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34 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
How do you test for a goiter
place a tangental light at the chin pointing toward the neck and look to see if it is even
Where does the preauricular lymph node
in front of the ears
What does the preauricular lymph node drain
the frontal sinus and front of the face
Where is the posterior auricular lymph node
behind the ear, above the mastoid process
Where is the occipital lymph node
Base of the skull
Where is the tonsilor lymph node
at the angle of the jaw
Where is the submandibular lymph node
halfway between the angle of the jaw and the tip of the jaw
where is the submental lymph node
in the tip of the jaw
Where the the superficial cervical lymph node
over the sternomastoid muscle
where is the posterior cervical lymph node
at the bottom of the trapezius muscle
where is the Deep cervical lymph node
under the sternomastoid muscle
where is the supraclavicular lymph node
behind the clavical at the connection with the sternomastoid muscle
where can you palmate to feel the lymph nodes
head/neck
arms
axillary
groin
what is a keloid
when a scar goes a way and the keloid is the hard area. the keloid is basically the scare tissue
what are the major muscles of the neck
sternomastoid and trapezius
what is a confluent
when skin lesions run together
What are the different ways that people think they can get sick
Biomedical
naturalistic
Magicoreligious
what is the naturalistic point of view on illness
people may believe that the forces of nature must be kept in natural balance or harmony
what are the 8 Kleinman's questions
1. What do you call the problem
2. What do you think caused the problem
3. Why do you think it started when it did
4. what do you think the sickness does? How does it work?
5. How Severe is the sickness? Will it have a long or a short course?
6. what kind of treatment do you think the patient should receive?
7. What are the chief problems the sickness has caused?
8. What do you fear most about the sickness
What is empathy
I can't imagine what you fell but I'm sorry
how do you calculate someone's smoking history
# of packs per day * yrs. of smoking
what does it mean when someone has pallor
pale
what does it mean when someone has erythema
red
What does it mean when someone has cyanosis
blue
What does it mean when someone has jaundice
yellow
what does it mean when someone has hyperthemia
fever, they are very hot, the person needs to be cooled down
What does it mean when someone has diaphoresis
the person is sweating like buckets
the interview is what kind of data
subjective
what are the 7 parts of a complete health history
1. Biographical data
2. Reason for seeking care
3. Current health or history of current illness
4. Past history
5. Family history
6. Review of systems
7. Functional assessment or ADLs
what are the vital signs
1. pulse
2. heart rate
3. respiration
4. Temperature
5. Pain
What are the 3 layers of the skin
1. Epidermis
2. Dermis
3. Subcutaneous layer
what are the 2 different types of sweat glands
Eccrine-goes directly on the skin
Apocrine-goes on the hair follicle
What are the different functions of skin
1. Protection
2. Prevents penetration
3. Perception
4. Temperature regulation
5. Identification
6. Communication
7. Wound Repair
8. Absorption and excretion
9. Production of vitamin D
What is the ABCDE rule of skin self-examination
A-asymmetry
B-border
C-color
D-diameter
E-elevation and enlargment