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Test your basic knowledge |
Clinical Surgery
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Study First
Subjects
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health-sciences
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surgery
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. How do patients with a pharyngeal pouch usually present?
According to site - contents and if it is random or axial. When it comes to site - you consider where it is local or distant(Which is also known as a free flap). You have to also consider the contents which can contain any tissue capable of transfer
Simple mastectomy - Modified radical mastectomy(patey) - Radical mastectomy(Halsted mastectomy) - Extended radical mastectomy
Patients are usually symptom-free for a long period of time followed by dysphagia and hoarseness - associated with regurgitation of undigested foods - and associated weight-loss
Chest x-ray to map the caudal extent of the cystic hygroma - CT/MRI scanning especially if it is complex
2. What is the pathogenesis of a congenital dermoid cyst?
The incompetent vein is at or above the level of the tourniquet
These are due to a defect through the linea alba adjacent to the umbilicus and usually due to obesity stretching the fibres.
It is due to development inclusion of epidermis along lines of fusion of skin dermatomes and are therefore commonly at: The medial and lateral ends of the eyebrows - The midline of the nose - The midline of the neck and trunk - Suspect if you see a c
Unilateral total lobectomy and isthmusectomy
3. What are the surgical options for Raynauds?
Elderly(A for Aged)
Size - Tenderness - Mobility - Consistency
Cervical sympathectomy and amputation of the affected phalanges - Cervical sympathectomy may not be a permanent solution and may only relieve symptoms for 2 years or less - Amputate only if digits are threatened with gangrene
Urinary retention - Bruising - Pain - often very severe and patients should be discharged with adequate analgesia; chronic groin pain persists in 5% of patients - Haematoma - 10% - Ischaemic orchitis - 0.5%(prev. vasectomy predisposing cause and diss
4. What are the treatment options of false aneurysms?
Ultrasound would be the first investigation - Abdo wall masses and extent of disease better seen with CT Scan - IV contrast enhance CT scanning to clarify lower abdominal and pelvic vasculature
Auscultation - Percussion of the thyroid gland and downwards for retrosternal extension
Ultrasound compression of the false aneurysm - Thrombin injection - Surgical repair - Observation and review
Loss of hair on outer-third of eyebrows - Lid retraction - Lid lag - Ophthalmoplegia - Exophthalmos - Chemosis - Proptosis
5. What does a hypertrophic scar look like?
Scar confined to wound margins - It is found across flexor surfaces and skin creases
Elderly(A for Aged)
Mnemonic : PACT - Prominent nodule in a multinodular goitre - Adenoma - Cyst/Carcinoma/Lymphoma - Thyroiditis
Black discolouration of the skin
6. How does follicular carcinoma spread?
CHIASMA - Congestive : portal hypertension - hepatic vein obstruction - Haematological : reticuloses - Infection : Viral - bacterial - protozoal - Amyloid - Storage disorders : Gaucher's disease - Masses : primary/secondary neoplasia - Autoimmune : F
Via the bloodstream(R is equal to red is equal to blood)
State of the skin/subcutanaeous tissues - Sites of fascia defects - Site of incompetence(including the Trendelenburg and Tourniquet Tests)
Black discolouration of the skin
7. How should one treat a sebaceous cyst?
Non-Surgical : May be left alone if small and asymptomatic - Surgical : To prevent recurrence - complete excision of the cyst and its contents is required and this is done through the removal of an elliptical portion of skin containing the punctum.
Via the lymphatic route(Y for yellow = lymph)
Below Knee - Above Knee
The two main differential diagnoses to consider are; Benign - keratoacanthoma - especially if it is sloughing at its centre - Malignant -Squamous cell carcinoma - particularly the nodulo-ulcerative type with a rolled edge
8. Which patients might be considered for carotid endarterectomy?
Symptomatic carotid stenosis of more than 70% - Trials demonstrated that for patients with severe stenosis surgery reduce the relative risk of disabling stroke by 48%
The incompetent vein is below the level of the tourniquest
Hyperkeratosis - Acanthosis - Hyperplasia of variably pigmented basaloid cells
Infection - acute and chronic otitis media - herpes zoster(ramsay hunt syndrome) - Idiopathic - Bell's Palsy - Trauma - surgical -accidental - e.g basal skull fracture - Tumour - paraganglioma - squamous cell carcinoma of external or middle ear - met
9. How should one conclude a thyroid examination after examining the patient from the back?
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Gorlin's syndrome
Auscultation - Percussion of the thyroid gland and downwards for retrosternal extension
Mnemonic : L-SHAPE - Lymph node/Lipoma of the cord - Sapheno-varix/Skin lesions(sebaceous cyst/lipoma -etc) - Hernia - inguinal or femoral - Aneurysmal dilatation of the femoral artery - Psoas abscess or bursa - Ectopic/undescended testes
Commoner in females - Results from polyclonal immunoglobulins against thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor Which bind and stimulate the receptor - these antibodies are found in 90% of patients - Hyperthyroidism with goitre - Thyroid eye disease - Thy
10. Which is the most widely accepted repair for umbilical herniae?
11. What is the classification used in the definition of severe exarcerbation of inflammatory bowel disease?
Mnemonic: SNAiL - Superficial spreading - Nodular melanoma - Acral lentiginous melanoma - Lentigo maligna melanoma
Truelove classification - Gastrointestinal symptoms : passage of bloody stools more than 6 times per day - Systemic signs : tachycardia and pyrexia - Laboratory findings : anaemia and CRP more than 30
Via chorda tympani to anterior two-thirds of the tongue
Third cranial nerve palsy - complete ptosis - Horner's syndrome - partial ptosis - Syphillis
12. What is the Courvoisier's law?
The aneurysm is surgically repaired by either an excision bypass -where the popliteal artery is ligated above and below the diseased segment and a graft interposed - or a simple resection and anastamoses without the use of a graft - Acute ischemia ca
In the presence of jaundice if a mass(the gall bladder) is palpable in the right upper quadrant - the cause is unlikely to be due to gallstones.
malignant change?
The tumour arises from epidermal cells that normally migrate to the skin surface to form the superficial keratinizing squamous layer. Full-thickness epidermal atypia is seen and tumour cells are seen to extend in all directions into the deep dermis a
13. What is the pathogenesis of an acquired dermoid cyst?
Salmonella typhi - Mycotic aneurysms as a result of staphylococcal infection - Syphilitic aneurysms
True cysts with a complete smooth wall are very rare - Most are composite lesions with colloid degeneration - necrosis or haemorrhage in benign or malignant tumours - Only benign if completely abolished by aspiration - Cytology can be false-negative
It is due to forced implantation of skin into subcutaneous tissues following an injury. Normally found in areas of the body prone to injury such as fingers. Suspect if you see an adult in exam.
These are due to a defect through the linea alba adjacent to the umbilicus and usually due to obesity stretching the fibres.
14. What are the surgical options for managing ulcerative colitis?
Those related to anaesthesia
Use of gloves and discontinuing any predisposing drugs e.g beta blockers - Using warm pads in gloves and socks in the winter - Encourage patients to stop smoking
Three arteries - artery to vas deferens -testicular artery -cremasteric artery - Three nerves - ilioinguinal nerve on the front of the cord - nerve to cremaster and autonomic nerves - Three other structures - vas deferens - pampiniform plexus of vein
Subtotal colectomy with ileostomy plus or minus mucous fistula formation in acute severe colitis - Proctocolectomy and permanent ileostomy when the patient chooses or if patient not suitable for a restorative procedure - Restorative proctocolectomy W
15. What are the features of nodular melanoma?
Traumatic - Iatrogenic(following angiography and bypass)
Hypertrophic scars tend to appear soon after injury and usually regress spontaneously - while keloid scars appear months after injury and continue to grow
Second most common type - Occurs most often on the trunk - Polypoid in shape and is raised - Smooth surface - Irregular edge - Frequently ulcerated
They are known as adiposis dolorosa or Dercum's disease.
16. What are the main aetiologies in diffuse enlargement of the thryoid?
Excision of a single lobe of the lung
Stroke is the third leading cause of death in the west and 85% of strokes are thromboembolic - caused by atherosclerosis at the carotid bifurcation or proximal (2-3cm) internal carotid artery.
This removes the possibility of recurrent disease appears to improves the outcome for patietns with significant eye disease and eliminates the need for annual TFT monitoring to assess remnant function. It does - of course - demand thyroxine replaceme
Multinodular goitre - Toxic - Simple colloid goitre - Thyroiditis - Neoplasia
17. What are the features of a direct inguinal hernia?
Is there evidence of a new or old stoma site? Is there evidence of a small incision to one side of the scar(from a drain - this may have been due to a bowel operation) - Are there also scars in the groins? - Are there striae gravidarum
It is the result of a weak posterior wall to the inguinal canal - Arise medial to the inferior epigastric vessels at operation - This weakness causes the abdominal contents to bulge through the wall into the inguinal canal but the hernia is not withi
Non-adherent dressing over ulcer plus wool bandage - Crepe bandage - Blue-line bandage - Adhesive bandage to prevent the other layers from slipping
A pyogenic granuloma is a rapidly growing capillary haemangioma whic usually measures less than 1cm in diameter
18. What is the adequate treatment for minimal lesion(less than 1cm) in thyroid cancer?
Unilateral total lobectomy and isthmusectomy
Increase in size - Ulceration - Change in colour - Irritation - Bleeding - Halo of pigmentation - Satellite nodules - Enlarged local lymph nodes - Evidence of distant spread
Central causes - RHF - hypoalbuminaemia -nephrotic syndrome and hypothyroidism - Peripheral - venous disease such as DVT - Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome - chronic venous insufficiency or post-phlebitic limb - Rare - angio-oedema - arteriovenous malforma
Small red capillary naevus - Develops on the trunk in middle-age - No clinical significance
19. What does four-layer compression bandaging comprise of?
Increased sweating - Palmar erythema - Thyroid acropachy - Onycholysis - Areas of vitiligo - Pulse - Fine Tremor
Familial e.g 'hazel nails' - pachydermoperiostitis - Graves' disease - Unilaterally seen in axillary artery aneurysm and brachial arteriovenous malformation
Non-adherent dressing over ulcer plus wool bandage - Crepe bandage - Blue-line bandage - Adhesive bandage to prevent the other layers from slipping
An abnormal protrusion of abdominal contents through a defect in the linea alba - usually halfway between the xiphoid process and umbilicus
20. What are the complications with regards to the surgical treatment of a ganglion?
Benign skin lesion: Keratoacanthoma - Infected seborrhoeic wart - Solar keratoses - Pyogenic Granuloma - Malignant skin lesion - Basal cell carcinoma - Malingnant melanoma - Congenital: Xeroderma pigmentosum - Acquired - Environmental agents - Pre-ex
Wound complications - Recurrence - Damage to adjacent neurovascular structures
Heamolysis - Hereditary e.g : gilbert's syndrome
Urine cytology -blood tests would be expected to be normal and a renal ultrasound scan which shows a cyst with a smooth outline -sharply defined thin wall and no internal echoes(which imply solid components)
21. What radiological investigations would be helpful in distinguishing the different causes?
History and Clinical Examination - they usually present incidentally but occasionally with a renal mass or haematuria
The two main differential diagnoses to consider are; Benign - keratoacanthoma - especially if it is sloughing at its centre - Malignant -Squamous cell carcinoma - particularly the nodulo-ulcerative type with a rolled edge
Ultrasound would be the first investigation - Abdo wall masses and extent of disease better seen with CT Scan - IV contrast enhance CT scanning to clarify lower abdominal and pelvic vasculature
This is the array of plastic surgeon techniques of increasing complexity that is available to the surgeon and Which is used according to their suitability for individual patients
22. What are the common causes of ascites?
Nerve to stapedius - Nerve to posterior belly of digastric - Five divisions within the parotid gland - temporal - zygomatic - buccal - mandibular and cervical
Investigation and treatment of concurrent abnormalities - Management of hypertension
In the presence of jaundice if a mass(the gall bladder) is palpable in the right upper quadrant - the cause is unlikely to be due to gallstones.
Chronic Liver disease - Right Heart Failure - Intra-abdominal Malignancy - Hypoalbuminaemia
23. What is the normal ABPI?
Stoma diarrhoea - related to water and electrolyte imbalances - hypokalemia being the commonest and most important consequence - Nutritional disorders - Stones - both gall stones and renal stones increase in frequency following an ileostomy - Psychos
Found below the inguinal ligament - Usually not reducible - Commoner in women - but inguinal herniae are still commoner in women than femoral hernias. Risk of strangulation is high - Cough impulse usually absent
Increased sweating - Palmar erythema - Thyroid acropachy - Onycholysis - Areas of vitiligo - Pulse - Fine Tremor
1
24. What are the non-surgical treatment options for hydrocoele?
SRSN -OPD -RAT - Site - Radiation - Severity - Nature - Onset - Periodicity - Duration - Relieved by - Accentuated by - Timing
It is important to exclude malignant tumours such as: Malignant melanoma - Basal cell carcinoma
Lobectomy - Pneumonectomy - Non-anatomical resection are often performed for traumatic injury - Sleeve resection
Non-surgical : Watch and wait - a small hydrocoele may require no treatment other than reassurance - but an underlying malignancy should be excluded. Aspiration - the hydrocoele fluid can be aspirated to relieve symptoms; tends to reaccumulate
25. What would you tell patients about their recovery from inguinal hernia repair?
Early mobilization is important - They should keep the area clean and wash carefully -especially after the clip/sutures have been removed - They are able to bathe immediately - They may need to be off work for 6 weeks if their job involves heavy lift
Acute severe ulcerative colitis - MPS - toxic Megacolon - Perforation - rare in absence of toxic dilatation and raises possibility of Crohn's disease. The mortality is 40% - Severe gastrointestinal bleeding - Chronic ulcerative colitis - 3 Ms - Medic
Non-Surgical : leave alone if asymptomatic and if patient does not want intervention - Surgical : Indicated only if malignant growth suspected; post-excision - local regrowth is common as neurofibromata cannot be surgically detached from underlying n
Barium swallow may be useful - If diagnosis is in doubt - endoscopy with biopsies and brushings should be performed to exclude a carcinoma - Physiological function could be tested using 24-hour oesophageal pH studies to exclude reflux and manometry
26. What kinds of analgesia would be appropriate for this patient?
Inflammation : inflammatory bowel disease -especially Crohn's disease - Diverticular disease - tuberculosis - Malignancy : Often following spontaneous rupture and abscess formation by the tumour - Radiotherapy : Pelvic irradiation can damage the inte
Stool tests: Stool Culture - in new cases of IBD to exclude infection - Blood tests - Full blood count - may show anemia and leukocytosis - Electrolytes may show evidence of dehydration or hypokalemia - Liver function tests - CRP and ESR may be raise
Ischaemic ulcers can be extremely painful and even removing the bandages from around the ulcer can cause pain that lasts for several hours. The analgesic ladder would be appropriate in this situation starting from simple oral agents -stronger oral ag
The incompetent vein is below the level of the tourniquest
27. What do you know about the epidemiology of keloid scars?
May affect people from puberty to 30 years - Females are more affected than males - Black and Hispanic Races are effected the most.
Ulcer is distal to the fistula - Shallow indolent ulcers
Non-surgical : Watch and wait - a small hydrocoele may require no treatment other than reassurance - but an underlying malignancy should be excluded. Aspiration - the hydrocoele fluid can be aspirated to relieve symptoms; tends to reaccumulate
Derived from capillary endothelial cells or from fibrous tissue - It is linked to human herpes virus 8
28. What is the most common type of malignant melanoma?
Increase in size - Ulceration - Change in colour - Irritation - Bleeding - Halo of pigmentation - Satellite nodules - Enlarged local lymph nodes - Evidence of distant spread
Superficial spreading at 70% of malignant melanomas
Renal transplantation is indicated in end stage renal failure - the commonest reasons in the UK are:Diabetes mellitus - Hypertensive renal disease - Glomerulonephritis - Polycystic kidney disease
Injection sclerotherapy with 1% sodium tetradecyl sulphate - this has a high recurrence rate and indicated for postoperative recurrence of veins - below knee varicosities if the long saphenous vein and short saphenous vein are not involved.
29. What are the causes of gangrene?
30. How is a testicular tumour removed?
The pressure cuff is inflated over the upper arm and the systolic pressure measured at the brachial artery using a Doppler probe - The cuff is then placed over the calf. - When the dorsalis pedis pulse has been located with the Doppler - the cuff is
Through an inguinal approach - with early clamping of the testicular artery and vein within the spermatic cord before the testis is mobilized out of the scrotum - this prevents intraoperative seeding of tumour up the testicular vein
Infection - acute and chronic otitis media - herpes zoster(ramsay hunt syndrome) - Idiopathic - Bell's Palsy - Trauma - surgical -accidental - e.g basal skull fracture - Tumour - paraganglioma - squamous cell carcinoma of external or middle ear - met
Mechanical obstruction - Coordination abnormalities
31. What is the arterial supply to the thyroid gland?
Superior thyroid artery - Inferior thyroid artery - Thyroidea ima(in 3% of people)
Aneurysms are most common in: Men - Aged more than 60 years - Smokers - Hypertensive patients - Often strong family history
Debridement of dead tissue which can be performed by the tissue viability nurse since it does not require anaesthesia and reconstruction using a variety of fascial and muscle-containing composite flaps.
Lymphocyte-mediated destruction of the exocrine glands secondary to B-cell hyper-reactivity and associated loss of suppressor T-Cell activity
32. How should you organize information when talking about a disease?
Definition - Incidence - Sex - Geography - Aetiology - Pathogenesis - Macroscopic Pathology - Microscopic Pathology - Prognosis - Symptoms - Signs - Investigations - Treatment
Remove goitrogens from diet(e.g cabbage) - Thyroxine 0.1/0.3 mg per day - If thyrotoxicosis treat as in Graves' disease - Aspiration of cysts with cytology to exclude malignancy - Radioiodine for elderly patients - particularly those unfit for surger
A chemodectoma is a tumour of the paraganglion cells of the carotid body located at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery. They are usually benign(but locally invasive) - but occassionally - they are malignant with potential to metastasize to
Vaginal Hydrocoele - fluid accumulates in the tunica vaginalis - Hydrocoele of the cord - fluid accumulates around the spermatic cord - Congenital Hydrocoele - Infantile Hydrocoele
33. What should be done prior to surgery in the surgical treatment of an incisional hernia?
It is the result of a weak posterior wall to the inguinal canal - Arise medial to the inferior epigastric vessels at operation - This weakness causes the abdominal contents to bulge through the wall into the inguinal canal but the hernia is not withi
Traumatic - Iatrogenic(following angiography and bypass)
The procedure should be performed under sterile condition and if the ascites is not clinically apparent or easy to locate - it should be done by a radiologist under ultrasound guidance to prevent inadvertent injuries to intra-abdominal structures.
Cardiac and respiratory disease should be controlled first - Other risk-factors should be optimized - Preoperative weight loss should be encourage
34. What are the medical options for Raynauds?
This is the array of plastic surgeon techniques of increasing complexity that is available to the surgeon and Which is used according to their suitability for individual patients
It is important to exclude malignant tumours such as: Malignant melanoma - Basal cell carcinoma
Calcium channel blockers e.g nifedipine - Prostacyclin analogues - Alpha blockers - 5-HT antagonists
Non-surgical - if the cyst is not troublesome - it should not be removed - especially in younger men - because there is risk of operative damage and postoperative fibrosis causing subfertility - Surgical - very large or painful cysts can be removed a
35. Obstructive Jaundice - With regards to radiological investigations
Angiolipomas - Hibernomas - Bannayan-Zonana Syndrome
Ultrasound will show: Presence of underlying liver disease - Degree of dilatation of the common bile duct(>8mm is abnormal) - Presence of gall stones - Presence of lymphadenopathy or a pancreatic mass - CT Scan - ERCP - MRCP
Similar to those in the right iliac fossa except for the bowel where a mass in the Left iliac fossa could indicate: Diverticular mass Which is often tender - Carcinoma of the colon - Faecal mass
Calcification of the walls of the vessel preserves the pulses until late in the natural history of disease - and prevent the sphygmomanometer from compressing the vessels. This tends to lead to an abnormally(and reassuringly) high ankle brachial pres
36. What complication can neurofibromata give rise to?
Neo-rectum is created in a pelvic reservoir - Stage 1 : resection of colon and/or rectum - Stage 2 : Construction of an ileal reservoir - Which is anastamosed to the anus - this is usually covered with a diverting loop ileostomy proximal to the pouch
Pressure effects - Deafness with involvement of the 8th cranial nerve - Sarcomatous transformation - Intra-abdominal effects - Skeletal changes
50%
The aim of bypass is to provide a systemic circulation while the heart is stopped and emptied of blood.
37. What is the classic presentation of renal cell carcinoma?
38. What is the pathology of Sjogren's syndrome?
The primary lesion could be treated with excision with 1cm margin and Moh's staged chemosurgery with histological assessment of margins and electrodessication - for lesions of the eyelids -ears and nasolabial folds. Radiotherapy is applied for unrese
Lymphocyte-mediated destruction of the exocrine glands secondary to B-cell hyper-reactivity and associated loss of suppressor T-Cell activity
Defective gene on chromosome 17
Second most common type - Occurs most often on the trunk - Polypoid in shape and is raised - Smooth surface - Irregular edge - Frequently ulcerated
39. What are the features of a femoral hernia?
Sympathetic overstimulation and restrictive myopathy of levator palpebrae superioris
Found below the inguinal ligament - Usually not reducible - Commoner in women - but inguinal herniae are still commoner in women than femoral hernias. Risk of strangulation is high - Cough impulse usually absent
Debulking or bypass procedures - Direct lymphovenous anastamosis - Stripping a piece of intestinal mucosa - exposing the rich submucosal plexus - this can then be used to replace a leg lymph node which then forms new connections with distal lymphatic
Psychological and social implications - Haematoma and wound infection - including gas gangrene - Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolus - Phantom limb pain - due to the sensory cortex 'believing' the limb is still present - Skin necrosis
40. What are the secondary causes of Raynauds?
Mnemonic: BADCaT - Blood disorders e.g polycythemia - Arterial e.g atherosclerosis - thrombangiitis obliterans - Drugs e.g beta blockers - oral contraceptive pill - Connective tissue disorders e.g rheumatoid arthritis - systemic lupus erythematosus -
Venous gangrene is a rare complication of deep vein thrombosis in the iliofemoral segment and presents in three phases: 1 - Phlegmasia alba dolens - white leg 2 - Phlegmasia cerulea dolens - blue leg 3 - Gangrene - occurs as a consequence of acute is
The five Ms - Mechanical - obstructive symptoms - Malignancy - Marred Beauty - cosmetic reasons - Medical treatment failure - thyrotoxicosis - Mediastinal(retrosternal) extension - unable to perform FNAC or monitor change clinically
Reflux Trahere transplantation - Kistner's operation - Obstruction: Palma Operation - Warren Bypass
41. What investigations would be helpful in confirming the diagnosis of coarctation of aorta?
42. What are the non-surgical treatment options for coarctation of aorta?
Lord's plication - Jaboulay's operation
Investigation and treatment of concurrent abnormalities - Management of hypertension
Mayo's 'vest-over-pants' operation is the most widely accepted repair for these herniae
The aim of bypass is to provide a systemic circulation while the heart is stopped and emptied of blood.
43. How would you treat hidradenitis suppurativa?
Well-localized abscesses are treated by incision and drainage under antibiotic cover - Larger lesions are treated by radical excision and full-thickness skin grafting usually harvested from the groins or abdomen
Malignancy - Primary lung tumour - Cardiovascular : Pulmonary embolus/infarct or Dressler's syndrome - Infections such as Pneumonia - Tuberculosis or Subphrenic abscess - Systemic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and SLE
The two main differential diagnoses to consider are; Benign - keratoacanthoma - especially if it is sloughing at its centre - Malignant -Squamous cell carcinoma - particularly the nodulo-ulcerative type with a rolled edge
An arterial bruit may indicate alcoholic hepatits and carcinoma. A venous hum is associated with portal hypertension and if this is secondary to cirrhosis with a patent umbilical vein(or varices in the falciform ligament) - this is known as the Cruve
44. Which patients should have their aneurysms repaired?
Painless - Associated with normal appearance of the surrounding skin - Associated with local sensory loss
Hyperthyroidism - Recurrent - Hypothyroidism - Hypertrophic scarring
The reason for repairing abdominal aortic aneurysm is to avoid complications - The following aneurysms should be repaired: Symptomatic aneurysms(back pain - tenderness over the aneurysm on palpation -distal embolic events - ruptured/leaked aneurysms)
The elective mortality from open AAA repair is 5% but this figure may be lower in specialist centres - If the patient suffers a ruptured aneurysm and reaches the hospital - their operative mortality rises to 50% - but only 50% of patients reach hospi
45. What is the differential diagnosis for a skin lesion?
Halfway along inguinal ligament that is between pubic tubercle and ASIS Which is equal to the location of the deep inguinal ring
Calcium channel blockers e.g nifedipine - Prostacyclin analogues - Alpha blockers - 5-HT antagonists
A caring and competent approach - A good examination technique - An ability to elicit and draw conclusions from physical signs
Benign skin lesion: Keratoacanthoma - Infected seborrhoeic wart - Solar keratoses - Pyogenic Granuloma - Malignant skin lesion - Basal cell carcinoma - Malingnant melanoma - Congenital: Xeroderma pigmentosum - Acquired - Environmental agents - Pre-ex
46. With which conditions would an ascitic transudate be expected?
It arises de novo
Mnemonic : SPRUE - Site of enlargement : from the right costal margin towards the right iliac fossa - Percussion Note : dull - Respiration Movement: it descends - Unable to get above it - Edge : may be smooth or irregular
A seborrhoeic keratosis is a benign overgrowth of the basal cell layer of the epidermis.
Cardiac failure - Tricuspid regurgitation - Constrictive pericarditis
47. What needs to be taken into consideration when marking the stoma site?
Grade 3 compression stockings to apply 40mmHg pressure at the ankles - Intermittent pneumatic compression device - Cellulitis should be treated - Advise patient to elevate their leg as much as possible and stress the importance of cleanliness and car
Chest x-ray to map the caudal extent of the cystic hygroma - CT/MRI scanning especially if it is complex
They can be caused by any disease that leads to a peripheral sensory neuropathy - or by causes of spinal cord disease. Causes of peripheral neuropathy include: Systemic disease - diabetes -vasculitis -hypothyroidism and Vitamin B12 deficiency - Drugs
Patient must be standing up as he or she must be able to see the stoma - The stoma must be within the rectus abdominis muscle - Away from scars or skin creases - Away from bony points or waistline of clothes - At a site that is easily accessible to t
48. How would you treat a congenital dermoid cyst?
Surgical treatment involved complete excision but the full extent of the cyst should be established with suitable radiographic views such as x-ray or CT scan.
Chronic Liver disease - Right Heart Failure - Intra-abdominal Malignancy - Hypoalbuminaemia
Angiolipomas - Hibernomas - Bannayan-Zonana Syndrome
'Watch and wait' or aspiration followed by 3 weeks of immobilzation
49. What should one do in the general examination of the surgical patient?
Wash Hands - Observe from end of bed - Start examination from right-hand side - Look for JACCOL which means jaundice -anaemia -cyanosis -clubbing -oedema and lymphadenopathy - Observation -Palpation -Percussion and Auscultation
Cirrhosis - Malignancy - Lymphatic rupture or damage
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
An aneurysm is an abnormal dilatation of a blood vessel - A true aneurysm involves all layers of the arterial wall - A false aneurysm follows a partial laceration of the vessel wall causing blood to leak out of the vessel into the surrounding tissues
50. What are the two main classifications for thyroid enlargement?
Salmonella typhi - Mycotic aneurysms as a result of staphylococcal infection - Syphilitic aneurysms
Pregnancy - Ascites - Ovarian cysts - Fibroids - Bowel distension
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
Other risk factors and cardiovascular disease elsewhere would be excluded and the neck imaged with a duplex scan or occasionally on intravenous digital subtraction angiogram