MTPJ; ask the patient ok ition okthumb pencil and write, pick upoa o mug, undo a button, oppose o their o B .B of this against your own); .Bcheck strengthandof little finger (check strength w w extension and w or w lacerating trauma to idenwflexion following penetrating w ww tify tendon injury. Stressing Collateral ligaments of the digits following trauma or dislocation by attempting et to deviate the phalanges etmedially or laterally. .net n n . . XOther joints Wrist (E p. 153)kand X inspect the elbow. X ok o ok o o o B w.B w.B Distal phalanx w w w w ww B . kX o o net Middle phalanx Proximal phalanx ww oo B . w et Phalanges .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww Metacarpal bones t t t e e n n . First metacarpal . .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B . bones w. wCarpal w w w w ww Radius Ulna t t e e et n n n Fig. 3.19 Anatomy of the hand, thumb and fingers. . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo w oo B . w et n . kX ok ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo o oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww Bo ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n ww Bo o w.B .n kX ww o w.B .ne X k ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww t o o w.B w 155 et t et n . X w Musculoskeletal t .ne X k ww o Bo B .B w w w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 156 .B w ww Chapter 3 ww w History and examination t .ne Urological X k o .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . Symptoms Polyuria,wanuria, prostatism (urgency, hesitancy, poor stream, wnocturia, straining), haematuria, ww terminal dribble, dysuria, oedema, renal w w colic, incontinence, malaise, lethargy, N+V, anorexia, weight loss, itching, passingtstones in the urine, incontinence, infertility, bone pain, e discharge, genital/perineal.lesion, et impotence, et genital scrotal pain, dyspareunia (pain n n n . . Xon intercourse), FB (vaginal, urethral, X anal), anal/perianal problems. kX myeok Past medical history DM, iBP, okrecurrent UTIs, renal/ureteric ostones, o o o B loma, known renal impairment/ failure, previous vesicoureteric w.B (steroids, w.B disease,reflux, gout, immunosuppression HIV), neurological long- w w w Male Tight foreskin, term urinarywcatheter, STIs, spinal cord pathology; Bo recurrent balanitis, testicular pain/swelling; Female Number of children, mode of delivery and any complications, last cervical smear and result. Drug history Nephrotoxics (including NSAIDs, ACEi, aminoglycosides), bladder neck relaxants, infertility or impotence drugs, antiandrogens; allergies. Social history Foreign travel, ability to cope with ADLs, sex abroad, illicit drug use (smoke, oral, IV). Sexual history • Last sexual intercourse (LSI)—date, gender, type of intercourse (vaginal, anal, oral), protected, relationship of partner (casual, long term), problems or symptoms in partner, high-risk area, sex worker • Repeat the above for all partners in the last 3mth •All men should also be asked if they have ever had sex with another man in the past as this affects risk and types of STI to consider. Occupational history Past and present jobs, exposure to dyes. Family history Polycystic kidney disease, DM, iBP. et n . X ok Bo B History et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo ww ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww et oo B . w ww .n kX w oo B . ww ww t .ne X k ww t t t Examination (lying flat, supine) .ne .ne (See Fig. 3.20) .ne X X X Mental state, ok General inspection ok RR (?Kussmaul breathingoofk metabolic hiccups, pallor,ohydration (dehydrated: sunkenoeyes, dry lips/ Bo acidosis), B tongue; fluid-overload: w. peripheral oedema, pulmonary w.Boedema). w w Hands Leuconychia, w brown nails, pale nail beds. w ww Arms Bruising (purpura), pigmentation, scratch marks, fistula, BP (lying and standing). t et e(dehydration, et n n . . Face Eyes (anaemia, jaundice), mouth ulcers, fetor),.n rash. X X X ok Neck JVP. ok ok o o o B B kidney, dialysis Abdomen Inspect (distended scars, transplanted w.Bkidneys,bladder, w.lymph port), palpate w (ballot bladder, liver, spleen, nodes), perw cuss (enlarged w bladder, ascites), auscultatew(renal artery bruits), PR for ww prostate. t Size, surface, consistency nand t symmetry of prostate innmen, Rectum eimpaction eretention). et n . . . faecal (will worsen urinary X X X ok Back Oedema, loin tenderness ok on percussion. ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Urological w 157 t t t Chest .neCVS and RS examination (pericarditis, .ne heart failure, fluid overload). .ne X X X Oedema, bruising, pigmentation, scratch marks, neuropathy, k ok Legs weakness oaltered ok proxo o (myopathy), reflexes, muscle wasting. Bo imal B B . Urinalysis Glucose,w blood, protein, nitrites, leucocytes. w. w w Other Fundoscopy w (DM and iBP changes), blood w glucose, weight. ww Bladder Uterus Fallopian t t e ebone et tube Pubic Seminal n n n . . . Cervix vesicles X Ovary X kX Urethra Shaft ok Bladder oRectum okRectum o o o Glans Prostate B Pubic bone w.B Anus Foreskin ww.B Anus Clitoris w Vagina Urethral w w ww Vas deferens meatus Outer labia (sperm duct) Urethral Scrotum Inner labia meatus Epididymis t Testis t t e e (testicles) n n . . .ne X X X Fig. 3.20 Anatomy of the female (L) and male (R) urogenital systems. k ok ok oo Bo Examination ofwmale B .Bogenitalia (ensure chaperone . present) w Inspection Lookwfor any ulceration (includingw w w retracting foreskin and ww B checking the glans), warts, scars, or sinuses, urethral discharge, tight foreskin (phimosis) or retracted foreskin which is stuck leaving the glans exposed (paraphimosis). Inspect the scrotum for skin changes or oedema and, while the patient is standing, the lie of the testes (the left testis usually hangs lower than the right and both testes lie longitudinally—a high testis with a transverse lie may indicate torsion, though a torted testis may also appear normal). Palpate each testis in turn between the fingers and the thumb feeling for texture, tenderness, nodules, and to compare left to right. An absent testis may be maldescended and trapped in the inguinal canal. Examine epididymis and follow it up superiorly to the spermatic cord and up into the inguinal ring. Palpate inguinal lymph nodes or maldescended testis. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o oo B . w ok Bo o et n . kX .n kX ww t e X.n .ne X k ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww t o o w.B ww et .ne X k Examination of female genitalia See E pp. 158–9. ww Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 158 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t t .ne .nesystem .ne Female reproductive X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B w. of last period, length of menstrual w. cycle (regular or w Menstrual history Date w w irregular), length of period, associated pain/ s ymptoms w w (Box 3.9), age when w periods started/stopped; bleeding/discharge severity of periods (number of pads/ tampons, clots, flooding), bleeding periods, after interet(vaginal, et between et course anal, oral), or after menopause, rectal/urinary bleeding, n n n . . . Xeffect on lifestyle, other vaginalkdischarge X (colour, consistency and Xsmell). ok Sexual history Pain on superficial o or deep penetration (dyspareunia), ok type o o o B of intercourse (vaginal, in .Banal, oral), use of contraception, wprevious w.B intercourse foreign countries, sexually transmitted infections; contraception w w w ww current andw previous types, problems/benefits. Cervical smear Date of last test and result, previous results and any treatt smears, colposcopy clinic, mente(repeat laser ablation). etand/ eandt n n n . . . Past gynae history Previous problems o r operations (where X of surgeon), breast orkthyroid X problems, use of HRT, kprolapse. X ok name o of pregnancies, o type of o o o Past obstetric history Number number of births, B .B delivery, complications, forw obstetric history). w.Bsubfertility (E p. 160 w w Past medical history w Clotting problems, thyroid problems, w anaemia, malignancy. ww B Urinary problems Incontinence (on laughing/coughing/exercising or spontaneous), dysuria, urgency, frequency, haematuria, if symptomatic ask about fluid intake, leg weakness, faecal incontinence, back pain and previous spinal problems/surgery, effect on lifestyle. Other Vaginal lumps, weight loss, other concerns. t .ne X k oo et Examination oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t o ww o w.B o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n Bo w Always have a chaperone who can reassure the patient and also guard the door. Document name and role in notes. Ask friends and family members to leave, unless the patient wants them to stay (this also provides an opportunity to ask questions which the patient may not have answered fully with others present). As with any examination it is essential to keep the patient informed about what you are going to do. Start with the patient lying flat on her back with arms by her sides. It is important the patient is relaxed and that you have a good examination lamp. See Fig. 3.21. Abdominal Assess for scars, striae, hernias, body hair distribution, everted umbilicus, distension, tenderness including loins (± guarding, rebound), masses, organomegaly, percuss (masses, shifting dullness). Ask the patient to move her feet apart, bend her knees, and let her legs flop outwards. Have a strong light source directed at the vulva and gloves on both hands. Vulval Look for rashes, ulcers, warts, lumps or other lesions; spread the labia majora using your non-dominant thumb and index finger and look for lesions, lumps, discharge (urethral/vaginal), bleeding; ask the patient to push down (look for prolapse) and cough. Vaginal Insert a well-lubricated index and middle finger (dominant hand) into the vagina and feel for the cervix, noting the size, shape, consistency, and whether it is mobile or tender. Feel above, below, and to the sides (adnexae) for masses or tenderness. Finally, palpate the uterus by placing your other hand above the pubic symphysis and press down with the fingers at the cervix; pressing up feel for uterine position (anteverted/retroverted), size, shape, consistency, mobility, and tenderness. Inspect the finger afterwards for blood or discharge. t .ne X k ok Bo t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Female reproductive system w 159 t t t Cusco’s .nespeculum While the patient .isninethe same position insertXa well .neluX X and warmed speculum the vagina. Look at the cervix. If you ok bricated ok into ok forward unable to visualize theocervix, ask the patient to tilt heropelvis Bo are B B by placing her fists under ulceration, bleeding, cysts w. her bottom. Look for w wtake. swabs or other lesions and the cervical os. If required and/or a w w w ww cervical smear. Consider Sims’ speculum (for examining prolapses), rectal examination. et et et n n n . . . X X X Pubic bone ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.BClitoris w w w w ww Bladder et Uterus et et n n n . . . X X X Rectum ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.BCervix w w w of the female reproductivewsystem. ww Fig. 3.21 Examination t t et .nBox .nein gynaecology X.ne X X K 3.9 Descriptive terms ok ok ok o o Bo Anatomy B B . . wlateral Adnexae The areas to the cervix wherew thew ovaries are located. w wentrance to the vagina. w ww Introitus The Abnormal t et bleeding Climacteric Phase of irregular periods n net . .ne and associated symptoms .prior X X X to menopause. ok ok periods. ok Bleeding between o o Bo Intermenstrual B B Menopause The end a woman’s menstrual cycles. w.ofblood w. (>80mL/cycle). w w Menorrhagia Excessive loss during menstruation w w ww Oligomenorrhoea Infrequent menstruation, >42d menstrual cycle. Postcoital after sexual intercourse. t menopause. et BleedingBleeding ethe et n n n Postmenopausal >6mth after . . . X amenorrhoea Failure ktoXstart menstruating by 16yr. kX ok Primary o of menstruation foro>6mth o after o Secondary amenorrhoea B B .BoAbsence . ­menstruation hasw started and not due to pregnancy. w ww ww ww Pain et n . kX o Bo Dysmenorrhoea Pain associated with menstruation. Dyspareunia Pain associated with sexual intercourse, can be superficial (eg vulval or entrance to vagina) or deep (only on deep penetration). et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wHistory and examinationw ww t t t .ne .ne .ne Obstetric X X X ok ok ok o o Bo History B B . w. last menstrual w Current pregnancy w Estimated due date (EDD), gestation, w w period (LMP), method of conception, scan results, site of placenta, w w w rhesus status, concerns, attitude to pregnancy. Current symptoms Bleeding, other vaginal discharge, headache, visual dysuria, urinary et or urgency, et disturbance, et frequency constipation, vomiting, GORD. n n n . . . XPrevious pregnancies Number kofXpregnancies (gravidity), number Xof delivok eries o ok gestation, o o ≥24/40wk (parity),omiscarriages, terminations (reason, B B method), stillbirths, vomiting, anaemia, w.complications: w.B bleeding, group w w B strep, BP, proteinuria, gestational DM, poor w foetal growth, admission. w w w 160 Chapter 3 Delivery history Method of delivery and reason (vaginal, ventouse, forceps, elective/emergency Caesarean), gestation, birthweight, sex, complications (fever, prolonged rupture of membranes, CTG trace), postnatal baby problems (feeding, infection, jaundice), admission to SCBU/NNU, outcome (how is the child now), postnatal maternal problems (pain, fever, bleeding, depression). t t e X.n ok Bo t e X.n ok o B . w e X.n ok o B . w ww ww Past gynae history Previous problems, operations, STIs. Past medical history DVT, PE, DM, admissions, psychiatric problems. ww t DM, iBP, pre-eclampsia, t t Familyehistory .n pregnancies. .necongenital abnormalities,XDVT, .nePE, multiple X X k partner, type of housing,oemployment, k ok Social history Support fromoofamily/ o Bo financial problems,wsmoking, B B alcohol, substance abuse. . w. w w ww pregnancies) Table 3.14wAntenatal care (uncomplicated w Gestation et Standard antenatal care: etpurpose of each visit* .net (wk) n n . . XBooking FBC, G+S, red cellkantibodies, X rubella, syphilis, hepatitiskB,XHIV ok serology, sickle-co ell disease, thalassaemia, BMI, BP, urine o o oo dipstick and culture B B B . . w (combined test) 11–14 USS for assessment and nuchal screening wwBP,gestational wUrine, wwand neural tube defects; ww 16 serum screening (for Down’s triple/quadruple test) t and placental position net 20 et USS for foetal anomalies andegrowth n n . . red cell antibodies, anti-D ifX. 28 Fundal height, BP, urine, FBC, kX kX vaccine k rhesus –ve. Offer pertussis o o oo Bo 25 , 31 Fundalwheight, BoBP, urine B . . 34 Fundal height, BP, urine, anti-D if rhesus –vw w w eECV if breech at 36/40 ww woffer 36, 38, 40 w Foetal position, fundal height, BP, urine, † † † 41 t .ne Discuss induction, foetal position, fundal height, BP, urine, offer membrane sweep t kX o Bo e X.n ok *For further information, see Mwww.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg62 † For the first pregnancy only. ww o B . w ok o B . w ww t e X.n ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Obstetric w 161 t t t Examination .ne .ne .ne X X X Audible from 12wk using a Doppler ultrasoundkand 24wk ok Foetal aheart oitkis faster o o Pinard stethoscope; than the mother’s o (110–160bpm). Bo using B B . . Weight Plot mother’s 618) w weight and BMI (E p. w wat the booking visit w (Table 3.14). ww w w Inspection Striae, linea nigra (line of pigmentation from the pubic symphysis to navel that darkens during tthe 1st trimester), venous distent theoedema. escars, e et sion, n n n . . . X height The fundus (topkofXthe uterus) is palpable from about kX 12wkto ok Fundal o from the top of the pubicoosymphysis gestation; it should be measured o o B the top of the fundus .B16 and 36wk the tape measure. Between w.Bwith ashould wthe fundal height inw centimetres be the same as gestation ±2cm, w w w after 36wk. eg 23–27cmw at 25wk. Fundal height is unreliable See Fig. 3.22. w et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o 36 weeks o B .B w.B 40 w weeks w w w w ww Bo et X.n et X.n ok ww ok o B w. 22 weeks 16 weeks oo B . ww 12 weeks w Fig. 3.22 Location of the fundus as pregnancy progresses. t .ne X k ww t 32wk it is possible tonassess t t Foetal position of the foetus .nelie After .theefoetalthehead: .neby palpating across the abdomen for X X X Head palpable midline ok • Longitudinal oinkfossa ok o o Head palpable in iliac Bo •• Oblique B B . . Transverse Headw palpable in lateral abdomen. w w w w after 32wk can also assess w the presentation though ww Presentation Palpation this is liable to change until about 36wk. By palpating both ends of the foetusethe t position of the head cannbeetdetermined: et n n • .Cephalic Head is at the bottom . . XBreech Head is at the top. kX kX ok •Engagement o by palpating the base of theoouterus o o This is assessed above B the pubic symphysis B two hands to assess .between .B how much of the w w presenting part wwis palpable. If only the top 1/w5thwof the presenting part is ww palpable the foetus has ‘engaged’. Blood pressure This must be monitored tregularly to assess for pregnancy- et iBP; consider eand fundoscopy too. et n n n induced urine dipstick . . . X X X ok Urine dipstick For proteino(pre- okeclampsia) and glucose (DM). ok o o B USS Lie, presentation, confirmed w.Band engagement can be w w.B on USS. w w w ww B 162 .B w ww Chapter 3 ww w History and examination t .ne Psychiatric X k o .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . Are you safe? Sit sow patient is not between youw and the door, remove w the be walarm, all potentialw weapons, familiar with the panic check notes/ask ww w staff about previous violence, have a low threshold for a chaperone. t Set the comfortable, ensure privacy e and etscene Make sure you are both etthe n n n . . that you will not be disturbed, eg.give bleep to someone else, have X X kX ok tissues available, emphasize oconfidentiality. ok o o o Basics Full name, age,.marital were they referred B B status, occupation, who w.B by, current status w under Mental Health Act. w w w history Previous psychiatricwdiagnoses, in-patient/day ww Past psychiatric patient/out-patient care, do they have a community psychiatric nurse (CPN), previous deliberate self-harm etever et(DSH), previous treatments eandt n n effects, been admitted under.n the Mental Health Act. . . X X medications, effects, kdidXthey/do history Current and ok Medication okprevious o o oo they take it, allergies/ r eactions, alternative/herbal remedies. B B B . . w Personal history ww wwp. 166), associated ww • Childhood w Pregnancy, birth, development (E Bo B History memories, names of schools attended, reason if changed schools, types of school (mainstream/specialist), age of leaving school, qualifications • Employment loss of jobs, which did they enjoy, why did they change, ask about unemployment and why • Relationships Current relationship(s) and sexual orientation, list of major relationships and reasons for ending, any children and who they live with and relationship to patient. Forensic Contact with police, convictions or charges, sentences, outstanding charges. Personality How would they describe their personality now and before the illness? How would others describe it? Social history Occupation and duration of employment/unemployment, where they live, concerns over money, friends and relationships, hobbies. Drug and alcohol Smoking, alcohol, illicit drugs. Family history Family tree with parents and siblings, ages, occupations, relationships, illnesses. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Psychiatric w 163 t t t Examination .ne .ne .ne X X X examine the mind k 3.10 ok Psychiatrists okthrough talking to the patient o(Boxes o 3.11). Much of the o information is gleaned while taking history Bo and B B . under the following headings. . This isthecalled and should be organized the w w Mental State Examination (MSE). w w w w ww Appearance Racial origin, age, dress, make-up, hairstyle, jewellery, tattoos, cleanliness, neglect, physical condition. et Appropriateness, posture, et movement (excessive, .nslow, et Behaviour n n . . expression, eye contact, anxiety, suspiciousX­exaggerated), gestures, tics, facialkX X ok ness, rapport, abnormal movements, o aggression, distraction,oconcentration. ok o o B Mood The patient’swsubjective .B assessment of theirwmood. .B w w Affect Interviewer’s objective assessment of mood and appropriateness w w ww of patient’s response, eg flat, reactive, blunted. Speech tform Accent, volume, rate, tone, hesitations, stuttering; e Associations (derailment, changing et quantity, et Content between subjects), puns. n n n . . . X form Rate, flow (eg blocked), X derailconnection (eg flight of ideas, kXbeliefs ok Thought oself, okinsertion/ ment); Content Beliefs about about others, thought o o o B withdrawal/control/ B beliefs about the world/ future, delusions, wb.roadcast, w.Brituals, overvalued ideas, obsessions, compulsions, ruminations, phobias. w w w w ww B Perception Illusions, hallucinations (visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory), unusual experiences, depersonalization, derealization. Cognition This can be tested formally using the Mini- Mental State Examination (MMSE) on E p. 377; often the Abbreviated Mental Test Score (AMTS) is used instead (E p. 375). Risk Thoughts of deliberate self-harm, suicide, harming others, plans, acquiring equipment, writing notes, previous suicide attempts. Can ‘protective factors’ be identified? Document these if so. Consider risk both to self and to others. Insight Awareness of illness and need for treatment. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o oo B . w ww t ok Bo .ne X k t ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o .n kX What constitutes abnormal behaviour to the extent of constituting a mental illness can be a controversial and difficult area, subject to allegations of cultural and political bias and even suggestions of undue pharmaceutical industry influence. Two main classification systems are accepted: •The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, produced by the American Psychiatric Association; the 5th edition (2013) is currently in use: DSM-5 •The International Classification of Diseases, published by the World Health Organization (covers all of medicine); 10th edition (1992) is currently in use: ICD-10. ICD-11 is due to be published (2018). e X.n ww et .ne X k K Box 3.10 Defining ‘mental illness’ ww Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k ww o w.B et n . kX ww t Each classification carries a slightly different emphasis and diagnostic criteria; in rare instances, this results in an abnormal condition recognized in one, but not the other. o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 164 .B w ww Chapter 3 .B w w ww w History and examination t t et .nBox .nein psychiatry .ne K 3.11 Common terms X X X ok ok behaviours which reflects ok emotions Pattern of observable o o Bo Affect B B experienced. w. wof. perceived danger. w Anxiety Feeling w of apprehension caused by anticipation w w A doctor entitled to recommend w compulsory admis- w Approved clinician sion for treatment under the 2007 Mental Health Act. Cognition et The process of thinking,.reasoning, et and remembering. .net n n . Compulsion Repetitive behaviours in to obsessions; X often to X egresponse kX­relieve the distress causedobykthem, k washing hands. o o Acute onset.B ofodisordered cognition with .attentional Bo Delirium Bo deficits; typically involveswchanges in arousal and maywbe associated with hallucinations. ww ww ww Delusion A fixed, false belief that goes against available evidence and is not explained by the person’s religioustor cultural background. et Global e of cognition with preserved et Dementia organic deterioration n n n . . . X X X ok consciousness. ok of self as if detached or outside okthe body. Depersonalization Alteredosense o o B B of reality as if detachedwfrom .Bsurroundings. Derealization Altered.sense w state Emotion A complex of feeling that results in physical and psychow w w w ww B logical changes that influence thought and behaviour. Euphoria Pathologically exaggerated feeling of well-being. Flight of ideas Rapid switching of topics where the thread of connection can be determined (eg sound, content). Formal admission Admission under a section of the Mental Health Act. Hallucination A false sensory perception in absence of a real stimulus, eg hearing voices; feature of psychosis if the subject lacks recognition of the false nature. Illusion False interpretation of a real external stimulus, eg seeing a shadow and thinking it is a person. Informal admission Voluntary admission as a psychiatric in-patient. Insight The ability of a person to recognize their mental illness. Mania Abnormal elevation of mood with grandiose ideas, increased energy and agitation, pressure of speech, distractibility, and pleasure seeking. Mood Emotional state that colours the person’s perception of the world. Obsession Recurrent unwanted thoughts or images, eg my hands are dirty. Passivity Delusional belief in external control of a person’s actions or thoughts. Personality disorder Enduring and inflexible behavioural patterns that markedly differ to societal norms. Phobia Persistent, irrational fear of an activity, object, or situation, leading to the desire to avoid the feared stimulus; beyond voluntary control. Psychosis Disordered thinking and perception without insight, often ­accompanied by delusions or hallucinations. Ruminations A compulsion to consider an idea or phrase. Stereotype Repeated pattern of movement or speech without any goal. Thought insertion Delusional belief by a person that an external agency is putting thoughts into his/her mind (a passivity phenomenon). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w Neonatal examination w w 165 t t t .ne .ne .ne Neonatal examination X X X ok baby check is a keyocomponent ok of life in paediatrics.ooAllk neonates Bo The B . 72h of birth with the aim should be examined within wbabies w.of:B • Identifying unwell (tone and respiratory rate w w w ones).very important) ww • Identifyingw abnormalities (especially reversible Preparation Prior to the examination you should check the maternal t significant maternal illness,negestation t at birth, birthweight,ntype efor: et notes n . . . of delivery, problems at delivery (meconium, premature rupture of memX (PROM), group B strep, kXlow APGAR scores: appearance, kX pulse, ok branes o o o o o B grimace, activity, respiration). w.B w.B Introductionw Introduce yourself to the mother/ parents, offer congratuw w w lations and explanation. Has the baby passed w faeces and urine? Feeding w well? Any parental concerns? Ask them to undress the baby to the nappy. et baby Consider doing ethet following first as they are.ndifet n n . . $ Settled X if the baby is crying: listening X kX to the heart and feeling the apex ok ficult ofemoral okeyes. o o o beat, count RR, feeling the pulse, and looking in the B .Bgetting the baby to suck (pacifier, wTry w.B breast, bottle, w $ Crying baby w w parent’s little wfinger, your little finger); if thiswfails, swaddle the baby and w ask the parents to give the baby a feed then return in 30min. t t et Overall .ne Take a few momentsXjust.ntoelook; is the baby: jaundiced, .nblue, X X moving normally,kbreathing normally? ok dysmorphic, o ok limb o Tone (DegreeB ofohead support, spontaneousB symmetrical Bo Neuro . is not routinely performed. movements), Moro wreflex w. w w Head Anterior w and posterior fontanelle (bulging, w sunken), head circum- ww ference, eyes red reflex (red flag if absent), face (dysmorphic?), ear shape and position (tags, pits, top of insertiontof pinna should be at the level of t et palate the.n eyes), (with your little finger), .ne suck reflex. .ne X X X (single ok Hands/arms Fingers (number, ok shape, colour), palms ok crease in o arm movement. Bo 60% of Down’s andw1%.Bofonon-Down’s), symmetrical B w. to the heart, apex w Chest Respiratory rate (RR >60 is abnormal),w listen w w the clavicles for fractures. w w beat, gently feel Abdo tPalpate (to exclude hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, masses), dese testes, patent anus, enlarged.nclitoris, et femoral pulses. et cended n n . . X feet Anterior hip creases X(symmetrical?), Barlow test k(flex X hip to ok Hips/ oka click/ o Ortolani o o 90°, press posteriorly, feelofor clunk if the hip dislocates), B test (after Barlow’swabduct .B the hips one at a timewwhile .B pressing on the greater trochanter with your middle finger, feel for a click/clunk as the hip w w w w ww relocates), note repetition of these tests can cause hip instability, ankles (talipes, correctable or not), toes (number, shape, colour). et et et n n n . . . make a note), posterior hip creases. Xdefects), buttocks (blue spots— X X ok Plot In the red book: weight, okhead circumference, examination. ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Turn baby over Spine (straight), sacrum (lumps, dimples, hair tufts, skin B 166 .B w ww Chapter 3 ww w History and examination t .ne Paediatric X k o .B w w t .ne X k et .n kX oo oo B B . . Basics Age in days w 1mth), weeks (until 2mth),w months (until 2yr), or w (until years, gender, gave the history, who was present. wwho ww ww Current state Feeding and drinking, weight gain, wetting nappies/passing urine, tfever, bowels, crying, runny nose, e ears, drawing up legs, rash..net cough, breathing problems, et pulling n n . . X Pregnancy problems andkmedications, X X 2/40 at birthk(37– ok Birth o (NVD, induced,gestation o if4LSCS is normal), type of delivery ventouse, o forceps, o o B .Bspecial care, birthweight,wPROM, .B group B strep ask why), resuscitation, wmaternal (GBS), meconium, pyrexia during labour, vitamin K (IM or oral), w w w bottle, type of milk). w ww feeding (breast, Immunizations Check the child is up to date with vaccinations (Table 3.15); t or febrile beforehandneandt jabs will be postponed if the child iseunwell et often n n . . . children get a slight fever for <24h afterwards. X X X k k k o o o vaccination Bo Table 3.15 UK w Bo schedule (from Augustw2017) Bo . . Birth May get tuberculosis (BCG) and/or hepatitis B if at risk w tetanus, pertussis, poliowand w Haemophilus wDiphtheria, ww 2mth Bo B History influenzae type b (DTaP/IPV/Hib), hepatitis B, pneumococcal disease (PCV), Rotavirus, meningococcal group B (MenB) 3mth Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio and Haemophilus influenzae type b (DTaP/IPV/Hib), hepatitis B, and rotavirus 4mth Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio and Haemophilus influenzae type b (DTaP/IPV/Hib), hepatitis B, pneumococcal disease (PCV) and MenB 12–13mth Measles, mumps, rubella (MMR), Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib), pneumococcal (PCV), meningococcal group C disease (MenC), MenB 2yr to 8yr Influenza 3yr4mth–5yr Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis and polio (DTaP/IPV), MMR 12–13yr Human papilloma virus (girls only) 14yr Tetanus, diphtheria, and polio (Td/IPV) and meningococcal groups A, C, W, and Y disease . kX o o net et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww Source: data from Mhttps://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_ data/file/633693/Complete_imm_schedule_2017.pdf. Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. t e X.n .ne X k t ww et n . X ww k ok See Table 3.16 ooand ask about school performance. oo Bo Development B B . . Social history Whowthe child lives with, parental w responsibility, parental wof school (mainstream, ww jobs, smoking, w nursery/school attendance, type w w special needs), academic ability, sporting ability, friends, enjoyment of school, foreign travel. t Family tree with parents ehistory etand siblings, consanguinity .ifnreleet Family n n . . vant, illnesses in the family, how are their parents and siblings at the moX asthma, eczema, hayfever, X X ok ment, ok DM, epilepsy, other diseases okspecific to o o o presenting complaint. B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Paediatric w 167 t t t Examination .ne .ne .ne X X X of the examination can k by simply observing k the child; ok Muchusually o beofperformed oyounger o o has the advantage limiting tears. Approach chilBo this B B . are sitting on a parent’s knee . and feeling secure. dren gently while w they w Examination is much ww the same as for adult patients, wwbut include the following: ww 2 If unwell ABC and resuscitate, E pp. 238–40. Always records obs— for normal ranges by age, see Box 6.11t(E p. 240). et Ask eyou if a child of either sex is.nover et n n . . Chaperone a nurse to accompany X X X ok 10yr, if there is a child protection ok issue, or whenever you feelooit isknecessary. o o B Hydration Fontanelle, mucous .Bcapillary-refill (≤2s), warmwperipheries, .B membranes, tears w if crying, skin turgor, sunken eyes, tachycardia, lethargy. w w w head bobbing, nasal flaring, w tracheal tug, cervical ww Respiratory Grunting, lymphadenopathy, recession (sternal, subcostal, intercostal). et Cyanosis (check mouth), etclubbing, mottled skin, murmurs et Cardiovascular n n n . . . Xmay radiate to the back, femoral X pulses (coarctation), radiofemoral ok delay, dextrocardia, hepatomegaly ok (heart failure). ookX o o B Abdominal Check the B genitalia if young, relevant, w.external w.B or boys with w w abdominal painw (torsion); never do a PR (though seniors might). w w w Neurological AVPU (Alert, responds to Voice, responds to Pain, Unresponsive), fontanelles, tone, reflexes (including Moro and grasp reflex if young), head circumference (growth chart), development (Table 3.16). t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k development ok Table 3.16 Key stages inoochildhood ok o Bo Age Gross motor B B w. Fine motor Speechww. Social w 6wk Holds head Eyes follow 90° Startles w w to Smiles ww in line sound 3mth t Lifts head up Eyes follow 180° t Coos Laughs e Sits e Babbles et n n 6mth Transfers objects Objects to .n . . X X X unsupported mouth ok okthumb grip ‘Mama, dada’ Waves okgoodbye Pulls to stand Finger– o o Bo 9mth B B 12mth Walks First wordsw. Finger foods w. Points unsupported w w ww ww 18mth Running 2yr Lumps net Scribbles Copies line Asks for ‘wants’ Feeds alone Uses fork 2–3-word net sentences et n . . X X tricycle Copies circle and age Dry by day ok 4yr Uses okcross Name obyknight Hops Copies Counts to 10 Dry o o o B .B wthe.Bears and throat if there iswawsuspicion ENT Always check infection; w w or pus is ofpresent. ww describe thew colour, appearance, and if an effusion Weight, height These should be plotted on a sex-specific growth chart. t ecircumference etimportant in infants and .nthose et Head This is especially n n . . X neurological disease; thekXmeasurement should be plotted X ok with o ok on a sex-specific chart. o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww X3yr. B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww ww Bo et t et n . X ww w ww o Bo B .B w w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 4 w 169 t t t .ne Prescribing .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww Prescribing—general considerations 170 to prescribe—best practice 171 t How e et Drug interactions 173 net n n . . . Reporting adverse drug reactions 173 X Special considerationskX174 kX ok o o o o o Controlled drugs 175 B Enzyme inducers w.B and inhibitors 176 ww.B w Endocarditis w prophylaxis 177 w ww Night sedation 178 therapy 179 et Steroid et et Topical corticosteroids 180 n n n . . . Empirical antibiotic treatment 181 X Clostridium difficile (C.kdiff) X X ok o 182 ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 170 .B w ww Chapter 4 .B w w ww w Prescribing t t t .ne .ne considerations .ne Prescribing— g eneral X X X ok okis increasing in medical schools, okyet it is only to safe prescribing o o Bo Exposure B B really when you are .faced daily with drug charts and. decisions that you w will only know w get the hang ofw it.w Even the most experienced w w of doctors by heart thew dose and frequency of a maximum of 30–40 drugs, so do w not worry if you cannot remember everything. Start basic: paracetamol for adults et is 1g/4–6h PO, max 4g/.2n4hetin divided doses (E p. 213)..net n . Many errors in hospital involve drugs, so it is important Xyou want X to kXconsidermedical k k a few things everyo time to prescribe a drug, rather than o o Bo just writing a prescription .Boas a knee-jerk reaction. w.Bo w Indication Isw a valid indication for the drug? Is there an alternative w w there wwas move method to solve the problem in question (such the patient to a w quiet area of the ward rather than prescribe night-time sedation)? et et et Contraindications What contraindications are there to the.ndrug? n n . . Does the patient have asthma or Raynaud’s syndrome, in which case X X ok β-blockers may create more okproblems than they solve. ookX o o B B If a patient is nil by mouth Route of administration then it is w.oral wor.Bask(NBM), w w pointless prescribing medications; use the BNF the pharmacist w w ww to help you use alternative routes of administration. Remember IM and SC injections can be painful, so avoid these if possible. t et Drug when physically.n mixed netinteractions Some drugs nareeincompatible . . X X X IV furosemide and and other ok togethercause(egphysiological ok IV(egmetoclopramide), ok combinproblems ACEi with K -sparingodiuretics). Look o Bo ations B B through the patient’s drug (E p. 173). . chart to spot potential drugwinteractions . w Adverse effects ww All drugs have side effects. ww Ensure the benefits of ww treatment outweigh the risk of side effects and remember some patients are more prone to some side effects than others (eg Reye’s syndrome et with aspirin, or oculogyric et crises in young females.nwith et in n . children .nshould metoclopramide). Some side effects prompt urgent action (such as X X X statin drugs in patients ok stopping ok who complain of muscle pains, okor patients o get wheezy with.B β-bolockers), but others can be advantageous if they Bo who B do not expose the wpatient to unnecessary risksw(such w. as slight sedation w w with some antihistamines). w w w Administering drugs Always double check the drug prescription and the drug with another member of staff eat sign et (qualified nurse or doctor)..nThis ewillt n is .not of uncertainty, this is .ansign that you are meticulous and X limit the chance of a drug X X ok greatly ok error occurring, which would ok make you o look careless. Equally, if o you are asked to check a drug o calculation then B B attention (often this meanswperforming .B take it seriously and the drug w.pay w calculation againwyourself ). w w ww + 2 If in doubt Never prescribe or administer a drug you are unsure Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t .ne X ok .Bo about, even if it is a dire emergency—seek senior help or consult the BNF or a pharmacist. o o B . w ww w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w How to prescribe—best practice w 171 t t t .ne to prescribe— .nbeest practice X.ne How X X ok drug card Thereoareokusually at least four drug sections ok (Figs 4.1– o Bo The B B . 4.3); once- only/ tat regular medications,wPRN (‘as required’) w.doses,fluids wsinfusions/ w medications,w and (E pp. 394–7). Other sections include ww w O , anticoagulants, insulin, blood products (often a separate card), medications prior to admission, and nurse prescriptions. t et the drug card As with ethe et n n n Labelling patient’s notes, the drug card . . . X have at least three identifying X features: name, DoB, and NHS kXnumber ok should oNHS ok number (the NPSA advice is that the should be usedowhenever poso o B sible). There are usually .Bspaces to document the ward, .B consultant, date of w w admission, and number 2, 2 of 2, etc.). ww of drug cards in use (1wof w ww The allergy box Ask the patient about allergies; check old drug cards if available. any allergies in this tbox and the reaction precipitated; et Document e drug allergies then record ethist eg.penicillin l rash. If there are no.n known n n . too. Nurses are unable to give any drugs unless the allergy box is complete. X X X ok Writing a prescription okUse black pen and write clearly, ok ideally in o o o B capitals. Use the generic B Voltarol ) and w.B drug name (eg diclofenac, w.not w clearly indicate w the dose, route, frequency of administration, date started, w w ww 2 ® and circle the times the drug should be given (Figs 4.2 and 4.3). Note that some drugs do require generic names in addition to brand names—often the case with medications used in Parkinson’s disease. Record any specific instructions (such as ‘with food’) and sign the entry, writing your name and bleep number clearly on the first prescription. See Box 4.1 for verbal prescriptions and Box 4.2 for self-prescribing. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX t .ne X k oo B . w electronic services Electronic prescribing Many hospitals now w employ w w system so try to become ww to help withw prescribing. There is no universal familiar with your system as quickly as possible—check with your ward pharmacist t et or colleagues if you need.na refresher. et n . .ne Common abbreviations X X X k ok ok STAT— immediately bd—twiceo ao day/12h o Bo IVPO——intravenous B B tds—t.hree times a day/8h . gram by mouth wg— w four times a day/6h microgram—avoid mcg or µg w qds— IM—intramuscular w , — o ne dose, two doses w od—once a day/24h w units—avoid ‘IU’ or ‘U’ ww SC—subcutaneous PRN—as required PR—by rectum om—every morning mg—milligram t INHe —tinhaled on—every night e et mL—millilitre n n n . . . NEB —nebulized X X X ok Changes to prescriptions okIf a prescription is to change,oodoknot o o B the original; cross itwout.Bclearly and write a new prescription .B (Fig. 4.1).amend Initial w w prescriptions. It is essential and date anyw cancelled that you record the reason ww ww B (eg β-blocker stopped in wheezy asthmatic patient), otherwise someone else might not realize why it was stopped and re-prescribe it. et et et n n n . . . X doses, and original startkdates X carried over and that the X ok drugs, oand filedare ok old drug card(s) are crossed through in the notes. o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Rewriting drug cards When rewriting drug cards, ensure the correct B 172 Chapter 4 .B w w o oo B . w t .ne X k ww o Bo et n . kX ww w Prescribing t .ne X k Bo et o w.B .n kX o ww t ok o w.B ww et n . kX oo e X.n .B w ww ww ww Fig. 4.1 Example of cancelled drug prescription for a regular medication. et n . X ok Bo B .B w ww et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo o B . w ww ww et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X ok t .ne X k ww w Fig. 4.2 Example of drug prescription for a PRN medication. o Bo t .ne X k t o o w.B .ne X k ww Box 4.1 Verbal prescriptions t ok Bo t .ne X k et n . X ok o o w.B ww Box 4.2 Self-prescribing ww o w.B ww F1s can only prescribe on in-patient drug cards and TTOs. The GMC’s ‘Good Medical Practice’ guidance (2013 Mwww.gmc-uk.org/guidance/ good_medical_practice.asp) states you should ‘avoid providing medical care to yourself or anyone with whom you have a close personal relationship’. Do not get tempted or pressured to ignore this. et n . kX o ww Verbal prescriptions are only generally acceptable for emergency situations, and the drug(s) should be written up at the first opportunity. If a verbal prescription is to be used, say the prescription to two nurses to minimize the risk of the wrong drug or dose being given. Check your local prescribing policy first. e X.n Bo oo B . w Fig. 4.3 Example of a once-only (STAT) medication. ww et .n kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Reporting adverse drug reactions w 173 t t t .ne interactionsX.ne .ne Drug X X ok list of specific drug interactions ok are shown in Appendixo1oofkthe BNF. o Bo APharmacokinetic B .interactions Occur whenwone.Bdrug alters the abwmetabolism, w w sorption, distribution, of w another drug which alters wactive drug, causingoranexcretion w the fraction of aberrant response to a standardized w dose. See the following examples: et Metal ions (Ca , Fe .)nform et complexes with tetracyclines et Absorption n n . . which decreases their absorption and bioavailability. X X X ok Distribution Warfarin is ohighly ok bound to albumin, so odrugs ok such as o B sulfonamides whichwcompete .B for binding sites onandalbumin .B cause displacewanticoagulant ment of warfarin, increasing its free fraction w effect. w There are many w drugs which influence the binding w of warfarin like this. ww Metabolism Rifampicin is a potent enzyme inducer (E p. 176) and increases of the OCP, reducing its clinical effectiveness; other eoftmetabolism etin such et n n forms contraception should be.used circumstances. .n . X Xrenal clearance of digoxin, kresulting X Quinidine reducesok the ok Excretion o the risk ofin o o o higher than anticipated levels of serum digoxin and increasing B digoxin side effectswand/ .Bor toxicity. w.B w w Pharmacodynamic interactions Describe w w the effect that drugs ww 2+ have on the body and their mechanism of action. Interactions occur when 2 or more agents have affinity for the same site of drug action, eg: • Salbutamol and propranolol (a non-specific β-blocker) have opposing effects at the β-adrenergic receptor; clinical effect is determined by the relative concentrations of the two agents and their receptor affinity. et .n kX et .n kX et .n kX oo oo B B . . 2 Drugs which commonly w have interactions are worth wkeeping an eye out for. w wdigoxin, wantibiotics, These include warfarin, antiepileptics, antidepresw w w sants, antipsychotics, theophylline, and amiodarone. t t net .ne .drug .ne X X X Reporting adverse reactions ok ok ok o o Bo The Yellow Card B B . Scheme This has been running . since 1964 and wproducts is coordinated w byw the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory w w During drug development,wside effects with a frequency ww Agency (MHRA). of 1:1000 or greater (more common) are likely to be identified, so the Yellow tCard Scheme is important in detecting side effects once ta eatduty to rarer n n ne drug isein general use. All doctors have contribute to this. .Yellow . . X X X tear- o ut slips in the back of the BNF can be sent off or go online ok Mhttps://yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk/ ok . The forms can be completed ok by anyto o o o B healthcare workerw and.B even by patients. w.B w w New drugs These are marked with an inverted triangle (▼) in the BNF. w w ww Bo o 3+ Any suspected reaction caused by a new drug must be reported. 2 Sinister drug effects Such as anaphylaxis, haemorrhage, severe skin reactions etc., must be reported via the Yellow Card Scheme, irrespective of how well documented they already are. t e X.n t e X.n t e X.n k k ok Common drug reactions oo Such as constipation.B ooopioids, indifrom B . gestion from NSAIDs, w and dry mouth with anticholinergics, w are well recog- w nized and considered notw need reporting. ww minor effects which dow w Bo B 174 .B w ww Chapter 4 .B w w ww w Prescribing t t t .ne considerations .ne .ne Special X X X ok okcarefully considered with specific ok reflection prescription shouldobe o Bo Every B B of the patient in question. If in doubt, consult the BNF or speak to the w. There wof .patients pharmacist or w a senior. are some groups for whom w wmust be even more carefully considered. w ww prescriptions Patients with liver disease The liver has tremendous capacity and et so liver disease is often severe etby the time the handling of.nmost et reserve n n . . drugs is altered. The liver clears some drugs directly into bile (such as X cautiously if at all. The liverkalso X manu-rikXfampicin) so these should beokused o o oand hypoproteinaemia can.Bresult o in increased plasma proteins Bo factures .Bagents free fractions of some (phenytoin, warfarin,w prednisolone) and rew sult in exaggerated ww pharmacodynamic responses. wwHepatic encephalopathy ww can be made worse by sedative drugs (night sedation, opioids, etc), and fluid overload by NSAIDs and corticosteroids documented in liver etHepatotoxic et is well et failure. drugs (such as n methotrexate and isotretinoin) should n n . . . only be used by experts as they may precipitate fulminant hepatic failure X X X ok and death. Patients with established ok liver failure have an increased ok bleeding o o o tendency so avoid IM.injections and employ caution if .using any anticoaguB w Bcan be used in liver disease, w Bbut consider a re- w lant drugs. Paracetamol w w duced dose;w consult the BNF/pharmacist. Special w considerations for patients w with liver disease are listed under each drug monograph in the BNF. t Patients renal disease Patients et with impaired renal function et .ne onlywith should be given nephrotoxic.n drugs with extreme caution as.nthese X X X fulminant renal failure; these include NSAIDs, gentamicin, ok may precipitate okAny ok(impairment o o ACEi, and IV contrast. patient with renal disease Bo lithium, B B . will have altered drugwhandling . (metabolism, or end-stage renalwfailure) w w clearance, volume of distribution, etc) and more careful thought must w prescribing for the patientswwith GFR <60mL/min, and ww be given when senior input sought when GFR <30mL/min (BNF, pharmacist or senior); t dosing frequency, andnchoice the amount, et of drug needs careful thought. net .ne that .normal Remember a creatinine in X the. ‘normal’ range does not mean X X k considerations for patients 387.oSpecial ok renal function, E p. each ok with renal o drug monograph in the BNF. Bo Bo disease are listed under B w. Many drugs can cross thewplacenta w. and have effects w Pregnant patients w w In the first trimester (weeksw1–12), this usually results in w upon the foetus. congenital malformations, and in the second (weeks 13–26) and third trimesters growth retardation or has direct t (weeks 27–42) usually results eeffects eint are euset n n n toxic upon foetal tissues. There no totally ‘safe’ drugs.to . . X X known to be particularly troublesome. X but there are drugs ok inThepregnancy, okshortest ok be used minimum dose andothe duration possible o should o B when prescribing in pregnancy w.B and all drugs avoided wif.Bpossible in the first w trimester. w w w w w et n . kX o Bo Drugs considered acceptable Penicillins, cephalosporins, heparin, ranitidine, paracetamol, codeine. 2 Drugs to avoid Tetracyclines, streptomycin, quinolones, warfarin, thiazides, ACEi, lithium, NSAIDs, alcohol, retinoids, barbiturates, opioids, cytotoxic drugs, and phenytoin. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w .ne X ok .Bo Special considerations for pregnant patients are listed under each drug monograph in the BNF. ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Controlled drugs w 175 t et patients, drugs given.tonethet Breastfeeding patient As with .ne .npregnant X X X baby. can get into breast milk on to the feeding k and be passed ok mother oconcentrated ok maternal Some drugs become more in breast milkothan o o B plasma (such as iodides) .BOther drugs can child. w.B and can be toxic to theorw stunt the child’sw suckling reflex (eg barbiturates),w act to stop breast milk w w to a pharmacist before ww production altogether (eg bromocriptine). Speak prescribing any drug to a mother who is feeding a child breast milk. Special considerations for patients who are breastfeeding are listed under each drug et in the et et n n n . . . monograph BNF. X kX Formulary for Children. oNeonates kX are ok Children See the BritishooNational o o B more unpredictablewin.B B terms of pharmacokinetics and.pharmacodynamics wshould than older children; prescriptions for this age group be undertaken w w by experienced w neonatal staff and drugs double- w checked prior to adminis- ww tration. After the first month or two, the gut, renal system, and metabolic pathways more predictable. Almost t all drug doses still need et become etot be.calculated by weight (eg mg/kg).n oreby body surface area (BSA)..There n n X a few drugs which shouldknever X prescribed in childrenkbyX a non- ok are o (causesbeirreversible specialist, including tetracycline staining o o ooof bones and B teeth) and aspirinw(predisposes B to Reye’s syndrome); others should be .B . w used with caution such as prochlorperazine and isotretinoin. 2 Always wwfor Children when prescribingwforwpaediatric patients. ww consult the BNF t t t .ne .ne .ne Controlled drugs X X X k k ok oo CDs are those drugs .which ooare addictive drugs.B (CDs) Bo Controlled B and most often abused and are subject to and ww oforthestolen, wwthe prescription storage requirements Misuse of Drugs Regulations 2001; they in- ww w w clude the strong opioids (morphine, diamorphine, pethidine, fentanyl, alfentanil, remifentanil, methadone), amphetamine- like agents (methylt (Ritalin )), and cocaine (anlocal t anaesthetic). t e e phenidate agents n . in a locked cabinet and X . of their use onThese .neare stored a record a named patient X X is required to be keptobyklaw. Some other drugs may be the ok basiscupboard okkept in and o o such as.B concentrated KCl, ketamine, benzodiazepines, Bo CD B . anabolic steroids, but w this is not a legal requirement wand will depend upon w local policy. w Thewweaker opioids (codeine) are not treated as controlled ww w drugs though they are still often misused. t Prescribing drugs Prescribing patients is just e like et any controlled et shouldforbein- n n n . . prescribing other drug and the .benefits balanced against poX side effects for each individual X patient. Morphine, diamorphine, X ok tential ok prescribed ok and o o tramadol are the most commonly CDs on theoward. As with B all prescriptions, write .Ba maximum dose details clearly and makew sure w.Bthe w w and a minimal interval between doses is documented (E pp. 88–91 for w w ww ® management of pain). Controlled drugs for TTOs E pp. 80–1. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 176 .B w ww Chapter 4 .B w w ww w Prescribing t t t .ne .ne inhibitors X.ne Enzyme inducers and X X ok term enzyme inducersooiskused to describe agents (usually okdrugs, but o Bo The B B . the activity of the cytochrome . P450 enzymes not always) which alter wphase (mostly found w in w the liver) which are involved in metabolism w w w reduction, and hydrolysis w reactions). 1Agents (typically oxidation, which w induce cytochrome P450 activity result in increased metabolism of the affected and subsequently reduce etofdrugs et the systemic drug response; ein-t n hibitors cytochrome P450 have.n the reverse effect and result in.n exag. X drug responses as more X of the affected drug remains X ok gerated ok inducers oklistedavailable to exert its effect. Common and inhibitors o are here. o o B You’ll see warfarinw is .aB frequent culprit (Table 4.1).w.B w w Appendix 1 of BNF ww Table 4.1 w Drugs interacting with warfarin— wconsult Alcohol, amiodarone, cimetidine, simvastatin, NSAIDs Drugs which iINR etwhich dINR Carbamazepine,.nphenytoin, et rifampicin, oestrogens .net Drugs n . X X X ok Inducers ok ok o o o B .BEach of the drugs Table 4.2 shows drugs induce metabolic enzymes. w.Bthat on the left canw induce the enzymes so that allw of w the drugs on the right w (and any of w the other drugs on the left) will w have reduced plasma levels: w Table 4.2 Enzyme inducers t t t .ne inducers .ne levels reduced .ne Enzyme Plasma X X X ok Phenobarbital/barbituratesook Warfarin ok o Bo Rifampicin B B Oral contraceptives . w. Phenytoin Corticosteroids ww w w ww Ethanol (chronic use) Ciclosporin w Carbamazepine (All drugs on left) t t t e n . .ne .ne Inhibitors X X X ok okwhich inhibit enzymes. Each oofk the drugs 4.3 shows some drugs o o Bo Table B B on the left can influence the metabolic enzymes responsible for breaking . w w. of increasing down the specific drug on the right; this has the effect the w w plasma levelw of this latter drug, exaggeratingw its biological effect. ww Tablet 4.3 Enzyme inhibitors e inhibitors etlevels increased et n n n . . . Enzyme Plasma X X X ok Disulfiram ok Warfarin ok o o o Chloramphenicol B .B Phenytoin w.B Corticosteroidsww Tricyclic antidepressants w w w ww et n . kX o Bo Cimetidine MAO inhibitors Erythromycin Ciprofloxacin et n . kX o o B . w ww Amiodarone, phenytoin, pethidine Pethidine Theophylline Theophylline w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Endocarditis prophylaxis w 177 t t t .ne .ne .ne Endocarditis prophylaxis X X X ok ok ok o o and children with structural cardiacB conditions Bo Adults B . following cardiac conditions Regard people with wthe w. as being at risk of w w w developing infective endocarditis : w w w •Acquired valvular heart disease with stenosis or regurgitation • Valve replacement et congenital heart disease,.nincluding et surgically corrected or.net • Structural n . palliated structural conditions, but excluding atrial septal Xdefect, kXfully repaired ventricular septal kXdefect or fullyisolated kductus repaired patent o o o Bo arteriosus, and closure Bo .Bodevices that are judged towbe.endothelialized w • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy • Previous infective ww endocarditis. ww ww Advice t at risk of infective endocarditis Offer e people et clear and consistent.ninforet n n . . mation about prevention, including: X benefits and risks of antibiotic X prophylaxis, and an explanation X ok • The okis no longer ok of o o o why antibiotic prophylaxis routinely recommended B • The importancew B B of .maintaining good oral health w. w w • Symptoms that may indicate infective endocarditis and when to seek w w ww 1 expert advice • The risks of undergoing invasive procedures, including non-medical procedures such as body piercing or tattooing. net net net . . . X X X we offer prophylaxis? ok Should ok against infective endocarditis: ok not offer antibiotic prophylaxis o o Bo Do B B . • To people undergoing procedures w. dental • To people undergoing non-dental proceduresw atw the following sites: w w lower gastrointestinal tract w ww upper and genitourinary tract; this includes urological, gynaecological, and t procedures, and childbirth obstetric net this includes ear, nose,Xand.net .neupper and lower respiratory .tract; X X k ok throat procedures and obronchoscopy. ok o o not offer chlorhexidine mouthwash as prophylaxis against infective Bo Do B B endocarditis to people w. at risk undergoing dentalwprocedures. w. w w ww Managing w infection • Investigate and treat promptly any episodes of infection in people at risk of infective endocarditis to reduce the risk developing et etan antibiotic et ofthatendocarditis n n . • .Offer that covers organisms cause infective endocarditis Xif a person at risk of infectivekendocarditis X X.n k k is receiving antimicrobial o o o oundergoing because theyB are a gastrointestinalB oro genitourinary Bo therapy . . procedure at a site where there is a suspected infection. w w ww ww ww • • • t ok Bo t e X.n 1 t e X.n ok o B . w ww ok o B . w NICE clinical guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG64 ww e X.n ww B 178 .B w ww Chapter 4 Prescribing .B w w w ww t t t .ne sedation X.ne .ne Night X X ok otok and dependence on hypnotics ok (sedating develop tolerance o o Bo Patients B B . long term. They are only licensed drugs) if they are taken w. for short-term w use and shouldw bew avoided if possible. w w w w Causes of insomnia Anxiety, stress, depression, mania, alcohol, pain, coughing, nocturia (diuretics, urge incontinence), restless leg syndrome, et aminophylline, SSRIs, benzodiazepine/ et et steroids, opioid withdrawal, n sleep n n . . . apnoea, poor sleep hygiene, levothyroxine. X X X ok Try to dose regular medications ok so that stimulants (steroids, ok SSRIs, o o o B .B early in the day, while sedatives aminophylline) arew given w.B (tricyclics, anti- w w histamines) arewgiven at night. Encourage sleep hygiene, ear plugs, eye w w w shades, and treat any causes of insomnia. Sleep et hygiene Avoid caffeine in.nevening et (tea, coffee, chocolate), eal-t n n . . cohol, nicotine, daytime naps, phone use or cerebral activity before X encourage exercise, lightkXsnack 1–2h before bed, comfortable ok sleep; o eye shades), routine. ookX and o o quiet location (ear plugs and B w.B w.B If the patient is w still unable to sleep and there is aw temporary cause (eg post- w w ww op pain, noisy ward) then it is appropriate to prescribe a one-off or short course (≤5d) of hypnotics (Table 4.4). Some patients may be on long-term hypnotics; these are usually continued in hospital. If long-term hypnotics are stopped, the dose should be weaned to minimize withdrawal. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o oralohypnotics Bo Table 4.4 Common B B w. 24h Significant hangoverweffect, w. useful for anxious Diazepam 5–15mg/ w patients w w ww Temazepam 10–20mg/24h Shorter action than diazepam, less hangover t 3.75–7.5mg/24h Less dependence t and risk of withdrawal than t Zopiclone diazepam .ne .ne and less hangover effect X.ne X X k ok ok hepatic failure and sleep oapnoea. o o Respiratory/ Bo Contraindications B B w. include hangover (morningwdrowsiness), w. Side effectsw These confusion, w ataxia, falls,w aggression, and a withdrawal w syndrome similar to alcohol w withdrawal if long-term hypnotics are stopped suddenly. et et et n n n . . . Xshould not be on hypnotics when Xthey leave. It is bad practice ktoXdischarge ok patients with supplies of addictive ok and unnecessary medications. o o oo B B B . . Violent/aggressive patients E p. 107 for emergency w sedation. ww should only be prescribed wafter w Pre-op sedation discussion with the w w w anaesthetist and is rarely offered these days. Diazepam and temazepam are options. Midazolam is a rapidly acting it should only be ebyt experienced et IV sedative; eandt used doctors under monitored conditions (sats, RR, n n n . . . X with a crash trolley available. X 1–2mg boluses then waitkX 10min for ok BP) ok Give the full response before repeating; >5mg is rarely needed.oo o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Discharge If a patient is not on hypnotics when they enter hospital, they B .B w ww .B w w w w Steroid therapy w 179 t t t .ne therapy X.ne .ne Steroid X X ok ok never be abruptly discontinued ok as this given for >3wkoshould o Bo Steroids B B can precipitate an Addisonian crisis (E p. 338). Patients can need >60mg w. for severe w. and prednisolone per day inflammatory w disease this must be w w wdose if they are converted tow an appropriate IV corticosteroid unable to w take regular PO doses (Table 4.5, Box 4.3). Long-term steroid use should prompt (E p. 451). t etconsideration of osteoporosis eprophylaxis et n n n . . . X 4.5 Conversion of oralkprednisolone X to IV hydrocortisonekX ok Table o o o oo dose Normal prednisolone dose Suggested hydrocortisone B B B . . ≥60mg/24h PO w 100mg/6h IV w w 20–50mg/24h 50mg/6hw IV wPOw ww ≤20mg/24h PO 25mg/6h IV t e et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B B w.conversion w.B Box 4.3 Steroid w w w w ww * *If patients with known adrenal insufficiency, or those who have been on any dose of oral corticosteroids for >3wk present unwell, consider an initial dose of 100–200mg hydrocortisone IV STAT, then d/w senior as to regular steroid dose. If unable to tolerate PO administration, ensure equivalent IV steroids given, as per Box 4.3. These are equivalent corticosteroid doses compared to 5mg prednisolone, but do not take into account dosing frequencies or mineralocorticoid effects: • Hydrocortisone 20mg; usually given IV 6–8h • Methylprednisolone 4mg; usually given once daily • Dexamethasone 750micrograms; usually given once daily. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . w must be performed w wsteroid therapy This is anwartwand Withdrawing w w gradually if steroids have been used for >3wks. Large doses (>20mg prednisolone or equivalent) can be reduced by 5–10mg/wk until dose is 10mg t be reduced more slowly, t prednisolone/ dosesemust net d. Thereafter the been .n on long- .neegis by.5mg/wk. If the patient has X term steroids andXthere X k insufficiency then omit a single k morning concern about adrenal ok significant oSynacthen oimmediately o o and arrange a short test. Resume dosing Bo dose B B . after while awaitingw results. If these show an adequate w.adrenal response, it w w w is safe to stop steroid therapy; if not, discuss with endocrinology. w w w See Table 4.6 for side effects of steroids and treatment and monitoring options.t e et et n n n . . . and treatment and monitoring options XTable 4.6 Steroid side effectskX X ok GI ulceration o Consider PPI or H -receptoroantagonist ok o o B Infections and reactivation w.Bof TB Low threshold forwculturing w.Bsamples or CXR w Skin thinning/pw oor wound healing Pressure carew and wound care ww B ® 2 Na+ and fluid retention Bo o et Hyperglycaemia n . kX Hypertension et n . kX o o B . w ww Osteoporosis (E p. 451) Regular BP, fluid balance charts, and daily weighing of patients Twice-daily blood glucose if taking high-dose steroids Bone protection (Ca2+ + bisphosphonate) Twice-daily BPs w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 180 Chapter 4 .B w w ww w Prescribing t t t .ne .ne .ne Topical corticosteroids X X X ok oarek used in the treatment of omany ok inflammao steroids These Bo Topical B B . . tory skin diseases.w As with corticosteroids given w orally or intravenously, w w the mechanism of action is complex. Corticosteroids offer symptom- ww w w atic relief but are seldom curative. The least potent preparation (see Table 5.20 E p. 221) possible should be used to control symptoms. et of topical steroids often etcauses a rebound worsening etof Withdrawal n n n . . . symptoms and the patient should be warned about this. The amount Xbody parts is shown in Fig.k4.4.XAlwaysof kXsteroid needed to cover various k o o otopical steroids. oo Bo wash hands after applying B B . . w thinning of the skin, worsening w Side effectsw striae w w Localacne, ww local infection, and telangiectasia, depigmentation, hypertrichosis, systemic rarely w adrenal suppression, Cushing’s syndrome (subsequent withdrawal of topical steroids et can precipitate an Addisonian et crisis). et n n n . . . Potency E p. 221 for a list of the common topical steroids used X X arok ranged by potency. ookX ok o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2 t t t .neONE adult .ne .ne X X X ok unitfingertip ok ok o o (FTU)* Bo B B w. w. w w w w units (FTUs) ww Number of fingertip Aget Arm t Trunk Trunk (back)t Face e e &Leg &.hand foot (front) inc. buttocks & neck n n . .ne Adult X X X 4 8 7 7 2 ok Children: ok ok o o 3–6 months 1 1 1 1 1 Bo B B 1–2 years w. 1 w. 2 1 2 3 w w 3–5 years 1 2 3 3 3 w w ww 2 2 4 3 5 6–10 years Fig. 4.4 Amount topical steroid required t unit of(FTU) efingertip et to treat various body parts. *One ea t n n adult is the amount.n of ointment or cream expressed from . . X with a standard 5mm diameter X kXon the ok tube ok nozzle, applied from the distaloocrease tip of the index finger. o o Reproduced with permission from Long, C.C. and Finlay, A.Y. (1991) Clinical and B Experimental Dermatology, w.B16: 444–7. Blackwell Publishing. w.B w w w w ww /2 1 /2 /2 1 /2 1 /2 1 1 /2 /2 1 1 /2 1 o Bo et n . kX 2 /2 /2 1 1 et n . kX t .ne X ok .Bo See these NICE Clinical Knowledge Summaries for an excellent resource in prescribing topical corticosteroids for different ages and body areas: Mhttps://cks.nice.org.uk/corticosteroids- topical-skin-nose-and-eyes#!scenariobasis:5/-468112 o o B . w ww w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Empirical antibiotic treatment w 181 t t t .ne .netreatment X.ne Empirical antibiotic X X k ok ok These will be your keyooresource o antibiotic guidelines for Bo Local B B .They are written to ensure wthe. most appropriate antibiotic treatment. w w w antibiotics are wused prior to knowing the pathogen w and its antimicrobial ww sensitivities. Always seek advice from the microbiologists if deviating from the guidelines; their choice of suitable antibiotic will depend upon likely t t et and its usual antimicrobial esensitivity, pathogen patient factors (agene and n n . . . coexisting disease), and drug availability. Some common infections and X kareXlisted in Tables 4.7–4.9 (suitable kX for an antibiotic regimens ok suggested o o o o o healthy 70kg adult); more detailed options, including B otherwise .B choices for patients with penicillin allergies, are listed E p649. w w.B w w w prior to commencing antibiotic w therapy is important as ww Taking cultures they allow subsequent therapy to be more specifically tailored. However, culturestshould not delay treatment in the e et septic patient. et n n n . . . XTable 4.7 Common exampleskX X ok Lower UTI Nitrofurantoin o or trimethoprim ok o o o B B or ciprofloxacin w.B Pyelonephritis Co- wa.moxiclav w Cellulitis w Flucloxacillin 1g/6h PO/IV ww ww B Wound infection net et Meningitis . kX o o Encephalitis As for cellulitis if after ‘clean’ surgery; for ‘dirty’ surgery or trauma, use co-amoxiclav 1.2g/8h IV Ceftriaxone 2g/12h IV. Consider adding amoxicillin 2g/ 4h IV if patient >50yr, pregnant or immunocompromised and/or vancomycin 1g/12h IV if penicillin-resistant pneumococcal meningitis is suspected As for meningitis + aciclovir 10mg/kg/8h IV (to cover herpes simplex virus encephalitis) Flucloxacillin. Base therapy on Gram stain of joint aspirate oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww Septic arthritis w t .ne X k ww t t t .ne 4.8 Pneumonia .ne .ne X X X Table ok ok 500mg–1g/8h PO ok o o acquired Amoxicillin Bo Community- B B (CAP), CURB65=0–1 . w Amoxicillin 1g/8h PO/IV +wclarithromycin w. 500mg/ CAP, CURB65=2w w w ww 12h PO/IV CAP, CURB65≥3 amoxiclav 1.2g/8h IV + clarithromycin 500mg/12h IV t acquired Co- e et variation between hospitals.nsoet Hospital- There is considerable n n . . consult Xaspiration pneumonia always X local guidelines. Gram-negative Xcover is important ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w Table 4.9 Septicaemia w w ww Urinary tract sepsis Co-amoxiclav 1.2g/8h + gentamicin 5mg/kg IV STAT Intra-abdominal sepsis Tazocin 4.5g/8h IV et sepsis et et n n . . Neutropenic Tazocin 4.5g/ 8h IV + gentamicin 5mg/kg/24h IV.n X X X ok Skin/bone source Flucloxacillin ok 2g/6h ok o o o Severe sepsis/ s eptic Tazocin 4.5g/ 8 h IV + gentamicin 5mg/ k g STAT B shock, no clear focus w.B w.B w w w w ww IV ® ® IV ® B .B w w .B w w wPrescribing 182 ww w Chapter 4 t t t .ne .ne(C. diff) .ne Clostridium difficile X X X k ok ok obacillus, o o A Gram- positive spore-forming anaerobic which Bo Bacteriology B B . colonize the gut. Exposure w . can asymptomatically to antibiotics alters the w w w balance of gut wflora, promoting C. diff overgrowth, w production of toxins that ww damage colonic mucosa, and subsequent symptomatic C. diff infection (CDI). Transmission Via the faeco–oral route, after direct or indirect conet patients, eoft spores een-t tact between or ingestion lying dormant in the n n n . . . X X X C. diff is now regarded ok vironment. ok as a major cause of hospital- ok acquired infections (HAI), E pp. o 502–3. o o B .B Clinical features abdominal pain are w.ofB CDI Watery diarrhoeawand wsevere common; feverwand leucocytosis are also seen; disease causes w w w pseudomembranous colitis and toxic megacolon. Consider CDI in the dif- w ferential of unexplained fever and raised inflammatory markers in hospitalized Elderly and frail patients etolder adults. et are at especially high.risk etof n n n . . dehydration, recurrent disease, and mortality from CDI. X X arises. kX as soon as suspicion ofokCDI Through stoolosamples ok Detection o o o Currently this involves a 2- s tage process, with a rapid, screening test for a B .B .B by a more C. diff protein (or w PCR for the C. diff toxin gene), followed spew cific immunoassay ww for the C. diff toxin. Speakwtowthe laboratory if there is ww 3 any doubt. Consider an urgent AXR to rule out toxic megacolon. Treatment See Box 4.4. Starts with metronidazole 400mg/8h PO or vancomycin 125mg/6h PO. Pay attention to fluid and electrolyte balance. Other regimens including higher doses of PO or PR vancomycin, IV metronidazole, or PO fidaxomicin may be required in patients who fail to respond or who relapse after initial treatment—always consult local guidelines and the microbiologist. Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an effective treatment for refractory cases, offered in a few UK centres.4 Infection prevention and surveillance Barrier nursing, good hand hygiene, and cleaning of equipment is key to preventing transmission to other patients (the spores are resistant to alcohol hand gels so hand washing with soap is essential). Local infection prevention teams should be made aware of suspected and confirmed cases, for advice on how to prevent transmission. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww ww K Box 4.4 Ecology, Clostridium difficile, and antibiotics Intestinal carriage of C. diff does not equate with disease—what matters is when it outgrows other colonic commensal bacteria. Hence just controlling transmission is not entirely sufficient. Instead, we need to avoid disturbing the healthy colonic flora through indiscriminate use of broad- spectrum antibiotics. As part of this approach, most hospitals limit the use of cephalosporins, quinolones, and clindamycin. The national toolkit on antibiotic stewardship5 aids clinicians in reducing CDI rates as well as antimicrobial resistance. Always prescribe using local antibiotic guidelines, and regularly review whether prescriptions are needed. t t e X.n ok Bo ok ok 4 5 ww t t e X.n ok Bo e X.n o w.B ww 3 ok ww ww t e X.n e X.n Bristol Stool Chart types 5–7 not attributable to an underlying condition (or therapy) from: hospital patients aged >2 years and community patients aged if >65 years or wherever clinically indicated. Mhttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/updated-guidance-on-the-diagnosis-and-reporting-ofclostridium-difficile NICE clinical guidelines available at: Mguidance.nice.org.uk/ipg485 Start smart then focus: Mhttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/antimicrobial- stewardship-start-smart-then-focus o B . w ww t e X.n o w.B ww ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 5 w 183 t t t .ne Pharmacopoeia .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww Pharmacopoeia 184 et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 184 Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t .ne .ne .ne Pharmacopoeia X X X k local guidelines and formularies ok ocheck ok and to are advised to always o o Bo Users B B . consult the BNF when. prescribing drugs. w converting enzyme inhibitor. wDose w w ACEi $ Angiotensin- See Tables 5.1 w w and 5.2 on how to commence a patient on an ACEi Indications Heart failure, hypertension, diabetic nephropathy, prophylaxis of cardioet events Caution Pregnancy.nand et breastfeeding, patients already et vascular n n . . taking diuretics, renal artery stenosis/ r enal impairment, aortic stenX hyperkalaemia, knownkallergy X to ACEi. May not be keffective X in ok osis, o o o o o African-Caribbean patients SE Postural hypotension, B B cough, .Brenal impairment and hyperkalaemia, taste disturbance, and angio- w.dry wurticaria w w oedema. If cough w is problematic for the patient, w consider AT II receptor antagonist (E p. 190), or other antihypertensive agent. ww ww et n . XEnalapril et et n n . . X X Initially 5mg/ ok Fosinopril Dose ok 24h PO up to max 40mg/24h4hPO oPOk Dose Initially 10mg/24h PO up to max 40mg/2o o o B .B 5–10mg/24h PO up to maxw80mg/ .B 24h PO Lisinopril Dose wInitially w w Perindopril w Dose Initially 4mg/24h PO up to w max 8mg/24h PO ww erbumine Perindopril et Dose Initially 5mg/24h.nPOeupt to max 10mg/24h PO .net arginine n . X X X ok Ramipril Dose Initiallyo1.25– ok 2.5mg/24h PO up to max 10mg/ ok24h PO o o B .anBACEi .B Table 5.2 Starting w w w w antihypertensive Patients withw significant comorbidity and/or taking wother ww medications, as well as the frail and elderly, may need more cautious management when starting an ACEi and when increasing the dose t t BP, identify target BP net Before U+E, document nestarting .Firstnedosestarting Check . X X Xto. Start with lowest dose and consider giving at bedtime k k k o o o limit any problems with first- d ose hypotension Bo In hospital Increase Bo monitor .Bodose daily/alternate days asw BP .allows, w wwU+E daily/alternate days ww ww Table 5.1 ACEi In community net Check U+E and BP at 7–10d after starting therapy or increasing dose. Increase dose every 14d until target BP reached X. ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 185 t t t Acetylcysteine (eg Parvolex .ne .ne) $ Acetylcysteine helpsXreplace .ne X X necessary to k the toxic products formed ok the substrates oofeliminate ok when hepatic metabolism paracetamol is overwhelmed. o o Bo normal B B . is preferred): Dose In adults, 3 doses w.of acetylcysteine are givenorw(5% wglucose • 150mg/kgw IVw infusion in 200mL 5% glucose 0.9% saline over 1h w ww • 50mg/kg IV infusion in 500mL 5% glucose or 0.9% saline over 4h • 100mg/kg IV infusion in 1000mL 5% glucose or 0.9% saline over 16h. t et Mainly used in known .noresuspected et Indication paracetamol overdose n n . . X p. 509). It should be commenced X X in all patients ok (E okkg, thoseimmediately ok calculated to have ingested >75mg/ with a staggeredooverdose, or a o o B blood paracetamolwlevel B on the nomogram .Babove the treatment threshold . in Fig. 5.1. Startw treatment within 8h of ingestion— do not wait for level if ww w w close to or after this time aswefficacy patient presents of acetylcysteine will w decline rapidly after 8h. Discontinue treatment if the plasma concentration is later reported as below the treatment line and patient is asymptomatic with etLFTs, creatinine, etpatients et n n n normal and PT. Discuss with acidosis, encephalop. . . X worsening renal function,korXPT prolongation with hepatologist X ok athy, o available locally). ok on call (or at nearest liver centre o if not o o B SE Flushing, rash, pruritus, nausea, and vomiting all relatively w.B urticaria, w.B are w w common during treatment. More severe anaphylactoid reactions (dBP, ww w w iHR, bronchospasm) should be managed as per E pp. 484–5 with infusion slowed or stopped. o Bo Plasma-paracetamol concentration (mg/litre) t .ne X k 120 oo 110 100 oo B . w line Treatment ww 90 t .ne 80 X k 70 60 50 40 ww 20 et n . kX oo B . ww w .ne X k ww 2 4 0.7 oo B . w 0.5 0.4 0.3 t ok0.1 o w.B et n . kX et ww et n . X 0.2 ww ww .n kX 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 Time (hours) 6 0.8 0.6 et X.n o 0 t .ne X k ww o w.B 10 0 o ok o w.B t .ne 30 X ok Bo Bo et .n kX Plasma-paracetamol concentration (mmol/litre) B ® 0 ww t .ne X ok .Bo Fig. 5.1 Paracetamol overdose treatment nomogram. Reproduced from M https://www.gov.uk/drug-safety-update/treating- paracetamol-overdose-with-intravenous-acetylcysteine-new-guidance. Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. o o B . w ww w ww ww B 186 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t Actrapid .ne $ Insulin. See insulin. .ne .ne X X X k IV bolus; $ Nucleoside ok Adenosine ok(antiarrhythmic). Dose 6mgorapid orapid o needs repeated dose 12mg rapid IV bolus, then 12mg IV bolus Bo ifIndication B B . tachycardia CI 2nd/3rd-dwegree . heart block, Supraventricular sick w sinus syndromew(unless pacemaker fitted), longwQT syndrome, COPD/ w w asthma Caution Pregnancy, recent MI, pericarditis, heart block, bundle branch block, accessory pathway, hypovolaemia, valvular lesions SE Nausea, sinus pause, etbradycardia/asystole, flushing,.nangina, et dizziness. et n n . . XAdrenaline (epinephrine); X anaphylaxis $ Catecholamine. kXif inadok Dose 0.5mg/STAT IM (0.5mL ok of 1:1000); repeat afteroo5min o o equate response Indication B B Suspected anaphylaxis; .Bif in doubt give w.and it Caution Cerebro- cardiovascular disease w SE iHR, iBP, anxiety, w w sweats, tremor, w arrhythmias. w ® Adrenaline (epinephrine); cardiac arrest $ Catecholamine. et n . X et n . X ww ww t Dose 1mg/STAT IV (10mL of 1:10,000); repeat as per ALS algorithm Indication Cardiac arrest Caution As for ‘Adrenaline (epinephrine); anaphylaxis’ SE As for ‘Adrenaline (epinephrine); anaphylaxis’. ok Aggrastat Bo .ne X ok ok o B . w o B . w Alteplase $w Plasminogen activator. See fibrinolytics. w ww ® $ Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor. See tirofiban. Amiloride $ Potassium-sparing diuretic. Dose 5–10mg/24h PO (max ww 20mg/24h PO) Indication Oedema, potassium conservation when used as an adjunct to thiazide or loop diuretics for hypertension, congestive cardiac failure, hepatic cirrhosis with ascites CI Hyperkalaemia, anuria, Addison’s disease Caution Renal impairment, DM, pregnancy, and breastfeeding SE Abdominal pain, GI disturbances including bleeding. t .ne X k oo et t .ne X k .n kX oo oo B B . . Aminophylline; IV $ Theophylline/methylxanthine. wonwideal ww Dose Loading w 5mg/kg (based body weight) in w 100mL 0.9% saline IVI over w w 20min; Maintenance 0.5mg/kg/h, make up 500mg in 500mL 0.9% saline (concentration mL) IVI Indication airways disease, t Reversible t etacute asthma= 1mg/ eloading severe Caution Avoid dose if patient taking n n . . .neoral X X X theophylline; cardiac disease, hypertension, epilepsy SE Tachycardia, k ok palpitations, arrhythmia,oconvulsions ok Info Theophylline o is o only available Bo as an oral preparation; B B aminophylline consists of theophylline and ethyl. wsimply w. enediamine which improves the drug’s solubility. w w w w w w Monitoring Stop infusion 15min prior to sampling, take sample 4–6h after aminophylline commencing an infusion 10–20mg/L (55–110micromol/L) t e et et (theophylline) 2 Toxic >20mg/L (>110micromol/ L) n n n . . . 2 Signs of toxicity Arrhythmia, anxiety, tremor, convulsions X X X (E OHAM3 ok okp. 731) ok o o o B .B .B wcardiac Amiodarone; arrest $ ClasswIIIwantiarrhythmic. Dose w 300mg IV/Sw TAT after third shock if patient w remains in VF/pulseless ww B VT Indication VF/pulseless VT. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 187 t t et Amiodarone; arrhythmias $ Dose .ne .neClass III antiarrhythmic. X .nOral X X 8h PO for 1wk,kthen 200mg/12h PO for 1wk, then ok loadingPO200mg/ o IV loading. Initially 5mg/kg over ok20–200mg/ as maintenance dose; o o Bo 24h B B . then further infusion if necessary . of up 1to20min IVI (with ECG monitoring) 1.2g w w over 24h IVI Indication SVT, nodal and ventricular tachycardias, atrial fibrilw w w VF (see above) CI Bradycardia, w sinoatrial heart block, ww lation and flutter, thyroid dysfunction, iodine sensitivity Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, thyroid disease, hypokalaemia, heart failure, bradycardia SE N+V, taste et raised etelderly, et n n n . . . disturbance, transaminases, jaundice, bradycardia, hypotension, pulX toxicity, corneal deposits, X X ok monary ok skin discolouration Info Monitor ok LFTs and o o o TFTs every 6mth. B .B .B Amlodipine w Seew calcium-channel blockers. ww w $ Beta-lactam. Dose 500mg– w 1g PO/IV 8h Indication ww Amoxicillin Infection CI Penicillin allergy Caution Glandular fever, CMV infection, ALL/e CtLL SE N+V, diarrhoea, rash. et et n n n . . . X XDose 500mg–1g PO/IV 6hkXIndication $ Beta-lactam. ok Ampicillin okCaution o infection, Infection CI Penicillin allergy Glandular fever, o CMV o o B ALL/CLL SE N+V,wdiarrhoea, B .B rash. . w Antacids/alginates ww Dose See Table 5.3 wwIndications Acid reflux ww B disease Caution Hepatic and renal impairment; if symptoms are severe or persist seek expert opinion SE Depends upon preparation used, see Table 5.3 Info The sodium load in these preparations can be significant and they should be used with caution in patients with hepatic impairment. The alginates increase the viscosity of the stomach contents and can protect the oesophageal mucosa from acid attack; the raft-forming alginates float on the surface of the stomach contents and may further reduce the symptoms of reflux. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww Table 5.3 Antacids and alginates o Bo t Classification .ne hydroxide X Aluminium k ww t e X.n ok Bo Magnesium trisilicate ww Other alginate preparations Bo o et n . kX o t .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . X ok o ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et .ne X k ww o w.B Alginate raft-forming suspensions w eg Alu-Cap® Dose 1 capsule 4 times daily and at bedtime CI hypophosphataemia, neonates SE constipation Dose 10mL 3 times daily in water CI Hypophosphataemia SE diarrhoea, belching (due to CO2 liberation) Dose depends upon preparation, see BNF CI and SE See magnesium carbonate eg Peptac® Dose 10–20mL after meals and at bedtime SE usually none eg Gastrocote® Dose 5–15mL 4 times daily (after meals and at bedtime) SE usually none o w.B Magnesium carbonate t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 188 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t Antiemetics Dose See Table 5.4 .ne .neIndications N+V see TableX5.5; .nenot X X effective k all causes of N+V Caution kand SE See ok all antiemetics areimportant o toforestablish the cause of N+V. o oo Bo Table 5.4 Info It is w B B . . w w classification Table 5.4 w Antiemetic ww ww Antihistamines Cinnarizine, cyclizine, promethazine t t IM Cyclizine Dose 50mg/8h PO/eIV/ e et n n CI Heart failure .n . . X X SE Drowsiness, pain on injection, urinary retention, kX vision ok oblurred ok dry mouth, o o o B .B Phenothiazines droperidol, perphenazine, wChlorpromazine, w.B prochlorperazine, trifluoperazine w w w Dose Consult BNF; 10mg/8w ww Prochlorperazine h PO, 12.5mg/24h IM, 3– 6mg/12h buccal CI Parkinson’s, epilepsy t e et hypotension, drowsiness, agitation et SE Extrapyramidal effects, n n n . . . X X X Domperidone, ok Dopamine ok metoclopramide ok antagonists o o o B .B 10mg/8h PO/IV/IM w.B Metoclopramide wDose CI Avoid in patients <21yr (especially w w obstruction ww ♀) and in bowel ww B SE Extrapyramidal effects net et 5HT3 antagonists . Ondansetron kX o o Miscellaneous oo B . w ww t .ne X k Granisetron, ondansetron Dose 4–8mg/8h PO/IV/IM CI QT prolongation SE Constipation, headache, flushing, bradycardia, hypotension Dexamethasone, benzodiazepines, hyoscine hydrobromide, nabilone, neurokinin receptor antagonists .n kX oo B . ww w ww Table net 5.5 Causes of N+V andXsuggested net antiemetic net .Likely . . X X cause Suggestedkantiemetics ok o prochlorperazine, metoclopramide, ok o o Promethazine, Bo Pregnancy B B . wondansetron w. antihistamines w Postoperative w In no particular order: 5HT antagonists, w (eg cyclizine), dexamethasone,wphenothiazines (eg ww prochlorperazine), metoclopramide t Bowel Treat the cause. Avoid e etmetoclopramide et n n n . . . obstruction X X kX promethazine, cyclizine ok Motion sickness Hyoscineoohydrobromide, ok o o Vestibular Betahistine (see BNF), antihistamine (eg.B cinnarizine, see B .Bphenothiazine disorders (eg prochlorperazine) wBNF), w w w Cytotoxic w Pre and post treatment with w domperidone or ww chemotherapy metoclopramide; add in dexamethasone, 5HT antagonists. See BNF et care Depends upon cause eEt p. 93 et Palliative n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 3 3 B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 189 t t t Antihistamines $ H -receptor .ne .neantagonists. Dose See Table .ne5.6 X X X Symptomatic reliefkof allergy (eg hayfever, allergickrhinitis, urok IndicationsCaution Avoid if possible oo in pregnancy and breastfeeding; oo consult Bo ticaria) B B . . BNF if renal or hepatic impairment; all antihistamines have the potenw tial to cause sedation, more so than others ww(Table 5.6); the sed- w ww alsosome ating antihistamines possess significantw antimuscarinic activity and w should be used with caution in prostatic hypertrophy, urinary retention, and inetpatients with angle-closure glaucoma SE Drowsiness, headache, eintthis section eatt n n n . . . antimuscarinic effects Info The drugs are all antagonists X X are antagonists at Hkreceptors, X cimetidine andkranitidine ok Handreceptors; o o o o are useful for gastric o acid suppression (see ranitidine). B w.B w.B w w Table 5.6 w Antihistamines w ww Non-sedating antihistamines Acrivastine, cetirizine, desloratadine, fexofenadine, levocetirizine, loratadine, mizolastine, rupatadine et et et n n Cetirizine Dose 10mg/24h.n PO . . X X Caution Halve ok Desloratadine Dose ok dose if eGFR <30mL/min ookX o o 5mg/24h PO B .B 10mg/24h PO Loratadine wDose w.B w w Sedating antihistamines w Alimemazine, chlorphenamine, w clemastine, ww 1 1 2 cyproheptadine, hydroxyzine, ketotifen, promethazine Chlorphenamine Dose 4mg/4–6h PO (max 24mg/24h); 10mg/8h IV/IM (over 1min if given IV) t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok of factor Xa. Indicationooandk dose VTE o $ Direct inhibitor Bo Apixaban B . replacement 2.5mg /12h w prophylaxis after hip/ knee PO.B for 14d for knees, w 35d for hips (start 12–24h after surgery); Treatment of DVT/PE Initially w w w w 7d, then 5mg/12h for 6mths; w Prophylaxis 10mg/ 12h for of recurrent w PE/DVT Continue with 2.5mg/12h; Prophylaxis of stroke and systemic emt valvular atrial fibrillationneandt 1 risk factor (Such as previous bolismein et .n ornon- stroke TIA, symptomatic heart. failure, DM, HTN, or >75yr).n 5mg/ X X X dose to 2.5mg/ 2h if 2 of: >80yr, <61kg, or creok 12h (reduce ok1Avoid okserum o o >133mmol/L)B Caution in patients with significant bleeding Bo atinine B . dose before removing epidural risk. Wait 30h afterwlast and wait w. catheter w w 5h until next dose SE Anaemia; bruising; haemorrhage; nausea Info No w w ww routine anticoagulant monitoring required (INR tests are unreliable). Arthrotec® $ NSAID. See diclofenac. t e X.n .ne X k t et n . X Asacol® $ Aminosalicylate. See mesalazine. Aspirin; antiplatelet $ NSAID. Dose Antiplatelet 75mg/24h PO; ok o ok oNon- o24h Bo ACS/MI 300mg/STAT B B PO; haemorrhagic stroke 300mg/ PO for 14d . . wIndication Secondary prevention wof thrombotic then 75mg/24hw PO cerew brovascular w and cardiovascular events CI Active w bleeding, children under ww 16 (Reye’s syndrome) Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, asthma, peptic ulceration, use of other anticoagulants SE Bronchospasm, et concomitant et et GI.irritation/ haemorrhage. n n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 190 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w ww w t t net Aspirin; .ne analgesic/antipyretic .ne $ NSAID. Dose 300–X9.00mg/ X X 4g/ 24h Indication pyrexia CI As for k ‘Aspirin; ok 4–6h PO; max ok‘Aspirin;Pain, ofor Caution As ofor antiplatelet’ SE As ‘Aspirin; o Bo antiplatelet’ B B . . antiplatelet’. w w AT II receptor ww antagonists Dose See Table ww5.7; commence therapy ww in the same way as starting an ACEi (E p. 184) Indications Patients intolerant of ACEi; heart failure, hypertension, diabetic nephropathy, et of cardiovascular events et Caution Pregnancy and .breastet prophylaxis n n n . . Xfeeding, renal artery stenosis/ X renal impairment, aortickinXstenosis, ok hyperkalaemia, known allergy ok to ACEi. May not be effective o o oo African- Caribbean patients .SE Postural hypotension, renal impairment and B B B . w disturbance, urticaria andwangioneurotic w hyperkalaemia, taste oedema; cough can occur wwbut is less common than with w ACEi. ww Tablet 5.7 AT II receptor antagonists t e e et n n n . Candesartan Dose Initially 4–8mg/.24h PO up to max 32mg/24h PO . X X 50mg/24h PO up to max 300mg/ ok Irbesartan Dose Initiallyoo75–k1X ok24h PO o o B B 24h PO Losartan Dose Initially .100mg/ w.B 25–50mg/24h PO up towmax w Valsartan Dose Initially 80mg/24h PO up to max 320mg/24h PO w w w ww Atenolol See beta-blockers. t t t .ne .ne inhibitor. See statins. X.ne Atorvastatin $ HMG CoA X reductase X k$ Anticholinergic. Dose 500micrograms/ ok Atropine; bradycardia ok oo3mg/ o 24h Indication Bradycardia Bo STAT IV every 3–5wmin;.Bmax B . CI Glaucoma, myasthenia gravis, pyloric stenosis, prostatic w enlargement Caution Down’s syndrome, ww GORD SE Transient bradycardia, ww antimuscarinic ef- ww fects (constipation, urinary urgency and retention, pupil dilatation/loss of accommodation, dry mouth). t et cardiac et Atropine; arrest .$ Dose 3mg/ n neAnticholinergic. . .nSTAT X X X IV Indication non- s hockable cardiopulmonary arrest Caution None ok the arrest situation SE Asofor ok‘Atropine; bradycardia’ InfooAtropine ok is noin o B longer recommended.B use in non-shockable w for routineGuidelines). w.Bcardiopulmonary w arrest (see 2015 Resuscitation w w w $ Antibacterial. See mupirocin.w w Bactroban Beclometasone Corticosteroid.t Dose 200–400micrograms/12h t Chronic$asthma eIndication et n n n INH (step 2eBTS guidelines) Caution TB SE Oral . . . X X bronchospasm (rare) Info XDifferent hoarse voice, paradoxical ok candidiasis, okinterchangeable obekprescribed preparations/devices areonot and should o o B by brand name. w.B w.B w w Bendroflumethiazide $ Thiazide diuretic. w w Dose Oedema 5–10mg/ ww ® et n . kX o Bo alternate days PO; Hypertension 2.5mg/24h PO Indication Oedema, hypertension Caution DM, gout, SLE SE Dehydration, hypotension, electrolyte imbalance (especially dK+) Interaction ilithium levels and NSAIDs decrease effect. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 191 t et net$ Beta-lactam. Dose X Benzylpenicillin (penicillin .G) 0.6– .ne .n1.2g/ X X 4.8g/ 24h in k divided doses) Indication Infection; ok 6h IV (max ok of skin, endocarditis CIoo Penicillin allergy Caution History alo Bo throat, B B . . contraceptive pill, lergy SE Diarrhoea Interaction Decrease effects of oral w w allopurinol increases ww risk of rash. ww ww Beta-blockers Dose See Table 5.8 Indications Generic indications include: hypertension, angina, myocardial infarction, arrhythmias, heart failure, etthyrotoxicosis, anxiety, migraine et prophylaxis, benign .essenet n n n . . tial tremor; topically for glaucoma Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, X abrupt withdrawal especially X in patients with IHD (risk X of reok avoid ok AV block, oksymptoms o o o bound iHR/ i BP), 1st- d egree DM (may mask B dglucose), COPDwCI.BAsthma, uncontrolled heart w.Bfailure, marked w w w bradycardia,w dBP, 2nd/3rd-degree AV block, wsevere peripheral arterial w disease SE Bradycardia, hypotension (especially postural), heart failure, bronchospasm, conduction disorders, peripheral vasoconstriction, t nightmares, insomnia),neim-t et fatigue, sleep disturbance e(often headache, n n . . .effect potence Info The cardioselective β- b lockers (Table 5.8) have less Xon β receptors but are not kcardiospecific X X k k and bronchoconstriction can o o opatients. oo (atenolol, occur in susceptible Water-soluble β-.bB lockers Bo still B . w excreted by the kidneys andwa dose reduction is nadolol, sotalol) are often necessary wwin renal impairment; thesewarewalso less likely to cause ww 2 sleep disturbance and nightmares. et5.8 β-blockers. Doses show.ninitial et dose range for treatment .net Table .of nhypertension, X X ok Cardioselective doses varyoowithk indication; consult BNF ookX o B B available IV .B .also Atenolol Dosew 25–50mg/24h PO (100mg/24h max); w w w Bisoprolol wDose 5–10mg/24h PO (20mg/24hw max) ww Metoprolol Dose 50–100mg/24h PO (400mg/24h max); also available IV t Non-e cardioselective net50mg/24h in divided doses)X.net .n .(max Carvedilol Dose 12.5mg/24h PO X X ok Labetalol Dose 100mg/o1o2hkPO (max 2.4g/24h in divided doses); ok also o available.B IV Bo B . Propranolol Dosew 40–80mg/12h PO, increase weeklyw (max 320mg/24h in w w divided doses) w w ww Sotalol Used only to treat arrhythmias. Only commence after seeking expert advice t t e emaintenance et Dose 40mg/12h PO (usual dose 80–160mg/12h n n n . . . PO); also available IV X X X ok Timolol Used predominantly ok as eye drops for the treatment oofk o o o B glaucoma; in systemic effects w.Bcase reports exist of this resulting w.B w w w w ww Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 192 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w ww w t t t Betamethasone cream See topical .ne .ne corticosteroid. .ne X X X k 200mg/8h PO; modified- ok Bezafibrate $ Fibrate.ooDose orkelease preo BNF Indication Hyperlipidaemias unresponsive Bo parations available,wcheck B B . w.primary biliary cir- w to diet and other measures CI Hypoalbuminaemia, w w rhosis, gall bladder w disease, nephrotic syndrome, w pregnancy and breast- w feeding Caution Renal impairment (see BNF for reduced dosing), hepatic impairment, SE GI disturbance, anorexia, cholestasis. t et hypothyroidism et n . .ne Bisoprolol See beta-blockers. .n X X X k k ok Bowel cleansing preparations Klean-Prepo, o MoviPrep , oo Dose(Eg Bo Picolax , etc)w$.BLaxative. Consult BNF.B or local guideline w Indications Prior to surgery, colonoscopy or w radiological examination CI Bowel obstruction, ww toxic megacolon Caution w Elderly, children, dehy- ww dration SE N+V, abdominal pain and distension, dehydration, electrolyte disturbance These agents should tnot be used in the treatment of et Info et constipation (see also laxatives). .ne n n . . X X X ok Bricanyl $ β agonist.oSee okterbutaline. ok o o B Buccastem See antiemetics w.B (phenothiazine).ww.B w Budesonide w $ Corticosteroid. Dose 100– w800micrograms/12h INH; ww ® ® ® ® 2 ® 1–2mg/12h NEB Indication Chronic asthma (step 2 BTS guidelines) Caution TB SE Oral candidiasis, hoarse voice, paradoxical bronchospasm (rare). t t t .ne .ne dependence. Dose Commence .ne Bupropion $ Treatment of nicotine X X X before target smoking ok 1–2wk ok cessation date, initially 150mg/ ok 24h PO 6d, then 150mg/12hoPO (max single dose 150mg;omax total daily Bo for B B dose 300mg) Indication Smoking cessation CI Acute w. severe w. alcohol or benzo- w diazepine withdrawal, hepatic cirrhosis,w CNS tumour, history of w w Hepatic impairment, renalwimpairment, pregnancy and w seizures Caution breastfeeding SE Dry mouth, GI disturbances, taste disturbance, agitat t tion, e et .n anxiety. $ Antimuscarinic.XSee.nhyoscine .ne X X Buscopan butylbromide. ok okD $ Calcium salt. See calcium okcarbonate. o o Bo Calcichew /Calcichew B B w. $ Calcium salt. Dose w.See BNF Indication w Calcium carbonate w w w dCa CI iCa (urine/serum), w eg malignancy Caution w Osteoporosis, History of renal stones, sarcoid, renal impairment SE GI disturbance, dHR,earrhythmias. t et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww ® ® ® 3 2+ Bo o et n . kX 2+ et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 193 t t et Calcium- Dose See Table .ne channel blockersX$.nDihydropyridines. .ne5.9 X X iBP, prophylaxis k CI Unstable angina, k ok Indicationssignificant o of angina o cardiogenic aortic ostenosis, acute porphyria Caution Pregnancy, o Bo shock, B B . flushing, breastfeeding, heart .failure SE Abdominal pain, N+V, palpiw w tations, dBP, oedema, headache, sleep disturbance, fatigue Info The w w w relax smooth muscle and dilate w both coronary and per- ww dihydropyridines ipheral arteries. Nimodipine preferentially acts upon cerebral vascular smooth and is used in the prevention and treatment of ischaemic etmuscle et subarachnoid et n n n . . . neurological deficits following aneurysmal haemorrhage. X X ok Table 5.9 Calcium-channel okblockers (dihydropyridines) ookX o o B w.B5mg/24h PO up to max 10mg/ w2.4hBPO Amlodipine Dose Initially w w w10–20mg/24h PO ww Felodipine w Dose Initially 5mg/24h PO up to max Nifedipine Dose Depends upon preparation. Always specify specific brand consult BNF et for modified-release (MR).npreparations; et et n n . . Nimodipine Dose 60mg/ 4 h PO starting within 4d of subarachnoid X X X haemorrhage and ok okcontinue for 21d; IV preparationoavailable, ok o o consult BNF B w.B w.B w w Calcium-cw hannel blockers $ Verapamil, w diltiazem. Dose See ww B Table 5.10 Indications iBP, prophylaxis of angina; verapamil is also used in the management of tachyarrhythmias CI Left ventricular failure, bradycardia, 2nd-or 3rd- degree AV dissociation, sick sinus syndrome Caution Pregnancy, patients taking β-blockers or other negatively chronotropic drugs, 1st-degree AV dissociation, acute phase of MI SE Bradycardia, dBP, heart block, dizziness, flushing, headache, oedema, GI disturbance Interactions Unlike the dihydropyridines, diltiazem and verapamil are negatively chronotropic and inotropic and should not generally be used in conjunction with β-blockers or other negatively chronotropic drugs. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t .ne 5.10 Calcium-channel blockers .ne(verapamil, diltiazem) X.ne Table X X ok ok ok Dependsoupon preparation; consult. Always o specify specific Bo Diltiazem Dose B B brand for.modified-release (MR) preparations;. consult BNF w 40–120mg/8h PO for SVT; wTypically ww Verapamil Dose 80–120mg/8h PO for w w ww angina prophylaxis; 80–160mg/8h PO for iBP; 5–10mg over 5min IV with ECG monitoring for treatment of acute SVT (seek senior help before giving IV inotropes/ t e et chronotropes) et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 194 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t neDose Calcium 10mL of 10%; give 1mL/ .ne chloride $ Calcium .salt. .nemin X X X Emergency management of dCa CI iCa Caution ok IV Indication ok impairment ok History stones, sarcoid,orenal SE Peripheralovasodilatation, Bo ofdBP,renal B B . . gluconate. injection-site reactions; more irritant than calcium ww $ Calcium salt.wDose ww10mL of 10%; give ww Calcium w gluconate over 3min IV Indication Emergency management of dCa , iK CI iCa tCaution History of renal stones, renal impairment SE e vasodilatation, dBP, injection- et sitesarcoid, et Peripheral reactions. n n n . . . X X salt. Dose 15g/6–8h PO; XPR preResonium $ ok Calcium okCalcium otokmoderate) o o o parations also available (see BNF) Indication iK (mild B .B .BMonitor K . Caution Pregnancy,w breastfeeding SE GI disturbance wInfo w w Calpol $w Simple analgesic. See paracetamol. w ww Candesartan See AT II antagonists. et $ Imidazole antifungal. eSeet clotrimazole. et n n n Canesten . . . X X ok Captopril See ACEi. ookX ok o o B Carbamazepine .B $ Antiepileptic. Dose Initially.B 100mg/12h PO; w wpreparations Increase To max 2g/24h in divided doses; PR w w w w tonic–clonic, available (see BNF) w Indication Antiepileptic; generalized chronic w B 2+ 2+ 2+ + 2+ ® + + ® ® pain, eg trigeminal neuralgia (see BNF for dosing) CI AV conduction abnormalities, history of bone marrow depression, acute porphyria Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, cardiac disease, Hong Kong Chinese/Thai origin, history of skin conditions SE N+V, dizziness, drowsiness, headache, ataxia, visual disturbance, cytopenias, hepatic dysfunction, skin disorders Interaction Enzyme inducer. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w Monitoring carbamazepine .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k w Random sample 20–50micromol/L (4–12mg/L) 2 Toxic >50micromol/L (>12mg/L) t t netInitially 15–40mg/24h X .ne .Dose .ne Carbimazole $ Antithyroid. PO; Once X X k for 12– ok euthyroid 5–15mg/24h PO oask maintenance dose usuallyoogiven o Hyperthyroidism CI Severe blood disorders Caution Bo 18mth Indication w B B . . Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic impairment SEwN+V, pruritus, rash, w w agranulocytosis. w w Carvedilol See beta-blockers. et See cephalosporin. .net et Cefaclor n n . . X X X ok Cefalexin See cephalosporin. ok ok o o o B Cefotaxime See cephalosporin. w.B w.B w w Cefradinew See cephalosporin. w Ceftazidime See cephalosporin. ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok Cefuroxime See cephalosporin. ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Ceftriaxone See cephalosporin. B .B w ww .B w w w Pharmacopoeia w w 195 t t et Celecoxib inhibitor. PO.n (max .ne $ NSAID/COX2X .ne Dose 100–200mg/12hX X 4h in divided doses) Indication Pain and inflammation; ok 400mg/2rheumatoid okand okIHD,osteoarthritis ankylosing spondylitisoCI CVD, o Bo arthritis, B B . Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, . HF, allergy to any NSAID hepatic imw w pairment, renalw impairment SE GI disturbance/w headache, dizziw w Decreases wbleeding,increases ness Interaction effects of antihypertensives, toxicity w of methotrexate, increased risk of renal impairment with ACEi, AT II antagonists, et or ciclosporin. et et n n n . . . Cephalosporin Dose See Table 5.11 Indications Infections (with known X X X surantimicrobialok sensitivity (consult local guidelines)), ok orgicalsuspected okbe harmful o o o prophylaxis, other prophylaxis Caution Not known to B in pregnancy, present w.Bin breast-milk in low concentration; w.B 0.5–6.5% of w w w patients whoware penicillin-allergic will display w allergy to cephalosporins w as cephalosporins contain a beta-lactam ring as do the penicillins and carbapenems SE Diarrhoea (rarely antibiotic-associated colitis), N+V, abet discomfort, headache, allergic etreactions Info Cephalosporins earet dominal n n n . . . amongst the antibiotics which are most likely to result in Clostridium difficile X kX and clindamycin. Asowith kXall antiok diarrhoea, the others being oquinolones o o o biotics, it is important to consult local guidelines as infectious B different susceptibilities B agents have .Bdepending upon geographical .location. w w ww ww ww Table 5.11 Cephalosporins (consult local guidelines) t t Firstegeneration net .n .n8he PO Indications UTIs, respiratory .tract Cefalexin Dose 500mg (250–500mg) X X X k sinusitis, skin and soft tissue infections infections, otitisomedia, ok ok o o Bo Cefradine Dosew500mg B B . (250–500mg) 6h PO Indications w.surgical prophylaxis but generally not used widely now w w w w ww Second generation Cefuroxime Dose 750mg (750–1500mg) 8h IV, 500mg (250–500mg) 12h PO; t Indications Gram-positivenand t t .ne . e Gram-negative bacteria; surgical .ne prophylaxis X X X ok Third generation ook ok o Bo Cefotaxime Dosew1g.(1– B2g) 12h IV Indications better Gram- B negative activity, w.bacteria but poorer coverage against Gram-positive than w w cefuroxime; penetrates the CSF w w ww Ceftriaxone t .ne Dose 1g (1–4g) 24h IV Indications better Gram-negative activity, but poorer coverage against Gram-positive bacteria than cefuroxime; penetrates the CSF et et n n . . X Xor 2g/12h IV; Indications better Gram- X 1g (1–2g) 8hkIV ok Ceftazidime Dose o but poorer opkositive negative activity, coverage against Gram- o o o B bacteria.than w B cefuroxime; good activitywagainst w.BPseudomonas w w ww Cetirizinew $ H antagonist. See antihistamine. Chloramphenicol; drops $ tAntibiotic. Dose 1 drop 0.5%/2th t frequencyeye ereduce e TOP; as infection Continue for 48h n . .nisecontrolled. .nafter X X X symptoms resolve Indication Conjunctivitis, corneal abrasions, post ok surgery SE Transient stinging. ok ok eye o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 1 B 196 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t et Chlordiazepoxide $ Benzodiazepine. .ne .ne Dose See Table 5.12 Indications .nAcute X X X withdrawal treatment/ rophylaxis Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, ok alcoholdisease, okprespiratory okrespiratory renal impairment, disease (sleep apnoea, o o Bo liver B B failure), reduce dose in the elderly, avoid abrupt withdrawal w. confusion, w. SE Respiratory w ­depression, drowsiness, ataxia, amnesia,w dependence Info Symptoms w w withdrawal tend to occur 12–4w8h after the last alcoholic drink w of acute alcohol and usually subside 5–7d after the last drink. A reducing dose of chlordiazepoxide as a surrogate CNS depressant ethet acts et (which is the effect alcohol ehastto n n . . upon CNS) and it is uncommon.n for physical symptoms of withdrawal X if patients are treated with Xthis sort of regimen; always consider X ok present ok (E ok vitamin o o o supplementation in these patients p. 105); consult local guidelines. B .B w.B regimen for alcohol w Table 5.12 Chlordiazepoxide withdrawal (local w w w differ from this suggested regimen) w ww guidelines may Day 1 20mg/6h PO Day 5 5mg/6h PO e2 t et et Day 20mg/8h PO Day 6 5mg/8h PO n n n . . . X 3 X 10mg/6h PO kX Day 7 5mg/12h PO ok Day o ok o o o Day 4 10mg/ 8 h PO Day 8 STOP B w.B w.B w w Chlorhexidine w $ Antiseptic. Indication Skin w preparation prior to sur- ww B gery or other invasive procedures (eg vascular access, spinal/epidural anaesthesia), surgical hand scrub, oral hygiene, antiseptic lubricant (eg Hibitane®) CI Avoid contact with eyes, brain, meninges, middle ear and other body cavities SE Sensitivity, mucosal irritation. Chlorphenamine $ H1 antagonist See antihistamine. Cimetidine $ Antihistamine (H2 antagonist). See ranitidine. Ciprofloxacin $ Quinolone. Dose 500–750mg/12h PO; 400mg/12h IV Indication Infections: GI, respiratory, urinary CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding, allergy to quinolones Caution Myasthenia gravis, seizures (reduced seizure threshold), adolescents/ children, renal impairment SE N+V, diarrhoea, tendonitis (including tendon rupture) Interaction NSAIDs increase risk of seizure, increase levels of theophyllines, increase nephrotoxicity of ciclosporin, increase effect of warfarin. Citalopram $ Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor. Dose 20mg/ 24h PO (max 40mg/24h) Indication Depression, panic disorder CI Active mania, QT interval prolongation Caution Pregnancy, epilepsy, cardiac disease, DM SE GI disturbance, anorexia, weight loss, dNa+, agitation Interaction MAOI within 2wk. Clarithromycin $ Macrolide antibiotic. Dose 250–500mg/12h PO/ IV Indication Atypical pneumonias, H. pylori CI Allergy Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment, concomitant use with statins SE GI upset, irritant to veins. Clindamycin $ Antibiotic. Dose 150–450mg/6h PO; up to 4.8g/24h IV in 2–4 doses for life-threatening infections (consult BNF) Indication Gram- positive cocci and anaerobes; osteomyelitis, intra- abdominal infections, MRSA CI Diarrhoea Caution Breastfeeding, acute porphyria SE GI disturbance, antibiotic-associated colitis (namely C. diff ), hepatotoxicity, arthralgia; discontinue drug if patient develops new onset diarrhoea Interaction Increases neuromuscular blockade. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 197 t t t Clobetasol .ne propionate cream .neSee topical corticosteroids.X.ne X X k k Loading 300mg/ ok Clopidogrel $ Antiplatelet. oo IndicationDosePrevention ooSTAT PO; of.B atherothrombotic Bo Maintenance 75mg/w2.4hBPO events following MI/ACS/CVA CI Pregnancy, acw Hepatic impairment, wincreased ww breastfeeding, tive bleedingwCaution risk of bleeding, ww recent trauma/surgery SE GI disturbance, bleeding disorders Interaction Increased risk of bleeding with and anticoagulants; etpump et NSAIDsof clopidogrel. et proton inhibitors may reduce effectiveness n n n . . . X X Dose 1% cream 2–3 applications/ X kantifungal. $ Imidazole ok Clotrimazole oinfections, ok Avoid o o o 24h Indication Fungal skin vaginal candidiasis Caution B contact with eyeswand.Bmucous membranes, can w .B condoms and damage w w diaphragms SE Local irritation. w w ww Co-amoxiclav $ Beta-lactam with clavulanic acid. Dose 375–625mg/ 8h PO;t1.2g/8h IV Indication Infection; where amoxicillin alone is not apt impairment, e CI Penicillin allergy Caution eRenal et propriate glandular.n fever, n n . . X infection, ALL/CLL SE kN+V, X X rash. ok CMV o diarrhoea, ok inhibitor o o o Co- b eneldopa $ Levodopa and dopa- d ecarboxylase B (benserazide). Dosew.Initially B 50mg/6–8h PO, increased w.B to 100mg/ w w w 24h or 100mg/ t wice a week according to response; usual mainten- w w w ance dose 400– 800mg/ day in divided doses Indication Parkinson’s disease Caution Severe pulmonary or cardiovascular disease, psychiatric illness, endocrine disorders, pregnancy and breastfeeding SE GI disturbances, taste disturbances, dry mouth, anorexia, arrhythmias and palpitations, postural hypotension, drowsiness, dystonia, dyskinesia. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . w BNF Indication w (carbidopa). Dose w Depends upon preparation, wconsult w w Parkinson’s disease Caution Severe pulmonary or cardiovascular disease, w psychiatric illness, endocrine disorders, pregnancy and breastfeeding SE t mouth, anorexia, arrhythmias t GI disturbances, taste disturbances, e dry et .npalpitations, .n drowsiness, dystonia, dyskinesia. .ne and postural hypotension, X X X $ Weak opioids with paracetamol. Dose 8/ Two ok Co-codamol oktablets/ o5k00mg o o 4–6h PO (max eight 2 4h in divided doses); 30/500mg Bo tablets/ B B . . Two tablets/4–6hw eight tablets/24h in divided w doses) Indication w w PO (maxdepression, wileus; Pain CI Acute respiratory paralytic codeine containing w w w medicines should not be used in children under 12yr, or in any patient under the age of 18yr who undergoes removal of tonsils or adenoids for et of sleep apnoea Caution et Pregnancy (especially delivery), et thentreatment n n . . . XCOPD, asthma, renal impairment, X hepatic impairment SE N+V, Xconstiok pation Info Co-prescribe olaxatives ok if using opioids for >24h. ok o o B Codeine phosphate .B60mg/4h PO/IM w.B $ Weak opioid. Dose w30– (max 240mg/2w 4h in divided doses) Indication Pain CI Acute respiratory w w medicines should not be ww depression, w paralytic ileus; codeine containing B Co-careldopa $ Levodopa and dopa- decarboxylase inhibitor et n . kX o Bo used in children under 12yr, or in any patient under the age of 18yr who undergoes removal of tonsils or adenoids for the treatment of sleep apnoea Caution Pregnancy (especially delivery), COPD, asthma, renal impairment, hepatic impairment; never give codeine phosphate IV SE N+V, constipation Info Co-prescribe laxatives if using opioids for >24h. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 198 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t netβ agonist. Dose 500micrograms .ne .ne Combivent $ Antimuscarinic.with X X X bromide with 2.5mg salbutamol/ PRN NEB ok ipratropium okairway ok Indication o o and other reversible obstruction, COPD Caution Bo Asthma B B . SE Antimuscarinic effects (commonly . dryProstatic hyperplasia, glaucoma mouth), w w w headaches, arrhythmias.ww fine tremor, tension w ww Corsodyl $ Antiseptic. See chlorhexidine. Cyclizine et $ Antihistamine (H antagonist). et See antiemetics. .net n n . . Dabigatran $ Direct thrombin inhibitor. and dose VTE X110mg 1–4Indication X prophy­ kXlaxis after hip/knee replacement k h after surgery,ok followed by o o o If >75yr then 12h for 9 d (30B 1st B Bo 220mg/ . doin hips) start 12–24h after (30d . dose. initial dose is 75mg,wfollowed by 150mg/12h for 9dw in hips). Treatment w of recurrent PE/DVT Initial of DVT/PE and wprophylaxis wwdose must follow at least ww 5 days treatment with a parenteral anticoagulant. 150mg/12h. If >75yr, renal impairment or at increased risk of bleeding: 110mg/12h. Prophylaxis of stroke et embolism in non-valvular.nAFetand 1 risk factor (Such as previous et andnsystemic n . . stroke or TIA, symptomatic heart failure, DM, HTN, or >75yr): 150mg/ 1 X X X 2h. ok If >75yr: 110mg/12h. SEoAbdominal ok pain; anaemia; diarrhoea; ok dyspepsia; o o haemorrhage; nausea..B Caution Avoid in patients with significant B .B bleeding risk. w Wait 6h after epidural catheter removal to restartwdabigatran. Info Dose changes if receiving or w verapamil. No routine anti- ww ww concomitant amiodarone w B ® 2 ® 1 coagulant monitoring required (INR tests are unreliable). Dalteparin $ Low-molecular-weight heparin. Dose Consult BNF Indication DVT/ PE treatment and prophylaxis, ACS CI Bleeding disorders, thrombocytopenia, severe hypertension, recent trauma Caution Hyperkalaemia, hepatic or renal impairment SE Haemorrhage, thrombocytopenia, hyperkalaemia Interaction NSAIDs increase bleeding risk, effects increased by GTN. Desloratadine $ Antihistamine (H1 antagonist). See antihistamines. Dexamethasone $ Corticosteroid. Dose See BNF Indication Cerebral oedema (malignancy), suppression of inflammation/ allergic disorders, diagnosis of Cushing’s disease, chemotherapy induced N+V CI Systemic infection Caution Adrenal suppression, may precipitate tumour lysis syndrome in patients with some haematological malignancies SE Cushing’s syndrome, deranged blood glucose, osteoporosis, psychiatric reactions, raised WCC (specifically neutrophilia). Diamorphine $ Opioid. Dose 2.5–5mg/4h SC/IM/IV Indication Severe pain, ACS/acute MI, acute pulmonary oedema, palliative care CI Respiratory depression, paralytic ileus, raised ICP/ head trauma, comatose patients, phaeochromocytoma Caution Pregnancy (especially delivery), COPD, asthma, renal impairment, hepatic impairment SE N+V, constipation, respiratory depression, dry mouth Interaction MAOI Info Co-prescribe laxatives if using opioids for >24h. Diazepam $ Benzodiazepine. Dose status epilepticus 5–10mg over 10min IV (max 20mg) or 10–40mg PR; Other short-term usage 2mg/8h PO (max 30mg/24h in divided doses) Indication Seizures, status epilepticus; Short term Anxiety, alcohol withdrawal, muscle spasms CI Respiratory depression, sleep apnoea, unstable myasthenia gravis, hepatic impairment Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, history of drug abuse, respiratory disease, muscle weakness, renal impairment SE Drowsiness, confusion, muscle weakness. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 199 t t t Diclofenac $ NSAID. Dose 50mg/ .ne .ne 8h PO/PR (max 150mg/ .n2e4h X X X doses) Indication kPain, inflammation CI Pregnancy, peptic ok in divided o okischaemic disease, hepatic impairment, congestive heart failure, o o Bo ulcer B B heart disease, peripheral disease, cerebrovascular w. renalarterial w. GI disease,disease Caution Breastfeeding, impairment, asthma, paw w w w tients with w significant risk factors for cardiovascular events (eg iBP, w ilipids, DM, smoking) SE GI disturbance/ bleeding, headache, dizzit ness Info Arthrotec is a preparation e oft diclofenac with misoprostol and e et n n n . . . may reduce GI side effects. X X Xover at $ Cardiac glycoside. Emergency IV loading dose 0.75– ok Digoxin ok0.75– ok1mgdoses o o o least 2h IV Rapid oral loading dose 1 .5mg over 24h in 3 divided PO B (typically 500micrograms .B PO initially, followed by 250micrograms .B PO 6h w w wtachycardic Maintenance ww later, and furtherw w 250micrograms PO 12h laterwif still dose 62.5–125micrograms/24h PO Indications Often 2nd- line agent in supraventricular tachyarrhythmias (commonly AF and atrial flutter), heart t t failure eCI 2nd-or 3rd-degree AV dissociation, e accessory conducting.npathet n n . . ways (eg WPW) Caution Pregnancy, recent MI, sick sinus syndrome, renal X X X elderly patients, or iCa SE N+V, diarrhoea, ok impairment, okdK , dMgdizziness, okyellow o o o bradyarrhythmias, tachyarrhythmias, blurred or B sion Therapeutic monitoring .B(Table 5.13) should be undertaken .B if toxicity is con-viw w w is poor Info Digoxin is ww sidered (usually presents with N+V) or if ratew control ww B ® + 2+ 2+ now rarely used for rapid rate control, with other agents often being used in preference (E pp. 256–61) or DC cardioversion (E p. 546). Digoxin is most often used in the chronic rate control of supraventricular tachyarrhythmias and in heart failure. Digoxin does not restore sinus rhythm, it merely slows conduction at the AV node, limiting the number of impulses passing from the atria through to the ventricles thus controlling ventricular rate. It also acts as a positive inotrope, increasing the force of ventricular contraction If rate not adequately controlled After loading with digoxin, discuss with senior or cardiologist. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t Monitoring .ne digoxin X k t .ne X k w t .ne X k et .n kX Optimum sampling time 6–12h post oral dose 1–2.6nmol/L (0.8– 2microg/L); typically takes 7d to get to steady state 2 Toxic >2.6nmol/L (>2microg/L). Toxicity can occur at levels <1.3nmol/L if patient has dK+ 2 Signs of toxicity (see Table 5.13; E OHAM3 p. 708) o o w.B ww oo B . w w w w w w w Table 5.13 Digoxin toxicity Symptoms N+V, confusion, diarrhoea, et et yellow and blurred vision .net n n . . Bloods Toxicity precipitated by renal failure, dK , dMg , dT X X kX k k Check digoxin level (see ‘Monitoring digoxin’); toxic o o oL (>2micrograms/L) oo if >2.6nmol/ Bo ECG B B . . Tachy- wave inversion w and bradyarrhythmias. ST depression/T- wwbradyarrhythmias) Complications wwiK , cardiac dysrhythmias (tachy- wand ww Management Airway, breathing, and circulation Continuous ECG monitoring t t e et Treat arrhythmias .ne n n . . Consider digoxin- b inding antibody fragments (DigiFab , see BNF) X X kX digoxin overdose if known or o suspected ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww + 2+ 4 + ® B 200 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t Dihydrocodeine $ Weak opioid. .ne .neDose 30mg/4–6h PO (maxX240mg/ .ne X X divided doses); 50mg/ 6h IM Indication Pain CI Acute respirak 4–Caution ok 24h indepression, oileus ok delivery), paralytic Pregnancy (especially o o Bo tory B B COPD, asthma, renal impairment; give w. impairment, hepatic Co- wp.rescribe never dihydrocodeinewIV SE N+V, constipation Infow laxatives if wfor >24h. w ww using opioids Diltiazem channel blockers. t et See calcium- eDose et n n n . . . Dipyridamole $ Antiplatelet. 200mg modified-release/ X PO (max 600mg/24hkinXdivided doses), non-modified- Xrelease ok 12h o (see BNF) Indication Secondary ok preveno o o preparations also available B B .B and TIA, adjunct to oral .anticoagulation tion of ischaemicw stroke for w w w prophylaxis ofwthromboembolism associated with prosthetic heart w w valves Caution Breastfeeding, aortic stenosis, unstable angina, recent w MI SE GI disturbance, dizziness, headache, myalgia Interaction Increases t warfarin, decreases effectnofecholinesterase t effecteof inhibitors. et n n . . . X X X sodium See laxatives. ok Docusate ok Dose 1mg/24h PO; increase okgradually to o o o Doxazosin $ α antagonist. B .B .B 2–4mg/24h (maxw16mg/24h) Indication Benign w prostatic hyperplasia, w w hypertension CI Breastfeeding, hypotension Caution w w Pregnancy, hepatic ww B 1 impairment SE Postural hypotension, headache, dizziness, urinary incontinence Interaction Increases effects of antihypertensives. Doxycycline $ Tetracycline. Dose 100–200mg 12–24h PO (consult BNF) Indication Respiratory tract infections, GU infections, anthrax, malaria prophylaxis CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment, age <12yr (stains growing teeth and bones) Caution Myasthenia gravis may worsen, exacerbates SLE SE GI disturbance including, dysphagia/oesophageal irritation, photosensitivity Interaction Decreased absorption with milk, decreases effects of oral contraceptive pill, mildly increases effects of warfarin. Edoxaban $ Direct factor Xa inhibitor. Dose 30mg/24 if <60kg, 60mg/ 24 if > 61kg Indication Prophylaxis of stroke and systemic embolism in non- valvular AF and 1 risk factor (Such as previous stroke or TIA, symptomatic heart failure, DM, HTN, or >75yr); Treatment of DVT/PE and prophylaxis of recurrent PE/DVT Caution Mitral stenosis and prosthetic heart valves. Avoid in patients with significant bleeding risk. SE Anaemia; epistaxis; haemorrhage; nausea; pruritus; rash (rare = allergic oedema). Info No routine anticoagulant monitoring required (INR tests are unreliable). Monitor LFTs for the 1st year. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww t e X.n o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k t ww et n . X ww ok Enalapril See ACEi. oo ok Bo Enoxaparin $wLow- .Bmolecular-weight heparin.wDose .BoDVT/PE prophyw laxis 20–40mg/ 4h SC (E pp. 420–1); DVT/w 1.5mg/kg/ ww2treatment w PE treatment 24h SC; ACS 1mg/kg/12h Indication DVT/PE treatment w and prophylaxis, ACS CI Bleeding disorders, thrombocytopenia, set t Hyperkalaemia, hepatic vere ehypertension, recent trauma Caution ethrombocytopenia, eort n n n . . . renal impairment SE Haemorrhage, hyperkalaemia X X kX risk, effects increasedobykGTN. ok Interaction NSAIDs increase obleeding o o o B Epilim $ Antiepileptic. w.B See valproate. ww.B w w w ww ® B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 201 t t t Erythromycin $ Macrolide antibiotic. 50mg/ .ne .ne Dose 500–1000mg/6h PO; .ne X X X in divided dose (typically 1000mg/6h IV) Indication ok kg/24h IVpneumonias. ok 500– oktoInfection; Commonly used in patients allergic penicilo o Bo atypical B B . . renal impairment, lins CI Allergy Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or w w concomitant usew w with statins SE GI upset, irritantwtowveins. ww Esomeprazole $ Proton pump inhibitor. Dose 20–40mg/24h PO Indication GORD, H. pylori eradication Breastfeeding Caution t SE GICI disturbance, et PUD, ecancer et Pregnancy, hepatic impairment, gastric headache n n n . . . XInteraction Proton pump inhibitors kXmay reduce effectiveness ofoclopidogrel. kX ok Felodipine See calcium-ocohannel o o blockers. B w.B$ Iron supplement. DosewConsult w.BBNF as depends w Ferrous fumarate w upon formulation anaemia SE GI disturbance, w w Indication Iron deficiency w dark stools. Ferrous et gluconate $ Iron supplement. et Dose 600mg/8h PO.n(see et n n . . BNF) Indication Iron deficiency anaemia SE GI disturbance, dark stools. X X kX Iron ok Ferrous sulfate $ Ironosupplement. ok oIndication Dose 200mg/8h PO o o B deficiency anaemiawSE.B GI disturbance, dark stools. .B w w Fibrinolytic w drugs $ Plasminogen activator. ww Dose and indications ww B Depends upon specific agent, see Table 5.14 (also E p. 551) CI Recent haemorrhage, trauma or surgery, coagulopathies, aortic dissection, aneurysm, coma, history of cerebrovascular disease, peptic ulceration, menorrhagia, hepatic impairment; streptokinase should not be used again beyond 4d of first administration due to antibody formation and risk of allergic reactions Caution Pregnancy, following external chest compression, old age, hypertension SE N+V, bleeding, hypotension. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww w Table 5.14 Fibrinolytic drugs o Bo t .ne X k t o o w.B Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et In acute STEMI, fibrinolytic drugs should be used where primary cutaneous intervention (PCI) is not immediately available Alteplase Indications Acute MI, massive PE, acute ischaemic stroke Dose Consult BNF; given as an IV bolus followed by an IV infusion, followed by heparin infusion Reteplase Indications Acute MI Dose Consult BNF; given as two IV boluses 30min apart, followed by heparin infusion Streptokinase Indications Acute MI, DVT, PE, acute arterial thromboembolism, central retinal venous or arterial thrombosis Dose Consult BNF; typically 1.5million units in 100mL 0.9% saline over 1h IV. Do not repeat administration after 4d of initial dose due to risk of allergic reaction Tenecteplase Indications Acute MI Dose Consult BNF; given as an IV bolus, followed by heparin infusion Urokinase Indications Thromboembolic occlusive vascular disease; DVT, PE and peripheral vascular occlusion; occluded iv catheters and cannulae blocked by fibrin clot Dose Consult BNF ww ok Bo t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 202 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w w ww t et netBPH 5mg/24h PO; male- Finasteride $ Antiandrogen. .Dose .ne .pnattern X X X 1mg/24h PO Indication BPH, male-pattern baldnesskCI Females ok baldnessadolescents okProstate o obstrucCaution cancer, urinary otract o Bo and B B . . tion SE Gynaecomastia, testicular pain, sexual dysfunction. ww See metronidazole. www Flagyl $ w Antibiotic. ww Flecainide $ Class Ic antiarrhythmic. Dose Initial 100mg/12h PO; t5d; 2mg/kg over 10–30min slow reduce etto lowest effective dose over e3– et n . IV.n (max 150mg) Indication VT, SVT CI HF, history of MI, heart.n block, X branch block CautionkPatients X with pacemakers, AFkSEXGI disok bundle o fatigue Interaction o o ooof action inturbance, dizziness, oedema, Duration B B B . . creased by amiodarone, fluoxetine, quinine; myocardial w w depression with w β-blockers/verapamil. ww ww w Flixotide $ Corticosteroid. See fluticasone. t 500mg/6h PO; 250–2000mg/ Flucloxacillin $ Beta-lactam. Dosee250– et et n n n . . . 6h IV Indication Penicillin sensitive infections, endocarditis, osteomyelitis X of flucloxacillin-relatedkXjaundice, penicillin allergy SEkDiarrhoea, X CI ok History o o o o o ­abdominal pain CautionB impairment Interaction Decrease B . Renal increases .B effects of oral contraceptive pill, allopurinol risk of rash. w w ww$ Triazole antifungal. Dose ww50–400mg/24h PO/IV ww Fluconazole ® ® Dependent on indication Indication Fungal meningitis, candidiasis, fungal prophylaxis CI Pregnancy, acute porphyria Caution Breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment SE GI disturbance. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X Dose 50–300micrograms/ ok Fludrocortisone $ oMineralocorticoid. ok ok o disease, other adrenal insufficiency, posBo 24h PO IndicationwAddison’s B B . . cover Caution w tural hypotension CI Systemic infection without antibiotic Adrenal suppression ww SE Sodium and water retention, ww hypertension. ww Flumazenil $ Benzodiazepine antagonist. Dose 200micrograms/STAT t t t IV, followed 100micrograms/1min (max 1mg) Indication .ne by OD/ .ne if required .ne Benzodiazepine toxicity CI Conditions dependent on benzodiazepX X X k Benzodiazepine dependence, ok ines, eg status epilepticus oCaution ok mixed o o arrhythmias. Bo OD SE N+V, dizziness, B B . . w Fluoxetine w $w Selective serotonin re- uptake inhibitor. Dose 20mg/ w 24h PO (max w 60mg/24h) Indication Depression, w bulimia nervosa and ww OCD CI Active mania Caution Pregnancy, epilepsy, cardiac disease, DM, bleeding disorders, glaucoma SE GI disturbance, anorexia, weight loss, dNa+, agitation Interaction MAOI within 2wk. t et et n n . . X Dose 100–500micrograms/ X INH $ Corticosteroid. ok Fluticasone ok asthma ok 12hCaution o o o (consult BNF) Indication Chronic (step 2 BTS guidelines) B .B TB SE Oral candidiasis, bronchospasm (rare). w.Bhoarse voice, paradoxical w w w w 24h PO before con- ww Folic acidw $ Vitamin B9. Dose 400micrograms/ ception and until week 12 of pregnancy; 5mg/wk for preventing methotrexate effects Indication Pregnancy, folate deficient megaloblastic et sidelong- eCIt Malignancy egivet n n n anaemia, term methotrexate Caution Never . . . X for pernicious anaemia;kcan X degeneration of spinal X ok alone o SEcause ok cord, uno o diagnosed megaloblastico anaemia GI disturbance. B w.B w.B w w w w ww e X.n B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 203 t t t Fondaparinux $ Factor Xa inhibitor. .ne .neDose 2.5mg/24h SC (2.5mgXloading .ne X X op) Indication VTE prophylaxis and treatment, ACS Active ok dose 6h post- ok Caution ok CIbleeding bacterial endocarditis Pregnancy, breastfeeding, o o Bo bleeding, B B disorders, active PUD,. recent surgery, epidural/spinal .anaesthesia, hepatic w or renal impairment wwSE Bleeding, purpura, anaemia, wthrombocytopenia. w w ww Furosemide $ Loop diuretic. Dose Typically 20–80mg/24h PO/ IV Indication (LVF, pulmonary resistant hypertenetSevereOedema et oedema), et sion CI dK and dNa , hypovolaemia, renal impairment Caution n n n . . . XHypotension SE GI disturbance, Xhypotension, electrolyte disturbances X ok (dK , dNa , dMg ) Interaction ok Increases toxicity of gentamicin, ok digoxin, o o o B NSAIDs Info IV doses B min (risk of at .<4mg/ w.B>80mg should be infused w deafness). w w w w$ Antibiotic. Dose 2% topical w Fusidic acid cream 3–4 applications/24h; w oral and IV preparations available (see BNF) Indication Staphylococcal t t penicillin-resistant staphyloskin infections; IV treatment Osteomyelitis, einfections ebreastfeeding, et n n coccal Caution Pregnancy, monitor LFTs.n SE GI . . X X X reversible jaundice. ok disturbance, ok ok o o o Fybogel See laxatives. B w.B w.2B4h PO; Continued w Gabapentin w $ Antiepileptic. Dose day 1 300mg/ w w w w + + + + 2+ ® Increase by 300mg/24h PO up to max 3.6g/24h in 3 divided doses Indication Epilepsy, neuropathic pain Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment, DM, avoid abrupt withdrawal SE GI disturbance, headache, sleep disturbance Interaction Effects decreased by antidepressants. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok Gentamicin $ Aminoglycoside. ok Dose Once daily 5–7omg/ okkg/24h IV o Bo adjust to serum concentration; B B dosing regimens may be used w. Indicationother w. meningitis, (consult local guidelines) Infection; w sepsis, endow carditis CI Myasthenia gravis Caution Pregnancy, w w breastfeeding, renal im- ww pairment SE Ototoxic, nephrotoxic Interaction Effects increased by loop diuretics, t et increases effects of warfarin. et n . .nenext dose is due (but check .nlocal X X X Levels are typically taken 1 hr before ok ok ok first) o o Bo guidelines B B . IV dose 9–18micromol/L (5–10mg/ Monitoring Peak 1hw post w.L) gentamicin Trough <4.2micromol/L (<2mg/L) w w w ww 2 Toxic >12mg/L (22micromol/L) w t .ne 2 Signs of toxicity tinnitus, deafness, nystagmus, vertigo, renal failure (OHCM10 E p. 756). Will vary with once-daily regimen, check locally. .ne X X Glibenclamide See sulfonylureas. k ok oo Bo Gliclazide See sulfonylureas. B . w Glipizide Seew sulfonylureas. w t et n . X ok ww o w.B Glucagon $ Peptide hormone. Dose 1mg/PRN IM/SC/slow IV Indication Hypoglycaemia, in treatment of β-blocker overdose CI Phaeo­ chromocytoma Caution Insulinoma, glucagonoma, chronic hypoglycaemia SE GI disturbance, dK+, hypotension. et n . kX o Bo ww et n . kX t o o B . w ww Glycerin suppositories See laxatives. w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 204 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t et Glyceryl See.n GTN. .ne $ Trinitrate nitrate. X .ne X X k $ Nitrate. Dose 1–2osprays/ k PRN ok GTN sublingual/transdermal oo Prophylaxis o and treatment of angina, left Bo SL; 0.3–1mg/PRNwSL.BIndication B w. ventricular failure CI Hypotensive conditions, hypovolaemia, aortic stenw w osis Cautionw Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hypothyroidism, recent MI, head ww w trauma SE Postural hypotension, tachycardia, headache Info Transdermal patchest are available, see BNF—patients tolerance (tachyt may develop e to nitrates and as such it.nis esuggested eta phylaxis) to ensure patients.have n n . prevent this; it is usual to have this Xnitrate-free period for 4–8h toX kX period ok overnight when the effectsooofknitrates oneeded. are least likely to be o o B .B min IVI GTN. GTN IV infusion Nitrate. Dose 10–200micrograms/ w.$Bsee wventricular w w w For typical prescription Fig. 5.2. Indication Left failure, onw chest pain refractory to SL w going ischaemic nitrates CI Hypotensive con- w ditions, hypovolaemia, aortic stenosis Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hypothyroidism, recent MI, head trauma et et SE Postural hypotension,.tachyet n n n . . cardia, headache Info Patients may develop tolerance (tachyphylaxis) X and as such it is suggested X freeto kX to ensure patients haveoaknitrate- ok nitrates o o o o period for 4–8h to prevent this; it is usual to have this B .B are .Bperiod overnight when the effects of nitrates least likely to be needed. w w ww ww ww B t .ne X k oo et .n kX oo B . Fig. 5.2 Example ofw a GTN infusion. ww oo B . ww t .ne X k w Haloperidol $ Antipsychotic (butyrophenone). Dose Antiemetic 0.5– o Bo t .ne X k t et 3mg/8h PO/IV; Other 0.5–10mg/8h PO/IM/IV Indication Schizophrenia, agitation, N+V, motor tics, intractable hiccups CI Comatose/CNS depression Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment, cardiovascular disease, Parkinson’s, epilepsy SE Extra­pyramidal symptoms, cardiac arrhythmias (QTc prolongation). o ww o w.B .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww Heparin $ Glycosaminoglycan (potentiates antithrombin III). Dose Loading dose 5000units or 75units/kg IV; Maintenance 18units/kg/ h IVI (titrate dose to keep APTT within therapeutic range); Prophylactic dose 5000units/12h SC (seldom used as LMWH have similar benefits and fewer side effects) Indication Rapid anticoagulation, treatment and prophylaxis of DVT/ PE, ACS CI Bleeding disorders, thrombocytopenia, severe hypertension, recent trauma, history of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT, E p. 421) Caution iK+, hepatic or renal impairment SE Haemorrhage, thrombocytopenia, iK+ Interaction NSAIDs increase bleeding risk, effects increased by GTN. t e X.n ok Bo .ne X k ww et n . kX o o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok ww Humalog® See insulin. Bo t o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 205 t t t Humalin .ne See insulin. .ne .ne X X X ok Hydralazine $ Vasodilator ok (arterial >> venous). oDose ok hyperteno 5– 1 0mg slow IV titrated to effect (can repeat Bo sion 25–50mg/12hwPO; B B . w. Hypertension, w after 30min); Heart failure 25–75mg/6h PO Indication w w heart failure w CI SLE, severe tachycardia, w myocardial insuffi- w ciency Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment, ischaemic cerebrovascular disease SE Tachycardia, palpit heart disease, ehypotension, etafter et tation, SLE-like syndrome long-term, rebound .hypern n n . . Xtension on stopping therapy, kfluidXretention. ok Hydrocortisone cream o See topical corticosteroids. ookX o o B B w.B w.Dose Hydrocortisone IV/PO $ Corticosteroid. Acute 100– w w 250mg/6h IV; w Chronic 20–30mg/24h PO win divided doses Indication ww Adrenocortical insufficiency, acute allergic/ inflammatory reactions CI Systemic infection Caution Adrenal suppression SE Cushing’s syndrome, t t e e et DM, osteoporosis, dyspepsia. n n n . . . X X kX B . Dose Macrocytic anaemia $oVitamin ok Hydroxocobalamin okafterwithout o o o neurological involvement Initially 1mg three times a week IM, 2wk B 1mg/3mth IM; Macrocytic B .B anaemia with neurological .involvement Initially w w w 1mg on alternate then 1mg/ ww ww days IM until no furtherwimprovement, ® 12 2mth IM Indication Pernicious anaemia, other macrocytic anaemias with neurological involvement Caution Do not give before diagnosis fully established SE N+V, headache, dizziness. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X butylbromidek$ Anticholinergic. Dose 20mg/6kh PO (max ok Hyoscine 24h in divided doses); oo 20mg/STAT IV/IM repeated ooafter 30min Bo 80mg/ B . (max 100mg/24hw in.B divided doses) Indication GI/ G U w smooth muscle w spasm CI Myasthenia gravis Caution Pregnancy, glaucoma, GI obstrucw w whyperplasia, urinary retentionwSE Antimuscarinic effects, w tion, prostatic drowsiness. t t t Hyoscine Dose Antiemetic .ne hydrobromide900micrograms/ .$neAnticholinergic. .ne 300micrograms/6h PO (max X 24h in dividedXdoses); X ok Excessive respiratory secretions ok200–600micrograms/4–8oh oSCk Indication o Bo Motion sickness, excessive B secretions CI.B Caution w. respiratory w Glaucoma Pregnancy, GI w obstruction, prostatic hyperplasia, urinary retention w SE Antimuscarinic w effects, sedative Interaction w Decreases effects of ww sublingual GTN. t 6h PO (max 2.4g/2n4hetin Ibuprofen 4e00mg/ et $ NSAID. Dose 200– n n . . divided doses) Indication Pain, inflammation CI Pregnancy, peptic X X. ulcer kXdisease Caution Breastfeeding, k k hepatic or renal impairment, asthma, GI o o o SE GI disturbance/ bleeding, headache Interaction Bo disease .Boincreases .BoDecreases effects of antihypertensives, toxicity of methotrexate. w w w ww ww InsulatardwSee insulin. ® Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 206 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w ww w t t t Insulin .ne Dose When starting orXchanging .ne SC doses, liaise withXdiabetes .ne X diabetes nurse specialist); see Table 5.15 Indications ok team (eg ketoacidosis, ok infusion ok DM,in hyperkalaemia, maintenance of oeuglycaemia o Bo diabetic B B critical care and post. MI CI Hypoglycaemia Caution .May need dose adw w impairment, see w justments in pregnancy, renal and whepatic ww breastfeeding, BNF SE Hypoglycaemia, local reactions andw fat hypertrophy at injection w site, rarely allergic reactions Info Table 5.16 is not an exhaustive list of t insulins. In addition to these single preparations so-calledebietmixtures et are also ofusedinsulin, n n n . . phasic of two different insulins and often .consist X a rapid-or short-acting insulin X X ok ofproportions). ok and a longer-acting insulin ok(in different o o o B w.B w.B w w Table 5.15 IV infusions of insulins w w ww Indication t with 10units soluble insulinnet Hyperkalaemia 50mL of 50% glucose et eover n n (E pp. 399–403) (eg Actrapid ) .IVI . . 10min XSliding scale X X k k k 50mL of 0.9% saline with 50units soluble insulin (eg o o), often infused at 0–7mL/h depending oo upon the Bo (E p. 333) wActrapid B .Bo blood . patient’s sugar w ww ww ww ® ® Table 5.16 Properties of common subcutaneous insulins t t t Type .neof insulin Example XOnset .ne Peak Max duration .ne X X ok Rapid acting ok 15–30min 0.5–1.25h o4–o6hk o Novorapid Bo Aspart B . .B Lispro Humalog 15–30min 0.5–1w .25h 4–6h w w Apidra w Glulisine w 15–30min w 0.5–1.25h 4–6h ww Short acting t t 2–3h t Soluble Actrapid 30–60min 6–8h .ne and long acting X.ne .ne Intermediate X X Insulatard 6–10h 14– ok Isophane ok 2–4h o1k8h o o Bo Glargine B B 3–4h 8–16h . 20–24h . wLantus w 720h Detemir Levemir 3–4h 8h w w w6–w ww Ipratropium $ Anticholinergic. Dose Chronic 20–40micrograms/6h t e et250–500micrograms/4–6.hnNEB et INH (max 80micrograms/6h); Acute n n . . Caution Glaucoma,X prostatic XIndication Bronchospasm; chronic X and acute effects. ok hyperplasia SE Minimal antimuscarinic ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww ® ® ® ® ® ® ® Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w w 207 Pharmacopoeia t t t Iron .neSee ferrous preparations. X.ne .ne X X k ok ISMN $ Nitrate. See isosorbide oo mononitrate. .Book Bo ISMO $ Nitrate.wSee.Bisosorbide mononitrate. w w w Isoket $ Nitrate. See isosorbide dinitrate.w w ww Isosorbide dinitrate IV infusion $ Nitrate. Dose 2–10mg/h IVI Indication Left ventricular failure, ischaemic chest pain CI Hypotensive et hypovolaemia, et Caution et n n n . . . conditions, aortic stenosis Pregnancy, breastX hypothyroidism, recent X MI, head trauma SE Postural X hypook feeding, ok Info ok tolerance o o o tension, tachycardia, headache Patients may develop B (tachyphylaxis) to w .B if infused for prolongedwperiods, .B though there nitrates w w are obvious risks about stopping a nitrate infusion; consult senior. w w ww Isosorbide mononitrate $ Nitrate. Dose initially 20mg breakfast and lunchtime then 40mg breakfast andt lunchtime PO (max 120mg/24h et PO e of angina, adjunct in congestive et n n n in .divided doses) Indication Prophylaxis . . X failure Caution As GTNkSEXPostural hypotension, tachycardia, X headok heart o tolerance (tachyphylaxis) toonitrates ok and ache Info Patients may develop as o o B such it is suggestedwto.B B ensure patients have a nitrate-f.ree period for 4–8h w the effects of w to prevent this; w is usual to have this period overnight w itlikely ww when nitrates are least to be needed, hence prescribing them to be given at w ® breakfast and lunchtime rather than 8am and 8pm. t t t Istin .neSee calcium-channel blockers. .ne .ne X X X ok Lactulose See laxative.ook ok o Dose Initially 25mg/ 2 4h Bo Lamotrigine $wAntiepileptic. B B . . PO for 14d; w Then 50mg/24h PO for 14d, increase by max 50– 100mg/24h every 7– w 14d until seizures Indication Epilepsy Caution w wwcontrolled (max 500mg/24h) ww Requires close monitoring of serum levels, pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatictor renal impairment, avoid rapid e et withdrawal SE Rash/.snevere et skin reactions, cerebellar symptoms, cytopenias. n n . . X X X k inhibitor. Dose 30mg/24hokPO for 4– $ Protonopump ok Lansoprazole o 15mg/24h PO maintenance Prophylaxis Bo 8wk, B . H. pyloriIndication .Boand treatment of peptic ulcers, w GORD, eradication, Zollinger–Ellison syndr w w Caution Breastfeeding, w w impairment, gastric ome CI Pregnancy hepatic w ww cancer SE GI disturbance, headache Interaction Proton pump inhibitors may reduce effectiveness of clopidogrel Info Also available as a FasTab t which in the mouth and isn useful edissolves et in patients who are NBM..net n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww ® ® Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 208 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t Laxative .ne Dose See Table 5.17XIndications .ne Treatment and prophylaxis .neof X X (E pp. 316–17)kCaution Confirm the patient is k constipated ok constipation o oChronic consider causes of constipation SE See Table 5.17 Info use o o Bo and B B . electrolyte imbalances andwgut. dysmotility. Ensure of laxatives can lead to w adequate water intake and increase fibre intake wwhere possible. Always w wwimpaction consider faecal and other causesw of obstruction before com- w mencing oral laxatives. Combinations of laxatives from different groups can be etused in severe constipation.n(egetlactulose and senna). .net n . X X ok Table 5.17 Laxatives ookX ok o o B Classification w.B w.B Bulk-forming w Eg Fybogel , Normacol w w CI Difficulty in swallowing, w ww laxatives intestinal obstruction, colonic atony, faecal impaction SE Diarrhoea, flatulence, t e et abdominal distension, .net gastrointestinal obstruction n n . . X X 5mL spoons in water/12h POkX 1 sachet or ok Fybogel ok twodocusate, o o o Stimulant laxatives Eg bisacodyl, glycerol, senna o B B B . . CI Intestinal obstruction, acute surgical abdomens, active winflammatory bowel disease, dehydration ww pain, N+V ww SE Diarrhoea, hypokalaemia, wabdominal ww ® ® ® Info Co-danthramer should only be used in the terminally ill as potentially carcinogenic t et Bisacodyl 5–10mg/nocte.PO n neort 10mg/mane PR . .ne X X X 1–2 capsules/ PO ok Co-danthramer o1k2h POnocte ok o sodium 200mg/ (max 500mg/24h PO ino divided doses) Bo Docusate B B Glycerin supps w1. suppository/PRN PR, max 4winw24h. w Senna w 2 tablets/nocte PO or 10mL/ w nocte PO ww Faecal softeners Eg arachis oil, liquid paraffin Info Infrequently usedt et CI Peanut allergy n ne net . . . X X X Movicol , magnesium salts, rectal k phosphates ok Osmotic laxatives Eg(eglactulose, okenema), oMicrolette Fleet rectal sodium citrate (eg ) o o Bo B B CI Intestinal obstruction, colonic atony . . wSE Diarrhoea, flatulence, abdominal wdistension and ww discomfort, nausea; local irritation ww with rectal preparations ww ® ® Lactulose Movicol® Phosphate enemas Microlette® t .ne X ok Bo 10–15mL/12h PO 1–3 sachets/24h PO 1/PRN PR, max 2 in 24h 1/PRN PR, max 2 in 24h .ne X k t ok o o w.B et n . X o w.B Levothyroxine $ Thyroid hormone (T4). Dose Typically 50– ww ww 200micrograms/24h PO at breakfast Indication Hypothyroidism CI Thyrotoxicosis Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, panhypopituitarism, adrenal insufficiency, cardiovascular disorders, DM SE Hyperthyroid-like symptoms; GI disturbance, tremors, restlessness, flushing Interaction Increases effects of TCAs and warfarin, decreases effects of propranolol. et n . kX o Bo ® et n . kX t o o B . w ww ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 209 t t t Lidocaine .ne $ Local anaestheticX(amide). .ne Dose Local anaesthesiaX1/.n2/e4% X SC (max 3mg/kg (max dose 200mg)); Antiarrhythmic ok solution ok total ok Seeto Indication Local anaesthesia, ventricular arrhythmiaso(alternative o Bo BNF B B . block, sinoatrial amiodarone) CI Myocardial w. depression, atrioventricular wimpairment, node disordersw Caution Pregnancy, hepatic or renal epilepsy, w w w hypovolaemia SE Dizziness,wdrowsiness, confusion, severe hypoxia/ tin- w nitus Interaction Increased myocardial depression with β-blockers and other antiarrhythmics, increased risk of arrhythmias et et with antipsychotics. .net n n . . XLignocaine $ Local anaesthetic (amide). See lidocaine. kX ok Lisinopril See ACEi. ookX o oo B B B . . wsalt (mood stabilizer). DosewSeewBNF Indication Mania, w Lithium $ Lithium bipolar disorder hypothyroidism, w wwCI Pregnancy, breastfeeding,wuntreated Addison’s disease Caution Thyroid disease, myasthenia gravis SE GI upset, thirst, polyuria Interaction Diuretics, NSAIDs Info Lithium citrate et carbonate et interchangeable et and lithium doses are not simply d/w senior/ n n n . . . X X NPSA on stable regimens kXmonitor level every 3mth.okThe ok pharmacist; have published guidance o onothe ‘safer use of lithium’ andothis should be o B consulted before commencing w.B lithium therapy. ww.B w Monitoring w Optimum sampling time 4–7d after w commencing treatment 12h ww 1 lithium . kX o o net post dose 0.4–1mmol/L 2 Early signs of toxicity (Li+ >1.5mmol/L) tremor, agitation, twitching, thirst, polyuria, N+V 2 Late signs of toxicity (Li+ >2mmol/L) spasms, coma, fits, arrhythmias, renal failure (E OHAM4 p. 716) et t .ne X k .n kX oo oo B B . . w (antimotility). Dose 4mg Loperamide $Opioid PO initially then 2mg w w2w PO following every loose stool (max 16mg/ 4h in divided doses) ww w w Indication Diarrhoea, control of high output stoma CI Pregnancy, IBD, any condition peristalsis should nott be stopped; constipation, ileus, t et where megacolon Caution Hepatic impairment, promote fluid and electron . .ne can .ne lyte depletion in the young SE Abdominal cramps, constipation,X dizziness X X ok Info Loperamide should notobek used in infective diarrhoeas oorkdiarrhoea o Bo associated with IBD.w.Bo B w. w w Loratadine $ H antagonist. See antihistamine. w w ww Lorazepam $ Benzodiazepine. Dose Sedation/anxiety 1–4mg/ 24h PO/ IM/IV; Seizures 4mg slow IVt (repeated once after 10min tif et Indication needed) Sedation, seizures, status epilepticus CI Respiratory n . .nemyasthenia .ne X X X depression, sleep apnoea, unstable gravis, severe hepatic k breastfeeding, history of drug kabuse, reok Caution Pregnancy, ooweakness, oSEoDrowsiness, Bo impairment B B spiratory disease, muscle renal impairment . . w w confusion, muscle weakness. ww ww ww B 1 Losartan See AT II antagonists. Bo o et n . kX 1 et n . kX t o o B . w ww Mwww.nrls.npsa.nhs.uk/resources/type/alerts/?entryid45=65426 w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 210 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w w ww t t et Magnesium sulfate $ Magnesium .ne .ne salt. Dose 2–4g IV overX5–.n15min X X followed by an infusion (see BNF) Indication Arrhythmias, MI, seok oftenasthma, oekclampsia, ok acute pre-eclampsia/ dMg Caution Pregnancy, monitor o o Bo vere B B . N+V, hypotension, BP, RR, urinary output, w. hepatic or renal impairment wSEwith thirst, flushed w skin Interaction Risk of hypotension calcium-channel w ww blockers Infow Magnesium sulfate 1g equivalentw to 74mmol. Monitoring Levels should be checked et et every 6h while on IV therapy or moreet n n magnesium urgently if indicated; Therapeutic range 1.7–3.5mmol/L .n . . X 1.0mmol/L Normal plasma X X ok 0.7– okrangerange ok o o o 1.7– 3 .5mmol/ L Therapeutic B .B w.B 2.5–5.0mmol/L w ECG changes (QRS widens) w w wL Reduction in tendon reflexesw ww 4.0–5.0mmol/ >5.0mmol/L Loss of deep tendon reflexes t >7.5mmol/ L Heart block, respiratory e et paralysis, CNS depression .net n n . . >12mmol/ L Cardiac arrest X X X ok ok ok o o o B Maxolon $ Antiemetic See.B metoclopramide. w.B (dopamine antagonist). w w w Mannitol w $ Polyol (osmotic diuretic). Dose w 0.25–2g/kg/4–8h over ww 2+ ® 30– 60min IVI (max 3 doses) Indication Cerebral oedema, glaucoma CI Pulmonary oedema, cardiac failure Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment SE hypotension, fluid and electrolyte imbalance. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k (antimuscarinic). Dose 135– $ Antispasmodic ok Mebeverine oIndication ok150mg/8h o o (20min before food) GI smooth muscle cramps; IBS/diBo PO B B verticulitis CI Paralytic w. ileus Caution Pregnancy,wacute w. porphyria SE Very w w rarely rash, urticaria. w w w Meropenem $ Carbapenem antibiotic. Dose 500–1000mg/8h IV (dose doubled in severe infections) Indication Aerobic and anaerobic Gram- t et and etCaution n n positive Gram-negative infections Pregnancy, breastfeeding, . . .ne X X X hepatic or renal impairment, sensitivity to beta- l actams SE GI disturbance ok okcolitis, headache, deranged LFTs. ok antibiotic associated o o Bo including B B . . formulation, conMesalazine $ Aminosalicylate. Dose Depends upon ww ww Mild/ sult BNF; POwand PR preparations available w Indication moderate ac- ww tive ulcerative colitis and maintenance of remission CI Salicylate allergy, coagulopathies Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment SE GI upset, bleeding disorders. t et et n n . . X $ Biguanide. Dose kXInitially 500mg/24h PO with ok Metformin oAfter ok breakfast; o o After 1wk 500mg/12h PO; further 1wk 500mg/8hoPO if required B .Bpolycystic ovarian (max 2g/24 in divided Indication Type 2 DM, w.orBdoses) w syndrome CI Hepatic renal impairment Caution Ketoacidosis, potential w w w of lactic acidosis, iodine-containing w contrast, general an- ww increased risk aesthesia SE GI disturbance, metallic taste. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww e X.n B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 211 t t net Methadone $ Opioid. Dose Usual .ne .nerange 60–120mg/24h PO;X.should X X given more frequently than 12h if on prolonged use; ok not bepatient’s ok usual oktheestablish dose fromothe dispensing pharmacy, o Bo the B B . information Indication Aid .in withdrawalpatient may not tell you accurate from w w opioid dependence, chronic pain CI Acute respiratory depression, paraw w w ICP/head trauma, comatose w patients, phaeochromo- ww lytic ileus, raised cytoma Caution Pregnancy (especially delivery), arrhythmias, hepatic or renal impairment SE N+V, constipation, etInteraction et respiratory depression, edryt n n n . . . mouth MAOI within 2wk. X X X ok Methotrexate $ Dihydrofolate ok reductase inhibitor. Dose ok2.5–10mg/ o o o B wk PO (max 25mg/ Rheumatoid arthritis, disease, ww.k)BIndicationlymphoma w.BCrohn’s psoriasis, ALL, w non-Hodgkin’s CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding, w hepatic or w renal impairment, active infection, w immunodeficient syn- ww dromes Caution Blood disorders, effusions (especially ascites), peptic ulcer, ulcerative colitis SE GI disturbance/ ucositis, pulmonary fibrosis, et myelosuppression et mNSAIDs, etri-t pneumonitis, Interaction co-trimoxazole, n n n . . . X Info Patients usually kXalso prescribed folic acidoduring kX treatok methoprim ment with methotrexate.oo o o B Methylprednisolone $ Corticosteroid. Dose 0mg/24h PO; wI.MB(exceptionally, w2.4h2–B4for 10– 500mg/ 2w 4hwIV/ up w tow 1g/ up to 3d) ww B Indication Acute inflammatory disease, cerebral oedema (associated with malignancy), graft rejection CI Systemic infection Caution Adrenal suppression SE Cushing’s syndrome, DM, osteoporosis Interaction Duration decreased by rifampicin, car­bamazepine, phenytoin; duration of action increased by erythromycin, ketoconazole, ciclosporin. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k Metoclopramide $ Dopamine antagonist. See antiemetic. ww Metoprolol See beta-blockers. w Metronidazole $ Antibiotic. Dose 400mg/8h PO; 500mg/8h IV ww t Anaerobic and protozoal infections, t Indication sepsis, Clostridium et abdominal .nediarrhoea Caution Pregnancy, .nbreastfeeding, .nealdifficile hepatic impairment, X X X taste, oral mucositis Interaction ok cohol use SE GI disturbance, okmetallic ok Can o o levels, increases effects of warfarin. Bo increase lithium andwphenytoin B B . wIV. titrated to effect w Midazolam w $ Benzodiazepine. Dose 1–10mg w Indication Conscious CI Breastfeeding, w w sedation, sedation in anaesthesia w respiratory depression, sleep apnoea, unstable myasthenia gravis Caution Pregnancy, hepatic or renal impairment,thistory of drug abuse, respiratory etmuscle e confusion, muscle weakness. et disease, weakness SE Drowsiness, n n n . . . X X kXE analogue. Dose treatmentok800micro$ Prostaglandin ok Misoprostol odose; o o o grams/ 2 4h PO in divided prophylaxis 200micrograms/ 6 2h PO B Indication Prophylaxis B treatment of peptic ulcerswCI.BPregnancy,–1breast.and w feeding Caution Cardiovascular/cerebrovascular ww wwdisease SE Diarrhoea. ww Mixtard See insulin. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 1 ® B 212 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w ww w t t net antagonist. Dose 10mg/ Montelukast $ Leukotriene .receptor .ne .ne24h X X X in evening Indication Chronic guidelines), allergic rhinok PO Caution ok asthmaSE(BTS okheadache, Pregnancy, o breastfeeding Abdominal pain, o Bo itis B B rarely Churg–Strauss. syndrome. w w. Morphinew$wOpioid. Dose 2.5–10mg/4w hw IV titrated to effect; 5– ww 10mg/4h IM/SC Indication Acute severe pain, chronic pain, acute MI, acute depression, ileus, raised t LVF CI Acute respiratory t Cautionparalytic e e et ICP/ head trauma, comatose patients Pregnancy (espen n n . . . Xcially delivery), COPD, asthma, X arrhythmias, renal impairment, X hepok atic impairment SE N+V, okconstipation, respiratory depression, ok dry o o o mouth Info Co-prescribe laxatives if using opioids for.B >24h. B w$.BOpioid. See oral morphine. w MST Continus w w w w ww ® Mupirocin $ Antibacterial. Dose Apply to skin up to 3 times/24h Indication Bacterial skin infections Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment SE Local reactions; urticarial, pruritus, burning sensation, rash. et n . X et n . X et n . X ok N-acetylcysteine $ Amino ok acid derivative. See acetylcysteine. ok o o o Naloxone $ Opioid receptor antagonist. Dose 0.4– 2 .0mg IV/ IM/SC, B .B .B repeat after 2min w if needed (max 10mg) Indicationw Opioid reversal during OD/overtreatment ww Caution Pregnancy, physical wwdependence on opioids, ww cardiovascular disease SE N+V, hypotension BNF Emergency treatment of poisoning. t t t Narcan .ne $ Opioid receptorXantagonist. .ne Narcan is a brandXname .nefor X k See naloxone for opioid overdose ok naloxone that is no longer oused. ok or reo Bo versal of narcosis.w.Bo B w. Dose 30–60mg/ w Nefopam $ Centrally acting non-opioid analgesic. w w 8h PO (maxw90mg/8h PO) Indication Moderate w pain CI Convulsive dis- w orders Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment, elderly,t urinary retention SE N+V, nervousness, t pink. urinary retention,nedryt e lightheadedness, may colour eurine mouth, n n . . X activator. Dose 5–10mg/1k2hXPO. (max kXNicorandil $ Potassiumochannel k o o Indication Angina prophylaxis oo and treat12h in divided doses) Bo 30mg/ B B . . ment (not 1st line) CI Breastfeeding, hypotension, LVF with low filling wPregnancy, hypovolaemia, acute wpulmonary pressures Caution oedema, w w w w ww ® ® MI SE Headache, flushing, GI disturbance. Nifedipine See calcium-channel blockers. Nitrofurantoin $ Antibiotic. Dose 50–100mg/6h PO; take with food t et et n n . . X CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding,kXrenal imUrinary tract infections ok Indication okinfants o o oo Caution pairment, G6PD deficiency, <3mth, acute porphyria B B B . . Hepatic impairment, anaemia, DM, electrolyte imbalance, vitamin B / w folate deficiency, lung disease SE Anorexia, GI acute and ww wdisturbance, w w ww chronic pulmonary reactions. NOAC acronym NOAC originally ‘Novel Oral Anti­ et Thehowever ethaverepresented e6yrt coagulants’, since these drugs now been in practice .for n n n . . Xthe term ‘non-vitamin K antagonist X oral anticoagulant’ to represent XNOAC ok is preferred. This distinguishes okthem from warfarin. The ocurrent ok NOACs o o B used in the UK include apixaban, dabigatran, edoxaban, .Band rivaroxaban. w.Bindividually winformation. See each of these drugs for more detailed w w w w ww e X.n 12 B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 213 t t t Nurofen .ne $ NSAID. See ibuprofen. .ne .ne X X X ok Nystatin $ Polyene antifungal. ok Dose 100 000 units (1mL)/ o6kh PO; topo o Candidiasis; oral, skin Caution GI absorbance minBo ical gel PRN Indication B B w. (at high doses), oral irritation, w.rash. imal SE GI disturbance w w w w $ Proton pump inhibitor. w Omeprazole Dose 10–40mg/24h PO; IV w preparation available for endoscopically proven bleeding ulcers (consult t guidelines) Indication Prophylaxis t BNF/e local and treatment of pepticeulet Hepatic n n . cers, GORD, H. pylori eradication .Caution impairment (no.n more X 20mg/24h), can mask gastric X kX cancer SE GI disturbance, ok than opump okheadache,of o o o dizziness Interaction Proton inhibitors may reduce effectiveness B clopidogrel. w.B w.B w w Ondansetron w See antiemetics (5HT receptor w antagonist). ww Oral morphine $ Opioid. Dose oral solution 5–20mg/4h PO; tablets 5–20mg/ et 4h PO; 12h slow release .preparations et 10–30mg/12h PO,.adjust et n n n . to response (larger dose tablets available; seek senior/ s pecialist advice) X X CI Acute respiratory kdepression, X Severe pain, chronic ok Indication ohkeadpaintrauma, o phaeoo o o paralytic ileus, raised ICP/ comatose patients, B chromocytoma Caution .BPregnancy (especially delivery), w.BCOPD, asthma, w wwimpairment, w arrhythmias,w renal hepatic impairment w SE N+V, constipa- w ® 3 tion, respiratory depression, dry mouth Info Co-prescribe laxatives if using opioids for >24h. t t net Oramorph $ Opioid. See oral.morphine. .ne .ne X X X ok Oseltamivir (Tamiflu o)k $ Antiviral. Dose Treatment ok of influo o 5d; Prevention of influenza 75mg/ 2 4h PO for 10d Bo enza 75mg/12h POwfor B B . . Indication Treatment of influenza if started withinw48h of the onset of wexposure prophylaxis of w w Caution Renal im- ww symptoms, w post- influenza pairment, pregnancy and breastfeeding (use only if potential benefit outweighs (eg during a pandemic)) et riskconvulsions, et SE GI disturbances, headache, arrhythmias, thrombocytopenia. n n net . . . X X X $ Antimuscarinic. Dose 5mg/8–12h PO, increase k if reok Oxybutynin ok doses); opreparations (max 20mg/24h inodivided modified-release o Bo quired B B also available Indication. Detrusor instability; urinary frequency, urgency and w breastfeeding, bladderwoutflow/ w. GI obstruction, incontinence CI w Pregnancy, w w Caution Hepatic or renal impairment, w myasthenia gravis prostatic hyper- w ® ® plasia, autonomic neuropathy SE Antimuscarinic effects, GI disturbance. t e X.n .ne X k t et n . X Oxycodone $ Opioid. Dose 5mg/4–6h PO (max 400mg/24h); 1–10mg/ ok Bo 4h IV/SC titrated to effect Indication Pain; moderate to severe CI Acute respiratory depression, paralytic ileus, chronic constipation, acute abdomen, raised ICP/ head trauma, hepatic or renal impairment if severe, acute porphyria, cor pulmonale, comatose patients Caution Pregnancy, COPD, asthma, arrhythmias, renal impairment, hepatic impairment SE N+V, constipation, respiratory depression, dry mouth Info 10mg PO oxycodone is equivalent to 20mg PO morphine. 1mg IV oxycodone is equivalent to 2mg PO oxycodone. Info Co-prescribe laxatives if using opioids for >24h. ok o o w.B ww et n . kXOxyContin ww o w.B ww et et n n . . X X $ Opioid. Modified o ok release form of oxycodone. ok o o o B OxyNorm $ Opioid. .B w.B Immediate-acting formwofwoxycodone. w w w ww ® ® B 214 .B w ww Chapter 5 Pharmacopoeia .B w w ww w t t t Oxytetracycline $ Tetracycline .ne .ne antibiotic. Dose 250–5X00mg/ .ne6h X X Acne vulgaris, k Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal ok PO Indicationage o rosacea CIstains okand bones) <12yr o(irreversibly growing teeth o Bo impairment, B B . SLE SE GI disturbCaution Myasthenia gravis w. may worsen, exacerbates wInteraction ance including,w dysphagia/oesophageal irritation Decreased w w absorption w with dairy products, decreases w effects of oral contraceptive w pill, mildly increases effects of warfarin. et See thiamine. et et Pabrinex n n n . . . X $ Proton pump kX inhibitor. Dose 20–80mg/ k24hXPO;(con-IV ok Pantoprazole oulcers preparation available foroo endoscopically proven bleeding o o B B sult BNF/local guidelines) of peptic w.B Indication Prophylaxiswand w.treatment ulcers, GORD,w H. pylori eradication Caution Hepatic impairment (max w w w 20mg/24h), renal impairment (max oral dose 40mg/24h), can mask w gastric cancer SE GI disturbance, headache, dizziness Interaction Proton t pumpeinhibitors may reduce effectiveness et of clopidogrel. et n n n . . . Paracetamol $ Simple analgesic. Dose 0.5– 1 g/ 4 – 6 h PO/ I V (max X X X ok 4g/24h in divided doses) okIndication Pain; mild to omoderate, ok pyro o exia Caution Alcohol dependence, hepatic impairment .SE Rare; rash, hypoB w.B hepatic impairmentwInteraction w B Prolonged use w glycaemia, blood disorders, w can potentiate wwarfarin. w w ® Paroxetine $ Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor. Dose 20–40mg/24h t 50–60/24h) Indication Major tdepression, obsessive-compulsive t PO (max .ne panic disorder, post-traumatic .ne stress disorder Caution Pregnancy, .ne disorder, X X X cardiac disease, DM ok epilepsy, ok SE GI disturbance, anorexia, okweight loss, o o , agitation; increased incidence of antimuscarinic, B extrapyramidal and Bo dNa B . with fluoxetine. w. withdrawal effectsw compared Penicillin w Gw $ Beta-lactam. See benzylpenicillin. ww ww Penicillin V $ Beta-lactam. See phenoxymethylpenicillin. t t et Pentasa See.n mesalazine. .ne $ Aminosalicylate. X .ne X X oil $ Antispasmodic. Dose 1–2 capsules/ ok Peppermint ok colic and ok8h POin beo o meals Indication Abdominal distension especially Bo fore B B .irritation. IBS Caution Sensitivityw to .menthol SE Heartburn, perianal w w ACEi. Perindopril wSee ww ww Pethidine $ Opioid. Dose 25–100mg/4h SC/IM; 25–50mg/4h slow t obstetric, post-op CI Acutenere-t IV Indication Pain; moderate to severe, et depression, eraised n n . . spiratory paralytic ileus, ICP/head trauma, comatose X X. ardelivery), COPD, k asthma, kXpatients Caution Pregnancyok(especially o o renal impairment, impairment SE N+V, Bo rhythmias, .Bo hepatic .Bo less constipation than morphine, respiratory depression, dry mouth. w w Phenobarbital ww $ Barbiturate. Dose Epilepsy ww(not 1st line) 60–180mg/ ww + ® 24h PO at night; Status epilepticus 10mg/kg at max 100mg/min (max 1g) IV (see BNF) Indication Epilepsy, status epilepticus CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic impairment Caution Renal impairment, acute porphyria SE Respiratory depression, hypotension, sedation. et n . kX et n . kX t .ne X k o oo oo Trough 60–180micromol/L (15–40mg/L) .B Bo Monitoring B . phenobarbital 2 wToxic >180micromol/L (>40mg/wL)w ww w ww B .B w ww .B w w w Pharmacopoeia t t et Phenoxymethylpenicillin (penicillin V) $ Beta-lactam..nDose .ne .ne X X X PO Indication Oral post- splenectomy k infections, k (prophyok 0.5–1g/CI6hPenicillin oCaution allergy History of allergyoo SE diarrhoea o Bo laxis) B B Interaction Decrease .effects of oral contraceptive .pill, allopurinol increases risk of rash. ww ww w w Phenytoin $ Antiepileptic. Dose Epilepsy 3–4mg/kg/24h PO increased gradually Status epilepticus tloading dose = 20mg/kg IV at no t as necessary; ethan e et more 50mg/ min with ECG.n monitoring, maintenance = 100mg/ n n . . X6–8h thereafter IV (see BNF);kmonitor X level (see ‘Monitoring kphenytoin’) X ok Indication Epilepsy, status epilepticus o CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding, o sinus hypoo o o B tension Caution Hepatic Bimpairment, avoid abrupt w withdrawal, .B acute porw.count phyria; monitor w blood SE Drowsiness, cerebellar effects, hypotension, w arrhythmias,w purple glove syndrome, blood w disorders; Chronic use coarse facies, hirsutism, gum hypertrophy Info As drug highly protein bound, may need to adjust monitored levels for low albumin (consult pharmacist). w w 215 ww ww et n . XMonitoring et et n n . . Trough 40–80micromol/ (10–20mg/L) X kXLL(>20mg/ >80micromol/ L) ok phenytoin 22 Toxic oAtaxia, ok o o o Signs of toxicity nystagmus, dysarthria, diplopia B w.B w.B w w Phosphatewenema See laxatives. w ww Phytomenadione $ Vitamin K . Dose 1–10mg/STAT PO/IV det upon indication—consultneBNF t and/or d/w haematologist t pending .ne Bleeding and/or over- .ne Indication a.nticoagulation with warfarin Caution X X X ok Pregnancy, give IV slowly.ook ok o Bo Picolax See laxatives. B B . wtazobactam wwith. tazobactam. Dose w Piperacillin with $ Beta-lactam w w w in neutropenic patients w 4.5g/6–8h IVwIndication Severe infection, infection (in combination with aminoglycoside) CI Penicillin allergy Caution Pregnancy, t renal impairment, history t breastfeeding, allergy SE Diarrhoea.et .ne $ Antihistamine .neof penicillin .n Piriton (H antagonist). See chlorphenamine.X X X k k k o ooclopidogrel. oo See Bo Plavix $ Antiplatelet. B B . . Potassium oralwsupplement $ Potassiumwsalt. Dose Potassium w Potassium loss CI ww chloride: 2–4w g/w 24h PO (two tablets/8–12h)wIndication 1 ® ® 1 ® Serum potassium >5mmol/L Caution Renal impairment, elderly, intestinal strictures, history of peptic ulcer SE GI disturbance, upper GI ulceration Info Check serum Mg2+ as this is also likely to be low in dK+. t et et n n . . kX inhibitor. See statin. okX ok Pravastatin $ HMG CoA oreductase o o o 24h mane Dose Initially 10– B Prednisolone $w.Corticosteroid. B .B20mg/ w PO though often 30–40mg/24 PO in severe disease (up to 60mg/ w 2.5–15mg/24h PO Indication wSuppression 24h); Maintenance of inflam- ww w w matory and allergic disorders (eg IBD, asthma, COPD), immunosuppression infection withouttantibiotic cover Caution Adrenal et CI Systemic e et suppression SE Peptic ulceration, Cushing’s syndrome, DM, .osteon n n . . Xporosis Interaction Duration kofXaction decreased by rifampicin, X carbaok mazepine, phenytoin; duration o of action increased byoerythromycin, ok o o B ketoconazole, ciclosporin Info Consider bone and GI .Bprotection stratw.B egies when using long- term corticosteroids; Ew p. w 179. w w w ww e X.n B 216 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t Pregabalin $ Antiepileptic. Dose .ne .neEpilepsy 25mg/12h PO Xincreased .ne X X to 100–1k50mg/8–12h (max 600mg/24h divided k in600mg/ ok every 7dPain/bya50mg o12h increased every 3–7d up otoomax nxiety 75mg/ o Bo doses); B B 24h in divided doses. Indication Epilepsy, neuropathic pain, generalized w w. Renal anxiety disorder CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding Caution w w w w heart failure, avoid abruptwwithdrawal SEimpairment, severe congestive GI disturb- w ance, dry mouth, dizziness, drowsiness. et et See antiemetics. et Prochlorperazine $ Phenothiazine. n n n . . . X X X $ Anticholinergic. 2.5mg/8h PO increased ok Procyclidine oinkdividedDosedoses; o5–k10mgevery 3d up to max 30mg/24h Acute dystonia IM/ o o o B .B drug-induced extrapyramidal .B symptoms IV Indication Parkinsonism; w w CI Urinary retention, glaucoma, myasthenia w gravis Caution Pregnancy, w ww breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment, w cardiovascular disease, pros- w tatic hyperplasia, tardive dyskinesia SE Antimuscarinic effects. t et et Propranolol See beta-blockers. ne n n . . . X X X100units $ Heparin antagonist. 1mg IV neutralizes k ok Protamine ok50mg Dose o 80– o heparin IV in last 15min o (max at rate <5mg/min);o1mg IV neutralB .BIndication Heparin izes 100units heparin w.SCB(max 50mg at rate <5mg/ wmin) OD, bleeding inw patient on heparin therapy Caution Risk of allergy increased w w w ww post-vasectomy, or in infertile men, fish allergy SE GI disturbance, flushing, hypotension, dyspnoea Info Protamine can also be used to help reverse the effects of LMWH but it is much less effective at this than for heparin. t t t .ne .ne .ne Prozac $ Selective serotoninX re-uptake inhibitor. See fluoxetine. X X ok ok See budesonide. ok o o Bo Pulmicort $ Corticosteroid. B B . 200–300mg/ w.alkaloid. Dose Nocturnal wlegwcramps Quinine $ Plant w 24h (nocte)w PO; Treatment of malaria See w BNF Indication Nocturnal leg ww cramps, treatment and prophylaxis of malaria CI Haemoglobinuria, myasthenia optic neuritis, tinnitus Caution Pregnancy (teratot eint 1stgravis, et hepatic genic trimester), breastfeeding, or renal impairment, n n . . .nedecardiac disease (AF, conductionXdefects, heart block), elderly, G6PD X X k nausea, ok ficiency SE Cinchonism (tinnitus, ok headache, hot and flushed oskin, o o Bo abdominal pain, rashes, B B visual disturbances (including temporary blind. w. ness), confusion),w acute kidney injury, photosensitivity. w w w w ww ® ® Ramipril See ACEi. Ranitidine $ Antihistamine (H2 antagonist). Dose 150mg/12h PO; IV t e X.n .ne X k t et n . X preparation available (see BNF) Indication Peptic ulcers, GORD Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment, acute porphyria, may mask symptoms of gastric cancer SE GI upset, confusion, fatigue. k ok oo oo Bo Reteplase $ Plasminogen B B . . activator. See fibrinolytic. w w w wconsult Rifampicin $ Antibiotic. Dose Tuberculosis BNF; Meningitis ww w w prophylaxis 600mg/ 12h PO for 2d; Other serious infections 600mg/ 12h IVt (usually after microbiology t advice) Indication Tuberculosis, e e prophylaxis, serious staphyloet N..nmeningitidis/ H. influenza meningitis n n . . Caution Pregnancy, hepatic or X Xcoccal infections CI JaundicekX k renal imok pairment, alcohol dependence, o acute porphyria SE oGIodisturbance, o o B headache, drowsiness, hepatotoxicity, turns body .B secretions orw.Bp450, ange Interactionw Induces decreases effectsw ofw warfarin. w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 217 t t et Rivaroxaban $ Direct inhibitor.n of factor Xa. Indication and dose .ne .neVTE X X X after hip/knee replacement 10mg/24h for 14d for knees, 5wk for ok prophylaxis ok Treatment ok15mg/ (start 6–10h after surgery); of DVT/PE Initially 12h o o Bo hips B B for 21d; For prophylaxis. of recurrent PE/DVT 20mg/24h;. Prophylaxis of stroke w w and systemic embolism valvular AF and 1 risk w in non-heart wfactor (Such as previous w wsymptomatic stroke or TIA, failure, DM,w HTN, or >75yr.) 20mg/24h; w Prophylaxis of atherothrombotic events following ACS with elevated cardiac biot or aspirin and clopidogrel.) markers with aspirinealone et1(In2h combination et n n n . . . 2.5mg/ for 12 months. Caution Avoid in patients with significant X risk. Wait 6h after last X before removing epidural kXcatheter ok bleeding okSEdose opain; o o o and wait 5h until next dose. Haemorrhage; abdominal constiB pation; diarrhoea;wdizziness; .B dyspepsia; headache;whypotension; .B nausea; pain in extremities; rash; renal impairment; w vomiting. Info No w ww pruritus; routine anticoagulant monitoring required w (INR tests are unreliable). w Take doses >10mg/24h with food. Reduce dose in renal impairment. et et inhibitor. See statin. .net Rosuvastatin $ HMG CoA reductase n n . . X X ok (r) tPA $ Plasminogen activator. ok See fibrinolytic. ookX o o B Salbutamol $wβ.Bagonist. Dose Chronic w airways .B disease 100– 200micro­gramsw aerosol/200–400micrograms w powder INH PRN (max wgrams/24h in divided doses);w2.5–5mg/4h NEB; Status ww 400–800micro­ B 2 asthmaticus 2.5– 5mg/ PRN NEB; 250micrograms/ STAT (diluted to 50micrograms/mL) slow IV, followed by maintenance infusion of 3– 20micrograms/ min (3– 24mL/ h of the 50micrograms/ mL solution), titrated to heart-rate Indication Asthma; chronic and acute, other revers+ ible airway obstruction, eg COPD, iK Caution Cardiovascular disease, DM, hyperthyroidism SE Fine tremor, nervous tension, headache, palpitation, muscle cramps. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X k w Salmeterol $ Long-acting β2 agonist. Dose 50–100micrograms/12h o ww INH Indication Chronic asthma, reversible airway obstruction Caution Cardiovascular disease, DM, hyperthyroidism SE Fine tremor, nervous tension, headache, palpitation, muscle cramps. t .ne X k t et .ne X k .n kX oo oo B B . . Senna See laxatives. ww ww w w w Seretide $ Long-acting β agonist with corticosteroid. Dose 25– w 50micrograms salmeterol with 50– fluticasone/ 12– t (depends upon inhaler ndevice, t500micrograms 24h INH see BNF) Indication Asthma e e et n n . . . (E p. 279) Caution Cardiovascular disease, DM, hyperthyroidism, X SE Fine tremor, nervouskXtension, headache, palpitation, X ok TB o voice, paradoxical bronchospasm ok muscle o o o cramps, oral candidiasis, hoarse (rare) B Interaction See salmeterol .B and fluticasone. .B w w w w Dose 50mg/24h ww winhibitors. Sertralinew $ Selective serotonin re-uptake Bo Sando-K® $ Potassium salt. See potassium oral supplement. ® 2 et n . kX o Bo PO increased by 50mg increments at intervals of at least 1wk until desired effect (max 200mg/24h) Indication Depression, OCD, panic disorder CI Hepatic or renal impairment, active mania Caution Pregnancy, epilepsy, cardiac disease, DM SE GI disturbance, anorexia, weight loss Interaction MAOI within 2wk, inhibits p. 450 enzymes. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 218 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t t Sevredol .ne $ Opioid. See oralXmorphine. .ne .ne X X ok Simvastatin $ HMG CoA okreductase inhibitor. See statin. ok o o Bo Slow-K $ Potassium B B w. salt. See potassium oralwsupplement. w. w Sodium valproate $ Antiepileptic. See valproate. w w ww Sotalol See beta-blockers. et et diuretic (aldosterone .nantaget Spironolactone $ Potassium- sparing n n . . X Dose 100–200mg/24hkPO X(max 400mg/24h) IndicationkOedema/ X ok onist). o nephritic o heart ascites in cirrhosis/malignancy, syndrome, congestive o o o B failure CI Pregnancy, .Bbreastfeeding, hyperkalaemia, wCaution w.B hyponatraemia, Addison’s disease Renal impairment, w porphyria SE GI disturbw w gynaecomastia, menstrual w irregularities Interaction ww ance, impotence, Increases digoxin and lithium levels; risk of iK when used with ACEi or AT II receptor et antagonists. .net et n n . . Statins $ HMG CoA reductase inhibitor. Dose See Table 5.18 Indications X X X ascular primary and prevention of cardio­ ok Dyslipidaemias, ok secondary ok vbreasto o o disease (irrespective of serum cholesterol) Caution Pregnancy, B feeding, hypothyroidism, w.B hepatic impairment,whigh w.Balcohol intake, SE w w Myalgia, myositis GI disturbance, w w (in severe cases rhabdomyolysis), w ® ® + pancreatitis, altered LFTs (rarely hepatitis/jaundice) Interaction Avoid concomitant use of macrolide antibiotics and amiodarone (possible increased risk of myopathy). t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok Table 5.18 Statins ook ok o Bo Atorvastatin Dose B B . 24h PO w. Initially 10mg/24h PO up to max w80mg/ w Fluvastatin Dose Initially 20mg/24h PO up tow max 80mg/24h PO w Dose Initially 10mg/24h PO upwto max 40mg/24h PO ww Pravastatin Rosuvastatin Dose Initially 5mg/24h PO et et up to max 40mg/24h PO et n n Simvastatin Dose Initially 10mg/ 24h PO up to max 80mg/24h PO .n . . X X X ok Stemetil $ Phenothiazine. okSee antiemetic. ok o o o B B w$ .Plasminogen w.B Streptokinase activator. Seew fibrinolytic. w w w ww ® Sulfasalazine $ Aminosalicylate. Dose Maintenance 500mg/ 6h PO; Acute 1– 2g/ 6h PO until remission; PR preparations also available Indication Rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease CI Sulfonamide sensitivity Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment, G6DP deficiency SE GI disturbance, blood disorders, hepatotoxicity, discoloured bodily fluids. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 219 t et netIndications Type 2 DMXCI.nKeto­ Sulfonylureas Dose See Table .5.19 .ne X X Pregnancy, breastfeeding, hepatic or renal impairment, k agents in obese ok acidosis Caution oline okencourage should not be 1st- patients as will o o Bo porphyria; B B further weight gain SE w. N+V, diarrhoea, constipation, w. hyponatraemia, w hypoglycaemia,w hepatic dysfunction, weight gain Info Hypoglycaemia rew w hours and must always w sulting fromw sulfonylureas can persist for many be treated in hospital; sulfonylureas should not be given on the day of surgery etdue to the risk of hypoglycaemia. et et n n n . . . X X X ok Table 5.19 Sulphonylureas ok ok o o o Glibenclamide Dose.B 5mg (2.5–15mg) 24h PO mane Info.Long acting; use B cautiously w in the elderly wB w w Gliclazide w Dose 40–80mg (40–160mg) usually w 24h PO mane (max ww 320mg) Info Medium acting Glipizide Dose 2.5–5mg (2.5–15mg) et et usually 24h PO mane (max .net 20mg) Info Short acting n n . . X X g) divided throughout the daykPO X 0.5–1.5gk ok Tolbutamide Dose o (0.5–2acting o with meals Info Medium o o o B w.B w.B Symbicort w $ Long-acting β agonist withw corticosteroid. Dose 6– w w ww ® 2 12micrograms formoterol with 100– 400micrograms budesonide/ 12–24h INH (depends upon inhaler device, see BNF) Indication Asthma (E p. 279), COPD Caution Cardiovascular disease, DM, hyperthyroidism, TB SE Fine tremor, nervous tension, headache, palpitation, muscle cramps, oral candidiasis, hoarse voice, paradoxical bronchospasm (rare) Interaction See salmeterol and fluticasone. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . Synacthen $ wSynthetic corticotrophin (ACTH). wwSee tetracosactide. ww w w Tamiflu $ Antiviral. See oseltamivir. t t Tamoxifen $ Oestrogen receptor antagonist. Dose Breast cancer 20mg/ et for other 24h indications consult receptor- .nPO; .neBNF Indication Oestrogen X .ne X X cancer, anovulatory k infertility CI Pregnancy oCaution k Breas ok positive breast othromboembolism, o o increased risk of occasional cystic ovarian Bo tfeeding, B B . swellings in pre-mw enopausal women SE Hot flushes, w. vaginal discharge/ w bleeding, menstrual suppression, GI disturbance Interaction Increases efw w w w w fects of warfarin. Tamsulosin antagonist. Dose 400micrograms/ 24h PO Indication etprostatic$ αhyperplasia et et Benign CI .Breastfeeding, hypotension, hepatic n n n . . Ximpairment Caution Renal impairment X SE Postural hypotension, X headok ache, dizziness, urinary oincontinence ok okeffects of Interaction Increases o o B antihypertensives.w.B w.B w Tazocin $ Beta- lactam with tazobactam. Seew piperacillin. w w ww B ® ® 1 ® Tegretol® $ Antiepileptic. See carbamazepine. et n . kX et n . kX o Bo o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo Teicoplanin $ Glycopeptide antibiotic. See vancomycin. ww B 220 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t t et 10–20mg/24h PO at bedtime Temazepam $ Benzodiazepine. .ne .nDose .ne X X X dependency (max 4wk course) Indication ok or preoperative; ok common ok sleep preoperative oanxiety CI Respiratory depression, apo Bo Insomnia, B B . gravis, hepatic impairment . Caution Pregnancy, noea, unstable myasthenia w w breastfeeding, w abuse, respiratory muscle weakw history ofSEdrug ww disease, ww ness, renal impairment Drowsiness, confusion, muscle weakness. Tenecteplase $ Plasminogen activator. t t See fibrinolytic. e e et n n Terbutaline $ β agonist. Dose 500micrograms/ 6h INH; 5–.1n 0mg/ . . X 12h NEB; oral preparationskXare also available, consult BNF XIndication ok 6– o airway obstruction, uterine ok relaxation Asthma and other reversible o o o B .B Cardiovascular disease,wDM, .Bhyperthyroidism during pregnancy w Caution SE Fine tremor,w nervous tension, headache, palpitation, muscle cramps. w w w ww Tetanus vaccine and immunoglobulin E p. 451. t Tetracosactide (Synacthen ) $ e250micrograms etSynthetic corticotrophin (ACTH). et n n n Dose IV/IM Indication Diagnosis of Addison’s disease .Caution . . X X breastfeeding, allergic SE Cushing’s syndrome, kX DM, ok Pregnancy, ok bedisorders o o o osteoporosis Info Blood should sampled for cortisol pre- doose and again B at 30min post Synacthen guidelines). w.B dose (consultant local w w.B w Tetracycline w $ Tetracycline antibiotic.wDose 250–500mg/6h PO ww 2 ® ® Indication Infection, acne vulgaris CI Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment, age <12yr (irreversibly stains growing teeth and bones) Caution Myasthenia gravis may worsen, exacerbates SLE SE GI disturbance including, dysphagia/oesophageal irritation Interaction Decreased absorption with milk, decreases effects of oral contraceptive pill, mildly increases effects of warfarin. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX t .ne X k oo B . Theophylline 500mg/12h PO (dew $ Methylxanthine. Dosew200– ww w w pending upon preparation, consult BNF) Indication Severe asthma/ w COPD (see BTS guidelines) CI acute porphyria Caution Cardiac disease, t hyperthyroidism, peptic ulcer t disease SE Tachycardia, palpitat epilepsy, .neGI disturbance Info Theophylline .neis only available as an oralXprepar.ne tion, X X kof theophylline and ethylenediamine consists ok ation; aminophylline drug’s osolubility ok which o o allowing IV administration. Bo simply improves the B B w. w. Monitoring 2 Toxic >20mg/L (>110micromol/w L) w w ww theophylline w B net 2 Signs of toxicity Arrhythmia, anxiety, tremor, convulsions (E OHAM4 p. 731) et et n n . . X PO depending on severity BNF); ParenteralkX 2– 3 pairs ok 24h ok ) (consult o o oo Indication of a­mpoules/ 8h IV (Pabrinex (consult local guidelines) B B B . . Nutritional deficiency, especially alcoholism Caution Reports of anaphylaxis with parenteral wwpreparations. ww w w ww Thyroxine $ Thyroid hormone (T ). See levothyroxine. t heparin. Dose Depends nupon Tinzaparin $ Low-molecular-weight et consult eDVT/ et n n . . indication, BNF Indication PE prophylaxis and . treatX CI Breastfeeding, bleeding X X severe thrombocytopenia, ok ment okCautiondisorders, okor renal o o o hypertension, recent trauma Hyperkalaemia, hepatic imB .B thrombocytopenia, hyperkalaemia .B Interaction pairment SE Haemorrhage, w w NSAIDs increase wwbleeding risk, effects increased wwby GTN. ww X. Thiamine $ Vitamin B1. Dose Oral 25–100mg/24h or 200–300mg/ ® 4 B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 221 t t et Tiotropium $ Antimuscarinic.n (anti-M3). Dose 18micrograms/ .ne .n2e4h X X X for inhalation also (see BNF) Indication Maintenance k available ok INH; solution oRenal ok hyperof COPD Caution impairment, glaucoma, o prostatic o Bo treatment B B trophy, cardiac rhythm w. disorders SE Minimal antimuscarinic w. effects. w Tirofiban w $w Glycoprotein IIb/ IIIa inhibitor. Dose Initially 400nano- ww w grams/kg/min for 30min IV; Then 100nanograms/kg/min IV for at least 48h (max 108h treatment) Indication Prevention in unstable anetSTEMI et abnormalof MIbleeding/ et gina/ N patients CI Breastfeeding, cerebron n n . . . history of haemorrhagic stroke, Xvascular accident within 30d,kX Xsevere ok hypertension, intracranialoodisease ok or renal Caution Pregnancy, hepatic o o B impairment, increased .Brisk of bleeding, surgery orwmajor .B trauma within w 3mth SE Bleeding, reversible thrombocytopenia. w w w w Topical corticosteroids Dose Consultw BNF; guidance on applying w topical steroids can be found on E p. 180 Indications Inflammatory conditions of the skin, eg eczema, dermatitis amongst etCI Untreated et orcontact et n n n others bacterial, fungal, viral skin lesions, rosacea, . . . X dermatitis, widespread X popsoriasis Caution Useklowest kXplaque ok perioral o5.20) tency agent possible (Table for shortest duration o ofotime to limit o o B side effects SE LocalwThinning .B of the skin, worseningwlocal .B infection, striae and telangiectasia, acne, depigmentation, hypertrichosis; Systemic Rarely w w w w ww B adrenal suppression, Cushing’s syndrome Info Topical steroids should only be commenced after seeking specialist advice (either following a dermatology review or after consideration by registrar). The decision to stop potent topical steroids should be taken as seriously—always be mindful of the potential for a patient to develop an Addison crisis after stopping long-term potent topical steroids. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX ww Table 5.20 Topical corticosteroid potencies Potency Mild o Bo t .ne X k Moderately potent Potent t e X.n w Examples Hydrocortisone 0.1–2.5%, Dioderm®, Mildison®, Synalar 1 in 10 dilution® Betnovate-RD®, Eumovate®, Haelan®, Modrasone®, Synalar 1 in 4 dilution®, Ultralanum Plain® Beclometasone dipropionate 0.025%, betamethasone valerate 0.1%, Betacap®, Betesil®, Bettamousse®, Betnovate®, Cutivate®, Diprosone®, Elocon®, hydrocortisone butyrate, Locoid®, Locoid Crelo®, Metosyn®, Nerisone®, Synalar® Clarelux®, Dermovate®, Etrivex®, Nerisone Forte® t o ww Very potent oo B . ww t .ne X k o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k t ww et n . X ww ok Tramadol $ Opioid. oDose o 50–100mg/4h PO/IM/IVo(max ok 600mg/ respiratory deBo 24h in divided wdoses) B Indication Pain CI Acute B . . pression, paralytic ileus, raised ICP/ head trauma, comatose paw ww Caution w tients, acute porphyria, uncon­ trolled epilepsy Pregnancy w w w (especially delivery), breastfeeding, COPD, asthma, arrhythmias, hepatic or renalt impairment SE N+V constipation, depression, dry e Interaction MAOI within 2wk eInfot Co-respiratory et mouth prescribe laxatives if.n using n n . . X X X ok opioids for >24h. ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 222 .B w ww Chapter 5 .B w w ww w Pharmacopoeia t net Acute infection 200mg/X12h.nePO;t Trimethoprim $ Antibiotic. .Dose .ne X X 100mg/ 24h POkat night Indication Urinary k ok Prophylaxis oCaution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, o tractrenalinfecCI Blood dyscrasias o o Bo tions B B . SE GI disturbance, rash, . hyperkalaemiaim-In pairment, folate deficiency w w teraction Increases w phenytoin levels, increases wwrisk of arrhythmias with ww amiodarone.w Valproate Antiepileptic. Dose 300mg/ 12h PO increasing by 200mg e3dt (max$2.5g/ et Indication etCI every 24h in divided.n doses) Epilepsy: all forms n n . . acute porphyria Caution Pregnancy, XFamily history of hepatic dysfunction, X kXimpairment, ok breastfeeding, hepatic oroorenal ok (bleeding blood disorders o o B risk), SLE, pancreatitis GI disturbance, sedation, headache, cerebellar .B decreased w.BSEblood wEffects effects, hepatotoxicity, disorders Interaction by w w antimalarials, wantidepressants, antipsychoticswand antiepileptics. ww Monitoring Trough 350–700micromol/ (50–100mg/L) et etLL(>180mg/ et valproate 2 Toxic >1260micromol/ L) n n n . . . X X X ok Valsartan See $ AT II oantagonists. ok ok o o B .B .B 6h PO; 1–1.5g/ Vancomycin $w Glycopeptide antibiotic. Dose 125mg/ wvancomycin w w 12h IV; some centres use continuous infusions of (consult ww w w local guidelines) Indication Serious Gram +ve infections: endocarditis, MRSA, antibiotic associated colitis Caution Pregnancy, breastfeeding, renal impairment, avoid rapid infusion, history of deafness, inflammatory bowel disease SE Nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, blood disorders, rash (red man syndrome) Interaction Increased nephrotoxicity with ciclosporin, increased ototoxicity with loop diuretics. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . w guidelines) wlocal Monitoring ww Usually before 3rd or 4th dose (check w ww vancomycin Trough 10–15mg/L 2 Toxicity can occur within therapeutic range t t e et n . .ne .nDose Venlafaxine $ Serotonin and noradrenaline re-uptake inhibitor. X X X ok Initially 37.5mg/12h, increase ok if necessary at intervalsooofk>2wks to o 12h (max 375mg per 24h) Indication Major depression, generalBo 75mg/ B .B w. CI Breastfeeding, high risk w ized anxiety disorder of cardiac arrhythmia, w w uncontrolledwhypertension Caution Pregnancy, w hepatic or renal impair- ww ment, heart disease, epilepsy, history of mania, glaucoma SE GI disturbance, hypertension, dizziness, Interaction MAOIs t2wk, increasedpalpitation, t withdrowsiness e e et within risk of bleeding aspirin/ N SAIDs, CNS toxn n n . . . Xicity with selegiline, mildly increases X effects of warfarin. kX ok Ventolin $ β agonist.oSee oksalbutamol. o oo B B B . . wCalcium-channel blockers. ww Verapamil See $ ww w ww B ® 2 Vitamin K See $ Phytomenadione. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pharmacopoeia w 223 t t t Warfarin .ne $ Coumarin. DoseXLoading .ne E p. 422; MaintenanceXTypically .ne X PO dictated by the INR (though higherkdoses and ok 1–5mg/on24halternative oareknotpatient’s o days uncommon) IndicationoProphylaxis of o Bo dosing B . thromboembolism (atrial fibrillation, mechanical heart.B valves, etc), treatw w ment of venousw thrombosis or pulmonary embolism CI Pregnancy, peptic w whypertension, ww Caution ulcers, severe bacterial endocarditis Breastfeeding, w hepatic or renal impairment, conditions in which risk of bleeding is increased (eg GI bleeding, peptic ulcer, recent ischaemic et postpartum, etrecent surgery, et n n n . . . stroke, bacterial endocarditis), uncontrolled hypertenX recent SE Haemorrhage,krash, X alopecia Interaction Avoidkcranberry X ok sion oInfo Warfarin o of 0.5mg o o o juice (ianticoagulant effect) is available in tablets B (white), 1mg (brown), w.B3mg (blue), and 5mg (pink) wbut.Bcheck which tab- w lets are stockedw locally. w w w w Zolpidem $ Non-benzodiazepine hypnotic. Dose 10mg/24h PO at night Indication Short-term treatment of CI Breastfeeding, set impairment, t insomnia ehepatic eillness, et vere psychotic neuromuscular respiratory n n n . . . X X X apunstable myasthenia respiratory failure,ksleep ok weakness, ok orgravis, o weakness, noea Caution Pregnancy, o hepatic renal impairment, muscle o o B history of drug abuse disturbance, .B headache. w.SEB Taste disturbance, GI Dose w3.75– w Zopiclonew $w Non-benzodiazepine hypnotic. 7.5mg/24h PO ww w B at night Indication Short-term treatment of insomnia CI Breastfeeding, ­severe hepatic impairment, neuromuscular respiratory weakness, unstable myasthenia gravis, respiratory failure, sleep apnoea Caution Pregnancy, hepatic or renal impairment, muscle weakness, history of drug abuse SE Taste disturbance, GI disturbance, headache. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k Zoton® $ Proton pump inhibitor. See lansoprazole. ww ww Zyban® $ Treatment of nicotine dependence. See bupropion. o Bo t .ne X k t o ww o w.B Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ok Bo w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww ww Bo et t et n . X ww w ww o Bo B .B w w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 6 w 225 t t t .ne Resuscitation .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww Early warning scores 226 care 228 t Intensive e et et 2 Peri-arrest 230 n n n . . . 2 In- h ospital resuscitation 231 X 2 Advanced Life Support kX (ALS) 232 kX ok o o o o o 2 Arrest equipment and tests 234 B .B 2 Advanced w.BTrauma Life Support (ATLS) w236 w w 2 w Paediatric Basic Life Support 238 w ww 2 Newborn Life Support (NLS) 242 et 2 Obstetric arrest 244 .net et n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wResuscitation 226 ww w Chapter 6 t t t .ne warning scores .ne .ne Early X X X k ok Early detection of the o‘unwell’ ok o o patient This has repeatedly been Bo shown B B . . to improvew outcome. Identification of suchw patients allows suitable w w changes in management, including early involvement of critical care teams ww w w or transfer to critical care areas (HDU/ICU) where necessary. Identification the ‘at-risk’ patient t Relies on measurement etphysiologicalofparameters, egenerally etof n n n simple which deteriorate as the .patient . . X X RR, HR, BP, O saturation, more unwell; thesekinclude of kXlevel ok becomes o omight consciousness, and temp.oRemember that the sick patient not alo o B .BBox 6.1. ways look that unwell.B from the bottom of the bed. See w w w w Scoring ofwthese parameters Usuallywundertaken by nursing staff ww and it creates a means by which staff can more quickly identify clinical deterioration. In 2017, the Royal College of Physicians updated their et Early Warning Score (NEWS) et and published the NEWS2; et National n n n . . . shown in Fig. 6.1. There is currently no standardized version for pregnant X or paediatrics. Normal Xobservations are awarded akscore X ok patients okattract o for ofeach0, o o o while abnormal observations higher scores. The values B .B score reaches a physiological parameter w.Bare added together. If wthiswtotal w ‘threshold’ value w (≥5, or any individual parameter w scoring 3), the nursing ww 2 1 staff should increase the frequency of observations and alert a doctor to review the patient, depending on local policy/guidelines. t t et Trends .ne in physiological parameters .ne Often more usefulXthan.none- X X Some patients k may have abnormal scoresokeven when ok off observations. obecause o o seem relatively ‘well’ For Bo they B Bmechanisms. . thresholds mayofbecompensatory these patients, higher agreed w by .senior doctors, but w bear in mind that w they are also likely to deteriorate w much more quickly. w Take care inwthe interpretation of NEWS. w For example, a patient with w ­severe chest pain can be very unwell yet have a NEWS of 0. See Box 6.2. t t t Patients closely .ne who should be X .ne monitored by suchXscores .ne Include: X ok • Emergency admissions,ounstable ok or elderly patients ook Bo • Patients with pre- B e.xisting disease (cardiovascular, respiratory, w.B DM) • Patients whow arew failing to respond to treatment w • Patients who w have returned from ICU/HDU w or recent surgery. ww Box 6.1 et Key updates in NEWS2 etpatients might constantly.cross et n n . In.nthe original NEWS charts, COPD X thresholds for low oxygen X saturations. As with manykpersistent X ok alarm okdesensitized othis patient o o o alarms, users might become to high scores in B B B for saturations cohort. NEWS2w has. a separate row (“SpO scale w.2”) w if the patient w has been allocated to target saturations of 88–92% to w w ww 2 ensure that they are appropriately monitored. Additionally, in the original score a patient could be confused, but still be considered as not at risk since they were ‘alert’ on the AVPU scale. NEWS2 recognizes new confusion by allocating a score of 3 to this worrying feature as a new category, ‘C’, in addition to a similar score allocated for patients responsive to Voice or Pain only, or Unresponsive (hence CVPU). t ok Bo t e X.n 1 t e X.n ok ww o B . w e X.n ok ww o B . w Mhttps://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/projects/outputs/national-early-warning-score-news-2 See also NICE guidelines at Mhttps://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg50 ww B .B w ww .B w w t ok Bo e X.n ≥39.1 38.1–39.0 36.1–38.0 Alert 91–110 .ne X k 35.1–36.0 ≤40 ≤35.0 Temperature (°C) Consciousness ww oo B . w t ww t .ne X k Pulse (per minute) Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) Air or oxygen? .ne X k oo B . ww w Fig. 6.1 National Early Warning Score (NEWS2). A total score ≥5, or any individual parameter scoring 3 should prompt urgent review by a doctor Ask yourself, could this be sepsis? © Royal College of Physicians 2017. CVPU ≥131 111–130 51–90 101–110 91–100 ≤90 ≤83 t o o w.B et .n kX t .ne X ok o B . w ww 41–50 Air Oxygen 86–87 84–85 ww SpO2 Scale 2 (%) ≤8 ≤91 SpO2 Scale 1 (%) Physiologica l parameter o oo B . w ww Respiration rate (per minute) 3 2 t .ne X k oo Bo ≥220 93–94 on oxygen ≥96 94–95 ww et n . X ok o B . w 92–93 1 9–11 ok t .ne X k 111–219 ≥97 on oxygen 95–96 on oxygen 88–92 ≥93 on air ≥25 21–24 et n . X Bo B 12–20 Score 0 1 2 3 w ww Early warning scores 227 t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww ww et .n kX et n . X ww k oo oo B B . . Calling for help isw easily said in an exam situation,w but actually initiating the call is much wharder. It feels a little embarrassing w to have to cancel ww w w the arrest call since it was just a patient fainting, but it was still right to call for help. Remember, the cardiac arrest team can be called for peri- arrest patients where you simply need etsenior et many more pairs of hands.nand et n . some support. It’s better.n to prevent a cardiac arrest! Always X ‘Adult/paediatric/obstetric X X ok state ok cardiac arrest team tooWard ok A’, even o o if it’s a peri- a rrest patient. B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2 Box 6.2 Calling for the cardiac arrest team B 228 .B w ww Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t t t .ne .ne .ne Intensive care X X X ok section aims to provide oakbrief introduction to the decisions okinvolved in o o Bo This B B referring and accepting. a patient into ICU (Intensive Care w w. Unit). w w What does ICU offer that is different from ward care? w w ww • Close monitoring using non-invasive and invasive devices (such as arterial and central venous lines) t et support erespiratory failure (some units ecant • .Organ for vascular, renal, or n n n . . X offer cardiac support too) kX ok • 1:1 nursing care and frequent, o intensive physiotherapy.ookX o o B .Bpatient will have Intensivists offer organ w.Bsupport and resuscitation; weach a parent team w overlooking their care who should visit on regular ward w w with ICU). ww rounds (thisw will most likely be your first encounter Admitting a patient onto intensive care It can sometimes t intensivists ethat etaccept patients, ecer-t seem are ‘reluctant’nto but there are n n . . . tain questions that must be satisfied in order to ensure that a patient X X X can ok benefit from ICU. Patientsohave ok frequently described post-otraumatic ok stress o disorder following prolonged remind B B us that it is a .B ICU stays; this serveswto.and tough environmentwwith frequent exposure to painful invasive procedw w ures. The decision w to commit a patient to awrigorous treatment pathway ww B is a complex process. A possible referral needs to be discussed with your consultant, as the decision to admit will be made by an ICU consultant who will often phone your consultant for further discussion. The information required Includes any known current/previous wants and wishes, details of the current illness and underlying medical conditions, the response to treatment so far, and the general physical/functional baseline. This is put together to decide on likely prognosis and trajectory, and therefore whether the benefits will outweigh the risks. What are the patient’s wishes? (Not always possible in the acute setting, but some patients are admitted to ICU electively following planned surgical procedures such as complex open AAA repairs.) The most difficult aspect of the decision is deciding how likely it is that the patient in front of you will go on to have a quality of life that they will find worthwhile. Is ICU really going to make a difference? (Eg ICU cannot entirely replace liver function, but it can support the respiratory system long enough to enable the body to recover from an infection.) Intensive care therapies can be aggressive and unpleasant. You need to ensure that the patient is motivated to endure this, but also has a good pre-existing baseline to rely upon. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww oo B . w .n kX ww et et et n n n . . . X X is another aspect considered. Is the kXthefrequently ok Reversibility ohave okaspresenting complaint something that we chance of reversing (such infection)? o o o B B B Or is this new presentation just the natural sequelae of .their existing disease . w neurological disease process. For example, ww a patient with a degenerative ww and intensive antibiotics ww develops an w infection. ICU can offer organ support while the infection is being treated, but there is little that can be offered if the patient et is becoming breathless because et of diaphragmatic weakness. et n n n . . . If you need help with a sick patient Call ICU— t hey may not X X nekXbut they can advise you on further ok cessarily need to take overoocare ok action. o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Intensive care w 229 t t t Indications for intubation Not intubated .ne .neall patients on ICU are X .ne X X 6.3), ICU offers patients support beyond just managing ok (see BoxPatients ok organ oarek unabletheto are only intubated in situations where they o o Bo airway. B B protect their own airway, will intubate ventilate w. or it may be that ICU what wis. calledand a patient in order to facilitate treatment (this is w ‘an induced w w terms). w ww coma’ in layman’s •Respiratory problems (eg hypoxia, hypercapnia, trauma) t cannot maintain airway, net • Neurological problems (eg low GCSeso et sedation n n . mandatory is required, .e.g. for agitation) X the work of breathing in cardiac X. kX• Physiological reasons (tooreduce k k o o respiratory failure, and acidosis, to prevent hypercapnic Bo failure, Bofor .Binoraised .and cerebral vasodilation ICP, e.g. head injury, w w w ‘neuroprotective meningitis). ww measures’, e.g. in severewencephalitis/ ww Respiratory wean Refers to the process of reducing ventilatory support in a patient who is on positive pressure ventilation, in order for the paetbe able to breathe unaided.nbyetthemselves. In a patient who ehast tient to n n . . been on a ventilator for a long period time, has COPD, or who is weak X X X ok and malnourished, this complex ok process may take severaloweeks ok or even o o months. There is no universal protocol. B w.B w.B Receiving anw ‘ICU step-down’ patient w on your ward w w ww B When patients no longer need ICU level care, they are ‘stepped down’ to the wards. Generally, a written handover document from ICU should accompany the patient to the ward and sometimes a telephone handover as well. Some questions to consider: • What are the priorities of care for this patient and the next stages? • What happens if they deteriorate? Would ICU readmit them? ICU patients will often be discharged with a plan for re-escalation • Physiotherapy plans •Have all the central venous and arterial lines been removed? • Are there any drugs prescribed that you are not familiar with? •Remember that there are teams from ICU in each hospital who help with psychological counselling after a prolonged ICU stay. Most hospitals have an outreach team who review step-down patients. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o t .ne X k t .ne X k w t .ne X k ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . Box 6.3 Levels wwof care in hospital www w ww Level 0 General medical/surgical bed. Level 1 Patients needing outreach support from ICU for medical advice, t emonitoring, et as they may need escalating etot close or clinical intervention n n n . . . XICU or have just come from kthere. X kX but ok Level 2 Often called HDUooCare; osupport provision of single organ o o B maintaining own airway w.B(e.g. vasopressors, renalwreplacement w.B therapy). Level 3 Patients who are intubated or needing more than one organ w w ww supported. w If the ICU feel that a patient may from ICU but the Unitt ettheyteam etthebenefit is.n full, will try to accommodate patient elsewhere, such n . .neas theatre recovery until an ICU bed becomes available, or X in some X X k ok cases may arrange a transfer ok to an ICU in another hospital oo that has Bo availability. w.Bo B . w ww ww ww Bo B .B w ww 230 Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t t et .nPeri- .ne .ne 2 a rrest X X X ok Call the arrest teamooif kyou are concerned about A,ooB,kor C (see Bo 3 E Box 6.2, p. 227);.call Do not w B for senior help early. w w.Bthink you have to w manage this alone. w w w w Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/adjuncts 2 Airway with C-spine control int trauma et e CALL ARREST TEAM .net n If no respiratory.effort— 2.n Breathing X X ok 2 Circulation If no palpable ok pulse—CALL ARREST TEAMookX o o B B ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETISTw.B 2 Disability wIf .GCS w ww ww Airway w • Look inside the mouth, remove obvious objects/dentures • Wide- bore suction under direct vision if secretions present et for et(stridor, et n n • .Listen signs of airway impairment snoring, gurgling, or.n no . X entry) X X ok • air ok ok o Jaw thrust/head tilt/chinolift with cervical spine control inotrauma B .B • Oropharyngeal w or nasopharyngeal airway as tolerated. w.B w w Breathingw w ww B • • • • • • • Look for chest expansion (does R = L?), fogging of mask (Box 6.4) Listen to chest for air entry (does R = L?) Feel for expansion and percussion (does R = L?) Non-rebreather (trauma) mask and 15L/min O2 initially in all patients Bag and mask if poor or absent breathing effort Monitor O2 sats and RR Think tension pneumothorax (in a trauma victim). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww w Circulation o Bo • • • • • • t .ne X k Look for pallor, cyanosis, distended neck veins Feel for a central pulse (carotid/femoral)—rate and rhythm Monitor defibrillator ECG leads and BP Venous access, send bloods and perform ABG if time allows 12-lead ECG Call for senior help early if patient deteriorating. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX ww Disability—if GCS ≤8 or falling, CALL ANAESTHETIST • Assess GCS (E pp. 344–5) and check glucose • Look for pupil reflexes and unusual posture • Feel for tone in all four limbs and plantar reflexes. t e X.n .ne X k t ww et n . X ww k ok Exposure oo oo Bo • Remove all clothing, B B check temp . . w including perineum and back w • Look all overw body for rash or injuries w with a blanket. ww ww • Cover patient 2 Box et 6.4 Signs of life .net et n n . . X X respiratory effortkX • Purposeful movement ok •Regular o ok o o o • Coughing • Speaking B .B • Opening eyes w w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w IN-HOSPITAL RESUSCITATION w 231 t t et .nIn- .ne .ne 2 h ospital resuscitation X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. Collapsed/sick patientww. w w w ww et etand assess et Shout for HELP n n n . . . X X X ok ok patient ok o o o B w.B Signs of life? ww.B w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X NO YES ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo ok et X.n Call resuscitation team ok o B w. et X.n CPR 30:2 With oxygen and airway adjuncts ww t .ne X k Assess ABCDE Recognise and treat Oxygen, monitoring, IV access oo B . ww w Call resuscitation team if appropriate ww Apply pads/monitor t et Attempt et n defibrillation .n . .ne X X X if appropriateok ok ok o o Bo B B . wLife. Support wover Advanced Hand to w w w resuscitation w ww when resuscitation team team arrives t e et2015 guidelines. et Fig. 6.2 In-hospital resuscitation algorithm; n n n . . . Reproduced with the kind permission of the Resuscitation Council (UK). X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B causes w.B 2 Box 6.5 w Common w w w ww Arrhythmia E p. 254 Hypoxia E pp. 277–89 Myocardial E p. 250 Pulmonary et infarction et oedema E p. 278 et n n Hypovolaemia E p. 393 Pulmonary embolism E p. 284 .n . . X (UTI/pneumonia) E p. 494 X X (idK ) E p. 398 ok Sepsis ok Metabolic oEkp. 285 o o o Hypoglycaemia E p. 328 (Tension) pneumothorax B w.B w.B w w w w ww + B 232 .B w ww Chapter 6 Resuscitation .B w w ww w t t et .nAdvanced .ne .ne 2 Life Support (ALS) X X X ok ok ok o o Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ Bo 2 Airway B B . w w. adjuncts with C-spine control in trauma w w If no respiratory effort—CALL 2 Breathing w wARREST TEAM ww If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST TEAM 2 Circulation t e et et n . Basic life support Should be.n initiated and the cardiac arrest.nteam X kX arrest is suspected. okX ok called as soon as cardiac oroorespiratory o Advanced life support is centred around a .‘universal B Bo algorithm’ .Bon a This w w (Fig. 6.3) which is taught standardized course offered hospitals. w ofby amost w wwarrest team This usuallywconsists The cardiac team leader w (medical registrar), F1, anaesthetist, CCU nurse, and senior hospital nurse: t to other members • Team leader—gives clear instructions etprovides earterial et n n . • .F1— BLS, cannulates, takes blood, defibrillates if.n X trained, gives drugs, performs X kXchest compressions (see Boxok6.6) ok • Anaesthetist— obreathing, o o o airway and they may choose to bag-and-mask B .Binsert a laryngeal mask, or intubate ventilate the patient, wBLS, w.B (E pp. 556–7) w • Nurses—provide defibrillate if trained, w give drugs, perform chest w w w w compressions, record observations, note time points, and take ECGs. Needle-stick injuries (E p. 108.) Commonest in times of emer- t the sharps box nearby nandetnever leave sharps on the bed. gency. neHave net . . . X X X Can be veryk during a cardiac arrest. k antecuok Cannulation oto difficult o The fossa is the best place look first; alternatively try feet, hands, foreo o Bo bital B B arms, or consider external Take . jugular if all else fails. w . bloods if you are wallow successful, but w don’t this to delay the giving of drugs. w w Occasionally useful in cardiacwarrests, especially K which ww Blood tests can often be measured by arterial blood gas machines. Use a blood gas tto obtain a sample (the femoral t with a green needle (21G) syringe etis .neeasiest— .neaskartery often NAVY E p. 530) and a nurse to take the sample.n to the X X X k on the clinical scenario;oifkin doubt fill testsodepend ok machine. Other blood bottles o (E p. 531). Bo all the common blood B . on specific .Bo w Defibrillation Taught courses (eg ILS,wALS) and must not be w trained. The use of automated undertaken w unless ww external defibrillators ww or AEDs (E p. 546) is becoming routine in non-clinical areas as rigorous trainingtis not required. e arrest drugs These.nareet now prepared in pre-filled.nesyr-t n Cardiac . X adrenaline (epinephrine)kX X 10mL (1:10,000), atropine ok inges: o 1mg in300mg okgive(several preparations available), amiodarone in 10mL. Always a large o o o B .Beach dose to encourage it intowthe.Bcentral circulation flush (20mL saline) after . w E inside back cover ww of this handbook for further wwemergency drug doses. ww + Cardiac arrest trolleys Found in most areas of the hospital. Know et n . kX o Bo where they are for your wards. Ask the ward sister if you can open the trolley and have a good look at the equipment within it as they differ between hospitals. They are often arranged so the top drawer contains Airway equipment, the second contains Breathing equipment, the third contains Circulation equipment, and the lower drawer contains the drugs and fluids. You’ll seldom need anything that isn’t on the trolley. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k oo B . w ww o Bo t .ne X k o w.B ww t okAssess rhythm o ww et n . kX oo .B w ww ww .n kX Call resuscitation team e X.n o w.B w 233 et CPR 30:2 Attach defibrillator/monitor Minimise interruptions et n . kX w w ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT (ALS) Unresponsive and not breathing normally o Bo .B w w ww Non-shockable Return of spontaneous Shockable et(VF/Pulseless et et n n (PEA/Asystole) .n circulation VT) . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w wAdvanced Life Support algorithm; w ww Fig. 6.3 Adult 2015 guidelines. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Resuscitation Council (UK). t e X.n ok Bo t ok o o w.B et n . X o w.B When you start to attend arrest calls as a foundation doctor, you can often feel out of your depth and a little useless. That’s not the case at all! Here is a list of incredibly useful things to start immediately when you arrive: • Announce that you will scribe (keep a timed record of drugs and shocks given) and communicate the need for the next dose/shock loudly to your team • Be a tourniquet for your colleague, this steadies the hand during CPR so IV access is gained faster • Find the notes and start looking through the background so that you can educate the team on the patient’s clinical background which can give significant clues on why the cardiac arrest has taken place. et n . kX o Bo .ne X k 2 Box 6.6 What can you do? ww ww et n . kX t o o B . w ww ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 234 .B w ww Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t t et .nArrest .neand tests .ne 2 equipment X X X ok ok ok o o Bo Airway B B . . Jaw thrust Pull thewjaw forward with your indexw and middle fingers at w mandible. Pull hard enoughwtowmake the angle ofw each your fingers ache. ww Head tilt Gently extend the neck, avoid if C-spine injury risk. Chin lift chin up with two fingers, avoid if C-spine injury risk. et etPull theairway et curved n n . .n the Oropharyngeal (Guedel) A .rigid, tube; choose Xsize that reaches the angle ofktheXmouth from theplastic X k k tragus of the ear. o oo the tongue back, then.Brotate oo 180° Insert down to avoidB pushing when Bo upside . inside the mouth (do not insert upside down in children). w w Nasopharyngeal tube, not to be used with ww wwairway A flexible, curved plastic ww significant head injury. Choose the size that will easily pass through the nose (size 6–7mm in most adults); insert by lubricating and pushing horit et into the patient’s nostril (not eupwards). et zontally Use a safety pin through n n n . . . the end to prevent the tube being lost. X X ok Suction Cover the hole onoothekXside of a wide-bore suction okcatheter to o o B B Secretions in the parts ofwthe cause suction at the .tip. .Boropharynx that w can can be seen directly be cleared. A thinnerw catheter can be used to w clear secretions w in the airway of an intubatedwpatient. ww Breathing t Non-re mask A plastic mask with net a floppy bag attached; used netin .n ebreather acutely ill patients to give 780%X O. with a 15L/min flow rate. X. X k to O ok Standard mask (Hudson mask) okA plastic mask that connectsoodirectly o O with a 15L/ m in flow rate. Bo tubing; delivers 750% B B w.connects to the O tubingwviawa. piece of coloured w Venturi A maskw that plastic, delivering w either 24%, 28%, 35%, 40%, w or 60% O . Adjust the w flow rate according to the instructions on the coloured plastic connector, eg 4L/tmin with the 28% Venturi connection. t e mask (Ambu bag) A self-inflating netto Bag .nand .ne bag and valve that allows .you X X X into an inadequatelykventilating patient. Attach the O to k tubing ok forcebagO with o rate then seal the mask over othe a 15L/min o flow patient’s o Bo the B B . stands at the head nose and mouth. Easiest person w. with two people; onew wsqueezes to get a firm seal with both hands while the other the bag. The w w wETT or LMA (E mask can bew removed to attach the bag to an p. 558). w Pulse oximeter Plastic clip with a red light that measures blood O saturt Do not rely on the reading ations. Clip onto the patient’s indexefinger. etthere et n n n . . . unless is an even trace on the monitor and the patient has a pulse; X on the different arm fromkX kX the BP cuff. ok use o o o o o Nebulizer This is a 3cm- igh cylinder that attaches beneath a mask. The B .Bhhalves cylinder is made of that can be untwisted wtwo w.Bso that the fluid to w w w be nebulizedw can be inserted. The nebulizerw can be connected to a pump w 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 or directly to an O2 or medical air supply. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w ARREST EQUIPMENT AND TESTS w 235 t t t Circulation .ne .ne .ne X X X (E p. 546) Successful requires ECGkmonitoring ok Defibrillation okand defibrillation o oo electrodes identify a shockable rhythm, delivery of current through Bo toattached B B . . to the chest wall. Previously, monitoring was performed w w and green to using ECG leads: red w to right shoulder, yellow to left shoulder, apex w wdeliver current. Most NHS ww (E p. 542). w Separate paddles were applied to trusts now use hands-free adhesive defibrillation electrodes which are safer t double as monitoring leads (E and also edefibrillate etp. 543). et n n n . . Only if you have been .trained, otherwise many defibrillators X an automated mode (AED) X X ok have ok that can provide computerized ok rhythm o o o analysis and advice. B • Check the adhesive are correctly applied w.Belectrodes w.Bto the chest w • Switch the defibrillator to ‘monitor’ mode w w rhythm is identified, select required w defibrillation energy ww • If a shockable using the circular dial, then charge defibrillator using ‘charge’ button t to stand clear and stand clear • Tellestaff et yourself—strive to minimize.net n n . . the interruption of chest compressions Xlatest possible moment kX which should continuekXuntil the ok • Check o o oo self ) O , staff, B andoyou are clear (O , top, middle, bottom, B • Check the B . . the rhythm is still shockable then press the ‘shock’ to ww Resume CPR, without w wwto checkbutton deliver thew charge. pausing rhythm. ww B 2 2 Blood pressure Attach the cuff to the patient’s left arm so it is out of the way and leave in place. If it does not work or is not believable (eg irregular or tachyarrhythmia) then obtain a manual reading. Venous access Ideally an orange/grey venflon in each antecubital fossa; however, get the best available (biggest and most central). Remember to take bloods but don’t let this delay giving drugs. t .ne X k oo Disability o Bo et oo B . w oo B . ww ww t .ne X k w Glucose Use a spot of blood from the venous sample or a skin prick to get a capillary sample; clean skin first with water to avoid false readings. Examination GCS, pupil size and reactivity to light, posture, tone of all four limbs, plantar reflexes. Exposure Take all the patient’s clothes off; have a low threshold for cutting them off. Inspect the patient’s entire body for clues as to the cause of the arrest, eg rashes, injuries. Measure temp. Remember to cover the patient with a blanket to prevent hypothermia and for dignity. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B t e X.n ok Bo oo B . w .n kX t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww et n . X Arterial blood gas Attempts to sample radial artery blood in a patient in extremis may be futile and waste valuable time. Instead, attach a green (21G) needle to a blood gas syringe, feel for the femoral pulse (½ to ⅔ between superior iliac spine and pubic symphysis) and insert the needle vertically until you get blood. Press hard after removal. Even if the sample is venous, it can still offer useful information. Femoral stab (E p. 530.) If no blood has been taken you can insert a green needle into the femoral vein which is medial to the artery (NAVY). Feel for the artery then aim about 1cm medially. If you hit the artery take 20mL of blood anyway and send for arterial blood gas and normal blood tests, but press hard after removal. ECG Attach the leads as shown on E p. 543. CXR Alert the radiographer early so that they can bring the X-ray machine for a portable CXR. et n . kX o .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww Other investigations Bo .n kX w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 236 .B w ww Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t t et .nAdvanced .neLife Support (ATLS) .ne 2 Trauma X X X k ok oquickly ok o This is designed to and safely stabilize B theoinjured patient. Bo ATLS B The purpose of ATLS to provide definitive care all injuries, but to w. is notthreats w.ofthese. w w recognize the immediate to life and to address Remember ww w w to act immediately: 710% of trauma deaths arise from airway obstruction. As with ALS, in ATLS the patient’s care is delivered by a team which will etof a leader and various members. et Details of how to undertake eant consist n n n . . . ATLS course are given in Box 6.7; it is really useful if you are considering X X a kXcareer in the acute servicesoorksurgery. k o o Bo The primary wsurvey .Bo This allows a rapid wassessment .Bo and relevant management threatening issue is found w to be undertaken. If a life- w ww this must bewtreated before moving on to the next step of the primary w survey. The primary survey is as follows: Airway with cervical spine prot ventilation and oxygenation tection et (E OHCS10 p. 782); Breathing: eCirculation et n n n . . . (E OHCS10 Chest trauma, p. 788); with haemorrhage conX (see Box 6.8 and E OHCS10 X Management of shock inktrauma, X ok trol ok examination; oEnvironment;p. o o o 784); Disability: brief neurological Exposure/ B .B Reassess patient’s ABCDE Adjuncts to primary wsurvey; w.Band consider need w w w for patient transfer. w w w B The secondary survey This follows once all life-threatening issues t .ne X k oo et t .ne X k have been identified and dealt with; the secondary survey is a top-to-toe examination looking for secondary injuries which are unlikely to be immediately life-threatening. See Table 6.1 for a mnemonic to make sure you don’t miss anything. The secondary survey is as follows: AMPLE history (Allergies, Medications, Past medical history, Last meal, Events leading to presentation) and mechanism of injury; Head and maxillofacial; Cervical spine and neck; Chest; Abdomen; Perineum/ rectum/ vagina; Musculoskeletal; Neurologic; Adjuncts to the secondary survey. ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww ww t t t .ne 6.1 Secondary survey mnemonic .ne .ne Table X X X k ok oSecondary ok o o survey Bo Mnemonic B B Has w. Head/skull w. w w My Maxillofacial w w ww Critical Cervical spine Care t Chest e et et n n n . . . Assessed Abdomen X X kX ok Patient’s oPelvis ok o o o Priorities Perineum B w.B Orifices (PR/PV) ww.B Or w w w ww Next Neurological Management Musculoskeletal et et definitive care et Decision? Diagnostic tests/ n n n . . . X X kX Journal, Hughes S.C.A, 23:661– from Emergency o Medicine ok Reproduced ok 2, 2006, o o o with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w ADVANCED TRAUMA LIFE SUPPORT (ATLS) w 237 t et It is highly unlikely the.nfounet Trauma .ne and the foundation .ndoctor X X X will be the first k to attend to a major trauma patient, ok dation doctor oinperson ohask sustained ATLS can be applied principle to any patient who o o Bo though B B an injury. Having a logical, wise approach to injured patients minimw. life-tstep- wor. injuries izes the risk of missing hreatening complications which subw w w wbecome debilitating if left unrecognized w sequently may and untreated. If w you are working in the ED you will likely be involved in gaining IV access or t conducting parts of the primary tsurvey under supervision. Get perhaps ewith esurvey; ein-t n n n . . . volved conducting the secondary it is often poorly performed X the adrenaline of performing Xoff. This kX life-saving interventions wears ok asbitallis essential ounconscious okto report o o o though, as the patient will be unable a B finger fracture, or damaged .B genitalia. .B w w ww ww ww 2 Box 6.7 ATLS course In thetUK, ATLS courses are coordinated Royal College oft e The course is currently.3ndays et long,byandthedetails e n Surgeons. of where . .nand X X X when courses are run can be obtained from the College (E p. 615 for ok ok a long waiting list for places okas this is a details). There isousually o£600. Bo contact B B . popular course; the .cost for the 3-day course is around w w The ATLS principles ww provide a structured wwapproach to managing ww B complex trauma patients by identifying the life-threatening priorities and treating quickly. Keep an eye out for new research though as some of the ATLS teachings are not always what are done in practice (eg the ATLS approach to fluid management does not include hypotensive fluid resuscitation now used in many departments). Check with your local protocol over how trauma is best managed. For those who are especially interested in trauma management after sitting the ATLS, then consider the European Trauma or ATACC (Anaesthesia Trauma and Critical Care) courses when you are more senior. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t et et more? .nfour .ne 2.nBox 6.8 On the floor X and X X k is hypovolaemia and theoway k to think ok The main cause of shockoinotrauma o Bo about blood loss w B B is that it can accumulate on the floor and in . w. fracturefourcanother places. Long bones can harbour up to 0.75L andw a pelvic hide w several litresw of blood loss. Abdominal and chest w wounds can hold nearly ww your whole blood volume and will required immediate surgical intervention if suspected. See Fig. 6.4 for where tto look for occult blood loss. et e et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X 6.4 Where to look for occultkX blood loss kXwith ok Fig. o Handbook o2016, Reproduced from Baldwin, Oxford of Clinical Specialties, o o o B permission from Oxford University Press. w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww 238 Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t et et .nPaediatric .nLife .ne 2 Basic Support X X X k ok okis patent; consider manoeuvres/oaodjuncts o CheckB airway Bo 22 Airway B . If w poor respiratory effort—PAEDIATRIC w.ARREST TEAM Breathing w w ARREST TEAM 2 Circulation w If HR <60bpm—PAEDIATRIC w ww If unresponsive to voice—PAEDIATRIC ARREST TEAM 2 Disability t e etif severely unwell; call for.nsenior et n n . 3 Call the PAEDIATRIC arrest .team X X X ok help early (Fig. 6.5). (SeeoBox ok6.9 for life-threatening causes.) ok o o B B Airway w.B(head tilt), chin lift, jaw w w.(Box • Airway manoeuvres: thrust 6.10) w w or nasopharyngeal airway w ww • Oropharyngeal if responding only to pain • If still impaired, CALL ARREST TEAM. et etdrooling, septic), do not look eint n n . . 2.nIf you suspect epiglottitis (stridor, X mouth, but give O , call kyour X X ok the o senior help urgently, andooankanaestheo tist and ENT surgeon. o B w.B w.B Breathing w w w w ww B 2 • • • • Bag and mask with 15L/min O2 if poor or absent breathing effort Non-rebreather mask and 15L/min O2 in all other patients Monitor pulse oximeter Effort stridor, wheeze, RR, intercostal recession, grunting, accessory muscle use (head bobbing in infants), nasal flaring • Efficacy chest expansion, air entry (does R=L?), O2 sats • Effects HR, pallor, cyanosis (late sign), agitation, drowsiness. t .ne X k oo et o Bo oo B . ww ww Circulation • • • • • • • oo B . w .n kX t .ne X k w Start CPR if HR absent or <60bpm and unresponsive Monitor defibrillator ECG leads Status HR + rhythm, pulse volume, cap refill (≤2s normal), BP (see Box 6.11) Effects RR, mottled/pale/cold skin, urine output, agitation, drowsiness Venous access (consider intraosseous) check glucose and send blds Consider fluid bolus (20mL/kg IV 0.9% saline STAT) if shocked Exclude heart failure iJVP, gallop rhythm, crepitations, large liver. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww Disability • Assess AVPU (Alert, responds to Voice, responds to Pain, Unresponsive); check glucose if not already done • Look for pupil size and reflexes; assess posture and tone • E pp. 350–2 for seizures. t e X.n .ne X k t ww et n . X ww k ok o oo Bo Exposure w.Bo B . wwith a blanket. • Look all overw body for rashes, check temp, cover w ww ww 2 Box 6.9 Life- threatening causes t e et et n •.n Croup (exclude epiglottitis) .•nDehydration (DKA) . X X X foreign body ok • Sepsis, meningitis, pneumonia ok •• Inhaled ok o o o Bronchiolitis • Anaphylaxis B .B w.B • Asthma •Heart failure w (especially infants) w w w w ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo w ww o Bo et n . kX .B w w t .ne X k oUnresponsive o B . o w.B .n kX o ww t ww et n . kX oo e X.n ok o w.B .B Open airway w ww ww et n . X et n . X .ne X ok t .ne X k t et n . X ok w 239 et Shout for help ww w w PAEDIATRIC BASIC LIFE SUPPORT t k oo o B B . . Not breathing normally w w ww ww ww t net net .ne . . X X X ok o5 kRescue breaths ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww No signs of t et et life n n . . .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w 15 Chest compressions w w ww Bo ok Bo e X.n k oo2 Rescue breaths oo B B . . w 15 Chest compressionsww ww w ww et et team et Call resuscitation n n n . . . X X (1 minkCPR ok o first, if alone) ookX o o B Fig. 6.5 Paediatric Basic .B w.BLife Support algorithm; 2015wguidelines. wCouncil Reproduced withw the kind permission of the Resuscitation (UK). w w ww B 240 .B w ww Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t t et 2.nBox 6.10 Main age-related .nedifferences in paediatric .ne X X X ok life support ok ok o o Bo Feature B B <1yr Child >1yr puberty w.Infant w.Post- w Airway positionw Neutral Slightly Slightly extended w w ww extended Breaths Mouth and Mouth, ±nose Mouth only t t nose e e et n n n . . . Pulse Brachial Carotid Carotid X X kX 1 finger above 2 fingersokabove ok CPR position oabove 1 finger o o o xiphisternum xiphisternum B B .xiphisternum w.2Bhands For CPR use ww 1 finger 1 or 2 hands w w 15:2 ww Compressions:breaths 15:2 w 15:2 et emergency drug.doses et et n n n Common . . X bolus 20mL/kg 0.9% salinekX X • Diazepam 0.5mg/ ok •• Fluid o IV IV okkkggPRIV o o o Glucose 2mL/ k g 10% glucose • Lorazepam 0.1mg/ B .B kg 1:10,000 IV • Ceftriaxone • Adrenaline (arrest)w w.B 80mg/kg IV w 0.1mL/ • Adrenaline w (anaphylaxis) 0.01mL/kg 1:1000 IM. ww ww t t t 2nBox . e 6.11 Normal range .nfore observations by ageX.ne X X k RR (/min) okHR (/min) Systolic BPo(mmHg) ok Age o 110–160 o 30–40 .B 70–90.B Bo <1yr w100 2–5yr 20– 3w 0 95–140 80– w w w w ww 6–12yr 12–20 80–120 90–110 >12yr 60–100 100–120 t 12–16 t t e e n n . . .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo o oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww Bo ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n ww Bo o w.B .n kX ww o w.B .ne X k ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww t o o w.B w 241 et t et n . X w w PAEDIATRIC BASIC LIFE SUPPORT ww o Bo B .B w w w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 242 Chapter 6 Resuscitation .B w w ww w t t et .nNewborn .ne .ne 2 Life Support (NLS) X X X ok ok ok o o then fast bleep a senior or CALL THE Bo 2 If you are concerned B B w. TEAM (Fig. 6.6). ww. NEONATAL ARREST w w w ww Preparation • Put non- sterile gloves on t on the resuscitaire net eton the etowels • .Turn heater and place warm n n . on O /air and check pressure, X set PIP/PEEP to 30/10cmH X.O for kX• Turn k k o o o term babies o it works Bo • Turn on suctionwand.Bcheck .Bo •Get the laryngoscope and size 3.5 and 4.0 (termw babies) ETT ready • Check gestation, ww estimated birth weight, and wwhistory. ww Drying • Post- etdelivery start the clock and.nplace et the baby on the resuscitaire et n n . . • Dry vigorously with a warm towel and cover X X kX be placed directly in a plastic ok • Babies <30/40 gestation oshould ok bag. o o o B B out meconium .B If the baby is not breathing, 2 Meconium delivery w w.suck w (Box 6.12) from the mouth and beneath the w vocal cords under direct w w ww 2 2 vision with a laryngoscope before drying; if the baby breathes then stop and resuscitate as usual. t t t Airway .ne and breathing X.ne .ne X X RR and HR, if eitherkis impaired and not improving:k ok • Assess o oo place the baby’s head Bo Bo in the neutral position w.Bgive place Neopuffw ™.over nose and mouth, jaw thrust; 5 inflation breaths: w w wNeopuff™ hole for 2–3s thenwuncover for 2–3s ww cover the look for chest movement, improved HR, colour t t • If unsuccessful, reposition head andegive et n .n a further 5 inflation breaths .ne • .If unsuccessful, consider intubation X X X obstruction and consider a Guedel airway ok • Look for oropharynxbreaths okat lower ok o pressures (eg 20/ 5o, 1s on 1s off). Bo • Continue Neopuff™ B B . w. CALL Circulation— ifw HR <100bpm after breaths, w w w ww ARREST w TEAM • Assess the HR by gripping the umbilicus or listening to the heart • Start inflation breaths: etCPR if HR <60bpm/absentndespite etthumbs et n n grip round the chest and use .both over lower sternum . . X for a rate of 120 (twice X second) X ok aim ok toabreaths ok ratio of 3:1 compressions o o o B • Attempt to get IV .access w B , eg umbilical venouswcatheter, w.B check glucose. w w Drugs w w w • • • • • • • Adrenaline 0.1–0.3mL/kg of 1:10,000 IV if HR not improving Na+ bicarbonate 4.2% 2–4mL/kg IV if acidotic and not improving Glucose 10% 2.5mL/kg IV if hypoglycaemic 0.9% saline 10mL/kg IV if large blood loss suspected. et n . kX o Bo • • • • et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo t .ne X k oo B . w o w.B .B w ww ok If chest not moving: Recheck head position Consider 2-person airway control and other airway manoeuvres Repeat inflation breaths SpO2 ± ECG monitoring Look for a response et oo B . w .n kX ww oo B . ww When the chest is moving: If heart rate is not detectable or very slow (< 60 min–1) ventilate for 30 seconds Reassess heart rate If still < 60 min–1 start chest compressions; coordinate with ventilation breaths (ratio 3:1) t .ne X k Re-assess heart rate every 30 seconds If heart rate is not detectable or very slow (< 60 min–1) consider venous access and drugs o ww o w.B Update parents and debrief team w ww oo B . w t DO .ne X k YOU ww et NEED .n kX HELP? Fig. 6.6 Newborn Life Support algorithm; 2015 guidelines. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Resuscitation Council (UK). t t o B . w ww (guided by oximetry if available) o Bo Acceptable pre-ductal SpO2 2 min 60% 3 min 70% 4 min 80% 5 min 85% 10 min 90% ww .ne X ok If no increase in heart rate look for chest movement ww t .ne X k ASK: Increase oxygen Maintain temperature et n . X ww TIMES 60 s ww t .ne X k oo AT et n . kX oo Re-assess If no increase in heart rate look for chest movement during inflation o B . w o ALL ok If gasping or not breathing: Open the airway Give 5 inflation breaths Consider SpO2 ± ECG monitoring ww et n . X k o Bo t e X.n Assess (tone), breathing, heart rate o w.B .n kX ww Dry the baby Maintain normal temperature Start the clock or note the time w 243 et (Antenatal counselling) Team briefing and equipment check ww et n . kX w w NEWBORN LIFE SUPPORT (NLS) Birth o Bo B .B w w ww et et n n . . X X ok 2 Box 6.12 Life-threatening ok causes of unresponsive okneonate o o o B .B • Meconium aspiration • Prematurity w w.B w w •Hypoxia w • Congenital abnormality. w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww e X.n B .B w ww 244 Chapter 6 .B w w ww w Resuscitation t t et .nObstetric .ne .ne 2 arrest X X X k ok okis patent; consider manoeuvres/ oadjuncts o o Check airway Bo 22 Airway B B . . Ifw no respiratory effort—OBSTETRICw ARREST TEAM Breathing w w 2 Circulation w If no palpable pulse—OBSTETRIC w ARREST TEAM ww If GCS ≤8—OBSTETRIC ARREST TEAM 2 Disability t e et et n n n . . . Staff X X X ok • Standard arrest team along okwith obstetrician and neonatologist ok . o o o B B .B Position w w.Wedge, 2 Left lateral position (>15°) using a Cardiff or w w w wtake the pressure of the uteruswoff the vena cavapillows, your knees to and aorta w • Push the uterus to the left and up to further relieve pressure. et et et Airway n n n . . . obvious objects/dentures X X• Look inside the mouth, remove kX vision k ok • Wide-bore suction under odirect if secretions present o o oo B B B • Jaw thrust/head tilt/ chin lift . . wto prevent gastric aspiration.ww • Early intubation ww w ww B Breathing • Look/listen/feel for respiratory effort • Bag and mask if poor or absent respiratory effort • Monitor O2 sats and RR. t .ne X k oo Circulation • • • • • o Bo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww Feel for a central pulse (carotid/femoral)—HR and rhythm Mid-sternal chest compression (30:2) if pulse absent Arrhythmias—use a defibrillator/drugs as usual (E p. 546) Venous access, send bloods and give IV fluids STAT Monitor defibrillator ECG leads and BP. ww t .ne Disability X k t o ww w .ne X k oo B . w et .n kX • Assess GCS and check glucose • Look/feel for pupil reflexes, limb tone, and plantar reflexes. Surgery ww o w.B ww t ok Bo .ne X k t ww et n . X ok o o w.B 2 Box 6.13 Causes of obstetric arrest ww See also E p. 230. o w.B Haemorrhage/hypovolaemia E p. 492 Pre-eclampsia/eclampsia E p. 518 Excess magnesium sulfate Pulmonary embolism E p. 284 E OHCM10 p. 693 Acute coronary syndrome E p. 249 Amniotic fluid embolism E OHCS10 p. 89 Aortic dissection E p. 253 Stroke E pp. 355–6 et n . kX o ww • Emergency Caesarean if resuscitation is not successful by 5min: • improves maternal chest compliance and venous return • The mother’s needs take priority in all decisions. See Box 6.13 for causes of obstetric arrest. e X.n Bo t .ne X k et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 7 w 245 t t t .ne Cardiovascular .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww 2 Chest pain emergency 246 pain 247 t Chest e et 254 et 2 Tachyarrhythmia emergency n n n . . . Tachyarrhythmias 256 X 2 Bradyarrhythmia kemergency X kX 262 ok o o o o o Bradyarrhythmias 264 B 2 Hypertension w.B emergency 268 ww.B w Hypertension 270 w w ww Heart failure 274 et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 246 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t et .nChest .ne .ne 2 pain emergency X X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Airway B B Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ w. w. TEAMadjuncts 2 Breathing w If no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww 2 Circulation t for senior help early if patient 3Call epatient etunwell or deteriorating. .net n n . • .Sit up X min O if SOB or sats <94% X X ok •• 15L/ ok ok o o o Monitor pulse oximeter, BP, defibrillator ECG leads if unwell B B • Obtain a full setw of .observations including BP in both arms and ECG w.B w • Take brief history if possible/check notes/askw ward staff w w ww • Examine patient: condensed CVS, RS, abdo exam •Establish likely causes and rule out serious causes: t consider percutaneous coronaryeintervention (PCI) or thrombolysis et pp. 550–1) et n n n . . . (E X X kX PO STAT giving aspirino 300mg ok consider ok o o o consider needle decompression (E p. 279) B .B sections • Initiate further treatment seew following w.B , including analgesia, w • Venous accessw , take bloods: w w ww 2 • • • • FBC, U+E, LFT, CRP, glucose, cardiac markers, D-dimer, lactate •Request urgent CXR, portable if too unwell • Call for senior help if no improvement or worsening •Repeat ECG after 20min if no improvement • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et t .ne X k .n kX oo oo B B . . w causes w 2 Life-threatening ww w• wAortic dissection ww • Myocardial infarction • (Tension) pneumothorax • Pulmonary embolism t coronary syndrome net • Sickle-cell crisis. net • Acute e n •. Pericardial effusion/cardiac tamponade X. X. kX k k o o o Bo .Bo .Bo w w ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww w t .ne pain Chest X k o Bo .B w w oo B . w w t .ne X k Chest pain et o w.B .n kX o 2 Worrying features idHR, idBP, iRR, dGCS, collapse, sudden- onset/ongoing pain, arm, jaw, or back pain, sweating, nausea, vomiting, radio-radial/femoral delay, neurology, pregnancy, ECG changes. ww ww Think about Common Acute coronary syndromes, pulmonary embolism, et n . kX w 247 ww t et n . X o Ask about Site of onset,oradiation, ok quality (heavy, aching,osharp, ok tearing), o B intensity (scale of w1–.1B .B 0), time of onset, duration,w associated symptoms w w (sweating, nausea, w palpitations, breathless, cough, w fever), exacerbating/ ww relieving factors (breathing, position, exertion, eating), recent trauma/ exertion/ similarity to previous pain; PMH Cardiac/respiratory t stress, t eDM, eCardiac/ et issues, GORD, icholesterol; DH respiratory medications, n n n . . . antacids; FH IHD, early cardiac death; SH Smoking, exercise tolerance. X X X ok Risk factors ok ok o o o B IHD iBP, icholesterol, .B IHD. w.BFH, smoking, obesity, DM, wprevious w w PE/DVT Previous PE/ D VT, immobility, ioestrogens, w w recent surgery, FH, ww pregnancy, hypercoagulable states, smoking, long-distance travel. GI Known (E p. 300), known peptic eHR,t BPGORD et ulcer, alcohol binge. .net n . Obs (both arms), RR, sats,.n temp, GCS, pain, cardiac monitor. X X kXrhythm/ ok Look for Sweating, pallor, okdyspnoea, cyanosis, pulseoorate/ o o iJVP, mediastinal shift, tug, chest B volume, cool peripheries, .Bclammy, .Btracheal w w wall tenderness, asymmetric chest expansion/percussion/ breath sounds, w w swelling/erythema. ww crepitations, w pericardial rub, heart murmurs, calf wpain/ musculoskeletal, pneumonia, pneumothorax (tension or simple), myocarditis, pericarditis, reflux, peptic ulcer disease; Uncommon Aortic dissection, cardiac tamponade, sickle-cell crisis, Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (Table 7.1). e X.n Investigations ECG (E p. 542, pp. 586–8 for procedure/interpret- ation);eBloods t VBG, FBC, U+E, LFT, D-edtimer, troponin, lactate; ABG Taken t on.n O if patient acutely unwell (E.n pp. 536–7, pp. 598–9 for procedure/ .ne X X X CXR If you suspect pneumothorax clinically ok interpretation); ok a tension ok requestper-a immediate needle decompression (E p. 285), otherwise o o Bo form B B portable CXR if the patient is severely ill (poorer image.quality) or standard w.for interpretation); w suspected large w CXR (E pp. 596–7 Bedsidew w w PEechoorFor w PE, acute MI,w or aortic dissection; CT To rule out aortic dissection. Treatment 15L/ m in O if SOB or sats <94%. Consider IV opioids (and et if pain is severe. .net et an antiemetic) n n . . X X are unable to confirm a diagnosis X to exclude Ifkyou ok Diagnoses o causes ok imo o mediately, consider life-threatening and investigate o until excluded: B Cardiac ischaemia Abnormal w.B ECG, typical history,witroponin(s) w.B echo. w PE dsats, abnormal 284), iD-dimer, CTPA. w ECG, clinical risk (E p. w ww Pneumothorax Mediastinal shift, dbreath sounds, review CXR. Aorticedissection Evidence of shock, e left t t and right systolic BP differebyt n n >15mmHg, mediastinal widening on CXR, abnormal CT/echo. .n . . X X X ok Contact cardiology/medical okregistrar on-call for advice ifonecessary. ok o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2 2 B 248 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t .ne 7.1 Common causes ofXchest .nepain .ne Table X X ok ok Examination Investigations ok o o Bo 3ACS History B B . Sudden- o.nset Dyspnoea, ST new w welevation/ pain/ tightness, ±arrhythmia, wLBBB, itroponin(s). (STEMI) w wradiating to left pale, clammy,w Troponin(s) are not ww arm/jaw, >15min, non-tender chest needed to make the breathlessness, wall t diagnosis of STEMI t e e et sweating, nausea n n n . . . X ACS Sudden-onset kXDyspnoea, X depression, T-wave ok 3 o ±arrhythmia, STinversion, okwaves, pain or tightness, Q ECG (NSTEMI) o o o radiating.to left pale, clammy, can .be normal, itrop, B B B arm/w tender chest echo regional wall w shows w jaw, >15min, non- wmotion wall abnormalities wbreathlessness, w ww sweating, nausea pain at rest Dyspnoea, depression, T-wave 3ACS et Anginal et pale, STinversion, et or with ifrequency/ ±arrhythmia, ECG can be (unstable n n n . . . severity/ d uration, clammy, non- normal, troponin not angina) X X chest wall elevated kX ok Angina >15min ok tender o changes, o o oECG Exertional pain Dyspnoea, Transient B B B . . (stable) or tightness, tachycardia, troponin not elevated, w ww to left non-tender, may wradiating ww+ve cardiac stress ww B arm/jaw, <15min, breathlessness, dby rest/GTN Myocarditis/ Recent viral illness, pericarditis pleurisy, ion lying, dsitting forwards test, +ve CT/invasive coronary angiogram, responds to anti-anginals Pericardial rub, Saddle-shaped ST on most otherwise normal ECG leads, iCRP/ESR, CVS and RS exam itroponin if myocardial involvement, echo, MRI Widened mediastinum 3Aortic Severe tearing iHR, dBP, interscapular pain, difference in on CXR, iD-dimer, dissection breathlessness, dissection flap/aortic brachial pulses neurology dilation on echo/CT and pressures, iRR, neurology Pulmonary Breathlessness, PE Often normal, ABG: PaO2n/d, CO2d, embolism risk factors (E swollen/red clear CXR, iD-dimer, p. 284), pleurisy, leg, tachycardia, sinus tachy, S1Q3T3, new collapse dyspnoea, dBP RBBB, thrombus/dilated RV on echo, CTPA Pneumo­ Sudden-onset Mediastinal Pleura separated from thorax pleurisy ±trauma; shift, unequal air ribs on CXR, other tall and thin patient; entry/expansion, investigations often COPD, smoker hyper-resonance normal, CT if unsure Pneumonia Productive cough, Febrile, coarse iWCC/iNØ/iCRP, pleurisy, feels unwell creps, dull to consolidation on CXR percussion (E pp. 596–7) Musculo­ Mechanical, may be Tender (though ECG to exclude cardiac skeletal chest pleuritic, worse on doesn’t exclude cause, normal bloods, pain palpation/movement other causes), normal CXR normal RS exam Reflux or Previous indigestion, May have upper ECG to exclude cardiac spasm reflux, known hiatus abdo tenderness, cause, normal bloods/ hernia, dby antacids normal CVS and CXR, trial PPI/antacids RS examinations t .ne X k oo oo B . w be normal after pain resolves et .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww w .B w w w Chest pain w 249 t et coronary syndromes.(ACS) net 3 .nAcute .ne X X X is a general term referring ok K ACS ok to presentations of varying ok severities myocardial ischaemia o (Tables 7.2 and 7.3). The aim isoto allow a proBo ofspective B B rather than diagnosis tow be. made to improve wand.a retrospective acute management patient outcomes (E OHCM10 p. 118). w w w w ww Table 7.2 Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) classification in patients with typical et cardiac-sounding chest .pain etlasting >15min et n n n . . ECG findings Troponin (6– 1 2h post- p ain) Diagnosis X X kX to make a diagnosis, STEMI ok ST elevation or new Not oneeded ok o o o LBBB but will be i (E p. 250) B w.BTroponin T above 99th percentile w.BNSTEMI T-wave inversion/ w w flattening, ST w depression, of the upper referencew limit (E pp. 251–2) ww absence of ST elevation. Troponin T below 99th percentile Unstable angina ECG may still be normal of the upper reference limit (E p. 252) et et et n n n . . . X X kX ok Table 7.3 Interpreting troponin ok measurements in suspected oACS o o o B Raised troponin can be .detected 3–12h after myocardial necrosis. w B troponins. w.B Consider the following when interpreting w w w should not be interpreted in isolation. w Use the ‘pre-test ww Time Troponins course probability’ of acute MI (history, ECG, and echo findings) both at presentation and over time to help interpret troponin levels t et pain, a raised troponin is usually nchest net History patients with cardiac-sounding .ne Indiagnostic . . X X X of ACS. Remember that diabetics, the elderly, and females ok ok confusion, othek chest)can atypically (weakness, nausea, pain outside o o Bo Levels present B B While cardiac- chest pain and a markedly.raised troponin w.sounding should w be treated as MI until proven otherwise, and wwmyocarditis w cardiomyopathy can also causewboth. ww Takotsubo There are many causes of moderately raised troponins Trend t Acute MI causes a sharp rise in troponin 1–2 days, falling again over t t overhelp e 3–5 days. The value over time.can etherefore determine the cause n n . .ne X X X is excreted renally and during times of haemodynamic ok PMH Troponin okdemand ok‘leak’stressfrom (ie when cardiac oxygen outstrips supply). It cano also o Bo B B the myocardium, overt cardiac necrosis. Causes of a raised . withoutcritical wtherefore w. cardiac troponin are illness, renal (AKI, CKD), (acute MI, w w heart failure, arrhythmias, myocarditis), respiratory (hypoxia, pulmonary w w ww embolism), haematological (anaemia), neurological (ischaemic stroke, and trauma (cardiac contusion, electrical cardioversion). t haemorrhage), The PMH is therefore vital in interpreting e et a troponin level in context.net n n . . who may present atypically (females, elderly, diabetics) XECGs Inor patients X kX who cannot provide history (agitated, comatose, lowoGCS, ok oandkatroponin o o o dementia), the ECG levels become more important. B .B for evidence of MI (pathological Inspect serial wECGs w.BQ waves), ischaemia (T-wave inversion/flattening, ST w depression), and coronary w w (T-wave normalization/flipping,wchanging ST segments) ww instability An echo can show features in keeping with acute MI (new loss of viable new regional wall motion et myocardium, et abnormalities, though there.net n n are other causes of these) and other differential diagnoses (eg aortic . . X X cardiomyopathy) X pulmonary embolism, ok Bleeding dissection, obekbalanced against oin ksuspected o o o Bleeding risk should thrombosis risk B .Bwhere there is diagnostic uncertainty. ACS, especially w w.BExclude aortic dissection and talk to seniors before startingw ACS treatment w w w ww Echo B .B w w .B w w wCardiovascular 250 ww w Chapter 7 t t et (ST elevation MI) (E 3 .nSTEMI .neOHCM10 E p. 120.) X.ne X X k failure, AV block, cardiac dysrhythmia. signs Features ofoLV ok 2 WorryingCentral, ok to left o o crushing, heavy chest pain/tightness, ±radiating Bo Symptoms B B arm/jaw, shortness anxiety. wof. breath, nausea, sweating,wpalpitations, w. w Risk factors Smoking, obesity, DM, iBP, icholesterol, FH, previous IHD. ww w w Signs Tachycardia, cool and sweaty (‘clammy’), ±LV failure or hypotension. Investigations ECG ST elevation (>1mm int2 or more contiguous limb leads or etin chest e et >2mm leads) or new LBBB; subsequent Q waves ±T-wave.n invern n . . LV failure; Troponin WillX be raised Xsion (Fig. 7.1); CXR Cardiomegaly, kXsignsasofECG ok but treatment should not obeowithheld ok alone are findings and o history o B sufficient to make the.diagnosis and early treatment is vital. wforBreperfusion w.B Acute treatmentw Aim by percutaneous coronary intervenw tion (PCI; angiography with stenting or balloon w w angioplasty) within 12h ww of onset and 2h of first presentation to ED so seek senior help. Give O (15L/mtin), aspirin (300mg), a P2Y inhibitor ticagrelor, 60mg e or 600mg clopidogrel— eseet local (180mg et prasugrel, protocol), diamorphine n n n . . . X 5mg IV), antiemetic (Ekp.X188), and GTN (two puffs SL/ Xmin until ok (2.5– o pain after three SL doses and onotk 5hypotenpain free; infusion if ongoing o o o B sive E p. 203). Consider if PCI cannot.B occur within 2h of w(E.Bpp. thrombolysis wbisoprolol first presentation 550–1). β-blockadew (eg 5–10mg/ w w infarct size and mortalitywbut avoid in COPD, asthma, ww PO STAT) reduces 1 2 12 hypotension, AV block, and heart failure. See Box 7.1. Secondary prophylaxis dmodifiable risk factors (smoking, obesity, DM, iBP, ichol), β-blocker, statin, anti-platelets (aspirin indefinitely, P2Y12 inhibitor usually for at least 1yr), ACEi, and anti-anginals (β-blockers, amlodipine, nitrates, nicorandil, ranolazine, revascularization). Complications Dysrhythmias (AV block, bradycardia, VF/VT), LVF, valve prolapse, ventricular septal/free wall rupture, ventricular aneurysm, pericarditis, Dressler’s syndrome (E OHAM4 p. 154), and recurrent pain. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B et .n kX .n kX o o w.B ww ww et .n kX ww et .n kX Hours oo Days Weeks .BooMonths B . Fig. 7.1 Typical sequential w STEMI. ww ECG changes followingwanwacute w ww Box 7.1 Care after myocardial infarction • Bedtrest for 48h with continuous ECG symptom monitoring t e 12-lead ECG and thorough.nclinical et andexamination •.n Daily of CVS/RS.ne X• Thromboembolism prophylaxis X (E pp. 420–2) X ok • β-blockade unless contraindicated, ok with uptitration ook o o B • ACEi/angiotensin .IIB receptor antagonist, with uptitration .B • High dose statinw (eg atorvastatin 80mg PO OD)w w w • Discuss modifiable w risk factors and arrangewcardiac rehabilitation ww •Primary PCI patients are at lower risk of complications and have shorter patients twill require risk stratification andt et stays; thrombolysis consideration for inpatient angiography n . .ne in those with new dysrhythmias .ne X X X • Consider electrophysiological studies k ok okand 3mth to review symptoms, in OP clinic at o 5wk oo lipids+BP, Bo •Review B B and optimize cardiovascular risk (E OHCM10 p. 114). . . w w ww ww ww Bo o et .n kX Normal NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG167 1 B .B w w .B w w w w w w 251 Chest pain t t t 3NSTEMI (non-ST elevation .ne .ne MI) .ne X X X and interventionkare often less ‘dramatic’ thankfor STEMI, ok K Diagnosis o ooas markedly 1yr survival is poorer.oHigh TIMI/GRACE scores, as well Bo but B B . . raised troponins, ongoing pain, dynamic ECG changes, and a large area w all suggest higher risk w w of affected myocardium (Box 7.2); ask cardiology w w patients needing emergencywPCI (E OHAM4 p. 44). ww early to identify 2 Worrying signs LV failure, AV block, cardiac dysrhythmia, ongoing pain. Symptoms, et risk factors, and signs Overlap et with STEMI; patients are.older, et n n n . . more comorbid, and present more atypically. X X X ok Investigations ECG Can beonormal ok or show ST depression,ooT-kwave invero of changes; CXR B sion/flattening/normalization, .B or complete resolution w.Bfrom UA by raised w Cardiomegaly, signsw of LV failure; Troponin K Differentiate w w troponin (Tables to local protocols, typically on w w 7.2 and 7.3); taken according w presentation and 6–12h after maximum symptom onset. Echo To assess for loss of viable myocardium, regional wall motion structural comt et of MI, et(eg PE,a­ bnormalities, plications and differential diagnoses aortic dissection). .ne n n . . X treatment O (15L/min), aspirin X clopidogrel (300mg), diamorkX ok Acute ok(E p.(300mg), oSL/ phine (2.5–5mg IV), antiemetic 188), GTN (two puffs 5min until o o o B pain free; infusion ifwongoing B not hypo.B pain after three SL doses, w.provided tensive E p. 203), and anticoagulation (2.5mg w fondaparinux E p. 420). w w wbisoprolol 5–10mg STAT) butw β-blockade (eg beware patients with COPD, w 2 2 3 asthma, hypotension, AV block, or heart failure. Consider glycoprotein IIb/ IIIa inhibitors and urgent PCI if high risk/chest pain despite GTN infusion. Secondary prophylaxis and complications These are broadly the same as in STEMI, though complications are less common. et et .n kX .n kX oo oo B B . . K Box 7.2 Risk in ACS w ww stratification Estimation of in ACS allows assessment wmortality wwof the risks and benefits ww of interventions and careful targeting of resources to those patients who stand to the most. Many validated been developedt t benefit emajor et scoresInhave e from trial data, including the Thrombolysis Myocardial Infarction n n . . .nThe X X X (TIMI) score. However, many such trials had restricted entry criteria. k develok Global Registry of Acute Coronary ok Events (GRACE) algorithms owere o o Bo oped B B from a large registry . (94 hospitals, 14 countries, . 22,645 patients) w wNSTEMI, involving patients with all subtypes of ACS (STEMI, and UA). w w ww Risk scoresw can be calculated on admissionw (to predict in hospital and 6mth mortality) and on discharge (to predict 6mth mortality). t and a cardiology opinion for 2 High- Will need a CCUebed et risk patients et n n . . consideration of glycoprotein IIb/ IIIa inhibitors and urgent PCI. .n X intermediate-risk patients Require X observation to ensure painkXfree and ok Low/ okrisk stratification o or CT o o oimaging clinically stable, then further stress B B .B to determine need forwithelective . coronary calcium w scoring, PCI. w ww ww ww Bo o et .n kX 4 5 t e X.n 3 ok Bo t t NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG94 Use unfractionated heparin infusion if angiography is planned within 24h, or if significant bleeding risk (consider in frail elderly, active/recent bleeding complications, significant renal impairment or those with extreme low body mass). 4 Antman EM, et al. JAMA 2000;284:835 available free online at Mjama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/ full/284/7/835 See also the excellent collection of resources available free at Mwww.timi.org 5 Granger CB, et al. Arch Intern Med 2003;163:2345 available free online at Marchinte.ama-assn. org/cgi/content/full/163/19/2345 2 e X.n ok ww o B . w e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w wCardiovascular 252 ww w Chapter 7 t t et angina 3 .nUnstable .ne .ne X X X based on typical history ok K Diagnosis ok without raised troponin (EoOHAM4 ok p. 44). Worrying signs Featuresoof LV failure, cardiac dysrhythmia. Bo 2Symptoms, B B . and signs These overlap withwother . forms of ACS; risk factors, w w w typically episodes of angina occurring on minimal provocation or at rest, w to GTN; more frequent and w more severe than patient’s ww with poor response ‘usual’ angina; few symptoms or signs between episodes of pain. t Investigations inversion/flipping, dynamic et ECG ST depression, T-w.ave eflattening/ et n n n . . ST/ T - w ave changes over time, signs of previous MI; Troponins −ve. X treatment As for NSTEMI X(E pp. 251–2); analgesiak(morphine, X ok Acute ok(aspirin, o o o o GTN), antiplatelet agents clopidogrel), limit ischaemia (β- B .Bthrombus (fondaparinux).wRisk .B stratify, further blockade), and disrupt w w secondary prophylaxis as w management forw NSTEMI (E pp. 251–2). ww wand Stable angina (E OHCM10 p. 116.) K Frequently encountered in primaryecare, t retrosternal chest discomfort et predictably et n occurring upon exertion.n and relieved by rest and nitrates..n . X X X Central, heavy chest ok Symptoms ok pain (lasting <15min) radiating okto left arm o and jaw, precipitated by o exertion and relieved by rest oro rapidly by GTN B .B (<5min), shortness nausea, sweating, palpitations. wof.forBbreath, wsevere w w Risk factors Common IHD; see ACS (E p. 249); aortic stenosis. w w ww 6 Signs Tachycardia, cool and sweaty (‘clammy’), pallor. Normal after episode. See Box 7.3. Investigations ECG Transient ST depression during pain; flat or inverted T waves; signs of previous MI; Troponin Not elevated (if elevated, diagnosis is NSTEMI). CT coronary angiogram if first presentation of typical chest pain or atypical symptoms with ECG findings (ST changes or Q waves). Functional testing if positive CTCA or previous CAD (eg myocardial perfusion scan, SPECT imaging, stress echo, or cardiac MRI). Invasive coronary angiogram if inconclusive functional test.7 Acute treatment Pain relief with rest and GTN is characteristic. If pain lasting >15min, investigate and treat as for NSTEMI/UA. Prophylaxis Assessment/ reduction of modifiable risk factors (smoking, obesity, DM, BP, cholesterol), statin, aspirin, ACEi, anti-anginals (β-blockade, calcium channel blockers, nitrates, nicorandil, ranolazine, revascularization). et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww ww ww K Box 7.3 Angina with normal coronaries? Throughout your career, you will encounter numerous patients with atypical chest pain who require basic investigations to exclude serious pathology and subsequent reassurance. However, some patients experience convincing ischaemic heart pain despite angiographically normal coronary arteries. In this situation, considerations include coronary artery spasm (Prinzmetal’s angina), cocaine-induced vasospasm, microvascular angina (post-menopausal women with perfusion defects on functional imaging), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypertension, and aortic stenosis. t t e X.n ok Bo ok ok ww t t e X.n ok e X.n o w.B ww Bo t e X.n o w.B ok o B . w ww ww t e X.n NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG126 7 See NICE guidelines at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG95 6 ww ok o B . w ww e X.n ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chest pain w 253 t t et dissection 3 .nAortic .ne .ne X X X you suspect aortic dissection, k get help and arrange an urgent ok K If OHCM10 oOHAM4 ok CT aorta o o p. 654, or E p. 142.) Bo (E B B . severe chest pain, anterior . or interscapular, Symptoms Sudden- wonset wneurological w w tearing in nature, dizziness, breathlessness, sweating, deficits. w w ww Risk factors Smoking, obesity, DM, iBP, icholesterol, FH, previous IHD. Signs Unequal radial pulses, tachycardia, hypotension/hypertension, difetin brachial pressures of ≥15mmHg, et aortic regurgitation, pleural et ference n n n . . . effusion (L>R), neurological deficits from carotid artery dissection. X X X ischaemia ok Investigations ECG Normal okor may show LV strain/ ok (E o o o mediastinum >8cm (rarely irregularity B pp. 586–8); CXR Widened .Bseen),from w.B wdevelop of aortic knuckle and small left pleural effusion can blood w w tracking down; Echo May show aortic root leak, aortic valve regurgitation, ww w w or pericardial effusion. Urgent CT/ MR angiography/ transoesophageal echo. Acute treatment Seek senior help. Hypotensive Treat as shock (E pp. 490– t t e X-match 6 units, analgesia e(IVt 5)..n Oe(15L/min), two large-bore cannulae, n n . . Xopioids). Hypertensive Aim to keep Xsystolic BP <100mmHg (Ekpp.X272–3). ok Further treatment Surgeryo(for oktype A: involves the ascending or o ooaortaaorta) B conservative management B B (for type B: involves descending only). . . w w Musculoskeletal ww chest pain ww ww B 2 Symptoms Localized chest wall pain, worse on movement and/ or breathing, recent trauma or exertion (eg lifting). Signs Focal tenderness, erythema, absence of other signs in CVS or RS. Investigations ECG Normal (no ischaemia/MI); CXR Normal (no pneumothorax); D-dimer Normal and low probability PE (E p. 284). Acute treatment Reassurance and simple analgesia (E pp. 88–91). Chronic treatment Should settle in 2wk, avoid further injury (eg heavy lifting), regular analgesia to permit ADLs, deep breathing and coughing (to prevent chest infection). Stop smoking. Pericarditis (E OHAM4 p. 150.) Symptoms Pleuritic chest pain, worse on lying flat and deep inspiration, relieved by sitting forwards, fever, recent viral illnesses. Signs May be no abnormalities, ±pericardial rub. Exclude tamponade. Investigations ECG Saddle-shaped ST in most leads (Fig. 7.2); blds iWCC and inflammatory markers, ±iviral titres, troponin; Echo bright pericardium ± pericardial effusion; exclude tamponade and purulent pericarditis. Acute treatment Reassurance and analgesia; paracetamol, NSAIDs. High troponin suggests myopericarditis, but treat as ACS until proven otherwise. Chronic treatment Usually settles in 2–4wk. If recurrent, discuss with cardiology and consider cardiac MRI/colchicine/steroids. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . kX ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o Bo .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k o w.B ww t .ne X ok .Bo oo B . w Fig. 7.2 Typical saddle- ww ww shaped ST segment seen inwpericarditis. ww B 254 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t et et .nTachyarrhythmia .nemergency .ne 2 X X X ok ok oakdjuncts o o Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ Bo 22 Airway B B wIf no. respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w. TEAM Breathing w w ARREST TEAM 2 Circulation w If no palpable pulse—CALL w ww 22Call et for senior help early if patient et‘unstable’ (Fig. 7.3): .net n n . . X X X of an unstable patient ok 2• Signs ok ok o o o Reduced conscious level • Chest pain B • Systolic BP <90mmHg • Heart w.B w.Bfailure. w w w w ww • Sit patient up unless hypotensive, then lay flat with legs elevated • 15L/ O if SOB or sats <94% t etminpulse e pads if unwell et • .n Monitor oximeter, BP, defibrillator n n . . X• Request full set of observations X and ECG ok • Take brief history if possible/ ok check notes/ask ward staffookX o o B • Examine patient: condensed RS, ±abdo exam.B w.Band ruleCVS, w • Establish likely causes out serious causes w • Initiate further w treatment E p. 255 ww ww B 2 • Venous access, take bloods: • VBG, FBC, U+E, D-dimer, troponin, TFT, lactate, magnesium, calcium • Consider requesting urgent CXR, portable if too unwell • Call for senior help • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww 2 Life-threatening causes o Bo • • • • • t .ne X k • t o o w.B t e X.n ok Bo et n . kX o .ne X k secondary to shock, including PE iatrogenic (drugs). ww .ne X k oo B . w ww t ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et .n kX ww o o w.B ww w Ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation (VF) Torsades de pointes Supraventricular tachycardia with haemodynamic compromise Fast atrial fibrillation/flutter with haemodynamic compromise Sinus tachycardia: • Bo t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww e X.n Up to 3 attempts t .ne kX • Amiodarone 300 mg IV over 10–20 min • Repeat shock • Then give amiodarone 900 mg over 24 h X.n k o o w.B ww • Shock • Syncope net X. k ww t et e X.n k Irregular ww Possibilities include: • AF with bundle branch block treat as for narrow complex • Pre-excited AF consider amiodarone t .ne No - Stable et n . X ok If VT (or uncertain rhythm): • Amiodarone 300 mg IV over 20– 60 min then 900 mg over 24 h w ww If known to be SVT with bundle branch block: • Treat as for regular narrowcomplex tachycardia o w.B .Bo w w Narrow QRS Is rhythm regular? Regular • Vagal manoeuvres • Adenosine 6 mg rapid IV bolus if no effect give 12 mg if no effect give further 12 mg • Monitor/record ECG continuously et n . X ok o .B t e X.n t et n . X ok Narrow o w.B ok !o B . w Seek expert help ww Regular w ww ww • Myocardial ischaemia • Heart failure Broad Is QRS regular? o o w.B ww et n . X ww Probable re-entry paroxysmal SVT: o B . w Seek expert help Possible atrial flutter: ! et n . X k ok No • Record 12-lead ECG in sinus rhythm • If SVT recurs treat again and consider anti-arrhythmic prophylaxis w Probable AF: • Control rate with beta-blocker or diltiazem • If in heart failure consider digoxin or amiodarone • Assess thromboembolic risk and consider anticoagulation Sinus rhythm achieved? Yes Irregular ok ww oo B . w e X.n TACHYARRHYTHMIA EMERGENCY oo B . w Adverse features? et X.n k o .Bo .n kX Is QRS narrow (< 0.12 s)? Broad QRS w ww ww ! Seek expert help Assess using the ABCDE approach Monitor SpO2 and give oxygen if hypoxic Monitor ECG and BP, and record 12-lead ECG Obtain IV access Identify and treat reversible causes (e.g. electrolyte abnormalities) Yes - Unstable Synchronised DC Shock* o .Bo oo B . w o w.B ww ww et et ok ok o w.B • • • • et et et X.n t et ww ww ww ww ww • Control rate (e.g. with beta-blocker) 255 t t t t .ne .ne .ne .ne Fig. 7.3 Adult tachycardia (with a pulse) algorithm; 2015 guidelines. X X X X X k of the Resuscitation Council ok Reproduced with the kindoopermission ok (UK). ok ok o o o o B B B B B w. w. w. w. w. w w w w w w w w w w * Conscious patients require sedation or general anaesthesia for cardioversion B .B w ww 256 Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t .ne .ne .ne Tachyarrhythmias X X X ok Worrying featuresodGCS, ok dBP (systolic <90mmHg), okchest pain, o Bo 2heart B B failure, broad w.QRS complexes. w. w w w Common Sinus tachycardia,wAF or flutter with fast venThink about tricular response, AV nodal re-entrant tachycardia. Uncommon Ventricular tachycardia re-entrant tachycardia (eg accessory pathway/ et (VT), WAVhite), et Non- et n n n . . . Wolff–Parkinson– atrial tachycardia. cardiac causes Beware X X shock, pain, anxiety, PE.kX ok appropriate tachycardia oin oegksepsis, o oofobreath, dizziAsk about Onset, .associated Sx (chest pain, shortness B B B . w Cardiac problems ness, palpitations, w collapse), previous episodes; PMH (IHD, valvular lesions, hypertension), thyroid disease, DM; DH Cardiac ww ww drugs, levothyroxine, salbutamol, anticholinergics, caffeine, nicotine, allergies; SH Smoking, alcohol, recreational drug use. AF risk factors iBP, coronary artery and valvular heart disease, pulmonary embolism, pneumonia, thyrotoxicosis, alcohol, sepsis. Sinus tachycardia risk factors Shock (hypovolaemic, cardiogenic, septic, anaphylactic, spinal), pain/anxiety, fever, drugs (levothyroxine, salbutamol, anticholinergics, caffeine, nicotine, cocaine). et n . X ok Bo et n . X ok o B . w ww ww ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww Obs Pulse (check apical pulse as radial can underestimate), BP, cap refill, ww RR, O2 sats, GCS, temp, cardiac monitor. t t t Look ‘unstable’; .ne for Any ‘worrying features’ .ne classify arrhythmia as X .ne X X k ok E Fig. 7.3, p. 255.ECG Powaves ok before each QRS implyoosinus rhythm, Bo Investigations B B . clear P waves implies AF, w . tooth baseline ­irregular QRS without saw- imw wrate of ≥140 (narrow complexes) w suggests SVT (including plies atrial flutter, w w ww flutter with 2:1 block), broad regular complexes suggests VT (always check for a pulse) (Fig. 7.4 and Tables 7.4 and 7.5); blds FBC, U+E, TFT, CRP, t suspected), troponin,nMget , Ca , others as indicated bynesus-t D-dnimer . e(eg(ifX-PEmatch picion if haemorrhage); X X. ABG and CXR Only once treatment X. has k been initiated or if results k k are likely to alter management; Echo If suspected o o o Bo large PE, acute valvewlesion, .Bo poor LV or pericardial effusion. .Bo w Treatment w w ww ww 2+ In all patients • Airway, Breathing (with O2), Circulation (HR, BP and capillary refill) • IV access (two large-bore cannula in both antecubital fossa) • Obtain ECG or view trace on defibrillator to decide on rhythm • If hypotensive or dizzy lay flat with legs up—call for senior help • If semi-conscious lay in recovery position—call senior/2 ARREST TEAM. t e X.n ok Bo 2+ .ne X k t et n . X k oo oo B B . . w Specific arrhythmias ww w wwEstablish and treat cause, egw Sinus tachycardia shock, sepsis (E pp. 490–5). w AF Old or new AF? Consider urgent rate/rhythm control (E p. 258). SVT Usually et time to call for help and egett drugs ready (E p. 259)..net n VT.n no pulse 3Call ARREST TEAM and start BLS/ALS (E p. 230). . X with pulse If haemodynamically X X attempt chemical cardioversion ok VT ok Estable, ok will need (eg amiodarone or beta-bolocker p. 186); if fails or if unstable, o o B .B low GCS. DC cardioversion (E w.Bp. 546), with sedation orwGAwunless w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Tachyarrhythmias w 257 t t t .ne 7.4 ECG features of tachyarrhythmias .ne .ne Table X X X ok ok P waves Broad/narrow ok Rate o Regular o Bo Sinus tachycardia w B B . >100 Narrow BBB)* ✓ ✓ w. (unless w w Fast AF >100 Narrow (unless BBB)* ✘ ✘ w ≥140 w ww SVT ✓ ✓or ✘ Narrow (unless BBB)* VT (with ✓ t ✘ Wide, not typical BBB QRS* et pulse) ≥150 ealways et n n . . VT (pulseless) As for ‘VT with pulse’; perform a pulse-check .n X X (carotid) kX ok VF o ok o o Chaotico irregular electrical activity; never has a pulse B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B .B strip) ECG, lead II view w.B w(rhythm w w w w ww Sinus tachycardia B *80% of wide complex tachycardias (WCT) are ventricular (VT) and 20% are supraventricular (90% VT if previous CAD). Supraventricular rhythms can produce a WCT if there is bundle branch block (BBB; ‘aberrancy’) or an accessory pathway (‘pre-excitation’), as part of the heart is depolarized from outside the conduction system, and therefore more slowly. Because 1) it is difficult to distinguish VT from SVT with aberrancy/pre-excitation on the ECG, 2) treatments are similar, and 3) VT is a more unstable rhythm, if there is any doubt at all a WCT should be treated as VT until proven otherwise. t .ne X k Fast AF oo SVT o Bo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww t .ne X k o ww ok Bo o Bo oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww t Torsades de pointes et n . kX et .ne X k VT with or without a pulse et n . VF X ww w t o w.B t .ne X k Fig. 7.4 Typical appearance of various tachyarrhythmias. w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wCardiovascular 258 ww w Chapter 7 t t t Atrial .ne fibrillation (AF) (EXOHAM4 .ne p. 72.) .ne X X signs Heart failure, hypotension, dGCS or chest pain. ok 2 WorryingPalpitations, okheart ok malaise. o o SOB, failure, chest pains,B dizziness, Bo Symptoms B . . Risk factors/cause Previous age, acutew illness, valvular disease, ww AF, increasing w heart failure,wcardiomyopathy, IHD, acute MI, cardiac surgery, HTN, PE, ww w pneumonia, COPD, thyrotoxicosis, alcohol, caffeine, and any acute illness. Signs Irreg irreg pulse, hypotension if compromised, signs of a cause/risk factors. et ECG Absent P waves,.nirreg et irreg QRS complexes; blds.nFBC et Investigations n . , Ca , ±D-dimer (PE), troponin X(iWCC), U+E, TFT, alcohol,kXMg X (if Heart size, oedema, pneumonia; ok possible ischaemic cause);ooCXR ok Echo LV o o dilatation/impairment, LA volume, valvular lesion. CTCA to exclude CAD. B w.B w.B Treatment w w w compromise Seek immediate w help. Treat with shock ww 2 Haemodynamic (E p. 546); O , IV access, DC cardioversion; if unsuccessful, amiodarone IV ±further et cardioversion. Chronic AF.nvery et unlikely to cause compromise: edot n n not shock, but consider other causes of compromise, eg sepsis. . . X X X stable Treatment include: ok •Haemodynamically ok newoptions ok o o Conservative: if AF is probably and the precipitant o is obvious then B .Bclose monitoring may suffice. .B treating the cause wand w • Rate control:w if not, rate (<110bpm) over rhythm control (cardioverting w w w ww 8 2+ 2+ 2 to SR) is first line because symptoms are usually rate-related, rate-controlling medications are safer more successful drugs, and anticoagulation usually continues regardless. Beta-blockers (E p. 191) or non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (E p. 193) are first line, adding digoxin if needed (E p. 199). Consider pacemaker ±ablation if flipping from sinus bradycardia to fast pAF (tachy-brady). • Rhythm control: reverting to and staying in SR is less likely in old age, established AF, LA dilatation, and mitral valve disease, but younger patients with new AF and normal hearts may achieve and maintain SR, so could be spared the risks of AF cardiomyopathy and long-term anticoagulation. Also, if there are disabling symptoms or AF-induced heart failure, rhythm control should be tried with DC/chemical cardioversion (flecainide/sotalol if no structural heart disease, or amiodarone) first, and AF ablation second. Anticoagulation Almost all patients with AF need lifelong anticoagulation, including the 4wk prior to DC cardioversion (unless TOE excludes LA thrombus)/4wk afterwards (due to atrial stunning). Exceptions are patients with strong preferences, excessive bleeding risk (eg HASBLED score),9 contraindications, very low stroke risk (CHA2DS2VASc score of 0 in men, 1 in women)10 or in sustained SR (discuss with cardiology). Options include non-vitamin K oral anticoagulants (NOACs, eg apixaban, dabigatran, edoxaban, and rivaroxaban), warfarin, or dalteparin (E pp. 420–2). Aspirin should not be used as monotherapy for stroke prevention. Complications Thromboembolic disease (eg ischaemic stroke). Drug side effects (amiodarone, warfarin, NOACs, β-blockers, digoxin, etc). et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B ok o w.B ww t t e X.n 9 ok e X.n ok ww o B . w ww t e X.n e X.n NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG180 HASBLED score: 1 point for each of uncontrolled HTN >160mmHg, abnormal renal/liver function, stroke, bleeding predisposition/anaemia, labile INRs, elderly >65yr and drugs (alcohol, anti-platelets, NSAIDs). Aim to reduce bleeding risk than avoid anticoagulation. 10 CHA2DS2VASc score: 1 point for each of CCF, HTN, DM, vascular disease, age 65–74yr and female sex category. 2 points for each of age >75yr and stroke/TIA. After assessing and reducing the bleeding risk, the stroke risk outweighs the anticoagulation risks for patients with AF and a CHA2DS2VASc score of 2 or more (‘consider’ anticoagulation in men with 1 point). 8 ww t e X.n ww Bo .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Tachyarrhythmias w 259 t t t Atrial .ne flutter .ne .ne X X X tooth’ flutter waves reflecting activity, with ventricular k response ok K ‘Saw 150bpm. oksimilar atrial osuccessful o o Management to AF, except drugs less and Bo around B B . . p. 78). electrical and ablative cardioversion more so (E OHAM4 w w Supraventricular ww tachycardia (SVT)ww ww 2 Worrying signs Heart failure, hypotension, dGCS, or chest pain (E OHAM4 p. 68). et Palpitations, et et n n Symptoms shortness of.nbreath, dizziness, ±chest pains. . . X factors Previous SVT, structural X X ok Risk ok cardiac anomaly, alcohol, okiT . o Signs Tachycardia, anxiety,ohypotension if haemodynamicocompromise. B Investigations ECG Narrow .B complex tachycardia (unless wmay w.Bconcurrent BBB) w w w with P waves (which merge into QRST so be difficult to see), regular w rate usually ≥140; Further investigations w QRS complexes, Only required if w diagnosis in question, otherwise initiate treatment as follows. t Acute etreatment O , large-bore IV access et (antecubital fossa). Monitor et n n n . . . rhythm on defibrillator: X manoeuvres (E p. 545)kX X ok •• Vagal o ok o o o Chemical (E p. 545). B Chronic treatment Ifwrecurrent, .B seek cardiology advicewas.Bmay require elecw w trophysiological testing of cardiac conduction ablation. w wpathways/ ww 4 2 Complications Hypotension, ischaemia, heart failure in individuals with existing cardiac disease, deterioration into more sinister arrhythmia. t t et Wolff– .ne Parkinson–White syndrome .ne (WPW) (E OHAM4 .p.n80.) X X X This is a re- entrant ok Aetiologywhich ok tachyok o o results from an accessory Bo cardia B B . conduction pathway between the atria w(bundle w. w w and the ventricles of Kent). w w ww It classically appears as a short PR interval and a δ/delta wave (shown by t t t arrowein .n Fig. 7.5). .ne .ne Treatment Avoid digoxin and verapamil. X X X ok Refer to a cardiologist oforokconsiderok o studies and Bo ation of electrophysiology B B Fig. 7.5 δ wave w.pathway. w. in WPW. ablation of accessory w w w w w w Table 7.5 Anti-dysrhythmics commonly used in tachyarrhythmias t discussion with a senior.net 3These et drugs should only be used eafter n n . . (should LoadingX dose 300mg/over 60min IVI via central Xline. line kXAmiodarone k k be given via a central followed by 900mg/over 24h IVI via central o o o o12h PO forOR but can be given Bo 200mg/8h PO for 1wk then 200mg/ Bo vein, B . . peripherally in an w 1wk then Maintenance dose 200mg/ w 24h PO emergency) ww ww ww Verapamil (avoid if patient 5mg/over 2min IV; further 0.5–1mg doses every on β-blockers) 5min until target rate achieved (total maximum 20mg) OR 40–120mg/8h PO et n . kX et n . kX t .ne X k o obedoduring IV administration of these.agents. oo Bo Patient must be in a monitored B B . w w ww ww Flecainide (not if patient has IHD) 2mg/kg/over 10min IV (maximum 150mg) OR 100–200mg/12h PO ww B 260 .B w ww Chapter 7 Cardiovascular .B w w ww w t t et OHAM4 p. 62.) Ventricular tachycardia (VT) .ne .n(E .ne X X X (>30s), k symptomatic, heart failure, ok 2 Worrying signs Sustainedorooabsent ok hypotenpulse (pulseless VT). o Bo sion, dGCS, chestwpain, B B . w.±chest pain, arrest. w Symptoms Palpitations, dizziness, shortness of breath, w w w trauma, hypoxia, acidosis, longwQT, electrolyte disturbances. w Risk factors IHD, Signs Tachycardia, anxiety, pallor, hypotension, dGCS, shock. et ECG Broad complex .tachycardia, et P waves not before.nevery et n n Investigations . X rate usually >150; bldskX X K ), urgent TSH, U+E (especially ok QRS, o Check ok situation and Mg ; Other investigations Should be directed by o clinical o o B though cardioversion.B w is main priority at this stage. w.B w w Acute treatment w 2 Call senior help. w ww 3 Pulseless VT Call ARREST TEAM. Commence BLS/ALS (E pp. 232–3). VT with eta pulse O , large-bore IV cannula et in antecubital fossa; restoration eort n n of.n sinus rhythm with either drugs (eg sotalol, amiodarone loading) . . X cardioversion (under sedation X X low GCS). ok DC oekxcitationunless ok o o o Either SVT with aberrancy/ p re- or VT Treat as VT. B .B w.Bmay need drug therapy w Chronic treatment This to w maintain sinus rhythm, w electrophysiological w studies/ablation or implantable w cardioverter/defib- ww + 2+ 2 rillator (E OHAM4 p. 62). Try to keep Mg >0.9 and K >4.0. t VF (or other dysrhythmia), t tachycardia cardiomyopathy. t Complications .ne .ne .ne Torsades de pointes X X X k axis (E p. 257). Develops ok This looks like VF but hasoaorotating ok on backo Bo ground of iQT interval B B 7.6). Give Mg sulphate 2g/IV (8mmol) win.small(Table w. saline) over 15min (dilute volume, eg 50mL ofw0.9% ±overdrive w pacing (E OHAM4 w p. 64). w ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2+ Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Tachyarrhythmias w 261 t t et .ne 7.6 Causes of prolongedXQT.ninterval .ne Table X X k rate ok QTc = QT/√(RR interval)—thisoallows ok correction of the QT interval forooheart on an ECG trace. Bo and is usually calculatedwautomatically B B . . <450ms (♀) are wand Normal QTc Values are gender specific: values <430ms (♂) w w considered normal; values >450ms (♂) and >470ms (♀) are abnormal; values w w ww in between these are borderline. There is a dose–response relationship between risk of cardiac death and prolongation of QTc.* et etsyndrome (autosomal dominant), et Congenital Romano–W ard n n n . . . Jervell,X Lange–Nielsen syndrome (autosomal X recessive ok ok associated with deafness) ookX o o B Drugs dysrhythmics (amiodarone, w.B Anti- w.Bsotalol,haloperidol, quinidine), psychoactives (thioridazine, w w fluoxetine), antihistamines w w (terfenadine, loratadine), ww antimicrobials (erythromycin, clarithromycin, fluconazole) t e et et Electrolyte disturbance dK , dMg n , dCa n n . . . Complete XSevere bradycardia X heart block, sinus bradycardiakX ok IHD ok myocarditis o Ischaemia, o o B B Subarachnoid haemorrhagew.Bo iintracranial bleed w. et al. J Am wwColl Cardiol ww ww B + *Straus, M. 2+ 2+ . 2006;47:362 available free online. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 262 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t et .nBradyarrhythmia .neemergency X.ne 2 X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Airway B B Check . airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ w w. TEAMadjuncts 2 Breathing w If no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww 2 Circulation et for senior help early if patient ethas ‘adverse features’ (Fig..7.6): et 3Call n n n . . X X X ok 2 Adverse features/features ok ok o o o B • Systolic BP <90mmHg • Ischaemic chest.B w.B w pain • Syncope w • Heart failure. w ww ww • Sit patient hypotensive/dizzy, t then lay flat with legs elevated emt in Oupif unless et • 15L/ SOB or sats <94% ne n n . . . • Monitor pulse oximeter, BP, defibrillator’s ECG leads if very unwell X X kX ok •Request full set of observations ok and ECG with long rhythm ostrip o o o • Take brief history if.B possible/check notes/ask ward.B staff B • Examine patientw : condensed CVS, RS, abdo examw w w •Establish likely w causes and rule out serious causes w ww B 2 • Consider IV atropine, 500micrograms, repeat at 2–3min intervals (max 3mg) • Initiate further treatment, including transcutaneous pacing, see following sections • Venous access, take bloods: • VBG, FBC, U+E, LFT, troponin, TFT, lactate, calcium, magnesium • Consider requesting urgent CXR, portable if too unwell • Call for senior help. • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t et .ne .ne 2.n Life-threatening causes X X X k block (±following MI) ok ok • Complete (3rd-degree)ooheart • Möbitz type II Bo •Pauses B . .Bo w >3s on w ECG w • Hypoxia w in children. ww ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww t .ne X k • • • • o Bo Yes Bo o w.B t ok Satisfactory response ? • ok • • • o B . w Consider interim measures : Atropine 500 mcg IV repeat to maximum of 3 mg OR Transcutaneous pacing OR Isoprenaline 5 mcg min–1 IV Adrenaline 2–10 mcg min–1 IV Alternative drugs* ww t • Yes • • o!k o B w. et X.n Seek expert help Arrange transvenous pacing ww ww .ne X ok ok • et X.n et n . X Yes ww .B w ww ww No o et n . kX oo No Atropine 500 mcg IV et n . X .n kX ww e X.n w 263 et Adverse features ? • Myocardial ischaemia • Heart failure o w.B ok Bo t .ne X k Assess using the ABCDE approach Monitor SpO2 and give oxygen if hypoxic Monitor ECG and BP, and record 12-lead ECG Obtain IV access Identify and treat reversible causes (e.g. electrolyte abnormalities) • Shock • Syncope et n . kX w w BRADYARRHYTHMIA EMERGENCY oo B . w ww o Bo .B w w • o B . w ww Risk of asystole? Recent asystole Mobitz II AV block Complete heart block with broad QRS Ventricular pause > 3 s No oo B . ww ww t .ne X k Continue observation w * Alternatives include: • Aminophylline • Dopamine • Glucagon (if bradycardia is caused by beta-blocker or calcium channel blocker) • Glycopyrronium bromide (may be used instead of atropine) ww t t netguidelines. .ne .2015 .ne Fig. 7.6 Adult bradycardia algorithm; X X X k ok Reproduced with the kind permission ok of the Resuscitation Counciloo(UK). o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 264 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t .ne .ne .ne Bradyarrhythmias X X X ok ok BP <90mmHg, symptomatic okhypoteno o featuresBSystolic Bo 2sion,Worrying B . QRS, heart failure, VT/wV.F. HR <40bpm, wbroad w w w w Sinus bradycardia MI (typicallywinferior Think about MI) drugs (including w digoxin toxicity), vasovagal (Box 7.4), dT , hypothermia, Cushing’s r­ eflex (bradycardia et and hypertension 2°.ntoetiICP), sleep, anorexia nervosa, et n n . . physical fitness; complete or 3rd- d egree AV heart block. X X kX visual ok Ask about Dizziness, postural ok dizziness, fits/faints, weight ochange, o o o B disturbance, nausea, .vomiting; PMH Cardiac disease.B (IHD/AF), thyroid w Bhead injury wpathology, disease/surgery, DM, or intracranial glaucoma, w w eating disorder; w DH Cardiac medications (β-wblockers, Ca antagonists, ww amiodarone, digoxin), eye drops (β-blockers), anticoagulants, and antiplatelets t SH Exercise tolerance, ADLs. et (may need pacemaker) (Boxe7.5); et n n . . IHD risk factors iBP, icholesterol,.nFH, smoking, obesity, DM, previous X X X ok angina/MI. ok ok o o o Obs HR, BP, postural.B BP, RR, sats, temp, GCS, cardiac.B monitor. B wrate/rhythm/volume, pallor, wshortness of breath, w Look for Pulse w w w w w B 4 2+ dGCS, drowsy, iJVP (cannon waves in 3rd-degree AV block), signs of cardiac failure (iJVP, pulmonary oedema, swollen ankles), features of iICP (papilloedema, focal neurology E p. 364). Investigations ECG Sinus bradycardia or complete heart block (see Table 7.7 and Fig. 7.7), evidence of ischaemia or infarction (E pp. 586–8) or of digoxin toxicity (see Table 7.7 and Fig. 7.7); blds FBC, U+E, glucose, Ca2+, Mg2+, TFT, cardiac markers, digoxin level, troponin, coagulation (if considering transvenous pacing); CXR Unlikely to be helpful in the immediate setting, but may reveal heart size and evidence of pulmonary oedema; Head CT Useful if you suspect raised intracranial pressure, though patient will be in extremis (about to cone E p. 345) if iICP causing bradycardia (speak to on-call neurosurgeon). Echo for structural defects and cardiac function (eg need for ICD/CRT device). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww o w.B et n . kX o Bo oo B . w .n kX ww t .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k • Airway, Breathing (with O2) and monitor Circulation • If either dGCS or dBP (<90mmHg systolic), 3call for senior help/ ARREST TEAM • IV cannula and take bloods • Bed rest and cardiac monitoring • Consider giving IV atropine if systolic BP <90mmHg (500micrograms at 2–3min intervals to a maximum of 3mg) • Check ECG to exclude myocardial infarction and to identify heart block, extreme sinus bradycardia, or very slow atrial fibrillation. e X.n ok Bo w t Treatment t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Bradyarrhythmias w 265 t t t .ne 7.7 ECG features of bradyarrhythmias .ne and types of heartXblock .ne Table X X k each QRS, rate <60 ok ok Sinus bradycardia P waves oprecede o Bo 1st-degree AV blockwP–R B . interval >5 small squares (>0.2s) .Bo w w to beat, until failure of ww Möbitz I interval lengthens from beat ww P–R wrestarts. (Wenckebach) AV conduction, then pattern A usually benign and asymptomatic disease of the AVN that improves with exercise and rarely pacemaker insertion t et etfail requires n . .ne M.ön bitz II Intermittent P waves to conduct to ventricles, but X X X P–R interval I; k does not lengthen, unlike Möbitz ok oktype typically of 3:1 oo2:1 (P waves:QRS complexes):BRatios oblock. Bo B and above are considered high-grade.AV A less . wbenign and more symptomaticwinfranodal w disease that worsened by exercise and more commonly requires ww ispacemaker w ww implantation 3rd-degree Complete dissociation P waves and QRS t et AV emayt between block complexes, which be narrow or broad. A malignne n n . . . and usually symptomatic disease that invariably requires X kX pacemaker implantationokX urgent o permanent ok o o o Digoxin Down- sloping ST segment (reversed.B tick), inverted T B B . wwaves; often present even when w effect/toxicity drug is at non-toxic ww levels ww ww B Rate-controlled AF . kX o o No P waves; irregularly irregular rhythm net et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ECG, lead II (rhythm strip) view; arrows indicate P wave Sinus bradycardia ww 1st-degree AV block o Bo et .nMöbitz type I X k ww Möbitz II with 3:1 AV block o o w.B Digoxin effect/ toxicity et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k ww o Bo ww o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww t Fig. 7.7 Typical appearances of various bradyarrhythmias and types of heart block. et n . kX ww w t 3rd-degree et n (complete) . X AV block ok Bo t .ne X k w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 266 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t Sinus .ne bradycardia (E OHAM4 .np.e 82.) .ne X X X signs Features of k heart failure, hypotension, dGCS. ok 2 WorryingAsymptomatic, odizziness okpalpitations, o o (±on standing), falls, Bo Symptoms B B .oedema, symptoms of iICP,whypothermia, . shortness of breath, or dT . w Signs Orthostatic dBP, hypothermia, evidence w of iICP (E p. 364). w w by a P wave, rate <60, ww Investigationsw ECG QRS complex will be preceded QRS will be narrow unless BBB; exclude ischaemia/infarction; blds FBC, U+E,etCa , Mg , TFT, cardiac markers, coagulation (if considering ebet helpful et n n n . . . transvenous pacing); CXR Unlikely to in resuscitation phase. X treatment If symptomatick(dizzy X GCS <15) or systolick<90mmHg, X ok Acute o layor flat o (as long as o o o monitor heart rate on defibrillator, with legs elevated B B If worrying .BO , secure IV access and take .bloods. iICP not suspected). w w w w signs present, w3call for senior help/ARREST w TEAM. Titrate 500micro- ww grams atropine IV every 2–3min (to a maximum of 3mg) followed by a large flush, until HR improves. Identify and correct precipitant. Consider external etpacing-wire via central line/.pnermanent et pacemaker (E pp. 548–9); et pacing/ n n . . a rhythmical precordial thump (percussion pacing) can be used in extremis X X X ok when an external pacing machine ok is not immediately available. ok o o o Chronic treatment Consider 24h tape; frequent symptomatic episodes of B w.Bare sign of sick sinus syndrome w.B(E p. 267) and w bradycardia or pauses w w may need a w permanent pacemaker system (E w OHCM10 p. 132). w 4 2+ 2+ 2 Complications Severe bradycardia and high vagal tone can deteriorate into asystole so prompt treatment is required. Remember to talk continually to the patient and/or check for a pulse since pulseless electrical activity (PEA) is common and the ECG trace may not change. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . w w bradycardia from unopposed wparasympathetic K Sudden reflex inhibw w ww ition upon heart rate is common. Often brief loss of consciousness preceded by eg light-headedness, visual disturbance, nausea, or sweatt t consider other diagnoses t ing. e of consciousness is prompt— n Recovery .ne .ne if. not. Typical precipitants areX listed. X X ok • Fear and pain (includingoneedles) ok ok o Bo •Post-micturitionw(especially B B in older men) . w. •Nausea and vomiting w w • Dilatationw of anal sphincter and cervix (during w surgery) ww •Pulling of extra-ocular muscles/pressure on eye (during ophthalmic surgery) • iIntra- abdominal pressure (during laparoscopic surgery, straining on t ettoilet). et the n n . . .ne X X X k ok ok oo Bo Box 7.5 Drugswwhich Bo can precipitate bradycardia B . . β-blockersReports of bradycardia even from β-blocking eye drops ww ww ww DigoxinRhythm likely to be AF, butw may be sinus if reverted B Box 7.4 Vasovagal attacks et n . kX o Bo Ca2+ antagonists Verapamil and diltiazem slow heart rate Amiodarone Can cause conduction defects and bradycardia α-agonistsPhenylephrine is mainly used by anaesthetists and can cause reflex bradycardia by increasing peripheral vascular resistance Ivabradine Used for prognosis in heart failure to slow the sinus node. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Bradyarrhythmias w 267 t t t Complete .ne (3rd-degree) heart .neblock (E OHAM4 p. 86.)X.ne X X signs Features of heart ok 2 WorryingAsymptomatic, ok failure, hypotension, dGCS. ok shorto o dizziness (±on standing), palpitations, Bo Symptoms B B ness of breath, ±chest w. pain. w. w w Causes Frequently underlying ischaemic damage (typically after inferior ww w w MI); also post-cardiac surgery, drug-induced (β-blockers, Ca channel blockers), amyloid, sarcoid, myeloma, infective (Chagas, Lyme). et (and potentially dGCS),.often et iBP, cannon waves in iJVP.n(due et Signs dBP n n . X asynchronous contractionkofXthe right atria against a closed X ok tovalve), ofeatures of underlying disease. ok tricuspid signs of heart failure, o o o B Investigations ECG w .B dissociation of P waves .Bfrom QRS comComplete wrespond plexes; narrow w QRS implies proximal rhythm (may atropine), w wto respond toto atropine); ww broad QRS w implies distal rhythm (less likely look for evidence of myocardial infarction; blds FBC, U+E, Ca , Mg , TFT, e cardiac t markers, coagulation n(ifetconsidering transvenous pacing); et n n CXR Unlikely to be helpful in immediate resuscitation phase. . . . X treatment If symptomatick(dizzy X or GCS <15) or systolic k<90mmHg, X ok Acute o lay flat o supplemeno o o monitor heart rate on defibrillator, with legs elevated. O B tation, secure IV access .B help/ARREST bloods. 3Call for w.Band takeatropine wsenior w w TEAM. Titrate 500micrograms IV every 2–3min (to a maximum w w ww B 2+ 2+ 2+ 2 of 3mg), followed by a large flush, until HR improves. Identify and correct precipitant. Consider external pacing/pacing-wire via central line (E pp. 548–9); a rhythmical precordial thump (percussion pacing) can be used in extremis when an external pacing machine is not immediately available. Chronic treatment Likely to need permanent pacemaker (E OHCM10 p. 132) and/or correction of precipitant. Complications Severe bradycardia and high vagal tone can deteriorate into asystole so prompt treatment is required. Remember to talk continually to the patient and/or check for a pulse since PEA is common and the ECG trace may not change. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k ok Sick sinus syndrome ok node often precipitated obyoischaemia/ o of the sinoatrial Bo Dysfunction B B . . fibrosis. Results inw (±arrest), sinoatrial block, or SVT with w bradycardia wwsyndrome). alternating w bradycardia/ asystole (tachy- bw rady Needs ww pacing if symptomatic. t ettypes of heart block (E eOHAM4 et Other p. 86) n n n . . . X degree AV block and MöbitzkX X unless I These do not require treatment ok 1st- oor there ok drugs). the patient is symptomatic is a reversible cause o (usually o o B Möbitz II and high-w .BAV block These may deteriorate grade into complete w.Bpacing, heart block and may require temporary/permanent especially w w w w w when associated with an ACS or general anaesthesia—seek cardiology w advice. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 268 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t et .nHypertension .ne .ne 2 emergency X X X k ok okis patent; consider manoeuvres/ oadjuncts o o Check airway Bo 22 Airway B B . Ifw no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w.TEAM Breathing w w 2 Circulation w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww If GCS <8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability t e etdeteriorating. et n n n . . . 3Call for senior help early if patient X X kX ok If systolic >200 or diastolic o>120: ok o o o B • Sit patient up w.orBsats <94% w.B • 15L/min O if SOB w w • Monitor pulse w oximeter, BP, defibrillator ECG w leads if unwell ww •Request full set of observations and ECG • Taketbrief history if possible/check notes/ staff t e patient: condensed RS,.CVS, etabdo,askandward • .Examine eye examination.ne n n X out serious causes andkestablish X likely causes X ok •Rule o observations: ok new? Review history and o previous is hypertension o o B • Do not give STAT dose without.B w.B ofEantihypertensive w senior review • Initiate further treatment p. 271 w w • Venous access w , take bloods: w ww B 2 • • FBC, U+E, cardiac markers, TFT, glucose, cortisol • Consider requesting urgent CXR, portable if too unwell • Urinalysis and β-hCG (in women of child-bearing age) • Call for senior help for advice •Re-assess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww 2 Life-threatening causes • Pre-eclampsia/eclampsia • Malignant hypertension >200/120 • Hypertensive encephalopathy o Bo t .ne X k o ww o w.B ok Bo Bo o et n . kX w t .ne X k • Phaeochromocytoma • Thyrotoxic storm • Cushing’s reflex (raised ICP). .ne X k et oo B . w ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww t o o w.B ww .n kX ww t e X.n t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo o oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww Bo ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n ww Bo o w.B .n kX ww o w.B .ne X k ww et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww ww t o o w.B w 269 et t et n . X w w HYPERTENSION EMERGENCY ww o Bo B .B w w w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 270 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t .ne .ne .ne Hypertension X X X k ok ok oo mentation, seizures, retinal o features.B Altered haemorrhages, Bo 2AKI,Worrying B w arterial aneurysms. ww. chest pain, pregnancy, w 2 Is this a hypertensive crisis? If any of above, w wor acute iBP >200 systolic ww or >120 diastolic (E p. 268). et about Life-threatening Hypertensive et crisis (acute iBP, typically et Think n n n . . . pre-eclampsia; Other X>200 systolic or >120 diastolic;XE p. 271), XAnxiety, hypertension (including ok pain, primary (essential)ooroksecondary ok thyroid o o storm and phaeochromocytoma). B .B w w.B but consider w Ask about The majority of patients will be asymptomatic, w w w headache, chest/back w possibility ofw end-organ damage (visual symptoms, pains, haematuria) or secondary causes (Table 7.8) PMH Previous hypertension, syndrome, acromegaly, syndrome, phaeot Conn’s et Cushing’scoarctation, edisease, et n n n chromocytoma, thyroid DM, renal artery stenosis; . . . X Cardiac and antihypertensive X medications, steroids, contraceptive X ok DH ok MAOI, okrecreational pill, levothyroxine/carbimazole, antipsychotics, o o o B .B drugs (cocaine, amphetamines); FH Hypertension, .endocrine disease, w wB polycystic kidney disease; SH Exercise tolerance, smoking. w w w w ww B Obs HR, BP (both arms with correct sized cuff ), sats, temp, GCS, repeat BP after a period of prone relaxation. Look for Signs of precipitating disease Radiofemoral delay, striae, central obesity, large hands/feet/face, tremor, exophthalmos, proximal myopathy, gravid uterus, renal bruits/polycystic kidneys; Signs of end-organ damage Fundoscopy (papilloedema, hypertensive retinopathy), displaced apex beat or S4 (suggest left ventricular hypertrophy), haematuria. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX ww w oo B . ww Table 7.8 Key secondary causes of hypertension t .nedisease or Renal X k renal artery stenosis t .ne X k ww tInvestigations Ref net .ne Urine microscopy, E X . p. 387 X k renal Doppler USS, ok o o autoantibodies ±renal Bo .Bo .Bo biopsy w w Phaeochromo­ w Plasma metanephrines; E p. 339 w ww ww cytoma 24h urinary catecholamines +VMA t t Thyroid dysfunction TFTs E pp. 340–1 e e et n n n . . . X X X ok Acromegaly ok oEk p. 337 o o o IGF- 1 and pituitary B hormone levels w.B w.B w w w w ww Cushing’s Urinary free cortisol; E pp. 338–9 syndrome dexamethasone t t suppression test e e et n n n . . . Other causes include pregnancy (gestational, pre- e clampsia/ e clampsia), Conn’s syndrome X p. 339), hyperparathyroidism (Ekp.X403), scleroderma, coarctation of thekaorta, X ok (E o sleep apnoea. o drugs o o o (steroids, MAOI, OCP) and obstructive B w.B w.B w w w w ww Features Renal failure, abnormal urine dipstick, FH may be relevant, renal bruit Sweating, labile hypertension, palpitations Cold/heat intolerance, sweating, lack of energy Headache, visual field disturbance, change in facial features Centripetal obesity, skin thinning, weakness B .B w w .B w w w w w Hypertension w 271 t t t Investigations BP Ensure correct .ne .nesized cuff and repeat manually; .ne a X X X of hypertension be confirmed with blood pressure ok new diagnosis(BPM) okbeshould okmeasuring whichocan ambulatory (a 24h monitor o Bo monitoring B B every 30m) or at home ECG Features of w. (self-monitoring BD forw1w); w. TFT; LVH (E p. 587); blds FBC, U+E, glucose, cholesterol, Urine Blood, w w protein, β-hw CG; CXR Unhelpful in immediatew setting, but will show heart w size and aortic contours. If <40yr with BP 140/90 and BPM >135/85 but t damage, cardiovascular disease, no organ renal disease or diabetes, conespecialist efort secondary et n n n . . sider opinion to investigate causes (Table .7.8). X X cessation, regular exercise, Xreduce Lifestyle advice ok Treatment ok(smoking okmodifiable o o o alcohol and caffeine, balanced low- s alt diet). Identify and treat B risk factors (DM and dyslipidaemia). Pharmacological therapy if approwBP.B wFig..B7.8). w w priate, based upon and risk factors (Box 7.6 and w w ww Box 7.6 Hypertension: who and how to treat eBPt in patients with HTN can be confusing et and the evidence is always evolving. et Target n n n . . . The following is adapted from the NICE guidelines which themselves can be conflicting: X patient with a clinic BP >160/ X subsequent BPM results ofkX >150/ ok •Any ok 100 andtherapy. o o oofor patients 95 should be started on pharmacological This is also true B B B . . who are under 80yr with a clinic BP of >140/90, BPM w results of >135/85, w and one or more of (i) cardiovascular disease, (ii) renal disease, (iii) a 10yr w w w w ww cardiovascular risk of >20%, or (iv) end-organ damage (eg LVH, eGFR<60mL/ 11 min, hypertensive retinopathy or microalbuminuria)11 • The target BP then depends on age and comorbidities. If they are <80yr aim for a clinic BP <140/90 (or 135/85 on BPM). If ≥80yr aim for a clinic BP <150/90 (or 145/85 on BPM) •Patients with diabetes and CKD have lower targets due to the higher risk of complications. In T1DM aim for a clinic BP <135/80, or <130/80 if they also have CKD, albuminuria or 2 or more features of the metabolic syndrome (eg high cholesterol and central obesity).12 In T2DM aim for a clinic BP <140/80, or <130/80 if they also have CKD, retinopathy, or a previous CVA/TIA.13 In CKD and an albumin:creatinine ratio of >70mg/mmol, aim for <130/8014 • The choice of antihypertensive should be guided by Fig. 7.8 and patient tolerance. Calcium channel blockers (C) (or thiazide- Age <55 Age >55 or black type diuretics, D, if C not suitable) are the best first choice drug for most patients. A C (or D) Limited data from younger patients suggest that ACEi or ARBs (A) have better BP- lowering effects. ACEi or ARBs are also A & C (or A & D) first line for patients with (i) CKD and an albumin:creatinine ratio >30mg/mmol, or (ii) diabetes mellitus (if T2DM rather than A&C&D T1DM, C or D should be added to ACEi or Fig. 7.8 Treating hypertension. ARB as dual 1st-line therapies) • β-blockers are less effective than other classes at reducing CVS events, especially stroke. They are used as an additive treatment or to avoid polypharmacy in patients with other indications (eg angina). et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok .n kX o o w.B ww t t e X.n ok e X.n ok o w.B ww ww Follow-up If treatment is initiated or altered in hospital, ensure GP t e X.n ok ww knows what investigations have been undertaken, their results, and what the therapeutic plan is. Once BP control is acceptable, patients should have annual GP follow-up to review BP, lifestyle, and medication. Complications End-organ damage, malignant HTN, CV disease. t Bo ww t e X.n o w.B ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX t e X.n ok o B . w ok NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG127 12 NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG17 13 NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG28 14 NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG182 11 ww e X.n ww o B . w ww B 272 .B w ww Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t Hypertensive crises .ne .ne .ne X X X >200/1k a 2 hypertensive emergency ok K Elevation ofbyBPevidence o of20 isend- ok7.9) orwhen2 o o organ damage (Table Bo accompanied B B hypertensive urgency end- w. in the absence of w wo.rgan damage (E w OHAM4 p132). w w w w Symptoms and signs iBP, often acute, in presence of end-organ damage (Table 7.9). et et et n n n . . . Table 7.9 End- o rgan damage in hypertension X X ok Organ Symptoms/signsookXInvestigations ok o o B .B CNS CT head may show subarachnoid or dGCS, headache, wvomiting, w.Bhypertensive w w intracranial haemorrhage; confusion, w w ww new motor weakness, encephalopathy occurs with cerebral oedema following loss of vascular autoregulation seizures, coma Eyeset Headache, visual Fundoscopy haemorrhages et et showsoftenretinal n n . . .n disturbance ±papilloedema; coexists with damage X X X elsewhere k k k o oo ECG changes, elevated .cardiac oomarkers. pain, Bo Heart Chest B B . orthopnoea pulmonary oedema on CXR w w Aorta Sudden wwtearing chest Echo or CT may wwreveal aortic dissection ww pain radiating to back; collapse Kidneys Haematuria, lethargy, anorexia (E p. 253) t tworsening renal function; proteinuria, t Rapidly .ne .ncellecasts .ne red on urine microscopy X X X k ok okAlways confirm BP yourself,oousing o See Table 7.9. Bo Investigations B B .secondary causes (Table 7.8).wRequest . formalcorrect sized cuff. Consider ophw thalmic assessment ww if suspect retinal disease.ww ww Diagnosis This relies on a compatible history, often with previously comparatively t normal BP, and presencenoretabsence of end-organ damage. etreatment et n nwith Acute In the absence of.end-organ damage, oral therapy . . X X X channel blocker or should be instigated. Ifkend-organ ok a calciumis present, ok ACEi admitopatient to a monitored area (HDU/ oo ICU), with Bo damage B B . close monitoring of . BP (Box 7.7), ECG, neurological and fluid warterial line, central line, catheterization). w state, Rapid balance (consider rew w wcan be dangerous, resulting inwcerebral hypoperfusion and ww duction in BP is only necessary in an acute MI or aortic dissection. Otherwise, aim to reduce diastolic BP to 100mmHg or by 25% (whichever value is higher) over 24h (see Tables 7.10 and 7.11 for treatment options). Patients with early features of end-organ damage may be commenced on oral therapy, though more severe organ damage may require treatment with IV agents. If no evidence of LVF use labetalol; if LVF present commence furosemide (20–50mg IV) ±hydralazine. Consider ACEi to counteract high circulating levels of renin. Nitroprusside and hydralazine are still used as adjuncts in severe crises under expert guidance. Chronic treatment BP needs checking regularly once discharged from hospital. Ensure GP knows what investigations have been undertaken, their results, and what the therapeutic plan/target BP is. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Hypertension w 273 t t et .ne CVA .ne K.nBox 7.7 BP control inX acute X X k autoregulation is impaired ok acute ischaemic stroke, ocerebral ok and ago o Bo Ingressive B B lowering of .BP results in hypoperfusion and. poor outcomes. 3Seek expert help. Generally, only treat ifw BPw>220/120 or clear ww w include IV labetalol. ww evidence ofw end-organ damage. Suitable agents Table et7.10 Oral antihypertensives foretacute management of hypertenet n n . . sive crises (E OHAM4 p. 137) .n X X X ok Drug Dose ookComment ok o o B Atenolol 50–100mg/ β-blockers available. Contraindicated w.B Many w.B 24h PO in asthma, peripheral vascular disease, DM w w w w ww Amlodipine 5–10mg/24 PO Ca channel blocker; 1st line in elderly and when β-blocker contraindicated et 25–50mg/ et Safe in pregnancy et Hydralazine Vasodilator. n n n . . . 8h PO X X kX ok Nifedipine 10–20mg/8hoPOokAvoid sublingual as rapidly dropso BP. OK o o to use in conjunction with β- b locker B .B verapamil or diltiazem w .B (avoid with β-blockers) w ww ww ww 2+ Table 7.11 IV antihypertensives for acute management of hypertensive crises (E OHAM4 p. 136) t t t .ne .ne .ne K Patient must be in HDU/ICU, ideally with invasive BP monitoring. Intravenous X X X ok therapy can result in rapid fallsoinoBPkso drugs must be titrated cautiously. ok o Bo Drug B B Dose. Comment w w. Isoket 0.05%* w 2–10mL/h IVI Venodilates. w Useful in LVF/angina. Easy ww (0.5mg/mL) w (1–5mg/h) for nursesw to set up infusion. Drug of choice t GTNet 1–10mg/h IVI et Useful in LVF and angina n n . . Venodilates. .ne Hydralazine 5–10mg/20min IVI Vasodilates, can cause compensatory X X X ok ok rise in heart rate; use withooa kβ-blocker o 1 0min IVI Used in eg aortic dissection. Avoid in Bo Labetalol 20–w80mg/ B . LVF w.B w w Nitroprussidew 0.25–8micrograms/ Rapid onset. wUseful in LVF or hypertensive ww kg/min IVI encephalopathy. Rarely used now: toxic cyanide metabolites may accumulate t e et sweating, iHR, iRR, and dpH.net causing n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww ® *Isosorbide dinitrate: available as 25mL 0.1% solution (25mg in 25mL). Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 274 Chapter 7 .B w w ww w Cardiovascular t t t .ne failure .ne .ne Heart X X X ok Heart failure has high morbidity/ ok mortality and is increasingly okcommon. o o Bo KSymptoms B B Breathlessness, PND, wheeze, w. orthopnoea, w. oedema, fatigue. w Causes Often multifactorial. Assess the history, w exam, and echo carefully. w w Non-ischaemic often secondary w to eg HTN, DM, valve w Usually ischaemic. disease and toxins eg chemotherapy, stimulants and alcohol, but can be t primary eg HCM, ARVC, DCM, or acquired eg peripartumeor et (inherited et causes n n n . . . Takotsubo). Rarer non-ischaemic secondary are infiltrative (amyloid, X overload, Fabry), inflammatory X (sarcoid, giant cell), infectious X (viral ok iron ok (muscular ok ataxia), o o o myocarditis, HIV), neuromuscular dystrophy, Friedrich’s B and electrical (AF, tachycardia, w.B pacemaker syndrome). w.B w w Signs Cachexia,w iRR, iHR, iJVP, murmur (if valvular disease), 3rd heart w creps, pitting oedema (typically w ankles but sound, bibasal check sacrum). w Investigations ECG No specific features, look for arrhythmias, conduction disease et or broad QRS (?device.ntherapy); et blds FBC (?anaemia),.nU+E et n . (?renal hypoperfusion), TFTs, fasting lipids, glucose, iron, BNP (secreted X failing ventricle—normal Xlevels unlikely in untreated heart kXfailure); ok byCXRtheCardiomegaly, ok oedema, oupper o o o pulmonary pleural effusions, lobe diB .B .Bmotion abnormalversion, Kerley B w lines; Echo Valvular pathology, wall w ities, left ventricular ww ejection fraction (LVEF). wwHF with preserved LVEF ww B 15 (Box 7.8) may show ventricular hypertrophy and altered filling pressures. Acute treatment Treat pulmonary oedema in acute decompensation (E p. 288). Chronic treatment Conservative measures includes treating the cause, smoking cessation and cardiac rehab. β-blockers16 and ACEi improve prognosis and symptoms if reduced LVEF so are 1st-line therapy (ARB if ACEi not tolerated). An aldosterone antagonist is cautiously added as 2nd line if EF <35% and still symptomatic. 3rd-line therapies to be considered by specialist heart failure teams are ivabradine (if SR and HR >70), cardiac resynchronization therapy (if QRS >130ms, more so if LBBB, QRS >150ms, or other pacing indication) and valsartan/sacubitril (in place of ACEi). Advanced heart failure therapies (transplant/assist devices) or palliation may follow. If prognosis >1yr an ICD is considered at any stage if EF remains <35% to prevent death. Furosemide/bumetanide provide symptom relief from congestion with thiazides/inotropes if resistant. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww K Box 7.8 Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction Much understanding in heart failure comes from the study of patients with clear echocardiographic evidence of inadequate left ventricular contraction. However, the signs and symptoms of heart failure frequently manifest in those with ‘preserved LVEF’. Many of these patients will have raised left ventricular filling pressures with ventricular stiffening, reducing filling efficiency in diastole. This population is more likely to be older, female, and hypertensive (a demographic rapidly increasing in size) but poorly represented in clinical trials. Despite good theoretical backing, little or no evidence of mortality benefit exists for ACEi, ARBs, β-blockers, or calcium channel blockers, while diuretics should be used with caution (since acute reductions in filling pressures may worsen failure). Management should involve close attention to correction of dysrhythmias and comorbid conditions, as well as control of blood pressure, and careful fluid balance. t e X.n ok Bo t ww o w.B et n . kX 16 ww t o o B . w ww et n . X .ne X ok .Bo NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG108 Avoid β-blockers in COPD. Few β-blockers are licensed for heart failure (eg bisoprolol, carvedilol, and nebivolol): Patients already on a β-blocker for another indication may need to switch. 15 ww ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o Bo .ne X k ww w ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 8 w 275 t t t .ne Respiratory .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww 2 Breathlessness and low sats emergency 276 and low sats 277 t Breathlessness e etpatient 290 et 2 Stridor in a conscious adult n n n . . . Cough 291 X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 276 .B w ww Chapter 8 .B w w ww w Respiratory t t et .nBreathlessness .ne low sats X.ne 2 and X X ok ok ok o Bo emergencyw.Bo B w. w manoeuvres/ adjuncts 2 Airway ww Check airway is patent; consider w ww If no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST TEAM 2 Breathing t t ARREST TEAM If no palpable pulse—C 2 Circulation e eALL et n n n . . . X X X ok 3 Call for senior help oearly okif patient is deteriorating.oUse okemergency o call bell to summon help B .B quickly—don’t leave thewpatient. .B • Sit patient up w w w • 15L/min Owin all patients if acutely unwellw ww • Monitor pulse oximeter, BP, defibrillator’s ECG leads if unwell • Obtain a full set of observations including eta brief etnotestemp et •Take history if possible/check /ask ward staff n n n . . . • Examine patient : condensed RS, CVS, ±abdo exam X X kXout serious causes ok •Establish likely causes and orule ok o o o • Initiate further treatment , see E pp. 277–8 B w.B w.B • Venous access, take bloods: w w FBC, U+E, w LFT, CRP, bld cultures, D-dwimer, cardiac markers ww B 2 • • Arterial blood gas, but don’t leave the patient alone • ECG to exclude arrhythmias and acute MI •Request urgent CXR, portable if too unwell • Call for senior help •Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . • In COPD/known CO2 retention, rapidly titrate down O2 to lowest flow to maintain normal sats for this patient (usually 88–92%). Beware of CO2 retention and have a low threshold for repeat ABG. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t 2 Life- .ne threatening causesX.ne .ne X X ok •Asthma/COPD ok •Pneumonia ok o o oedemaB(LVF) •Pulmonary embolism (PE) Bo •Pulmonary B • (Tension) pneumothorax •Pleural effusion w. w. w w • MI/arrhythmia •Anaphylaxis/ w w airway obstruction. ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w w .B w w w w w w 277 Breathlessness and low sats t t et .ne .nlow .ne Breathlessness and sats X X X ok Worrying featuresoRRok>30, sats <92%, systolic BPo<100mmHg, ok Bo 2chest B B . inability to complete sentences, pain, confusion, wsilent w. exhaustion, w w w tachy/bradycardia, chest. w w w Think about 2 Life-threatening causes of respiratory failure See Table 8.1; t Most likely oedema (LVF), PE, et COPD/asthma, pneumonia, epulmonary eMI;t n n n . . . Others Pneumothorax, pleural effusion, arrhythmia, acute respiratory X syndrome (ARDS), ksepsis, X metabolic acidosis, anaemia, X pain, ok distress o Chronic okbronchieco o o panic, foreign body/ a spiration; COPD, lung cancer, B tasis, interstitial lungwdisease, .B TB. w.B w w w Ask aboutw Speed of onset, cough, changew in sputum (quantity, colour), w haemoptysis, wheeze, chest pain (related to movement, pleuritic), chest trauma, lying tpalpitations, dizziness, difficulty t flat, recent travel, weightnloss; eCardiac emalignancy, et n n PMH or respiratory problems, old or exposure .to TB; . . X Inhalers, home nebulizers,kXhome O , cardiac medication,kXallergies; ok DH o occupaSH Smoking (pack-years), pets, o oo exercise tolerance, previous/ ocurrent B tion B B . . (asbestos exposure). w surgery/immobility/fracture/ PE risk factors w ww travel/hospitaliza- w w Recent tion, oestrogen (pregnancy, HRT, the pill),wmalignancy, previous PE/ w 2 DVT, thrombophilia, varicose veins, obesity, central lines. t t t Obs .neTemp, RR (11–20 is normal), .nBP,e HR, sats (should be >94% .n),eO ­requirements (improving or worsening?). X X X ok ofullk sentences, confusion, cyanosis, ok CO flap, for Ability to speak o o Bo Look B B . itching, swollen lips/eyes,w.raised JVP, tracheal tremor, clubbing, w rashes, shift and tug, use of accessory muscles, abnormal unequal air w w w stridor, wheeze, bronchial breathing, wwpercussion, entry, crackles, swollen/red/hot/ w tender legs, swelling of ankles, cold peripheries. et et Investigations PEFR If asthma suspected (may be too ill); blds FBC, n netWells .nCRP, .and . U+E, LFT, D-dimer (if PE suspected score <4 E p. 284), cardiac X X X k (May need physio or salineonebs k to help) cultures; Sputum ok markers,andblood oAFBs o o send for M,C+S; if TB risk; ABG (E pp. 598–9), keep on Bo inspect B B . . O if acutely SOB;w ECG (E pp. 586–8); CXR (E w pp. 596–7); portable if w w unwell, though wimage quality may be poor; Spirometry w Should be done once ww the patient has been stabilized to help confirm the diagnosis (E p. 600). Treatment et Sit all patients up and egivet 15L/min O – this saves.nlives. etot n n This can be reduced later since CO retention in COPD takes a while . . X Check sats and ECGkinXall patients: X ok •develop. o (E p. 291) ok o o o Stridor—call an anaesthetist B • Wheeze—give nebulizer .B (E p. 279), eg salbutamolw5mg .B ±ipratropium w 500micrograms STAT (drive by oxygen or air w as appropriate) w w w ww 1 2 2 2 2 2 • Unilateral resonance, reduced air entry ±tracheal deviation and shock— consider tension pneumothorax and treat urgently (E p. 285) • Asymmetrical coarse crackles, dair entry, bronchial breathing—consider pneumonia (E p. 282) • Symmetrical fine crackles, dair entry, iJVP—consider LVF (E p. 288) • Normal exam—consider PE, asthma, cardiac, and systemic causes. t ok Bo t e X.n e X.n ok ww o B . w ok ww o B . w Patients with chronic lung disease may normally have sats <92%. 88–92% is a better target. See BTS guidelines on emergency use of oxygen in adults at Mwww.brit-thoracic.org.uk 1 t e X.n ww B 278 .B w ww Chapter 8 .B w w ww w Respiratory t t t .ne 8.1 Common causes ofXbreathlessness .ne .ne Table X X k Examination Investigations ok ok History oo o Bo COPD B B Usually crackles, hyperexpanded, w. smoker, ±wheeze/ w.CXR change in ±cyanosed/pursed- flat diaphragms; w w w productive wlook exclude pneumonia ww lip breathing, cough, worsening for infection and and pneumothorax wheeze pneumothorax ABG; sputum t t e e et n n Asthma Known asthma, Wheeze ±crackles, dPEFR; CXR; .n . . X X recent exposurektoX look for signs ok o or of infection or exclude okpneumonia cold air, allergens ando pneumothorax o o B B eosinophil drugs .(NSAIDs, w Bvirusesβ- pneumothoraxww.ABG; blockers), count w w iWCC/NØ/CRP, ww Pneumonia w Productive cough, Febrile, asymmetrical green sputum, air entry, crackles, consolidation or feels unwell bronchial breath blunted angles on t t t e e ±pleuritic pain sounds ±dpercussion CXR (E pp. 596–7); n n . . .ne sputum MCX and S X X k ok ok±hypoxia PE risk factors, iHR (may be dPaCO oo leg iJVP, oABGs, Bo Pulmonary B B embolism pain, .±pleuritic only sign); may have .on w pain and evidence of DVT;wcan w dimer, CXRiD-often chest w shocked normal w haemoptysis be severely w ww B 2 Pulmonary oedema . kX o o net Pneumothorax o Bo t .ne X k Pleural effusion ARDS o Bo et n . Anaemia/ kXMI/ arrhythmias 3 Anaphylaxis Bo o et n . kX Known cardiac problems, orthopnoea, swollen legs oo B . Sudden w onset wwpleuritic chest o ww o w.B t .ne kX pain ±trauma. Underlying lung disease and previous episodes or tall, thin, male Gradual onset breathlessness, ±pleuritic chest pain Concurrent severe illness Chest pain, palpitations, dizziness, tiredness iJVP, symmetrical fine inspiratory crackles, pink frothy sputum, dependent oedema, cold peripheries Unequal air entry and expansion, hyper-resonant ±displaced trachea (late) t .ne X k o onset, wwSudden itching, swelling, urticarial rash, new drugs/food of tension pneumothorax; CXR shows pleura separated from ribs ww et oo B . w .n kX Reduced expansion, Effusion on CXR stony dull base ww ww Hypoxic, very unwell New bilateral infiltrates on CXR Irregular or fast Abnormal ECG pulse, shocked, pale (E pp. 586–8), dHb, icardiac markers Stridor, ±wheeze, IM adrenaline, shock, swollen lips IV steroids and eyes, blanching (E pp. 484–5); rash acute and convalescent serum tryptase t et n . X ok ww o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww t .ne X k oo B . ww Needle decompression w .ne X k o w.B Cardiomegaly + fluid overload on CXR (E pp. 596–7), ECG may show ischaemia or previous MI ww t w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Breathlessness and low sats w 279 t t t Asthma .ne .ne .ne X X X A common chronic disease k ok Kinflammation, o characterized by variable airflow okobstruction, o and hyper-ro esponsiveness that results in wheeze, chest tightBo ness, B B . . dyspnoea, andw cough. w w breathlessness, wheeze and Symptoms Episodic wwchest tightness; family or ww personal Hxw of atopy (hayfever, eczema, asthma). Signs Wheeze, tachypnoea, silent chest, hyperinflated chest. et PEFR Reduced in acute .setting et compared with best or predicted et Investigations n n n . . based upon age/ h eight, or diurnal variation on self- m onitoring as out- X X X ok patient; ABG Normal or odPaO ok with a dPaCO due to hyperventilation. ok o o 3 Beware normal/.rB ising CO ?Patient tiring; CXR Hyperexpanded, exB clude w pneumothorax; Spirometryw w.,BdFEV :FVC ratio. pneumonia and dFEV w Acute exacerbation w Sit up and give 15L/minwO . Salbutamol 5mg NEB ww ±ipratropium 500micrograms NEB and prednisolone 40mg PO (or hydrocortisone 200mg IV). Drive the nebulizer from O supply, not et salbutamol et 10–1mask et air..n Repeat 2.5mg NEB every 5min and reassess.n PEFR n . X sats frequently. AntibioticskX X of infection. ok and o if evidence ok RR >25. o o o 3 Severe Incomplete sentences, PEFR <50% of best, HR >110, B .B <33% of best, silent chest, .Bsats <92%, PaO 3 Life-threatening wPEFR w w <8kPa, normalwPaCO , poor respiratory effort, exhaustion, cyanosis, w w ww 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 2 altered GCS, arrhythmia. 2Call ICU. 3 Near-fatal CO2 retention. 2Call ICU. 2 Beware those with previous ICU admissions. No improvement Call for senior help. Consider: • Early ICU input/assessment • Aminophylline 0.5–0.7mg/kg/h, discontinue any oral theophylline and monitor levels (under senior guidance) • Mg2+ sulfate 2g (8mmol) IV over 20min. Improving Admit those in whom PEFR<75% predicted after 1h therapy; gradually reduce supplemental O2 and step from nebs to inhalers over several days; always check inhaler technique and ensure patient books follow-up with GP 48h post discharge. Chronic treatment (E OHCM10 p. 182.) See Table 8.2, aiming for minimum treatment resulting in symptom control; monitor PEFR; always check inhaler technique before escalation; ensure allergen avoidance, smoking cessation and co-morbidities (GORD, nasal polyposis, OSA, breathing pattern disorder) identified and controlled. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww ww t t e X.n e X.n ok ok o w.B ww ww Low-dose ICS and LABA (combination) t ok e✓✓t n . X ✓ ✓ e X.n Additional treatment (high-dose ICS/long-acting muscarinic agonist/leukotriene receptor antagonist/theophylline) Oral steroids ok o B . w ww ✓ t e X.n 5 ✓ ✓ Medium-dose ICS and LABA (combination) Bo t k 1 o o 2 3* 4* B ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ . w STEP Salbutamol/terbutaline Low-dose inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) ok o B . w ✓ ✓ * If no response to LABA, stop LABA use medium–high-dose ICS alone. BTS guidelines include tables to predict PEFR where unknown. Source: data from Mhttps://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/ document-library/clinical-information/asthma/btssign-asthma-guideline-quick-reference-guide-2016 ww ww e X.n Table 8.2 Simplified stepwise management of asthma (2016) Bo ww ww ww B .B w w .B w w wRespiratory 280 ww w Chapter 8 t t t COPD .ne (E OHAM4 p. 186.) X.ne .ne X X fixed airflow k due to loss of elastic recoil k in alveoli ok K Predominantly oofobstruction o(bronchitis). o o and narrowing airways with excess secretions Bo (emphysema) B B 2 Worrying signs dGCS, CO . w. risingcough, w. w Symptoms Breathlessness, isputum,wtight chest, confusion, w NB iindex of suspicionwin (ex-)smoker. ww dexercise tolerance. Signs Wheeze, cyanosis, barrel-chested, poor expansion, tachypnoea. t with type 2 RF common. et ABG Often deranged.nineCOPD, et Investigations n n . . Compare with previous samples and pay close attention to FiO ; repeat X X X ok after 30min in seriously illopatients; ok CXR Hyperexpanded,oflat okdiaphragm o (look for evidence of B .Binfection, pneumothorax,wor.Bbullae); Spirometry (E p. 600) dFEVw , dFEV :FVC ratio (<70%). w Acute exacerbation w Sit the patient up and give wwthe minimum amount of ww O to maintain sats ≥88% (aim for PaO 78kPa). Give salbutamol 2.5mg ±ipratropium NEB (drive leaving nasal O cannulae et mask500micrograms et by air, et on.n under if necessary) and prednisolone 30mg PO (or hydrocortisone n n . . X200mg IV). Sputum for M,C+S.kX X Get an ABG and CXR (portable ok Use oobservations ok if unwell). ABG results and clinical to guide further o management: o o B Bregular nebs • Normal ABG (for them) Continue current O and give w.BiFiO w.watch • Worsening hypoxaemia , repeat ABG <30min, for confusion w w w prompt a repeat ABG sooner;wconsider NIV ww which should 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 • i CO2 retention or d GCS Request senior help 2 urgently; consider: • ICU input/assessment • Aminophylline 0.5–0.7mg/kg/h, discontinue any oral theophylline and monitor levels (under senior guidance) • NIV (Box 8.1). Antibiotics Consider prescribing antibiotics (eg PO doxycycline or amoxicillin) if the patient has iSOB, fevers, worsening cough, purulent sputum, or focal changes on CXR. Chronic treatment (E OHCM10 p. 184) Smoking cessation is paramount. Stepwise therapy with inhalers can reduce symptoms, reduce the frequency and severity of exacerbations, and improve health status and exercise tolerance (Table 8.3). If still breathless despite maximal inhaler therapy, give home nebulizers. If PaO2 consistently ≤7.3kPa (or ≤8kPa with additional risk factors), long-term O2 therapy aiming for a minimum of 15h/d confers survival advantage. Annual influenza and pneumococcal vaccines decrease incidence of LRTI.3 Consider prescribing rescue packs (abx/steroids) to patients for acute (infective) exacerbation. Pulmonary rehab (see Box 8.2). Complications Exacerbations, infection, cor pulmonale, pneumothorax, respiratory failure, lung cancer (beware haemoptysis and weight loss). et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B t .n kX o o w.B ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww e X.n ww t e X.n k k oo oo B B . . w Machines assist through a tightly fitting Bi-level posiwventilation wwmask. w tive airwayw pressure (BiPAP) used in COPD with a pH ≤7.35 w wpatients and CO ≥6.0kPa who have failed to respond to initial medical therapy reduces and length of admission. t Patients who need NIVnusuestayt mortality et ally on the respiratory ward.nore HDU/ICU. Continuous positive n . . Xairway pressure (CPAP) is not kXNIV since it does not helpowith kXmechok anics of ventilation (Eo p.o288). o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo ok .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX K Box 8.1 Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) 2 NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG101 Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease. 2017 report. Mhttp://goldcopd.org/ wp-content/uploads/2016/12/wms-GOLD-2017-Pocket-Guide.pdf 2 3 B .B w w .B w w w w w Breathlessness and low sats w 281 t t et .ne 8.3 Simplified COPD severity .nassessment .ne Table and treatment (GOLD X X X k ok guidelines) ok oo o Bo GOLD Yearly w.BDyspnoea B Treatment .Severity of airflow w limitation (FEV % w stage exacerbations w w ww predicted) w A 1 or less Breathless only SABA or ≥80—GOLD 1 on strenuous tSAMA (Mild) et e et exercise n n n . . . X X Having or/+ 50–79—k ktoXstop LAMA ok B 1 or less owalking o GOLD 2 (Moderate) on LABA o o o B B 49—GOLD 3 C 2 or more .BBreathless only LAMA + 30– w on strenuous LABA orww.(Severe) (or 1 hospital w exercise admission) LABA w w+ ICS ww D 2 or more Having to stop ICS + LABA + <30—GOLD 4 (or 1 hospital on walking (triple (Very severe) t e etLAMA et admission) therapy) n n n . . . X data from Global Initiative forkChronic X X Lung Disease, 2017k ok Source: ouploads/2016/Obstructive o Greport, Mhttp://goldcopd.org/wp-content/ 12/wms-GOLD-2017-Pocket- uide.pdf o o o B .B .B wcommon wCOPD Table 8.4 Some inhalers for asthma and w w w w ww 1 Drug type Short-acting β agonist Medication Salbutamol Terbutaline Inhaled steroids Beclometasone Budesonide Fluticasone Ciclesonide Inhaled steroids Beclomethasone/formoterol and long-acting Budesonide/formoterol β agonist (combination) Fluticasone/salmeterol Fluticasone/vilanterol Long-acting Tiotropium anticholinergic Umeclidinium Glycopyrronium Aclidinium Vilanterol and umeclidinium Long-acting β agonist and Indacaterol and glycopyrronium long-acting anticholinergic Oldaterol and tiotropium (combination) Formoterol and aclidinium net net . kX o Bo . kX o o w.B ww o Bo et .n kX o o w.B ww ok Bo et .n kX o o w.B t e X.n ok o w.B ww et o o w.B t ok o w.B ww t t ww t e X.n e X.n Patients with chronic lung disease who take part in a structured 8–12wk pulmonary rehabilitation programme with a graduated exercise regimen see increased exercise tolerance and improved well-being,4 although this does not reverse pathological processes or improve spirometry. Diet and other lifestyle advice are also covered. ok Bo ww e X.n Box 8.2 Pulmonary rehabilitation e X.n ww .n kX ww t e X.n Colour Blue Blue Brown Brown Orange Red Pink Red Purple Yellow Grey Green Orange Green Red Yellow Green Orange ww et .n kX Trade name eg Ventolin® Bricanyl® Qvar® Pulmicort® Flixotide® Alvesco® Fostair® Symbicort® Seretide® Relvar® Spiriva® Incruse® Seebri® Eklira (Genuair)® Anoro® Ultibro® Spiolto® Duaklir® 4 ok ww o B . w ok ww o B . w Summarized at Mhttps://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/document-library/clinical-information/ pulmonary-rehabilitation/bts-quality-standards-for-pulmonary-rehabilitation-in-adults/ ww B .B w w .B w w wRespiratory 282 ww w Chapter 8 t t t Pneumonia (E OHAM4 p. 166.) .ne .ne .ne X X X signs CURB-65 score ≥3 (see ‘Severity’, E p. 282). ok 2 WorryingCough, oksputum, okbreathless, o o purulent pleuritic chestBpain, Bo Symptoms B . confusion, anorexia. w. haemoptysis, fever, unwell, wwiHR, Signs itemp,w iRR, dsats, unequal air entry, wwreduced expansion, dull percussion, bronchial breathing. Severityt The CURB-65 criteria (see Fig. 8.1) are a validated set of variethat support (but do not replace) etclinical et ables judgement in community- n n n . . . X pneumonia on whether kX to admit. In the out-poatient kXsetting, ok acquired omit urea to get a CRB-o 65oscore; patients scoring 0 (and possibly 1–2) o o B are suitable for home.B treatment. .B wiWCC; w Investigations blds i neutrophils; iCRP; bld cultures. If CURB- w w w cultures If CURB-65 ≥3 (or CURB- w 65=2 and not had anti65 ≥2; Sputum 5 ww 6 biotics); Urine If CURB-65 ≥2 test for pneumococcal antigen; if CURB-65 ≥3 or clinical suspicion, test for legionella antigen; ABG dPaO2 (±dPaCO2 due to hyperventilation but not if tiring or COPD); CXR MAY show focal consolidation; repeat at 6wk if ongoing symptoms or high risk for malignancy/empyema. Treatment Sit up and give O2 as required. Give antibiotics according to local policy or E p. 181 for empirical treatment. Look for dehydration and consider IV fluids. Most patients who require IV antibiotics can safely be switched to PO therapy by day 3.7 Offer a 5d course of antibiotic therapy for patients with low-severity CAP; consider a 7–10d course of antibiotic therapy for patients with moderate and high severity CAP. If symptoms not resolving by day 3, repeat CRP and CXR to exclude pleural effusion/empyema. Complications Empyema, respiratory failure, sepsis, confusion. Hospital-acquired pneumonia K Pneumonia developing ≥48h after admission and not felt to have been incubating at time of admission. Causative organisms will include Gram –ve bacilli (eg Pseudomonas or Klebsiella species, E. coli.) as well as S. pneumoniae and S. aureus (including MRSA). Symptoms and signs can be severe, particularly in frail patients with other comorbidities, and lung necrosis and cavitation may develop. Empirical antibiotic selection should be guided by local policy ±discussion with a microbiologist. Aspiration pneumonia K Aspiration of gastric contents refluxing up the oesophagus and down the trachea may lead to a sterile chemical pneumonitis. Alternatively, oropharyngeal bacteria may be aspirated causing a bacterial pneumonia. Risk factors include dGCS (eg sepsis, anaesthesia, seizures), oesophageal pathology (eg strictures, neoplasia), neurological disability (eg dementia, MS, Parkinson’s disease), or iatrogenic interventions (eg NG tube, OGD, bronchoscopy). At-risk patients can be identified by bedside swallow evaluation (E p. 356). Care is supportive, with O2 supplementation, suctioning of secretions, and attention to prevention of further aspiration (involve SALT and chest physio). Empirical antibiotics can be of benefit if bacterial pneumonia suspected (eg persistent fever, purulent sputum)—eg co-amoxiclav 625mg/8h PO or 1.2g/8h IV with metronidazole 400mg/8h PO or 500mg/8h IV. t t e X.n ok Bo ok ok ww et et .n kX o o o w.B o o o w.B et o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B ok e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ok o B . w 6 ww ww t e X.n e X.n ok o B . w NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG191 Lim WS, et al. Thorax 2003;58:377 full-text available free at: Mwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/ articles/PMC1746657 7 Oosterheert JJ, et al. BMJ 2006;333:1193 full-text available free at: Mwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/ articles/PMC1693658 5 ww t e X.n ww Bo .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX ww et .n kX ww et .n kX ww Bo e X.n o B . w ww Bo t e X.n o B . w ww ww ww B .B w ww t .ne X k oo B . w o Bo t .ne X k et n . kX t ok ok Bo ww Yes et X.n t .ne X k oo B . w ww Give antibiotics eg amoxicillin 500mg/8h PO o Bo 3–5 High severity (risk of Hospital t o B . w ww Hospital Supportive care Supportive care Give antibiotics eg amo PO plus clarithromycin Consider transfer to critical care unit (especially if CURB-65 = 4 or 5) t .ne Send pleural fluid (if present) for culture and pneumococcal antigen testing o o w.B ww Give antibiotics eg coamoxicla clarithromyc Send sputum and blood for culture oo B . ww t .ne X k Send urine for legionella and pneumococcal antigen testing w Send pleural fluid (if present) for culture and pneumococcal antigen testing t Give antibiotics eg amoxicillin 500mg/8h PO ww kX Send sputum for culture if no recent antibiotics Send urine for pneumococcal antigen testing and consider legionella and mycoplasma testing Hospital ww ) .ne X ok Send blood cultures ok Home ok o B . w Other reasons for admission (unstable co-morbidity, social) No et n . X ww .B w ww 2 Moderate severity (risk of death 9%) ww Bo o et n . kX oo e X.n Low severity (risk of death <3%) et n . X o w.B .n kX ww o w.B .ne X k ww et .n kX Consider atypical and viral pathogen serology (baseline and follow-up samples) oo B . w ww ww Fig. 8.1 Severity assessment and investigations in community-acquired ­pneumonia. Adapted by permission from BMJ Publishing Group Limited. British Thoracic Society guidelines for the management of community acquired ­pneumonia in adults: update 2009, Lim, W.S. et al. Thorax 2009 64 (Suppl 3):iii1. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B w 283 et • Confusion • Urea >7mmol/l • Respiratory rate ≥30/min • Blood pressure (SBP <90 or DBP ≤60mmHg) • Age ≥65 years ww w w Breathlessness and low sats CURB-65 severity score: or each feature present: o Bo .B w w w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w wRespiratory 284 ww w Chapter 8 t t t Pulmonary embolism (E OHAM4 .ne .ne p. 120.) .ne X X X Often none except may have pleuritic ok Symptoms oklegbreathlessness; oinkTable chest o o haemoptysis, dizziness, pain; consider risk factors Bo pain, B B . . pleural 8.5. Signs iJVP, iRR,wiHR, dBP, RV heave, hypotension, w w and tachypnoea maywbewthe only clinical signs.rub, ww ±pyrexia. Tachycardia w Investigations D-dimer Will be raised in many situations (infection, malignancy, MI, CVA name a few) while a normal D-dimer must be interpreted tin et tocontext et tachycardia e the clinical (Box 8.3); ECG.n (sinus commonest finding), n . .ndO X X X RBBB, inverted T waves V1– V 4 or S Q T ; ABG type 1 RF (dCO , ± ok (if large PE); CT-PA Is the definitive ok imaging modality, thoughoV/oQkscan may be) o o B B failure, pregnancy. w.B used, eg in those with.renal Acute treatment w Sit w up (unless dBP) and give 15L/ O . If life-threatening w wwminarrange (hypotensionw +shock) seek immediate senior support, an urgent CT- w PA + echo and consider thrombolysis. Otherwise parenteral anticoagulation (E pp. eg enoxaparin 1.5mg/kg/ and pain relief; IV fluids if dBP. et420–2), et2pp.4h SC et n n n Chronic treatment Anticoagulation .(E 420–2) eg warfarin/DOAC. . . X X X ok Length of treatment willodepend ok on risk factors/context.ook o B K Box 8.3 Clinical PE.B w.B risk assessment for w w w PEs are common and potentially fatal, but associated with non-specific clinical w w ww 8 1 3 3 2 2 2 9 signs. The CT-PA offers excellent diagnostic accuracy but exposes your patient to 3.6yr of background radiation, along with nephrotoxic IV contrast medium, while taking up significant resources. So can D-dimer testing help? Remember, the negative predictive value of any test is determined by the prevalence of whatever disease you are testing for: the value of D-dimer testing lies in the excellent negative predictive value when the risk of a PE is low. In those at high risk, negative D-dimer levels do not provide sufficient reassurance. The Wells score for PE (Table 8.5) is a clinically reliable method of identifying the risk of PE, and hence deciding on further testing. •Those scoring ≤4 are low risk: test for D-dimers.10 If elevated, proceed to CT-PA; if negative, then consider alternative diagnoses •Those scoring >4 are high risk: proceed to CT-PA testing and start treatment dose of LMWH. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B et .n kX .n kX o o w.B ww ww et .n kX ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . w Clinical feature w Points wwof DVT (leg swelling and pain on deep wwvein palpation) 3 ww Signs/symptoms PE most likely clinical diagnosis 3 t t HR >100 1.5 et e e n n . . X>3d immobilization or surgery inkpast X 4wk X1.5.n k k o DVT/PE oo oo 1.5 Bo Previous B B . . Haemoptysis 1 w wwtreatment or treatment in past w Malignancy (current 6mth or palliative) 1 w w ww Source: data from Wells et al. Thromb Haemost 2000;83:358. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo o et .n kX Table 8.5 Wells score for pulmonary embolism NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG144 3mth may suffice if low risk (eg 1st PE with identified risk factor now removed); if higher risk (recurrent or unprovoked PEs, or thrombophilia) treatment may need to be long term. 10 In pregnancy, D-dimer testing is uninterpretable. If clinical suspicion, then a Doppler U/S of leg veins is the safest initial investigation—treat if DVT seen. If this is negative, a half-dose V/Q scan provides an acceptable balance of diagnostic utility with radiation exposure. The risk of CT-PA is not to the foetus (which can be shielded) but to proliferating maternal breast tissue. 8 9 B .B w w .B w w w w w Breathlessness and low sats w 285 t t et E p. 204) Spontaneous pneumothorax .ne .n(OHAM4 .ne X X X spontaneously (primary) or in the presence of ok K May occurlungapparently ok ok o disease oroinjury (secondary). Bo underlying B B . thin, male; Marfan’s; recent Risk factors Primaryw Tall, line, pleural w.central w w aspiration or chest drain; Secondary COPD, asthma, infection, trauma, w w ww mechanical ventilation. Symptoms Breathlessness ±chest pain. t resonant and reducednairet entry on affected side, tachypeHyper- et Signs n n . . . X may have tracheal deviation X fractured ribs. X ok noea, ok notorextending ok line of Investigations CXR Lung markings to the peripheries, o o o B pleura seen away from w.Bthe periphery. w.B Treatment Sit up w and give 15L/min O . Chest drain/ aspiration as directed by w w(E p. 286). In essence, primary w pneumothoraces can po- ww BTS guidelines tentially be discharged, while secondary pneumothoraces require admission and either et aspiration (E p. 552) or,.more et usually, drainage (E pp. 554–5). et n n n . . X Tension pneumothorax X X ok 3 ok is under positive pressure (egofollowing ok peneIf air trapped in the pleuralospace o B Bshift may occur, trating trauma or mechanical ventilation) then mediastinal w.B lung w.return. compressing thew contralateral and reducing venous The patient w w w with unilateral hyper- ww may be hypotensive, tachycardic, tachypnoeic, 11 2 resonance and reduced air entry; iJVP and may have tracheal deviation away from the side of the pneumothorax. 2 This is an emergency, it will rapidly worsen if not treated. Sit up and give 15L/min O2. Treat prior to CXR. Insert a large cannula (orange/grey) into the 2nd intercostal space, midclavicular line. Listen for a hiss and leave it in situ; insert a chest drain on the same side. If there is no hiss, leave the cannula in situ and consider placing a 2nd cannula or consider alternative diagnoses; a chest drain is usually still required to prevent a tension pneumothorax accumulating. et o Bo et .n kX et .n kX o o w.B ww .n kX o o w.B ww ww et reflects an imbalance between net fluid within the pleural nspace net K .Excessive . . X X X oncotic pressures ok hydrostatictoandlymphatic ok within the pleural vasculature, ok and/or drainage. o o Bo disruption B B . transudates Causes Pleural effusion w. may be divided into thosebewcausing (where pleuralw fluid protein <25g/L—tend tow bilateral) pulmonary w w nephrotic syndrome, hypothyroidism, w oedema, cirrhosis, intestinal mal- w absorption/failure and exudates (protein >35g/L—may be unilateral or t rheumatoid; if purulentnand bilateral) et malignancy, infection, vasculitides, einfection. et n . . pH.n <7.2, this is empyema reflecting X criteria These help differentiate, X kX especially when protein ok Light’s oeffusion ok >25g/L o o o but <35g/ L . Consider the an exudate if pleural protein:serum B protein >0.5, pleural .B LDH >2/3 of LDH:serum LDH >0.6, or w pleural w.B w w upper limit of normal serum value. w w ww Symptoms The patient may be breathless with pleuritic chest pain. Signs Stony to percussion with reduced air entry, tachypnoea. t with et dull eangle et Investigations CXR Loss of costophrenic a meniscus E pp. .596–7. n n n . . XTreatment Sit up and give 15L/mkinXO . Investigate the cause; if thekX is ok large, op. 552) may relieve symptoms and oaideffusion pleural aspiration (E diagnosis o o o B (draining >1.5L/24hwmay .Bcause re-expansion pulmonary w.Boedema). w w w w ww Pleural effusion (E OHAM4 p. 216.)11 2 British Thoracic Society guidelines available at Mhttps ://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/standards-of- care/guidelines/bts-pleural-disease-guideline/ 11 B 286 .B w ww Chapter 8 .B w w ww w Respiratory t t t Algorithms for the treatment .ne .neof spontaneous X.ne X X ok pneumothorax ook ok o Bo B B . Spontaneous wPneumothorax w. w w w w ww et et YES et n n n . . . X X see Fig 8.3 X ok ok ok o o o B .B w.B w w w w NO w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok YES* ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo If Bilateral/Haemodynamically unstable proceed to Chest drain Age >50 and significant smoking history Evidence of underlying lung disease on exam or CXR? Primary Pneumothorax Aspirate 16–18G cannula Aspirate <2.5I Size>2cm and/or Breathless NO et X.n et ok .n kX YES o .Bo Success (<2cm and breathing improved) w NOo o B . w w Consider discharge review in OPD in 2–4 weeks ww o t .ne X k w t .ne X k *In some patients with a large pneumothorax but minimal symptoms conservative management may be appropriate t .ne X k Chest drain Size 8–14Fr Admit ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . Fig. 8.2 Treating spontaneous pneumothorax in patients w or evidence wover 50 with no whistory significant smoking of underlying w lung disease. Adapted w w ww by permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: British Thoracic Society pleural disease guideline 2010, MacDuff, A. et al. etThorax 2010 65 (Suppl 2):ii18. .net et n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo B .B w ww .B w w w w Breathlessness and low sats t .ne X k w 287 t t .ne Spontaneous Pneumothorax .ne X X o ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww NO see Fig 8.2 t e et et n n n . . . X X X YES ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok YES ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B If Bilateral/Haemodynamically unstable proceed to Chest drain Age >50 and significant smoking history Evidence of underlying lung disease on exam or CXR? Secondary Pneumothorax >2cm or Breathless . kX o o net ww o Bo t .ne X k NO Chest drain Size 8–14Fr Admit ww o oo B . ww w ww NO t .ne X YES k et oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k t ww et n . X Fig. 8.3 Treating pneumothorax in patients over 50 with significant smoking history or evidence of underlying lung disease. Adapted by permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: British Thoracic Society pleural disease guideline 2010, MacDuff, A. et al. Thorax 2010 65 (Suppl 2):ii18. et n . kX o Size 1–2cm t .ne X k Admit High flow oxygen (unless suspected oxygen sensitive) Observe for 24 hours t Bo YES Success Size now<1cm o w.B e X.n ok Bo kX Aspirate 16–18G cannula Aspirate <2.5I oo B . w NO t .ne ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX t o o B . w ww ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 288 .B w ww Chapter 8 .B w w ww w Respiratory t t t Pulmonary oedema (E OHAM4 .ne .ne p. 87.) .ne X X X kdyspnoea, Dyspnoea, orthopnoea, paroxysmal nocturnal ok Symptoms ok oheart o o sputum; coexistent dependent oedema or previous disease. Bo frothy B B . fine inspiratory basal crackles, .wheeze, pitting Signs iJVP, tachypnoea, cold w w w w hands and feet; oedema (ankles and/or sacrum) suggests right heart failure. ww w w Investigations blds (Look specifically for anaemia, infection or MI): FBC, U+E, tCRP, cardiac markers; BNP (normal unlikely in cardiac e ABG May show hypoxia;.nECG et Excludelevels et failure); arrhythmias and.nacute n . X may show old infarcts,kX X586–8); LV hypertrophy or strain (Ekpp. ok STEMI, o oedema CXR Cardiomegaly (notoifoAP projection), signs of pulmonary o o B B LV function/ejection fraction. (E pp. 596–7); Echo.Poor w.Bis life-threatening w Acute treatmentw Sitw up and give 15L/min O . If the attack w w early as CPAP and ICU may w be required. Otherwise w call an intensivist monitor HR, BP, RR, and O sats while giving furosemide 40–120mg IV ±diamorphine every 5min up eIVt (repeat(repeat etto 5mg max, watch RR) 1mg ebo-t n n luses up to 5mg, watch.n RR). If further treatment is required, . . X guided by blood pressure:kX ok be oof sublingual GTN followed byoanokIVXnitrate • Systolic >100 Give 2 sprays o o B B h every infusion (eg GTN starting w.B at 4mg/h and increasing wby.2mg/ 10min, aimingw to keep systolic >100; usual range 4–10mg/h; E p. 203) w w w ww B 2 2 • Systolic <100 The patient is in shock, probably cardiogenic. Get senior help as inotropes are often required. Do not give nitrates • Wheezing Treat as for COPD alongside above-mentioned treatment • No improvement Give furosemide up to 120mg total (more if chronic renal failure) and consider CPAP (see Box 8.4). Insert a urinary catheter to monitor urine output, ±CVP monitoring. Request senior help. Consider HDU/ICU. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w Once stabilized, the patient will need daily weights ±fluid restriction. Document LV function with an echo and optimize treatment of heart failure (E p. 274). Oral bumetanide may be preferred to oral furosemide for diuresis since absorption is said to be more predictable in the presence of bowel oedema, though evidence for this is lacking. Always monitor U+E during diuresis: The heart-sink patients are those with simultaneously failing hearts and kidneys who seem fated to spend their last days alternating between fluid overload and AKI—close liaison with the patient’s GP and palliative care teams is as essential as ever here. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B ww et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww ww et et et n n n . . . XApplication of positive airway Xpressure throughout all phases Xof the ok respiratory cycle limits oalveolar ok and small airway collapse, okthough the o o patient must still initiate muscular B B power to .B a breath and have sufficient w.effect, inhale and exhale.wPursed-lip breathing has a similar and is often w w observed in patients with chronic lung disease. CPAP is often used in ww w w the acute treatment of pulmonary oedema or the chronic treatment of sleep et apnoea (may use nasal CPAP). et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww K Box 8.4 Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) B .B w ww .B w w w w Breathlessness and low sats w 289 t t t SVC .neobstruction (E OHCM10 .np.e528.) .ne X X X k facial/arm swelling,o headache. ok Symptoms Breathlessness,oorthopnoea, ok facial oedema, o engorged veins, stridor. Bo Signs Facial plethoraw(redness), B B . . Pemberton’s test Elevating the arms over the headw for 1min results in inw w creased facial wplethora and iJVP. w ww Investigations CXR/CT Mediastinal mass, tracheal deviation, venous congestiontdistal to lesion; Other Sputum cytology atypical cells. e Seek senior input early. etSit up for eOt. n n n Treatment and give 15L/ min . . . X XIV. Consider diuretics tokXdecrease 4mg/6h PO/ ok Dexamethasone ok pressure o oo 12h PO). venous return and relieveoSVC (eg furosemide 40mg/ B Otherwise symptomatic B B . . treatment while arranging for tissue diagnosis. ww distress syndrome (ARDS) ww (E OHAM4 p198.) ww Acute respiratory w w K Acute-onset respiratory failure due to diffuse alveolar injury following a pulmonary insult (eg pneumonia, gastric or systemic insult etpancreatitis, et aspiration) eoft (shock, sepsis). Characterized by the acute development n n n . . . Xbilateral pulmonary infiltrateskand X severe hypoxaemia in thekabsence X of ok evidence for cardiogenic opulmonary o o oedema. o o B Symptoms Breathlessness, often multiorgan failure. .B wof.Brespiratory w Signs Hypoxic, signs distress, andw w w w underlying condition. ww B 2 Investigations CXR Bilateral infiltrates. Treatment Sit up and give 15L/min O2. Refer to HDU/ICU early and treat underlying cause. Often requires ventilation. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 290 .B w ww Chapter 8 .B w w ww w Respiratory t t et .nStridor .ne .ne 2 in a conscious adult patient X X X ok ok ok o o stridor— C ALL ANAESTHETIST AND ENT Bo 2 Airway Acute B B . w. TEAM URGENTLY poor respiratory effort—CALL w ARREST 2 Breathing wIfw w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww 2 Circulation 3 Call senior anaesthetics and ENT immediately. t forattempt enot et ehelp et n n n • .Do to look in the mouth/ xamine the neck . . X If choking, follow algorithmkinXFig. 8.4 ok ••Avoid othe patient in any way ookX disturbing/upsetting o o B • Let the patient sit in.B position they choose.B w Owhatever w • Offer supplemental to all patients w ww ww • Fast bleepw senior anaesthetist • Fast bleep senior ENT • Adrenaline (epinephrine) nebs (5mLeoft 1:1000 with O ) et pulse et n n n • .Monitor oximeter ±defibrillator’s ECG leads if unwell . . X Check temp X X ok ••Take ok ward staff or check notes ok brief history fromorelatives/ o o B .B itching (?anaphylaxis) w.B • Look for swelling, rashes, wcauses • Consider serious (see ‘Life-threateningw w w w causes’) ww 2 2 •Await anaesthetic and ENT input •Request urgent portable CXR • Call for senior help • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok Life-threatening causes ok ok o o Bo 2• Infection B B (epiglottitis, w. abscess) • Foreignwbody w. w •Tumour w •Post- wop ww •Trauma •Anaphylaxis t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww t e X.n ok Bo .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww et n . X ww o w.B Fig. 8.4 Adult choking treatment algorithm, 2015 guidelines. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Resuscitation Council (UK). Bo o et n . kX et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t .ne Cough X k o Bo et n . kXBloody oo B . w Cough t .ne X k o w.B ww o ww t ww et n . kX oo e X.n ok .B w ww Usually, the cause of coughing is obvious (Box 8.5). Chronic (>8wk), unexplained coughing with a normal CXR and the absence of infective features requires a considered approach. Is there diurnal or seasonal variation in coughing (cough-variant asthma; do PEFR diary, lung function testing, and a trial of inhaled steroids)? Is there a history suggestive of gastro-oesophageal reflux (trial of PPI)? Does the onset of a dry cough follow the introduction of an ACEi (consider an AT II receptor blocker)? Or is there a sensation of mucus accumulation at the back of the throat (consider chronic/allergic rhinitis and ‘post-nasal drip’ and a trial of nasal steroids or antihistamines)? et n . X ok .n kX URTI, post-viral, post-nasal drip (allergy), pneumonia, LVF, PE Asthma, COPD, bronchitis, bronchiectasis, smoking, post-nasal drip, oesophageal reflux, pneumonia, TB, parasites, interstitial lung disease, heart failure, ACEi, lung cancer, sarcoid, sinusitis, cystic fibrosis, habitual Massive Bronchiectasis, lung cancer, infection (including TB and aspergilloma), trauma, AV malformations Other Bronchitis, PE, LVF, mitral stenosis, aortic aneurysm, vasculitides, parasites o w.B et n . X ww t .ne X ok ok o B . w w 291 et ww Bo w w Box 8.5 Causes of coughs Acute Chronic o Bo .B w w o B . w ww ww ww t t Haemoptysis up blood, >500mL 24h is massive. et .ne ABC,Coughing .ne FBC,over Management establish patent airway; U+E, LFT, clotting, X X Xm.innG+S, k sputum C+S and cytology,okABG, ECG, CXR. Sit up, o15L/ k O. o odcough) If massive Good IV.Baccess o (≥green), 60mg PO (may Bo Codeine B . w team for urgent w monitor HR and BP, immediate referral to respiratory wwthorax. bronchoscopy w±CT ww w Bronchiectasis (E OHCM10 p. 172.) K Abnormal permanently damaged t and dilated bronchi caused et ofand ebronchial ebyt n n n destruction the elastic tissue of .the walls. . . X Cystic fibrosis, infection X X TB, HIV), tumours, ok Causes ok (pneumonia,aspergillosis, ok imo o o munodeficiency, allergic bronchopulmonary foreign bodies, B aspiration, asthma,wrheumatoid .B arthritis, idiopathic.w.B w Symptoms Chronic cough with purulent sputumw w w ±haemoptysis, halitosis. ww Signs Clubbing, coarse inspiratory crepitations ±wheeze. Investigations FBC, immunoglobulins, aspergillus serology; blood or sweat et CF); Sputum C+S; CXR Thickened et bronchial outline (tramline et testn(for n n . . . and ring shadows) ±fibrotic changes; CT thorax (‘high- r esolution CT’) X X X ok Bronchial dilatation; spirometry; ok Bronchoscopy for otherodiagnoses. ok o o B Acute treatment Ow±BIPAP ±cortico- .B as required, ±bronchodilators w.B (consult steroids. Typicalwrecurrent infections include Pseudomonas local w antibiotic guidelines). w Chest physiotherapy towmobilize secretions. ww 2 12 2 et n . kX o Bo Chronic treatment Chest physio, inhaled/nebulized bronchodilators, antibiotics, consider prophylactic, rotating antibiotics if ≥3 exacerbations/yr. NIV and surgery may be considered where medical management fails. Complications Recurrent pneumonia, pseudomonal infection, massive haemoptysis, cor pulmonale. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w .ne X ok .Bo British Thoracic Society guidelines available at Mhttps://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/standards-of- care/guidelines/bts-guideline-for-non-cf-bronchiectasis/ 12 ww ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww ww Bo et t et n . X ww w ww o Bo B .B w w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 9 w 293 t t t .ne Gastroenterology .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww 2 Abdominal pain emergency 294 pain 295 t Abdominal e et et 2 GI bleeding emergency n304 n n . . . Acute upper GI bleeds 305 X Acute lower GI bleeds kX307 kX ok o o o o o Nausea and .vomiting 310 B Diarrhoea w312B w.B w w Constipation 316 w w ww 2 Liver failure emergency 318 failure 319 et Liver et et Jaundice 324 n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 294 Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t et net .nAbdominal .emergency .ne 2 pain X X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Airway B B . airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ Check w w. TEAMadjuncts w 2 Breathing w If no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww 2 Circulation et et et n n n . . . 3 Call for senior help early if patient deteriorating. X min O if SOB or sats k<94% X kX ok •• 15L/ o o o o o Monitor BP, pulse oximeter, if unwell B .B defibrillator’s ECG leads • Obtain a full setw of observations, are they haemodynamically w.B stable? w w •Take briefw history if possible/check notes/w ask ward staff ww • Examine patient: condensed RS, CVS, abdo, ±wound exam • Consider causes (see ‘Life-threatening causes and emergencies’) t ifserious etreat et et and present n n n . . . • Initiate further treatment E pp. 295–7 X X X ok • Venous access, take bloods: ok ok o o o FBC, U+E, LFT, amylase, CRP, clotting, X-match .4B units, bld cultures B w.B • Give IV fluids if hypovolaemic or shocked (E p.w 490) w w • Analgesia w as appropriate w ww B 2 • • • • • • • • Arterial blood gas, but don’t leave the patient alone Erect CXR (portable if unwell) and consider plain AXR ECG Urine dipstick and β-hCG (all pre-menopausal women), ±catheter Keep patient NBM if likely to need theatre Call for senior help Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww 2 Life-threatening causes and emergencies t .ne X k ww t t t •Perforation • Leaking .ne .ne abdominal aortic X.ne • Bowel infarction/ischaemia X aneurysm (AAA) X k k ok obstruction oo • Strangulated hernia oo Bo •• Bowel B B •Testicular or ovarian torsion . Acute pancreatitis. w wpregnancy •Ruptured ectopic • Acute cholangitis w w w w (MI, aortic dissection). ww •Referred pain • Appendicitis et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Abdominal pain w 295 t t t .ne .ne .ne Abdominal pain X X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Worrying features B B Sudden onset, iHR, dBP, dGCS, massive w. expansile w.vomiting, ­distension, peritonism, mass, persistent haemaw w w PR bleeding; if life-threatening w E p. 294. ww temesis, massive Think by anatomicaletstructure, see Fig. 9.1; Common et about Pain et n n n . . Gastroenteritis, peptic ulcer, .gastro- oesophageal reflux disease X X bowel disease (IBD), Xirritable constipation, inflammatory ok (GORD), ok okmesenteric o o bowel syndrome (IBS),odiverticular disease, adhesions, B adenitis, renal colic,wUTI/ .B pyelonephritis, urinary retention, w.B biliary colic/ w sepsis, pancreatitis, bleeding AAA, incarceratedw hernia, ischaemic bowel; w w pregnancy, ovarian cyst, w Obs/g ynae Ectopic ovarian torsion, PID, endo- w metriosis, labour; Other Trauma, MI, pneumonia, sickle-cell crises, DKA, t porphyria. See Tablen9.1 psoaseabscess, etand Box 9.1. et n n . . . X about Nature of painkX(constant, colicky, changes with X ok Ask oonset, frequency, severity, radiation ok eating/ vomiting/bowels), duration, to the o o o B back, dysphagia, dyspepsia, B . abdominal swelling, nausea.B and vomiting, stool w w loss, breath- w colour, change w bowel habit, urinary symptoms, w inlumps, ww lastweight lessness, rashes, chest pain, recent surgery, period; PMH DM, w IBD, IHD, jaundice, gallstones, pancreatitis, previous abdo surgery; DH NSAIDs; SH Alcohol. t t et .neTemp, HR, BP, RR, sats, finger- .nprick .ne Obs glucose, urine output. X X X ok okpallor, pulse volume, clubbing, okleuconychia o o for Jaundice, sweating, Bo Look B B . (white nails), lymphadenopathy (Virchow’s node),w abdominal scars, disw. w w tension, ascites, visible peristalsis, tenderness, peritonitis (tenderness with ww w w guarding, rebound, or rigidity), loin tenderness, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, masses (?expansile/pulsatile), check hernial orifices, examine ext (♂: testicular vs epididymal t t ternal femoral pulses, .negenitalia .ne skintenderness), .ne bowel sounds, lung air entry; PRX perianal tags, fissures, warts; tenderX X ok ness, masses, prostate hypertrophy, ok stool, check glove foroblood, ok mucus, o colour. Bo melaena and stool w B B . w. w w Investigations Urine Dipstick, β-hCG in all w pre-menopausal women w age, MSU; blds FBC, U+E, w of reproductive LFT, amylase, Ca , glucose, w ±cardiac markers, venous lactate, clotting, bld cultures if pyrexial; ABG If unwell; etECG To exclude MI; Erect.nCXR et To exclude perforation;.nPlain et n . AXR To exclude bowel obstruction or KUB For renal colic; USS Especially X X X ok if hepatobiliary cause suspected; ok CT abdo Discuss with senior. ok o o o B Treatment Givewall.B patients O , analgesia ±antiemetics; w.B insert a urinary w w w catheter if unwell. Keep NBM until urgent surgery is ruled out. w w w 2+ 2 Shocked IV fluids 3urgent senior review Peritonitic With IV fluids, IV antibiotics 3urgent senior review >50yr in severe pain ?AAA, IV fluids 3urgent senior review Abdo pain and vomiting Consider obstruction, IV fluids, NG tube, AXR (E pp. 602–3) 3urgent senior review • GI bleed Resuscitate with IV fluids (E p. 304) 3urgent senior review. et n . kX o Bo • • • • et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 296 .B w ww Chapter 9 Gastroenterology .B w w ww w t t t .ne 9.1 Common causes ofXabdominal .ne pain .ne Table X X ok ok ok History Examination Investigations o o Bo 3Perforation w B B Rapid under . onset, severe Peritonitis, w. Gas abdominal pain ±bowel sounds diaphragm, acidotic w w w Bowel Pain, distension, Distension, Dilated loops of w w w obstruction nausea, vomiting, tenderness, bowel on AXR constipation tinkling bowel t t e e et sounds n n n . . . Bowel ischaemia/ Sudden onset, severe Shock, iWCC, ilactate/ X X X or pain, previous acidotic, ok infarction ok arterial generalized ok±AF o o o disease, ±AF tenderness previous MI B .B .BECG on w w Appendicitis w RIF pain (initially Slight temp, w periumbilical), wwRIF iWCC, iCRP ww tenderness, anorexia, nausea, ±peritonitic vomiting t t e e et n Strangulated Sudden onset pain,.n Tender hernial Needs urgent.n . X previous hernia surgerykX kX mass ok hernia oheartburn, GORD/peptic Dyspepsia, Epigastric Consider o o oo need for B B B ulcer anorexia, NSAIDs tenderness OGD . . w iWCC, iCRP Gastroenteritisww Rapid onset, itemp, epigastric w vomiting, diarrhoea tenderness, wwno ww peritonitis net Inflammatory bowel disease X. ok tTender ±mass .ne ±peritonitis Weight loss, mouth ulcers, PR blood ±mucus, diarrhoea oo B . w kX t .ne X k iWCC, iCRP, iplts, oedematous bowel on AXR, lesions on colonoscopy iWCC, iCRP, diverticulae on colonoscopy iiiamylase, iWCC, iCRP, iglucose, dCa2+ oo B . ww Diverticular w Pain, diarrhoea, Tenderness, w w ww disease constipation, PR ±peritonitis bleeding t Constant epigastric etShock, 3Acute e n n epigastric net pain radiating to back, pancreatitis . . . X X X vomiting, anorexia, ok okgallstones tenderness, ok ialcoholoor dbowel sounds o Bo 3Abdominal w B B Abdominal Expansile mass, . Urgent USS . and back pain, collapse, unwell, oftenw (bedside if aortic aneurysm w previous heart dleg (AAA) w disease/iBP, age dBP, ww possible); ww pulses immediate surgery ♂ tcolic >50yr, tSweating, if60%leaking t e e Renal Sudden severe colicky of stonesne n n . . . flank pain, radiates restless, loin visible on KUB; X X tenderness >99% onkX to groin, nausea/ ok ok o oo CTnon- vomitingo contrast B B B . . Hepatobiliary Constant or colicky RUQ LFTs; w w Deranged disease dilated CBD on w ww RUQ pain, gallstone tenderness, w ww ±jaundice USS Bo Obs/gynae disease o Bo torsion Lower abdo pain, PV bleeding, irregular/ absent periods Lower abdo β-hCG +ve, PV lesions seen on t ettenderness, n exam abnormal USS . .ne X X Sudden-onset Tender testicle, Urgentk surgery oksevere unilateral pain ±swelling ogroin oo B B . . w w ww ww ww et n . kX3Testicular B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo .B w w w t .ne X k oo B . w Liver, gallbladder, duodenum, right lung o w.B .n kX o Stomach, spleen, left lung Abdominal aorta, small bowel, appendix Meckel’s diverticulum ww Right kidney, colon, ureter, musculoskeletal t e X.n Caecum, appendix, right ovary and right fallopian tube, right testicle, ureter Bladder, uterus, rectum, colon w 297 et Oesophagus, stomach, duodenum, heart ww et n . kX w Abdominal pain ww Left kidney, colon, ureter, musculoskeletal et n . kX oo Sigmoid colon, left ovary and left fallopian tube, left testicle, ureter k oo B . w.B Fig. 9.1 Abdominalw organs and pain, by region. w w w w ww I Box 9.1 Causes of abdominal pain in this chapter and elsewhere et et et n n n . . . Bowel X ok Adhesions/ischaemia E p.o299okX Appendicitis E p. 299ookX o B Diverticular disease E.p. Dyspepsia/peptic w B301 w.Bulcers E p. 300 Gastroenteritis E p. 313 Hernias E p. 298 w w w w ww Inflammatory bowel disease E p. 315 Irritable bowel syndrome E p. 314 Obstruction E p. 298 E p. 297 t t et ePerforation n n Hepatopancreatobiliary . . .ne X X X ok Biliary colic/cholecystitis Eopp.ok301–2 Hepatitis E p. 321 ook chronic) Bo Pancreatitis (acute/w .B E p. 302 .B w Genitourinaryw w ww ww o Bo Ectopic pregnancy E p. 512 Ovarian cyst E p. 514 Testicular torsion E p. 476 o Bo t .ne X k Other Endometriosis E p. 514 Pelvic inflammatory disease E p. 514 t o o w.B Abdominal aortic aneurysm E p. 487 ww et n . kX o Renal colic E p296 ww t Bo oo B . w .n kX 3 Perforation (E OHCM10 p. 606.) Causes Peptic ulcer, appendicitis, diverticulitis, inflammatory bowel disease, bowel obstruction, GI cancer, gallbladder. Symptoms Acute abdominal pain worse on coughing or moving; PMH Peptic ulcer, cancer, IBD; DH NSAIDs; SH Alcohol. Signs iHR, ±dBP, iRR, peritonism (abdo tenderness, guarding, rebound, rigidity), reduced or absent bowel sounds. Investigations blds iWCC, dHb, iamylase, ilactate; CXR Erect film shows air under the diaphragm, ±obstruction on AXR; ABG Acidosis. Management 2 Seek senior review; resuscitate with IV fluids, 15L/min O2, good IV access (large ×2), analgesia (eg morphine 5–10mg IV with cyclizine 50mg/8h IV), NBM, and urgent X-match 4 units; IV antibiotics (eg co- amoxiclav 1.2g/8h IV), insert NG tube and urinary catheter, consider emergency CT once stable, prepare for emergency laparotomy (E p. 114). e X.n ok Bo et .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 298 .B w ww Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t t Bowel .ne obstruction (E OHCM10 .nep. 610.) .ne X X X ok ok ok o of intestinal obstruction Bo Bo Box 9.2 Causes B w. w. Outside the bowel Adhesions, hernias, masses, volvulus. w w w wall Tumours, IBD, diverticular w disease, infarction, con- ww Within the bowel genital atresia, Hirschsprung’s disease. etthe bowel lumen Impacted .faeces, et FB, intussusception, strictures, et Inside n n n . . polyps, gallstones. X X X ok Paralytic ileus (pseudo-obstruction) ok Post-op, electrolyte imbalance, ok uraemia, o o o B DM, anticholinergic .drugs. wB w.B w w w w ww Symptoms Vomiting (may be faeculant), colicky abdo pain, pain may improve with vomiting, constipation (±absolute—no flatus or stool), et anorexia, recent surgery..net et bloating, n n . . Signs iHR ±dBP, iRR, distended abdomen, absent or tinkling bowel X X ok sounds, peritonitis, scarsofrom ok previous surgery, hernias.ookX o B B Look for dilated Investigations blds Mild .iWCC and iamylase ±acidosis; .AXR w Bor volvulus w bowel (?small or large) (E pp. 602–3); erect CXR ?free air. w w w Managementw Bowel obstruction may need w fluid resuscitation and anal- w B gesia, treat according to the type and location of the obstruction: • Strangulated Constant severe pain in an ill patient with peritonitis (acute abdomen); can be small or large bowel. This will require urgent surgery especially if caused by a hernia • Small bowel Early vomiting with late constipation, usually caused by hernias, adhesions, or Crohn’s. Treat conservatively with NBM, a NG tube, and IV fluids (E pp. 394–7)—often referred to as drip and suck— until the obstruction resolves; surgery if patient deteriorates. K+ is often lost into the bowel and needs to be replaced in fluids (eg 20mmol/L) • Large bowel Early absolute constipation with late vomiting, usually caused by tumours, diverticulitis, volvulus (sigmoid or caecal) or faeces. IV fluids, NBM and refer to a senior surgeon. Urgent surgery may be required if the caecum is >10cm across on AXR otherwise a CT, colonoscopy, or water-soluble contrast enema may be requested to investigate the cause. Surgery is usually required except for: • sigmoid volvulus—sigmoidoscopy and flatus tube insertion • faecal obstruction—laxative enemas (E p. 207) • colonic stenting—may be offered for tumour palliation • Paralytic ileus Loss of bowel motility can mimic the signs and symptoms of a mechanical blockage. It is a response of the bowel to inflammation locally (eg surgery) or adjacently (eg pancreatitis). The main distinguishing feature is the relative lack of abdo pain, although the pathology responsible for the ileus may cause abdo pain itself. USS abdo, contrast enema, or CT may be required to exclude mechanical obstruction. Treat conservatively with NBM, NG tube, IV fluids (E pp. 394–7) until the underlying pathology improves. Check and correct electrolyte abnormalities, including K+ and Mg2+ both of which may need to be replaced. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww et n . kX ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k o w.B ww et n . X o Complications Strangulation, o bowel infarction, bowel perforation, ok dK , o o o B hypovolaemia. w.B w.B w w w w ww + B .B w w .B w w w w w Abdominal pain w 299 t t t Adhesions .ne .ne .ne X X X Previous surgery, abdominal k sepsis, IBD, cancer, endometriosis. ok Causes ointermittent oktenderness, o o Symptoms and signs Chronic abdominal pain and Bo may B B . develop bowel (distension, vomiting, w. constipation). wwobstruction Managementw Analgesia and stool softeners; w maywneed operative division ww of adhesions, but this may lead to new adhesions forming. Bowel infarction (EeOHCM10 p. 620.) t etischaemia/ ePRt n n n . . . Symptoms Unwell, sudden- o nset severe constant abdominal pain, X PMH AF, MI, polycythaemia. kX kX ok blood; o o o o o Signs iHR (?irregular), iRR, itemp, cold extremities, generalized B tenderness .B±dBP,signs. but few wspecific w.B w w Investigationswblds iWCC, iamylase, w metabolic/ lactic acidosis; ww Sigmoidoscopy ±biopsy may show pale, ulcerated mucosa. Management resuscitate with IV fluids; analgesia, IV ABx (eg et NBM, et anticoagulation et n n co- amoxiclav 1.2g/ 8h IV), consider with IV.nhep. . X (E pp. 420–2), surgicalkX X poor resection is often necessary.kVery ok arin o state prognosis—clarify premorbid and consider ICU careoasoappropriate. o o B Appendicitis (EwOHCM10 .B p. 608.) w.B w w $ A common diagnostic challenge — c omplications w w can be severe if left ww 1 untreated, but 15–40% of appendicectomy specimens are normal. Can occur in any age group; classical cases are easy enough to spot, variable anatomy and extremes of age can make presentation atypical. Differential UTI, diverticulitis, gastroenteritis, mesenteric adenitis, perforated ulcer, IBD, diverticulitis; Gynae Ectopic pregnancy, ovarian torsion, ruptured ovarian cyst, salpingitis. Symptoms Central, abdominal colicky pain worsening over 1–2d then developing into constant RIF pain (sensitivity and specificity of 780%2), worse on moving, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, may have constipation, diarrhoea, dysuria, oliguria (all non-specific and common). Signs itemp, iHR, ±dBP, RIF tenderness ±guarding/rebound/rigidity, RIF pain on palpating LIF (Rovsing’s sign), PR tender on right (there is no evidence that this has diagnostic utility in adults, but failure to perform PR still considered negligent). Investigations iWCC, neutrophilia>75%, iCRP (a useful triad with negative predictive value >97% in adults, but beware children and elderly); bld cultures (if pyrexial), G+S; US and contrast-enhanced CT reduce laparotomy rates, but this must be balanced against risks of radiation exposure and local resources. Management Surgery—NBM, IV fluids, analgesia, IV ABx (eg co-amoxiclav 1.2g/8h IV). Laparoscopic approaches reduce scarring, postoperative pain, recovery time, and incidence of wound infections, but require more operative time and higher skill levels than open appendicectomy. If peritonitic, send for immediate surgery, otherwise reassess regularly while awaiting surgery. If diagnostic uncertainty, a short period of safe observation ±imaging can be informative. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B k 1 2 e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ok ww ww t e X.n e X.n ok And hence an all too common source of tension between ED staff and junior surgical doctors— try to avoid becoming part of this seemingly perpetual cliché when your turn comes. See Yeh B. Ann Emerg Med 2008;52:301 for an excellent review of the clinical utility of signs and symptoms in adult appendicitis; available free at: Mwww.annemergmed.com/article/S0196- 0644(07)01732-5/fulltext o B . w ww t e X.n ww o Bo .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww o B . w ww B .B w w .B w w wGastroenterology 300 ww w Chapter 9 t t t Dyspepsia .ne (E OHCM10 p. 252.) .ne .ne X X X persistent symptom referable to the upper GI tract.k ink ok $ Anypatients oulcer o Thisandwillrare o o with peptic disease, GORD, oesophagitis, Bo clude B B . upper GI malignancies, endoscopic w. as well as those without wsignificant changes. Aim to identify those at risk of significant pathology, and conw w w in those without. w ww trol symptoms Symptoms Burning retrosternal or epigastric pain, worse on bending and t t nausea, vomiting, nocturnal lying,ewaterbrash (excess saliva), acidereflux, et n n n . . cough, symptoms improved by antacids; symptom patterns are .poorly Xpredictive of endoscopic findings. X kX ok Signs o(nok peritonitis), rarely epigastric omass. o o o Epigastric tenderness B B hernia, medica.B alcohol, obesity, pregnancy, Common risk factors w Smoking, w.hiatus w w tions (bisphosphonates, calcium antagonists, nitrates, corticosteroids, NSAIDs). w w ww Investigations Urgent endoscopy if ‘red flag’ symptoms (chronic GI bleeding/ iron deficiency anaemia, unintentional weight loss, progressive dysphagia, persistent et vomiting, epigastric mass).noret≥55yr and persistent/unexplained et n n . . dyspepsia. Else test and treat for H. pylori (Box 9.3). Some reserve testing X those who fail empirical treatment X kXConsider full-dose o PPI. ok for orkequired PPIwithfor1mth o o o low- d ose maintenance or as- those who respond. If sympB .Bendoscopy or 24h ambulatorywpH .Bmonitoring. toms persist, consider w w advice Weight loss, smoking Managementw Lifestyle wwcessation, alcohol reduc- ww 3 tion, avoid foods/drugs which exacerbate symptoms, especially NSAIDs. • GORD Antacids (E p. 187) PRN if mild; full-dose PPI for 1–2mth, then low-dose or PRN PPI; H2 receptor blockers (eg ranitidine) less effective than PPI, but individual patients may respond better; surgical fundoplication (rarely) if severe • Oesophagitis As for GORD; frequency of surveillance if Barrett’s oesophagus detected requires specialist guidance • Peptic ulcer 1–2mth full-dose PPI. 95% of duodenal and 80% of gastric ulcers are related to H. pylori, therefore ensure eradication (see Box 9.3). Gastric ulcers are also associated with malignancy, therefore repeat endoscopy at 6wk to confirm healing. If symptom recurrence, retest, since eradication may require different or prolonged antibiotics, and re-infection can occur • Gastric/oesophageal malignancy Urgent multidisciplinary team referral for surgery/palliation. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o ww o w.B ww et .n kX .n kX o ww o w.B K Box 9.3 H. pylori infection and eradication • .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX ww C-urea breath testing reliably detects infection or confirms et et eradication and is widely used innsecondary care; faecal antigennet n . . . tests are used in primary care kX• CLO tests require a biopsy kX kpHX taken at OGD and rely upon o o o changes.Bo Bo • Aindicator .Bo ‘wash-out’ period of 2wk off PPI is needed for these tests; w w w are less reliable, but can w serological be w used in a patient on a PPI wtests ww •Treatment is with triple therapy for 1wk, eg lansoprazole 30mg/ 12htPO, amoxicillin 1g/12h PO, clarithromycin 12h PO t e containing metronidazole etmay increase500mg/ •Regimens resistance andne n n . . . may be better reserved forX 2nd-line therapy X• 2wk X k k k courses increase eradication o o effective. oo rates by 10%, but are.Bnotocost- Bo B . w w ww ww ww 3 13 NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG184 B .B w ww .B w w w w Abdominal pain w 301 t t t Diverticular disease (E OHCM10 .ne .ne p. 628.) .ne X X X = diverticulaek(out pouchings) in the large bowel. ok $ Diverticulosis o of diverticulae; acutely symptomatic. ok o o Diverticulitis = inflammation Bo $Symptoms B B . improves with Abdominal sided, w. pain/cramps (usually leftww bowel opening),wirregular bowel habit, flatus, bloating, PR bleeding. w w ww Signs itemp, iHR, ±dBP, LIF tenderness, ±peritonitis, distension. Investigations blds iWCC, iCRP; CT/colonoscopy direct visut et (necessary et causesForof indirect/ alization only to exclude other symptoms). .ne n n . . X X fibre diet, antispasmodics Diverticulosis kHigh- (eg kX analok Management osenna, E oNBM, mebeverine), laxatives (eg p. 207); Diverticulitis o o o B gesia, fluids and ABx amoxiclav 1.2g/8h IV). .B w.(egB co-perforation, w Complications Obstruction, w w (usually painless). abscess, ww adhesions, strictures, ww ­fistula, PR bleeding Renaltcolic (E OHCM10 p. 638.) t e consider other causes.nofe abdominal pain, including.nAAA, et $ .n Always X­especially if no previous renalkstone X disease. kX loin to ok Symptoms Acute-onset severe o unilateral colicky pain radiating ofrom o o o B groin, nausea and vomiting, B strangury (fresweating, haematuria, dysuria, w.B w.sensation quent, painful passage of small volumes of urinew with of incomw w iliac fossa or suprapubic painwsuggests another pathology. ww plete emptying); B Signs iHR, sweating, patient restless and in severe pain, usually no tenderness on palpation unless superimposed infection. Investigations Urine Hb on dipstick (790% cases), nitrates suggest UTI, β-hCG if ♀; blds FBC, U+E, Ca2+, urate; CT-KUB Detects >99% stones. Management Analgesia (NSAID first, then opioids), if <5mm should pass spontaneously; larger stone will require urology opinion. If evidence of infection give IV ABx (check local policy). If evidence of infection or hydronephrosis refer urgently to urologist for nephrostomy or stent. Complications Pyelonephritis, renal dysfunction. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t .ne colic .ne .ne Biliary X X X ok $ Contraction of the gallbladder ok or cystic duct around gallstones. ok o o or constant RUQ/ e pigastric pain (especially Bo Symptoms Recurrentwcolicky B B . . on eating fatty foods), nausea, vomiting, bloating. w w w Signs RUQ tenderness, non-peritonitic, not w jaundiced. w ww Results blds Normal; USS Gallstones. t elective cholecystectomy.net Management et Analgesia, dietary advice, eand n n . . Complications Passage of stone into bile duct may Xor acutecommon X.cause kXcholestatic jaundice, cholangitis, k k pancreatitis. o o o Bo Acute cholecystitis .Bo .Bo w w $ Gallbladder inflammation 2° to cystic ductw occlusion by gallstone. ww RUQ/egepigastric ww Symptoms Continuous pain,w unwell, vomiting. Signs itemp, RUQ tenderness and peritonitis, Murphy’s sign (pain and cest deep inspiration during palpation sationeof et in RUQ, not present in LUQ). et n n n . . . Results blds iWCC, iCRP; USS Gallstones and thickened gallbladder. X X kXconsider ok Management NBM, analgesia, okABx (eg co-amoxiclav 1.2g/o8hoIV); o o B urgent cholecystectomy w.Bvs interval procedure. ERCP w.ifBdistal CBD stone. w w w w w w B .B w w .B w w wGastroenterology 302 ww w Chapter 9 t t t 3Acute OHCM10 .ne pancreatitis (E X .ne p. 636.) .ne X X from a mild self-limiting k illness to severe and life-tohreatening. k ok $ Varies‘I GET oIdiopathic, o SMASHED’: Gallstones (50%),oEthanol (25%), Bo Causes B B .Mumps, Autoimmune, Scorpion . bites (rare), Trauma, Steroids, w wERCP, w w Hyperlipi­daemia, Hypercalcaemia, Hypothermia, Drugs (eg thiaw w ww zide diuretics). Symptoms Constant severe epigastric pain radiating to the back, i­mproved t forward, nausea, vomiting, esitting etanorexia. et with n n n . . . XSigns iHR, ±dBP, itemp, cold Xextremities, epigastric tenderness X with ok peritonitis, abdominal distension, ok dbowel sounds, mild jaundice, ok Cullen’s o o o (bruised umbilicus) or sign. B .BGrey–Turner’s (bruised flanks) wiWCC, w.Biglucose, dCa , w Results blds dHb, iiilipase (or amylase), w w w (±DIC), LFT; USS ?gallstones; w CT If diagnosis in doubt. w deranged clotting Management IV fluid resuscitation, O , analgesia, urinary catheter, NBM, NG tube. If severe (Table 9.2) involve ICU and plan ERCP if gallstone et Monitor etglucose. et n n aetiology. fluid balance, .obs, Daily U+E, FBC,.nCRP; . X X LMWH (E pp.k420–2). kX ok prophylactic ofailure, respiratory failure,oohaemorrhage, o o Complications DIC, renal B .B necrosis), pseudocysts, thrombosis, sepsis w(infected w.Babscess, chronic w w pancreatitis. w w w w 4 5 6 2+ 2 Table 9.2 Modified Glasgow score for predicting acute pancreatitis severity et In 1974 developed a scoring system, netRanson net . . validated for use in alcohol-inducedX acute X >55yr k pancreatitis; this remains widelyokused. The o <8.0kPa oo modified Ranson criteria (1979) have been Bo PaO B Bo disease. WCC >15 .× 10 /L validated for gallstone-r.elated In w w 1984, Blamey et w al.* at the Royal Infirmary Ca (uncorr) w<2mmol/L w >10mmol/L in Glasgow modified w 8 of the 11 Ranson ww Glucose criteria and validated these for prognostic ALT >100u/L use in both t alcohol and gallstone inducednet LDHet >600u/L epancreatitis. acute n n . . . Urea >16mmol/L X kXAlbumin kX <32g/L ok o o Bo Score 1 point for eachwparameter Bo present on admission or withinwthe.Bfirsto48h. A score . of ≥3 predicts an episode of severe pancreatitis and should prompt ICU/HDU referral. Reproduced from Gut, Blamey S. L., et al., 25, 1340–6, 1984, ww wwwith permission from BMJ ww Publishing Group Ltd. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww .n kXAge Variable Criteria 2 9 2+ *Original article available free at Mwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1420197 t k o Bo t e X.n 4 5 6 t e X.n e X.n British Society of Gastroenterology guidelines at Mgut.bmj.com/content/54/suppl_3/iii1.full Case series available free at Mwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1700547 Lipase slightly more specific. Overall trend in relation to pain is more important than absolute values. ok ww o B . w ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Abdominal pain w 303 t t t Chronic .ne pancreatitis (E OHCM10 .ne p. 270.) .ne X X X k can be due to gallstones alcohol, obut ok CausesalsoUsually ok (which o cause recurrent pancreatitis), familial,Bo cystic fibrosis, Bo may B hyperparathyroidism, w. iCa . w. w w Symptoms General w malaise, anorexia, weightwloss, recurrent epigastric ww pain radiating to back, steatorrhoea, bloating, DM. Signs Cachexia, epigastric tenderness.et et et n n n . . . XInvestigations blds Glucose (?DM, E pp. 334–6); Stoolkdelastase; X ok USS (±endoscopic), CT/oMoRCPkXmay show characteristicoochanges, eg o B microcalcification.w.B B . w Diet Refer to w Management Analgesia, advise to stop drinking ww wwwithalcohol; dietician: low fat, high calorie, high protein fat- soluble vitamin w ­supplements; Pancreatic enzymes eg Creon before eating; Surgery Coeliac- t stenting of the pancreatic plexuseblock, etduct, pancreatectomy. .net n n . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B 2+ ® t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 304 .B w ww Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t et .nGI .ne .ne 2 bleeding emergency X X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Airway B B . airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ wCheck w. adjuncts w ARREST TEAM 2 Breathingww If no respiratory effort—CALL w ww If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST TEAM 2 Circulation t e etdeteriorating. et n n n . . . 3Call for senior help early if patient X the patient on their sidekX X if vomiting ok •• Lay o<94% ok o o o 15L/ m in O if SOB or sats B • Monitor pulse oximeter, w.B BP, defibrillator’s ECGwleads w.Bif unwell • Obtain a full w set of observations including temp w bloods: ww •Two goodw (large) sites of venous access, take FBC, U+E, LFT, clotting, urgent 4 unit X-match • 0.9% etsaline 1L IV et et n n n . . . •Take brief history if possible/ c heck notes / a sk ward staff X X RS, and abdo exam kX patient: condensed ok •• Examine okCVS, o o o Correct clotting abnormalities if present (E p. 418)Bo B B . . • Arterial blood gas , but don’t leave the patient alone w w • Initiate further wwtreatment, see following sections ww ww B 2 • • Consider serious causes (see Box 9.4) and treat if present • Seniors may consider giving terlipressin 2mg IV over 5min if gastro- oesophageal varices suspected (E p. 306) If bleeding is severe and the patient haemodynamically unstable: • Call for senior help • Give O–ve blood, request X-matched units • Contact the on-call endoscopist and alert surgeons • 2 Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t t Boxe9.4 .n Life-threateningXcauses .ne .ne X X oesophageal varices ok •Peptic ulcer ok •• Gastro- ok o o Upper GI malignancy. Bo • Vascular malformations B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww .B w w wAcute upper GI bleeds 305 ww t t t .ne upper GI bleeds .ne .ne Acute X X X ok ok ok o o Bo (E OHAM4 p. 224.) B B . w. dGCS, iHR, dBP, posturalwBPwdrop, 2 Worrying features durine output, w w frank PR blood, chest pain, w ww frank haematemesis, coagulopathy, liver disease. Thinkt about Common Peptic ulcer (NSAIDs, H. pylori), Mallory–Weiss egastro-oesophageal varices, oesophagitis, et swallowed eepi-t tear, blood (eg n n n . . . X Other Oesophageal korXgastric cancer, vascular malformations, X ok staxis); o 9.4). ok underlying coagulopathy (Table o o o B Ask about Colour,wquantity, vomit, frequency, onset, .B mixed in or throughoutblack .Bstool stool colour and consistency (those on iron may have w but it should w w not be tarry),w chest pain, abdominal pain, dysphagia, w dizziness, fainting, sweating, ww 7 et n . X ok Bo B SOB, weight loss; PMH Coagulopathy, liver problems (?varices), peptic ulcers; DH NSAIDs, anticoagulants, steroids; SH Alcohol. Obs Pay special attention for iHR, dBP; check postural BP, GCS. Look for Continued bleeding, colour of vomit, cold extremities, sweating, pulse volume, bruises, other bleeding (nose, mouth), abdominal tenderness ±peritonitis, masses, signs of chronic liver disease (E pp. 319–23); PR Fresh blood/melaena. Investigations blds FBC, U+E, LFT, clotting, G+S or 2–4 unit X-match; low platelets may indicate hypersplenism (?2° to portal hypertension/chronic liver disease); iiurea (out of proportion to icreatinine); check for coagulopathy; ECG ?ischaemia; OGD Allows diagnosis and definitive treatment only after adequate resuscitation; timing guided by clinical assessment of severity: Risk scoring can be useful in this regard (Table 9.3), but does not replace clinical judgement. Discuss all potential major bleeds with seniors and an endoscopist at an early stage. et n . X ok o B . w ww t .ne X k oo t .ne X ok o B . w ww et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k Table 9.3 Rockall risk scoring system for GI bleeds ww o Bo t o ww o w.B oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . kX 7 ok o o w.B ww o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww ww et n . X Reproduced from Gut, Rockall T. A., et al., 38, 316–21, 1996, with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. The Rockall score was developed to predict risk of death or rebleeding based upon the complete score calculated after endoscopy (eg will occur in 11% of those with Rockall=3). 3Suspicion of rebleeding requires urgent discussion with the endoscopist and surgeon on call ± interventional radiology. As an alternative, the Blatchford score was developed to predict those not requiring intervention based upon admission parameters, marginally outperforming the Rockall score in this regard. It is somewhat more complex and less widely used (online calculators available eg Mwww.mdcalc.com). NICE has managed to end up recommending the use of both scores. ok Bo o .ne X k ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n Bo w Clinical information allows initial risk stratification, to which endoscopic findings (in italics) are added for complete assessment. ≤2 = low risk Feature 0 1 2 3 Age <60yr 60–79yr ≥80yr Shock: systolic BP >100mmHg and HR <100/min >100/min <100mmHg Comorbidity Nil major Heart Renal/liver Metastatic failure, IHD failure disease Diagnosis Mallory–Weiss/none All other Upper GI malignancy Bleeding on OGD Nil recent Recent t .ne X k ww NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG141 w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 306 Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t t .ne 9.4 Common causes ofXupper .neGI bleeding .ne Table X X k Examination Investigation ok ok History oo o Bo Peptic ulcers Epigastric/ B B hest pain, Epigastric on OGD, w. cmelaena, w. Ulcer heartburn, tenderness,w may CLO test may w ulcers, be peritonitic w previous w if be +ve ww NSAIDs, alcohol perforated Oesophagitis/ NSAIDs, Epigastric Inflammation/ t t et Heartburn, gastritis alcohol, hiatus hernia.ne tenderness erosions on OGD n . .ne X X X Gastro- Frank haematemesis Epigastric iPT, deranged k k ok oesophageal previous liver signs of LFT, oodisease, tenderness, oovarices on Bo varices B alcohol.B chronic liver disease OGD . w w Tear seen on OGD w Mallory– Forceful vomiting Epigastric w w Weiss tear w precedes bloodstaining tenderness w w if not resolving t large-bore cannulae. IVnfluids Management NBM until OGD, O , e two et regular et n n ±blood, obs (HR, BP, postural BP, urine output); consider cath. . . X X (see also Box 9.5): kX CVC line, and HDU/ ok eterization, okvitalICU o ooover- • Blood transfusion This is o often and lifesaving. However, B B B . . transfusion is also associated with increased mortality and w w rebleeding. Assess each patient ww carefully and discuss transfusion ww targets with a senior ww B 2 8 8 • PPIs Reduce rebleeding, surgery and transfusion, only when given after endoscopy to patients requiring endoscopic therapy (high-dose PO/IV eg omeprazole 40mg BD as effective as more cumbersome bolus/72h infusion) • Mallory–Weiss tears (E OHAM4 p. 234.) These occur after repeated forceful vomiting, often after alcohol excess. Bright red blood appears as streaks or mixed with vomit. Bleeding often resolves spontaneously • Clotting abnormalities (E p. 418.) Consider: platelet transfusion if active bleeding and plts <50 × 109/L; FFP if PT/APTT >1.5 × control; prothrombin complex concentrate or recombinant clotting factors if on warfarin/DOAC •H. pylori (E p. 300.) Test and eradicate if positive. 3Gastro-oesophageal varices (E OHAM4 p. 232.) Symptoms Symptoms of chronic liver failure (E pp. 319–23); known liver disease, excess alcohol; varices are asymptomatic until they bleed. Signs Signs of chronic liver failure (E pp. 319–23). Investigations Varices seen on OGD. Acute bleed Resuscitate according to E p. 304 then: • Terlipressin 2mg/over 5min IV if not already given • Antibiotics Cirrhotic patients have dimmune function; spontaneous bacterial infections are associated with imortality (eg Tazocin® 4.5g/8h IV) • OGD (urgent) For banding (oesophageal) or sclerotherapy (gastric) • Bleeding still uncontrolled Consider a Sengstaken–Blakemore tube and transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunting (TIPS). Once bleeding controlled Terlipressin 1–2mg/6h over 5min IV, for up to 5d; treat cause of liver failure; drisk of recurrent bleeding by dportal pressure (by TIPS or propranolol 40–80mg/12h PO) or further banding. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww et n . X ww o w.B T Box 9.5 What about other drugs? et n . kX et n . kX ww t Once haemostasis is achieved, continuation of aspirin where previously indicated (under PPI cover) is associated with reduced mortality (albeit at a higher risk of rebleeding).9 NSAIDs should be stopped and alternative analgesics prescribed. Data for other antiplatelet drugs and anticoagulants are more complex and each case will need careful discussion between the relevant specialists. o Bo ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k 8 9 o o B . w et alw w NEJM w ww .ne X ok .Bo Villanueva C, . 2013;368:11 free at Mwww.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1211801 Sung JJY, et al. Ann Intern Med 2010;152:1 (subscription required—check ATHENS). ww B .B w ww .B w w wAcute lower GI bleeds 307 ww t t t .ne lower GI bleeds .ne .ne Acute X X X ok ok ok o o Worrying features Continuous bright- r ed PR bleeding, iHR, dBP, Bo 2postural B B . w. dGCS, abdominal pain, w drop, dizziness, weight loss, vomiting. w w w Common Polyps, diverticular disease, w angiodysplasia, haem- ww Think about orrhoids, IBD, colon cancer, upper GI bleed (E pp. 305–6); Other Aorto- enteric etfistulae, ischaemic colitis, radiation et proctitis, Meckel’s diverticulum. et n n n . . . X about Onset, quantity,kX (red, black, clots), type blood kXofvomiting ok Ask o colour opain, (fresh, mixed with stool, streaks on toilet paper), abdominal o o o B (colour), pain on w opening .B bowels, straining, change .inBbowel habit, anwbleeding, orexia, weight loss, dizziness, SOB; PMH Previous diverticular w w w DH NSAIDs, anticoagu- ww disease, IBD,wpeptic ulcer, liver disease, AAA; lants, steroids, iron; FH IBD, bowel cancer; SH Alcohol. See also Box 9.6. et n . X et n . X et n . Xbruises, for Pale and cold extremities, sweating, pulse volume, ok Look ok (nose, mouth), oktenderness other sources of bleeding abdominal o o o B ±peritonism, masses, .Bsigns of chronic liver disease .B(E pp. 319–23); wpalpable w PR Blood, melaena, mass, haemorrhoids. See Table 9.5. w w w blds FBC, clotting, U+E, LFT, w G+S or X-match 2 units; ww Investigations ABG Only if unwell; OGD To exclude upper GI bleed, urgent if shocked; t et For investigation, biopsy, et ECGnIfeage >50yr; Sigmoidoscopy/colonoscopy . .nangiography .nand treatment; may require mesenteric or capsule enteroscopy if X X X k ok bleeding source cannot beooidentified. ok o o B Management Lower .B by surgeons managed w.BGI bleeding is traditionally w while upper GI w bleeding is usually a medical condition. w Although 785% of w w will settle with conservative w lower GI bleeds management, always beware w the brisk upper GI bleed presenting as PR bleeding. t rarely possible to tellnethe t t Diagnosis of significant lowereGI .nefromIt ishistory . alone,cause .n bleeds and examination investigations are essential. X X X ok Fresh blood on toilet paper oFresh ok blood or streaking stool only okand patient o a nal fissure, but arrange follow- up flexible Bo well: treat as haemorrhoids/ B B . w. sigmoidoscopy to w rule out bowel cancer. w w Mild bleedingw (no evidence of shock) Bleeding wshould usually settle with ww Obs HR, BP, postural BP, GCS, RR, sats. conservative management. Consider early discharge and follow-up. Moderate bleeding (Postural drop, iHR.) Secure IV access and fluid resuscitate ± blood until haemodynamically stable, catheterize, hourly fluid balance, senior review, may need urgent OGD if possibility of upper GI source 3Severe bleeding (Fresh bleeding/clots, dBP.) Resuscitate according to E p. 304, transfuse, call senior, on-call endoscopist, and surgical registrar. • 715% of patients with acute, severe PR bleeding will have an upper GI bleeding source identified on OGD. For the remainder, options include colonoscopic haemostasis, radiological embolization, or surgical resection. t e X.n ok Bo Bo o et n . kX .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 308 Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t t .ne 9.5 Common causes ofXlower .neGI bleeding .ne Table X X ok ok Examination Investigation ok o o Bo Upper GI bleed History B B Haematemesis, Liver disease, w.dHb, iurea, lesion w. fresh PR bleeding, epigastric w w clots or melaena, tenderness,wPRw on OGD ww epigastric pain blood or melaena t t or GI cancer or Change in bowel PReblood dHb ±dMCV, et e n n polyps habit, weight loss, .melaena, mucus, lesion on . .nor X X abdominal painkX palpable mass sigmoidoscopy k k o colonoscopy oo oo Bo Inflammatory Abdominal B B . pain, itemp, abdo tender.dHb, w weight ±peritonitic, PRww iCRP,iWCC, bowel disease w lesions on w diarrhoea, w sigmoidoscopy ww loss, mouth ulcers blood, mucus, or melaena colonoscopy Diverticular Abdominal pain, Tenderness, diverticulaeet et et PR dHb, n n disease fever, change in ±peritonism, on colonoscopy . . .n X X bowel habit kX blood, mucus k k o Abdo pain, generalized iWCC, acidotic, oo Shock, ooroprevious Bo Bowel B B . . ischaemia previous arterial tenderness ±AF w w MI on ECG disease wwRecurrent fresh PR blood orww dHb, lesions on ww Angiodysplasia Bo or radiation proctitis PR blood, old age, previous pelvic radiotherapy Haemorrhoids Painless, fresh red blood on toilet paper, perianal itch, constipation Anal fissure Pain on defecating, fresh blood on toilet paper, constipation et X.n ok oo B . w ww o t .ne X k melaena colonoscopy, consider argon plasma coagulation Often not palpable Lesions seen on on PR, perianal tags, proctoscopy may have rectal prolapse Posterior/anterior Proctoscopy to PR tear, perianal visualize lesions tags, tenderness kX t .ne oo B . ww t .ne X k w t ww et .ne X k .n kX oo oo B B . . Causes Oesophagitis, w gastric erosions, gastritis, peptic w ww ulcer, gastric/bowel ww cancer, polyps, IBD, angiodysplasia, GI lymphoma. w w Symptoms Anorexia, weight loss, tired, change in bowel habit, melaena, vague intermittent pain. t anaemic,abdo e et tenderness; PR Blood, mass. et Signs Pale/ cachexic, mild.n abdo n n . . X X X Stool Faecal occult ok Investigations ok blood (FOB), ova, cysts,oandokparasites; o blds FBC (dHb, dMCV o), iron, ferritin, vitamin B , folate, U+E, LFT; B .Bneed a video capsule endoscopy OGD±colonoscopy May or small bowel CT/ wdisease w.B MRI if small bowel suspected. w w w w ww Treatment Investigate and treat the cause, treat anaemia with ferrous sulfate 200mg/8h PO, consider admission for transfusion if Hb <80g/L or if symptomatic with anaemia. et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo Chronic gastrointestinal blood loss 10 12 Those with a simultaneous iron deficiency and vitamin B12 and/or folate deficiency may have a normal or raised MCV; in this instance, significant variation in red cell size will be reflected in an increased red cell distribUTIon width (RDW). 10 B .B w w .B w w wAcute lower GI bleeds 309 ww t t t Colorectal .ne polyps (E OHCM10 .nep. 616.) .ne X X X finding at colonoscopy; their importance klies in the ok $ A commonpotential ok oo ofoadenomatous polyps. Bo premalignant B B . . Causes Vast majority sporadic; rare familial syndromes. w Symptoms Oftenw ww bowel habit, blood ww w none; intermittent abdo pain,waltered w or melaena in stool, tenesmus, weight loss. Signs PR Palpable mass if very distal, blood, mucus. Investigations dHb, lesion on colonoscopy. Treatment Polypectomy (send for histology), multiple polyps may need colonic resection or regular colonoscopy follow-up.11 t t e X.n ok Bo ok o w.B ok $ Dilated and displaced perianal vascular tissue (anal cushions). Symptoms Recurrent fresh red blood on toilet paper or streaking stools ±pain or pruritus ani (anal itch), constipation. Risk factors Constipation with straining, multiple vaginal deliveries. Signs Not palpable unless prolapsed; PR Blood, otherwise normal. Investigations Proctoscopy To visualize haemorrhoids, Sigmoidoscopy To identify other pathology (eg malignancy). Treatment High-fibre diet, topical Anusol®, injection of sclerosants, band ligation, coagulation, cryotherapy, may need haemorrhoidectomy. Strangulated haemorrhoids Painful, tender mass, unable to sit down, treat with ice packs, stool softeners, regular analgesia, and bed rest. Once stable, inject piles and consider elective haemorrhoidectomy. ww t t e X.n ok e X.n o w.B Haemorrhoids (E OHCM10 p. 632.) ww Bo t e X.n t e X.n ok o B . w ww e X.n ok o B . w ww ww ww t t t .nefissure (E OHCM10 p.X630.) .ne .ne Anal X X ok Symptoms New-onset extreme okpain ±fresh red blood on opening ok bowels, o o Bo history of constipation B B and straining (beware Crohn’s. and cancer). w.posteriorly w(10% anterior), peri- w Signs Anal tear visible on the anal margin w w PR May be impossible duewtowpain. w anal ulcers, fistulae; Investigations Sigmoidoscopy If suspicious of pathology once pain controlled. t conservative High-fibre diet; t lidocaine ointment, 0.2–n0.3% Treatment e5% et .neointment, .ninjection . than GTN botulinum toxin all marginally better X X X k rate 95%. ok ­placebo; ­internal sphincterotomy ok oo p.cure o Bo Angiodysplasiaw(E.BOHCM10 B 628.) . wascending $ Submucosal w arteriovenous malformation, often colon. w w recurrent blood in the stool, w abdo pain is rare. ww Symptoms Elderly, Signs May be normal, pallor; PR Blood or melaena. Investigations Faecal occult blood, colonoscopy angiography. t et Angiographic eif tactive, mesenteric n n Treatment embolization bleeding; argon plasma . . .necoX X X agulation (endoscopic); rarely resection; treat anaemia, eg ferrous sulfate. k k ok oo oo Bo I Box 9.6 Causes B B . . covered w of rectal bleeding w w elsewhere w w w ww Inflammatory bowel disease E p. 315 Upper GI bleed E pp. 305–6 12 Bowel ischaemia E p. 299 kX o Bo Diverticular disease E p. 301 Infective diarrhoea E p. 313 t .ne t e X.n ok o B . w t e X.n ok o B . w The British Society of Gastroenterology guidelines for colonoscopic follow-up are at Mwww.bsg. org.uk/images/stories/docs/clinical/guidelines/endoscopy/ccs_10.pdf 12 For a useful meta-analysis, see Mwww.cochrane.org/CD003431 11 ww ww ww B 310 .B w ww Chapter 9 Gastroenterology .B w w ww w t t t .ne .ne .ne Nausea and vomiting X X X ok ok ok o o iHR, i/ d BP, dGCS, severe pain Bo 2 Worrying features B B . (head, chest, w. constipation, blood/coffee w abdomen), head injury, grounds, purpuric rash. w w w w ww Think about 2 Life-threatening Raised intracranial pressure (ICP), meningitis, tMI, bowel obstruction, acute abdomen, DKA; Common Post-otp, edrug induced (opioids), gastroenteritis, et pain, other ­infection, alcohol; n n . . .ne X X X Other Gastroparesis, paralytic ileus, pregnancy, electrolyte imbalance k k ok , Na ), migraine, labyrinthitis, oo Ménière’s, chemotherapy, oo Addison’s, Bo (Ca B B eating disorder (Table 9.6). . . ww timing, relation to wfoodww Ask about Frequency, or medications, colour, ww w blood, coffee grounds, melaena, dizziness, diarrhoea, constipation, flatus, pain, headaches, head trauma, visual problems, pregnancy; PMH Previous t et migraines, DM; DH Opioids, echemotherapy, et surgery, digoxin; SH Alcohol. n n n . . . X X kX ok Obs Temp, fluid balance,oHR, okBP, blood glucose, GCS, stool ochart. o o Look for and assess volume status (E p. 394), SOB, distended/ B B bowel sounds, hernias,wsurgical .tinkling .B scars,tender/ w peritonitic abdomen, mouth w rash, photophobia, papilloedema. ulcers, neck w stiffness, ww ww 2+ + Investigations Vomiting without the worrying features usually does not turgent investigation. If recurrent, t check U+E for dehydration t require or .ne imbalance and AXR ifXbowel .ne obstruction suspected. Otherwise .ne electrolyte X X according to related ok investigateamylase, ok symptoms. Consider: blds FBC, okU+E, LFT, Ca , oMg ; CXR Aspiration; ABG If oacutely unwell; Bo glucose, B B CT brain If head trauma w. (E p. 452); gastric emptying w. studies if suspect w w gastroparesis. w w w w Treatment Investigate and treat underlying disease; vomiting is distressing— t et so E p. 188 for pharmacology et and selection of appropriate antiemetics. n n . . .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2+ Bo o et n . kX 2+ et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w wNausea and vomiting 311 ww t t t .ne 9.6 Common causes of X .neand vomiting .ne Table nausea X X ok ok Examination Investigations ok o o Bo Raised ICP/ History B B . blurred Febrile, stiff neck, wiWCC/ . NØ/CRP, Headache, wdizzy, meningitis vision, feels ill, photophobia, rash, abnormal CT brain or w w wdrowsy ww low GCS w CSF results Bowel Colicky pain, Distended tender Distended bowel t tinkling loops on AXR net obstruction abdomen, et absolute esounds n or.n ileus constipation, brown bowel (E pp. 602–3) . . X X X vomit k k o Acute o Tender, rigid, Pneumoperitoneum ok o o Severe abdo o pain B B abdomen guarding, rebound on.B wc.offee- w CXR w Upper GI Blood/ Tender abdomen, w ww dHb, iurea ww ground vomit PR melaena Diarrhoea, feels Febrile, epigastric better after vomiting tenderness, not peritonitic Labyrinthitis Dizziness Unable to stand predominant, tinnitus Migraine Visual aura, Photophobia, headache visual field defects Hyperemesis ♀ usually between Normal; palpable gravidarum uterus 7–12/40 bleed Gastro- enteritis et n . X ok Bo et n . X ok o B . w ww iWBC, iLØor NØ, positive stool culture t .ne X Acute investigations ok normalo(E p. 367) B . w ww Acute investigations normal ww β-hCG+ TFTs often i,t et et iurea if dehydrated n n . . .ne XDrug induced Many medicationskcanXinduce vomiting, particularly opioids, X k k o chemotherapy ooand digoxin toxicity oo Bo B B . . w w ww ww ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 312 .B w ww Chapter 9 o oo B . w ww w Gastroenterology t .ne Diarrhoea X k Bo .B w w t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o 2 Worrying features iHR, dBP, low urine output, PR blood, weight loss, abdo pain. ww ww Think about Acute Gastroenteritis, antibiotics, laxatives, drugs, pseudo- membranous colitis (E p. 314), overflow diarrhoea (2° to constipation), post-chemotherapy, bowel ischaemia; Chronic IBD, IBS, colorectal cancer, diverticular disease, alcoholism, malabsorption disorders (eg coeliac, chronic pancreatitis), thyrotoxicosis, bowel resection, parasitic/fungal infections, autonomic neuropathy, carcinoid, Addison’s disease (Table 9.7). et n . kX t ww et n . kX oo e X.n k oo B B . w E. coli, Salmonella, Shigella, w.Campylobacter Traveller’s diarrhoea spp., w w ­giardiasis, amoebic w dysentery, cholera, tropical w sprue. ww Ask about Normal bowel habit and frequency, onset/frequency of t et recent constipation, stool echaracter et diarrhoea, (floating, greasy, bloody, n n n . . . mucus), colour, abdominal pain, pain relief on opening bowels, nausea, X X X flatus, fluid intake, mouth ulcers; PMH ok vomiting, okweightIBS,loss, okColorectal o o o cancer, IBD, diverticular disease, surgery; DH Recent ABx, immunoB .Babroad, other household members .B affected/ suppression; SH Travel sick w w contacts, occupation ww (food, healthcare), alcohol. ww ww Medications causing diarrhoea Antibiotics, laxatives, colchicine, t t digoxin, net diuretics, propranolol,XPPIs. .ne iron, NSAIDs, ranitidine, .thiazide .ne X X HR, BP, postural k sats, fluid balance, stool chart. ok Obs Temp, o(EBP,p.RR,394), ok o o for Volume status cachexia, mouth ulcers, clubbing, Bo Look B B . conjunctiva, thyroid mass,wabdomen . jaundice, rashes, w pale tenderness w ±peritonitis, masses, distension, surgical scars;wPR Pain, masses, stool w w ww o Bo o Bo colour, consistency; may reveal a rectum loaded with faeces suggesting overflow diarrhoea, particularly in the elderly, immobile patient with poor diet and recent constipation—treat as constipation (E pp. 316–17). Investigations Stool M,C+S x3, C. difficile toxin, ova, cysts, and parasites; blds FBC, U+E, glucose, LFT, Ca2+, TFT, CRP, vitamin B12, folate, iron studies, anti-tissue transglutaminase (TTG) antibodies, bld cultures; AXR Obstruction, mucosal oedema, faecal impaction; Sigmoidoscopy If not improving (or within 24h if suspected IBD/likely flare); Colonoscopy If cancer suspected. Management See Box 9.7. t .ne X k t o ww t o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w ww .n kX ww et et n n . . X review drugs (consider kX Increase fluidkintake, ok • Conservative oside effects); alternatives without GI start stool chart— o o oothis will B B B . often be kept more accurately on a busy ward if .you w it themselves w educate patients to complete w w w w ww • Infective Isolation and barrier nurse if infective source thought possible, ABx if systemically unwell • Medical in infective et Anti-motility agents should etbe avoided et n n n . . . diarrhoea, IBD, or pseudomembranous colitis. X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww e X.n K Box 9.7 General management of diarrhoea B .B w ww .B w w w w Diarrhoea w 313 t t t .ne 9.7 Common causes of X .ne .ne Table diarrhoea X X ok ok Examination Investigation ok o o Bo Gastroenteritis History B B . iCRP, +ve Sudden sweating,wiWCC, w. onset, itemp, ±vomiting, abdo tenderness microbiology on w w w abdominal cramps w stool sample ww Inflammatory Crampy abdo pain, Abdo tenderness, iWCC, iCRP; t boweledisease weight loss, blood in ±peritonitis, oedema et et mucus,PR mucosal n n stool, mouth ulcers .blood/ or megacolon on . .n X X X eye/skin/joint AXR; lesions seen on k k k o oo manifestations sigmoidoscopy oo Bo Irritable bowel Bloating, B B . . abdominal Abdo tenderness, Diagnosis w relieved by non-peritoniticwwexclusion; ofnormal syndrome cramps, defecation ww w investigations ww Malabsorption Weight loss, pale Pale, abdo dHb, dalbumin, disorders greasy stools, tired, tenderness, dCa ±anti-TTG t t t e e anaemia oedema, bloating, or endomysial .ne n n . . X X PR pale stool antibodieskX ok Bowel cancer Abdo pain,oweight ok PR blood or dHb,odMCV, o lesion o B B B loss, fresh blood or melaena, mucus/ on colonoscopy . . w melaena palpable mass w w ww iWCC, iCRP, ww Diverticular w LIF pain, PR bleeding LIF tenderness, 2+ ±peritonitis disease net diverticulae on et abdo colonoscopy n ndiffet Pseudo- Recent antibiotics .itemp, iWCC, iCRP, C. . . X X X weeks), k tenderness, toxin +ve;k may ok membranous (days/ o AXR crampy abdo PR green, foul showo toxic dilatation oopain, Bo colitis B green .watery stool smelling, ±blood .B w poor Abdo distension Overflow Constipation, may show w wwAXR diarrhoea w mobility, abdominal and tenderness, faecal loading w ww pain PR palpable stool t t net p. 428.) .ne gastroenteritis (E .OHCM10 .ne Infective X X X k in most ok $ Diarrhoea, accompaniedoobyknausea, vomiting, ±abdominal opain; o (including norovirus) but other infectious agents important. Bo cases due to virusesw B B . w. patient may w Symptoms Rapidwonset, recent vomiting and/ow r diarrhoea, implicate a w certain food, feels unwell, crampy w abdominal pain, flu-like w symptoms, pyrexia; other members of household/contacts affected. Appearance of stool Blood 2° colonic ulceration et spp.); et (typical for Campylobacter et n n or .Shigella watery ‘rice’ stool.n suggests cholera. . X itemp, iHR, dehydrated, X X ok Signs ok flushing, sweating, abdominal ok tendero o ness, general malaise; PR o tender, peri-anal erythema. B Investigations Stool w .B .B culture Result may take ≥48h; C.wdiff. toxin assays and w w norovirus PCR w where clinical suspicion; bldswiWCC, iCRP, iurea; if ww et n . kX o Bo prolonged, consider sigmoidoscopy and discuss with microbiology. Treatment Admit if clinical concern or not meeting fluid needs orally; isolation/ barrier nursing with rigorous hand- washing by nurses, doctors, and visitors; push oral fluids ±oral rehydration solutions, antiemetics (E p. 188); IV fluids if not tolerating oral fluids. Surprisingly few indications for antibiotics, even after identification of a causative bacterium—always discuss with microbiology. Some causes are notifiable (E p. 501). et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww 314 Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t et Pseudomembranous colitis.n .ne .ne X X X of Clostridium k often following antibiotic k ok $ Overgrowth o difficile, o use. Difficult o treat, with a high mortality in vulnerable groups, alwaysoremember this Bo tocondition B B . to start antibiotics on scanty . when tempted w wevidence. w Symptoms Usually 3–9d after antibiotic therapyw (can be 24h–6wk), rapid w w ww onset of high-quantity green, foul-smelling stool, crampy abdo pain. Investigations blds iiWCC, dK ; Stool C. difficile toxin, M,C+S. Treatment et 2 Stop unnecessary antibiotics; et isolate and barrier nurse,.nrehyet n n . . drate with PO/ I V fluids and correct electrolyte abnormalities, metronidaX 400mg/8h PO and/or vancomycin kX 125mg/6h PO (oraloroute kX targets ok zole orelapsing o o o GI tract). For persistent or disease, consider IV metronidazole, B .B PR vancomycin, PO or stool transplantation wfidaxomicin, w.Bas per ID advice. w w w Complicationsw Toxic megacolon, perforation,w high risk of spread to other w patients via hands of healthcare workers; spores not killed by alcohol gels. Irritable syndrome (IBS) t(E OHCM10 p. 266.) net et bowel epain, n n $.Consider in those with >6mth abdo bloating, or altered bowel.habit. . XDiagnostic criteria Central/lower X X 3 mths k k abdo pain at least 1d/wk for o associated with 2 or more oof: (1) pain related okpast o o o to defecation, (2) altered B B .B bowel frequency, w (3).altered stool form. w Red flags Thesew w should prompt urgent consideration ww of other diagnoses ww B + 13 include unintentional weight loss, rectal bleeding, age >60yr, family history of bowel or ovarian cancer. Signs Often normal or generalized abdo tenderness; exclude a pelvic mass. Investigations If fits diagnostic criteria and no red flags, exclude other pathology by checking for normal FBC, ESR, CRP, coeliac serology; CA125 if ♀ with persistent bloating/pain; further tests only if suspicion this is not IBS (eg TFT, faecal calprotectin, colonoscopy, OGD, parasites). Treatment Reassure and explain; basic lifestyle, exercise, and dietary advice including attention to regular meals and non-caffeinated drinks, with limited intake of foods high in insoluble fibre (eg bran); consider dietician and/or psychology referral; mebeverine 135mg/8h PO, loperamide, or Fybogel® according to symptoms. Treat refractory constipation (E pp. 316–17). Amitriptyline 10mg nocte or SSRIs (2nd line) have visceral analgesic effects.14 t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o oo B . w .n kX ww $ Impaired absorption of nutrients due to a wide range of GI pathology. Causes Coeliac disease, chronic pancreatitis, tropical sprue, cystic fibrosis, small bowel/gastric resection, bacterial overgrowth, IBD. Symptoms Diarrhoea ±steatorrhoea, weight loss, tiredness, SOB, dizziness, bruising, swelling, vomiting, gluten intolerance, abdo pain. Signs Cachexia, pale, dehydrated, mouth ulcers, sore tongue, abdo tenderness, oedema, bruises. Investigations blds dHb, dMCV, dCa2+, dalbumin, diron, dfolate, iPT; +ve anti-endomysial or anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies sensitive for coeliac disease; duodenal biopsy gold standard for coeliac diagnosis; Stool Elastase for assessment of pancreatic function; Hydrogen breath test For small bowel bacterial overgrowth. Treatment Refer to dietician and gastroenterologist, may need nutrient ±pancreatic supplements, gluten-free diet (coeliac). t e X.n ok Bo t 13 14 ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o .ne X k ww et .ne X k Malabsorption disorders (E OHCM10 p. 266.) ww Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k See Mwww.romecriteria.org for diagnostic resources. NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG61 w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Diarrhoea w 315 t t et Inflammatory bowel disease .ne .n(IBD) .ne X X X colitis ($ OHCM10kp. 262), Crohn’s disease ($ OHCM10 p. 264). ok $ UlcerativeRecurrent o ±blood ±mucus associatedowith okabdo o diarrhoea pain, Bo Symptoms B B . and weight loss. . malaise, tiredness, anorexia, w w Signs itemp, iHRw ±dBP, pale, abdo pain ±peritonism, abdo mass, abdo wwpalpable ww swelling (toxicw megacolon), malnourished; fistulae ±fissures in Crohn’s (Table 9.8). Extra-intestinal manifestations Mouth tulcers, erythema nodosum, t et gangrenosum, e episcleritis, iritis, .acute e pyoderma conjunctivitis, n npri. .nankylosing X X X arthropathy, clubbing, sacroiliitis, spondylitis, fatty liver, k ok mary sclerosing cholangitis, oocholangiocarcinoma. .Book Bo Investigations blds iWCC, B . dalbumin (as a marKer of inflammation, not ww iCRP, wwdvitamin nutrition), dKw(diarrhoeal losses), dCa , diron,w dfolate, B (terminal ww ileal disease), bld cultures; Faecal calprotectin sensitive but non-specific screen for colonic inflammation—if negative may avoid endoscopy Stool cultures Vital t including C. difficile; AXR Mucosal in ruling causes of exacerbation etouttoxicinfective eresidue et n n n . . . oedema, megacolon >6cm, faecal suggests uninvolved mucosa; X X kX and ± colonoscopy Shows appearances/ lceration ok Sigmoidoscopy okof characteristic ouconsidered. o o o allows biopsy; CT/MRI If concern abscess and if surgery being B Complications Toxic wmegacolon, .B bowel obstruction, perforation, w.B malabsorp- w tion, fistulae, fissures, strictures, malignancy. w w w w w B 15 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 + 2+ 12 Table 9.8 Differentiating between ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s t Feature .ne Symptoms X k oo et .n kX oo B . w oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o o w.B oo B . w .n kX ww t .ne X k t ww 16 o w.B et n . kX o o B . w ww et n . X ww t w ww See Mwww.ecco-ibd.eu for a range of European guidelines. Related to disease activity. 15 ww ok o o w.B ww et n . kX o et .ne X k Treatment This depends upon disease severity. Rehydrate and correct electrolyte imbalances; avoid antimotility/antispasmodic agents. Systemically well patients with mild–moderate UC (<6 stools/day) should start oral ±rectal mesalazine (eg Pentasa® 2g/24h PO). For mesalazine-refractory disease or for Crohn’s, give oral ±rectal steroids (eg prednisolone 40mg/24h PO tapering by 5mg/wk for total of 8wk). More severe disease requires IV steroids (eg hydrocortisone 100mg/6h IV). Consider antibiotics until infectious causes ruled out (eg co-amoxiclav 1.2g/8h IV). Monitor the patient closely (daily abdo exam, bloods ±AXR) and involve surgeons early. Elemental diet, immunosuppressive drugs (eg azathioprine), and biological agents (eg infliximab) may also be used. Surgery This is indicated as an emergency procedure in cases of perforation or massive haemorrhage. Urgent surgery is performed in UC for toxic megacolon or failure to respond to maximal medical therapy after 5–7d; delaying beyond this risks poor operative results. Surgery in Crohn’s is never curative and associated with high recurrence and complication rates, but is indicated for obstruction, abscesses, and fistulae. e X.n ok Bo ww w t ww Bo t .ne X k Ulcerative colitis (UC) Crohn’s Diarrhoea and PR blood/ Diarrhoea, abdo pain and mucus prominent weight loss prominent GI involvement Colon only, extending Anywhere along GI tract, most proximally from rectum to commonly terminal ileum variable extent Endoscopy Continuous inflamed mucosa Inflamed, thickened mucosa; from rectum proximally aphthous ulcers; skip lesions Histology Mucosal and submucosal Inflammation extends beyond inflammation, crypt abscesses, the submucosa, granulomas reduced goblet cells present .ne X ok .Bo ww B 316 .B w ww Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t t .ne .ne .ne Constipation X X X ok ok ok o o Worrying features Abdominal pain, distension, nausea/ vomiting, Bo 2iHR, B B . PR bleeding. wt.inkling bowel sounds, weight wloss, dBP, absent/ w w w Serious Bowel obstruction, w bowel/ovarian cancer; ww Think about Common Medications, poor diet, paralytic ileus, dehydration, functional disorders; et Other Anal fissure/stricture, et pelvic mass, spinal injury,.nhypoet n n . . thyroid (Table 9.9). X kX vomiting, date bowelsolast kXopened, ok Ask about Abdo pain,oonausea, o o B B frequency, stool consistency normal bowel habit .and and colour, blood w.Bflatus, in stools, pain w on w opening bowels, straining, bloating, fluid intake, w w discharge; PMH IBS, ww weight loss,w tenesmus, recent surgery; ♀: periods, IBD, diverticulosis, hernias, previous surgery, colon cancer, hypothyroidism; et DH (see ‘Medications causing etconstipation’) SH Mobility, .diet. et n n n . . X X causing constipation Opioids, iron supplements, kX channel blockers, ok Medications ocalcium- ok drugs, non-magnesium antacids, psychotropic o o o B anticholinergics, chronic w.B laxative use (may leadwtowthe.Bdevelopment of a w dilated atonic w colon). w w w Obs Temp, HR, BP, fluid balance. Look distennetfor Volume status (EXp..394), net tenderness ±peritonism, net . . X X absent/tinklingkbowel sounds, hernias, scars; k ok sion, masses, oimpaction, melaena/blood. oo PR Anal fisrectal masses, faecal o Bo sures, B B obstruction . FBC, U+E, TFT, Ca ; AXR w Investigations blds To .exclude w Sigmoidoscopy ±biopsy ww if sub-acute onset; Colonoscopy ww If cancer suspected. ww Management See Boxes 9.8–9.10. t t et 9.8 General management .nBox .ne of constipationX.ne K X X k ok • Conservative Increaseofluid okintake, high-fibre diet, review odrugs: o consider alternatives without GI side effects; start stool chart— Bo B B . w. patients to this will often be wwkept more accurately ifwyouweducate w completew it themselves. w • Medical E p. 207 for detailed first-line laxative prescribing information; begin with a bulk-forming laxative (eg Fybogel ); if necessary t etintreatment et(eg Movicol add or switch to an osmotic laxative ); if stools soft .ne n n . . X X but still difficult to pass, add a stimulant laxative (eg senna). k will help soften impactedGlycerol kX while ok suppositories or arachisooiloenemas ostool, o o B phosphate enemas.should reserved for when other fail. w BNewerbe medications wbe.Bmeasures • Refractory symptoms thatw may initiated under w specialistw advice include prucalopride, linaclotide, w and lubiprostone. ww 2+ ® ® et n . kX o Bo • Opioid-induced constipation Avoid bulk-forming agents; use osmotic and/or stimulant laxatives. Naloxegol or methylnaltrexone bromide may be added for refractory symptoms. • Surgical disimpaction Scooping hard faeces from the rectum is a seriously unpleasant point of last resort for everyone concerned. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Constipation w 317 t t t .ne 9.9 Common causes of X .ne .ne Table constipation X X ok ok Examination Investigation ok o o Bo Bowel History B B . . loops of Pain, distension, Distension, wvomiting, wDilated obstruction nausea, tenderness, absent/ bowel on AXR w w wconstipation ww tinkling bowelw sounds Paralytic ileus Absence of flatus, Distended abdomen, Distended bowel t recent operation absent t sounds loops on AXR, dKnet ecancer ebowel n n . Bowel Abdo pain, weight PR.blood or melaena, dHb, lesion on . Xmucus/palpable X loss, fresh blood or mass sigmoidoscopy/ kX k o o ok melaena colonoscopy o o o B B .B or Ano-rectal Freshw red. blood on Perianal tags, may wProctoscopy pathology toilet paper, ±pain have a tear or w sigmoidoscopy w w ww tenderness w Poor diet Anorexia (eg post- Cachexia dHb, dMCV, dCa t t op), low-fibre diet e e et n n n . . . Drugs See ‘Medications causing constipation’ X X X ok ok ok o o o B Poor diet w.B w.Badequate nutri- w $ A surprisingw number of in-patients fail tow achieve tion, with major w impacts on wound healing,wrecovery, and physical con- w B + 2+ dition. Try to recognize this and involve dieticians where appropriate, while avoiding prolonged NBM periods where possible. Markers for nutritional adequacy are problematic, but end-of-the-bed assessment is useful. Where constipation is a feature, encourage to aim for regular high-fibre meals, with good fluid intake and regular physical activity. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww K Box 9.9 Hints and tips o Bo ww w •Prescribe prophylactic laxatives for patients at risk of developing constipation (eg when prescribing opioids, post-op) •Exclude obstruction before prescribing a laxative • Lactulose is poorly tolerated by many patients and is associated with abdominal pain and bloating •Reassess regularly for resolUTIon of constipation—do not put off doing a rectal examination • Consider malignancy in all patients >40yr presenting with altered bowel habit. t .ne X k t o ww o w.B ok Bo oo B . w .n kX .ne X k t ww et n . X I Box 9.10 Causes of constipation covered elsewhere o o w.B Anal fissures/haemorrhoids E p. 309 Inflammatory bowel disease E p. 315 Irritable bowel syndrome E p. 314 et n . kX o et .ne X k ww t e X.n Bo t .ne X k ww ok o w.B Bowel obstruction E p. 298 Polyps E p. 309 ww et n . kX t o o B . w ww ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 318 .B w ww .B w w ww w Gastroenterology Chapter 9 t t et .nLiver .ne .ne 2 failure emergency X X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Airway B B . airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ wCheck w. adjuncts ARREST TEAM 2 Breathing w If no respiratory effort—CALL w w If no palpable pulse—CALL w ww ARREST TEAM 2 Circulation If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability et et et n n n . . . X Altered mental state or coagulopathy X kX in the presence ofojaundice. ok $3Call okif patient deteriorating. o o o for senior help early B w.B w.B Airway w w wthe mouth, wide-bore suctionwif secretions present ww • Look inside • Jaw thrust/head tilt/chin lift; oro/nasopharyngeal airway if tolerated. et et et Breathing n n n . . . • 15L/ m in O if SOB or sats <94% X X ok • Monitor O sats and RR.ookX ok o o B Circulation w.B w.B w w • Venous access , take bloods: w w ww B 2 2 FBC, U+E, LFT, PT/APTT, CRP, glucose, amylase, Ca2+, Mg2+, PO43–, bld cultures, paracetamol levels, viral serology • Start IV fluids 1L of 5% glucose over 4–6h • Monitor HR, ECG, BP. • t .ne X k oo Disability et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww t .ne X k • Check blood glucose treat if <3.5mmol/L (E p. 328) • Check GCS, pupil reflexes, limb tone, plantar responses. ww o Bo • Check temp • Ask ward staff for a brief history or check notes: • previous liver disease, likely causes (Box 9.11) • Examine patient brief RS, CVS, abdo, and neuro exam: • signs of chronic liver disease • ECG, ABG, and urgent portable CXR • Stabilize and treat E pp. 319–23 • Call for senior help and arrange transfer to HDU/ICU • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k t o ww t o w.B ww w Exposure .ne X k ww oo B . w et .n kX ww et et n n . . X failure X ok 2 Box 9.11 Causesoofokliver ok o o B B Acute liver failure overdose, drugs, toxins,.B alcoholic hepatitis, w.Paracetamol w ischaemic viral hepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis, hepatitis w w Budd–Chiari w (heart failure and shock), w ww Decompensated Alcohol excess, malignancy, GI bleeds, metabolic chronictliver disease disturbances, sedatives, vein thrombosis, acute t e et portal illness, surgery,.n infection (eg spontaneous bacterial.ne n . peritonitis) X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww e X.n B .B w ww .B w w w w Liver failure w 319 t t t .ne failure .ne .ne Liver X X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Worrying features B B Ascites, hepatic flap, altered. mental state, and w. features jaundice are cardinal of decompensation w wwin liver disease; also ww w bleeding, renal failure, iHR, w beware active dBP. Thinktabout 2 Emergencies Acute liver decompensated chronic t failure, e hepatic encephalopathy; eAcute et liver disease, liver failure Paracetamol.n overn n . . X (E p. 509), alcoholic hepatitis, X hepatitis (A, B, C, E, CMV, X ok dose ok‘Drug-viral oktoxinsEMV), pregnancy, medications (see induced hepatotoxicity’), (eg o o o B poisonous mushrooms), B B vascular (eg Budd–Chiari), sepsis, Weil’s disease, . . w‘Drug-induced hepatoabscess; Chronic w liverw failure Alcohol, medications (see toxicity’), obesity, w idiopathic, autoimmune, hepatitis ww (B±D, C), malignancy, ww Wilson’s disease, haemochromatosis, α -antitrypsin deficiency. et induced hepatotoxicity.nThisetmay result in response to a.nlarge et $n Drug- . number of drugs, ranging from mild elevations in LFTs to fulminant hepatic X X X ok failure. Paracetamol, NSAIDs, okACEi, erythromycin, fluconazole, okand statins o o o commonly cause hepatocellular limit normal with B .B injury (ALT >2× upper w.Bciprofloxacin, iso- w normal/minimally w iALP). Chlorpromazine, oestrogens, w w niazid, phenytoin, w erythromycin, and co-amoxiclav w can all cause cholestasis w 1 (iALP, with or without associated hepatocellular damage). Always ask about recreational drugs (eg cocaine, mushrooms) and OTC or herbal medications.17 t t t .neabout Tiredness, jaundiceX(+onset), .ne abdo pain, drowsinessX±confu.ne Ask X k bowel, urine), distension, oankle k swelling, ok sion, bruising, bleeding (skin, onose, o o infections (sore throat), weight loss, hair loss, Bo vomiting, rashes, recent B B .Previous jaundice, gallstones,w.blood transfusions; w darkening skin; PMH DH See ‘Drug- nduced hepatotoxicity’; FH Liver wiw wwdisease, recent jaundice; ww SH Alcohol, IVDU, tattoos, piercings, foreign travel, sexual activity. Obs Temp, HR, BP, RR, O sats, GCS, blood glucose, urine output. t liver etfor Volume eAcute et n n Look status E p. 394; failure Drowsiness, . . .nconX X X fusion, slurred speech, jaundice, flapping tremor (asterixis), poor co- ok ordination, bruising, foetor okhepaticus (sweet, faecal smelling ok breath), o o o B abdominal t­ enderness, .Bhepatomegaly, ascites; Chronicwliver .Bdisease Cachexia, w palmar erythema, clubbing, xanthelasma, spiderw naevi, caput medusa, gyw w naecomastia,w muscle wasting, splenomegaly,w genital atrophy, track marks w (IVDU), pneumonia/chronic lung disease, darkened skin. Investigations These are aimedeatt establishing the extent and poset of liver$damage, et n n n . . . sible cause and finding a possible cause of any decomX X kXclotting, especially intercurrent Urine MSU; blds o FBC, ok pensation, ok infection. o o o iron, ferritin, U+E, LFT, hepatitis serology (A, B+C), EBV and CMV serB ology, caeruloplasmin .B .B (if <50yr), autoimmune screen (antimitochondrial, w w antinuclear andwanti-smooth muscle antibodies, w ww E p. 607), bld cul- ww 2 et n . kX o Bo tures; Urgent USS abdo Looking for parenchymal mass(es), dilated ducts or portal vein thrombosis; Urgent ascitic tap (E pp. 564–5) and white cell count to check for spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (E p. 322). OGD may help assess for varices and check for upper GI bleed as cause of decompensation. 17 et n . kX t o o B . w ww w .ne X ok .Bo Useful review article available free at Mwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2773872 ww ww B .B w ww 320 Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t t 3Acute .ne liver failure (E OHAM4 .ne p. 268.) .ne X X X and jaundice without k ok $ Acute encephalopathy,oocoagulopathy ok previous o Bo cirrhosis (Table 9.10). B B wof. acute liver failure w. Table 9.10 Types w w w w ww Liver failure <7d of disease onset Hyperacute fulminant hepatic failure Liver failure t 1–4wk of disease onset neAcute t fulminant hepatic failure net efailure n Liver 4–12wk of disease onset . Subacute fulminant hepatic failure . X Late-onset hepatic failure kX. kXLiver failure 12–26wk of diseaseokonset o oo Bo Symptoms Bruising/wb.leeding, Bo drowsy ±confusion, w .Bpain. abdo Signs Drowsiness, confusion, slurred speech, w flapping tremor wwcoordination, w jaundice,ascites. ww (asterixis), poor bruising, hepatomegaly, Investigations Initiate liver screen as detailed (E p. 313) blds iPT/ APTT, etiiALT, iALP, ibilirubin, .iammonia, et iWCC, dglucose, .dMg et , n n n . dPO ; ABG Respiratory alkalosis, metabolic acidosis (poor prognosis); X Masses, echogenicity, portal Xvein flow. X ok USS ok early, ok with invao o o Treatment Discuss with a senior often needs ICU/HDU B B need transfer to a specialist sive monitoring, and liver centre, where wfor.may w.B w w may be considered transplantation. Monitor blood glucose every 2h; ww w w B 2+ 3– 4 insert a catheter and monitor fluid balance. • i PT Give one-off dose of vitamin K 10mg IV. PT prolongation is used to monitor disease progress; FFP and/or platelets may be indicated if the patient is bleeding or needs an invasive procedure • Stop Aspirin, NSAIDs, and hepatotoxic drugs (E p. 319); check all drugs in BNF • Antibiotic Prophylaxis in all patients (eg cefotaxime) ±antifungals • Daily bloods FBC, U+E, LFT, PT18 • Steroids May improve survival in more severe alcoholic hepatitis • Lactulose 10–20mL/8h PO in all patients (helps remove ammonia) • Close monitoring of cardiovascular status and blood glucose; if need IV fluids, avoid Na+ if cHRonic liver disease/ascites. Complications Renal failure (hepatorenal syndrome), respiratory failure (ARDS), cerebral oedema, bleeding, sepsis, dglucose, iNa+, dK+. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o o w.B oo B . w .n kX ww $ Acute liver inflammation on a background of chronic alcohol excess. Symptoms and signs Jaundice, anorexia, fever, and RUQ pain. Investigations blds iWCC, ibilirubin, iALT ±iPT. −ve hepatitis/autoimmune serology; Ascitic tap to exclude spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Treatment As for acute liver failure. Transplantation may have a role in highly selected patients. t e X.n .ne X k t ww et .ne X k Alcoholic hepatitis ww t .ne X k et n . X ww ok o ok o o Bo Vascular liver w B B . . disease w hepatic jaundice or w $ Diagnosed by Doppler uss; these diseases canw w w w orcause acute liver failure, often treated by anticoagulation endovascular methods. w • Budd–Chiari hepatic vein obstruction • Portal (pain and deranged etveinof obstruction et LFTs; jaundice only if other et n n causes liver disease coexist) .n . . X ischaemia due to hypotension kXrise. and/or hepatic arteryostenosis. kX ok • Liver oALT Typically causes massive o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Strictly, the INR is specific for warfarin therapy; the pattern abnormal clotting in liver disease is different and more reliably reported as PT and APTT prolongation. 18 B .B w ww .B w w w w Liver failure w 321 t t t Glandular Epstein–Barr virus, EBV.) .ne fever (Infectious mononucleosis, .ne .ne X X X Usually young (10– k30yr), sore throat >1wk, fever, ok Symptomsrash, oneck, ok lethargy, o o lumps in the anorexia. Bo malaise, B B Signs Red tonsils ±white w. exudate, tender lymphadenopathy, w. splenomegaly, rash (especially w with amoxicillin/ampicillin), palatal petechiae, jaundice. w Investigationsw blds ilymphocytes (atypical on w film), iALT, +ve Monospot/ Paul Bunnell, +ve IgM for EBV. Management rehydration, analgesia, etavoid Rest, et gargle with warm saline/­ et n n n . . . ­aspirin, amoxicillin/ampicillin, avoid alcohol, consider short course X oral steroids if very severek(eg X X encephalopathy).ok ok ofComplications ofailure,hepatic o o o Hepatitis, liver thrombocytopenia, splenic rupture, B haemolysis, encephalitis. .B .B w w w Acute viral (E OHCM10 p. 278.) whepatitis ww Causes Hepatitis A,B,C and E, cytomegalovirus (CMV) and EBV. Symptoms Jaundice, rash, diarrhoea, abdo pain, flu-like symptoms (eg fever, malaise, anorexia, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, arthralgia, sore throat). Signs Patient may have no signs, itemp, urticarial rash, jaundice, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy. Investigations blds iWCC, ibilirubin, iALT ±iPT, +ve hepatitis serology (eg check anti-hepatitis A, B, C, ±E, see Table 9.11 for hepatitis B interpretation). Management Avoid alcohol, supportive treatment, monitor for progression to acute liver failure (E p. 320) which may need interferon-α. Complications Natural history varies widely depending upon virus and host; risks include acute liver failure or chronic disease. et n . X ok Bo et n . X ok o B . w ww ww ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X k ok o(E ok o viral hepatitis OHCM10 p. 406) Bo Bo Chronic B . by hepatitis B(±D) andw $ Hepatitis >6mth,w caused C. . w w Symptoms and signs Usually asymptomatic, signs of w w chronic liver disease. ww Investigations blds Deranged LFT ±iPT; abnormal viral serology (check anti-hepatitis antibody then PCR for viral if positive; see Table 9.11 t et BCserology); et beload for.n hepatitis USS Liver.n may suggestive of cirrhosis..ne X X X referkto a hepatologist for antiviral treatment. ok Treatment Avoid alcohol;(20%), o hepatocellular carcinoma (esp okHBV). o o Bo Complications Cirrhosis B B w. in hepatitis B w. Table 9.11 Serology w w w w ww 19 Surface antigen (HBsAg) Anti-core (anti-HBc) IgM Anti-core (anti-HBc) IgG ‘e’ antigen (HBeAg) Anti-e (Anti-HBe) net X. ok Bo Active virus replication—acute or cHRonic disease Acute infection Chronic infection (or previous infection if HBsAg –ve) High infectivity Low infectivity .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww et n . X ww o w.B $ In chronic hepatitis B infection, HBeAg negativity is associated with immune control of the virus and low/undetectable viral DNA. Beware, however, the subset of patients in whom the virus develops a precore mutation leading to absent production of HBeAg, despite loss of immune control and rising viral DNA titres. These patients are at high risk for disease complications. Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww .ne X ok .Bo A rapidly evolving area with huge progress in the treatment options for hepatitis C. For a range of current European guidelines, see Mwww.easl.eu 19 ww w ww ww B 322 .B w ww Chapter 9 .B w w ww w Gastroenterology t t t Decompensated chronic liver .ne .nefailure (E OHCM10 p.X276.) .ne X X is the final common ok $ Cirrhosis ok histological pathway foroka variety of diseases; problemso relate to synthetic functiono(coagulopathy, Bo liver B ­ascites 2° to hypoalbuminaemia), decreased detoxification w. w.B (encephalop- w athy), or portalw hypertension (variceal bleeding). w w w w Symptoms and signs As for acute liver failure (E p. 320) but look for stigmata of chronic liver disease: spider angioma, palmar erythema, gynaecomastia. t and clotting profile; Establish Investigations et Measure severity LFTs,.neU+E et n n . . underlying cause Hepatitis serology, immunoglobulins, liver autoantibodies, X α -antitrypsin, caeruloplasmin, X kX precipiliver biopsy; o Identify ok ferritin, obldk cultures,USS, o o o tant of decompensation FBC, ascitic tap, OGD. Treatment This B B and transplant assessment; .input .Bdeal with upper requires hepatology w w wpp. 305–6), treat sepsis, support GI bleeding w (E ww alcohol cessation, lac- ww tulose (to reduce ammonia levels). Ascites Low-salt diet, daily weights, spironolactone 100mg/24h PO increasing dose every 48h to 400mg/24h et ascitic tap for diagnosis e(Et pp. 564–5) and to exclude.nsponet ±furosemide; n n . . taneous bacterial peritonitis; may need long- t erm antibiotics, therapeutic X X X ok paracentesis, or TIPS if orecurrent. ok Complications High mortality, ok portal o o hypertension, bleeding varices, e ­ ncephalopathy, hepatocellular carcinoma. B w.B w.B Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis w w w w ww 1 Symptoms Abdominal pain in the presence of ascites, associated with fever. Signs Fever, iHR ±dBP, abdo tenderness ±peritonitis. Investigations blds iWCC, iCRP; Ascitic tap >250 white cells/mm3 or identification of organisms (E pp. 564–5). Treatment Prompt IV antibiotics: (eg Tazocin® 4.5g/8h IV). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . w sclerosing cholan- w Causes Primaryw biliary cholangitis (E p. 325), primary ww gitis (E p. w 325), autoimmune hepatitis (type I and II—see Table 9.12); w primary biliary cirrhosis and type I autoimmune hepatitis may overlap. t fever, malaise, rash, jointnpain, t Symptoms have et Often asymptomatic, may or.n symptoms of chronic liver disease. .neSigns Signs of chronic liverXdisease. . e X X blds Deranged LFT ±iPT, +ve autoantibodies (Table 9.12); ok Investigations ok Autoimmune ok 30mg/ And liver biopsy. Treatment hepatitis Prednisolone o o Bo USS B B .azathioprine; Other diseases Ew.p. 325. Complications 24h PO initially then wcirrhosis, Acute liver failure, hepatocellular carcinoma. w w ww ww Table 9.12 Autoantibodies in autoimmune liver disease et biliary cholangitis Anti-m.nitochondrial et (AMA) present in 95%.nandet Primary n . 98% X(780% ♀) Xspecific X ok Primary sclerosing cholangitisookAnti- ok (ANA), smooth muscle (SMA), antinuclear o o (770% ♀, 780% IBD) .B p-ANCA B w w.Bantinuclear (ANA) Autoimmune hepatitis Anti-smooth musclew (SMA), w type I (80% ♀) w w ww B Autoimmune liver disease (E OHCM10 p268.) Autoimmune hepatitis type II Anti-liver/kidney microsomal type 1 (LKM1) (mainly children; 90% ♀) Bo o et n . kX et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w w w Liver failure w 323 net net p. 288.) net Haemochromatosis (E OHCM10 . . . X X X recessive diseasekcausing excess iron accumulation.k ok $ Autosomal- o hyperpigmentation, DM.ooSigns HepatoFatigue, lethargy,oarthralgia, Bo Symptoms B megaly, signs of chronic liver disease, cardiac failure, or.B conduction defects, . w tanned skin. Investigationswbldswitransferrin saturation hypogonadism ±impotence, w w false-negatives esp. in younger w (>60% in ♂ w and >50% in ♀ highly specific, butw ♀),iALT, iglucose, genetic testing (2 common mutations account for 70% of ECG Cardiomyopathy ort conduction delays; Liver biopsy (DiagCaucasian t patients); eseverity). et Treatment Venesection n (1eunit/wk) until ferritin normalizes then nosis, n n . . . Xevery 3–6mth; transferrin saturation Xor genetic screening of relatives.kX ok Non-alcoholic fatty liver okdisease (E OHCM10 p.o285.) o o o B $ Spectrum of damage B from fat deposition in absence of.B other causes. . w failure. Investigations Symptoms and signs Obesity, hypertension, diabetes, liver ww blds Full liver w screen to rule out other causes; HbA ww; USS ± elastography may ww show fat deposition and evidence of cirrhosis; liver biopsy. Treatment Weight loss; manage et cardiovascular risk; monitor etfor transplantation. et n α .-n antitrypsin deficiency (E.n OHCM10 p. 290.) . X Genetic disease with complexkinheritance X X causing liver and lung k ok $Symptoms o liver failure, o damage. and signs Breathlessness, family history. Investigations o o o B blds dα -antitrypsinwlevels, .Bgenetic testing; liver biopsy. Treatment w.B Stop smoking, w COPD treatment. may need liver transplant, w w w w w 1C 1 1 Wilson’s disease (E OHCM10 p. 285.) $ Autosomal-recessive disease; copper accumulates in the liver and CNS. Symptoms Tremor, slurred speech, abnormal movements, clumsiness, depression, personality change, psychosis, liver failure, family history. Signs Kaiser– Fleischer rings in eyes, signs of liver failure. Investigations blds dcaeruloplasmin, dtotal serum copper, iserum free copper, genetic testing; Urine i24h copper excretion (especially if a dose of penicillamine is given); copper on liver biopsy. Treatment Lifelong penicillamine, may need liver transplant, screen relatives. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww ww $ Bacterial infection typically transmitted via exposure of skin cuts or mucous membranes to water contaminated with rat urine. Symptoms Recent contact with dirty water, high fever, malaise, anorexia, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, arthralgia, pharyngitis, conjunctival oedema, neck stiffness, photophobia, jaundice, bleeding and kidney failure. Signs Acute liver failure, meningism, bruising, tender RUQ, myocarditis. Investigations Urine Dipstick haematuria, culture; blds dHb (haemolytic), iurea, icreatinine, ibilirubin, iALT, serology. Treatment Doxycycline 100mg/12h PO or benzylpenicillin 600mg/6h IV and supportive care of renal/liver failure. et et .n kX o o o w.B ok Bo o o w.B t ok o w.B e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ww ww t e X.n ok o B . w ww t e X.n $Predicting outcomes in chronic liver disease This is of considerable importance, not least in prioritizing use of organs for transplantation. The ‘Child’ scoring system originated in 1964 from attempts by Child and Turcotte to assess operative risks for cirrhotic patients undergoing porto-systemic shunt surgery. Later modifications to include albumin and INR led to the ‘Child–Turcotte–Pugh’ score which is still widely used. With the advent of liver transplantation, more precise stratification of patients with advanced disease was needed: for the NHS transplantation programme, the UKELD (UK end-stage liver disease) score is calculated from serum Na+, creatinine, bilirubin, and INR. The original description of the UKELD score (Neuberger J, et al., Gut 2008;57:252) is available online at Mgut.bmj.com/content/57/2/252.abstract (subscription required, but many NHS trusts provide access through ATHENS). Online calculators for the Child score are widely available (eg Mwww.mdcalc. com). Information on the NHS transplantation programme, including liver transplants and a UKELD calculator is available at Mwww.organdonation.nhs.uk ww ok .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B Weil’s disease (leptospirosis) Bo et .n kX e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B 324 .B w ww Chapter 9 o oo B . w t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o 2 Worrying features iHR, dBP, drowsiness, dGCS, bleeding, slurred speech, poor coordination, tremor/flap, renal failure, weight loss. ww ww Think about o Bo ww w Gastroenterology t .ne Jaundice X k Bo .B w w et n . kX t ok .B w ww ww et n . X ok Bo et n . kX oo e X.n Pre-hepatic Haemolysis, malaria. Hepatic Paracetamol overdose, viral hepatitis, alcohol, chronic liver disease, Gilbert’s syndrome, pregnancy, medications (E p. 325), toxins (eg poisonous fungi), vascular disease (eg ischaemia, Budd–Chiari), sepsis. Cholestatic Choledocholithiasis, ascending cholangitis, pancreatic cancer, cholangiocarcinoma, primary biliary cirrhosis, 1° sclerosing cholangitis. Ask about Tiredness, jaundice (+onset), abdo pain, itching, dark urine, pale stools, drowsiness, confusion, bruising, bleeding (skin, nose, bowel, urine), bloating, vomiting, rashes, recent infections (sore throat), weight loss, generalized aching, hair loss, darkening skin, joint pain; PMH Previous jaundice, gallstones, breathing problems, blood transfusions; DH Paracetamol and medications (E p. 325); FH Liver disease, recent jaundice; SH Alcohol, IVDU, tattoos, piercings, foreign travel, sexual activity (?abroad). o w.B et n . X ok o B . w ww ww ww t .ne X ok o B . w ww Obs Temp, RR, HR, BP, urine output, O2 sats, glucose, GCS. Look for Volume status (E p. 394), bruising, evidence of bleeding, ww t t t drowsiness, .ne confusion: .ne .ne Pre-hepatic Splenomegaly, pale X conjunctiva, breathlessness. X X ok Hepatic Signs of acute orochronic ok liver failure (E pp. 319–23). ok o tenderness ±peritonism, Charcot’s triad (fever, Bo Cholestatic Abdominal B B . . cachexia. w jaundice and RUQw pain = cholangitis), palpable gallbladder, ww wwurobilinogen; blds FBC, ww Initial investigations Urine MSU, bilirubin, reticulocytes and LDH (both elevated in haemolysis), blood film, clott LFT (total and conjugatedet bilirubin), amylase, lipase, nparating, e U+E, et cetamol serology, bld cultures;.Urgent .n levels, hepatitis, EBVXand.nCMV X X ducts, k ok USS Abdo (?dilated bile 9.12. ok cirrhosis, pancreatic mass, ometastases). o o Bo See Table 9.13 andwBox B B . w. Table 9.13 Laboratory investigation of jaundice w w w w w w Urine Liver tests Other tests Pre-hepatic Urobilinogen iunconjugated t dHb, nMCV, dhaptoglobin, t t e e jaundice bilirubin .n ireticulocytes n . .ne X X X May have positive hepatitis k ok Hepatic Urobilinogen oimixed ok Abilirubin, serology or iparacetamol iALT/ ST oo levels Bo jaundice B B . . Cholestasis Bilirubin, dark iconjugated bilirubin, Dilated wducts on USS urine ww iALP, iγGT w ww ww Cholangitis Bilirubin, dark iconjugated bilirubin, iWCC, iCRP, dilated biliary urine iALP, iγGT ducts Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t .ne X k oo Liver failure E pp. 319–23 B . w ww I Box 9.12 Causes of jaundice covered elsewhere o o B . w ww Haemolysis E p. 408 ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Jaundice w 325 t t t Gilbert’s .ne syndrome X.ne .ne X X disease causing mild, self- ok $ Benign autosomal recessive ok typically ok resolving o o during acute illness. Bo unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia B B w. w. Choledocholithiasis w w $ Gallstonew in common bile duct, causing obstructive jaundice. w ww Risk factors ♀, pregnancy, DM, obesity, age. Symptoms Often none, preceding tbiliary colic, dark urine, pale tstool. Signs Jaundice, mild RUQ e Investigations blds iALP, eibilirubin; USS Dilated bile .ducts. et tenderness. n n n . . X Xexclude pancreatitis and kcholangitis, X Maintain hydration, ok Treatment oco-kamoxiclav opermits diagprophylactic antibiotics (eg 1.2g/8h IV); ERCP o o o B nosis and stone removal; cholecystectomy usually deferred until jaundice w.BPancreatitis, w.Bclotting resolved. Complications cholangitis, w hepatitis, defects. w w w ww Cholangitis $ Infection of the bile duct with Charcot’s triad: fever, jaundice, RUQ pain. t Signs itemp, iHR ±dBP, et Unwell, abdo pain, rigors, ejaundice. et Symptoms n n n . . . RUQ tenderness (Murphy’s +ve). Investigations blds iWCC, iCRP, X X X ok ibilirubin; USS ?duct dilatation, ok stones. Treatment eg co-aomoxiclav ok 1.2g/ o o 8h IV; may need an urgent ERCP if gallstones are in the common B .B .B bile duct. w w Primary biliary ww cholangitis (E OHCM10 wwp. 282.) ww B $ Chronic, progressive autoimmune destruction of interlobular bile ducts. Previously known as primary biliary cirrhosis. Symptoms and signs Fatigue, pruritus, cholestatic jaundice, cirrhosis. Investigations blds iALP, iγGT ±ibilirubin, iIgM, anti-mitochondrial antibodies (E p. 322); USS ±liver biopsy for staging. Treatment Ursodeoxycholic acid (helps symptoms and delays progression); colestyramine 4–8g/24h PO for itching; monitor for signs of decompensation and screen for osteoporosis (DEXA); in advanced disease immunosuppression (eg methotrexate, steroids); replace fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K); refer for liver transplant assessment. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww w Primary sclerosing cholangitis (E OHCM10 p. 282.) t .ne X k ww t t $ .Inflammation and fibrosis of intra- net .neand extrahepatic bile ducts.X.ne X X signs Chronic biliary obstruction leading to cirrhosis; IBD k UC, ok Symptomsinand780%, o790% oknot related of which but course of IBD o o Bo present B B to PSC. Investigations. blds iALP, ±ibilirubin, iimmunoglobulin levels, w antibodies (SMA), antinuclear w.antibodies (ANA), anti-smooth muscle w w w A1, B8 or DR3; ERCP Multiple w strictures; fibrosis on ww p-ANCA, HLA- liver biopsy. Treatment Trials of immunosuppressive agents have proven disappointing; acid can screen for osteoet(DEXA)ursodeoxycholic ethelp symptoms;(71% et n n n . . porosis and monitor for .cholangiocarcinoma per annum); X X X ok transplantation key, but disease ok recurs in 15% post transplant. ok o o o B Cholangiocarcinoma B (OHCM10 E p. 286.) w.B w.(90%) $ Adenocarcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma of intra-and w extrahepaticw biliary epithelium; strong relationship ww with IBD and PSC. ww Symptoms and signs Jaundice, pruritus, weight loss, dull RUQ ache. Courvoisier’s law An tenlarged gallbladder in the presence of jaundice is not caused by e (suggests pancreatic or .biliary et cancer). et gallstones Investigations blds.iALP, n n n . X X ± biopsy. Treatment ­Surgeryk(10– X CA19.9; USS, MRCP,kERCP ok ibilirubin, oERCP + stenting. o 40%); else palliate: chemotherapy, o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww ww Bo et t et n . X ww w ww o Bo B .B w w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 10 w 327 t t t .ne Endocrinology .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww 2 Hypoglycaemia emergency 328 329 t Hypoglycaemia e et 330 et 2 Hyperglycaemia emergency n n n . . . Hyperglycaemia 331 X Sliding scales 333 kX kX ok o o o o o Diabetes mellitus 334 B Pituitary axis w.B337 w.B w w Adrenal w disease 338 w ww Thyroid disease 340 et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 328 .B w ww Chapter 10 .B w w ww w Endocrinology t t et .nHypoglycaemia .ne .ne 2 emergency X X X ok ok oakdjuncts o o Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ Bo 22 Airway B B ARREST wIf .no respiratory effort—CALLw w. TEAM Breathing w 2 Circulation w If no palpable pulse—CALLwARREST TEAM ww If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability t t e edeteriorating. et n n n . . . 3Call for senior help early if patient X glucose is normally >3.5mmol/ X L X ok •• Blood okcan have symptoms ok o o o Poorly controlled diabetics of hypoglycaemia B with a glucose >3.5mmol/ w.B L. w.B w w Coma or w low GCS with low glucosew ww • Protect airway • 15L/m if SOB or sats <94% et in Ovenous etpresent et •Establish access unless already n n n . . . X IV glucose STAT (75–1k00mL X or 200mL of 10%)kX ok •• Give o or offor20% If unable to establish IVoaccess, large insulin overdoses o oo give 1mg B B glucagon SC/IM .B . w • Begin to follow emergency protocol E pp. 344–5 GCS) ww(low ww is responsible, GCS shouldwreturn ww • If hypoglycaemia to 15 in <10min B 2 • Start 1L 10% glucose/4–8h IV, adjust rate to keep glucose >5mmol/L • Monitor finger-prick glucose every 30min–1h until patient stable • Attempt to determine the cause of the hypoglycaemia and review diabetes treatment if appropriate • Call for senior help • Reassess, starting with A, B, C; if no improvement E pp. 344–5. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww GCS 15/15 with low glucose o Bo t .ne X k t o o w.B ok Bo oo B . w .ne X k et .n kX t 2 Box 10.1 Causes of hypoglycaemia o o w.B • Insulin overdose • Medication (eg sulphonylurea) • Fasting/starvation • Sepsis •Renal failure et n . kX o .ne X k ww t e X.n ww w • Give 15–20g of quick-acting carbohydrate (eg. 170–225mL Lucozade®) or one glucose gel (eg GlucoGel®) orally • Monitor finger-prick glucose 1–2h until stable, aim for >5mmol/L • If CBG remains <4.0 mmol/L despite 3× oral glucose, consider glucagon or IV glucose as above mentioned • Once the patient has recovered, give a long-acting carbohydrate (eg toast, biscuits) • Attempt to determine the cause of the hypoglycaemia (Box 10.1) and adjust diabetes treatment as appropriate. ww Bo t .ne X k ww et n . kX • • • • • et n . X ok o w.B Alcohol excess Acute liver failure Insulinoma Glucocorticoid deficiency Neoplasm. ww o o B . w ww ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Hypoglycaemia w 329 t t t .ne .ne .ne Hypoglycaemia X X X k ok Worrying featuresodGCS, ok recurrent episodes, lossoofoawareness, Bo 2non- B B diabetic, lacking w.insight, or unable to communicate w. symptoms. w w w Most likely Excess insulin or oralwhypoglycaemics in a diabetic ww Think about or accidental dose in non-diabetic, alcohol; Other Dumping syndrome (DM or post- surgery), liver failure, adrenal (Addison’s), pituitaryeint etgastric et failure n n n sufficiency, sepsis, insulinoma, other.neoplasia, malaria. . . X about Sweating, hunger, X X recent food, previous ok Ask ok exercise, okloss, hypos o o o and awareness, usual blood sugars, seizures, weight tiredB ness, anxiety, palpitations; .B PMH DM, gastric surgery, .B liver or endow w crine disease; DH ww Insulin dose, oral hypoglycaemic ww dose, compliance; ww SH Alcohol, Occupation (eg commercial driver). Obs HR, temp, GCS, recent and blood glucose. t BP,Pale,RR,sweating, efor et current ebet Look tremor, .slurred speech, focal neurology (can n n n . . X eg hemiplegia), dGCS,kabdo X (injection sites, lipodystrophy), kX ok severe, o naevi,scars pigmented scars, jaundice,ospider hepatomegaly. oo o B Investigations Finger- .Bprick glucose If the result is unexpected ask for a rewmachine w.inBa fluoride peat on a different and send a blood sample oxalate w w w w ww B 1 1 (E p. 531) tube for a laboratory glucose result. If not known to be diabetic send samples for FBC, U+E, LFT, glucose, insulin, C-peptide, and cortisol, prior to correcting hypoglycaemia; do not let this delay treatment. Further investigations Hypoglycaemia is very rare in an otherwise healthy non-diabetic patient in the absence of alcohol. Consider ‘other’ causes listed previously (also see Box 10.2). For suspected insulinoma, the investigation of choice is glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels at the time of hypoglycaemia or after a 72h observed fast. See E OHCM10 p. 214. Treatment Follow treatment for ‘Hypoglycaemia emergency’ (E p. 328). DM A single episode of mild hypoglycaemia should not prompt a change of medication. If the patient is having regular hypos then consider a dose reduction, especially if lack of awareness of hypoglycaemic episodes. Try to establish any diurnal pattern of hypos, then reduce appropriate insulin dose by 20%; consult BNF to reduce the doses of oral hypoglycaemics. Ensure the patient is aware of the sick day rules (E Box 10.7 p. 335). Alcohol Hypoglycaemia following alcohol will not reoccur after correction in the absence of further alcohol consumption. Once the patient’s blood sugars are stable they can be discharged. Dumping syndrome Fast passage of food into the small intestine (following gastric surgery or in severe diabetic autonomic neuropathy) can cause fluid shifts and rapid glucose absorption. Excessive insulin secretion results in rebound hypoglycaemia 1–3h after a meal. A diet low in glucose and high in fibre will improve the symptoms. Aim for frequent, smaller meals. Neoplasia If suspected, arrange appropriate imaging and referral t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww .ne X k oo B . w ww ww o Bo et n . kX Addison’s/pituitary failure E p. 337, p. 338 Acute liver failure E p. 320 1 et n . X w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo Sepsis E p. 494 o o B . w ww ww ok o w.B I Box 10.2 Hypoglycaemia covered elsewhere et n . kX .n kX t o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k Loss of early autonomic symptoms warning of mild hypoglycaemia (eg tremor, sweating) seen in those with longstanding DM and frequent hypoglycaemic episodes. ww B 330 .B w ww Chapter 10 .B w w ww w Endocrinology t et net .nHyperglycaemia .emergency .ne 2 X X X ok ok ok o o Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ adjuncts Bo 2 Airway B B . w. TEAM ARREST 2 Breathing wwIf no respiratory effort—CALLw w If no palpable pulse—CALLwARREST TEAM ww 2 Circulation If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability t e etdeteriorating. et n n n . . . 3Call for senior help early if patient X X X ketoacidosis (DKA) ok Diabetic ok<94%(E p. 332.) ok o o o • 15L/ m in O if SOB or sats B .B .B • Call for senior help w w w w •Establish venous w access, take bloods: w ww FBC, U+E, glucose, osmolality, HCO , bld cultures • Check BP: eif tSBP<90mmHg, give 500mL.n0.9et% saline IV over 10–15min .then et n n . recheck; if SBP <90, give further 500mL 0.9 % saline IV over 10– X X kXcare teams. and call ICU/co ritical ok 15min ok o o o if SBP ≥90, give 1L 0.9 % saline IV over 60min B .B and ketones (dipstick urine • Check finger-prick wglucose w.Bfor ketones if w w capillary testing w unavailable) w ww B 2 − 3 • • • • Start a fixed rate insulin infusion of 0.1unit/kg/h IV (use 50units human soluble insulin eg Actrapid® in 50mL 0.9% saline; max. rate 15unit/h) • Venous blood gas; if pH <7.1 call ICU/critical care team • Monitor glucose and ketones hourly, and venous HCO−3 and K+ at 60min and 2hrly thereafter (Box 10.3); remember K+ will fall unless replaced • Further management E p. 332; ECG, CXR, MSU to determine cause • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX ww oo B . ww w t .ne X k 2 Box 10.3 Consider HDU admission in DKA for: ww t et or kidney failure •Young .people, et elderly, comorbidities, or pregnant • n n>6mmol/ . Heart .ne • GCS <12, sats <92% • Ketones L, HCO <5mmol/L,X pH <7.1 X X k k •oK <3.5mmol/L, anion gap >16 Eop. 599 ok • SBP <90 o o Bo B B w. w(E. p. 332.) Hyperosmolar hyperglycaemic state (HHS) w w w ww • 15L/min Owif SOB or sats <94% • Call for senior help •Establish venous access, take bloods: t t U+E, eFBC, ebld cultures et n n n glucose, osmolality, . . . X 1L 0.9% saline IV overk60min X X ok •• Give oat 0.05units/kg/h) ONLY if plasma ok ketones Start IV insulin (fixed rate o o o B .B ketones). >1mmol/L or 2+ urinary wglucose w.B • Monitor U+Ew and w w wMSU to determine cause ww • Further management E p. 332; ECG, CXR, (Box 10.4) • Reassess et , starting with A, B, C ... n. et et n n . . X X X ok 2 Box 10.4 Life-threatening ok precipitants of oDKA/ ok HHS o o B • Sepsis • Trauma/surgery .B w.B w • MI • Other acute w illness. w w w ww + 2 • − 3 B .B w ww .B w w w w Hyperglycaemia w 331 t t t .ne .ne .ne Hyperglycaemia X X X ok ok ok o o dGCS, ketonuria, acidosis, vomiting. Bo 2 Worrying features B B w. w.(DKA E p. 332), w Think aboutw 2 Emergencies Diabetic ketoacidosis w whyperglycaemic state (HHS Ew hyperosmolar p. 332); Common After sugary w food, steroids, non-compliance with diabetic treatment, infection, or acute t diabetics or severely unwellnnon- illnesse(in et diabetics), new diagnosis of.nDM. et n . . Ask about ‘Osmotic symptoms’ (thirst, polyuria, frequency, urgency), X Xrashes, breathlessness, cough, Xsputum, weight loss, vomiting, ok tiredness, ok PMH ooralk hypoglyo o o chest pain, abdo pain, dysuria; DM; DH Insulin dose, B caemic dose, medication .B SH Alcohol. w.B changes and compliance, wsteroids; w w w Obs Temp, w RR, GCS, urine dip, BM, recentw and current blood glucose, w fluid balance. t Volume status (E p. 394),nsweet- Lookefor smelling breath (ketones). Signs et perineum et n n . . . of infection Check skin thoroughly (including and feet) for abscesses X X kX look in mouth for dental and injection site o problems, ok orchestrashes ok infection, o o o for poor air entry or creps, abdominal tenderness. B Investigations wFinger- B and sus.Bprick glucose (±ketones wif .available w if result w dipstick Ketones, pect DKA) w repeat unexpected; w Urine evi- ww dence of infection (E pp. 604–5); blds Send if patient is unwell, has persistent hyperglycaemia (over 48h), or has urinary ketones (type 1 DM), request FBC, U+E, LFT, osmolality, pH/HCO−3 (venous), blood cultures; ABG Unnecessary unless concerns regarding respiratory status (venous pH adequate for DKA); ECG/CXR If treatment has been required. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w t .ne X k .n kX oo B . w takes hours to days w tient is unlikely w suggest underlying pathology.w DKA wtoHHS w to develop while takes days to weeks. w Type 1 diabetes Check finger-prick glucose (±ketones if available) and t t be transiently normalnsoon urine.eGlucose usually high in DKA but et .n a dose ofis insulin. .ne may . dipafter AssessX volume status (E p. 394), check X X ketonuria and check (normal ok stick forpH oka venous blood gas for pH/oHoCOkIf hyperglyor absenceBofo urinary ketones excludes DKA). Bo venous B caemia persistent,w try. to establish any diurnal pattern and i appropriate w.glucose. w insulin doses byw 20% with close monitoring of blood w w ww Type 2 diabetes Check finger-prick glucose and urine. The glucose must be raised for a diagnosis of HHS. If unwell, the treatment plan t initially. tglucosefollow e e et for n HHS Otherwise monitor levels every 6h forn48h, n . . . and Xincrease oral/IV fluid intake,kbut X reassess. DKA can occur in type 2 ok diabetics who require insulin o it is very unusual (evenoolowkXlevels of o o For.B persistent hyperB residual insulin production .B inhibit ketogenesis). w glycaemia increasewthe dose of hypoglycaemic medication or consider w w starting/increasing w insulin with frequent finger- wprick glucose checks. ww B Treatment A single episode of hyperglycaemia in an otherwise well pa- − 3 et n . kX o Bo Non-diabetic patients New diabetics often present with DKA/HHS; have a low threshold for starting treatment plans later in this section. Other triggers These can include steroids, pregnancy, and stress, eg severe illness or surgery. et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w w .B w w w Endocrinology 332 ww w Chapter 10 t t et OHAM4 p. 516.) Diabetic .ne ketoacidosis (DKA) .n(E .ne X X X resulting k in ketosis l acidosis and hyperglycaemia l k ok K Insulin deficiency odiuresis. omissed o o due to osmotic Typically seen following insulin Bo dehydration B B . of T1DM. treatments or infection w. in T1DM, or as a first presentation w(≥11mmol/ Diagnose basedw upon presence of hyperglycaemia L), acidosis w w (venous pH w <7.3 or HCO <15mmol/L), andw blood ketones ≥3mmol/L or w ketonuria (≥2+). Stabilize the patient as shown E p. 330, then: trehydration (see ‘DKA fluids’) • Continue IV insulin infusion and fluid et venous eafter eat n n n . . • .Monitor K , pH, and HCO 1h, 2h, and then 2hrly using X venous sample on a gas analyser X for rapid testing X ok • Monitor okketones ok ketones o o o venous glucose and hourly aiming for blood B to fall by >0.5 mmol/ /h w.BL/h and glucose by >3mmol/ w.LB w w w • If patient uses long-acting insulin continue at normal dose/time w w • Continue fixed rate insulin infusion until ketones <0.6mmol/L and pH w >7.3. At this point, convert to regular SC insulin if eating and drinking normally, et otherwise use a sliding.nscale et (E p. 333). See Box 10.5..net n . XDKA fluids 0.9% saline is the mostkappropriate X X replacement. A guide ok would o1h, 1L over 2h,fluid ooverk 4h.in Ifadults be to prescribe 1L over 1L over 2h, and 1L syso o o B B tolic BP <90mmHg on.B admission an initial 500–1000mL bolus must be carefully . w can lead to ceregiven under senior w Since excess fluid replacement w supervision. bral oedema,w reassess frequently for signs of overload ww(E p. 394), and tailor to ww 2 − 3 + − 3 volume status and patient weight. Add 40mmol/L KCl after the first litre of fluid if the plasma K+ is 3.5–5.5mmol/L. Omit additional KCl if K+ >5.5; if K+ <3.5 seek senior review. Add a 10% glucose infusion at 125mL/h if glucose <14mmol/L but do not stop saline. et et .n kX .n kX oo oo B B . . These patients require close monitoring. If severely w ill, catheterize, consider wwor ICU, admission tow HDU and an arterial and/ worwcentral line. If obtunded or ww persistent vomiting, keep NBM and pass NG tube. Dehydration and dGCS predispose to thromboembolism: give prophylactic LMWH (E pp. 420–1). t Consider precipitants: poor compliance/ insulin dose, alcohol, et netbloodincorrect .ne likely .nlow infections (may be asymptomatic—c.heck cultures, MSU and CXR; X X X ok threshold for starting antibiotics), ok MI (check an ECG), CVA, surgery, okpregnancy. o o Bo Hyperosmolar hyperglycaemic B B state (HHS) (E w. hyperglycaemia w. OHAM4 p. 524.) w K Severe, uncorrected leads to dehydration, but in the w w presence ofwresidual insulin production inwT2DM, ketoacidosis does w not develop. Previously referred to as hyperosmolar non-ketotic state t Diagnose based upon nraised t plasma osmolality (typically (HONK). emOsmol/ e(typically et n n . . . >340 kg) with high glucose >30mmol/L). X Xon the treatment plan E p.k330, X the patient as shown ok •• Stabilize ok based o then: o o o Continue IV fluid replacement on clinical state and comorbidities B .Bfailure) (eg elderly with w heart w.B w w • Monitor U+E, glucose and osmolality every 2h. Be aware that w w ww Bo o et .n kX T Box 10.5 Management tips in DKA/HHS 3 hyperglycaemia will drive redistribution of water into the extracellular fluid, lowering serum Na+ concentrations (‘spurious hyponatraemia’) • Commence IV insulin (fixed rate 0.05 units/kg/hr) only once glucose has stopped falling with IV fluids alone (unless i blood ketones at diagnosis) t ok Bo t e X.n 2 3 t e X.n ok o B . w e X.n ok o B . w Joint British Diabetes Societies guidelines at Mhttp://www.diabetologists-abcd.org.uk/JBDS/ JBDS_IP_DKA_Adults_Revised.pdf Plasma osmolality may be estimated as 2×([Na+] + [K+])+ urea + glucose while awaiting a formal lab measurement. ww ww ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Sliding scales w 333 t t t .ne scales .ne .ne Sliding X X X k They ok okand control of blood glucose olevels. allow strict monitoring o o Bo These B B . insulin whose are used in the treatment of diabetic patients requiring w. disrupted wvomiting, oral intake is significantly (eg NBM, severe or serious w w w illness), and w in critical illness, where good w glycaemic control improves w outcomes, eg post MI or on ICU, but are no longer used in the management et of DKA or HHS where fixed- ertate insulin infusions are advised. et n n n . . . Both the insulin infusion and appropriate IV maintenance fluids are preX on the infusions section X the drug card (Fig. 10.1).kX ok scribed okas ofnecessary), o Use 0.9% o o saline or 5% glucose (with KCl accordingBtoothe blood gluB cose (use 0.9% saline B . . w if the glucose is running >11mmol/ w L). w w w w ww Date Route Fluid Additives Vol Rate Signature 18.8.18 IV 0.9% saline 50units Actrapid 50mL Sliding Scale P Roluos et IV 5% glucose 20mmol.nKClet 1L 8h et 18.8.18 P Roluos n n . . X X for a sliding scale. X ok Fig. 10.1 Prescribing insulinoandokfluids ok o o B Insulin Date glucose w.B Start time Blood w.B Rate (mL/h) w w (mmol/L) w w ww B Actrapid Dose 1unit/mL . kX o o net 18.8.18 13:45 Route IV Signature S Dixon oo B . w t .ne kX <4 4–7 7.1–11 11.1–20 >20 Stop – call doctor 1 2 4 7 – call doctor oo B . ww t .ne X k Fig. 10.2 Example of sliding scale regimen (check local guidelines). ww o Bo w If the patient remains hyperglycaemic despite the sliding scale (Fig. 10.2) then check the infusion pump and cannula; if no problems found, then increase infusion rates by 1.5–2-fold, and check venous pH (T1DM) or osmolality (T2DM). If the capillary blood glucose is <4mmol/L check that there is 5% glucose running, increase the fluid rate and/or glucose concentration (up to 10%); recheck glucose in 30min. If persistently <4mmol/L stop the sliding scale, and restart the infusion at half the doses once blood glucose >6mmol/L. If glucose <2 E p. 328. Stop a sliding scale once a patient is eating normally and able to resume normal diabetes medication. Give normal dose of SC insulin 30min before stopping the scale, unless rapid acting (eg Novorapid®, Humalog®) in which case give at same time as stopping the scale. t .ne X k t o ww t e X.n o w.B et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k t ww et n . X ww k insulin o ok Prescribing o drug cards for prescribing.insulin. ooAlways spehospitals have separate Bo Most B B . cify the insulin formulation, ‘U’ for units w and avoid using thewabbreviation w (since this canw bew misread as a zero). See Fig. 10.3 w for an example. ww Breakfast Insulin Dose (units) Route Start t et et n n 18 SC 18.8.18 . . .ne X X X k Start Insulin ok Dose (units) Route ok Night o oo 18.8.18 Bo B 10 SC .B . w w Fig. 10.3 Prescribing ww subcutaneous insulins. ww ww B .B w ww 334 Chapter 10 .B w w ww w Endocrinology t t t .ne .ne .ne Diabetes mellitus X X X k ok o≥7.0mmol/ oLk2h after a plasma glucose L, or ≥11.1mmol/ o o Bo K75gFasting B B . or HbA >48 mmol/mol (on . one occasion if oral glucose load symptomatic orw2w occasions in no symptoms). ww w w resulting in dependence ww • Type 1 Autoimmune pancreatic β-cell destruction, on exogenous insulin; typically presents in children or young adults • Type insulin hyposecretion t or resistance to effects, net et 2 Relative esecretion n n requiring drugs to potentiate insulin or effects, or exogenous . . . X insulin; typically occurs in adults, X especially if overweight kX k k o o o glucose o (IGT) HbA 42–4o mol or Bo • Impaired .Btolerance .B 7mmol/ plasma glucose ≥7.8mmol/ L after OGTT, but <11.1mmol/ L; 20–50% w w progress to T2DM w in 10yr w w wfasting wglucose • Impaired glucose (IFG) Plasma ≥6.1mmol/L after w an overnight fast, but <7.0mmol/L; lower risk of developing T2DM tintolerance first detected during • Gestational degree of glucose et (E Any ewill et n n . . pregnancy p. 519); around 30% progress to T2DM within.n 5yr. X X X ok Type 1 DM (E OHCM10 okp. 206.) ok o o o B B loss, thirst, polyuria, abdo Symptoms Tiredness, .weight w breath, w.Bpain, vomiting. Signs Sweet-smelling shock, abdominal w pain (all suggest DKA). w w w ww B 4 1c 1c Investigations Glucose testing as previously mentioned. Check venous HCO−3 and pH and urine (ketones) to exclude DKA. If uncertainty about type of diabetes, positive islet cell or glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, or low C-peptide levels all suggest T1DM. Check HbA1C (see Box 10.6). Treatment Resuscitate and investigate for DKA; in the absence of DKA, a new diagnosis of T1DM does not necessitate admission, but the patient should be started on a suitable insulin regimen by an appropriately experienced individual (eg endocrine registrar or diabetes nurse specialist) with regular finger-prick glucose monitoring and prompt out-patient follow-up. For properties of some commonly used insulins E p. 205. Chronic management E p. 336. Involve diabetes team ASAP. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o t .ne X k t .ne X k w t ww et .ne X k .n kX oo oo B B . . HbA reflects non- nzymatic glycosylation of haemoglobin w at a rate prowweglucose. w portional tow plasma Since erythrocytes (and hence haemoglobin) ww w undergo slow but constant turnover, HbA reflects plasma glucose control over the preceding 1–3 months and is a reliable predictor of diabetes et et be set with patient involvement, et complications. Target HbA levels should n n n . . . taking into account an individual’s risk profile, as well as tolerability X and T2DM are 48mmol/kmolX(looserof kXtherapy. Initial targets in bothokT1DM o o or treatment refractory),.Bwithootreatment inapplied if frail.B elderly Bo targets tensification in T2DM w if levels rise to 58mmol/mwol.w ww w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww Bo K Box 10.6 HbA1c 1c 1c 1c 5 4 5 In the presence of diabetes symptoms, a random plasma glucose ≥11.1mmol/L may be considered diagnostic; in the absence of symptoms, all tests should be repeated on a separate occasion. Ie 86.5% (48mmol/mol) and 87.5% (58mmol/mol). Since 2009 HbA1c levels have been reported by NHS labs as mmol per mol (of haemoglobin without glucose attached) but previous units of % were reported in key trials, used in guidelines and still permeate the consciousness of some older patients and clinicians. B .B w ww .B w w w w Diabetes mellitus w 335 t t t Type 206.) .ne2 DM (E OHCM10 p. X .ne .ne X X k also present with diabetic complications, As for type 1, butocan ok Symptomsproblems, ok o neuropathy, MI, CVA, claudication.Bo Bo egSignsvisual B . Foot ulcers, w infections, peripheral neuropathy, w. poor visual acuity w w w and retinopathy, evidence of cardiovascular disease. w w w Investigations blds Confirm diagnosis based upon plasma glucose testing ±OGTT (E pp. 334–6), HbA (Box 10.6), U+E, lipid profile; ECG. et T2DM may initially be controlled et by a healthy diet with.nminet Treatment n n . . Ximal rapid-release carbohydrates X (as found in sugary drinkskorXsweets) ok and weight loss. If medication okrequired, uptitrate pharmacological o o oo(Table agents before adding in insulin therapy 10.1). B (usually to triple therapy) B B . . w E p. 336. See Box 10.7.ww Chronic management w w w ww Table 10.1 Medications for glycaemic control in T2DM Classet Examples Comment et et n n n . . . Biguanides Metformin 1st line for obese; iglucose uptake and X X X ok okdappetite; avoid if any renal failure ok o o o Sulphonylureas Gliclazide Add to metformin (1st line if.B metformin not B iinsulin secretion, w.B suitable); w but causes weight w gain. Cautious use inw the elderly due to risks of w w ww B 1c * hypoglycaemia Thiazolidinediones Pioglitazone 2nd line if other drugs not tolerated or effective; dinsulin resistance; avoid in heart failure DPP-4 inhibitors Sitagliptin 2nd line if other drugs not tolerated or effective; iinsulin and dglucagon secretion SGLT2 inhibitor Dapagliflozin 2nd line if other drugs not tolerated or effective; blocks renal reabsorption of glucose and promotes urinary excretion of excess glucose GLP-1 activators Exenatide, 2nd line if other drugs not tolerated or effective, (given SC) liraglutide especially if iBMI; iinsulin and dglucagon secretion Insulin Isophane Added eg if triple oral therapy insufficient (or (given SC) if metformin not tolerated and dual therapy insufficient) Acarbose Rarely used in current practice; dcarbohydrate α-glucosidase absorption; causes flatulence inhibitors t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k ww oo B . w .n kX *For more information, NICE guidelines are available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG87 t ww ww et et n n . . X X diabetic patients about ok Educate okwhat to do if they are feeling unwell: ok o o o • Drink plenty of fluids B Bsoup, fruit juice, or fizzy drinks w .B • If not eating, try milk, instead wof.blood • Increase frequency glucose monitoring to atw least 4 times/day w wattention if you cannot keep fluids down, w becoming drowsy or ww • Seek medical confused, blood glucose <4mmol/L or persistently >20mmol/L • If on tinsulin 3 This should never be stopped; can arise from t e illness, regardless of calorie.nintake. et hyperglycaemia intercurrent Consider increasing insulin dose ife n n . . blood glucose >13mmol/ L even if unable to eat. Dipstick urine for ketones at least X and seek medical attentionkif X X +ve ok • daily o diabetic ok intake o o o If on tablets Continue regular medications providing calorie B continues. Metformin w.Bmay need to be stopped if becoming w.Bdehydrated: seek w w medical advice. w w ww e X.n K Box 10.7 Sick day rules B .B w w .B w w w Endocrinology 336 ww w Chapter 10 t t et mellitus Long- .ne term managementXof.ndiabetes .ne X X mellitus is associated macrovascular (IHD, k PVD) ok K Diabetes ok with o CVA, o o microvascular (nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy) complicaBo and B B . studies show reductionswin.complications with tions. Large, long- wterm control of riskw factors; these should be assessed w ww at least annually in a ww formal review. Education and lifestyle Ensure understanding and motivation for glycaemic control compliance, and dietetas et (including self-monitoring,.nmedication et n n . well as assessing risk of hypoglycaemic unawareness). risk Xfor complications (physical activity, X smoking cessation,Modify X.factors k k k foot care). o oo oo Refer Bo for education classes. B B . . w and adjust therapy Glycaemic control w Measure HbA (every 3–6mth) wBox w accordingly w (see 10.6); consider revising target if tight control un- ww w acceptable to patient based upon individual risk profile. BP Aimtfor BP <140/80 (uncomplicated or <135/85 (uncomplieT1DM); if end-organ damage.naim et forT2DM) et cated BP <130/80 (E pp. 270–3). n n . . X an ACEi as 1st line (pluskdiuretic X or Ca channel blockerkX ok Use o o if African- Caribbean descent). o o o B .B and consider cardiovascular Lipids Measure lipid profile risk factors; in all w wlow.Brisk) T2DM age >40yr (except those judged to be very initiate statin w w w w ww 6,7 1c 2+ therapy (primary prevention—atorvastatin 20mg) and assess response; in T1DM consider statin therapy in those with microalbuminuria, family history, age >35yr, or other high-risk features. Nephropathy Test early morning urine albumin:creatinine ratio; if ≥2 repeated measurements show microalbuminuria (♂: >2.5mg/mmol, ♀: >3.5mg/ mmol), tighten BP control, initiate ACEi and consider renal referral. Retinopathy Arrange annual retinal screening; sudden loss of vision, rubeosis iridis, pre-retinal or vitreous haemorrhage, or retinal detachment require emergency ophthalmology review; new vessel formation requires urgent referral; pre-proliferative retinopathy, significant maculopathy, or unexplained change in visual acuity require routine referral. Footcare Assess annually for ulcers, peripheral pulses, sensory function, and foot deformity. If ulcers present, refer urgently to a specialist diabetic footcare team. Those with previous ulcers, absent pulses or impaired sensation require referral to a footcare team for frequent review.8 Neuropathy Assess for autonomic neuropathy in the form of unexplained vomiting (gastroparesis— consider trial of prokinetic agents, eg metoclopramide), erectile dysfunction (offer phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor, eg sildenafil), nocturnal diarrhoea, bladder voiding problems, or orthostatic hypotension. Neuropathic pain9 requires oral neuropathic agent (eg gabapentin, amitriptyline, duloextine). Refractory or severe pain may require opioid analgesia and specialist pain service referral. Pneumovax® and yearly flu vaccines These should be offered to all patients. et et .n kX o Bo o o w.B o ww et et .n kX o o o w.B ok o o w.B t ok o w.B k o Bo 7 8 9 e X.n ok o w.B ww t t e X.n ok ww ww t e X.n For NICE guidelines on management of T1DM see Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG17 For NICE guidelines on management of T2DM, see Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG28 For NICE guidelines on footcare in T2DM, see Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG19 For NICE guidelines on neuropathic pain, see Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG173 o B . w ww t e X.n ww 6 .n kX ww t e X.n ww et .n kX ww Bo .n kX o w.B ww Bo et .n kX e X.n ok ww o B . w ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Pituitary axis w 337 t t t .ne .ne .ne Pituitary axis X X X ok ok ok o o Bo Hypopituitarism B B .may affect one or more anterior K Failure of secretion hormones. w w.pituitary w w Causes Damage to the hypothalamic– p ituitary axis after surgery, irradiation, ww w w tumours, ischaemia, infection (eg meningitis), or infiltration (eg amyloidosis). Symptoms and signs These are specific to each hormone lost, eg growth et (GH) loss: weakness, malaise, etdcardiac output, hypoglycaemia; et hormone n n n . . . Xgonadotrophin (LH, FSH) loss: Xamenorrhoea, dlibido, erectile kXdysfuncglucook tion; TSH loss: hypothyroidism ok (E pp. 340–1); ACTH oloss: o o o (E p. 338). B corticoid insufficiency B B . . Investigations Testsw of pituitary function include LH, TSH, paired w hormones: ww FSH, with target w organ testosterone/ oestradiol, T , cortisol and ww w insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1, a marker of growth hormone secretion). Dynamic testing (eg short Synacthen test E p. 585) is also inet Generally, et function et formative. testing of pituitary should be undertaken n n n . . . Xand interpreted with specialistkadvice. X X ok Treatment Identify and treat underlying o cause; appropriate hormone okreplacement o o o B may be required eg w hydrocortisone (E p. 205) or thyroxine p. 207). .B w.B(E 3 On the ward, the most important point is to ensure any patient with w w w gets regular steroids (increased w in acute illness and given ww panhypopituitarism 4 ® IV if necessary) with early endocrinologist involvement (E p. 332). Diabetes et insipidus et due to loss of either.nADH et .nurine K .n Inability to form concentrated X X X (neurogenic) or renal response (nephrogenic). ok ok secretionNeurogenic okbrain o idiopathic, tumour or metastases, Bo Causes B . .Bo head trauma, cranial surgery; Nephrogenic drugs (eg lithium), w CRF, post-obstructive w uropathy, iCa ww, dK . ww ww Symptoms Polyuria, thirst (may be extreme). Signs Dilute clinically dehydratedt(E pp. 394–7). t et urine, e Investigations durine osmolality (<400mOsmol/ kg), iplasma osmolality, n . .ntest .neand and iNa . In the water deprivation (fluid balance, weight, urine, X X X k 8h without fluids)—failureokto concenok plasma osmolality recorded oover o o(an ADH anaBo trate urine (>600mOsmol/ B k g) confirms DI. Desmopressin .the production .Burine w w logue) is then given— of a concentrated at this point w implies neurogenic implies nephrogenic DI. ww DI; failure to concentratew ww Treatment Identify and treat the cause. In neurogenic DI, intranasal desmopressin may be used regularly. In t nephrogenic DI, bendroflume­ etor NSAIDs et thiazide may be used. .ne n n . . X Omission of desmopressinkinXa patient with DI who is unablektoXdrink (eg ok 3 dGCS) is life-threatening. in o ooPay attention to fluid balance oothese patients. B NBM, B . Acromegaly w.B w K Hypersecretion ww of GH from a pituitary tumour ww drives soft-tissue and ww 2+ + + et n . kX o Bo skeletal growth resulting in characteristic facial and body features. Symptoms and signs Enlarged hands and feet, coarse facial features, prognathism, macroglossia; headache ±bitemporal hemianopia. Sweating, hypertension, and hyperglycaemia are markers of disease activity. Investigations IGF-1 levels reflect GH secretion; OGTT and other tests of pituitary function under specialist guidance; pituitary MRI. Treatment Transsphenoidal resection of pituitary tumour where possible; medical therapy includes somatostatin analogues (eg octreotide). et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 338 .B w ww Chapter 10 .B w w ww w Endocrinology t t t .ne .ne .ne Adrenal disease X X X ok ok ok o o syndrome (E OHCM10 p. 224.) Bo Cushing’s B B K Excess of glucocorticoids (eg cortisol); ‘Cushing’s w. w. disease’ when due w w w to an ACTH- p roducing pituitary tumour. ACTH w w may also be pro- w duced ectopically, eg by small-cell lung cancers. Adrenal adenomas or carcinomas ACTH-independent causes t onaresteroids t (and will suppress ACTH). e e et A patient may becomen ‘Cushingoid’. n n . . . X Weight gain, depression, tiredness, weakness, kX psychosis, kX oligo- ok Symptoms oimpotence, or amenorrhoea, hirsutism, infections, DM. oo o o B Signs Central obesity.B hump), moon-face, water w (buffalo w.B retention,onlyiBP,in w thin skin, striae, bruising, peripheral wasting; hyperpigmentation w w w or ectopic ACTH production. w w Cushing’s disease Investigations iglucose, i24h urinary cortisol, plasma ACTH and 8am cort t OHCM10 p. 225); imagingntests tisol, e dexamethasone suppression testse(E et n . . are problematic due to high rates of.n ‘incidentalomas’ on adrenal CT or pituX MRI and are only done after Xbiochemical confirmation of the X ok itary oksource ok diagnosis. o o o Treatment Localize and remove of cortisol, eg transsphenoidal resecB B If surgical .B adrenalectomy for adrenal .adenoma. tion of pituitary adenoma, w w w metastatic lung cancer), ww treatment fails worwunsuitable (eg ectopic ACTHwfrom suppress steroidogenesis, eg with ketoconazole or metyrapone. If iatrogenic cause, try to taper steroid dose (E p. 179). Consider bone protection with bisphosphonate and vitamin D; monitor for iglucose. Complications Osteoporosis, DM, infection, poor healing, infertility. t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X ok o(Ek OHCM10 p. 226.) ook o insufficiency Bo Adrenal B . typically seen upon abrupt withdrawal .B of long-term K Adrenal deficiency, w w w autoimmune (com- w steroid therapy;w 1° adrenal (Addison’s) disease includes w TB monest in UK), (commonest worldwide),w metastases (eg lung, breast), w Waterhouse–Friderichsen syndrome (sepsis and adrenal haemorrhage). t t weakness, dizziness, depresSymptoms lethargy, weight net .neabdoTiredness, .neloss, vomiting, sion, pain, diarrhoea or constipation, myalgia. X. X X k scars, ok Signs Vitiligo, postural hypotension, ok hyperpigmentation ofoocreases, o Bo and mouth (buccal). B B . . w wFBC Investigations dNa , iK , iurea, may have abnormal and LFT. If susw w w short Synacthen test: orderw250micrograms Synacthen ww pected perform + + ® t e X.n ok Bo et n . kX o Bo ® from pharmacy, once this arrives send a blood sample for cortisol and ACTH levels, give the Synacthen® IM/IV (E p. 585); repeat cortisol levels in 30min. Addison’s is excluded if initial, or 30min cortisol is >550nmol/L. Treatment Hydrocortisone 20–30 mg/day in divided doses to mimic normal circadian rhythm. May also need fludrocortisone (50– 200micrograms PO OD) if electrolytes deranged or postural hypotension. 2If unwell, double dose of oral steroids for during of illness. If vomiting, needs IV/IM hydrocortisone—100mg stat and seek medical attention. 2Addisonian crisis Shock, dGCS, or hypoglycaemia in a patient with Addison’s disease or stopping long-term steroid therapy. Resuscitate according to E pp. 488–9, send bloods for cortisol levels, and give hydrocortisone (200mg IV STAT, then 100mg IV/8h) and broad-spectrum antibiotics (eg Tazocin® 4.5g IV); seek urgent endocrinologist advice. .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Adrenal disease w 339 t t t Hyperaldosteronism (E OHCM10 .ne .ne p. 228.) .ne X X X aldosterone secretion, resulting in Na and water retention; k typok K Excess ok(Conn’s ohyperplasia. o o from an adrenal adenoma syndrome), or adrenal Bo ically B B Symptoms Thirst, polyuria, w. weakness, muscle spasms, w.headaches. w w Signs Hypertension (especially if refractory to multiple antihypertensive ww w w agents or young age of onset). Investigations dK , normal or iNa , metabolic alkalosis; measure plasma t supine eandt aldosterone e30min eaf-t renin together after (postural changes n n n . . . X renin secretion). Ideally thekX X should be off all antihypertensives ok fect o patientwith othekdiagnosis; apart from α-blockers. iAldosterone drenin supports o o o B consider CT abdow(but abnormal .Bbeware ‘incidentalomas’: w .B CT findings, such as a small w adrenal mass of no clinical significance). w w w resection may be at- ww Treatment Spironolactone; if adenoma, surgical tempted after 4wk medical therapy once electrolytes and BP controlled. t Secondary hyperaldosteronism This occurs when renal perfusion is e deet leading et Common n n . . creased, to high renin secretion. causes include.ndiurX heart failure, liver failure, Xand renal artery stenosis. Features X are ok etics, okratio okwith spiro o o similar, but aldosterone:renin will not be high. Manage B onolactone or ACEi. w.B w.B w w Phaeochromocytoma (E OHCM10 p.w 228.) w ww B + + + K Catecholamine (eg noradrenaline) production from tumours within the adrenal medulla, or more rarely extra-adrenal source. Consider in those with drug-resistant or young-onset hypertension, or typical symptoms. Symptoms Episodic anxiety, sweating, facial flushing, chest tightness, breathlessness, tremor, palpitations, headaches, abdo pain, vomiting, or diarrhoea. Signs Episodic hypertension. Investigations Plasma and urine (24h collection) metanephrines. Imaging if biochemistry positive. Treatment Surgical resection of tumour can safely be performed only after adrenoreceptor blockade. α-blockers (eg phenoxybenzamine) are given prior to β-blockers (eg propranolol) to avoid hypertensive crisis of unopposed α-adrenoreceptor stimulation. See Box 10.8. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k w t o ww o w.B t .ne X k et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww ww 2 Box 10.8 Cautious prescribing needed Many drugs can precipitate a crisis in a patient with phaeochromocytoma. Think before prescribing and if in doubt, seek advice. Put a warning on the patient’s drug charts to alert prescribers. Common culprits are ­opioids, β-blockers, dopamine-receptor antagonists, and steroids. t e X.n ok Bo et n . kX o Bo ww .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 340 .B w ww Chapter 10 .B w w ww w Endocrinology t t t .ne .ne .ne Thyroid disease X X X ok ok ok o o Bo Hyperthyroidism B B . driven by excess thyroxine. K Hypermetabolic wstate w. w w Causes Graves’ disease (50– 6 0%; agonistic autoantibodies to TSH re- ww w w ceptor), toxic multinodular goitre (15–20%), subacute thyroiditis (15%; self- limiting, painful granulomatous as de Quervain’s t infiltrates et orwithpainless einfiltrates), et thyroiditis, lymphocytic toxic adenoma.n(5%), n n . . Xamiodarone (either due to kexcess X iodine or drug induced kthyroiditis), X ok excess exogenous replacement. o o o o o B Symptoms Weight loss, agitation, anxiety, psychosis,.B w.B w sweating, heat in- w tolerance, diarrhoea, tremor, oligomenorrhoea. w w w irregular pulse, warm hands, w tremor, goitre ±nodules, w Signs Thin, iHR, lid lag, lid retraction, muscle weakness; Specific to Graves’ disease Exophthalmos, pretibial myxoedema, acropachy.et et ophthalmoplegia, et if d thenthyroid n n . . .nthyInvestigations TSH used as screening test— measure (free Xroxine, ie active, not bound ktoXplasma proteins); antithyroidfTkperoxidase X k o o oino Graves’ and other forms.B antibodies positive of o thyroiditis (TSH Bo (TPO) B . receptor antibodies more specific for Graves’ but not routinely measw ww AF; USS Thyroid, or nuclear ured); ECG to wexclude ww scintigraphy may help ww B 4 localize lesion and assess uptake. Treatment Symptom relief with propranolol 40mg/6h (or rate limiting calcium channel blocker if asthmatic); suppress thyroid function using carbimazole in dose titrated to TFTs, or with thyroxine in ‘block and replace’ approach. Other options include radioiodine ablation or surgical resection. Complications CCF, AF, ophthalmopathy, osteoporosis. 3Thyrotoxic storm This is caused by infection, severe illness, recent thyroid surgery or radioiodine. Tachycardia, ±AF, fever, agitation, confusion, or coma with ifT4 or iT3. Resuscitate as required (E pp. 488–9) and get senior help. Propranolol (suppresses sympathetic response, blocks T4 to T3 conversion and alleviates symptoms), propylthiouracil (inhibits T3/T4 production and T4 to T3 conversion and hydrocortisone (reduces iodine uptake and inhibits T4 to T3 conversion) are the main treatments. Carbimazole (inhibits T3/T4 production) has a slower onset of action but may be preferred to propylthiouracil since it has a longer duration of action and is less hepatotoxic. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww Bo o et n . kX .ne X k oo B . w .n kX t ww ww o w.B et n . kX et n . X ww t o o B . w ww ww ok o o w.B ww et .ne X k ww t e X.n ok Bo w t o w.B t .ne X k w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Thyroid disease w 341 t t t Hypothyroidism .ne .ne .ne X X X and insidious; characterized by insufficient thyroxine ok K Common ok ok release o o Box 10.9). Bo (see B B .thyroiditis (autoimmune destruction), Causes Hashimoto’s w w.lithium), resolution w w stage of subacute thyroiditis, drugs (eg amiodarone, iatrogenic w w ww (post surgery or radioiodine), iodine deficiency (commonest worldwide). See also Box 10.10. et Fatigue, lethargy, weight.ngain, et hair loss, depression, confusion, et Symptoms n n . . menorrhagia, infertility. Xdementia, cold intolerance, constipation, X X ok Signs Obese, bradycardia,odtemp, ok cold/dry hands, macroglossia, ok jaundice, o o B pitting oedema, goitre, peripheral neuropathy, slow relaxing .B wdfT w.B reflexes. Investigations iTSH, ; +ve thyroid autoantibodies. w w w w24h PO, gradually titrated ww Treatment Levothyroxine (T ): 50micrograms/ up into range 50–150micrograms/24h based upon monthly TFTs until TSH e int normal range; yearly TFT once et stable. Beware of worsening et n n . . underlying ischaemic heart disease: consider propranolol 40mg/.6n h PO X prevent iHR. X ok toComplications ok myxoedema coma.ookX o o Angina from treatment, B w.B w.B w w K Box 10.9 w Subclinical thyroid disease w ww B 4 4 Patients with normal fT4 and T3 but i or dTSH have subclinical (hypo/ hyper) thyroid disease. Although some will progress to frank hypo/ hyperthyroidism, there is no management consensus. Positive autoantibodies increase likelihood of progression to overt thyroid dysfunction. Threshold for treatment lower if patient symptomatic. Recheck TFTs after 3mth; if TSH grossly i or d (eg >10 or <0.1mU/L) then consider levothyroxine/carbimazole or surveillance. dTSH and dfT4 suggests ‘sick euthyroidism’ in systemic illness— recheck after recovery. t .ne X k oo et ww oo B . w .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k ww t t et .nBox .necovered elsewhere X.ne I 10.10 Thyroid disease X X ok ok ok o Eo p. 403 Bo Parathyroid disease B B w. w. w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B .B w ww t .ne X k o Bo oo B . w et n . kX t .ne X k ok et n . X ok ww t .ne X k oo oo B . w o o w.B o ww oo B . ww t .ne X k ww w et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n Bo o B . w ww t ww et n . kX t et t .ne X k ok Bo ww .ne X ok .n kX ww o ww .B w ww o B . w o et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B ok Bo o w.B .n kX ww ww Bo et t et n . X ww w ww o Bo B .B w w .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Chapter 11 w 343 t t t .ne Neurology .ne .ne X X X ok ok ok o o Bo B B w. w. w w w w ww 2 Coma and reduced GCS emergency 344 and reduced GCS 346 t Coma t e e348 et 2 Adult seizures emergency n n n . . . 2 Paediatric seizures emergency 349 X Seizures 350 kX kX ok o o o o o Neurodegenerative 353 B B TIAdisorders .B 2 Stroke/ emergency 354 w wC.VA/ w w Stroke w 355 w ww Focal neurology 357 pain 360 et Back et et Headache 362 n n n . . . Dizziness 366 X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 344 .B w ww Chapter 11 .B w w ww w Neurology t t et .nComa .ne GCS emergency .ne 2 and reduced X X X k ok okis patent; consider manoeuvres/ oadjuncts o o Check airway Bo 22 Airway B B . . If no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w wTEAM Breathing w w 2 Circulation w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability t e etunwell or deteriorating. .net n n . . 3 Call for senior help early if patient X X ok Airway and C-spineookX ok o o B • Stabilize cervical spine .Bif there is any risk of injuryw(eg.Bfall) w • Look inside the mouth, remove obvious objects/ dentures w wwstridor, snoring) ww • Listen for w upper airway compromise (gurgling, • Wide-bore suction under direct vision if secretions present • Jaw thrust et /chin lift; oro/nasopharyngeal et airway if tolerated. .net n n . . Breathing X X X ok • 15L/min O if SOB/satso<94%; ok beware if previous COPD/ oCkO retainer o o • If hypoxic E p. 276 B .B w.B • Monitor O satsw and RR w w • Bag and mask w ventilation if poor/absent respiratory w effort. ww 2 2 2 Circulation t • Venous , take bloods: et , troponin, clotting, G+S,.nbldet .neVBG,access .nCa FBC, U+E, LFT, glucose, X X X k paracetamol,osalicylate and alcohol levels ok ok • ECGcultures, o o o and treat arrhythmias B B p. 262) .B (tachy E p. 254; brady .E • Start IV fluids if w shocked w • Monitor HR,w w cardiac trace and BP. ww ww Disability • Check glucose et blood n net net • .Check for sedatives: . . X X X benzodiazepines, ok Opioids, ok antihistamines, TCAs, baclofen, ok alcohol seizures (E p.o348) o Bo •• Control B B Check GCS (Box 11.1), reflexes, limb tone, plantar .responses, neuro obs: w. pupil w (see Table 11.1) w look for brainstem, lateralizing or meningeal w w for airway support if GCSw≤8worsigns w • Call anaesthetist airway concerns. Exposure et temperature et et • .Check n n n . . X• Look over whole body for kevidence X of injury or rashes kX ok • Ask ward staff for a briefoohistory and check medical notes o oo B B B • Examine patient brief RS, CVS, abdo, and neuro exam . . w • ABG, but don’t w leave the patient alone •Request urgent ww portable CXR ww ww 2+ • • • • Stabilize and treat, see following sections • Call for senior help • Reassess, starting with A, B, C . . . Bo o et n . kX et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww t Stabilization .ne X k • Get senior help o Bo o Bo • • • • .B w w w w COMA AND REDUCED GCS EMERGENCY oo B . w t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o Treat hypoxia with O2, airway aids, ±ventilation Treat arrhythmias and hypotension urgently Start broad-spectrum antibiotics if sepsis suspected (?meningitis) Treat simple metabolic/intoxication abnormalities: • glucose <3.5mmol/L, give 100mL of 20% glucose STAT • glucose >20mmol/L, 0.9% saline 1L IV STAT (consider DKA/HHS) • opioids (pinpoint pupils and dRR), naloxone 0.4mg IV/IM STAT ® • history of chronic alcohol excess, Pabrinex 2 pairs IV over 10min • benzodiazepine overdose alone, flumazenil 200micrograms IV. ww et n . kX ww t ok .B w I Box 11.1 wwdGCS covered elsewhere ww ww Hypoxia E pp. 277–89 Bradyarrhythmia E pp. 264–7 Liver failure E pp. 319–23 Hypotension E pp. 486–7 Meningitis E p. 364 Metabolic E pp. 399–403 Hypoglycaemia E p. 329 Pyrexia E pp. 496–505 et n . Hypertension E pp. 270–3 X t .ne ww et n . kX oo e X.n o w.B w 345 et n . X E pp. 331–2 Overdose Ekpp.X507–9 ok Tachyarrhythmia E pp. 256–61 oHyperglycaemia ok o oo B B B . . w w Further management ww function (see Table 11.1):ww ww • Check brainstem normal stabilize the patient and get an urgent CT head gradual- mannitol and urgent CT head et t onset dysfunction consider t e .nrapid-onset dysfunction giveXmannitol, .ne normalize PaCO withXventi.n X and contact a neurosurgeon urgently; the patient’skbrain is k lator k o o o herniatingo to iintracranial pressure o Bo • If CTprobably .BLPdue .B normal consider to test for meningitis or encephalitis w w • If CT and LP normal the cause is probably metabolic or ww ww intoxication. ww Table 11.1 Common causes of reduced GCS Cause Signs net net net .Intoxication . . X X X May have shallow, slow breathing, pinpoint pupils suggests ok oksuggests ok iiRR salicylates o o Bo Brainstem opioids, B B Eyes dilated w. or slow reacting pupil (unilateral w. or bilateral), absent dysfunction corneal reflex, eyes looking in different directions (III, IV, VI w w w lesion), eyes fixed: doll’s head movements w (not drifting back to ww • • • t .ne X ok Bo Lateralizing (cerebral dysfunction) Meningism Bo o et n . kX 2 forwards gaze when neck rotated) Swallow water not swallowed spontaneously/no gag reflex Respiration apnoeas, gasping, irregular, or Cheyne–Stokes breathing (alternating rapid breathing and apnoeas) Body increased tone and upgoing plantars unilaterally/ bilaterally/crossed Facial asymmetry, asymmetrical tone, and plantar responses .ne X k t ok o o w.B ww et n . X ww o w.B Neck stiffness, photophobia, Kernig’s sign, Brudzinski’s sign, straight leg raise (E p. 134) et n . kX o o B . w ww w ww ww t .ne X ok .Bo ww B 346 .B w ww Chapter 11 .B w w ww w Neurology t t et .ne and reduced .nGCS .ne Coma X X X ok ok ok o Bo Think about w.Bo B wd.glucose, Na , Ca , w No focal neurology dO , iCO , low BP, metabolic (i/ w w K ; acidosis/ a lkalosis, renal/ l iver failure/ d ecompensation, constipation), w w w overdose (alcohol, opioids, TCAs, benzodiazepines), epilepsy/post-ictal, hypothermia, itemp, hypothyroid, malignant et dysfunction et CVA,HTN. et Brainstem or lateralizing.n signs tumour, abscess, haeman n . . X hypoglycaemia or rarelykXother metabolic abnormalities.kX ok toma, Meningism Meningitis, encephalitis, o oo subarachnoid haemorrhage. oo B B B . . Ask about (notes, relatives, contacts, nurses) Baseline, speed of ww wwseizures, onset, headache, chest pain, palpitations, vomiting, weight loss; ww w w PMH Cardiac, respiratory, DM, kidney, liver, psychiatric, stroke/TIA, seizures, DH Elicit PMH from DH, consider the possibility of et dementia; et (overdose or withdrawal). et overdose; SH Alcohol, recreationalndrugs n n . . . X GCS (Table 11.2), temp, X X ok Obs ok BP, HR, O sats, O requirements, ok RR, o o o pupil size. B B w.limb w.B Neuro obs w GCS, movements, pupil size and reactivity, HR, BP, w w ww RR, temp. w + + 2 2+ 2 2 2 Look tfor Respiration Rate, depth, distress, added sounds, air entry on nesides; Pulse Rate/rhythm;XAbdomen net Rigidity, pulsatile mass,Xorgano­ net both . . . X distension; Neuro Pupil papilloedema (late k responses, ok megaly;plantars; oinjection oksign), limb Skin Rashes, marks, trauma; DREoconstipation. o Bo tone, B B . FBC, U+E, LFT, Ca , glucose, Investigations w blds CRP, w. troponin, clotting, bld cultures, toxicology screen (paracetamol, salicylate, alw w w w cohol); ABGw pH, dO or diCO ; ECG Arrhythmias; CXR Evidence of w aspiration; CT if the patient has focal neurology or there is no clear diagt an urgent CT head is required, t the patient may need ntoebet nosisethen .n first; AXR Faecal impaction; .neLP After a CT scan if CTXnormal. . intubated X X k k k o o o Bo .Bo .Bo w w ww ww ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2+ 2 Bo o et n . kX 2 et n . kX t o o B . w ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B .B w ww .B w w w w Coma and reduced GCS w 347 t t t .ne 11.2 GCS scoring (3/15Xminimum) .ne .ne Table X X ok ok4 Motor Obeys commandsook 6 spontaneously o Bo Eyes Open B . .B Open to command 3 Localizes pain 5 w w w w w Open to pain 2 Flexes/withdraws to pain 4 w w w No response 1 Abnormal flexion to pain 3 Voice tTalking and orientated 5 Extension to pain 2et t e e n n n . . . Confused/ 4 No movement X X 1 kX disorientated k k o o o Inappropriate words Bo .Bo 32 .Bo w w Incomprehensible sounds ww ww ww No vocalizations 1 t t 304:81–4. Source: data from Teasdale G, Jennett B. Lancet e 1974 e et n n n . . . Originally described in 1974 as a 14-point scale (omitting ‘abnormal flexion’) by X X use in patients with head injuries,kX at the University of Glasgow ok neurosurgeons ok andfortrauma. o this revised scale is now widely used in acuteomedicine o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww B t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww o Bo t .ne X k o ww ok Bo Bo o et n . kX et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww t e X.n ww w t o w.B t .ne X k .ne X k t ww ww o w.B et n . kX ww t o o B . w ww et n . X ok o o w.B ww w ww .ne X ok .Bo ww B 348 .B w ww Chapter 11 .B w w ww w Neurology t t et .nAdult .ne .ne 2 seizures emergency X X X ok okconsequences are dangerous okfor patients seizures and their o o Bo $andWhile B B anxiety provoking doctors, they are often self- imiting and over- w. Toforbegin w. lthe treatment has w risks. with stay calm, keep safe, w w w CBG, andpatient start timing,w observe, gather information, check plan ahead. w Afterwards, document exactly what you saw. et et et n . Check airway is.n patent; consider manoeuvres/adjuncts 2.n Airway X X X If no respiratory ok 2 Breathing ok effort—CALL ARRESToTEAM ok o o TEAM 2 Circulation B .IfBno palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w.B 2 Disability ww If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST w w w ww 3 Call for senior help if seizure >5min. All timings are from the start of the tfirst fit; the clock only restarts tonce the patient has been fit-free e e et forn >30min. n n . . . X 5min X ok 0– ok and easy to forget ookX o o • Start timing ; this is very important B .B .B • 15L/min O in allw patients w w • Keep patientw safe and put into recovery position if possible w w ww 2 • Monitor HR, O2 sats, BP, cardiac trace, temp • Venous access (after 3–4min). Take bloods: 2+ • FBC, U+E, LFT, CK, Ca , glucose, bld cultures, AED levels • Check GLUCOSE: if <3.5mmol/L give 100mL of 20% glucose STAT (Box 11.2). t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX t .ne X k oo B . • Call for senior whelp and attach a cardiac monitor wwapart wteeth ww • Consider w an airway adjunct but do not force • If IV access: lorazepam 4mg IV/2min, repeat at 10min if no effect • If no access: diazepam 10mg PR e ort5–10mg buccal midazolam, et netIVevery 10min if no effect up .repeat .nto 3 doses .n X X X • Ask ward staff about history /check notes k k k o malnourished, already. oo Pabrinex 2 pairs IV if not oo Bo •20–If alcoholism/ B B . . 40min ww and senior help www w • Call for anaesthetist w w • If not taking phenytoin: phenytoin 20mg/kg IV at <50mg/min • If taking phenobarbital 10mg/ t kg IV over 10min (max 1g)net et phenytoin: • .Monitor ECG, BP, and temp. .ne n X X. kX>40min k k o o o Thiopental or propofol Bo •• Transfer Boon ICU/HDU Bomonitoring. .EEG to ICUw for. general anaesthetic, intubation, w ww ww ww B 5–20min ® 2 Box 11.2 Life-threatening causes et cardiac disease • .Meningitis, et encephalitis, malaria .net Hypoxia/ n n . X Hypoglycaemia X• iICP and CVA X ok Metabolic (dCa , idNa o)k • Drug overdose ok o o o B Trauma clampsia .B (pregnancy). w.B • Hypertension/wew w w w ww • • • • 2+ + B .B w ww .B w w w w PAEDIATRIC SEIZURES EMERGENCY w 349 t t et .nPaediatric .ne emergency X.ne 2 seizures X X ok ok ok o o Bo 2 Airway B B Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ w. w.TEAMadjuncts 2 Breathing wIf no respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww 2 Circulation If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability t e et et n n n . . . children having a seizure. All timings X3 Call for senior help in allkX X are ok from the start of the firstofit;othe okfree period clock only restarts with o a fit- o B of >30min. w.B w.B w w Step 1 w w ww • Start timing; this is very important and easy to forget • Maintain airway, assess ABC, check pupil size, posture, neck stiffness, fontanelle, et temp, and for rashes .net et n n . . • 15L/ m in O in all patients X GLUCOSE: if <3.5mmol/ X X ok • Check ok L give 2mL/kg of 10%oglucose ok STAT o o (Box 11.3): B .B blood and one fluoridewbottle .B (E pp. 534–5) take 10mL ofw w clotted w treatment prior towgiving glucose, but don’t let thiswdelay ww B 2 • • Keep patient safe, be alert for vomit occluding the airway • Monitor HR, O2 sats, BP, cardiac trace, temp • Venous access, take bloods: 2+ 2+ • FBC, U+E, LFT, CRP, Ca , Mg , glucose, bld cultures, anticonvulsant levels (if on anticonvulsants), venous blood gas • If IV access: further lorazepam 0.1mg/kg IV (max 4mg) • If no IV access: diazepam 0.5mg/kg PR (max 10mg) • Ask parents or ward staff about history/check notes. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w ww .n kX w oo B . ww t .ne X k Step 2 (10min after either lorazepam/diazepam) ww t further lorazepam 0.1mg/ t g IV (max 4mg) • If IVeaccess: et .nekgkPR • .Ifnno IV access: paraldehyde 0.4mL/ with 0.4mL/kg olive oil.n or X X X k ok 0.8mL/kg of a pre-prepared ok50:50 solution (max 20mLoofomixture). o Bo Step 3 (10min w B B after either lorazepam/ p araldehyde) . w. • Call for anaesthetist and senior help w w w0.4mL/kg PR as above unless already w given ww • Paraldehyde • If not on phenytoin: phenytoin 20mg/kg IV/IO at <50mg/min • If on tphenytoin: phenobarbital 20mg/tkg IV/IO over 20min. e e et n n n . . . Step 4 (20min after either phenytoin/ p henobarbital) X X X ok •Rapid sequence intubation ok ok o o o pyridoxine, paracetamol, diclofenac. B • Consider mannitol, w.B w.B w w w Life-threatening causesw ww 2 Box 11.3 • Meningitis, et encephalitis, malaria .net •• Hypoxia et • .Hypoglycaemia iICP and CVA n n . X (dCa , idNa )kX • Drug overdose kX ok •• Metabolic oinjury Trauma/non-accidental • Hypertension. o o oo B B B . . w w ww ww ww 2+ + B 350 .B w ww Chapter 11 o oo B . w ww w Neurology t .ne Seizures X k Bo .B w w t .ne X k et o w.B .n kX o 2 Worrying features Preceding headache or head injury, duration >5min, prolonged post-ictal phase, adult onset, recent depression (overdose). ww ww ww Think about 2 Life-threatening See Box 11.2; Most likely Idiopathic o Bo et n . kX t ok o w.B .B w ww ww et n . X ok et n . kX oo e X.n (>50%), epilepsy, alcohol withdrawal, hypoglycaemia, hypoxia, trauma; Other Kidney or liver failure, pseudoseizures, overdose (tricyclics, phe­ nothiazines, amphetamines); Non-seizure Brief limb jerking during a faint, rigors, syncope, arrhythmias. See Table 11.3. Ask about Get a detailed description of the fit from anyone who witnessed the episode (see Boxes 11.4 and 11.5); headache, antecedent head trauma, chest pain, palpitations, SOB, alcohol withdrawal; PMH previous seizures, cerebrovascular/cardiac/respiratory/hepatic/renal/psychiatric disease, DM, alcohol, pregnancy, surgeries; DH Anticonvulsants, hypoglycaemics, benzodiazepines; SH Occupation, driving, hobbies, social support, alcohol intake, last drink, illicit drugs, recent travel; FH Epilepsy. et n . X ww t .ne X ok k oo o B B . . Obs GCS, temp, w CBG (recheck), BP, O sats, alcohol withdrawal score. w ww w Look for w Sweating, tremor, head injury, w tongue biting, neck stiffness, w papilloedema, focal neurology, urinary or faecal incontinence, pregnancy, infection, t limb trauma (eg posteriorndislocation et of shoulder). et .ne Investigations blds VBG, FBC,.U+E, LFT, glucose, Ca , Mg ,.n blood X X X levels; If hypoxia or metabolic ok cultures, anticonvulsant okdrugABGscreen, ok upset o Urine Consider β-hCG ifBo pre-menopausal Bo suspected; B ♀; ECG To exclude lesion, iICP, w.dysrhythmia; CT May showif wthea. focal w w haemorrhage or infarction, perform as urgentw patient has a perw w sistent GCS <15 post-fit, focal neurology or if the seizure was <4d post- w trauma; MRI Is the neuroimaging of choice in suspected epilepsy; LP If t May help to exclude encephalt meningitis net or encephalitis suspected; neEEG .for .ne itis. or as out-patient investigation epilepsy. X X X k treatment outlined on E p.o348. k Correct ok ousing Stop seizure o o Bo Treatment B B metabolic upset (glucose, Mg , Ca , Na ) and exclude threatening wto. establish w.Securelife-airway causes while trying the cause (Box w 11.6). if still w w≤8. Consider specialist opinion,wmoving ward, and ITU. ww fitting or GCS Bo 2 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ + et et et n n n . . . X witnessing or describing seizures, X document exactly whatk kX starting ok IfOnset owarning, oall happened: Position, activity, any in one limb or over, preso o o B .B ence of tonic phase .(arched w B back, muscle spasm). wmovements, w During Loss ofw awareness, limb movements, eye jaw and w breathing, peripheral or central w cyanosis, incontinence ww lip movements, (urinary and faecal), duration, HR, and rhythm. t (Todd’s paresis E p. n352). et Tongue trauma, sleepy, limb eweakness et Afterwards n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww K Box 11.4 Describing a seizure B .B w ww .B w w w w Seizures w 351 t t t .ne 11.3 Common causes ofXtransient .ne loss of consciousness X.ne Table X ok ok Examination Investigations ok o o Bo Epileptic History B B . may Often normal, may Known waura,epilepsy, w. Often normal, seizure have post-ictal have tonguew or limb may have w ww (E p. 352) wconfusion/weakness trauma w focal lesion or metabolic cause t t Alcohol Usually >50units/wk Anxious, sweaty, iMCV and γGT; e e et n n withdrawal alcohol consumption, .ntachycardic, tremor dplatelets, .mild . X p. 352) last drink >24h agokX ±chronic liver failure anaemia X ok (E o short Responsive to pain, Normal ok o o o Pseudo- Unusual features, B seizures/ duration, respiration, w.Bmemory of normal w.Binvestigations w psychogenic event no injuries w wFeels cold/hot, no LOC, Febrile, source w of iWBC, NØ or ww Rigors coarse shaking, infective infection (eg UTI, LØ and CRP, +ve pneumonia), no injury urine dipstick et et symptoms et n n . . .n Pregnant, may be X iBP, palpable uterus, Proteinuria, XEclampsia X k k k (E p. 518) unaware foetal heart peripheral oedema o oo oo on Doppler Bo Transient Palpitations, B B . . of cardiac w pale, sudden Evidenceinjury ww Arrhythmia arrhythmia/ LOC or heart block ww ±limb jerking; rapid disease, w ww B Stokes–Adams recovery with flushing t .ne Narcolepsy X k oo Vasovagal syncope (E p. 266) o t .ne X k following fall, irregular/absent pulse during attack Excessive daytime Often normal; loss of sleepiness, collapse, postural muscle tone sleep paralysis and tendon reflexes ±hallucinations during attacks Feels light-headed ±hot, Bradycardia and then collapse while hypotension during standing, ±fine limb episode, GCS 15/15 jerking, ±urinary inconti­ within min, no focal nence, rapid recovery, neurology no post-ictal phase et oo B . w .n kX on ECG, 24h ECG and BP monitoring, echo HLA typing, sleep studies t .ne X k oo B . ww ±postural drop ww w t .ne X k (systolic drop of 20mmHg or more) ww et .n kX oo oo B B . . Box 11.5 Assessing ‘first fit’ w ww fromafirst- History Detailed hand witness, documented waccount ww carefully. ww Investigations FBC, U+E, LFT, glucose, Ca , Mg , PO , clotting, medication levels, urine and serum toxicology screen (including paracetamol and salicylate); CT tot etstructural etrecent exclude causes (non-urgent, unless trauma or altered neurology); n n . . .neof consider LP after CT only if infection suspected; MRI is the neurologists’ imaging X X X k epilepsy, but ok choice in suspected okcan be arranged from their clinic. oosenior doctor Admit onlyBifoGCS <15 or drowsy; discuss B with Bo Management . . ­regarding suspicion of (E p. 619, 1yr wseizures and need to advise towstopwdriving ban); do not start antiepileptic medication—this decision should be made by a w w w ww neurologist in an urgent out-patient clinic (‘first fit’ clinic). I Box et 11.6 Causes of seizures et elsewhere in this book et n n n . . . Raised ICP E p. 364 Hypertensive emergency E p. 268 X ok Hypoglycaemia E p. 329 ookX Hypoxia E p. 276ookX o B .B E p. 364 Hypocalcaemia E p. 402 encephalitis w.EBpp. 400–1 Meningitis/ w w w Hyper/hyponatraemia Eclampsia E p. 518 w w ww Bo 2+ 2+ 3− 4 B .B w w .B w w w Neurology 352 ww w Chapter 11 t t t Epilepsy .ne (E OHCM10 p. 490.) .ne .ne X X X and unprovoked of a group of neurons ok $ Abnormal ok discharge ok causes a o Epilepsy is the recurrence of ≥2 such seizures. o Bo seizure. B B . which neurons are misfiring Symptoms Depends won w.and when. Classify w w seizures basedw on a careful history and close observation. The 2017 w w w system uses simpler language but you should still know the old terms: Onset and evolution etStart unilaterally in a focal area eoft brain giving stereotyped motor, et • Focal n n n . . . X sensory, or autonomic symptoms X (previously ‘partial’) kX result ok • Generalized Start bilaterally okin both cerebral hemispheres.ooAlways o o in reduced awareness (previously ‘primary generalized’) B w.BPreviously ‘secondary generalized’ w.B seizures. • Focal into generalized w w Awareness This w is important as conscious levelwimpacts on their safety. ww • Focal aware Focal symptoms but awareness remains completely intact. Previously referred to as a ‘simple partial’ seizures t always t etimpaired enot • .Focal awareness Awareness present (including.n ae n n . X vague lack of awareness). Previously X ‘complex partial’ seizures. X ok Motor ok ok involvement o o o B .B with movement (eg twitching, • Focal motor Focal seizure w w.Bor jerking) • Focal non-motor Affects sensation, emotion, thinking, experience w w w w ww • 1 Generalized motor Either ‘other motor’ or a tonic–clonic seizure (ie initial tonic whole body spasm followed by a clonic jerking phase) • Generalized non-motor Absence seizures; the stopping of activity with staring/eye-rolling and sometimes lipsmacking; usually <45s. Signs dGCS, tongue trauma, limb weakness, incontinence, Todd’s paresis (transient weakness following a seizure; mimics a TIA), post-ictal state. Investigations Often normal; MRI and EEG (±provocation) may aid diagnosis and seizure classification. Consider EEG/video telemetry. Treatment Changing AEDs should be by specialists. Beware some drugs lower seizure thresholds (fluoroquinolones, cephalosporins, penicillins, pethidine, tricyclics, clozapine). Consider NG/IV AEDs if they are NBM. et o Bo et .n kX et .n kX o ww o w.B .n kX o o w.B ww ww t t t .ne .ne .ne X X X withdrawal ok ok Alcoholconsider ok o the possibility of alcohol withdrawal B aso a cause or proBo Always B voking factor for seizures w. (E p. 372). w. w w w seizures Seen in morewsevere traumatic brain injury, ww Post-traumatic where AEDs are often used prophylactically. Arrange an urgent CT scan if not already t done; if haematoma nseen eotherwise et (E p. 452), contact a neurosuret n n geon, hourly neuro obs .and reassess if dGCS. . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww et et et n n n . . . X X X ok ok ok o o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 1 Guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/CG137 and Mhttp://www.ilae.org/ B .B w ww .B w w w w Neurodegenerative disorders w 353 t t et .ne .ndisorders .ne Neurodegenerative X X X k ok oOHCM10 ok o o disease (E p. 494.) Bo Parkinson’s B B $ Common neurological w. disorder (affects $1% wof. >60yr). Cardinal w w w features include resting tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia. w w w Symptoms and signs Coarse resting tremor (‘pill rolling’, unilateral at onset);trigidity (‘cog-wheeling’); falls, tfestinant gait; small handwriting, e impulsivity, speech/swallow e problems; sensation normal. et depression, n n n . . . XInvestigations Clinical diagnosis;ksingle- X photon emission CT if indistinguishable X ok from benign essential tremor; o exclude other causes of ‘Parkinsonism’, ok eg o o o B drug induced (haloperidol). B B Refer to specialist early if suspected. . . Management MDT ww(PD doctors, specialist nurses, wwPT, OT, SALT). Anti- w parkinsonianw medications should be started,wtitrated, and amended by w specialists. Levodopa enhances dopamine transmission but effectiveness reduces after years. First line is eithert levodopa with a peripheral dopa- et someinhibitor eif symptoms interfere with lifestyle, et decarboxylase (eg carbidopa) n n n . . . X a choice of levodopa, dopamine X (eg ropinirole), or monoamine- kXoff ’ and ok oroxidase ok if agonists o‘on- inhibitors (eg selegiline) they do not. Problematic o o o B ‘end-of-dose’ phenomena .B with levodopa may require of a w w.Bthe(egaddition MAO-B inhibitor, dopamine agonist, or COMT- inhibitor tolcapone). w w wis at strict times, so drug chart w ww Administration timings may need changing. B 2 Complications Depression, dementia (late stage): Parkinson’s disease may have pathological overlap with Lewy body dementia (E p. 377) with movement and cognitive dysfunction coming at contrasting stages in each disease. Parkinson’s-plus syndromes These share some features of Parkinson’s (eg multisystem atrophy: Parkinson’s plus autonomic and cerebellar dysfunction; progressive supranuclear palsy: Parkinson’s plus impaired upwards gaze). These tend to be refractory to standard therapy. t .ne X k oo et oo B . w .n kX oo B . ww ww w Motor neuron disease o Bo t .ne X k $ Degenerative disease affecting upper and lower motor neurons.3 Diagnosis Primarily clinical but EMG can help. Progressive motor weakness (UMN and LMN E p. 353) and behavioural change; sensation unaffected. Fasciculations progress to spasticity, poor swallow, and dementia. Management Supportive. Early referral to neurology- led MDT care including MND nurse, PT, OT, SALT, palliative care, and dietetics is vital.4 Quinine and baclofen for cramps. Exercise programmes. Prognosis 3–5yr. Complications Aspiration, respiratory failure, frontotemporal dementia. t .ne X k t o ww t ok Bo e X.n o w.B Huntington’s disease et .ne X k oo B . w .n kX ww .ne X k ww t et n . X $ Incurable inherited (autosomal dominant) disorder characterized by involuntary limb movements (chorea), dementia, and behavioural disturbance (depression, psychoses). Onset at 30–50yr. ww k oo oo B B . . w Friedreich’s ataxia ww w $ Inherited w (autosomal recessive) disorder characterized by progressive w ww limb and gait ataxia, dysarthria, loss of proprioception, absent tendon reflexest in the legs, and extensor plantar Inability to walk oce after disease onset. May.nalso et responses. et curs 715yr develop heart failure and DM. n n . . X X ok Supportive management.ookX ok o o B w.B w.B w w w w ww 2 3 4 NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG71 Resources for patients, carers, and doctors at Mwww.mndassociation.org NICE guidelines available at Mguidance.nice.org.uk/NG42 B 354 .B w ww Chapter 11 .B w w ww w Neurology t t et .nStroke/ .ne .ne 2 C VA/ T IA emergency X X X ok ok oakdjuncts o o Check airway is patent; consider manoeuvres/ Bo 22 Airway B B wIf no. respiratory effort—CALL ARREST w. TEAM Breathing w w 2 Circulation w If no palpable pulse—CALL ARREST w TEAM ww If GCS ≤8—CALL ANAESTHETIST 2 Disability t t e emay et n n n . . . 3 Call for senior help early. Patient need urgent aspirin, thrombX thrombectomy, or transfer X kX to Hype