Author Question: An 81-year-old patient with heart failure comes into the emergency room accompanied by his daughter. ... (Read 89 times)

khang

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An 81-year-old patient with heart failure comes into the emergency room accompanied by his daughter. The daughter reports that her father banged his head as he was getting out of the car 4 days ago.
 
  He did not complain of headache pain, so she did not obtain medical advice. She reports that she noticed a mild facial droop, slurring of speech, and gait disturbance in her father today. She reports that her father takes Coumadin, digoxin, and an ACE inhibitor. On physical examination, there is decreased right hand grip 2/5 strength and decreased right quadriceps strength 2/ 5 compared to the left side 5/5. CT scan shows an intracranial bleed. Which of the following is the most probable diagnosis?
  A. Subarachnoid hemorrhage
  B. Epidural hematoma
  C. Subdural hematoma
  D. Intracerebral hemorrhage

Question 2

A female patient presents to the clinic with complaints of a severe, throbbing, unilateral headache. She complains of seeing flashes of light prior to the headache. She complains of sound and light sensitivity as well as nausea.
 
  The clinician should recognize these as symptoms of:
  A. Epilepsy with aura
  B. Cluster headache
  C. Migraine headache
  D. Normal pressure hydrocephalus



Toya9913

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Answer to Question 1

ANS: C
Subdural hematomas can be either acute or chronic. Acute subdural hematomas are usually associated with an acute head injury and can cause a range of symptoms, including headache and loss of consciousness. A chronic subdural hematoma in the elderly population may enlarge significantly before the patient begins to notice head pain. The headache associated with subdural hematoma is generally dull and aching in nature and may be transient. The history often includes a blow to the head, fall, or other injury, which preceded the pain. The physical findings vary depending on the severity of the trauma but may include progressive neurological deterioration, which may advance to include coma. The elderly patient with head trauma and anticoagulants should raise suspicion of subdural hematoma.

Answer to Question 2

ANS: C
Typical migraine pain begins unilaterally but may become generalized and may lateralize to the opposite side and/or radiate to the face or neck. The pain ranges from a dull ache to a throbbing or pulsatile pain. The pain is often severe and/or incapacitating and is often aggravated by movement, light, and noise. Accompanying symptoms may include nausea, vomiting, photophobia, phonophobia, osmophobia, dizziness, chills, and/or ataxia. There may be tenderness to palpation of the temporal arteries. Auras, if experienced, may include blurred vision and scotoma and/or other prodromal symptoms, such as anorexia, irritability, restlessness, or paresthesias lasting from 30 minutes to 3 hours before the onset of migraine pain.



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