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Cases for CPT teaching

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Within days he had had to call the GP because of increasing shortness of breath. ... He reports to his GP complaining of dizziness whilst waiting for a bus and when ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cases for CPT teaching


1
Cases for CPT teaching
2
Case No 1
  • 70 year old man
  • PH of Myocardial infarction 7 years ago
  • Known LV impairment with history of PND
  • Recently discharged from hospital following
    aspiration of painful knee joint diagnosed as
    gout.
  • Chronic renal insufficiency with creatinine of
    200 said to be due to long standing hypertension

3
  • Presents with severe pain and swelling of
    opposite knee joint
  • Drug history
  • furosemide 20 mg 2x per day
  • Nifedipine 10 mg 2x per day
  • What other drugs might have been considered in
    the past?
  • Would you recommend any other long term
    treatments for his CVS condition?
  • How will you manage his arthritis / gout?

4
Think about
  • Aspirin
  • ACE inhibition
  • Calcium channel blockers
  • Beta blockers
  • Statin
  • NSAIDs
  • Allopurinol
  • Colchicine

5
Case No 2
  • A 68 year old man suffers from repeated episodes
    of palpitations which have been diagnosed as
    paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.
  • What steps would have been undertaken before that
    conclusion could have been reached?
  • A locum doctor started him on digoxin to try to
    stop the occurrences. Was that a good choice of
    drug?

6
  • What drug might you have chosen to stop the
    attacks?
  • He is admitted feeling unwell and digoxin
    toxicity is diagnosed.
  • What are the features of digitalis toxicity?
  • Why might digoxin toxicity arise?
  • How is the diagnosis best made?
  • He is discharged on no treatment but returns 2
    weeks later short of breath with atrial
    fibrillation with a ventricular rate of 150/min.

7
  • What therapeutic possibilities are there
  • Consider electric shock what precautions are
    needed?
  • Anticoagulation
  • Consider adenosine, amiodarone, flecainide,
    digoxin, beta blockers, verapamil.

8
Case No 3
  • A 60 year old man presents with upper abdominal
    pain for 2 weeks with shortness of breath at rest
    and orthopnoea and early jaundice. Examination
    reveals grossly elevated JVP, severe pitting
    oedema of legs. Crepitations throughout the
    lungs. Gallop rhythm at 120/min. BP 140/90.
    Smooth palpable liver with hepato-jugular reflux.
  • He had suffered an anterior myocardial infarction
    3 years previously.

9
  • What immediate measures will you prescribe?
  • Oxygen, diuretic, possibly iv nitrate, possibly
    iv morphine, LMW heparin prophylaxis
  • What immediate investigations will be required?
    And what investigations over the next few days?
  • CXR, FBC and UE then echocardiogram
  • What is the likely maintenance regime if this is
    ischaemic cardiac failure?
  • Diuretic and ACE inhibition. ?? Beta blocker
  • What drugs should you avoid in patients with CCF?
  • Sodium retainers, negative inotropes

10
Case No 4
  • A 45 year old lady presents with increasing
    wheeze over the previous 6 months. No past
    history of asthma. She is wheezy throughout both
    lungs and has a tachycardia. Her peak flow is
    150 l/min.
  • What immediate investigations are indicated?
  • What immediate measures should be taken?

11
Think about
  • Oxygen
  • Steroids
  • Beta agonists
  • Ipratropium
  • Aminophylline
  • Anti-biotics
  • AVOID sedating drugs

12
Case No 5
  • A 90 year old lady is admitted coughing up blood
    and with pleuritic pain in her R side
  • She had had bilateral ankle swelling
  • CXR clear, D dimer raised, S1Q3T3 on ECG
  • Current treatment amoxycillin just started,
    carbamazepine for trigeminal neuralgia, aspirin
    prophylactic, diclofenac for shoulder pain.
  • What are the pitfalls when starting
    anti-coagulation?

13
  • Factors to consider when using warfarin
  • Drug interaction pharmacokinetic
  • Drug interaction pharmacodynamic
  • Concurrent conditions which cause bleeding
  • Concurrent conditions which affect warfarin
    kinetics or dynamics
  • Liver disease, age, renal, gastrointestinal
  • Compliance
  • Benefit to risk ratio

14
Outline the treatment regime
  • Low molecular weight heparin for 5 days
  • Load with warfarin
  • Daily INR
  • Adjust warfarin according to recommendation on
    chart
  • Deal with over anti-coagulation according to BNF

15
Case no 6
  • A 45 year old man known to be alcoholic and
    addicted to Valium is admitted following three
    tonic clonic seizures
  • What might be the possible causes?
  • Effect of alcohol on brain
  • Metabolic abnormality 2ndry to alcohol
  • Alcohol withdrawal
  • Drug withdrawal
  • Head injury
  • Overdose of something

16
  • What specific urgent investigations are
    indicated?
  • CT scan
  • Glucose and electrolytes, serum Calcium
  • Toxicology
  • What will you prescribe?
  • Correct electrolytes, dehydration, hypoglycaemia
  • Give either lorazepam or phenytoin parenterally

17
  • Oxygen
  • Monitor vital signs and possibly EEG
  • Transfer to ITU for consideration for ventilation
    if series of fits continues
  • Consider need for maintenance treatment
  • Carbamazepine
  • Valproate
  • Phenytoin
  • Lamotrigine
  • Advise not to drive

18
Case No 7
  • A 65 year old man attends for a check up for
    insurance purposes. He feels perfectly well.
  • He smokes 2 cigars a day and drinks whisky in the
    evenings.
  • Examination reveals BP 165/95, apex beat 1
    displaced and heaving in character. He is 510
    tall and 15 st in weight.
  • His cholesterol is 5.9 mmol/l. His random
    glucose is 10mmol/l.

19
  • He asks about taking aspirin regularly
  • What will you advise
  • Aspirin?
  • Weight?
  • Alcohol?
  • Smoking?
  • Blood glucose
  • BP?
  • Monitor BP over 3-4 weeks
  • If sustained treat with drugs

20
  • What drug will you use
  • Thiazide
  • Beta blocker
  • ACE inhibitor and AII receptor blocker
  • Calcium channel blocker
  • Alpha blocker
  • Statin?

21
Case No 8
  • A 44 year old publican is admitted with gross
    ascites and leg oedema. He has been drinking in
    excess of 6 pints of beer a day for 20 years. He
    is jaundiced and has the stigmata of chronic
    liver disease and early asterixis.
  • His LFTS are completely awry with an INR of 2.1
    and a serum albumin of 28 g/l. Hb 10.2g/l
  • Abdo u/s confirms hepatic cirrhosis pattern

22
  • How will you treat his ascites
  • Slow weight loss
  • Bed rest
  • Diuretic which one and why
  • Consider paracentesis
  • What are the risks in prescribing to this patient
  • Pharmacokinetic disturbance
  • Pharmacodynamic disturbance
  • Electrolyte abnormalty
  • Bleeding
  • Encephalopathy
  • Hepatic adverse effect

23
Case No 9
  • A 70 year old man with long standing epilepsy
    develops chest pain on exertion and his ECG shows
    ST depression in V5 and V6.What key facts do you
    want to know?
  • History treated for GORD 10 years ago with
    omeprazole otherwise fit and well current
    medication carbamazepine 600 mg. No cigs
  • Examination fit looking, BP 140/85, systolic
    murmur at apex and base of heart, otherwise NAD.
  • CXR CTR 50
  • Cholesterol 6.0
  • Random blood glucose 5.6 UE, LFT, TFT - NAD
  • Echocardiogram NAD
  • Exercise ECG 1mm horizontal ST depression V4 to V6

24
  • What drugs will you prescribe?
  • Nitrate
  • ? GTN spray
  • Beta blocker
  • ? atenolol
  • Calcium channel blocker
  • ? amlodipine
  • Lipid lowering agent
  • ? simvastatin
  • Aspirin
  • What key points do you know about the
    pharmacology of these drugs?

25
  • Patient was treated with diltiazem, isosorbide
    mononitrate and atorvastatin.
  • 7 days later found to be listless, anorexic and
    generally weak and complaining or aching all over
    and sent to hospital
  • CPK 50
  • UE normal except for plasma Na of 119mmol/l
  • What is the explanation?
  • What do you know about the actions, adverse
    effects and pharmacokinetics of carbamazepine?
  • What other drugs cause hyponatraemia?
  • What do you know about enzyme inhibition as a
    mechanism of drug interaction.
  • What are the adverse effects and interaction
    risks with the statins?

26
  • It was decided that the patient did not need the
    carbamazepine and he was discharged on his
    anti-anginal treatment.
  • However whilst on a 6 month visit to Brazil he
    had a heart attack which was followed by late
    onset asthma.
  • His drug treatment had been changed to
    propranolol 80 mg daily, verapamil 20 mg and
    Uniphyllin Continus 400mg twice daily.
  • What are the risks to this patient associated
    with this drug regimen?
  • Within days he had had to call the GP because of
    increasing shortness of breath. He was
    orthopnoeic, coughing frothy sputum and his chest
    had inspiratory wheeze and crackles. His radial
    pulse rate was 75 / min completely irregular and
    his apex rate was 115 / min with a triple rhythm
    audible.

27
  • The GP injected morphine and sent him urgently to
    hospital.
  • A CXR showed pulmonary oedema and an ECG showed Q
    waves in leads 3 and AVF and atrial fibrillation.
  • What treatment would you implement?
  • Frusemide (furosemide)
  • Oxygen
  • (Diamorphine)
  • Nitrate
  • ACE inhibitor
  • Anti-coagulant
  • ?? DC cardioversion ?? Amiodarone ?? Digoxin
  • Beta blocker
  • What key points do you know about the
    pharmacology of these drugs?

28
  • At discharge from hospital the patient is
    reasonably mobile but SOB on walking up 2 flights
    of stairs but able to sleep on 2 pillows. His
    drugs are furosemide 40 mg daily, perindopril 4
    mg, digoxin 0.25 mg and carvedilol 6.25 mg twice
    daily and warfarin.
  • He reports to his GP complaining of dizziness
    whilst waiting for a bus and when getting up in
    the morning. He is prescribed Stemetil
    (prochlorperazine)
  • Do you think this was necessarily a wise
    prescription?
  • What are the dangers of using this drug for
    symptomatic dizziness?
  • What adverse effects often occur with
    phenothiazine drugs in the elderly?

29
  • Two months later he develops painful swelling in
    the foot following a brief episode of
    gastroenteritis.
  • He is treated with indomethacin for suspected
    gout
  • Why might gout have developed?
  • Was the right drug chosen?
  • What are the potential adverse effects of
    indomethacin in this patient?
  • How might you have managed the probable gout?

30
  • One year later the patient develops low mood
    because of increasing limitation of activity. He
    has developed symptoms of bladder neck
    obstruction which has been diagnosed by a
    urologist as benign prostatic hypertrophy.
  • In view of his low mood he has been prescribed
    amitriptyline 50 mg every evening.
  • What are the potential risks of this prescription
    in this patient?

31
An 82 year old lady is admitted because she keeps
falling over. She says it has got much worse
since the doctor changed her tablets. She takes
5 different lots of tablets but does not know
what any of them are for. What types of drug
might you specifically try to exclude from the
drug history?
  • Nitrates
  • ACE inhibitors, Calcium channel blockers, other
    vasodilators
  • Beta blockers
  • Diuretics
  • Sleeping tablets
  • Anti-depressants / anxiolytics
  • Drugs with negative inotropy

32
A 55 year old man is admitted with a 2 month
history of nausea culminating in vomiting blood
on one occasion. He has been in atrial
fibrillation following a myocardial infarction 5
years previously. He has also suffered from
chronic back pain for many years. What drugs
might you need to ask about which could be
relevant?
  • Digoxin
  • Aspirin
  • Warfarin
  • Statin
  • NSAIDs

33
A 48 year old man who is a known epileptic has
become increasingly drowsy and ataxic over the
last week. He is also known to suffer from
hypertension. His medication was changed about a
month ago. His GP has found his serum sodium to
be 124mmol/l. What ideas come to mind which
might explain his symptom as drug related?
  • Drug induced hyponatraemia can occur with
    carbamazepine and some other anti-epileptics and
    other CNS active drugs such as SRIs.
  • Hyponatraemia also occurs with diuretics which
    are used to treat hypertension.
  • The drowsiness might be due to excessive
    anti-epileptic (phenytoin or carbamazepine). The
    clearance of these agents is affected by
    concurrent administration of many agents
    including the anti-hypertensive diltiazem
  • Phenytoin is notorious for causing a cerebellar
    syndrome. Why is it so susceptible to drug
    interaction?

34
A 75 year old lady with known ischaemic heart
disease and left ventricular impairment has
become increasingly short of breath and has
developed ankle swelling after a locum doctor
changed her tablets. What will you try to
elucidate in the drug history? What might have
gone wrong with the prescribing?
  • What was her drug treatment? Why did she see the
    locum?
  • The ideal maintenance would be an ACE inhibitor
    and a (loop) diuretic. Perhaps these were
    stopped or reduced in class.
  • Perhaps he added a Calcium channel blocker
  • Perhaps he added a beta blocker
  • Perhaps he thought she had asthma and gave a
    corticosteroid.
  • Perhaps a NSAID was prescribed or bought.
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