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Ward & On Call Ward & On Call Survival Skills Survival Skills

Ward & On Call Survival Skills. By: Gen Surg R2sLaura VanderBeek Carmen Barnette Heather MacLeod Jola Omole Plastics R2 Colin White Urology R2s Jason

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Ward & On CallWard & On CallSurvival SkillsSurvival Skills

Ward & On CallWard & On CallSurvival SkillsSurvival Skills

By:By:

Gen Surg R2sGen Surg R2s Laura VanderBeek Laura VanderBeek

Carmen BarnetteCarmen BarnetteHeather MacLeodHeather MacLeodJola OmoleJola Omole

Plastics R2 Plastics R2 Colin WhiteColin WhiteUrology R2s Urology R2s Jason KovacJason Kovac

Zak Klinghoffer Zak Klinghoffer ENT R2 ENT R2 Rajveer HundalRajveer HundalOrtho R2s Ortho R2s Ted ScrivenTed Scriven

Jihad AboualiJihad AboualiVick KhannaVick Khanna

By:By:

Gen Surg R2sGen Surg R2s Laura VanderBeek Laura VanderBeek

Carmen BarnetteCarmen BarnetteHeather MacLeodHeather MacLeodJola OmoleJola Omole

Plastics R2 Plastics R2 Colin WhiteColin WhiteUrology R2s Urology R2s Jason KovacJason Kovac

Zak Klinghoffer Zak Klinghoffer ENT R2 ENT R2 Rajveer HundalRajveer HundalOrtho R2s Ortho R2s Ted ScrivenTed Scriven

Jihad AboualiJihad AboualiVick KhannaVick Khanna

General Ward Management

• Electrolyte imbalance• Post Op Fever• Chest pain/SOB• ECG• Acute MI

Common General Surgery Consults

• Appendicitis• Acute Cholecystitis• Ascending Cholangitis• Acute Pancreatitis• Small Bowel Obstruction• Ischemic Bowel

Helpful Pointers

• Urology• Orthopaedics• ENT

– Epistaxis– Peritonsillar Abscess

• Plastics

• Useful #s and General Tips

Hypokalemia

• What is the cause?– Diuretics (lasix)– Metabolic / Respiratory Alkalosis– Hyperaldosteronism– Diabetic ketoacidosis (with osmotic diuresis)– Loss through GI tract (diarrhea,vomiting)– Other renal losses - eg. various renal tubular

acidoses

Hypokalemia• ECG (PAC, PVC, flat Ts, U waves, ST depression)• Replenish Potassium:

– IV: • Add 20-40mEq KCl/L to IV solution• 10 mEq in 100cc H2O (x 3) ~> each over 1 hr• hurts, remember KCl scleroses veins

– Oral:• KCl elixir 20 mmol/15ml• K-lyte 25mmol/packet• i-ii Slow K tabs (8mmol)

– Replace Mg if deficient

• Repeat lytes

HyperkalemiaWhat is the causes?• Pseudohyperkalemia:

– Hemolysis• Excessive Intake:

– K+ supplements (oral or IV), Blood transfusions• Decreased Excretion:

– Renal failure (acute or chronic)• Drugs:

– K+ sparing diuretics (spironolactone)– ACE inhibitors– NSAIDS– Trimetoprim / sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX)– Cyclosporine– Renal tubular acidosis

• Redistribution:– Acidosis– Cellular breakdown (Rhabdomyolysis, Hemolysis, Tumor lysis

syndrome, Burns)– Drugs (digoxin, beta blockers, succinylcholine)– Insulin deficiency

Hyperkalemia• Repeat lytes• Stat IV• ECG

– Peaked Ts, ↓ R waves, prolonged PR, no P waves, sudden VT

• Stop any K+ or contributing drugs• Notify your chief resident/SMR• Continuous cardiac monitoring• 1 amp CaCl or Ca gluconate 10%• 1 amp D50W IV then Humulin R 10 units IV• Ventolin• Lasix 20-40mg IV• 1 amp sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3)• kayexalate: 30 g PO/PR q4h• Persistently high, call nephrology for dialysis

Post-Op Fever

• The 5 W’s:

– Wind (pneumonia)– Water (UTI)– Wound– Walk (DVT, PE)– What did we do?

• (surgery, drugs, IV sites, blood products)

Chest Pain &/or SOB• Assess pt:

– ABC’s, vitals– Hx– PE

• Do you need further investigations:– CXR– CK and Trops– ECG

• Remember:– Call for help early if pt unstable or you feel

uncomfortable:• chief resident / SMR / CCRT/ RACE team

ECG• Rate

– 300-150-100-75-60-50• Rhythm

– P before every QRS, QRS after every P– PR interval (AV blocks), QRS interval (BBB)

• Axis– Positive QRS in leads I and aVF

• Intervals– QRS <0.12, PR 0.12-0.20

• Hypertrophy– RVH: R wave progression decreases from V1 to V6– LVH: S in V1 + R in V5 > 35 mm

• Infarct– ST depression, ST elevation– T wave inversions, Q waves

Acute MI• ABC’s

• MONA– Morphine– Oxygen– Nitroglycerin– Asprin (160mg chewed)

• ECG• 2 large bore IVs• CK and Trop q8h x3• CXR• Meds: ASA, anticoagulation, ACEi, B-blocker, CCB, Statin, Diet

• Call Race team, CCRT or SMR, ?PCI

Gen Surg Consults

• Constipation– Does not have to be a referal– ER docs can manage them, but they often are

referred and hard not too accept as they could be a more serious underlying problem

• GI Bleeds– Go to GI, some exceptions

• Abd pain and Crohns, even if it is SBO – Go to GI, some exceptions

Appendicitis• Symptoms:

– anorexia usually first symptom, followed by vague peri-umbilical RLQ abdo pain, then vomiting occurs after the onset of pain; if no anorexia or if vomiting before pain, then question the diagnosis

• Signs: – fever, localized RLQ peritonitis, increased WBC

• Imaging: – Plain film – may see ileus– U/S – (sens 55-95%; spec 85-98%) look for non-compressible

appendix, > 6mm diameter, presence of a fecalith, peri-appendiceal fluid, and thickened appendiceal wall

– CT – (sens 92-97%; spec 85-94%) dilated appendix > 5mm, thickened appendiceal wall, fat-stranding, thickened mesoappendix, and obvious phlegmon

• Management:– IV fluid resuscitation, antibiotic coverage (cipro/flagyl, 2nd gen

cephalopsporin), NPO, analgesia, prepare for OR (consent, book OR), lap/open appendectomy equivalent. If perforated with abscess, treatment is percutaneous drain and interval appendectomy.

Acute Cholecystitis• Symptoms:

– steady RUQ pain (usually > 12 hr duration), bloating, nausea/vomiting, onset after big/fatty meal

• Signs:– Murphy’s sign, distended abdo, fever, increased WBC, may see increased

conjugated bili and alk phos/GGTs – may indicate passed stone• Imaging:

– CXR – exclude RLL pneumonia, may be able to see calcified stone– U/S – (sens 88%; spec 80%) gallstones, distended gallbladder, thickened wall

( > 3mm), pericholecystic fluid, and sonographic Murphys sign– CT – wall thickening, pericholecystic fluid, subserosal edema– HIDA – (sens 97%; spec 90%) failure to see contrast in gallbladder/cystic duct

• Management:– IV fluid rehydration, NPO, antibiotics (cipro/flagyl, amp/gent/ flagyl),

analgesia (toradol/morphine), conservative management or cholecystectomy if presentation within first 48 hrs or if patient deteriorates. May consider percutaneous cholecystostomy tube if patient not good operative candidate.

Ascending Cholangitis• Symptoms:

– RUQ pain, jaundice, fever – Charcot’s triad; plus hypotension and confusion – Reynold’s pentad (indicates shock state); may also have nausea/vomiting

• Signs:– jaundice; Murphys sign; increased WBC; fever; increased

conjugated bilirubin, alk phos/GGT, and transaminases• Imaging:

– U/S – distended gallbladder, dilated bile ducts, choledocolithiasis– CT – dilated biliary system, pancreatic head masses– ERCP/PTC – dilated biliary system, choledocolithiasis, site of biliary

tree obstruction• Management:

– Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, blood cultures, antibiotics, analgesia, NPO, urgent biliary tree decompression (ERCP/PTC drain), may require ICU admission

Acute Pancreatitis• Symptoms:

– severe, steady epigastric/LUQ pain that radiates to the back, nausea/vomiting, pain may be relieved by leaning forward

• Signs:– epigastric tenderness with voluntary/involuntary guarding,

fever, leukocytosis, increased amylase/lipase, LFTs may be increased if gallstone disease

• Imaging– U/S – R/O gallstones– CT – use to differentiate between mild and severe

pancreatitis and to monitor for complications of severe pancreatitis

• Management:– Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, correct electrolytes, foley in,

analgesia, NPO/clear fluid diet, antibiotics in severe pancreatitis, monitor lab markers as per Ranson’s Criteria or APACHE-II score, may require ICU admission

Small Bowel Obstruction

• Symptoms:– colicky abdo pain, nausea, vomiting, and obstipation

• Signs:– abdo distention (esp. if distal obstruction), dehydration,

mild leukocytosis• Imaging:

– Plain films – (sens 70-80%; low spec) dilated small bowel loops (>3cm), air-fluid levels ( > 5), absence of gas in the colon/rectum

– CT – (sens 80-90%; spec 70-90%) transition zone with dilated bowel proximal and collapsed bowel distal, intraluminal contrast not present distal to transition point, and little gas or fluid in the colon

• Management:– IV fluid resuscitation, electrolyte correction, foley catheter

in, NG tube esp. if vomiting, NPO, urgent OR if suspect strangulation/ischemia, otherwise trial of conservative management with serial abdo x-rays

Ischemic Bowel• Symptoms:

– mid-abdominal pain out of proportion to physical findings, nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, blood per rectum

• Signs:– abdo distention, diffuse peritonitis, fever, +ve FOB, increased WBC (often

> 20 000), increased lactate, metabolic acidosis• Imaging:

– Plain films: ileus, thumbprinting, gas in bowel wall or portal venous system– CT (with IV contrast)– (imaging modality of choice) bowel wall edema, gas

in the bowel wall, decreased bowel wall enhancement, occlusion of SMA/LMA, gas in the portal venous system

– Angiography – site of occlusion of mesenteric vessels, can determine whether embolic occlusion, thrombotic occlusion or vasospasm,

• Management:– Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, foley in, analgesia, correction of

electrolyte imbalances, antibiotics (tazocin), +/- CTA of abdo/pelvis, ICU admission, urgent laparotomy for resection of necrotic bowel – if entire small bowel compromised patient is palliative, revascularization may be required intra-op or via anti-thrombolytics depending on etiology. Second look laparotomy in 24-48 hours to check for further necrotic bowel, esp. if during first laparotomy bowel was resected or there were areas of questionable viability.

General Surgery Topics

• Hernias• Breast cancer• Colon Cancer• Soft tissue and Skin Malignancy• GERD and esophageal diseases• Hepatobillary Diseases (very brief

and only if at St. Joes or MUMC)

Urology• Ward :

– Difficult catheters– Suprapubic catheters– Post-op retention

• ER :

– Stones (office apt. vs. consult)– Hematuria– Trauma– Pyelonephritis

Orthopaedics• Site Specialties:

– HGH:• Trauma, Upper Extremity, Foot&Ankle, Spine• Lots of ‘Barton Street Specials’

– MUMC:• Peds, Sports• Lots of ‘entitled’ local residents

– HDGH:• Mainly arthroplasty, Sports (just a bit)• Lots of old people with broken hips

– SJH:• Arthroplasty, Upper extremity, Spine, Foot&Ankle• Lots of ‘crazys’ thanks to psych

Orthopaedics• On Call:

– Weekdays: Day call 8-5, Night call 5-8– Weekends: 8-8 (check for 8am OR’s 1st!!)– Always 2nd call backup by Sr – don’t

hesitate to call them (esp before calling staff)!

– Consults: get a copy of the bradma to give to staff with dictation jobid on it

– Post-call: get a feel for things, use your own judgment

• Similar for Gen Surg

Orthopaedics• On Call:

– HGH: in house, terrible call rooms, very busy with trauma

– HDGH: home call, check with wards before leaving, lots of hip #’s

– MUMC: VERY busy with ER consults, lots of reductions, issues with RNs, conscious sedation in ER

– SJH: Home call– Make SURE you handover all issues/admits in

the a.m.!

Orthopaedics

• Ortho Emergencies:– Open #’s– Compartment Syndrome– Lower Limb Nec Fasc– # Dislocations– Cauda Equina– Septic Joints– NV Compromise– C-Spine Injuries

Orthopaedics

• Common Ortho Meds to Know:– Ancef– Percocet– What else could you possibly need???

Orthopaedics

• Admissions:– Never admit without 1st talking with Sr or

Staff– Many sites have pre-printed order sheets

(ex: HDGH, 6W @ HGH)– Don’t forget NPO, abx oncall, pre-op

consults (medicine, thrombo, anesthesia)– Many medicine consults, but use your head

1st!!! (ex: timing, appropriateness)

Orthopaedics• Department Activities:

– Wednesday a.m. Grand Rounds• 7-7:30am: spine or oncology• 7:30-8:30: Grand rounds

– Each resident assigned a staff for 1 presentation/year

– Staff presents cases and grills chiefs, resident presents ~15min at the end

– Try to find out case details from staff to pass along to residents (esp chiefs) in advance!

– Journal Club:• Monthly, different staff’s house each month.• Schedule out in advance, R3’s coordinate• May be excused from call to attend!

Orthopaedics

• Department Activities:– Quarterly JBJS MCQ

• Subscriptions given out in July/Aug (Candice)• Quarterly quizes found online (jbjs.org?)• Submit to Dr. Bednar on due date

(Wednesdays)• Must complete ¾ yearly

– OITE• Novemberish• Everyone fails BADLY!

Orthopaedics

• Department Activities:– Funding:

• ~$1200 yearly for courses/books – use it or lose it!

– Research:• Present twice in 5 years• Coordinator is Dr. Ghert• Need ideas/proposals by fall of R2

Orthopaedics

• Resources:– JAAOS online – good reviews– Hopenfeld – surgical approaches– AO Foundation for Trauma– Wheeless online– Rockwood – wordy but comprehensive for

#’s– Campbells – good luck! Good insomnia tx– Miller Review – good for review, very brief

Epistaxis

• When assessing a patient in the ER, it is important to determine if the patient is still bleeding, is this an anterior or posterior bleed?

Anterior Bleeds• Very common, occur from vessels which anastomose & create

Kiesselbach’s plexus

1. Ask the patient to gently blow the nose to clear out any clots.2. Use suction if needed to rid yourself of clots/excess blood.3. Use cotton swabs with lidocaine and epinephrine to achieve a

vasoconstrictive effect.4. Take a look with your nasal speculum and see if there are areas of

bleeding.5. Use silver nitrate cautery if there is a bleeding vessel, do NOT!

Cauterize both sides of the septum.6. If bleeding does not stop move on to packing with Vaseline gauze

or murocel packs.7. Remember to give medications for pain (Tylenol 3/Percocet) and

Keflex to prevent toxic shock syndrome from the packing. Have the patient return in ~2 days to remove packs.

8. Sometimes the bleeding still doesn’t stop and you may have a posterior bleed which will require a nasal pack. Posterior bleeds are usually caused by the sphenopalatine artery.

Posterior Bleeds

• Technique - Foley catheter (10-14F 30-mL balloon)

a) Apply ‘muco’ nasal ointment 2% to the catheter.b) Insert the catheter into the nostril.c) Visualize the catheter tip in the back of the throat.d) Inflate the balloon with up to 10 mL of sterile water. (Do

not fully inflate the balloon to 30 mL.)e) Withdraw the balloon gently until it seats posteriorly.f) Pack the anterior nasal cavity with a balloon device,

nasal tampon (eg, Rhino Rocket), or layered ribbon gauze.

g) Apply a padded umbilical clamp across the catheter to prevent alar necrosis and to keep the balloon from dislodging.

Peritonsillar Abscess Needle aspiration: Needle aspiration is

used for symptom relief and is the criterion standard for diagnosis. Lidocaine with epinephrine should be used to anesthetize the area. A 16- to 18-gauge needle with a 10-mL syringe should be used to aspirate from the area that is most fluctuant. A needle guard may be used to prevent accidental carotid artery puncture due to the tip of the needle migrating too far posteriorly. Only 0.5 cm of the needle needs to be exposed. If a needle guard is unavailable, a curved clamp can be used to expose a small portion of the needle before inserting it into the area for aspiration. Since the superior pole is the most common place for the abscess to develop, that is usually the first place aspirated if the entire tonsil looks or feels boggy. Aspiration of the middle one third and then the lower one third should then be attempted if pus is not returned from the superior pole.

Peritonsillar Abscess

• Abscess I&D:– After lidocaine with epinephrine local infiltration, a No.

11 blade scalpel may be used to incise a very large PTA, allowing the purulent drainage to flow freely as the abscess cavity decompresses. Allow the patient to hold the Yankauer catheter tip and to suction the pus, rather than swallow it. Give analgesia medications and Clindamycin 600 mg po TID for ~10 days.

• Tonsillectomy:– may be used for recurrent peritonsillar abscesses

Plastics

• First year of plastic residency is mostly off service:

• Ortho, Medicine, Plastics, ER, Gen Surg (4 mths)

• Plastics rotation is based out of SJH• Journal Club each month (don’t miss this)• Core and Plastics rounds (don’t be late)• Call at SJH

Plastics

• Off service residents going thur plastics:• Gen Surg – usually at General• - trauma, hand fractures• Ortho – usually during second year at SJH• - know hand and breast anatomy

• Ways to prep Toronto Notes & The little red book of plastics secrets

Plastics

• Need to know how to do…– extensor tendon repairs– manage various hand fractures (ie the

different ways of casting)– local hand nerve blocks– drain abscesses appropriately– Expected to be able to conduct procedures

independently in ER (ie sterile technique etc)

Plastics

• Know the plastics emergencies• Know the reasons for referrals• Get meditech at home for looking at Xrays• Know different dressing types and

associated +/- of each• Consults – wide range of cases• Have office phone numbers & addresses on

hand for arranging follow up

Plastics• SJH staff are very particular with punctuality

and dress for clinic• White coats must always be worn if in

greens and outside of the OR • Always be on time for the start of staff

clinics and especially for SJH resident clinics Friday mornings

• Its a preceptor based system at SJH so if you are sick make sure you let your staff or staff office know

Phone #s

Dictation:5000

MUMC• Main #: 905-521-2100• Paging: 76443HGH• Main #: 905-527-0271• Paging: 46311HDGH• Main #: 905-389-4411 • Paging: 42111

SJH Phone #s

• Main #: 905-522-1155• Paging: 33311• Admitting: 33183• Dictation: 32078

– doesn’t give you prompts so use the yellow card the first few times

Paging• HHS

– 87 – pager # * priority

• Online Text– “corpweb”– Far right of screen, link to “PHONEBOOK”– Type in last name of person to be paged

Turning Off Your Pager

• Turning your pager off does not work• Call paging and let them know you are

post call, on vacation, at teaching… etc• Call 905-521-2100

– Ext 87– Enter your pager #– Enter 08

• Do the same thing to turn pager back on

General Tips• Keep up with reading/knowledge, you

won’t operate if you don’t know what you’re talking about

• Be on time• Get to the OR before your staff does• Work hard, don’t be lazy• Enjoy time off when you get it• RNs can be your best friends or your

worst enemy!

General Tips• Teach the Clerks• Take advice from your seniors• Make sure to vent often, and if necessary loudly!• If you think about calling your senior or staff,

CALL them• If you are overwhelmed with a sick pt call your

senior, the CCRT, RACE team, and/or the SMR• If someone is nasty to you, chances are they are

nasty to everyone!• Keep a balanced life

– family, friends, physical activity, hobbies, etc• Take all your vacations!!!• Have Fun!!!