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Test your basic knowledge |
Clinical Surgery
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
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health-sciences
,
surgery
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
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. What are the mechanical obstruction causes of dysphagia?
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2. What is the pathogenesis of Raynaud's phenomenon?
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
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
If the vessels are normal in calibre - the clinical features may be caused by relatively overactive alpha receptors in the wall - leading to abnormal smooth muscle contraction or changes in elasticity
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
3. How would you treat a branchial cyst?
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4. What is a skin flap?
Definition - Incidence - Sex - Geography - Aetiology - Pathogenesis - Macroscopic Pathology - Microscopic Pathology - Prognosis - Symptoms - Signs - Investigations - Treatment
A skin flap consists of tissue - or tissues - transferred from one site of the body to another - while maintaining a continuous blood supply through a vascular pedicle.
Prolonged weight-bearing and mechanical shear forces act on areas of soft-tissues overlying bony prominences - leading to both occlusion and tearing of small blood vessels -reduced tissue perfusion and ischaemic necrosis.
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
5. What are the 'exudate' causes of a pleural effusion?
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6. How would you treat a keratoacanthoma?
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
Non-Surgical : Leave alone if asymptomatic(particularly in young patients) - Surgical : Complete excision of lesion with histology(.
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
Rapid growth and pain(on history) - Hyperemic hot skin - Hard consistency - Fixed to skin and underlying muscle - Irregular surface or ill-defined edge - Facial nerve involvement
7. What are the specific early complications of amputations?
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8. How would you treat a cystic hygroma?
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.
Non-surgically via aspiration and injection of sclerosant surgically via excision which may be partial ( to relieve symptoms) or complete as a one-stage procedure.
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
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
9. When should the drains be removed post-surgery?
Cyanotic congenital heart disease - Infective endocarditis - Atrial myxoma (rare)
'Watch and wait' or aspiration followed by 3 weeks of immobilzation
Often surgeons place two drains - one in the axilla and one at the site of surgery within the breast tissue - The drains are usually left for 3 to 5 days or until the drainage volume is less than 50mL in 1 day. - Patients can safely be sent home with
Cardiac and respiratory disease should be controlled first - Other risk-factors should be optimized - Preoperative weight loss should be encourage
10. What is the defective gene in type 1 NF?
Mnemonic : No POMP - No opthalmic features are seen - Progression of simple diffuse goitre to nodular enlargement - Overactivity in parts of an MNG may lead to mild hyperthyroidism(Plummer's syndrome) - Middle-aged women - Positive family history
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
Immediate : Facial nerve transection - Reactionary haemorrhage - Early : Wound infection - Temporary facial weakness -salivary fistula and division of the greater auricular nerve which means loss of sensation to the pinna - Late : Wound dimple - Frey
Defective gene on chromosome 17
11. How would you investigate a patient with cervical lymphadenopathy?
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12. What are the causes of facial nerve palsy?
Popliteal aneurysms represent 80% of all peripheral (non-aortic) aneurysms - The patient may have presented with a lump behind the knee if the aneurysm has grown to such a size that it has expanded beyond the popliteal fossa - 50% present with distal
Intracranial - Intratemporal - Extratemporal
Bronchial carcionoma - Chronic suppurative lung disease(abscess -bronchiectasis -cystic fibrosis -empyema) - Fibrosing alveolitis - Mesothelioma
Tumour - parotid gland malignancy - Trauma - surgical - accidental e.g facial lacerations
13. What are the causes of a diffusely enlarged thyroid gland?
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14. What is secondary lymphoedema?
Rare - Worldwide distribution - Equally common in males and females - Rarely present at birth - 40% present in the first decade and can even present late in the ninth decade
It can be classified according to cause: Malignancy - Infections - e.g filiaris - tuberculosis - Post Surgery or Radiotherapy - axillary dissection in breast surgery and inguinal irradiation
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
Myelofibrosis - Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia - Malaria - Tropical splenomegaly - Kala-azar(visceral leishmaniasis)
15. What are the surgical options available for deep venous occlusion/reflux
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16. What are the features of infantile polycystic kidney disease?
VINTA MEDIC - Vascular - Iatrogenic - Neoplastic - Traumatic - Autoimmune - Metabolic - Endocrine - Degenerative - Inflammatory/Infective - Congenital
Congenital - Multiple arteriovenous fistulae - Traumatic
Autosomal recessive - 1 in 5000 to 40000 - Chromosome 6 is affected - It presents perinatally
Blood Tests:Haematological - FBC - ESR - Biochemical : TFT - ACE Levels(raised in sarcoidosis) - Serological : 'monospot' or Paul-Bunnell test looking for atypical mononuclear cells in infectious mononucleosis - Radiological : Ultrasound - CT Scan an
17. With which conditions would an ascitic transudate be expected?
Immobility and prolonged bed-rest are the most important factors - particulary secondary to conditions such as: Cardiopulmonary disease - Trauma - Neurological disease such as paraplegia - Bone and joint disease - Prolonged operative procedures - And
Classic Kaposi's sarcoma - AIDS-associated Kaposi's sarcoma - Endemic(central African) variety - Transplantation-associated Kaposi's sarcoma
Cardiac failure - Tricuspid regurgitation - Constrictive pericarditis
Resection of a lobe including its bronchial origin with re-anastamosis of the proximal and distal bronchus
18. How do paraumbilical herniae occur?
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
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
Paraumbilical herniae occur around the umbilical scar. They are uncommon before the age of 40 years and can become large. Peristalsis can be observed through the skin when the defect is large. The neck of the sac is often tight and held with a fibrou
Complete excision to include the neck of the ganglion at its site of origin
19. Why do these neuropathic ulcers form?
The insensitive - mechanically abnormal - dry foot is at risk from unperceived external trauma e.g from shoes and from repetitive painless injury e.g foreign body in shoe. Progressive skin loss and ulceration may occur.
Liver Cirrhosis - Inflammatory Bowel disease - Malabsorption - Gastrointestinal lymphoma
The tourniquet test is designed to reveal the presence and site of incompetent veins - especially at the sites of connection between the superficial and deep venous systems.
Non-surgical : regression is uncommon - except those arising in pregnancy and so they are best treated surgically - though occassionally a silver nitrate stick can be attempted - Surgical : curettage with diathermy of the base or complete excision b
20. What are the two main classifications for thyroid enlargement?
The principles of surgery are that the sac is excised completely or inverted - and the defect in the linea alba repaired - The fat contained within the hernia can be excised or reduced - The site of the defect should be marked with the patient lying
Psychosocial and physical preparation - Explanation of indications and complication - Involving a Clinical Nurse Specialist in Stoma Care preoperatively who would normally mark the site - Marking of the stoma site
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
Hyperkeratoses(thickening of the keratin layer) - Focal parakeratosis - Irregular acanthosis - Basal layer atypia only
21. What are the coordination abnormalities causes of dysphagia?
Undermined edge - Shallow ulcer
Motility disorders - diffuse oesophageal spasm and achalasia - Neurological disease such as myaesthenia gravis - bulbar palsy including MND and cerebrovascular accident with involvement of the 9th -10th and 12th cranial nerves.
Irregular or nodular surface - Poorly defined edge with areas which are more like normal breast tissue in between more abnormal areas - Consistency : breast tumours are usually firm - rather than hard - Tenderness : usually non-tender - Fluctuation :
Tumours raised above the skin : excision with 0.5cm margin(maximum) - Tumours not raised above the skin - Wider margin of excision - particularly if at inner canthus of eye -nasolabial fold and ear. A frozen section may be necessary to ensure adequat
22. What are the specific complications of inguinal hernia repair?
These are due to a defect through the linea alba adjacent to the umbilicus and usually due to obesity stretching the fibres.
Healing by secondary intention - Skin graft - Local flap - Distant flap - Composite flap - Island flaps vs pedicled flaps - Free tissue transfer - Composite neurovascular free tissue transfer
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
Epigastric pain - which may increase after meals - May be acutely painful after physical exercise - Nausea and early satiety - Reflux and non-ulcer dyspepsia
23. What is a secondary hydrocoele?
An absolute pressure of less than 50mmHg
Reflux Trahere transplantation - Kistner's operation - Obstruction: Palma Operation - Warren Bypass
Dilatation of normal capillaries - Can be secondary to skin irradiation - Can be part of hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia
The vaginal type of hydrocoele may be secondary to a number of local pathologies: Testicular tumours - Torsion - Orchitis - Trauma - Following inguinal hernia repair
24. How do you treat these scars?
Gumma of tertiary syphillis has a typical punched-out ulcer - over the anterior surface of the lower leg and has a yellow coloured 'wash leather' base. - Scalloped border
Non-Surgical - mechanical pressure therapy(day and night for up to 1 year) and topical silicone gel sheets - Surgical : Revision of scar with closure by direct suturing - local Z-plasty or skin grafting to avoid excessive tension - Intralesional ster
Lead shields to protect the eyes and gonads - Dose-fractionation - Prior chemotherapy - Regional hypothermia - Radiolabelled antibodies
As the perfusion of the leg begins to decrease in a patient with peripheral vascular disease; the ratio begins to fall.
25. What are the features of superficial spreading melanoma?
(H)infection - Hypoparathyroidism which leads to hypocalcemia
Occurs most often on the legs of women and the backs of men - Red -white and blue in colour - Irregular edge - Usually palpable but thin
Barrett's oesophagus - Stricture especially chemical - Achalasia - Plummer-Vinson Syndrome
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
26. What is the shorter version of the surgical sieve?
It will show you if it is malignant or inflammatory
The patient should have a full workup for atherosclerosis - General investigations : Urinalysis for proteinuria - marker of atherosclerotic renal disease - Blood tests: FBC for anemia - which might precipitate symptoms - Renal function for possible u
Coarctation may be associated with:Bicuspid aortic valcves - Aortic stenosis - Aneurysms in the circle of Wilis
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
27. What are single lumps in the breast more likely to be ?
Autoimmune condition - Intermittent or constant swelling of one or all of the salivary glands
Hyperkeratosis - Acanthosis - Hyperplasia of variably pigmented basaloid cells
Fibroadenomas - Breast cysts - Fat necrosis - Breast cancer
A blind-ending track -typically lined by epithelial or granulation tissue - which opens onto an epithelial surface
28. What level does the serum bilirubin need to rise to before jaundice can be detected on clinical examination?
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.
Weight loss - Change in bowel habit - Loss of appetite - Back pain
Benign skin lesions: Moles -freckles -lentigo -pigmented seborrhoeic keratoses - dermatofibromas and thrombosed haemangiomas - When it comes to malignant skin lesions - pigmented basal cell carcinomas
Normal bilirubin is less than 17 mmol/L and it usually has to reach at least three times this before the sclera is discoloured(i.e >50mmol/L). Very high levels of bilirubin are usually associated with hepatic jaundice
29. What do you know about thyroid malignancy?
Idiopathic(50%) - Myeloproliferative disorders - Autoimmune hepatitis - More common in males than females
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
The incidence is low approximately 4 per 100 -000 per year - The histological varieties are papillary -follicular -medullary - anaplastic and lymphoma(malignant) with papillary being the most common at 70% of the cases.(Mnemonic : MAL-FP)
A blepharoplasty can be performed where excess skin and fat are removed.
30. What does minimally invasive surgery involve in the surgical treatment of a pharyngeal pouch?
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31. What are the features of adult polycystic kidney disease?
Autosomal dominant - 1 in 500 - Chromosomes 4 and 16 are affected - Age of Presentation is between 30s and 50s
It is often advised as the problem usually gets worse with age and there is risk of infertility.
A furuncle results from infection of hair follicles with Staphylococcus aureus
malignant change?
32. What should be done prior to surgery in the surgical treatment of an incisional hernia?
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
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)
Cardiac and respiratory disease should be controlled first - Other risk-factors should be optimized - Preoperative weight loss should be encourage
Ductal carcinoma which account for approximately 70% of cancers - Lobular carcinoma which accounts for 20% of cancers - Others such as mucinous -tubular -medullary which accounts for approximately 10% of cancers
33. Describe the vascular supply of the transplanted kidney?
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34. What are multiple -painful lipomas known as?
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35. What are the four commonest types of malignant melanoma?
Mnemonic: SNAiL - Superficial spreading - Nodular melanoma - Acral lentiginous melanoma - Lentigo maligna melanoma
Idiopathic(50%) - Myeloproliferative disorders - Autoimmune hepatitis - More common in males than females
Often surgeons place two drains - one in the axilla and one at the site of surgery within the breast tissue - The drains are usually left for 3 to 5 days or until the drainage volume is less than 50mL in 1 day. - Patients can safely be sent home with
Calcium channel blockers e.g nifedipine - Prostacyclin analogues - Alpha blockers - 5-HT antagonists
36. What would you tell to a lady with varicose veins about the proposed surgery?
Multiple telangiectasia around the mouth and on the tongue and lips
Below Knee - Above Knee
A blind-ending track -typically lined by epithelial or granulation tissue - which opens onto an epithelial surface
Procedure usually performed as a day case - Need to wear tight-fitting stockings for 6 weeks preoperatively - No driving for 1 week - Does not alter the skin changes - including skin flares - May not improve symptoms such as aching - Risk of recurren
37. How can the extent of the obstruction be determined?
Fine-needle aspiration cytology for diagnosis - MRI to exclude deep-lobe involvement
An intravenous injection of contrast into the veins in the arm can illustrate the degree of obstruction - A CT Scan of the thorax may demonstrate the cause of the obstruction and the length of the SVC affected
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
Familial e.g 'hazel nails' - pachydermoperiostitis - Graves' disease - Unilaterally seen in axillary artery aneurysm and brachial arteriovenous malformation
38. What is the anatomical classifcations of hydrocoeles?
Below Knee - Above Knee
An absolute pressure of less than 50mmHg
End-to-end anastamosis - patching and the use of the left subclavian artery as a flap are all surgical options
Vaginal Hydrocoele - fluid accumulates in the tunica vaginalis - Hydrocoele of the cord - fluid accumulates around the spermatic cord - Congenital Hydrocoele - Infantile Hydrocoele
39. What is the treatment of a chemodectoma?
Skin and soft tissues such as a sebaceous cyst -lipoma or sarcoma - Bowel - ca caecum - crohns mass in terminal ileum - TB terminal ileum - appendicular mass or abscess - Gynaecological organs - ovarian tumours or fibroid uterus - Male Reproductive S
Surgical excision with preoperative embolizatoin if the tumour is large - Ultrasonic surgical dissection may also be used - Radiotherapy is used for patients unfit for surgery or for large tumours
The procedure can be performed under a regional(brachial plexus) - local or general anaesthesia - A longitudinal incision 3-4cm in length is made over the distal third of the forearm midway between the radial artery and the cephalic vein - The cephal
Unilateral - Bilateral
40. What syndrome is associated with a port-wine stain?
Heamolysis - Hereditary e.g : gilbert's syndrome
Osteomyelitis - infection transmitted to the bone through the stump - Stump ulceration - can be caused by pressure from the prosthesis - Stump neuroma - Swelling of the distal nerve as it tries to regrow following division; during the initial procedu
Sturge-Weber syndrome is the association of a facial port-wine stain with a corresponding haemangioma in the brain - leading to contralateral focal fits.
Temperature - Capillary Refill - Peripheral Pulses
41. What do you know about the epidemiology of keloid scars?
Thyroidectomy
Unilateral total lobectomy and isthmusectomy
Via the bloodstream(R is equal to red is equal to blood)
May affect people from puberty to 30 years - Females are more affected than males - Black and Hispanic Races are effected the most.
42. How would you investigate a patient with a breast lump?
Depends on local guidelines but essentially: Pneumococcal vaccine - Haemophilus influenzae type B vaccine - Meningococcal vaccine - Annual 'flu' vaccine - Consideration for lifelong penicillin or penicillin as required when infection present - Warn a
Triple assessment which consists of: Clinical : history and physical examination - Radiological : ultrasound or mammography - Pathological : cytology(fine-needle aspiration) or histological(tru-cut biopsy)
Diabetic neuropathy and peripheral occlusive arterial disease are the major aetiological factors for the development of ulceration and may act alone - together or in combination with other factors such as microvascular disease - biomechanical abnorma
Blood Tests:Haematological - FBC - ESR - Biochemical : TFT - ACE Levels(raised in sarcoidosis) - Serological : 'monospot' or Paul-Bunnell test looking for atypical mononuclear cells in infectious mononucleosis - Radiological : Ultrasound - CT Scan an
43. What is a hydrocoele?
Hidradenitis suppurative - also known as acne inversa - is now considered a disease of follicular occlusion rather than an inflammatory or infectious process of the apocrine glands. Abscesses form recurrently and this causes the characteristic perman
Excess accumulation of fluid in the processus vaginalis.
VINTA MEDIC - Vascular - Iatrogenic - Neoplastic - Traumatic - Autoimmune - Metabolic - Endocrine - Degenerative - Inflammatory/Infective - Congenital
Pleomorphic adenoma(commonest) and Warthin's tumour
44. What is the medical treatment of Graves disease?
Via the bloodstream(R is equal to red is equal to blood)
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
Antithyroid drugs - to inhibit thyroid peroxidase - Beta-blockers - to reduce the effect of excess circulating thyroxine on the cardiac system - Radioiodine - Treatment of choice - Single oral dose of 131 Iodine causes direct radiation damage to the
Some 50% are present at birth and they are thought to represent a congenital abnormality during the evolution of embryonic lymph nodes into the adult type
45. What are the features of ulcers in syphillis?
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46. What is the differential diagnosis in basal cell carcinoma?
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
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
For patients who refuse radiation therapy or relapse after an adequate course - pregnant patients or those wishing to become pregnant within 4 years - patients under the age of 40 years and those with nodular or large goitres
Familial e.g 'hazel nails' - pachydermoperiostitis - Graves' disease - Unilaterally seen in axillary artery aneurysm and brachial arteriovenous malformation
47. Large hernia
Commonest form of thyroid abnormality - Secondary to hyperplasia of the gland to meet physiological demand for thyroxine - Secondary to defective production of thyroid hormone
A furuncle results from infection of hair follicles with Staphylococcus aureus
May require the placing of postoperative drains
History and Clinical Examination - Investigate if prominent nodule or features suspicious of malignancy such as cervical lymphadenopathy or recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy
48. What is the pathology of Sjogren's syndrome?
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
Lined by stratified squamous or ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium - May also contain thyroid or lymphoid tissue - which can undergo malignant change - If malignancy occurs - usually of thyroid papillary type.
Lymphocyte-mediated destruction of the exocrine glands secondary to B-cell hyper-reactivity and associated loss of suppressor T-Cell activity
Patient preference - Clinical evidence of multifocal/multicentric disease - Large lump is small breast tissue - this depends of the size of the breast but often defined as a lump more than 4cm - Large area ( more than 4cm) ductal carcinoma in situ -
49. What is the non-surgical treatment of pressure sores?
Iodine deficiency - Increased physiological demand - Goitrogens(less common) - Defects of thyroid hormone production
Optimize tissue perfusion and oxygenation - Treat infection as it arises - Use topical dressings as required and provide nutritional support specifically vitamin C - zinc and multivitamins. - Other techniques include hyperbaric oxygen -hydrotherapy a
Tenderness over the graft - Reduction in urine output - Rising creatinine
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
50. What is a cystic hygroma?
Psychosocial and physical preparation - Explanation of indications and complication - Involving a Clinical Nurse Specialist in Stoma Care preoperatively who would normally mark the site - Marking of the stoma site
Peripheral neuropathy has several effects: Slowly progressive sensory loss - with numbness and tingling of the feet and sometimes also hands. The sensory loss is often glove-and-stocking in distribution and may also be associated with motor impairmen
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
A cystic hygroma is a congenital cystic lymphatic malformation found in the posterior triangle of the neck.