SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Clinical Surgery
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
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 do you know about the epidemiology of thyroglossal cysts?
Hyperthyroidism - Late Hypothyroidism - Later Hyperparathyroidism
Some surgeons would advocate that all patients should undergo Duplex scanning of the leg veins before any surgery is undertaken. Others would consider indications to be: Previous history of deep vein thrombosis - Any signs of chronic venous insuffici
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
History - Examination - Special Investigations - Treatment
2. What are the three basic questions that need to be asked in a peripheral arterial system history?
It arises de novo
Mainly teratoma or seminomas - other types are: Embryonal carcinoma - Choriocarcinoma - Yolk sac tumour - Leydig cell tumours - Sertoli cell tumours - Lymphoma
Primary disease occurring in isolation
Vascular symptoms - Risk factors for arterial disease - Fitness for surgery
3. What level does the serum bilirubin need to rise to before jaundice can be detected on clinical examination?
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
Pigmented freckles around the lips and inside the mouth - associated with intestinal intussusception and gastrointestinal bleeding from colonic polyps
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)
Mechanical obstruction - Coordination abnormalities
4. Describe the vascular supply of the transplanted kidney?
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
5. What types of wounds are prone to hypertrophic and keloid scar formation?
Angiolipomas - Hibernomas - Bannayan-Zonana Syndrome
A cystic swelling related to a synovial lined caivity - either a joint or a tendon sheath
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.
Wounds associated with - Infection - Trauma - Burns - Tension especially over the sternum such as after CABG - Wounds on certain areas of the body
6. What are the features of nodular melanoma?
Second most common type - Occurs most often on the trunk - Polypoid in shape and is raised - Smooth surface - Irregular edge - Frequently ulcerated
Excision of an entire lung
Small -punched out ulcers - Often over medial aspect of lower leg
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
7. How should one examine a lump or swelling?
Look - Feel - Press - Move - Listen - Transilluminate and Examine Surrounding Areas.
The causes of pain in the leg can be divided into: Musculoskeletal such as pathologies of the knee -ankle or hip - Neurological such as spinal stenosis which leads to spinal claudication - Vascular such as intermittent claudication and deep vein thro
Fine-needle aspiration cytology for diagnosis - MRI to exclude deep-lobe involvement
Fibrous tissue invades the tunica intima and media of the vein and breaks up the smooth muscle - preventing the maintenance of adequate vascular tone. These changes are patchy and may not affect adjacent segments of vein.
8. What is a keratoacanthoma?
Carcinoma of the stomach and oesophagus - lymphomas and with endocrine disorders such as acromegaly - Cushing's - diabetes complicated by severe insulin resistance
Small red capillary naevus - Develops on the trunk in middle-age - No clinical significance
Early - haematoma - Intermediate - Infection and nerve damage e.g saphenous in stripping - Late - Recurrence
A keratoacanthoma is a benign overgrowth of hair follicle cells that produces a central plug of keratin. It is rapidly growing - forming within 6 weeks and regressing after 6 weeks - leaving a depressed scar. Clinically and cytologically they may loo
9. What are the major causes of pre-hepatic jaundice?
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
10. What is the aim of the tourniquet test?
Demographics - Presenting Complaint - History of Presenting Complaint - Medical and Surgical History - Drugs and any other allergies - Family History - Social History - Systemic Enquiry
Schirmer's test for xeropthalmia - Slit-lamp examination of the cornea - Lip biopsy for histological examination of the minor salivary glands
A neurofibroma is a benign tumour derived from peripheral nerve elements.
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.
11. What surgical options are available in the management of cervical lymphadenopathy?
Pregnancy - Ascites - Ovarian cysts - Fibroids - Bowel distension
History and Clinical Examination - Investigate if prominent nodule or features suspicious of malignancy such as cervical lymphadenopathy or recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy
50%
Open lymph node excision biopsy - Block dissection of the neck - Radical Neck Dissection
12. What is neurofibromatosis?
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
Presence of multiple neurofibromas in a patient - in combination with other dermatological manifestations(six cafe-au-lait psots) - It is an autosomal dominant condition with two types: 1 and 2.
Sunlight - Pre-existing skin lesions - Previous melanoma
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
13. How do you classify the severity of thyroid eye disease?
Mnemonic : NO SPECS - No signs or symptoms - Only signs of upper lid retraction and stare - with or without lid lag and exopthalmos - Soft-tissue involvement - Proptosis - Exopthalmos - Corneal Involvement - Slight loss due to optic nerve involvemen
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
Rolled or raised edge - Often on sun-damaged skin
Clinical examination - Fine-needle aspiration which would show an opalescent fluid containing cholesterol crystals or pus.
14. How are epididymal cysts caused?
Intra-abdominal abscesses should be drained - Colonic defunctioning using a loop ileostomy may be needed for patients who have failed medical therapy - Occasionally a subtotal colectomy and permanent ileostomy may be needed - Pouch surgery is general
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
Intracranial - Intratemporal - Extratemporal
They are often multiple and most commonly arise in the head of the epididymis. Occassionally they occur as a complication of vasectomy - in which case they are full of sperm and are termed spermatocoeles.
15. Under what circumstances would patients (with popliteal aneurysms) they be treated?
Transfemoral radiological embolization of the testicular vein - using either a spring coil or sclerosant
These are due to a defect through the linea alba adjacent to the umbilicus and usually due to obesity stretching the fibres.
Surgery is indicated for: Symptomatic aneurysms - Those containing thrombus - Those greater than 2cm
Defined as portal vein pressure of more than 10mmHg(normal 5-10). Portal blood flow through the liver is greatly reduced or even reversed in the most severe cases
16. What is the classification used in the definition of severe exarcerbation of inflammatory bowel disease?
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
Congenital - Usually due to a cervical rib(arising from the seventh cervical vertebra) and the subclavian artery is compressed between the rib and either the scalenus anterior muscle or the clavicle - Acquired - The obstruction may also follow a frac
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
Dohlman's procedure - endoscopic diathermy resection of the posterior pharyngeal wall or endoscopic stapling with less risk of fistula formation and consequent mediastinitis
17. What are the predisposing factors for Raynaud's phenomenon?
Primary Raynauds is due to vasomotor malformation - Secondary Raynauds occurs as a consequence of pathology affecting the vessel wall
Scar extends beyond wound margins - It is found mostly on earlobes - chin -neck -shoulder and chest.
Multiple telangiectasia around the mouth and on the tongue and lips
Necrotizing vasculitis - Purpuric -haemorrhagic bullae
18. What is the surgical treatment of coarctation of aorta?
Mayo's 'vest-over-pants' operation is the most widely accepted repair for these herniae
End-to-end anastamosis - patching and the use of the left subclavian artery as a flap are all surgical options
Via the lymphatic route(Y for yellow = lymph)
True aneurysms are uncommon and are generally caused by atherosclerosis - and occasionally by dissection -trauma -previous carotid surgery or infection - When a true aneurysm has been excluded - the patient can be reassured and discharged. - Dilated
19. What are the pathological features of thyroglossal cyst?
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
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.
Surgical treatment is superficial parotidectomy(if superfical lobe of gland only involved) or total parotidectomy with preservation of the facial nerve(if deep lobe of gland or both lobes involved)
Venous disease
20. What are the specific complications of parotidectomy?
Colour changes - Trophic changes - Vascular angle
Pre-hepatic - Hepatic - Post-hepatic
Definition - Incidence - Sex - Geography - Aetiology - Pathogenesis - Macroscopic Pathology - Microscopic Pathology - Prognosis - Symptoms - Signs - Investigations - Treatment
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
21. What is the surgical treatment of a patient with an epigastric hernia?
An absolute pressure of less than 50mmHg
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
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
Cervical rib or prominent transverse process of the Chest X-ray or thoracic outlet views - Doppler examination may be useful in quantifying the postural changes and post-stenotic dilatation - Arteriograms of the subclavian artery may show a marked ki
22. What are the coordination abnormalities causes of dysphagia?
Hyperthyroidism - Recurrent - Hypothyroidism - Hypertrophic scarring
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.
Reflux Trahere transplantation - Kistner's operation - Obstruction: Palma Operation - Warren Bypass
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
23. What is the aetiology of diabetic foot ulcers?
Neuropathic - 45 to 60% of ulcers - Ischaemic due to peripheral occlusive arterial disaese - 10% of ulcers - Mixed neuroischaemic - 25-45% of ulcers
High-energy X-rays interact with tissues to release electrons of high kinetic energy - which cause secondary damage to adjacent DNA via an oxygen-dependent mechanism. The damage is either repairable or non-repairable - the latter manifesting itself a
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
Undermined edge - Shallow ulcer
24. What is the pathogenesis of a congenital dermoid cyst?
Anxiety - Hyperthyroidism - Hyperhidrosis erythematosus traumatica - Phaeochromocytoma
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
The main points to mention are: testicular damage should be mentioned as a specific risk factor - the operation can be performed under local or general anaesthetic and often as a day case - The Royal College of Surgeons has recommended the Lichtenste
Autoimmune condition - Intermittent or constant swelling of one or all of the salivary glands
25. How do carcinomas of the oesophagus present?
Vascular - Cerebrovascular accident - Tumour - acoustic neuroma - Infection - Meningitis(rarely
The characteristic presentation is insidious with progressive weight-loss and dysphagia - The patient initally hass difficulty swallowing solids and often describes the food getting stuck in the lower part of the oesophagus - They may also describe o
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
1
26. What do you know about the pathophysiology of pressure necrosis?
Palomo operation
Non-surgical : cryotherapy - topical application of 5-fluorouracil - retinoic acid - Surgical : Shaving of affected skin
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.
Medical : treat underlying condition - saline cleansing - high-dose oral or intralesional steroids plus/minus cyclosporin - Surgical : serial allograft followed by autologous skin graft or muscle flap coverage when necessary
27. What clinical features would make you suspect that a parotid swelling is malignant in nature?
Surgery is indicated for: Symptomatic aneurysms - Those containing thrombus - Those greater than 2cm
Remnants of a patent processus vaginalis - Arise from the abdominal cavity lateral to the inferior epigastric vessels at operation - passing obliquely through the deep inguinal ring and travelling along the inguinal canal with the spermatic cord - Ma
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
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
28. What are the four commonest types of malignant melanoma?
Mnemonic: SNAiL - Superficial spreading - Nodular melanoma - Acral lentiginous melanoma - Lentigo maligna melanoma
Blood Tests:FBC - to look for raised white cell count in infection - Liver function - to look out for hypoalbuminaemia or evidence of hepatic dysfunction - Clotting - functional hepatic impairment - CRP/ESR - increased in infection/inflammation and i
Cardiac failure - Metabolic disorders leading to hypoalbuminaemia such as Cirrhosis and Nephrotic syndrome
80% of salivary gland tumours occurs in the parotid gland - 80% of these parotid tumours being benign - with 80% of these benign tumours being pleomorphic adenomas
29. What are the surgical problems associated with AF?
It is a point halfway along a line joining the ASIS and the midline Which is equal to the location of femoral artery
Anaesthesia is more complicated because of the increased risk of stroke - In addition - patients with AF may be anticoagulated and if on warfarin - this medication needs to be discontinued prior to elective surgery - Patients with controlled AF may d
Resection of a lobe including its bronchial origin with re-anastamosis of the proximal and distal bronchus
Prehepatic jaundice can occur due to haemolysis - especially following a transfusion - Hepatic jaundice can result from the use of halogenated anaesthetics - sepsis or intra- or postoperative hypotension - Post-hepatic jaundice can occur due to bilia
30. What does a hypertrophic scar look like?
The aorta is narrowed below the origin of the left subclavian artery and therefore blood flow to the abdomen and legs is reduced - The prominent vessels over the back are large collateral that have developed to bypass the obstruction and supply the l
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
Scar confined to wound margins - It is found across flexor surfaces and skin creases
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.
31. What is the main statistic with regards to salivary gland tumours?
High success - 50 to 70% will heal at 3 months - 80 to 90% at 12 months - The patient should be warned to avoid trauma to the affected area - Four-layer compression bandaging - Encourage rest and elevation of leg - Once healed - grade 2 compression s
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
80% of salivary gland tumours occurs in the parotid gland - 80% of these parotid tumours being benign - with 80% of these benign tumours being pleomorphic adenomas
It is a collagen vascular disease - caused by infiltrate of plasma cells into the arterial wall - This leads to luminal thrombosis and affects small and medium-sized arteries of the lower limb - Eventually - collagen is deposited and forms a thick fi
32. What are the features of an inguinal hernia?
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
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
Dissection of the hernial sac from surrounding tissues and definitioni of tissue bordering the defect on all sides to 2-3cm - Closing the defect(if small) and/or using mesh overlapping adequately( more than 5 to 8cm) over normal tissues to allows for
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
33. How would you manage a multinodular goitre?
Primary Raynauds is due to vasomotor malformation - Secondary Raynauds occurs as a consequence of pathology affecting the vessel wall
The major risk is embolic stroke(4% per year) which results from thrombus accumulating in an inefficiently contracting left atrium - Emboli can also lodge in the mesenteric vessel - causing intestinal ischaemia - Patients are also at risk from acute
History and Clinical Examination - Investigate if prominent nodule or features suspicious of malignancy such as cervical lymphadenopathy or recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy
Hypertrophic scars tend to appear soon after injury and usually regress spontaneously - while keloid scars appear months after injury and continue to grow
34. What is the surgical treatment of lymphoedema?
The mainstay of treatment of ascites is to treat the underlying condition and to place the patient on a weight reduction program - with the help of diuretic - and a low-sodium diet.
Indications for amputation can be remembered as the 4Ds: Dead - ischemic - peripheral vascular disease - thromboangiitis obliterans - AV fistulae - Damaged - trauma - unsalvageable limbs - burns - frostbite - Dangerous - Malignancy - bone and soft ti
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
Purple-blue naevus found on face -lips and mucous membrane of the mouth - Present from birth and does not change in size thereafter - Found on limbs in association with Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome.
35. What are the causes of a mass in the left iliac fossa?
Simple mastectomy - Modified radical mastectomy(patey) - Radical mastectomy(Halsted mastectomy) - Extended radical mastectomy
Less than 0.5
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
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
36. What are the indications for flap reconstruction?
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
37. What are the causes of atrial fibrillation?
Cardiac disease - hypertension -myocardial infarction -ischaemia -mitral valve disease - cardiomyopathy -endocarditis - Respiratory disease - Pneumonia - lung cancer - sarcoidosis - Other: Hypothyroidism and idiopathic ( lone AF)
Schirmer's test for xeropthalmia - Slit-lamp examination of the cornea - Lip biopsy for histological examination of the minor salivary glands
Excision of an entire lung
A keratoacanthoma is a benign overgrowth of hair follicle cells that produces a central plug of keratin. It is rapidly growing - forming within 6 weeks and regressing after 6 weeks - leaving a depressed scar. Clinically and cytologically they may loo
38. What are the neurological symptoms in thoracic outlet obstruction more commonly due to?
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
39. What do you know about thyroid cysts?
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
Mechanical obstruction - Coordination abnormalities
Mainly teratoma or seminomas - other types are: Embryonal carcinoma - Choriocarcinoma - Yolk sac tumour - Leydig cell tumours - Sertoli cell tumours - Lymphoma
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
40. What is a skin graft?
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
41. What is a pharyngeal pouch?
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
42. What are the indications for an amputation?
Complications include cosmetic symptoms but important problems are encountered in the perinatal period: Before delivery it may obstruct delivery - After delivery : respiratory obstruction and obstruction of swallowing
Indications for amputation can be remembered as the 4Ds: Dead - ischemic - peripheral vascular disease - thromboangiitis obliterans - AV fistulae - Damaged - trauma - unsalvageable limbs - burns - frostbite - Dangerous - Malignancy - bone and soft ti
Results from persistence of part of the thyroglossal tract - which marks development descent of the thyroid gland
Situations where skin grafts will not take - When the aim is to reconstruct the tissue that is 'like-for-like'(bone -joint -tendon -nerve -epithelial lining -etc) to promote optimal structure - function and cosmesis - When blood supply has to be impo
43. What is the mainstay of treatment in ascites?
The mainstay of treatment of ascites is to treat the underlying condition and to place the patient on a weight reduction program - with the help of diuretic - and a low-sodium diet.
Sunlight - Pre-existing skin lesions - Previous melanoma
Characteristic cold-induced changes associated with vasospasm
The incompetent vein is below the level of the tourniquest
44. What are the two main categories of causes of dysphagia?
Mnemonic : SNAPP - Sepsis elimination : open or percutaneous drainage of collections; administration of appropriate antimicrobials - Nutritional resuscitation/optimization : patients may be fluid and electrolyte depleted and malnourished. Resuscitati
Gall stones - Carcinoma head of pancreas - Lymph nodes
Rolled or raised edge - Often on sun-damaged skin
Mechanical obstruction - Coordination abnormalities
45. How should you organize information when talking about a disease?
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
The simplest surgical technique is to excise the papilloma with a sharp pair of scissors - controlling bleeding from the central vascular component with a single suture. Alternatively - diathermy can be used to control the bleeding at the same time a
Autoimmune condition - Intermittent or constant swelling of one or all of the salivary glands
Definition - Incidence - Sex - Geography - Aetiology - Pathogenesis - Macroscopic Pathology - Microscopic Pathology - Prognosis - Symptoms - Signs - Investigations - Treatment
46. What investigations would you perform in your diagnosis of a chemodectoma?
Using hand-held skin graft knives or electric or gas powered dermatomes - the latter producing a graft of even thickness from almost any site - with little expertise needed for operation. The donor site is usually one that can be easily concealed for
Sunlight - Pre-existing skin lesions - Previous melanoma
Duplex Ultrasound - Angiography - CT/MRI
Least common - Occurs on hairless skin - Irregular area of brown or black pigmentation
47. What are the main points that doctors are looking for during the Surgical OSCEs?
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
Endovascular repair - Laparoscopic repaire of abdominal aneurysms is the subject of current clinical trials
A caring and competent approach - A good examination technique - An ability to elicit and draw conclusions from physical signs
Wounds associated with - Infection - Trauma - Burns - Tension especially over the sternum such as after CABG - Wounds on certain areas of the body
48. What are the different histological subtypes of a sebaceous cyst?
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
Defective gene on chromosome 22 with variable penetrance - Cutaneous signs are less often seen in this type.
The incompetent vein is at or above the level of the tourniquet
Epidermal Cyst - Trichilemmal Cyst
49. What is the consequence of carotid stenosis?
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.
Purple-blue naevus found on face -lips and mucous membrane of the mouth - Present from birth and does not change in size thereafter - Found on limbs in association with Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome.
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.
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
50. What are the seven signs in the eyes that one should look out for when assessing the thyroid status?
Loss of hair on outer-third of eyebrows - Lid retraction - Lid lag - Ophthalmoplegia - Exophthalmos - Chemosis - Proptosis
A carbuncle is an extensive infection of hair follicles by the same organism with involvement of adjacent follicles and development of draining sinuses. It is associated with diabetes and is treated with a combination of systemic antibiotics and surg
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
40 X increased risk of developing lymphoma - usually B-Cell non-Hodgkin's type