Showing posts with label medicalschool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medicalschool. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 November 2016

St Emlyn's Emergency Medicine Blog

Shout out to this fantastic blog! Based out of the Manchester Royal Infirmary, St Emlyn's is an emergency medicine blog full of great insights into life as an EM doctor. There are lots of #FOAMed resources for those who are jumping on the social education bandwagon (a more modern version of medical education).
I particularly enjoyed this recent post about the risks of training in EM and why some Dr's quit and how to avoid those lows. @baombejp brings up the following points:


  • Dont expect results too fast, take the SMART approach
  • Dont fear failure, there are three ways you can react to a setback: you fly, you dive, you thrive
  • With regards to the future find the right balance between competence and confidence when progressing and be careful of the unknown'unknowns (the things you dont know you dont know ha)
  • Have a life! why have a job if you don't have a life
  • There will be ups and downs, find someone to talk to about it
The blog is full of great posts, I enjoyed reading this morning about this consultant dealing with his junior knowing more than him and the following teaching tips

Monday, 10 October 2016

Tissue Factor and Thromboplastin

Tissue Factor (TF) (aka Factor 3 or CD142) is a protein with a key role in coagulation. TF is present in large concentrations in subendothelial tissue of vessels (so by smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts). The endothelium itself can also express TF but only in imflammatory states, same for circulating monocytes.
TF is responsible for triggering the so called extrinsic pathway of coagulation (or TF pathway as its also known). This path is triggered when the vessel is damaged and there is exposure of the underlying TF. It acts as a receptor for Factor 7 which leads to the cleavage of Factor 10 and the activation of the common pathway of coagulation and thrombin activation.

Thromboplastin is the name of a lab reagent and is actually the combination of TF and phospholipids. TF and phospholipids together can trigger coagulation. Partial thromboplastin is just the phospholipids by themselves and can trigger the intrinsic pathway of coagulation (TF not needed to activate intrinsic pathway). So when an 'activated partial thromboplastin time' APTT test is order it is a measure of the intrinsic path of coagulation.

Picture highlighting TF (yellow box), the extrinsic pathway (red box) and common pathway of coagulation (green box). #medicine #coagulation #labs #tissuefactor #bleeding #medicalschool #medicalblog #medED #FOAMed #study

Wednesday, 5 October 2016

Fever Of Unknown Origin (FUO)

I am sure you have all watched at least one episode of House, the series in which a witty Hugh Laurie is presented with difficult to solve cases almost every day. Obviously in reality these kind of cases are incredibly rare, but there is one kind of 'difficult to solve' problem in medicine which appears far more often than you think, the febrile illness without an obvious origin, FUO.

Definition and Diagnosis:
Fever greater than 38.3 degrees on several occasions, persisting without diagnosis for at least 3 weeks despite of at least 1 week investigation in hospital. (Later updated to 3days Inpatient investigation or 3days of Outpatient investigation).

Can be further classified into:
Classical (as defined above)
Nosocomial (the fever was absent on admission to the hospital)
Neutropenic (Patient is neutropenic as well, less than 500 neutrophils per mm3)
HIV associated (Patient has confirmed HIV infection)

You cannot conclude a patient has a FUO until you have performed the following basic investigations:
History, Physical exam, Complete blood count, Blood Cultures, Complete metabolic panel and Liver function tests, Urinanalysis and culture, Chest X-ray.

Etiology:
Three catergories of illness can cause FUO; 
infections, malignancies and connective tissue disorders.
There is a long list of the possible causes (See image) but don’t forget Drug Fevers in which a fever can be the sole feature of an adverse drug reaction (most commonly with antibiotics).

Age is very important when considering the etiology, for example in younger patients infections will be much more common (in children around one third of FUO are caused by self limited viral illnesses) and in the elderly (haematological malignancies and solid tumours will be much more common).
Also neutropenia associated FUO will be much more likely linked to a bacterial infection (although never forget genetic neutropenia exists such as cyclic neutropenia and benign familial neutropenia).
Malaria and respiratory infections are a common cause in returned travellers.

First steps:
Re do history and physical exam, a careful history is critical for diagnosis! 
Ask about: animal exposure, immunosupression, drugs and toxins, localising symptoms (for example, jaw claudication is consistent with giant cell arteritis, nocturia with prostatitis etc.). 
Note that the degree of fever, nature of fever curve and response to antipyretics has no specificity to guide the diagnosis. 

After a careful history the following exams will be useful (obviously performed in a targeted nature, guided by your suspiscions):

LEVEL 1 testing:
ESR, CRP, LDH, TST/IGRA, HIVab/RNA, 3 blood cultures for separate sites, Rheumatoid factor, creatine phosphokinase, heterophile antibody test, antinucleaur antibodies, serum protein electrophoresis, procalcitonin can be helpful
LEVEL 2 testing:
CT abdomen, CT chest (if these turn out to be negative move to FDG-PET, although be aware of its high false positive rate)
Level 3 testing: 
Biopsies and Endoscopies

Treatment:
Treatment should be withheld as long as possible until the cause of the fever is determined and empirical antibiotic treatment is not appropriate! However you must obviously consider the patients condition and febrile neutropenic patients have a much higher percentage of bacterial infections and so empiric treatment can be appropriate after cultures have been obtained.

Summary:
  • Most cases of FUO are due to unusal represantations of common diseases rather than exotic diseases
  • Reassess the patient frequently and the don’t underestimate the importance of a very careful history and physical exam (it is in fact critical).
  • Almost any infective agent can be responsible for FUO
  • Look out for Malignancy red flags in the history and physical exam such as symptoms (night sweats, weight loss, pruritus, rectal bleeding), radiation exposure, cigarette smoking, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomagaly, petechiae.


A long list of the possible causes of FUO #fever #medicine #fuo #medED #study #medicalschool

Saturday, 3 September 2016

Study methods you should try

BLA BLA BLA BLA secret message hereIts time to go back to school or university (well for some of us). Its amazing how many people stick to their old study methods, Although these may work for some they can be terribly inefficient. This article has some great advice.

Friday, 2 September 2016

September Round-Up (Medical Student gems)

Youtube Channel: Vsauce
It has to be the most interesting video channel on the internet. Michael Stevens the main host has become an internet personality and star as a result of his fascinating channel, in fact Vsauce now is spread over four channels on Youtube; Vsauce1 (linked above), Vsauce2 (hosted by Kevin Lieber), Vsauce3 (dedicated to virtual worlds and Wesauce. There are often videos about medical themes or ancient medical practises for those looking for most medically related content. I absolutely love this channel and it never fails to leave me in a completely pensive state about the universe or nature of things. 

Doctors dissected is an incredibly honest insight into the lives of Doctors. Jane Haynes (a psychotherapist) asks various British doctors (a few of them London based GP's) about the reasons they chose medicine and how they feel about the profession today. The answers are often incredibly heartfelt and you feel you really are experiencing a side of these doctors that very few people would get to see. I finished this book with a feeling that Medicine has changed dramatically over the last forty years both for the better and for the worse (its often mentioned the loss of continuity of care has been the worst loss to current medical practice). 

Twitter accounts: @NEJM @Qikipedia
The New England Journal of Medicine and The QI elves, the Kings/Queens of interesting facts (Not strictly medical account but very entertaining nonetheless). 

Webpage: Sporcle
This website, although its full of games, is a fantastic site for educational time killers. I found myself addicted to trying to name all the countries in Europe, Africa and eventually the world. So again not strictly medical, however, if you want something medical there are some medically related quizzes. For example try naming all the eponymous syndromes..

Film: The Doctor
Ok the choice is obvious and it may seem like a boring movie but this movie was the centre of my course on professionalism and there are some lessons to learn. The main character, an arrogant heart surgeon, gets laryngeal cancer and the movie follows his journey through the patient experience. 





Sunday, 28 August 2016

End of the summer, The play that goes wrong!

So tomorrow I'll be hopping on the plane back to Italy to start and hopefully finish my final year of med school. It's been a long road and after receiving this wonderful email just a few days ago I am excited for a future in the NHS and as a Doctor.


So the hopefully if I'm not to busy on the wards and in the library I will be regularly posting on my blog some hopefully interesting and educational stuff this year. My email is isntthtpleasant@gmail.com and I'm keen for any ideas or questions about the blog, also if anyone wants a free tour around Milan, just drop me a line.

On another note, I saw this play in London over the holidays and it is incredible!
http://www.theplaythatgoeswrong.com/london
It's a simple comedy all based around a play about a murder that all goes wrong and its absolutely hilarious, I was laughing from start to finish and it suitable for all ages (I took my summer school kids there).