NBME Shelf Review (Part 5) – Ophthalmology and Toxicology
EM Clerkship
Zack Olson, MD ; Mike Estephan, MD ; Maddie Watts, MD
4.9 • 816 Ratings
🗓️ 28 October 2018
⏱️ 16 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Corneal Abrasion
* Stain the eye with fluorescein and use woods lamp* Look for fixed staining (“uptake”) on the cornea
Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma
* Symptoms* Eye Pain* Headache* Check for intraocular pressure greater than 20* Commonly precipitants* OTC cough/cold medicine (anticholinergic effect)* Dark environment (such as movie theater)* Treatment* Timolol* Pilocarpine* Acetazolamide* Apraclonidine
Giant Cell Arteritis
* Common features* Severe headache* Tenderness of the Temporal Arteries * Jaw claudication* Elevated ESR (“sed rate”)* Treat with steroids
Anterior Uveitis
* Painful red eye* Cell and flair on slit lamp examination
UV Keratitis (“snow blindness”)
* Common in skiers/snowboarders* Diagnose with fluorescein and use woods lamp* Punctate lesions on the cornea
Common Poisons/Antidotes
* Digoxin toxicity* Digibind* Acetaminophen toxicity* N-Acetylcysteine (NAC)* Ethylene glycol or methanol toxicity* Fomepizole* Jimson weed (anticholinergic toxicity)* Physostigmine* Organophosphate toxicity* Atropine* Treat until airway secretions have stopped* Pralidoxime * Opiate toxicity* Naloxone* Benzodiazepine * Flumazenil (falling out of favor)* Cocaine toxicity* DON’T give beta blockers* Unopposed alpha effect* Very little data to support this but commonly believed* Iron toxicity* Deferoxamine* Salicylate overdose* Sodium bicarbonate* Dialysis* Tricyclic antidepressent* Sodium bicarbonate* Beta blocker overdose* Glucagon* Calcium channel blocker overdose* Glucagon* IV Calcium* High dose euglycemic insulin therapy* Sulfonylurea overdose* Octreotide* Dextrose* Heparin reversal* Protamine sulfate* Cyanide toxicity (common in house fires)* Hydroxocobalamin * Sodium Nitrite* Carbon monoxide toxicity* Oxygen oxygen oxygen* Hyperbaric oxygen* BEWARE: pulse oximetry will be normal* Valproic acid toxicity* L-carnitine
Additional Reading
* Approach to Eye Complaints (EM Clerkship)* Acetaminophen Overdose (EM Clerkship)* Salicylate Overdose (EM Clerkship)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello, med students. This episode has been sponsored by Freed AI. Do you dread the thought of |
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| 0:34.1 | and you can cancel at any time if you decide it's not right for you. You can learn more at |
| 0:39.3 | www.gitfreed.a.i. Hey guys, what's going on? This is Mike Estefan from the University of |
| 0:49.1 | Rochester School of Medicine, bringing you episode five of the Emergency Medicine shelf exam review series. |
| 0:56.4 | In this week's episode, and probably next week's episode, we are going to focus on diagnostics |
| 1:02.0 | and therapeutics for conditions that you will see on your shelf exam. The content for this week |
| 1:07.7 | will focus on ophthalmology, toxidrums, and ingestions. |
| 1:13.0 | My goal for the next couple episodes is going to be to cover as much content as possible |
| 1:17.6 | in the shortest amount of time as possible. |
| 1:20.7 | This means less vignettes for you guys and more of a rapid-fire question-answer kind of style. |
| 1:26.6 | I also want to apologize in advance for the sound quality of this recording. |
| 1:31.3 | It is currently downpouring in Rochester, New York, and so you guys will probably hear the storm |
| 1:36.1 | intermittently throughout this podcast. |
| 1:39.1 | All right, let's talk about some ophthalmology. |
| 1:42.2 | So in the ED, how do you diagnose a corneal abrasion? |
| 1:47.2 | Good. |
| 1:49.2 | So you stay in the eye with fluorescine and then you examine the eye using a wood's lamp. |
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