Initial Workup - First Things First
- Principle: Start with the simplest, cheapest, and least invasive tests that offer the highest yield. Prioritize ruling out life-threatening conditions.
- Sequence: Follow a logical progression from broad screening to specific confirmation.
- Categories:
- Screening: Detects potential disease (e.g., Pap smear).
- Diagnostic: Confirms or rules out disease (e.g., Biopsy).
- Baseline: Establishes initial values before treatment (e.g., CBC, LFT, RFT).
⭐ Always order baseline investigations before initiating therapies with potential side effects (e.g., chemotherapy, anticoagulants) to monitor for toxicity.
Diagnostic Strategy - The Funnel Approach
Start broad, then narrow down. This cost-effective approach minimizes invasive testing by moving from high-sensitivity to high-specificity tests, ensuring a logical and efficient diagnostic workflow.
- Screening Tests (High Sensitivity):
- Identifies potential candidates; cheap and widely available.
- 📌 SNOUT: Sensitive test, when Negative, rules OUT.
- Confirmatory Tests (High Specificity):
- Confirms the diagnosis in those who screened positive.
- 📌 SPIN: Specific test, when Positive, rules IN.
⭐ Likelihood Ratios (LR): A positive LR >10 provides strong evidence to rule IN a disease. A negative LR <0.1 provides strong evidence to rule it OUT.
Invasiveness & Cost - The Sensible Ladder
- Principle: Always start with the least invasive & most cost-effective tests.
- Ascend the ladder only when a diagnosis isn't clear from the lower rungs.
⭐ In emergencies or with strong "red flag" signs (e.g., acute head trauma), it is appropriate to jump directly to a higher-level test like a CT scan.
Contextual Sequencing - When Rules Bend
Sometimes, the clinical context demands bypassing the standard "low-cost, non-invasive first" sequence. This is crucial in time-sensitive scenarios.
- High Pre-test Probability (PTP): When clinical suspicion is very high, initial screening tests are skipped to avoid delays.
- Example: Classic STEMI presentation → bypass serial troponins → direct to cardiac catheterization.
- Hemodynamic Instability: In critical patients, the most rapid diagnostic test (even if invasive) is chosen.
- Example: Unstable trauma patient → eFAST scan instead of a slower, comprehensive CT scan.
- Combined Diagnostic & Therapeutic Utility: A single, more invasive test is preferred if it can both diagnose and treat.
- Example: Choledocholithiasis → ERCP.
⭐ In a patient with high clinical probability of Pulmonary Embolism (e.g., high Wells score), guidelines recommend proceeding directly to CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA), bypassing the D-dimer test.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Always start with high-sensitivity screening tests, followed by high-specificity confirmatory tests.
- Prioritize non-invasive or minimally invasive procedures over invasive ones to reduce patient risk.
- Sequence investigations from cheaper and simpler to more expensive and complex.
- First, rule out the most probable and most life-threatening diagnoses.
- The pre-test probability of a disease should guide your initial test choice.
- Each test result must meaningfully inform the next diagnostic step.
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