StudyFix ICC-1 Disease Index

Deck-derived triage sheet — Psychiatry · Toxicology · Tropical Medicine · Ophthalmology

C/P
Inves
Mng
Special — pathognomonic

Psychiatry

15 entries
1

OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder)

C/P
  • Obsessions: intrusive, repetitive thoughts / images / impulses → anxiety
  • Common themes: contamination, harm to family, job loss, being a bad person
  • Compulsions: ritualistic washing / checking / ordering; mental acts (praying, counting)
  • Cycle: Obsessions → Anxiety → Compulsions → Relief
  • Insight preserved (thoughts recognised as own)
Inves
  • Clinical diagnosis (ICD-11 / DSM-5)
Mng
  • 3 pillars: psycho-education + psychotherapy + medication
  • 1st-line meds: SSRIs (e.g. Sertraline)
  • 2nd-line: Clomipramine (TCA)
  • Psychotherapy: CBT (1st), MCT, MBT, psychodynamic
  • Time threshold: >1h/day OR significant distress/impairment
Special
  • Hyperactive CSTC loop (cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical) — DLPFC ↔ striatum
  • Orbitofronto-striatal hyperactivity drives compulsivity
  • Caudate / OFC / anterior cingulate implicated
  • Serotonergic pathway dysregulation
  • PANDAS (immunological, paediatric)
  • 5-7× risk if first-degree relative; 80% concordance in identical twins
2

Acute Stress Reaction

C/P
  • Trigger: extremely threatening / horrific event
  • Emotional: sadness, anxiety, anger, despair
  • Somatic: daze, confusion
  • Cognitive: amnesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, stupor
  • Behavioural: overactivity, inactivity, social withdrawal
  • Autonomic: tachycardia, sweating, flushing
  • Onset hours-days; subsides within days of removal from situation
Inves
  • Clinical; rule out physical cause
Mng
  • Social support + information (1st-line)
  • Psychoeducation, normalisation, practical support
  • Little evidence for routine medication
  • NOT CBT acutely; NOT benzodiazepines
Special
  • NOT a mental disorder in ICD-11 — listed as reason for clinical encounter
3

Acute Stress Disorder

C/P
  • DSM-5 only
  • Symptom categories: intrusion + negative mood + dissociation + avoidance + arousal
  • Exposure: directly experienced / witnessed / learned of close family / repeated extreme
Inves
  • Clinical (DSM-5 criteria)
Mng
  • Psychoeducation + practical support
  • Trauma-focused CBT if persistent
Special
  • Duration 3 days to 1 month after trauma; beyond 1 month → PTSD
4

Adjustment Disorder

C/P
  • Maladaptive reaction to identifiable psychosocial stressor
  • Preoccupation with stressor, excessive worry, rumination, recurrent distressing thoughts
  • Significant impairment in functioning
Inves
  • Clinical
Mng
  • Address the stressor
  • Psychological support
Special
  • Onset within 1 month of stressor; resolves within 6 months of stressor ending
5

PTSD

C/P
  • 4 core clusters: intrusion + persistent avoidance + negative alterations in cognition/mood + alterations in arousal/reactivity
  • Intrusion: flashbacks, distressing memories, recurrent dreams
  • Arousal: hypervigilance, exaggerated startle, sleep disturbance, poor concentration
  • Negative cognition: guilt, detachment, impaired memory
  • Co-morbidities: substance misuse, affective + anxiety disorders, somatisation, violence
  • Lifetime prevalence 7.8% (F > M)
Inves
  • Clinical; DSM-5 / ICD-11
Mng
  • Psychological: CBT, EMDR, psychodynamic, hypnotherapy
  • Pharmacological: SSRIs (1st-line)
Special
  • Duration >1 month required
  • Biological signature: ↑ catecholamines + low cortisol (hypersuppression of HPA)
  • Loss of function predicts PTSD better than physical injury severity
  • Intentional harm + harm to children = high-risk stressors
6

Akathisia

C/P
  • Subjectively unpleasant inner restlessness + compulsion to move
  • Foot stamping, leg crossing/uncrossing, rocking, pacing
  • Prevalence ~25%
  • Less common with atypical antipsychotics
  • Weakly linked with suicide
Inves
  • Clinical (recognise drug history)
Mng
  • Reduce / change antipsychotic
  • Propranolol
  • Clonazepam
  • 5-HT2 antagonists (e.g. mirtazapine)
Special
  • Side-effect of antipsychotic medication (organic risk factor for disturbed behaviour)
7

Acute Dystonia

C/P
  • Contraction of muscles to maximum limits
  • Oculogyric crisis (eyes rolling upwards)
  • Torticollis (head/neck twisted)
  • Unable to speak / swallow
  • Back arching; jaw dislocation (extreme)
  • Prevalence 10%
Inves
  • Clinical
Mng
  • Oral / IM procyclidine (anticholinergic)
Special
  • Risk: young neuroleptic-naïve males; high-potency drugs (e.g. haloperidol)
8

Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS)

C/P
  • Tetrad: fever + muscular rigidity + altered mental status + autonomic dysfunction
  • Incidence 0.1%; mortality 5-10%
  • Mortality causes: respiratory failure, CV collapse, myoglobinuric renal failure, arrhythmias / DIC
Inves
  • Massively elevated CK (↑↑CK)
  • Leukocytosis
  • Altered LFTs
Mng
  • Stop causative agent
  • Supportive: O&sub2;, rehydration, cooling
  • Reduce rigidity: bromocriptine + dantrolene
  • Sedation: benzodiazepines
  • Supported ventilation if needed
  • Wait ≥5 days before cautious re-start with structurally unrelated antipsychotic
Special
  • Pathophys: dopamine antagonism + impaired Ca²⁺ mobilisation in muscle + SNS dysfunction
  • Rare but potentially life-threatening effect of all antipsychotics
9

Opiate Use / Dependence

C/P
  • Heroin = mu-receptor agonist; smoked / snorted / injected
  • Sedative + analgesic
  • Physical dependence
  • Withdrawal: sweaty, tremor, muscle aches/jerks, abdominal cramps, diarrhoea, piloerection, dilated pupils, runny nose, yawning, nausea
Inves
  • Urine drug screen (opiates / methadone)
  • COWS (Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale)
  • Verify community scripts with treatment agency + pharmacy
  • Screen Hep B / Hep C / HIV
Mng
  • A&E: symptomatic — diazepam, loperamide, buscopan (no methadone in A&E)
  • AMU: methadone substitution per local protocol
  • Methadone protocol: 10 mg up to QDS, max 40 mg in first 24h (titration)
  • Naloxone if overdose (short half-life → observation)
  • Discharge: link to local drug service early
  • Always write "OMIT IF SEDATED OR INTOXICATED"
  • Avoid doses after 18:00; oral solution 1mg/ml only
Special
  • Co-ingestion with benzos / alcohol = poly-drug overdose risk
  • Fatal respiratory depression possible at ≥30 mg methadone in non-tolerant individuals
10

GBL / GHB Use

C/P
  • GBL = gamma-butyrolactone; GHB = gamma-hydroxybutyric acid
  • Liquid; weak action at GABA-B receptors
  • Sedative effects
  • Severe respiratory depression with alcohol
  • Short half-life → intoxication rapidly progresses to withdrawal
  • Withdrawal: anxiety → confusion / agitation, tremor, cramps, insomnia, combativeness, delirium, delusions, paranoia + hallucinations (auditory/tactile/visual), tachycardia, hypotension
Inves
  • Clinical
Mng
  • Withdrawal: benzodiazepines + baclofen
  • May need ITU admission
Special
  • Repeated use → physical dependence
  • Benzodiazepine withdrawal: anxiety, depersonalisation/derealisation, light/sound sensitivity, fits → diazepam detoxification
11

Cocaine / Crack

C/P
  • Stimulant — affects dopamine
  • Binge pattern of use
  • High-dose complications: fits, hypertension, ischaemia (MI / ischaemic stroke / intestinal infarction), rhabdomyolysis
Inves
  • Urine drug screen
  • ECG, troponin if chest pain
Mng
  • Supportive
  • Benzodiazepines for agitation
  • Avoid β-blockers (unopposed α effect)
Special
  • Hallucinogens (e.g. LSD) → acute psychotic symptoms
12

Alcohol Use / Dependence

C/P
  • BAC <0.06: mild euphoria, ↓ concentration
  • BAC 0.06-0.09: disinhibition, ↓ reasoning / depth perception (UK drive limit 0.08)
  • BAC 0.10-0.19: emotional lability, slurred speech, gross motor impairment
  • BAC 0.20-0.29: stupor, memory blackout, severe motor impairment
  • BAC 0.30-0.49: severe CNS depression, ↓ HR / breathing / bladder
  • BAC >0.50: poisoning, death
  • Chronic GI/liver: gastritis, alcoholic hepatitis, fatty liver → fibrosis → cirrhosis → decompensated cirrhosis, oesophageal varices, encephalopathy
  • Chronic CNS: dementia, peripheral neuropathy, mood/personality changes
  • Withdrawal: sweating, tremor, tachycardia, anxiety, N&V, seizures
  • Drink-drive limit UK: 80 mg/100 mL blood; 35 µg/100 mL breath
Inves
  • FBC, U&Es, LFTs, GGT, amylase, clotting
  • SADQ score (mild <16 / moderate 16-30 / severe >30)
  • AUDIT / AUDIT-C / FAST / PAT / CAGE screening
  • Deranged LFTs: raised GGT + ALP, raised bilirubin
Mng
  • A&E: ABCDE, check blood sugar, IV fluids; airway protection (vomit aspiration risk)
  • AMU detox: chlordiazepoxide reducing regimen (per SADQ)
  • Thiamine: 100 mg PO TDS; Pabrinex I + II IM/IV for 3-5 days
  • DTs: haloperidol 5-10 mg PO or 5 mg IM (max 30 mg/24h PO, 18 mg/24h IM)
  • Seizures: diazepam 10 mg PR
  • Primary care: brief intervention, AA/NA referral, shared care
  • Discharge planning early; refer to local drug & alcohol service
Special
  • 3rd biggest lifestyle risk factor for disease / death in UK (after smoking + obesity)
  • Alcohol dependence criteria (ICD): ≥3 of 6 features over past year
  • Alcoholic hallucinosis = chronic psychiatric effect
  • Fetal alcohol syndrome: small head, brain damage, retarded growth/development
13

Delirium Tremens (DTs)

C/P
  • Triad: disorientation + visual hallucinations + signs of alcohol withdrawal
  • Clouding of consciousness, amnesia for recent events
  • Tactile / auditory / visual hallucinations
  • Severe: fear, paranoid delusions, sudden cardiovascular collapse
  • Mortality 5-10%
Inves
  • Clinical
  • ABG, electrolytes, glucose
Mng
  • Medical emergency
  • Benzodiazepines (chlordiazepoxide)
  • Haloperidol 5-10 mg PO or 5 mg IM (lower in elderly)
  • IV thiamine (Pabrinex)
  • Correct hypoglycaemia + magnesium
Special
  • Also occurs in benzodiazepine and cocaine withdrawal
14

Wernicke's Encephalopathy

C/P
  • Classic triad + 1: ophthalmoplegia + nystagmus + ataxia + confusion
  • Caused by thiamine (B1) deficiency
  • Petechial haemorrhages in brain stem
Inves
  • Clinical
  • Check magnesium, glucose
Mng
  • IV thiamine (medical emergency)
  • Correct magnesium deficiency + hypoglycaemia
Special
  • Untreated → Korsakoff's syndrome (irreversible)
15

Korsakoff's Syndrome

C/P
  • Loss of short-term memory (cannot register / recall new information)
  • Sequellae of untreated Wernicke's
Inves
  • Clinical
Mng
  • IV thiamine
  • Supportive (deficit largely irreversible)
Special
  • Caused by thiamine deficiency

Toxicology

12 entries
16

Paracetamol Overdose

C/P
  • Toxic dose ≥150-250 mg/kg single dose
  • Stage I (0-24h): asymptomatic / non-specific symptoms; LFTs normal
  • Stage II (24-72h): AST elevation precedes overt dysfunction
  • Stage III (72-96h): maximal hepatotoxicity → encephalopathy, coma, haemorrhage, cerebral oedema, ARF, pancreatitis
  • Stage IV (up to 3 wk): recovery with complete hepatic regeneration in survivors
Inves
  • Serum paracetamol level (validated prognostic indicator)
  • Serum AST + ALT
  • Arterial pH + lactate
  • PT / INR, U&Es, glucose, serum salicylate
  • Abnormalities of PT, bilirubin, glucose, lactate, pH > aminotransferases for prognosis (predict need for transplant)
Mng
  • <1h ingestion: activated charcoal 50g
  • IV N-acetylcysteine (NAC) — glutathione precursor / substitute
  • NAC nearly 100% hepatoprotective if within 8h
  • Indications: toxic dose history / staggered dose / above Rumack-Matthews treatment line / hepatotoxicity / high risk
Special
  • Mechanism: CYP450 minor pathway → NAPQI → glutathione depletion → hepatotoxicity
  • Risk factors: alcohol, chronic liver disease, malnutrition, old age, CYP-inducing drugs (carbamazepine, phenytoin)
  • Rumack-Matthews nomogram: starts at 4h, applied if entire ingestion within 4h
17

TCA Overdose

C/P
  • CNS early: restlessness, agitation, seizures → late: coma
  • Anticholinergic: dry skin, dilated pupil, sinus tachycardia, urinary retention, ↓ bowel movement, constipation, hyperthermia
  • CVS: sinus tachycardia, prolonged QT, dysrhythmias, hypotension
Inves
  • ECG: QRS >100 ms = sensitive indicator of toxicity
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring
Mng
  • Emergency measures (ABCD)
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring
  • Gastric lavage useful even after several hours (anticholinergic delays gastric emptying)
  • MDAC (enterohepatic circulation)
  • Serum alkalinisation: indications = conduction defects, dysrhythmias, hypotension, acidosis correction
  • Alkalinisation threshold: QRS >100 ms
Special
  • Mechanism: ↓ reuptake of NE + 5-HT; blocks muscarinic (anticholinergic), H1 (sedation), α1 (orthostatic hypotension)
  • Direct quinidine-like → conduction defects, dysrhythmias
  • Antidote: sodium bicarbonate
18

Aspirin (Salicylate) Overdose

C/P
  • N&V, gastric irritation
  • Hyperventilation / acute lung injury
  • Tinnitus, reversible hearing loss
  • Acid-base disturbances, hypokalaemia, hypocalcaemia, hypo-prothrombinaemia
  • Prerenal failure
  • Confusion, delirium
  • Terminal: cardiac arrest
  • Fluid loss: hypermetabolic state, tachypnoea, vomiting, fever, diuresis
Inves
  • Serum salicylate level (BSL)
  • ABG (mixed acid-base)
  • U&Es, glucose
Mng
  • Correct to euvolaemia
  • Gastric lavage useful even after several hours (concretions, delayed absorption)
  • MDAC
  • Urinary alkalinisation if BSL >35 mg/dL → target serum pH 7.3-7.5, urine pH 7.5-8
  • Cooling for hyperthermia; antacid for ulcer; vit K / blood for hypoprothrombinaemia
  • Haemodialysis if acute BSL >100 mg/dL OR severe acid-base / electrolyte imbalance / deterioration / renal failure / ALI / persistent CNS / coagulopathy
Special
  • Mechanism: uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation
  • Initial respiratory alkalosis (resp centre stimulation) → metabolic acidosis with compensatory resp alkalosis → severe: respiratory acidosis (CNS/resp depression)
  • Antidote: sodium bicarbonate
19

Body Packing

C/P
  • Ingestion of "packets" of drugs for smuggling (condoms / cellophane; often opiates or cocaine)
  • Complications: intestinal obstruction OR breakage + leak → toxidrome
  • Sympathomimetic (cocaine leak): sweating, hypertension, tachycardia
Inves
  • AXR and/or CT — multiple radio-opaque foreign bodies in GIT
  • Urine / plasma toxicological screen for leakage
Mng
  • No leak features: lactulose + observe
  • Leak / obstruction: surgical intervention
Special
  • Whole bowel irrigation is indicated for body packers / stuffers (CI in ileus, coma, convulsions unless airway protected)
20

Digoxin Toxicity

C/P
  • Bradycardia + AV block + dysrhythmias (most frequent cardiac manifestations)
  • GI symptoms = first to evolve
  • Hyperkalaemia (early predictor of need for antidote)
Inves
  • Serum digoxin concentration (SDC) — measure 6h post-ingestion (therapeutic 0.6-2.1 ng/ml; >15 ng/ml = serious)
  • Electrolytes (K, Ca, Mg)
  • Renal function
  • ECG: bradycardia, AV block, atrial/ventricular tachydysrhythmias, nonspecific ST sagging, peaked T (if hyperK)
Mng
  • Emergency measures
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring
  • MDAC (enterohepatic circulation)
  • Digibind (digoxin immune Fab) — indications: K >5 mEq/L, SDC >10 ng/ml adults (>5 children), ingestion ≥10 mg adults (≥4 mg children), life-threatening dysrhythmias, haemodynamically significant bradycardia unresponsive to atropine, suspected toxicity with unavailable SDC
  • Monitor K after Fab (hypoK may occur from Na/K-ATPase reactivation)
  • If Fab unavailable → correct hyperK
Special
  • Mechanism: inhibits Na/K-ATPase → ↑ intracellular Na → reverses NCX → intracellular Ca²⁺ overload
  • HypoK exacerbates chronic toxicity
  • HyperCa, hypoMg exacerbate cardiac glycoside toxicity
21

Opioid (Heroin) Overdose

C/P
  • Triad: sedation/coma + respiratory depression + pin-point pupil
  • Shallow respiration, cyanosis, low SaO&sub2;
  • Loud snoring / unrousable
  • Needle tracks
  • Respiratory depression → death
Inves
  • ABG
  • CXR
  • Consider co-ingestions (benzos, alcohol)
Mng
  • ABC, airway, breathing
  • IV access
  • Naloxone (opiate antagonist) — titrate; infusion if responds to initial dose
  • CXR
  • Observe (naloxone half-life shorter than most opioids → rebound coma risk)
Special
  • Opioid toxidrome: BP ↓, P ↓, RR ↓, T ↓, depressed mental status, pin-point pupils, ↓ peristalsis, hyporeflexia
22

Organophosphate Poisoning

C/P
  • Cholinergic crisis onset shortly after ingestion
  • Muscarinic (DUMBELS): diarrhoea, urination, miosis (pin-point), bradycardia/bronchospasm/bronchorrhoea, emesis, lacrimation, salivation, sweating
  • Nicotinic (MATCH): muscle fasciculations, adrenal medullary hyperactivity, tachycardia/arrhythmias, cramping of skeletal muscles, hypertension
  • CNS: vertigo, confusion, tremors, agitation, convulsions, coma
  • Intermediate syndrome (2-3 days): proximal limb / neck flexor / respiratory muscle paralysis (muscle fibre necrosis) — prevented by early oximes
  • Delayed neuropathy (2-3 weeks): mixed sensorimotor neuropathy (demyelination) — usually permanent
  • Cardiomyopathy
Inves
  • True AChE (RBC membranes)
  • Pseudo AChE (plasma)
  • ABG, electrolytes, glucose, U&Cr
  • ECG + cardiac monitoring
  • CXR (aspiration pneumonia / bronchospasm)
Mng
  • ABC + decontamination + continuous cardiac monitoring
  • Atropine 2-5 mg IV every 15 min (or double every 5-15 min) until atropinisation
  • Atropine endpoints: relief of bronchospasm + dryness of chest secretions (NOT HR, NOT pupil size)
  • Atropinisation for 1-2 days (prevent relapse)
  • Obidoxime (Toxogonin): 4-8 mg/kg loading → 10 mg/kg/day infusion × 3 days
  • Critical oxime window: first 24-48h (before enzyme aging)
  • Atropine overdose: cold compresses + IV fluids + benzodiazepines
Special
  • Mechanism: inhibits AChE → ACh accumulates at muscarinic + nicotinic + CNS
  • Irreversible after 24-36h ("aging")
  • Carbamates: reversible, shorter duration, low dermal toxicity, rarely fatal
  • Atropine = muscarinic antagonist only (does NOT block nicotinic)
  • Oximes = reactivate AChE → correct all 3 (muscarinic + nicotinic + CNS)
  • Anticholinergic toxidrome from atropine overshoot: warm dry pink skin + dilated non-reactive pupils + hyperthermia + tachycardia + urinary retention + ↓ bowel sounds + hallucinations
23

Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

C/P
  • Colourless, odourless, tasteless, non-irritating ("silent killer")
  • Throbbing headache (reflex cerebral vasodilatation 2° hypoxia)
  • Minor: dizziness, nausea
  • Significant: cognitive impairment, ataxia, visual/auditory abnormalities, confusion/convulsions, coma
  • CVS: tachycardia/hypotension, arrhythmias, conduction abnormalities, angina → MI
  • Pulmonary: tachypnoea, pulmonary oedema (cardiogenic or non-cardiogenic)
  • Cherry-red skin (rare, after excessive exposure)
  • Rhabdomyolysis → myoglobinuria → acute renal failure
  • Delayed neuropsychiatric sequelae (DNS): 2-40 day lucid period → behavioural changes, learning difficulties, memory problems, psychosis, gait disturbance, parkinsonism, paralysis, chorea, peripheral neuropathy, incontinence — recovery in only 50%
Inves
  • Carboxyhaemoglobin level
  • ABG
  • ECG / cardiac monitoring
  • CXR
Mng
  • ABC
  • 100% O&sub2; (decreases CO t½ from 5h to 1h)
  • Hyperbaric oxygen (2 atm) — decreases t½ to 20 min
  • HBO indications: altered mental status / confusion, COHb >25%, fetal distress in pregnancy
  • Cerebral oedema: prednisolone (1 mg/kg IV q4h) + mannitol 20% (1 mg/kg over 20 min)
  • Treat seizures, arrhythmias (antiarrhythmics), pulmonary oedema, acidosis/coma
  • Smoke inhalation: consider co-existing cyanide exposure
Special
  • CO Hb affinity 200-250× O&sub2; → leftward shift of OxyHb dissociation curve
  • Binds myoglobin (40-60× affinity) → cardiac depression / arrhythmias
  • Binds cytochrome oxidase → tissue anoxia
  • Displaces NO from platelet heme → vasodilatation / hypotension (correlates with neurological effects)
  • Fetal Hb has increased CO affinity + slow elimination + leftward fetal curve → neonates/fetuses more vulnerable
  • Antidote: hyperbaric oxygen
24

Cyanide Poisoning

C/P
  • Bitter almond smell; volatile colourless liquid
  • Large dose: sudden death within 1-2 min
  • Small dose CNS: headache, anxiety, agitation, confusion, lethargy, seizures, coma
  • CVS: initial bradycardia + hypertension → hypotension + reflex tachycardia → terminal bradycardia/hypotension
  • Resp: initial tachypnoea → bradypnoea + pulmonary oedema
  • Cyanosis NOT apparent (red asphyxia — blood stays bright red)
  • Metabolic acidosis
Inves
  • Cyanohemoglobin level
  • ABG (severe metabolic acidosis with raised AG)
Mng
  • Care of respiration (100% O&sub2;, intubation + mechanical ventilation)
  • GIT decontamination
  • Cyanide kit: amyl nitrite + sodium nitrite + sodium thiosulfate
  • Reducing agents: vit C, methylene blue
  • Dicobalt EDTA (Kelocyanor) — chelates circulating cyanide (does NOT bind intracellular)
  • Hydroxycobalamin (vit B12a) — cobalt binds cyanide → cyanocobalamin (vit B12) → urine excretion
  • IV NaHCO&sub3; for acidosis
Special
  • Mechanism: blocks cytochrome oxidase (binds ferric Fe³⁺) → halts aerobic metabolism → cellular asphyxia (histotoxic anoxia)
  • O&sub2; arterial = O&sub2; venous (no consumption)
  • Sodium nitrite: induces methaemoglobinaemia → Fe³⁺ pulls cyanide from cytochrome oxidase
  • Thiosulfate: provides sulfur → thiocyanate (renal elimination, minimally toxic)
  • Causes of red asphyxia: CO poisoning, cyanide poisoning, cold exposure (hypothermia)
  • Antidote: cyanide kit
25

Scorpion Envenomation

C/P
  • May have NO apparent local manifestations
  • Autonomic storm: agitation, hypertension, tachypnoea, generalised tremors, sweating
  • Delayed (~1.5h): vomiting, tachycardia, breathless, cyanosis, stupor
  • General/GI: dehydration, vomiting, diarrhoea, acute gastritis
  • CVS: hypertension, dysrhythmias, MI, acute heart failure
  • Pulmonary: respiratory distress, pulmonary oedema
  • CNS: agitation, convulsions
  • Metabolic: hyperkalaemia, stress hyperglycaemia, metabolic acidosis
Inves
  • ABG (impaired oxygenation / metabolic acidosis)
  • Serum electrolytes (hyperK)
  • RBS (hyperglycaemia)
  • ECG (sinus tachy or brady, arrhythmias, ischaemic changes)
  • CXR (pulmonary oedema)
Mng
  • Scorpion antivenom — ideal within first 4h (max window 24h)
  • Initial dose 3-5 ampoules slow IV or IM
  • Repeat every 30 min if progressing
  • Pre-administration: hypersensitivity skin test (premedicate with hydrocortisone if positive)
  • Treat complications (fluid, inotropes, ventilation, anticonvulsants)
Special
  • Egypt habitat: Cairo suburban / Upper Egypt
  • Pathophys: venom = potent autonomic stimulant → sudden pouring of endogenous catecholamines AND acetylcholine simultaneously → autonomic storm + cardiogenic shock
  • Antivenom dose same for children and adults (dose based on venom amount)
26

Viper Envenomation

C/P
  • 1-2 fang marks
  • Local: severe pain, bleeding from fang marks, oedema (whole limb), enlarged tender regional LNs, ecchymosis, blistering, skin necrosis / dry gangrene
  • General: anxiety (sweating, N&V, rigors, tachycardia, chest tightness), coagulopathy, bleeding, haemolysis, hypotension/shock
  • Myotoxicity: muscle pain/tenderness/weakness, myoglobinuria → renal failure, hyperkalaemia → arrhythmias
Inves
  • Coagulation profile
  • U&Es, CK
  • ECG (hyperK)
Mng
  • ABC priority
  • Polyvalent antivenom (slow IV or IV infusion) — best within 2h
  • Initial dose 3-5 vials; 10 additional if progressing; no absolute max
  • Treat hypotension, hemostatic abnormalities
  • Tetanus prophylaxis
  • Debridement of necrotic tissue
Special
  • Egypt habitat: most Egyptian deserts
  • Hemotoxic + vasculotoxic venom
  • First aid: rest, reassurance, immobilisation, remove constricting objects
  • Harmful: incision, suction, cryotherapy, electric shock
27

Cobra Envenomation

C/P
  • 1-2 fang marks
  • Minimal local pain + oedema (unlike vipers)
  • General: anxiety, sweating, N&V, rigors, tachycardia (within hours, may delay up to 12h)
  • Neuromuscular: fasciculation of face/neck → paralysis of skeletal muscles whole body
Inves
  • Clinical
  • Monitor respiratory function
Mng
  • ABC (airway protection critical)
  • Polyvalent antivenom IV
  • Ventilatory support
Special
  • Egypt habitat: humid environment (around Nile Valley)
  • Neurotoxic (not hemotoxic)
  • Consciousness + sensation spared

Tropical Medicine

6 entries
28

Leprosy — Tuberculoid (TT)

C/P
  • Few (1-2) lesions, <10 cm
  • Sharply demarcated hypopigmented macule (ovoid / circular / serpiginous)
  • Elevated edges, dry scaly centre, erythematous borders
  • Anaesthetic lesion
  • Sites: face, extensor surfaces of limbs
  • Uninvolved: perineum, scalp, axilla (too warm)
  • Nerves thickened + palpable + sometimes tender
  • Loss of sensation, sweating (rough dry hairless skin), deformity
  • Palpable nerves: great auricular, common peroneal, median, ulnar
Inves
  • Lepromin test positive (>5 mm induration)
  • Skin smear: absent organisms
  • Skin biopsy: granulomas, giant cells, mononuclear cell infiltration of nerve bundles
  • PCR (most specific)
Mng
  • WHO Paucibacillary regimen: Dapsone 100 mg daily + Rifampicin 600 mg monthly × 6 months
  • Side effects: haemolysis (G6PD), allergy, hepatitis, red urine
Special
  • Stable form; highest cell-mediated immunity; lowest bacterial load
  • Non-infectious
  • Mucosa + internal organs NOT affected
  • Early nerve affection (anaesthesia)
29

Leprosy — Lepromatous (LL)

C/P
  • Multiple, bilateral, symmetrical, widespread lesions
  • Poorly defined hypopigmented + erythematous
  • Macules / patches / papules / plaques / nodules
  • Normal sensation in lesions
  • Worst on cooler body parts
  • Leonine facies: thickened forehead, madarosis (loss of eyebrows/eyelashes), thickened earlobes, nasal septum perforation → collapse
  • Symmetric peripheral neuropathy — glove and stocking sensory loss
  • Ocular: corneal anaesthesia, keratitis, corneal ulceration, uveitis/glaucoma, irreversible blindness
  • Testicular: orchitis, atrophy, sterility
  • Hepatic: hepatitis, hepatic amyloidosis
  • Renal: glomerulonephritis, renal amyloidosis
  • Bone: osteoporosis, resorption of digits
Inves
  • Lepromin test NEGATIVE (no response)
  • Skin smear: numerous acid-fast bacilli
  • Skin biopsy: dense dermal infiltrates with fat-laden macrophages, paucity of lymphocytes
  • PCR (most specific)
  • Sites: ear lobes, elbows, knees, typical lesions
Mng
  • WHO Multibacillary regimen: Dapsone 100 mg + Clofazimine 50 mg daily; Rifampicin 600 mg + Clofazimine 300 mg monthly × 12-24 months
  • Side effects: red skin, ichthyosis
  • Post-exposure prophylaxis: single dose rifampicin → ↓ paucibacillary by 50%
Special
  • Stable form; lowest cell-mediated immunity; highest bacterial load
  • Infectious
  • Mucosa + internal organs affected
  • Late nerve affection
  • M. leprae doubling time 12-14 days; obligate intracellular acid-fast bacillus; not cultured in vitro; armadillo + mouse footpad reservoirs
30

Leprosy — Borderline Forms

C/P
  • Mid-borderline (BB): rarely seen, transient, unstable; multiple lesions of varying size/shape/distribution; skin-coloured or erythematous; "inverted saucer" / "Swiss cheese" lesions with sloping edges + punched-out centre
  • Borderline Tuberculoid (BT): larger, more numerous (5-20), less well-defined, less anaesthesia than TT; asymmetric; satellite lesions; asymmetric peripheral nerve involvement
  • Borderline Lepromatous (BL): widespread bilaterally symmetric macules / papules / nodules; sensation + hair growth normal within lesion; widespread peripheral nerve involvement
Inves
  • Skin smear, biopsy, PCR
Mng
  • WHO classification: ≥5 skin lesions = multibacillary (BB, BL → MB regimen); BT may fall in paucibacillary (≤5 lesions → PB regimen)
Special
  • Unstable forms (can shift along spectrum)
31

Lymphatic Filariasis (Elephantiasis)

C/P
  • Asymptomatic microfilaremia → acute adenolymphangitis (ADL) → chronic lymphoedema
  • ADL: sudden onset febrile painful lymphadenopathy (inguinal LNs, testis, spermatic cord); resolves in 1 week; recurrent; retrograde lymphangitis (distinguishes from bacterial)
  • Filarial fever: fever without adenitis
  • Tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE): dry paroxysmal nocturnal cough, wheezing, dyspnoea, anorexia, malaise, weight loss; peripheral eosinophilia; diffuse pulmonary infiltrates on CXR
  • Chronic lymphoedema grades I-IV
  • Chyluria
Inves
  • Nocturnal blood smear (10pm-2am) — microfilariae
  • W. bancrofti: anucleate tail tip, clear end of nuclear column
  • B. malayi: subterminal + terminal tail nuclei
  • Circulating filarial antigen (CFA) — W. bancrofti only
  • Filarial antibodies (recombinant antigen)
  • PCR (research mostly)
  • Lymph ultrasonography: "filarial dance" sign (viable worms in continuous motion)
  • CXR for TPE: diffuse pulmonary infiltrates
Mng
  • Diethylcarbamazine (DEC) — treatment of choice
  • Monoinfection: DEC 6 mg/kg × 12 days
  • Doxycycline 200 mg/d × 6 weeks (targets Wolbachia endosymbiont)
  • Lymphoedema: steroids (soften + ↓ swelling), bed rest, limb elevation, compression bandages
  • Chyluria: low-fat high-protein diet + medium-chain triglycerides
  • Secondary infection prevention: hygiene, antiseptic creams, footwear, limb exercise
  • Surgery: hydrocele + scrotal elephantiasis; gross limb less successful (may need grafting)
Special
  • Causative: Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi, B. timori
  • Vectors: Aedes, Anopheles, Culex, Mansonia mosquitoes
  • Pathophys: Th2 inflammatory response (IgE + IgG4) + Wolbachia endosymbiont → lymphatic endothelial hyperplasia → fibrosis
  • Egypt = first Eastern Mediterranean country to eliminate as public health problem (WHO milestone March 2018)
  • Once fibrosis established → irreversible (DEC does not change prognosis)
32

Onchocerciasis (River Blindness)

C/P
  • Progressive inflammatory eye + skin disease
  • Pruritus (microfilariae migrating through skin)
  • Subcutaneous nodules (onchocercomas)
  • Lymphadenitis
  • Blindness due to corneal fibrosis
  • Alternative names: Hanging groins, Leopard skin, River blindness, Sowda
Inves
  • Skin snips — definitive diagnosis (microfilariae from multiple body sites)
  • African: gluteal + thigh
  • American: scapula + iliac crest
  • Slit-lamp: microfilariae in cornea + anterior chamber
  • ICT card tests for IgG4 (recombinant antigen)
  • Mazzotti test: oral DEC 50-100 mg → intense pruritic rash + fever + oedema if positive
  • DEC 10% patch test (more localised reaction)
Mng
  • Ivermectin 150 mcg/kg every 3 months until symptoms resolve
  • Nonendemic areas: doxycycline 200 mg/d × 4-6 weeks (targets Wolbachia) followed by ivermectin
  • Moxidectin (FDA-approved 2018, ≥12 years)
Special
  • Causative: Onchocerca volvulus
  • Vector: Black flies (Simulium damnosum / Buffalo fly)
  • 99% in sub-Saharan Africa
  • 2nd leading infectious cause of blindness worldwide
  • Adult macrofilariae in subcutaneous nodules; ovoviviparous females release L1 microfilariae
33

Loiasis

C/P
  • Subcutaneous swellings on extremities
  • Localised pain, pruritus, urticaria
  • Microfilaremia phase usually asymptomatic
  • Calabar swellings (local hypersensitivity reaction — named after Nigerian city)
  • Migrating worm visible in subconjunctival + subcutaneous tissues
Inves
  • Diurnal blood smear (10am-2pm)
  • Adult worm in subcutaneous / conjunctiva
  • Serology for travellers to endemic areas
Mng
  • DEC is primary treatment
  • Mandatory microfilarial count before therapy (threshold 2500/mL)
  • Low count: DEC 8-10 mg/kg/d × 21 days
  • High count + symptomatic: pre-treat with albendazole 200 mg bid × 3 weeks → then DEC
  • Apheresis to lower counts pre-DEC
Special
  • Causative: Loa loa
  • Risk of severe encephalopathy with DEC if high microfilarial load
  • Diurnal periodicity (unlike W. bancrofti nocturnal)
  • Particular concern for MDA programmes for lymphatic filariasis in co-endemic regions

Ophthalmology

6 entries
34

Diabetic Retinopathy (NPDR + PDR)

C/P
  • NPDR (Stage I): microaneurysms, retinal haemorrhages (dot and blot), hard exudates
  • Severe NPDR (Stage II): cotton wool spots (nerve fibre layer infarcts), venous beading, IRMA (intraretinal micro-vascular abnormalities), deep haemorrhages
  • Proliferative DR (Stage III): neovascularisation on disc (NVD) + elsewhere (NVE), fibro-vascular proliferation
  • Advanced eye disease: vitreous haemorrhage, tractional retinal detachment, neovascular glaucoma
Inves
  • Fundus examination
  • Fluorescein angiography
  • OCT
Mng
  • Strict blood glucose control (primary systemic)
  • Mild NPDR: observation + treat macular oedema
  • Severe NPDR: pan-retinal photocoagulation (PRP) laser
  • PDR: PRP
  • Advanced: vitrectomy + endolaser
  • Anti-VEGF (e.g. intravitreal Lucentis) for diabetic oedema → protects wall integrity, ↓ leakage
  • PRP side-effects: loss of peripheral vision, ↓ night vision
Special
  • Commonest cause of blindness in economically active population
  • Microangiopathy = microvascular occlusion + leakage
  • Pathogenesis: ↓ pericytes → microaneurysms → capillary closure → ischaemia → VEGF release → neovascularisation
  • Risk factors: duration of disease, hypertension, poor DM control, renal disease
35

Diabetic Macular Edema

C/P
  • Leakage from unhealthy capillary bed at macula
  • Most common cause of visual loss in NPDR
  • Can occur at any stage of DR
Inves
  • OCT: pockets of fluid
Mng
  • Intravitreal anti-VEGF (treatment of choice)
Special
  • Anti-VEGF mechanism: protect integrity of wall → ↓ leakage
36

Hypertensive Retinopathy

C/P
  • Grade 0: no changes
  • Grade 1: barely detectable arterial narrowing
  • Grade 2: obvious arterial narrowing + focal irregularities
  • Grade 3: Grade 2 + retinal haemorrhages ± exudates
  • Grade 4: Grade 3 + disc swelling
  • Fundus signs: blot haemorrhage, AV nicking, cotton wool spots, arteriolar narrowing, disc oedema, copper wiring, exudates
Inves
  • Fundus examination
  • Systemic BP
Mng
  • Urgent BP control if Grade 4 (malignant HTN emergency)
Special
  • Grade 4 = malignant hypertension emergency
37

Retinal Artery Occlusion (CRAO / BRAO)

C/P
  • Sudden painless loss of vision
  • Preceded by amaurosis fugax (similar to TIA — temporary vision loss)
  • CRAO: profound ↓ visual acuity + RAPD
  • BRAO: field defect; pale ischaemic zone in distribution of blocked branch artery
  • Fundus: cherry-red spot at fovea, pale retina, attenuated vessels (embolus may be seen)
Inves
  • BP, lipid profile, fasting glucose, FBC, U&Es, LFTs, CRP/ESR
  • Carotid Doppler, ECG, ECHO
Mng
  • Emergency: first 15 min → 1 hour
  • Lower IOP → vascular dilatation: massage, IV mannitol, anterior chamber paracentesis
  • Vasodilatation: sublingual nitrates, breathing 5% CO&sub2; (in a bag)
Special
  • Cherry-red spot: fovea has dual blood supply + supplied by choroid; no coagulative necrosis (no ganglion cells at fovea)
  • Pale retina = coagulative necrosis of ganglion cells (surrounding retina)
  • Ophthalmic emergency ("stroke of the eye")
38

Retinal Vein Occlusion (CRVO / BRVO)

C/P
  • Sudden painless loss of vision (variable severity)
  • CRVO: profound ↓ VA + RAPD; extensive haemorrhages throughout fundus ("blood and thunder")
  • BRVO: field loss OR asymptomatic; confined to quadrant
  • Fundus: extensive flame-shaped retinal haemorrhages, cotton wool spots + exudates, disc swelling, macular oedema, engorged tortuous vessels
Inves
  • BP, lipid profile, smoking, fasting glucose, FBC, U&Es, LFTs, CRP/ESR
  • Carotid Doppler, ECG, ECHO
Mng
  • Anti-VEGF for macular oedema (early)
  • Pan-retinal photocoagulation for neovascularisation (late, ~3 months)
Special
  • Variable vision loss depending on macular involvement
39

Age-Related Macular Degeneration (Dry / Wet)

C/P
  • 30% of >70 years
  • Dry (non-exudative): asymptomatic OR gradual loss of central vision; early sign = macular drusen; late sign = geographic atrophy (sclera visible, choroid + retina atrophied)
  • Wet (exudative): choroidal neovascular membrane (CNVM) — abnormal vessels from choroid into subretinal space → can bleed / leak lipids → scar
  • Amsler grid defects: metamorphopsia (distortion), scotoma (blind spot)
Inves
  • Amsler grid
  • Slit-lamp
  • Fluorescein angiography (IV dye)
  • OCT (cut section of retina)
Mng
  • General (both): education + Amsler grid, smoking cessation, sunglasses, vitamin supplements (C+E, Zinc, beta-carotene)
  • Wet AMD: intravitreal anti-VEGF, photodynamic therapy (PDT)
Special
  • Lipophilic drusen deposits in Bruch's membrane
  • Risk factors: aging, smoking, UV light, +ve family history
  • CNVM causes: age-related (Wet AMD), idiopathic (<50 years), degenerative myopia, trauma, iatrogenic (intense laser burn)

Diagnostic Criteria

7 entries
1

OCD — ICD-11 Diagnostic Criteria

Core Requirement

  • Persistent obsessions and/or compulsions

Obsessions

  • Repetitive and persistent thoughts, images, or impulses/urges experienced as intrusive and unwanted
  • Examples: thoughts (contamination), images (violent scenes), impulses/urges (to stab someone)
  • Commonly associated with anxiety
  • Patient attempts to ignore / suppress / neutralise by performing compulsions

Compulsions

  • Repetitive behaviours or rituals, including repetitive mental acts
  • Performed in response to obsession
  • Examples: repetitive washing, checking, ordering of objects

Threshold

  • >1 hour per day OR significant distress / impairment
2

OCD — DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria

Core Requirement

  • Presence of obsessions, compulsions, or both

Obsession Criteria (both)

  • Experienced as intrusive + unwanted; cause marked anxiety / distress
  • Attempts to ignore / suppress / neutralise with another thought or action

Compulsion Criteria (both)

  • Repetitive behaviours (hand washing, ordering, checking) OR mental acts (praying, counting, repeating words silently)
  • Driven to perform in response to obsession
  • Aimed at preventing or reducing anxiety

Severity (Criterion B)

  • >1 hour per day OR clinically significant distress / impairment
3

Acute Stress Disorder — DSM-5 Criteria

Criterion A — Exposure (1 of 4)

  • Directly experiencing
  • Witnessing
  • Learning it occurred to close family / friend
  • Repeated extreme exposure

Criterion B — Symptom Categories (5)

  • Intrusion
  • Negative mood
  • Dissociation
  • Avoidance
  • Arousal

Criterion C — Duration

  • 3 days to 1 month after trauma exposure
4

PTSD — Traumatic Stressor Criteria

DSM-IIIR

  • A traumatic event outside the range of usual human experience that would be markedly distressing to almost anyone
  • Limitation: too restrictive

DSM-5 — Types of Exposure (4)

  • Directly experiencing
  • Witnessing in person
  • Learning about close family / friend (event must be violent or accidental)
  • Repeated / extreme exposure to aversive details (e.g. first responders collecting remains; police repeatedly exposed to child abuse details)

ICD-11

  • Exposure to event/situation of extremely threatening or horrific nature (short- or long-lasting)
  • Examples directly experienced: natural / human-made disasters, acute life-threatening illness (e.g. heart attack)
  • Witnessing/learning: sudden, unexpected, violent manner

Specific Events That Can Cause PTSD (7)

  • Military combat
  • Serious road accidents
  • Terrorist attacks
  • Natural disasters
  • Being held hostage
  • Witnessing violent deaths
  • Violent personal assaults
5

PTSD — Clinical Diagnosis

Duration

  • >1 month

Core Symptom Categories (4)

  • Intrusion symptoms (flashbacks, intrusive memories, recurrent distressing dreams)
  • Persistent avoidance
  • Negative alterations in cognition / mood (impaired memory, guilt, detachment)
  • Alterations in arousal / reactivity (startle response, ↓ concentration, sleep disturbance)
6

ICD Alcohol Dependence Criteria

Diagnostic Requirement

  • ≥3 features over past year:

Features (6)

  • (a) Strong desire or compulsion to drink
  • (b) Difficulty controlling drinking (onset / termination / level)
  • (c) Physiological withdrawal symptoms or drinking to relieve them
  • (d) Tolerance
  • (e) Neglect of alternative interests / time spent recovering
  • (f) Persisting drinking despite clear evidence of harmful consequences
7

Mental Capacity

4 Components

  • Understand information
  • Retain information
  • Weigh information & reach decision
  • Communicate the decision

5 Core Principles

  • Presumption of capacity unless proved otherwise
  • Capacity is task- and time-specific
  • Individuals supported as much as possible to make own decisions
  • Unwise decisions do not necessarily indicate lack of capacity
  • Best interests + least restrictive decisions on behalf of incapacitated

Categories of Incapacity (3)

  • Temporarily lacks capacity (e.g. unconscious after an accident)
  • Permanently lacks capacity (formerly had it — dementia, severe injury)
  • Never had capacity (severe learning difficulties)

Risk Scores & Screening Tools

3 entries
8

SADQ (Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire)

ScoreSeverity
<16Mild dependence
16-30Moderate dependence
>30Severe dependence
9

AUDIT Questionnaire

Clinical Domains (3)

  • Hazardous alcohol use
  • Dependence symptoms
  • Harmful alcohol use

AUDIT-C Threshold

  • Positive if ≥5
10

COWS (Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale)

Parameters Assessed (7)

  • Resting pulse rate
  • Sweating
  • Restlessness (observation)
  • Pupil size
  • Bone or joint aches
  • Runny nose or tearing
  • GI upset

Anatomical Classifications

3 entries
11

Leprosy — Ridley-Jopling Classification

TypeStabilityCell-mediated immunityBacterial load
Tuberculoid (TT)StableHighestLowest
Borderline Tuberculoid (BT)UnstableDecreasing
Borderline (BB)UnstableMiddleMiddle
Borderline Lepromatous (BL)UnstableIncreasing
Lepromatous (LL)StableLowestHighest
12

Leprosy — WHO Classification

Purpose

  • Simplify diagnosis
  • Promote rapid implementation of treatment
TypeLesionsRidley-Jopling overlap
Paucibacillary1-5 skin lesionsTT, BT
Multibacillary>5 skin lesionsBB, BL, LL
13

Filariasis — Habitat Classification

GroupSpecies
LymphaticWuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi, B. timori
CutaneousLoa loa, Onchocerca volvulus, Mansonella streptocerca
Body-cavityMansonella perstans, M. ozzardi

Severity Classifications

6 entries
14

Lymphatic Filariasis — Lymphoedema Grading

GradeFeatures
IReversible on elevation (pitting oedema)
IIDoes not reverse on elevation (pitting or non-pitting); no skin changes
IIINot reversible (non-pitting); thickening of skin
IVNon-pitting, not reversible, thickened skin with nodular / warty excrescences (stage of elephantiasis)
15

Diabetic Retinopathy — Staging

StageFeatures
NPDR (Background)Microaneurysms, dot/blot haemorrhages, hard exudates
Severe NPDRCotton wool spots, venous beading, IRMA, deep haemorrhages
Proliferative DRNeovascularisation (NVD, NVE), fibro-vascular proliferation
Advanced Diabetic Eye DiseaseVitreous haemorrhage, tractional retinal detachment, neovascular glaucoma
16

Hypertensive Retinopathy — Grading

GradeFeatures
0No changes
1Barely detectable arterial narrowing
2Obvious arterial narrowing + focal irregularities
3Grade 2 + retinal haemorrhages ± exudates
4Grade 3 + disc swelling (malignant HTN emergency)
17

Acid-Base Disorders

DisorderpHPrimarySecondary
Metabolic acidosis↓ HCO₃⁻↓ pCO&sub2;
Metabolic alkalosis↑ HCO₃⁻↑ pCO&sub2;
Respiratory acidosis↑ pCO&sub2;↑ HCO₃⁻
Respiratory alkalosis↓ pCO&sub2;↓ HCO₃⁻
18

Anion Gap

Formula

  • (Na⁺) − (Cl⁻ + HCO₃⁻)

Normal Range

  • 8-12 mEq/L (without potassium)
  • 12-16 mEq/L (with potassium)
  • 7 ± 4 mmol/L (alternative deck value)
19

Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) Effects

BACBehaviouralImpairment
<0.06Mild euphoria, relaxationConcentration
0.06-0.09Disinhibition, extroversionReasoning, depth perception (UK drive limit 0.08)
0.10-0.19Emotional lability, anger / sadness, ↓ libidoReaction time, gross motor, slurred speech
0.20-0.29Stupor, loss of understandingSevere motor, LOC, memory blackout
0.30-0.49Severe CNS depressionBladder, breathing, HR
>0.50High risk of poisoning, death

Drink-Drive Limit UK

  • 80 mg / 100 mL blood
  • 35 µg / 100 mL breath

Toxidromes & Mnemonics

6 entries
20

Toxidromes Evaluation

ToxidromeBPPRRTMental statusPupilsOther
Anticholinergic-/↑DeliriumDry mucous membranes, flushing, urinary retention
Cholinergic±±-/↓-Normal to depressed±Salivation, lacrimation, urination, bronchorrhoea, fasciculation, paralysis
Ethanol / sedative-hypnotic-/↓Depressed, agitated±Hyporeflexia, ataxia
OpioidDepressedHyporeflexia
SympathomimeticAgitatedTremor, seizures
Withdrawal — EtOH / sedativeAgitated, disoriented, hallucinationsTremor, seizures
Withdrawal — opioid--Normal, anxiousVomiting, rhinorrhoea, piloerection, diarrhoea, yawning
21

DUMBELS (Muscarinic Effects — Organophosphate)

  • Diarrhoea
  • Urination
  • Miosis (pin-point pupil)
  • Bradycardia (and bronchospasm / bronchorrhoea)
  • Emesis
  • Lacrimation
  • Salivation
  • Sweating
22

MATCH (Nicotinic Effects — Organophosphate)

  • Muscle fasciculations
  • Adrenal medullary hyperactivity
  • Tachycardia (and arrhythmias)
  • Cramping of skeletal muscles
  • Hypertension
23

MUDPILES (Causes of Elevated Anion Gap)

  • Methanol
  • Uremia
  • Diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Paraldehyde
  • Iron / Isoniazid
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Ethylene glycol
  • Salicylates
24

CHIPES (Radiopaque Substances on AXR)

  • Chloral hydrate
  • Heavy metal
  • Iron
  • Phenothiazine
  • Enteric coated
  • Sustained-release
25

Coma Cocktail

  • Dextrose
  • Naloxone
  • Thiamine

Management Hierarchies

4 entries
26

Disturbed Behaviour — Management Hierarchy

5 Stages (in order)

  • 1. Verbal de-escalation
  • 2. Time out
  • 3. Rapid tranquilisation
  • 4. Physical restraint
  • 5. Seclusion
27

ABC Model — Behaviour

Behavioural Progression

  • Antecedents (A)
  • Behaviour (B)
  • Consequences (C)

Intervention Hierarchy

  • Prevention → Management → Harm reduction
28

MHA vs MCA Comparison

ActGroundsScope
Mental Health Act (MHA)(Possibly) suffering from a mental disorderAssessment / treatment of mental illness only
Mental Capacity Act (MCA)Lack of capacity in dissenting patient; condition severe / life-threateningTreatment in patient's best interests
29

Observation Levels (Egyptian MHA)

LevelFrequencyClothingMovement
Constant monitoringWithin hand reach (staff sitting with patient)
Level 1Every 15 minHospital pyjamasCan wander, cannot leave unit
Level 2Every 30 minOwn clothesCan leave unit with responsible adult
Level 3Every hour (acute unit)Own clothesCan leave unit, accounts for whereabouts

Egyptian Mental Health Act 2009

10 entries
30

Article 11 — Preventing Voluntary Patient from Leaving

Hold Duration

  • Max initial hold by psychiatrist: 72 hours

Criteria (any of 3)

  • Danger to self
  • Danger to others
  • Unable to take care of self

Treatment During Hold

  • No treatment without consent (except emergency)

Notification

  • Regional Council for Mental Health

Extension

  • ≤1 week if hold reasons continue + no independent assessment obtained
31

Article 12 — Minors and Incapacitated

Authorised Applicants

  • Parents, guardian, trustee

Notification Within 2 Business Days

  • Social worker
  • Regional Mental Health Council

Guardian Rights

  • May request discharge at any time (unless involuntary admission applies)
32

Article 13 — Criteria for Involuntary Admission

Mandatory (all 3)

  • Psychiatrist approval
  • Clear indication of severe mental illness
  • Patient refusing admission

Conditional (≥1 of 2)

  • Imminent deterioration of psychiatric condition
  • Serious + imminent threat to safety / health / life of self or others

Notify Within 24h

  • Parents
  • Director of facility
  • National / Regional Council for Mental Health
33

Article 14 — Admission by a Non-Psychiatrist

Hold Duration

  • Max for evaluation: 48 hours

Accepted Written Request From (6)

  • Relative ≤2nd degree
  • Police officer
  • Social worker
  • Specialised health inspector
  • Foreign consul
  • Unrelated external psychiatry specialist

Notification

  • Public prosecutor within 24h
34

Article 16 — Extended Involuntary Stays

Trigger

  • >1 week

Assessment Requirements

  • 2 psychiatric assessments required
  • One external, one from facility
  • At least one government employee

Paperwork Deadline

  • To Regional Council within 7 days
  • If deadline missed → involuntary admission ends; facility bears consequences
35

Articles 17, 18, 21 — Transfers and Escapes

Urgent Transfer

  • Notify Regional Council for Mental Health within 24h

Non-Urgent Transfer

  • Public Prosecution assigns evaluating psychiatrist

Escapes

  • Inform Police + Public Prosecution
36

Article 28 — Ongoing Refusal of Treatment

  • Psychiatrist may compel treatment
  • Review every 4 weeks at most
  • New independent assessment required if forced treatment >3 months
37

Article 29 — Emergency Forced Treatment

Maximum Duration

  • 72 hours without consent

Indications (2)

  • Prevent imminent deterioration of mental/physical condition
  • Prevent imminent grave danger to others' life/health
38

ECT (Articles 28 & 30)

Standard Requirements (3)

  • General anaesthetic
  • Muscle relaxer
  • Written free-willed informed consent

Involuntary Patient Refusing

  • Independent medical evaluation required
  • Max 2 emergency sessions while awaiting assessment
39

Seclusion & Restraints

Definitions

  • Seclusion: confining person in room from which they cannot exit freely
  • Restraint forms (3): physical force, mechanical devices, chemicals (sedation)

Indications (4)

  • Agitated / uncontrollable patient
  • Restrained for hospital admission
  • Medication given against will
  • Long-term complete movement control needed by staff

Use Principles

  • Non-therapeutic — last resort
  • Least possible duration
  • Risk of further physical or psychosocial trauma