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Question 1
Correct
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A 9-year-old girl complains of perioral blisters and a burning sensation of her face. Some of the blisters are crusted and some are weeping. What is the most likely diagnosis?
Your Answer: Impetigo
Explanation:Impetigo appears more commonly on the face than other exposed areas like the limbs. Its blisters are clustered and may have a fluid discharge.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- The Skin
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Question 2
Correct
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A 43-year-old man with hemochromatosis presents with a painful and swollen right knee. X-ray shows extensive chondrocalcinosis but no fracture. Given the most likely diagnosis, which of the following would be present in the joint fluid aspirate?
Your Answer: Positively birefringent rhomboid-shaped crystals
Explanation:Pseudogout is a paroxysmal joint inflammation due to calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposition (calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate). Arthrocentesis should be performed, especially in acute cases.
Polarized light microscopy: detection of rhomboid-shaped, positively birefringent CPPD crystals.
Synovial fluid findings: 10,000-50,000 WBCs/μL with > 90% neutrophils.
X-ray findings: cartilage calcification of the affected joint (chondrocalcinosis).
Fibrocartilage (meniscus, annulus fibrosus of intervertebral disc) and hyaline cartilage (joint cartilage) may be affected. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Musculoskeletal System
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Question 3
Incorrect
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A 29 year-old new mother presented with a headache that was first noticed as she was picking up her 5 week-old baby. On admission, she was unable to tolerate the lights and complained of feeling sick. Fundoscopy showed bilateral papilledema, and she was complaining that she was unable to see on her left side. CT head showed a small right occipital bleed. Which of the following treatments is most appropriate?
Your Answer: Aneurysm coiling
Correct Answer: Heparin
Explanation:This patient has developed a venous sinus thrombosis peri-partum, resulting in her symptoms. Anticoagulation therapy including Heparin improves outcomes.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Nervous System
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Question 4
Correct
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A 42-year-old male patient who was on enalapril for hypertension presented with generalized body weakness. Investigations revealed hyperkalaemia. Which of the following can be expected in his ECG?
Your Answer: Tall, tented T waves
Explanation:In hyperkalaemia the ECG will show tall, tented T waves as well as small P waves and widened QRS complexes.Â
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Cardiovascular System
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Question 5
Correct
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A 51-year-old man speaks fast and does not take enough breaths before speaking again. He ignores interruptions and does not want to pause in between. What best describes this kind of speech?
Your Answer: Pressure of speech
Explanation:A pressured speech is too fast for the listener to understand and is very difficult to interrupt.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Nervous System
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Question 6
Correct
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Which of the following skin conditions is not associated with diabetes mellitus?
Your Answer: Sweet's syndrome
Explanation:Diabetic dermadromes constitute a group of cutaneous conditions commonly seen in people with diabetes with longstanding disease. Conditions included in this group are:
– Acral dry gangrene
– Carotenosis
– Diabetic dermopathy
– Diabetic bulla
– Diabetic cheiroarthropathy
– Malum perforans
– Necrobiosis lipoidica
– Limited joint mobility
– Scleroderma
– Waxy skin is observed in roughly 50%. Sweet’s syndrome is also known as acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis has a strong association with acute myeloid leukaemia. It is not associated with diabetes mellitus. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- The Skin
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Question 7
Correct
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A 57-year-old diabetic, smoker complains of non-healing ulcers and cramp-like pain in the calves relieved by rest. Examination results are as follows: absent distal pulses, and cold extremities with hair loss around the ankles. What is the most probable diagnosis?
Your Answer: Chronic ischemia of the limbs
Explanation:Chronic Limb Ischaemia presents with calf pain that is relieved by rest.
Intermittent claudication is not a diagnosis but a symptom and is not necessarily associated with diabetes.
Buerger’s disease occurs in younger heavy smokers (usually before age of 50).
DVT causes pain that is consistent, not intermittent as in claudication. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Musculoskeletal System
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Question 8
Correct
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When considering the anatomical location of intracranial meningiomas, which of the following relations is well recognised?
Your Answer: Parasagittal - spastic paraparesis
Explanation:The localisation of intracranial lesions (based on both history and examination) is crucial. Meningiomas are slow in growth, and its subtle effects are very different from the more aggressive, intrinsic lesions. Olfactory groove lesions affect the sense of smell and may produce ipsilateral optic atrophy. Sphenoid ridge lesions will produce exophthalmos. Chiasmal lesions usually produce bitemporal hemianopia.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Nervous System
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Question 9
Incorrect
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A 60-year-old male presented in the OPD with a severe pain in the chest, which radiated to the jaw and his left shoulder. What is your diagnosis?
Your Answer: Angina
Correct Answer: MI
Explanation:Risk of myocardial infarction is high in patients with diabetes mellitus. High levels of sugar in the blood can damage the arteries and lead to an increased risk of atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries. This is why diabetic patients have an increased risk of Myocardial Infarction.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Cardiovascular System
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Question 10
Correct
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Which one of these features is typical of dermatomyositis?
Your Answer: Gottron's papules over knuckles of fingers
Explanation:Dermatomyositis is a long-term inflammatory disorder which affects muscles. Its symptoms are generally a skin rash and worsening muscle weakness in the proximal muscles (for example, the shoulders and thighs) over time. These may occur suddenly or develop over months. Other symptoms may include weight loss, fever, lung inflammation, or light sensitivity. Complications may include calcium deposits in muscles or skin.
The skin rash may manifest as aheliotrope (a purplish color) or lilac, but may also be red. It can occur around the eyes along with swelling, as well as the upper chest or back ( shawl sign) or V-sign above the breasts and may also occur on the face, upper arms, thighs, or hands. Another form the rash takes is called Gottron’s sign which are red or violet, sometimes scaly, slightly raised papules that erupt on any of the finger joints (the metacarpophalangeal joints or the interphalangeal joints) -
This question is part of the following fields:
- The Skin
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Question 11
Correct
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A 45-year-old woman who is being treated for Hodgkin's lymphoma with ABVD chemotherapy is reviewed on the haematology ward.
Six days ago, she was admitted with a fever of 38.9°C and was immediately started on piperacillin + tazobactam (Tazocin). Her blood picture on arrival was as follows:
Haemoglobin: 10.1 g/dL
Platelets: 311 x 10^9/L
White cell count: 0.8 x 10^9/L
Neutrophils: 0.35 x 10^9/L
Lymphocytes: 0.35 x 10^9/L
After 48 hours, she remained febrile and tachycardic. Tazocin was stopped and meropenem in combination with vancomycin was prescribed.
She still remains unwell today with a temperature of 38.4°C, heart rate of 96 bpm, and blood pressure of 102/66 mmHg. Respiratory examination is consistently unremarkable and blood and urine cultures have failed to show any cause for the fever.
Which of the following is the most appropriate next step of management?Your Answer: Add amphotericin B
Explanation:This patient meets the diagnostic criteria for neutropenic sepsis, which is a relatively common complication of cancer therapy – usually chemotherapy occurring 7-14 days after. It is defined as a neutrophil count of <0.5 x 10^9/L in a patient undergoing anticancer treatment and who has either a temperature higher than 38°C or has other features consistent with clinically significant sepsis. Management approach is the same as mentioned in this case. However, if the patient still remains unwell, then an antifungal such as amphotericin B is started after risk-stratifying the patient and carrying out investigations (e.g. HRCT and Aspergillus PCR) to determine the likelihood of systemic fungal infection.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Haematology & Oncology
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Question 12
Correct
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A 35-year-old male is admitted following a collapse while competing in an iron man triathlon. His blood results are as follows:
Na+ 122 mmol/l
K+ 3.4 mmol/l
Urea 3.2 mmol/l
Creatinine 69 umol/l
During assessment he becomes increasingly obtunded and goes on to have multiple tonic clonic seizures. What is the most appropriate treatment from the list below to improve his neurological status?Your Answer: Hypertonic saline
Explanation:Over consumption of fluids, prolonged race duration and inadequate training all can predispose to acute hyponatraemia.
Mild symptoms include a decreased ability to think, headaches, nausea, and an increased risk of falls. Severe symptoms include confusion, seizures, and coma. Normal serum sodium levels are 135 – 145 mEq/liter (135 – 145 mmol/L). Hyponatremia is generally defined as a serum sodium level of less than 135 mEq/L and is considered severe when the level is below 120 mEq/L.
The correct treatment to give is hypertonic saline. Decompressive craniotomy would help alleviate raised intracranial pressure due to cerebral oedema however is not an appropriate first line treatment. Demeclocycline is used for SIADH and mannitol is more likely to be used in the context of traumatic brain injury.
Hyponatremia is corrected slowly, to lessen the risk of the development of central pontine myelinolysis (CPM), a severe neurological disease involving a breakdown of the myelin sheaths covering parts of nerve cells. During treatment of hyponatremia, the serum sodium (salt level in the blood) should not rise by more than 8 mmol/L over 24 hours. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency & Critical Care
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Question 13
Correct
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A 72-year-old man presents with chronic back and right hip pain which has been increasingly affecting him over the past few months. He finds it very difficult to mobilise in the mornings. Clinical examination is unremarkable, apart from a limitation of right hip flexion due to pain. Investigations show: Haemoglobin:    12.1 g/dl (13.5-17.7) White cell count:  8.2 x 109/l (4-11) Platelets:         200 x 109/l (150-400) C reactive protein: 9 nmol/l (<10) ESR:             15 mm/hr (<20) Sodium:          140 mmol/l (135-146) Potassium:       3.9 mmol/l (3.5-5) Creatinine:       92 µmol/l (79-118) ALT:             12 U/l (5-40) Alkaline phos:    724 U/l (39-117) Calcium:         2.55 mmol/l (2.20-2.67) Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Your Answer: Paget's disease
Explanation:Paget’s disease of bone is a chronic disease of the skeleton. In healthy bone, a process called remodeling removes old pieces of bone and replaces them with new, fresh bone. Paget’s disease causes this process to shift out of balance, resulting in new bone that is abnormally shaped, weak, and brittle. Paget’s disease most often affects older people, occurring in approximately 2 to 3% of the population over the age of 55.
Many patients with Paget’s disease have no symptoms at all and are unaware they have the disease until X-rays are taken for some other reason. When bone pain and other symptoms are present, they can be related to the disease itself or to complications that arise from the disease — such as arthritis, bone deformity, and fractures. In patients with Paget’s disease, alkaline phosphatase levels are usually quite elevated — a reflection of the high bone turnover rate.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Endocrine System & Metabolism
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Question 14
Correct
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A 21-year-old woman presents with painful vesicles in her right ear and a fever for some time. What is the most probable diagnosis?
Your Answer: Herpes zoster
Explanation:Herpes zoster oticus is a viral infection of the inner, middle, and external ear. It manifests as severe otalgia with associated cutaneous vesicular eruption, usually of the external canal and pinna. When associated with facial paralysis, the infection is called Ramsay Hunt syndrome.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- The Skin
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Question 15
Correct
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A 60-year-old woman presents to the oncology clinic with a general feeling of being unwell and temperature of 38.1°C. She is a known case of neuroendocrine cancer of the cervix, treated with carboplatin and etoposide. Her last treatment was eight days ago.
Blood cultures are taken and she is started on neutropenic sepsis protocol.
What will gram-staining of the blood cultures most likely show?Your Answer: Gram-positive cocci
Explanation: -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Haematology & Oncology
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Question 16
Incorrect
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A 70-year-old male patient presents to the urology clinic with a one-month history of passing frank haematuria. Flexible cystoscopy shows a mass of the bladder wall and biopsy reveals transitional cell carcinoma.
Out of the following, which industry has he most likely worked in?Your Answer: Refrigerant production before 1974
Correct Answer: Dyestuffs and pigment manufacture
Explanation:Exposure to aniline dyes is a risk factor for transitional cell carcinoma. Aniline dyes are used in dyestuffs and pigment manufacturing.
The other aforementioned options are ruled out because:
1. Feed production may expose to aflatoxin (hepatocellular carcinoma).2. Being a military personnel may expose to mustard gas (lung cancer).
3. Rubber industry may expose to nitrosamines (oesophageal and gastric cancer).
4. Refrigerant production before 1974 may expose to vinyl chloride (hepatic angiosarcoma).
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Haematology & Oncology
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Question 17
Correct
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A 40-year-old man has had multiple blood transfusions for sideroblastic anaemia. However, this time, 15 minutes into the blood transfusion, he complains of severe breathlessness. CXR shows diffuse bilateral pulmonary infiltrates.
What is the most likely diagnosis?Your Answer: Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI)
Explanation:Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is a serious complication of blood transfusion characterised by the acute onset of non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema following transfusion of blood products.
TRALI is a more severe manifestation of the febrile non-haemolytic group of transfusion reactions and usually occur in patients who have had multiple previous transfusions. TRALI is related to leucocyte antibodies which are present in the plasma of the blood donor. Multiparous women are the highest-risk donors for TRALI.
For management, leucocyte-depleted blood is now used for transfusion and this is associated with a reduced risk of this type of transfusion reaction.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Haematology & Oncology
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Question 18
Correct
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A 55-year-old male visited his diabetic clinic with a complaint of inability to walk properly due to weakness of his lower limbs. On examination, dorsiflexion was found to be weak bilaterally and there was diminished sensation on the dorsum of his feet as well as on the lower lateral portions of his legs. Which of the following could have led to this condition?
Your Answer: Compression of the common peroneal nerve
Explanation:The branches of the common peroneal nerve innervate the skin of the dorsum of the foot as well as the muscles which help to carry out dorsiflexion of the foot. Compression of the common peroneal nerve cause foot drop as well as the loss in sensation of the skin on the dorsum of the foot.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Nervous System
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Question 19
Incorrect
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An 8-year-old girl was bought immediately to the emergency department. She is fully conscious but has stridor, is wheezing and has a generalised erythematous rash. She has known allergies. What is the single immediate management?
Your Answer: Give 0.5ml in 1000 adrenaline by IM injection
Correct Answer: Give 0.3ml in 1000 adrenaline by IM injection
Explanation:This is a case of an anaphylactic reaction that requires immediate intervention. IM adrenaline dose for 6-12 year old children is 300 micrograms IM.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency & Critical Care
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Question 20
Correct
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A 25-year-old female presented following an insect bite she complained of itching at the site of bite. What is the most appropriate management can be done at this stage?
Your Answer: Oral antihistamine
Explanation:Itching is due to release of histamine locally as a reaction to insect bites. Oral antihistamines are adequate as she doesn’t have other systemic features of anaphylaxis.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Immune System
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Question 21
Incorrect
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A 25-year-old woman presented to the ED with carbon monoxide poisoning. High-flow oxygen was administered immediately. She had a GCS of 15 and her vitals were stable. Which one of the following is not an indication for hyperbaric oxygen therapy in this scenario?
Your Answer: Loss of consciousness
Correct Answer: A carboxyhaemoglobin concentration of 16%
Explanation: -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency & Critical Care
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Question 22
Correct
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A 45-year-old male presents to the clinic complaining of vomiting and early morning headaches. CT scan of the brain shows multiple ring enhancing lesions. Which of the following is the cause of this finding?
Your Answer: Toxoplasmosis
Explanation:Toxoplasmosis is a disease caused by the obligate intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii. Transmission occurs either through ingestion of cysts found, for example, in raw meat or cat faeces, or from mother to foetus through the placenta.
The clinical presentation depends on the patient’s immune status: In immunocompetent individuals, 90% of cases are harmless and asymptomatic, with the remaining 10% displaying mild mononucleosis-like symptoms. In immunosuppressed patients (e.g., those who are HIV-positive), infection may result in cerebral toxoplasmosis (headache, confusion, focal neurologic deficits) or toxoplasma chorioretinitis (eye pain, reduced vision).
Treatment is indicated for immunosuppressed patients, infected mothers, congenital toxoplasmosis, and immunocompetent patients with more severe symptoms. The treatment of choice is usually a combination of pyrimethamine, sulfadiazine, and leucovorin (folinic acid), with the exception of new infections during pregnancy, which are treated with spiramycin. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Infectious Diseases
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Question 23
Correct
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A 59-year-old man experienced an acute chest pain, which lasted for 45 mins whilst he was driving. The pain was located centrally and was accompanied by cold sweats and difficulty in speaking. History reveals he is a T1DM patient who's been on antihypertensive medication for 13 years. What is the most likely diagnosis?
Your Answer: Myocardial infarction
Explanation:The patient is diabetic and at major risk for an MI. The duration and location of the pain, the cold sweats and the difficulty in speaking suggest an MI. Pericarditis pain worsens upon inspiration or in a supine position. Patients usually lean forward to relieve the pain. (antalgic position). Pneumothorax pain is pleuritic in regards to location. Pulmonary embolism is accompanied by dyspnoea and pleuritic pain. Costochondritis pain is localized at the costochondral junction and it worsens with movements of the chest such as coughing or sneezing.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Cardiovascular System
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Question 24
Correct
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A 42-year-old man with a 6 month history of progressive weakness of both lower limbs, complains of lethargy and of difficulties climbing stairs. He also claims he's experienced muscle loss in his lower limbs. History reveals type 2 diabetes mellitus and heavy alcohol use for the last 4 years. Clinical examination reveals marked loss of fine touch and proprioception. The distribution is in a stocking manner and bilateral. However, no evidence of ataxia is present. What is the most probable diagnosis?
Your Answer: Dry beriberi
Explanation:Hypovitaminosis B1, consistent with dry beriberi is crucially a treatable condition, although sometimes with incomplete recovery, but it is probably under-recognized yet increasingly common given increasing levels of alcohol abuse in the western world. Dry beriberi or ‘acute nutritional polyneuropathy’ is considered to be rare in the western world. Rapid deterioration can occur, typically with weakness, paraesthesia and neuropathic pain. Striking motor nerve involvement can occur, mimicking Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS). In the context of increasing alcohol abuse in the western world, it is possible that alcoholic neuropathy associated with abrupt deterioration due to concomitant nutritional hypovitaminosis B1 may be seen increasingly often.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Nervous System
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Question 25
Incorrect
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A thin 18-year-old girl has bilateral parotid swelling with thickened calluses on the dorsum of her hand. What is the single most likely diagnosis?
Your Answer: Sarcoidosis
Correct Answer: Bulimia nervosa
Explanation:Bulimia nervosa is a condition in which a person is involved in binge eating and then purging. This patient has swollen parotid glands. The glands swell in order to increase saliva production so that the saliva lost in the vomiting is compensated. This patient also has thickened calluses on the back of her hand. This is known as Russell’s sign. This occurs because of putting fingers in the mouth again and again to induce the gag reflex and vomit. The knuckles get inflamed in the process after coming in contact with the teeth multiple times.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Gastrointestinal System
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Question 26
Correct
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Organophosphates, such as Sarin, have been used as chemical-warfare agents by terrorists.
Which of the following statements is true concerning organophosphate poisoning?Your Answer: Atropine is useful in the management of organophosphate poisoning
Explanation:The principal action of organophosphates is the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase’s, therefore leading to the accumulation of acetylcholine at muscarinic receptors (miosis, hypersalivation, sweating, diarrhoea, excessive bronchial secretions), nicotinic receptors (muscle fasciculations and tremor) and in the central nervous system (anxiety, loss of memory, headache, coma).
Removal from the source of the organophosphate, adequate decontamination, supplemental oxygen and atropine are the initial treatment measures. Pralidoxime, an activator of cholinesterase, should be given to all symptomatic patients.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Pharmacology
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Question 27
Correct
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A 30-year-old male patient presented with palpitations that occur randomly at rest. There have however been episodes of fast palpitations and dizziness on exertion. On examination there was a systolic murmur at the apex as well as a prominent apex beat and the chest was clear. Which of the following is LEAST likely to suggest a diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy?
Your Answer: A history of hypertension for 10 years
Explanation:Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is an autosomal dominant condition. Patients present with sudden cardiac death, dyspnoea, syncope and presyncope, angina, palpitations, orthopnoea and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea, Congestive heart failure and dizziness. Physical findings include double or triple apical impulse, prominent a wave in the JVP, an ejection systolic crescendo-decrescendo murmur and a holosystolic murmur at the apex and axilla of mitral regurgitation.
ECG shows ST-T wave abnormalities and LVH, axis deviation (right or left), conduction abnormalities (P-R prolongation, bundle-branch block), sinus bradycardia with ectopic atrial rhythm, atrial enlargement, abnormal and prominent Q wave in the anterior precordial and lateral limb leads.
2D echocardiography shows abnormal systolic anterior leaflet motion of the mitral valve, LVH, left atrial enlargement, small ventricular chamber size, septal hypertrophy with septal-to-free wall ratio greater than 1.4:1, mitral valve prolapse and mitral regurgitation, decreased midaortic flow, partial systolic closure of the aortic valve in midsystole -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Cardiovascular System
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Question 28
Correct
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A study is developed to assess a new anti-hypertensive drug and two groups of patients are randomly chosen. The first group takes an established anti-hypertensive drug for 3 months and the second group receives the new drug, again for 3 months. To assess the efficacy of the new drug, blood pressure is measured before and after taking the drug in both groups of patients. After a period of 1 month off medication, the groups swap medication and blood pressure is measured again, finally the difference in blood pressure after receiving each drug is calculated. Which of the following significance tests would you apply to assess the results of the study?
Your Answer: Student's paired t-test
Explanation:A t test is a type of statistical test that is used to compare the means of two groups. It is one of the most widely used statistical hypothesis tests in pain studies. There are two types of statistical inferences: parametric and nonparametric methods. Parametric methods refer to a statistical technique in which one defines the probability distribution of probability variables and makes inferences about the parameters of the distribution. In cases in which the probability distribution cannot be defined, nonparametric methods are employed. T tests are a type of parametric method; they can be used when the samples satisfy the conditions of normality, equal variance, and independence. In this case the data is parametric, and they belong to the same patients, so a paired t test should be used.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Evidence Based Medicine
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Question 29
Correct
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Which one of the following is a recognised cause of hypokalaemia associated with hypertension:
Your Answer: Liddle's syndrome
Explanation:Liddle’s Syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder that presents with hypertension usually in young patients, that do not respond to anti-hypertensive therapy and is later associated with hypokalaemia, low renin plasma, and low aldosterone levels as well. The other conditions listed do not present with hypertension and associated hypokalaemia.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Renal System
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Question 30
Correct
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A 40-year-old female is suffering from chronic cough. Which of the following additional symptoms will strongly indicate that she has asthma?
Your Answer: Symptoms in response to exercise
Explanation:An attack of asthma is characterized by severe dyspnoea accompanied by wheezing. During an attack, the person experiences breathing difficulty during inspiration and expiration, but might feel completely well between attacks. An attack can be triggered by factors like cold, dry air, tobacco smoke, pollen, pet dander, as well as stressful situations like exercise. Dizziness, voice disturbances, and coryzal illness are not features of asthma.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Respiratory System
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