Pastest 1
Pastest 1
Pastest 1
Options
A- Poor fibre intake
B-Hypothyroidism
C- Irritable bowel syndrome
D- Hypercalcaemia
F- Iatrogenic
G- Anal fissure
H- Carcinoma of the rectum
I- Carcinoma of the colon
J- Bowel obstruction
K- Depression
L- Bed rest
For each patient below, choose the SINGLE most likely diagnosis from the above list
of options. Each option may be used once, more than once, or not at all
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7. There is a harsh pan-systolic murmur, loudest at the lower left sternal edge
and inaudible at the apex. The apex is not displaced.
8. There is a soft late systolic murmur at the apex, radiating to the axilla.
9. The pulse is slow rising and the apex, which is not displaced, is heaving in
character. There is an ejection systolic murmur heard best at the right
second interspace that does not radiate.
10. The pulse is regular and jerky in character. The cardiac impulse is
hyperdynamic and not displace. There is a mid-systolic murmur, with no
ejection click, loudest at the left sternal edge.
11. There is a constant machinery-like murmur throughout systole and
diastole. The patient is clubbed and cyanosed.
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29. A 25-year-old woman was admitted two-days ago with high fevers, rigors
and left loin pain. She has received six doses of intravenous Cefuroxime.
Urine culture has grown a coliform organism, which is sensitive to
cephalosporins. Her loin pain is getting worse and she continues to spike
very high fevers.
30. A 30-year-old man complains of sharp pain on passing urine. He has also
noticed a thin discharge after micturition. He has number of sexual partners
and does not use condoms.
31. A 65-year-old carpenter complains of urinary frequency and urgency,
fatigue and thirst. He has lost one stone in weight over the past three
months.
32. A 58-year-old tyre-factory worker has noticed a number of episodes of fresh
hematuria. He has no pain on passing urine and otherwise fells well.
33. A 68-year-old woman presents with a short history of passing foul urine with
green brown discoloration. She has also noticed bubbles in her stream of
urine. She was treated for carcinoma of the cervix in the past.
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50. A 40-year-old woman: Hb 9.0-g/dl, MCV 82-fl, WCC 8.1 x 10 9/l, platelets
450 x 109/l, serum ferritin 300 mg/l.
51. A 50-year-old man with long-standing epilepsy: Hb 10.1-g/dl, MCV 115-ft,
WCC 3.8 x 109/l, lymphocytes 2.5, neutrophils 1.3, platelets 243x10 9/l.
52. A 21-year-old woman, booking visit to antenatal clinic: Hb 9.7 g/dl, MCV 71
fl, MCH 27-pg, red cell count 6.7 x 10 12/l, WCC 6.4 x 109/l, platelets 310 x
109/l, HbA2 5%
53. A 75-year-old woman, investigations for fatigue: Hb 9.4 g/dl, MCV 102 fl,
WCC 4.5 x 109/l. Lymphocytes 1.8, neutrophils 1.7, monocytes 1.0,
myeloblasts 0.1, platelets 190 x 109/l.
54. A 60-year-old man, routine blood test: Hb 10.8 g/dl, MCV 87, MCH 30-pg,
WCC 18.4 x 109/l, platelets 190 x 109/l, direct antiglobulin test-positive,
55. A 55-year-old man routine blood test Hb 13.8 g/dl, MCV 106 ft, WCC 6.7 x
109/l, platelets 110 x 104/l, blood film-target cells and hypersegmented
neutrophils.
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61. A 59-year-old woman presents with severe left-sided headache for three
days. She has no past history of note. Her left temporal artery is tender and
pulseless.
62. A 24-year-old woman complains of headaches every four weeks. She
started taking the oral contraceptive pill four months ago and her
headaches are getting worse. The headaches fast up to two days and she
is unable to work during that time.
63. An 18-year-old man presents with a 24-hour history of severe right frontal
headache and nasal congestion. He is tender over his right forehead.
64. Three days ago a 40-year-old builder was hit by a plank while he was at
work. He did not lose consciousness at the time and has no amnesia, he
vomited once. He is now complaining of increasing headache, dizziness
and poor concentration. He says that he is worried about returning to work.
65. A 35-year-old woman complains of increasing headache over a two-month
period. The headache is worse in the morning and on bending forwards.
She has also noticed some difficulty in writing but had put this down to
being distracted by the headache.
66. A 20-year-old man complains of severe generalized headache and
photophobia for tow days. He has a low grade fever, sore throat and mild
neck stiffness. He has no neurological signs or rashes.
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67. A 12-year-old boy has just had a dental extraction and is complaining of a
painful jaw.
68. A 70-year-old woman has bone pain from metastatic breast cancer simple
analgesia has been ineffective.
69. A 35-year-old man is admitted with an acutely painful abdomen. He has
epigastric tenderness. His amylase is elevated.
70. A 65-year-old man has an acutely painful, red and swollen left knee. He has
recently been started on frusemide by his GP.
71. A 50-year-old woman has severe shooting pains in the left side of her face
following an attack of shingles. She has tried a number of painkillers from
the local pharmacy without benefit.
72. A 21-year-old man has dislocated the terminal phalanx of his left little finger
in a fight. There does not appear to be a fracture and you wish to give him
analgesia to allow reduction of the dislocation.
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68. G
Simple analgesia is unlikely to be effective in malignant bone pain. If they are
ineffective, you could proceed up the analgesic ladder to moderately strong
analgesics such as codeine and tramadol. However, bone pain is likely to
require strong analgesia and morphine, or similar, should be given. NSAIDs are
also useful in managing bone pain and may be given in combination with
opiates, reducing the opiate requirement.
69. J
Pain from an acute abdomen requires opiate analgesia. Morphine is
contraindicated if acute pancreatitis is suspected, as it can cause spasm of the
pancreatic duct. Pethidine is of similar analgesic potency but without this
adverse effect.
70. E
Acute gout may be precipitated by loop diuretics. Pain is due to an intense
localized inflammatory process and is best treated with anti-inflammatory
drugs. Ibuprofen in high dose may be effective but diclofenac is more potent
and probably the drug of first choice. If a patient is unable to take NSAIDs then
colchicine or prednisolone are reasonable alternatives.
71. K
Neuropathic pain following herpes zoster, or due to trigeminal neuralgia,
amputation or peripheral neuropathy, is difficult to treat with conventional
analgesics. Co-analgesics may be of greater benefit. Carbamazepine is of
particular use in post herpetic neuralgia. Other anticonvulsants such as
gabapentin, sodium valproate and phenytoin may also be effective. Other
classes of co-analgesics include low-dose tricyclic anti depressants and local
anesthetic like drugs (e.g. mexiletine). Occasionally the pain remains resistant
to treatment and so severe that ganglion ablation is tried.
72. I
Many acute procedural pains may be managed with inhaled nitrous oxide
mixed with oxygen. This may be used for minor orthopaedic procedures, such
as reduction of a finger dislocation. It may also be used in labour and in the
management of painful sickle cell crises. Obviously the patient with the finger
dislocation could also receive a local anesthetic ring block.
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73. A 78-year-old woman was diagnosed with diabetes after she was found to
have a high blood glucose during an admission to hospital with a fall.
Despite following appropriate dietary advice, her HbA1c remains elevated
at 11%. She is visually impaired and finds it impossible to test her blood
glucose at home. She is not obese.
74. A 27-year-old woman was found to have glycosuria at a routine antenatal
clinic visit. A GTT confirmed the diagnosis of gestational diabetes.
75. A 65-year-old man has had type 2 diabetes for four years, for which he was
taking chlorpropamide. He presents with an acute myocardial infarction and
his laboratory blood glucose is 11 mmol/l.
76. A 58-year-old man was diagnosed with diabetes at a routine medical three
mounts ago. His body mass index is 32 despite losing 5 kg by following the
dieticians advice. His home blood glucose readings range from 7 to 11 and
his HbA1c is 10%.
77. A 32-year-old woman has had type 1 diabetes for 15 years. She injects
isophane insulin twice a day and rarely tests her blood glucose at home.
She attends the diabetic clinic for the first time in over a year and informs
you that she is 12 weeks pregnant.
78. A 65-year-old man has had type 2 diabetes for at least five years. He is on
the maximum dose of tolbutamide and metformin. All his home blood
glucose readings are greater than 11 mmol/l and he has symptoms of thirst
and weight loss. His body mass index is 22.
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79. A 20-year-old woman has a very heavy period and passes several clots.
Her last period was 45 days ago. She normally has a regular 30-day cycle
with light periods. She is otherwise well.
80. A 22-year-old woman has been on the oral contraceptive for six months.
She has developed intermenstrual and postcoital bleeding. Speculum
examination shows the visible part of the cervix to be red.
81. A 78-year-old woman has had treatment for a uterine prolapse. She has
recently developed vaginal bleeding which is increasing in severity. She is
frail but otherwise well. Uterine curettage reveals no histological
abnormality.
82. A 34-year-old woman presents with dark vaginal bleeding. Prior to this she
has had colicky left iliac fossa pain for a few days. She has a history of
pelvic inflammatory disease and irregular periods
83. A 55-year-old postmenopausal woman has developed post coital bleeding.
She also describes dyspareunia and urinary stress incontinence.
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80. D
The cervical canal is lined with columnar epithelium (which appears red), and
the visible part of the cervix is lined with squamous epithelium (pink). The oral
contraceptive increases the columnar zone such that it is visible around the
cervical os, which is termed cervical ectropion. Columnar epithelium is more
friable and tends to bleed or produce mucus. It is also more prone to infection.
Another, misleading, name for this condition is cervical erosion. If there is any
doubt about the diagnosis, cervical swab and smear should be performed,
looking for infection and neoplasia.
81. K
Post-menopausal bleeding should be assumed to be due to endometrial
carcinoma until proven otherwise. Other causes include polyps, vaginitis and
foreign bodies. Prolapse on its own rarely causes bleeding unless there is
cervical erosion or infection. Normal uterine curettage excludes a diagnosis of
endometrial carcinoma. The most likely diagnosis is vaginal or cervical erosion
due to a ring pessary that has not been changed.
82. H
Pelvic inflammatory disease increases the risk of ectopic pregnancy due to
blockage of one or both Fallopian tubes. The pain of a non-ruptured ectopic is
due to tubal colic and often precedes the vaginal bleeding as the uterine lining
is shed. Bleeding is typically dark (like prune juice). The history of irregular
periods may have masked the amenorrhoea of pregnancy.
83. E
Atrophic vaginitis and vaginal dryness is common in postmenopausal women
due to oestrogen deficiency. It may present with vaginal bleeding, dyspareunia,
urinary infection, stress incontinence or prolapse. Topical or systemic
oestrogen replacement is often of symptomatic benefit.
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90. A doctor is traveling to Somalia to work for the International Red Cross.
91. A businessman is going to a conference in a Thailand.
92. A 40-year-old man intends to travel to Barbados for a holiday. He had
hepatitis-A, four years ago and received polio vaccine as a child.
93. A 12-year-old girl is traveling to rural France with her parents.
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100. Lisinopril
101. Warfarin
102. Phenytoin
103. Trimethoprim
104. Glibenclamide
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105. A two-year-old girl has been unwell for two months with difficulty
breathing. She has a barking cough with no sputum. The cough is worse at
night and after feeding. Sometimes the bouts of coughing end with
vomiting. There is no wheeze.
106. A three-year-old boy has had a chronic cough for three months. He has
had several chest infections and has required several courses of
antibiotics. On examination he has a monophonic wheeze, heard in the
right lower lung field. He is systemically well.
107. A six-year-old refugee from Chechnya is unwell with a high fever, sore
throat and harsh cough. She has some difficulty swallowing and has a
hoarse voice. There is a thick grey exudate on the tonsils.
108. A five-month-old girl has been tired and irritable for a few days with a
runny nose. She now has a cough and is wheezy. On examination, her
temperature is 37.8OC and she has nasal flaring intercostal recession and
cyanosis.
109. A one month old baby has had a chronic cough since birth and has been
treated for two episodes of pneumonia. He becomes cyanosed when
feeding. He is on the 3rd centile for weight despite abdominal distension.
When coughing, he produces copious amounts of secretions and appears
to blow bubbles.
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110. This child was initially quite well and was on the 50 th centile for weight.
From eight months, however, she failed to thrive and rapidly fell to the 3 rd
centile over the next three months. She has severe diarrhoea, recurrent
episodes of fever and breathing difficulties. On examination, she has
generalised lymphadenopathy and eczema.
111. This child has moderate learning difficulties, cerebral palsy and growth
delay. There was prolonged jaundice after birth. There is also severe
visual impairment dure to choroidoretinitis. The mother was unaware of
any illness during pregnancy.
112. This child was well for the first week after birth before rapidly deteriorating.
He now refuses to feed, is drowsy and has had apnea attacks and fits. On
examination he appears very unwell and shocked with evidence of neck
stiffness.
113. This child developed a blistering rash on his scalp and face 10 days after
birth. The conjunctivae are also red and blistered. He has jaundice and
hepatomegaly.
114. This child developed a purulent discharge of both conjunctivae eight days
after birth. On examination there are no corneal ulcers or retinal changes.
He was otherwise well, initially, but has now developed a cough, fever and
cyanosis.
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120. A 60-year-old woman has recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes and is found
to have a fasting total cholesterol level of 4.9 mmol/l and triglyceride of 4.0
mmol/l. after six months of dietary treatment, her diabetes is well
controlled but her triglyceride is still 3.8 mmol/l.
121. A 70-year-old man has suffered an acute inferior myocardial infarction. He
is found to have a total cholesterol level of 5.0 mmol/l and triglyceride of
2.5 mmol/l on discharge from hospital.
122. A 40-year-old woman has symptomatic primary biliary cirrhosis. Her total
cholesterol is 7.8 mmol/l and triglyceride is 2.1 mmol/l.
123. A 35-year-old man was admitted with acute pancreatitis. After recovering
from this, he was found to have a triglyceride level of 7.4 mmol/l, his
cholesterol is 6.7 mmol/l. he admits to drinking four cans of strong lager
every day.
124. A 52-year-old man has peripheral vascular disease and angina. He has no
secondary causes of dyslipidemia. His total cholesterol is measured as
5.8 mmol/l and his triglyceride level is 3.4 mmol/l.
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125. A couple have had three children and are both sure that they have
completed their family. The wife does not wish to take the oral
contraceptive, as she is concerned about the possible risks, and they are
not keen on using condoms. Both are aged 35.
126. A 25-year-old shift worker wishes to avoid pregnancy for at least the next
six months. She suffers with regular classical migraines. Her partner has
a latex allergy.
127. A 38-year-old married woman has had two children and would like reliable
contraception. She is not absolutely sure that she and her husband will
not want a third child at some stage.
128. A 21-year-old woman had unprotected intercourse at a party two days
ago. She does not wish to become pregnant.
129. A 26-year-old Catholic couple attends their GPs surgery asking about
contraception. The wife suffers with irregular periods that are painful and
heavy.
130. A 28-year-old woman has discovered that her partner has been using
intravenous heroin. She wishes to continue a sexual relationship with him.
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136. A week old baby is permanently sleepy and floppy and rarely feeds or
cries. He has an excessively large tongue and is jaundiced, bradycardic
and hyporeflexic.
137. A three-year-old girl is admitted with painful swellings of her hands and
feet. She had prolonged jaundice after birth but has developed normally.
On examination she has splenomegaly and is jaundiced and pale.
138. A four-year-old boy has had recurrent chest infections since birth and has
now developed intermittent diarrhoea. He is failing to gain weight or height
normally. A recent sputum culture grew staph aureus.
139. A 14-year-old girl has not yet begun to menstruate. She gets teased for
being the shortest girl in her class. On examination she has delayed
breast development with wide spaced nipples. There is a systolic murmur
heard at the left sternal edge.
140. A 12-year-old boy had a protracted attack of gastroenteritis during which
he became jaundiced. Now both the jaundice and gastroenteritis have
settled. His mother says that he became jaundiced as a younger boy
when he had a chest infection.
141. A 20-month-old girl has failed to thrive since soon after birth. She is very
pale and appears breathless she has frontal bossing of the skull and
splenomegaly.
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147. A 64-year-old woman receives continuous peritoneal dialysis for chronic renal
impairment due to hypertensive nephropathy. She is on no medications likely to
cause hyperkalemia but her potassium level is persistently in the range 6.0 6.4
mmol/l. she does not feel unwell and her ECG is normal.
148. A 72-year-old man is admitted with increasing breathlessness and anuria for three
days. His clinical signs are consistent with pulmonary oedema with small pleural
effusions. He has a distended abdomen, which is dull to percussion between the
umbilicus and symphysis pubis. His potassium is 5.9 mmol/l, urea is 62 mmol/l and
his creatinine is 1100 umol/l.
149. A 36-year-old man presents with a one-week history of breathlessness, hemoptysis
and oliguria. He has widespread crackles and wheezes in his chest. He has a
pericardial rub and third heart sound. Potassium is 5.5 mmol/l, urea is 53 mmol/l,
and creatinine is 620 umol/l. His chest X-ray shows pulmonary oedema, bilateral
pleural effusions and diffuse peripheral infiltrates. Urinalysis reveals red cells and
casts. ECG shows widespread ST elevation. You have full renal facilities available in
your hospital.
150. A 42-year-old woman had a hysterectomy three days ago for fibroids. Since the
operation she has been vomiting profusely and is now complaining of thirst and
malaise. Sodium is 148 mmol/l, potassium 3.1 mmol/l, urea is 24 mmol/l and
creatinine is 118 umol/l. Her pre-operative blood tests were normal.
151. A 51-year-old man presents with severe breathlessness. Clinically, he is in severe
pulmonary oedema (confirmed on chest X-ray) and looks moribund. His ECG shows
no acute changes. His potassium is 5.5 mmol/l, urea 48 mmol/l, creatinine 520
umol/l. He has received two intravenous boluses of 100-mg frusemide with no
improvement in his clinical condition. His BP is 80/40-mmHg despite intravenous
dopamine. No urine has been passed since he was catheterized. Your ITU has no
beds and cannot provide hemofiltration. The nearest renal unit with a vacant bed is
over two hours away.
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157. A 74-year-old man is admitted with fever and breathlessness. He recently had
a trans-urethral resection of the prostate but was otherwise well until three
weeks ago. O/E, his temperature is 37.7oC, pulse is 96/min and regular, and
his BP is 180/80-mmHg. He has an early diastolic murmur. His chest is clear.
He has blood on urine dipstick. He has evidence of early clubbing.
158. A 27-year-old woman suffers with recurrent chest infections and has a chronic
productive cough. She remembers having had whooping cough as a child. On
examination, she is not febrile or cyanosed but has marked clubbing. She has
widespread crackles, wheezes and clicks on auscultation of her chest, which
do not clear with coughing.
159. A 68-year-old man presents with a three-month history of cough and weight
loss. On examination, he is cachectic. He has a hyper-expanded, quiet chest
with no abnormal breath sounds heard. He has left sided ptosis and bilateral
clubbing. He recently stopped smoking and gives a history of asbestos
exposure in the 1980s.
160. A 15-year-old boy is under investigation for weight loss. He gives a history of
intermittent abdominal pain and diarrhoea. His stools are often pale and hard
to flush away. On examination, he is thin and pale-skinned with fair hair but
with no specific abnormalities apart from clubbing.
161. A 53-year-old man has clubbing in the left hand only. He has a history of
hypertension and angina, with three vessel coronary disease shown on
angiography two years ago. His hypertension and angina are well controlled
on medication.
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163. E
The borders of Thailand and Cambodia are one of the few places where
Doxycycline is recommended for malaria prophylaxis, even though it is not
licensed for this use. The other places are Papua New Guinea, the Solomon
Islands and Vanuatu. Seek expert advice.
164. C
Previous malaria confers no protection against subsequent infection. It is not
uncommon for people traveling between the UK and a malarial country to
neglect their malarial prophylaxis, despite a history of the illness. Chloroquine
resistance is high in most of Sub Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, so
mefloquine is the prophylactic treatment of choice.
165. F
Mefloquine is highly effective in prophylaxis against chloroquine-resistant
falciparum malaria. Adverse events are common and may be serious or
irreversible, which has led to much publicity. Of particular concern is the risk of
neuropsychiatric effects, including neuropathies, agitation, anxiety, depression,
hallucinations and psychosis, which occur in around 1/1000 people. There is
often reluctance amongst travelers to take the drug, even though the risk to
their health from malaria is probably greater. Mefloquine is contraindicated in
anyone with a history of neuropsychiatric illness, including depression and
convulsions. The risk of malaria in coastal Kenya is quite low and prophylaxis
with chloroquine and proguanil is a reasonable alternative for this traveler.
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167. I
A pulsatile mass in the neck is either due to a carotid artery aneurysm or a carotid body
tumour (chemodectoma). The latter is usually firm but may be soft and pulsatile.
Diagnosis may be made with Doppler ultrasound or digital subtraction angiography,
which is the more discriminatory test. Do not go anywhere near these masses with a
needle.
168. D
A solitary thyroid nodule may e benign or malignant; secreting or non-secreting; solid or
cystic; and may be hot or cold (depending on uptake of radiolabeled iodine). Many
cold nodules are malignant but may be no secreting adenomas. Hot nodules are
usually adenomas but may rarely be follicular carcinomas. On ultrasound. Cystic
nodules are usually benign. Solid one may be malignant. No single radiological
investigation is diagnostic. Tissue diagnosis is required for any nodule unless it is hot
and cystic, or the patient is thyrotoxic. Therefor the most discriminatory test is fine
needle aspiration for cytology. Proceeding straight to excision biopsy will mean that
many benign lesions are removed unnecessarily and that some malignant lesions are
not excised completely.
169. A
Multinodular goitre may occur in association with hyperthyroidism or rarely,
hypothyroidism. It is most commonly associated with a euthyroid state. Ultrasound will
confirm, the typical multinodular architecture to make the diagnosis. Multiple nodules
do not require histological investigation, as they are almost never malignant. Thyroid
function tests will help guide treatment.
170. J
Salivary gland stones most commonly occur in the submandibular gland. The clinical
picture as given is classical. The stone may be palpable if it is in the duct. Confirmation
of the diagnosis is made with plain X-ray or contrast sialography. Stones in the duct
may be expressed bimanually; stones in the gland may require surgical excision.
171. K
Cervical lymphadenopathy may be the first and only clinical sign of an underlying
carcinoma of the pharynx, larynx, head or neck. Any lymph node that cannot be
otherwise explained must be investigated, with this in mind. Direct nasopharyngoscopy
should be performed as a bare minimum in order to identify any mucosal lesions.
Occasionally the diagnosis may only be made after node biopsy reveals metastatic
squamous cell carcinoma but the underlying cause is usually visible, if it is looked for.
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178. Sulfasalazine
179. Chlorpropamide
180. Sildenafil
181. Alendronate
182. Ampicillin
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179. C
Chlorpropamide is rarely used nowadays due to its long duration of action and
greater risk of side effects than other sulfonylureas. It has a greater risk of
hypoglycemia than shorter acting agents. When taken with alcohol it may
cause unpleasant flushing, an affect that does not occur with other
sulfonylureas. Other drugs that often cause flushing with alcohol are
metronidazole and disulfiram and patients should be specifically advised about
this.
180. I
Sildenafil is a vasodilator and often causes flushing and headaches. A rare
occurrence is that patients notice a bluish tinge to their vision. This is due to the
effect of sildenafil, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, on phosphodiesterase in the
retina. Another drug that causes change in color perception is digoxin, which
causes a yellow tinge if the drug is at toxic levels.
181. G
Alendronate is associated with a risk of esophageal spasm, pain ulcers and
strictures. Patients may reduce this risk by following the advice given in the
question. This certainly limits compliance with an otherwise useful drug.
Patients should also be warned to stop the drug and seek medical attention if
they develop esophageal symptoms.
182. H
Ampicillin and other broad-spectrum antibiotics may cause reduced oral
contraceptive efficacy. This is due to the loss of bowel flora that normally
recycle ethynylestradiol from the large bowel. The risk is relatively small but
patients should use barrier methods during the course of antibiotics and for a
week afterwards. Rifampicin, on the other hand, is a potent hepatic enzyme
inducer and almost certainly renders standard dose contraceptives useless.
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184. F
Liver metastases commonly arise from bowel and breast. Palpable, metastases
need not have any effect on liver function, which is only impaired if the
metastases involve over half the liver or if there is biliary obstruction.
185. A
Right heart failure is often forgotten as a cause of ascites and hepatomegaly,
due to congestive changes. In tricuspid regurgitation, the enlarged liver may be
pulsatile. The commonest causes of right heart failure are left heart failure,
hypertension and valvular disease. Rheumatic fever rarely causes tricuspid or
pulmonary valve lesions, so this patient probably has cardiac failure that is
primarily due to aortic or mitral valve disease or hypertension.
186. L
Patients with chronic inflammatory disease may develop secondary
amyloidosis. Causative conditions include rheumatoid arthritis, bronchiectasis
and chronic osteomyelitis. Amyloid accumulates in lymphoreticular and other
tissues, such as the tongue and skin. Purpura may be due to cutaneous
amyloid or hypersplenism induced thrombocytopenia. Cardiac amyloid is rare
in secondary amyloid. Feltys syndrome is the main differential diagnosis in a
patient with hepatosplenomegaly and rheumatoid arthritis.
187. J
Patients with lymphoma may either present with a lump (or lumps) or with
generalised symptoms of particular importance are B symptoms weight loss,
fever, night sweats which affect the choice of treatment and prognosis os the
disease. Involvement of extra-model sites, such as liver, spleen and bone
marrow, puts this patient at stage 4B. This is the highest stage and carries the
worst prognosis. Rx is chemotherapy after histological confirmation. Lymph
node pain on drinking alcohol is said to be a feature of Hodgkins disease.
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188. A 74-year-old woman presents to casualty with acute breathlessness. She has
had three similar admissions in the last few months. She has a past history of
rheumatic fever. On exam, she has an irregular pulse of 110/min. she has a nondisplaced, tapping apex beat with no evidence of left ventricular dysfunction. No
murmurs are audible. There are crepitations heard in both lower lung fields.
189. A 67-year-old man has had an elective total knee replacement. He has no
significant medical history. 36 hours after the operation, he complains of
increasing breathlessness. He is cyanosed and has crackles up to the midzones of both lungs. His ECG is normal and chest X-ray shows pulmonary
oedema with normal cardiac dimensions. His urine output since the operation
has been poor and he has been persistently hypotensive with a BP around
90/60-mmHg.
190. A 21-year-old man has become increasingly breathless over a period of four
days. He has also had severe central chest pain and a fever. He was previously
fit and well. On examination, he looks unwell, cyanosed and dyspneic. Pulse is
120/min regular, BP 90/40-mmHg, JVP is elevated and he has a gallop rhythm
with no murmurs. There are crackles in both lung bases. Chest X-ray shows
pulmonary oedema and a normal heart size. ECG shows extensive ST elevation
in the anterior and inferior leads without Q waves.
191. A 38-year-old woman was admitted to hospital two days ago with abdominal pain
and vomiting. She was tender in the epigastrium and was found to have a very
high serum amylase level. She has been treated with large volumes of
intravenous fluids and has maintained a good urine out put. Nonetheless she
has been persistently hypoxic and is deteriorating rapidly. She now has crackles
throughout both lung fields and a pO 2 of 501-kPa despite receiving 60% O 2 by
mask. Chest X-ray shows massive bilateral pulmonary oedema. Her serum
albumin is 30-mmol/l.
PASTEST BOOK-ONE
189. H
Fluid overload is a common cause of pulmonary oedema in hospital and may
occur in the absence of a previous history of cardiac disease. It is thought that
hypoxia and hypotension, possibly related to anesthetic and analgesic agents,
cause ischaemia of the myocardium and underperfusion of the kidneys. This
leads to oliguria, fluid retention and impaired cardiac output resulting in
pulmonary oedema usually on the second or third day after surgery.
190. B
Pulmonary oedema of cardiac origin is unusual in younger patients with no
previous cardiac history. Myocardial infarction may rarely occur in a young
patient with diabetes, familial hyper cholesterolemia, and congenitally
anomalous coronary arteries or after abuse of cocaine. Myocarditis is a more
common, but still rare, cause of acute cardiac failure in a young person. The
history is usually longer and less acute than a myocardial infarction and there
are usually symptoms of infection such as fever. Signs of right heart failure
often predominate initially. Recognized causes include Coxsackie virus,
diphtheria, HIV, toxoplasma and group-A streptococcus (rheumatic fever).
Treatment is supportive but patients may require inotropic drugs, ventricular
assist devices or even transplantation.
191. J
Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is acute severe pulmonary
oedema due to acute capillary leakage in response to severe illness or trauma.
It is usually part of a more generalised multi organ failure and has a mortality
approaching 50%. The following is needed to make the diagnosis.
An underlying cause for ARDS.
Bilateral pulmonary oedema on chest X-ray.
Persistent hypoxia despite inspired oxygen concentration >40%.
Normal or near normal capillary wedge pressure (ie not cardiac failure)
Normal oncotic pressure (not due to severe hypoalbuminemia.
Poor lung compliance (stiff lungs, possibly due to endothelial damage).
In this patient with acute pancreatitis, pulmonary oedema may be due to fluid
over load but this is unlikely if the urine output is good. hypoalbuminemia is
also a common complication of pancreatitis but levels well below 33-mmol/l are
required before significant oedema develops.
PASTEST BOOK-ONE
***
Options
A. Amitriptyline
B. Phenelzine
C. Fluoxetine
D. Buspirone
E. Lithium carbonate
F. Haloperidol
G. Diazepam
H. Temazepam
I. Zopiclone
J. Risperidone
K. Thioridazine
L. Drug treatment not appropriate
For each patient below, choose the MOST appropriate treatment from the above list of
options. Each option may be used once, more than once, or not at all.
192. A 28-year-old woman lost her job as secretary three months ago. She attends her
GPs surgery complaining of difficulty sleeping. She feels tired all the time, has a
poor appetite and has lost some weight. She says she feels worthless and is
helpless to do anything about it. She says that before she was fired from her job
her boss had been recording her phone calls and the sometimes she heard him
telling her colleagues that she was the worst person he had ever hired. She has
thought about committing suicide and says that her husband would not miss her
if she was died.
193. A 41-year-old man has been brought to casualty after being found in the street
acting in a bizarre fashion. He was exposing his genitals to passers-by and
shouting I am the salvation of the world. In casualty, he is very angry and
agitated and wants to return to the streets to complete his missionary work. He
refuses to have any tests in hospital and says the devil will punish you for
interfering in his work.
194. A 21-year-old single woman gave birth to her first child two days ago. Since the
birth she has been unable to sleep and is reluctant to hold her baby or feed her.
She is very tearful and cries for no reason. She denies any thoughts of harm for
herself or her baby. She had been looking forward to having a baby, even though
she had no regular partner and was not sure of the identity of the father. She
lives with her parents.
195. A 64-year-old woman has a three-year history of increasing confusion, loss of
mobility and tremor. She has recently developed frequent visual hallucinations
and tends to cry out for no reason, particularly at night. There is no evidence of
an acute medical cause for her confusion. On examination she is alert but
disorientated and quite agitated. She has a coarse resting tremor, increased
tone in her limbs and normal reflexes.
PASTEST BOOK-ONE
193. F
This is a riot uncommon scenario of acute psychosis, probably in a patient with
a long history of chronic schizophrenia. It could also be a manic psychosis. The
patient clearly lacks capacity for rational decision making and may be a risk to
himself or others. Formal detention in hospital under the mental health act
1983 section 2 allows for a 28-day period of assessment. He will require
medication with a neuroleptic agent to permit this. Haloperidol, droperidol and
chlorpromazine are all commonly used for initial management of acute
psychosis.
194. L
After childbirth, mothers often experience low mood due o a combination of
psychological and neuro endocrine changes. Baby blues are common, mild
and self limiting. Postnatal depression may be more serious and associated
with biological features. It too is often self-limiting and requires supportive
psychological treatments in the first instance. Anti-depressants may be required
in mire severe prolonged cases. Puerperal psychosis is less common (1/500
live births) and associated with severe mood disturbance, attempts to harm
mother and/baby, and delusions of malformations in a normal baby. This
requires in patient treatment in a specialized mother and baby unit.
195. J
Behavioral problems in a person with dementia should be managed with
caution. It is important to be clear whether you are giving treatment for their
benefit, or for the benefit of carers and other observers of the behaviour. If a
patient is not distressed or at risk of harm, they should not be given medication,
particularly if they are at risk of falls. Visual hallucinations and severe agitation
do warrant medication, provided it is used with care and monitored closely.
Neuroleptic agents are usually effective but may be limited by extra pyramidal
side effects or sedation. Newer anti psychotic drugs, such as risperidone and
olanzapine, cause fewer extra pyramidal effects and would be favored for this
patient. The patient in this question has a combination of dementia, visual
hallucinations, behavioral problems and Parkinsonism, which suggests a
diagnosis of Lewy body dementia.
PASTEST BOOK-ONE
196. A 42-year-old woman has noticed a lump in her left breast. There is a
strong family history of breast cancer, which affected her mother and
sister. There has been no pain in the breast or discharge form the nipple.
On examination, she has generally lumpy breasts, but says that one
particular lump is new and increasing in size.
197. A 23-year-old man has developed a swelling in his scrotum over a threemonth period. It is firm and painless and arises from the left testicle. He
has a history of asthma and orchidopexy.
198. A 68-year-old man presents with a one-year history of urinary frequency
and post micturition dribble. He has a medical history of atrial fibrillation
and takes warfarin. On examination, he has an enlarged prostate with an
irregular surface and loss of the medial sulcus.
199. A 55-year-old woman had a left hemicolectomy two years ago for a
carcinoma of the sigmoid colon. Histology was reported as showing
tumour invasion through the muscularis mucosa. She has recently
developed a change in bowel habit with no weight loss or rectal bleeding.
Abdominal examination is normal.
200. A 72-year-old woman has a six-month history of abdominal swelling and
malaise. On examination, there is generalised abdominal distension with
shifting dullness and the suggestion of a pelvic mass. She is on warfarin
for a pulmonary embolism.
PASTEST BOOK-ONE
197. I
Testicular swellings are usually benign cysts but ultrasound is needed to
exclude solid tumours. Previous non-descent of a testis (treated with
orchidopexy) is a risk factor for testicular malignancy. Diagnosis cannot be
made without histology but testicular malignancy. Diagnosis cannot be made
without histology but testicular ultrasound must be performed first to avoid
unnecessary removal of a normal testis.
198. G
Prostatic symptoms are usually due to benign hypertrophy rather than
malignant disease. PSA is raised in most cases of prostate cancer, but may
also be moderately raised in benign disease or following rectal examination.
Histology is important to make the diagnosis and guide treatment. It is usual to
obtain multiple histology specimens by trans rectal incision biopsy.
199. L
CEA is associated with bowel cancer but with low sensitivity and specificity. If a
patient with primary bowel cancer has an elevated CEA, the CEA may be used
to screen for early recurrence. As we do not know whether the CEA was
previously raised, a normal CEA may be false negative. Colonoscopy is
needed to investigate for recurrence, particularly in light of her new symptoms.
200. I
CA 19-9 is a tumour marker that is raised in ovarian carcinoma. It is non
specific and is often elevated in ascites due to other malignancies or cirrhosis.
The investigation of choice is an abdominal ultrasound to confirm the presence
of ascites and look for evidence of ovarian masses. Cytology of the ascites, if
positive, may be diagnostic but is often unrewarding.
PASTEST BOOK-ONE