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level: Level 1

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Level 1

QuestionAnswer
abnormal alignment of one or both eyes; cross eye, squint eyestrabismus
condition where the eyelid is rolled inward against the eyeballentropion
condition where eyelid is rolled outward away from eyeball; occurs with agingectropion
a small sebaceous cyst of the eyelid resulting when a gland is blockedchalazion
an infection of the sebaceous gland of the eyelid; "stye"hordeolum
bacterial infection/inflammation of the conjunctiva of the eye; "pink eye"conjunctivitis
border between the cornea and scleralimbus
nearsightedness; eyesight abnormality resulting from the eye's faulty refractive abilitymyopia
involuntary fine oscillating eye movement, best seen around the iris; abnormal in all cases except with extreme lateral gazenystagmus
the upper eyelid should always cover the top portion of the iris, even when looking down, you should not see a white rim of sclera between the lid and the iris; can be seen with hyperthyroidismlid lag
drooping of the upper eyelid caused by muscle paralysis and weakness; myasthenia travis can cause or CN3 damageptosis
the simultaneous inward movement of both eyes toward each other, usually in an effort to maintain single binocular vision when viewing an objectconvergence
appear as opaque black areas against the red reflex; slowly obstructs visioncataract
red patch on the sclera, looks like a spot of paint; caused by increased intraocular pressure via coughing, vomiting, trauma, etc; looks alarming but not serioussubconjunctival hemorrhage
inflammation of the eyelids characterized by redness and swelling and dried crusts; usually on lash line, usually bacterialblepharitis
a slightly yellowish elevated elastic tissue deposit in the conjunctiva that may extend to the cornea but does not cover it; caused by prolonged exposure to sun, wind, dustpinguecula
opaque wing either of two thickened triangular layers of conjunctiva extending from the nasal edge of the eye to the cornea; it arises from irritation of the a deposit; may obstruct visionpterygium
Cataracts; corneal opacity; retinal blastoma3 conditions that obstruct the Red Reflex
gradual onset over years, bilateral, mostly high-frequency loss of hearing, worse in loud environmentspresbycusis
small painless nodule at helix; congenital; not significantDarwin's tubercule
behind lobule in post auricular fold; filled with waxy sebaceous material, painful if infectedsebaceous cyst on ear
small, whitish yellow, hard, contender nodules in or near helix contain greasy, chalk material of uric acid crystals; sign of gouttophi
painful nodules develop on rim of helix as a result of repetitive mechanical pressure or environmental trauma; small, indurated, dull red, poorly defined, very painfulchondrodermatitis nodularis helicus
raised pinkish scar tissue at the site of an injury; results from excessive tissue repairkeloid
ulcerated, crusted nodule with indurated based that fails to heal; bleeds intermittently; needs immediate biopsy; usually from chronic sun exposurecarcinoma on ear
single, stony, hard, rounded nodule that obscures the drum; non-tender; overlying skin appears normal; benign but refer for removalosteoma
small bony hard rounded nodules of hypertrophic bone, covered with normal epithelium; arise near drum but do not obstruct view of drum; usual multiple and bilateral can be with cold water swimmers; need to treatment but may cause accumulation of cerumen which can block ear canalexostosis
exquisitely painful reddened, infected hair folliclefuruncle ear
arises in canal from granulomatous or mucosal tissue; redder than surround skin and bleeds easily; baths in foul purulent discharge; indicates chronic ear disease; benign but refer for excisionear polyp
inflammation of the external ear (including auricle and ear canal); severe swelling to 1/4 of normal ear canal sizeotitis externa
serum or pus; otitis media with effusion (OME) or chronic otitis media; may also see air or fluid or ai bubblesTM: yellow-amber
retraction of drum; vacuum in middle ear from obstructed Eustachian tube, caused by negative pressureTM: prominent landmarks
acute otitis media (AOM)TM: absent or distorted light reflex
blood behind drum, trauma or skull fractureTM: blue or dark red
dark, round or oval areasTM: perforation
scarring; sequalae of infectionsTM: white dense areas
diminished or absent landmarks; thickened drumchronic otitis media
black or white dots on drum or canal; colony of growthfungal ear infection
overgrowth of epidermal tissue in the middle ear or temporal bone may result over the years after marginal TM perforation; pearly white, cheesy appearance; can erode bone and produce hearing loss; early signs include otorrhea, otalgia, unilateral conductive hearing loss, tinnituscholesteatoma ear
hyperpigmentation on sacrum or buttocks but can be anywhere; caused by dermal melanocytesmongolian spot
large round or oval patch of light brown pigmentation present at birth; if 6 or more are present it is diagnostic of neurofibromatosiscafe au lait spot
common rash appears first 3-4 days of life; sometimes called "flea bite rash" consists of tiny punctate red macule and pupules on cheeks, trunk, chest, back, and buttocks; no treatment needederythema toxicum
transient mottling in the trunk and extremities in the response to cooler room temperatures; it forms reticulated red or blue pattern over the skincutis marmorata
normal physiologic variance in about half of all newborns, occurs day 3 or 4 of life; not normal day 1 (hemolytic disease) or after 2 weeks (biliary tract obstruction)physiologic jaundice
Seborrheic Keratosisdark, greasy, and "stuck on" raise area of hyperpigmentation
Actinic (Senile) Keratosisred-tan scaly plaques that increase over the years to become raised and roughened
Acrochordons"skin tags" overgrowths of normal skin that form a stalk and are polyp-like
Sebaceous hyperplasiaraised yellow papules with a central depression
petechiaetiny punctate hemorrahages 1 to 3mm, round and discrete, dark red, purple or brown in color
purpuraconfluent extensive patch of petechiae and ecchymoses >3mm, flat, red to puruple, macular hemorrhage
ecchymosispurplish patch resulting form extravasation of blood into the skin >3mm in diameter
contusionbruise
measles (rubeola)red-purple maculopapular blotchy rash on third or fourth day of illness; +Koplik spots (white grains of salt on buccal mucosa)
German measles (rubella)Paler pink, papular rash, first appears on face then spreads; +lymphadenopathy and absence of Koplik spots
chickenpox (varicella)small, tight vesicles first appear on trunk and spread to face, arms, legs (not palms or soles)
maculesolely a color change, flat and circumcised of <1cm
papulesomething you can feel, caused by a superficial thickening in epidermis <1 cm
patchmacules larger than 1cm
plaquepapules coalesce to form surface elevation greater than 1cm
nodulesolid, elevated, hard or soft, larger than 1cm, may extend deeper into dermis than papule
tumorlarger than a few centimeters, firm or soft, deeper into dermis, may be benign or malignant
whealsuperficial, raised, transient and erythematous; irregular shape from edema
urticaria (hives)wheals coalesce to form extensive reaction, intensely pruritic
vesicleelevated cavity containing free fluid, up to 1 cm
bullalarger than 1 cm fluid filled single chambered
cystencapsulated fluid-filled cavity in dermis or subcutaneous layer, tensely elevating skin
pustuleturbid fluid (pus) in the cavity, circumscribed, elevated
crust (secondary)thickened, dried out exudate left when vesicles/pustules burst or dry up
scale (secondary)compact, desiccated flakes of skin, dry or greasy, silvery or white, from shedding of dead excess keratin cells
fissure (secondary)linear crack with abrupt edges
erosion (secondary)scooped out but shallow depression
ulcer (secondary)deeper depression extending into dermis, irregular shape, may bleed, leaves scar when it heals
excoriation (secondary)self-inflicted abrasion, superficial
scar (secondary)after a skin lesion is repairs, normal tissue is lost and replaced with connective tissue (Collagen)
atrophic scarresulting skin level depressed with loss of tissue
lichenificationprolonged, intense scratching eventually thickens skin and produces tightly packed set of papules
nevus flammeus (port-wine stain)large, flat, macular patch covering face or scalp frequently along distribution of cranial nerve V
strawberry mark (immature hemangioma)raised bright red area of well defined borders about 2-3cml does not blanch, consists of imamture capillaries, usually disappears by age 5-7
cavernous hemangioma (mature)reddish-blue, irregularly shaped, solid, and spongy mass of blood vessels
telangiectasiacaused by vascular dilation; permanently enlarged and dilated blood vessels visible on skin surface
spider or star angiomafiery red star-shaped marking with solid circular center
venous lakeblue-purple dilation of venules and capillaries in a star-shaped, linear or flaring pattern
diaper dermatitisred, moist, maculopapular patch with poorly defined boarders in perineal area along inguinal and gluteal folds
intertrigoscalding red, moist patches with sharply demarcated borders, some loose scales; +candidiasis
impetigomoist, thin-roofed vesicles with thin, erythematous base; rupture to form erosions and thick, honey-colored crusts; highly contagious bacterial infection can easily spread
atopic dermatitis (eczema)chronic inflammatory skin lesion caused by overstimulated immune system, genetic changes in skin, and environmental triggers
primary contact dermatitislocal inflammatory reaction to an irritant in the environment of an allergy
allergic drug reactionerythematous and symmetric rash, usually generalized
tinea corporis"ringworm of body," scales hyperpigmented in whites, depigmented in dark-skinned people
tinea pedis"ringworm of foot" or "athlete's foot," fungal infection, first appears as small vesicles between toes, on sides of feet, and on soles, grows scaly and hard
herpes zoster (shingles)small, grouped vesicles emerge along route of cutaneous sensory nerve, then pustules then crusts
basal cell carcinomausually starts as small, pink or red papule with pearly translucent top overlying a telangiectasia (broken blood vessel) then develops rounded pearly borders with central red ulcer
squamous cell carcinomaerythematous scaly patch with sharp margins, 1 cm or more, develops central ulcer and surrounding erythema, usually on hands or head, areas exposed to UV radiating
malignant melanomausually brown, tan, black, pink-red, purple or mixed pigmentation
paronychiared, swollen, tender inflammation fo the nail folds
beau linetransverse furrow or groove, depression across the nail that extends down to the nail bed
harlequin color changebaby is in a side lying position and lower half of body turns red and upper half blanches with a distinct demarcation line down the midline
angular cheilitiserythema, scaling, shallow and painful fissues at corners of mouth, occur with excessive salivation
herpes simplex virus (HSV)cold sores; clear vesicles with surrounding indurated eythematous base evolving into pustules which rupture and weep and crust; highly contagious and spread by direct contact
candidiasis (oral)thrush in a newborn; white "cheesy" curdlike patches that scratch off, leaving a raw, red surface
leukoplakiachalky white patches that don't scrape off; precancerous
tonsillitisbright red throat with white or yellow exudate on tonsils and pharynx, swollen uvula and enlarged lymph nodes
thyroid nodule/nodesconsider them to be abnormal until proven otherwise
simple goitertypically seen in third world counties where deficient in iodine
Graves Disease (hyperthyroid)goiter, exophthalmos, eyelid retraction, nervousness, fatigue, weight loss, muscle cramps
acute rhinitisturbinates are dark red and swollen; nonallergic; clear, watery discharge, rhinorrhea, later purulent with sneezing, nasal itching, inflamed mucosa
allergic rhinitisturbinates are pale, smooth, and glistening; abnormal immune response from repeated exposure to antigens with rhinorrhea, itching of nose, eyes, lacrimation, nasal congestion, sneezing
polyps (nasal)smooth, pale gray nodules, overgrowths of mucosa; commonly caused by chronic allergic rhinitis; symptoms are absence of smell and a valve that moves when person breathes
perforated septumif hole is present when you shine light in one nare the light goes into the other
optic atrophywhite or gray color of the disc as a result of parrtial or complete death of the nerve
papilledemaincreased intracranial pressure causes venous stasis in the globe; increased ICP causes it; visual acuity not affected; can be caused by hemorrhages
hemorrhages (retinal)pailledema, severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopahty
A-V nickingsign of chronic hypertension
A-V narrowinggeneralized disease in arteriole diameter
CN IOlfactory- test using familiar scents
CN IIOptic- visual acuity and visual fields by controntation
CN IIIOculomotor- cardinal positions of gaze, PERRLA, nystagmus testing
CN IVTrochlear- have pt follow your finger towards their nose
CN VTrigeminal- "does this feel like this" using cotton or fingers on all 3 sections of face
CN VIAbducens- looking left to right, follow finger with eyes
CN VIIFacial- raise eyebrows, frown, smile, close eyes tightly, show teeth, puff cheeks (push on cheeks)
CN VIIIVestibulocochlear- whispered test or rub fingers next to ears
CN IXGlosspharyngeal- say ahh, uvula should rise midline and tonsillar pillars medially
CN XVagus- same tests as CN IX- say ahh, touch posterior pharyngeal with cotton swab, uvula should be midline
CN XISpinal Accessory- shrug shoulders and push face into hand
CN XIIHypoglossal- stick out tongue (no wiggling) "say light tight dynamite"
What are consititutional symptoms?fevers, fatigue, chills, lethargy, weakness, weight changes
Weber Test with Conductive Hearing Losssound lateralizes to poorer ear because that ear is not distracted by background noise
Weber Test with sensorineural losssound lateralizes to better/unaffected ear because the ear with nerve loss cannot perceive sound
Weber Test with Conductive Hearing Losssound lateralizes to poorer ear because that ear is not distracted by background noise
Rinne Test with conductive lossperson hears equally long bone and air conduction AC=BC or AC<BC
Rinne Test with sensoriuneural lossnormal ration of AC>BC but reduced overall, person hears poorly both ways
Bullous Myringitis (Bullous TM)small vesicles containing blood are on eardrum
Rinne Test with sensoriuneural lossnormal ration of AC>BC but reduced overall, person hears poorly both ways