history and physical
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History And Physical. Diane Morris. History of Present Illness. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
History And PhysicalDiane Morris
Patient is a 60 year old white female who presented to the Emergency Room with complaints of dizziness and “just not feeling right” for a couple of days. Patient states that she was in the car with her male friend they were at a stop light went to turn her vision went blank she became dizzy, and couldn’t hear. Male friend pulled over to the side of the road so she could get her barings. After patient was able to open up her eyes she thought her blood sugar was low ate some candy that she had in her purse and continued to the family function they were going to checking her blood sugar when she got there and it was in the 120’s. Patient stated that she continued to feel “funny” and called her Doctor on Monday for evaluation. Patient was scheduled to have blood work done and outpatient CT for the next day. Patient was still concerned that she was not feeling well on Monday evening, so she went to the Emergency Room for evaluation. Patient was evaluated for possible stroke versus TIA. In the emergency room patient had a CT scan, CXR, EKG and blood work done. CT scan was negative and showed no acute changes, lab values were all within normal limits and CXR showed nothing abnormal.
History of Present Illness
Surgical History: s/p Cholecystectomy 1984 s/p Appendectomy 1978 s/p Myxoma Left Atrium 1990 s/p Left Ear “something removed” 1993
Past Medical History
Medical History: A-Fib Type 2 Diabetes Hypothyroidism Vertigo Sleep Apnea, uses CPAP Anxiety High Cholesterol
Past Medical History
Patient is divorced lives alone but does have a male friend. Patient does all her own ADL’s, finances and still continues to drive. Has one daughter that lives in the area. Patient denies any use of alcohol, tobacco or illicit drug use. Pt is retired after being a secretary for thirty for years. Pt is a full code.
Social History
Both parents are living. Father has a history of heart disease, cardiac stents, pacemaker, prostate cancer, CABG, and esophagitis and now has to eat pureed food. Mother has a history of HTN, Type One Diabetes, and memory loss with dementia/Alzheimer.
Family History
Codeine: nausea and vomiting Iodine and Seafood: rash and hives Serzone: hallucinations Celexa: hallucinations Albuterol: increased heart rate
Allergies
Synthroid 188mcg daily-hypothyroidism Potassium 20 mEq BID Xanax 0.5mg BID-anxiety Coumadin 2mg daily-blood thinner Amiodarone 200mg daily-A-fib Lipitor 10mg-high cholesterol Vitamin D 2000iu daily Zaroxolyn 5mg daily-water pill used for
treatment in patients with heart or liver disease Amaryl 1mg daily-Type Two Diabetes Lasix 40mg daily-fluid retention
Medications
Glimepride 2mg daily-Type Two Diabetes Metolazone 5mg daily-water pill used to
treat HTN Tylenol prn Nasonex prn
Medications
Constitutional: Alert, oriented, skin warm dry and pink, patient is able to answer all questions appropriately, states she has not been feeling well for the last couple of days.
Eyes: PERRLA, denies any changes in vision, only vision change was when episode happened on the car and vision went blank for a second
ENT: Denies any nasal drainage or any changes with hearing, does not wear hearing aids, using Nasonex PRN
Skin/Breast: Denies any rashes, minimal bruising due to medication, no open wounds at time of admission, breast exam not performed
Review of Systems
Cardiovascular: Denies any SOB, CP or chest pressure, irregular heart rhythm (A-fib) which is normal for patient
Pulmonary: Denies any SOB, cough or sputum production
Endocrine: no changes in appetite, pt is taking Amaryl and Glimperide as prescribed
Gastrointestinal: Denies any problems with bowel
Genitourinary: Denies any increase or pain with urination
Review of Systems
Musculoskeletal: Denies any changes in strength, joint tenderness or swelling, no recent falls or trauma
Neurological: Able to answer all questions appropriately, no headache, short and long term memory intact, c/o dizziness with head movement
Psychology: Denies any changes in mood, patient takes Xanax as needed for anxiety
Heme/Lymph: Bruising from medications, no history of DVT or PE, patient is taking Synthroid as prescribed
Review of Systems
Vitals: Temp 36.6 Pulse 87 RR 16 BP 131/51 O2 Sat 98% RA
Physical Exam
General: Patient does not appear in any distress, sitting up in bed, eating breakfast
Eyes: PERRLA, EOM intact, no redness or drainage, able to open and close eyes with no difficulties
ENT: No nasal drainage, no difficulty with swallowing, smile equal no drooping, denies any problems with hearing at this time, states at time of incident everything went dark and couldn’t hear
Neck: No redness, swelling or any palpable masses, thyroid not enlarged
Physical Exam
Lymph Nodes: No lymphadenopathy Cardiovascular: Irregular rhythm (A-fib), RR, no
carotid bruits, no JVD Lungs: Clear to auscultation, no wheezing or use of
accessory muscles Skin: No rashes, skin is warm dry and pink, minimal
bruising due to medication Breast: deferred Psychiatry: denies feeling anxious, just wants to
know if something is wrong Abdomen: Bowel sounds present in all four
quadrants, no pain or tenderness with palpation
Physical Exam
Genitourinary: Genital exam not performed, does not pertain to patients complaint
Rectal: Rectal exam not performed, does not pertain to patients complaint, patient denies any problems with bowels or any blood in stools
Extremities: No edema, clubbing, cap refill <3 seconds, pulses equal bilaterally 3+
Musculoskeletal: Full ROM all extremities, no edema, no deformities
Neurological: A & O x 3, no slurred speech, no neuro deficits, CN 2-12 intact, moves all extremities with no difficulties
Physical Exam
WBC 6.13 RBC 4.01 Hgb 12.0 Hct 31.6 BUN 23 (result a little high, Lasix can
increase level, Diabetic) Creat 1.2 (normal range but on the high
end) Na 138 K 4.3
Pertinent Diagnostic Tests
Cl 99 BiCarb 24 Caclium 9.0 CPK 72 Trop <0.015 HgA1c 7.3 Chol 135 Tri 62 HDL 70 LDL 53 VLDL 12 TSH 2.5
Pertinent Diagnostic Tests
PT 3-5 25, 3-6 26.1, 3-7 26.1 INR 3-5 2.4, 3-6 2.5, 3-7 2.5 UA was neg, no protein in urine
Pertinent Diagnostic Tests
EKG: A-Fib, patient has a history of A-fib, no acute changes since last EKG that is on file
CXR: no infiltrates, no effusions, no acute changes since last x-ray was obtained
CT: no acute changes MRI: Negative for any acute bleeding or clots, no
tumors Echo with bubble study: normal study, air bubbles
followed the normal pathway of the heart Carotid Doppler: normal blood flow, no evidence
of carotid stenosis
Pertinent Diagnostic Tests
TIA vs. Stroke Vertigo/Dizziness Stress Reaction
Differential Diagnosis
Vertigo/Dizziness: sensation of motion when there is no motion or an exaggerated sense of motion in response to a given bodily movement, hearing loss is the key to diagnosis for vertigo
Peripheral vertigo: onset of sudden, often associated with tinnitus and hearing loss, horizontal nystagmus may be present
Central vertigo: onset is gradual, no associated auditory symptoms
All tests and lab results came back within normal limits. Patient states that she was feeling better but still had dizziness with head movement.
Impression (final diagnosis)
MRI Echo with bubble study Carotid Doppler Vestibular Rehab PT/INR Lipid Panel
Plan
Patient was admitted to the telemetry floor for continuous monitoring. Orthostatic blood pressures were obtained and showed no difference in laying, sitting or standing. More lab work was obtained for testing lipid levels, HgA1C, and PT/INR daily while admitted to the hospital. More extensive study was ordered: MRI, Carotid Doppler study, and Echo with bubble study. Discharge instructions include following up with PCP in a couple of days, Cardiology in one month and Vestibular Rehab the next day. Instructions also include having repeat lab work done to follow PT/INR. Patient also educated about changing positions slowly, to sit at the end of the chair prior to standing up and sitting on edge of bed before standing. Patient states that her daughter will be able to stay with her for a few days to help take her around to different appointments.
Plan
After evaluating the patient I talked with my preceptor explained her story and what I thought her diagnosis was and what testing should be done. My preceptor agreed with my diagnosis and ordered what testing I suggested, plus some that he suggested: echo with bubble study and carotid doppler. The main things that I would do differently were to order the other testing and take a bigger look at the picture to think of everything that could be the cause of her dizziness. I did not know though what the echo with bubble study was, so I need to learn about the different types of testing there is to order.
Reflection of Care