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Test your basic knowledge |
Clinical Surgery
Start Test
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
.
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 you classify skin flaps?
Elderly(A for Aged)
Weight loss - Change in bowel habit - Loss of appetite - Back pain
As the perfusion of the leg begins to decrease in a patient with peripheral vascular disease; the ratio begins to fall.
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
2. What are the surgical treatment options for hydrocoele?
3. What are the features of nodular melanoma?
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
Second most common type - Occurs most often on the trunk - Polypoid in shape and is raised - Smooth surface - Irregular edge - Frequently ulcerated
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
General - Thermoregulatory - Dermatological - Musculoskeletal - Gastrointestinal - Cardiovascular - Gynaecological - Psychiatric - Neurological
4. How would you treat a cystic hygroma?
Pigmented freckles around the lips and inside the mouth - associated with intestinal intussusception and gastrointestinal bleeding from colonic polyps
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.
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-surgically via aspiration and injection of sclerosant surgically via excision which may be partial ( to relieve symptoms) or complete as a one-stage procedure.
5. Large hernia
May require the placing of postoperative drains
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)
Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber Syndrome - Parkes-Weber syndrome
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
6. How would you rehabilitate a patient following the placement of a stoma?
Diet should be normal - Bag should be changed once or twice a day(needs to be emptied more frequently than this if it is urine or fluid faeces) - Ileostomies should have the base plate under the bag changed every 5 days and the bag changed daily - Ps
Second most common type - Occurs most often on the trunk - Polypoid in shape and is raised - Smooth surface - Irregular edge - Frequently ulcerated
Arises in a lentigo maligna - Occurs most often on the face or dorsum of the hands and forearms - Underlying lesion is flat and brown-to-black in colour with an irregular outline - Malignant area in the lesion is usually thicker - and darker in colou
Parafollicular C Cells
7. What are the 3 objectives that one should look out for in the inspection of varicose veins?
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
Mnemonic : HIS PRIPS - Ischaemia/gangrene - Haemorrhage - Retraction - Prolapse/intussusception - Parastomal Hernia - Stenosis - Skin excoriation
Traditionally -Bilateral subtotal thyroidectomy without need for postoperative replacement of thyroxine was recommended but more recently total thyroidectomy is the preferred procedure due to the risk of pathological change in the thyroid remnant nec
Site and size of varicosities - including the presence of saphena varix - Skin for changes and scars - Swelling of the ankle
8. What kinds of analgesia would be appropriate for this patient?
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
50%
Varicocoeles are dilated tortuous 'varicose' veins in the pampiniform plexus - the network of veins that drains the testis - They usually occur in 15% of younger men - often around puberty - and are thought to have an anatomical basis - If they appea
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 :
9. What is a neurofibroma?
Transfemoral radiological embolization of the testicular vein - using either a spring coil or sclerosant
A neurofibroma is a benign tumour derived from peripheral nerve elements.
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
Defective gene on chromosome 22 with variable penetrance - Cutaneous signs are less often seen in this type.
10. How would you treat this condition?
11. How do testicular tumours usually present?
The commonest presentation is a painless lump or a dull ache in one testis in a young man - Occasionally there is a history of trauma accompanying the discovery of the mass - 10% present with an acutely painful testis - If para-aortic nodes have beco
White lines and streaks inside the mouth
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
General - Specific
12. What is a skin flap?
Cervical spondylosis - Pancoast's tumour - Cervical disc protrusions - Ulnar nerve neuropathy
0.5 to 0.8
Primary Raynauds is due to vasomotor malformation - Secondary Raynauds occurs as a consequence of pathology affecting the vessel wall
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.
13. What are the secretomotor branches of the facial nerve?
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.
Via greater superficial petrosal nerve to lacrimal - nasal and palatine glands
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
Emergency procedures e.g following penetrating chest trauma - Cardiac surgery - Resection of lung cancer
14. What are the features of spider naevi?
Arises in a lentigo maligna - Occurs most often on the face or dorsum of the hands and forearms - Underlying lesion is flat and brown-to-black in colour with an irregular outline - Malignant area in the lesion is usually thicker - and darker in colou
Scar confined to wound margins - It is found across flexor surfaces and skin creases
Form of telangiectasias - Central arteriole with leg-like branches Which blanch on central pressure - Found over upper torso - head and neck in adults - Associated with chronic liver disease and pregnancy
Use of truss or corset - Weight loss and management of other risk factors
15. What is the Courvoisier's law?
Pregnancy - Ascites - Ovarian cysts - Fibroids - Bowel distension
Lymphocyte-mediated destruction of the exocrine glands secondary to B-cell hyper-reactivity and associated loss of suppressor T-Cell activity
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.
Carcinoma of the stomach and oesophagus - lymphomas and with endocrine disorders such as acromegaly - Cushing's - diabetes complicated by severe insulin resistance
16. How do you harvest a skin graft?
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
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
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.
Arising from the skin and soft tissues - sebaceous cysts -sarcoma -lipoma -epigastric hernia - Arising from the gastrointestinal tract - carcinoma of the stomach -hepatomegaly -pancreatic ca - pancreatic pseudocyst - Arising from the vascular system
17. What are the main features of splenomegaly in the clinical examination?
SPRUE - Site of enlargement - from the left costal margin towards the umbilicus - Percussion note - dull - Respiration movement - it descends - Unable to get above it or ballot it(differentiating it from the kidney) - Edge - a notch may be palpable o
Small red capillary naevus - Develops on the trunk in middle-age - No clinical significance
Minor defects in neonates are common but usually repair spontaneously. In children - umbilical herniae are mor common; they tend to have a narrow neck and folds of peritoneum stuck within this neck - which can occassionally strangulate. Most cases re
Non-Surgical - Reassure and 'Watch and Wait' - Surgical - Reason : Pain/Cosmesis and this is done with suction lipolysis via a small - remote incision Which is performed under local anaesthetic as a day case.
18. What are the coordination abnormalities causes of dysphagia?
Epidermal Cyst - Trichilemmal Cyst
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.
Derived from capillary endothelial cells or from fibrous tissue - It is linked to human herpes virus 8
Superior thyroid artery - Inferior thyroid artery - Thyroidea ima(in 3% of people)
19. What do you know about thyroid cysts?
Demographics - Presenting Complaint - History of Presenting Complaint - Medical and Surgical History - Drugs and any other allergies - Family History - Social History - Systemic Enquiry
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
As the perfusion of the leg begins to decrease in a patient with peripheral vascular disease; the ratio begins to fall.
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
20. What are the complications of the surgical removal of a branchial cyst?
History - Examination - Special Investigations - Treatment
Familial e.g 'hazel nails' - pachydermoperiostitis - Graves' disease - Unilaterally seen in axillary artery aneurysm and brachial arteriovenous malformation
Recurrence of the cyst - Developement of a chronic -discharging sinus
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
21. What is a papilloma?
A papilloma is an over-growth of all layers of the skin with a central vascular core. They are increasingly common with age.
It arises de novo
Emergency procedures e.g following penetrating chest trauma - Cardiac surgery - Resection of lung cancer
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.
22. What would you tell to a lady with varicose veins about the proposed surgery?
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
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
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.
Demographics - Presenting Complaint - History of Presenting Complaint - Medical and Surgical History - Drugs and any other allergies - Family History - Social History - Systemic Enquiry
23. What is the treatment of a chemodectoma?
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
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
Defective gene on chromosome 22 with variable penetrance - Cutaneous signs are less often seen in this type.
Congenital : Cystic disease - horseshoe kidney - hypertrophic single kidney - Acquired : Diseases specific to the kidney such as solitary cysts - tumours - hydronephrosis - pyonephrosis - perinephric abscess and renal vein thrombosis and diseases as
24. What are the main points that doctors are looking for during the Surgical OSCEs?
Black discolouration of the skin
VINTA MEDIC - Vascular - Iatrogenic - Neoplastic - Traumatic - Autoimmune - Metabolic - Endocrine - Degenerative - Inflammatory/Infective - Congenital
A caring and competent approach - A good examination technique - An ability to elicit and draw conclusions from physical signs
Anti-salivary antibodies - rheumatoid factor - but two specific antibodies present are anti-SSA-Ro and anti-SSA-La
25. When considering the treatment of a disease in a surgical patients - What are the important modalities of treatment which should be considered?
Duplex Ultrasound - Angiography - CT/MRI
Conservative - Medical - Surgical
Mean age is 50 years at presentation(F for fifty)
Any cause of deep venous insufficiency can lead to ulceration: Valvular disease - varicose veins - deep vein reflux - communicating vein reflux - Outflow tract obstruction - often post-DVT - Muscle pump failure - primary such as stroke and neuromuscu
26. How would a patient with carotid aneurysm be investigated?
Myelofibrosis - Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia - Malaria - Tropical splenomegaly - Kala-azar(visceral leishmaniasis)
Treatment involves the use of artificial tears and saliva - use of systemic steroids and careful follow-up due to increased risk of lymphoma development
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
May affect people from puberty to 30 years - Females are more affected than males - Black and Hispanic Races are effected the most.
27. What are the vital points to be taken into consideration when examining the neck?
Cirrhosis - Malignancy - Lymphatic rupture or damage
Inspect - Protrusion of the tongue - Swallowing - Palpate(from the back) - Continue Accordingly(Neck Decision Circle)
Mneumonic : LIST Lymphoma and Leukaemia - Infection(further subdivided into Bacterial - Viral - Protozoal and Toxoplasmosis) - Sarcoidosis - Tumours
Tissues with rapid turnover(epidermal layers of the skin - small intestine - bone marrow stem cells) - Tissues with a limited ability to repopulate(spinal cord and gonads)
28. What is the treatment of medullary carcinoma?
It helps to give an indication as to What the exact aetiology is.
Treatment is radical surgery with follow-up using sequent calcitonin assays
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
Gangrene is the result of irreversible tissue necrosis and has a number of causes: Diabetes - Embolus and thrombosis - Raynaud's syndrome - Thrombangiitis obliterans - Ergot poisoning - Vessel injury secondary to extreme cold -heat -trauma or pressur
29. What should one point out when describing the features of a thyroid swelling?
Size - Tenderness - Mobility - Consistency
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
Early - haematoma - Intermediate - Infection and nerve damage e.g saphenous in stripping - Late - Recurrence
Hypertrophic scars tend to appear soon after injury and usually regress spontaneously - while keloid scars appear months after injury and continue to grow
30. How would you treat an acquired dermoid cyst?
Surgical treatment involves complete excision of the cyst.
Simple inversion and oversewing(diverticulopexy) - as pouch is left in situ - risk of missing a possible diverticular carcinoma - or diverticulectomy.
Sympathetic overstimulation and restrictive myopathy of levator palpebrae superioris
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
31. What are the specific complications of a stoma?
Scar confined to wound margins - It is found across flexor surfaces and skin creases
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
Mnemonic : HIS PRIPS - Ischaemia/gangrene - Haemorrhage - Retraction - Prolapse/intussusception - Parastomal Hernia - Stenosis - Skin excoriation
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
32. What is the risk of rupture for an aneurysm more than 5.5cm?
10% per year
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
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
Duration and change in size - Cosmetic symptoms - Discomfort during swallowing/dysphagia - Dyspnoea - Hoarseness - Pain
33. If the patient has noticed pale stools and dark urine - what other questions would you ask?
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Dysplastic naevus syndrome - Large congenital naevi - Family history in first-degree relatives
Weight loss - Change in bowel habit - Loss of appetite - Back pain
Males represent 1% of all breast cancers. Features that would be suspicious would be: Older age - Unilateral gynaecomastia - Firm or hard nodules within the breast tissue - Remember to examine the axillary and supraclavicular fossae for lymphadenopat
Cardiac failure - Metabolic disorders leading to hypoalbuminaemia such as Cirrhosis and Nephrotic syndrome
34. What radiological investigations would be helpful in distinguishing the different causes?
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
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
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
Treatment involves the use of artificial tears and saliva - use of systemic steroids and careful follow-up due to increased risk of lymphoma development
35. Which patients might be considered for carotid endarterectomy?
Peripheral Neuropathy
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%
Sunlight - Carcinogens - Previous radiotherapy - Malignant transformation in pre-existing skin lesion
Halfway along inguinal ligament that is between pubic tubercle and ASIS Which is equal to the location of the deep inguinal ring
36. When should the drains be removed post-surgery?
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
Treatment is essentially surgical - Operation of choice is Sistrunk's operation - Inject patent track with dye at the start of the operation - Excise cyst and the patent or fibrous track which runs through the central portion of the hyoid bone(Which
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
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.
37. What is the pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathy?
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
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
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.
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
38. How would you investigate a patient with cervical lymphadenopathy?
39. What are the cause of cervical lymphadenopathy that you know of?
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
Mneumonic : LIST Lymphoma and Leukaemia - Infection(further subdivided into Bacterial - Viral - Protozoal and Toxoplasmosis) - Sarcoidosis - Tumours
Multinodular goitre - Toxic - Simple colloid goitre - Thyroiditis - Neoplasia
A pharyngeal pouch is formed by the herniation of pharyngeal mucosa(known as a pulsion diverticulum) through its muscular coat at its weakest point(Killian's dehiscence) between the thyropharyngeal and cricopharyngeal muscles that make up the inferio
40. What are the variants of lipoma?
Axillary vein thrombosis - Damage to axillary drainage following surgery such as axillary dissection in breast surgery
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
Angiolipomas - Hibernomas - Bannayan-Zonana Syndrome
41. What are the major indications for renal transplantation?
Mnemonic: SNAiL - Superficial spreading - Nodular melanoma - Acral lentiginous melanoma - Lentigo maligna melanoma
Idiopathic(50%) - Myeloproliferative disorders - Autoimmune hepatitis - More common in males than females
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
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
42. What are the contents of the spermatic cord?
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
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Gorlin's syndrome
Undermined edge - Shallow ulcer
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
43. What is venous gangrene?
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
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 -
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
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
44. Describe the vascular supply of the transplanted kidney?
45. What are the non-surgical treatment options for an incisional hernia?
Within the lumen: Foreign body - oesophageal web - Plummer-Vinson syndrome - In the wall : Carcinoma of the oesophagus -oesophagitis -barrett's oesophagus - benign oesophageal stricture and post-radiation or chemical strictures - Outside the wall: re
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
Plasma alpha feto-protein and beta-HCG - raised levels may indicate a testicular tumor - Testosterone and LH levels to demonstrate hypogonadism - Thyroid function tests
Use of truss or corset - Weight loss and management of other risk factors
46. What is the differential diagnosis of a malignant melanoma?
Undermined edge - Violaceous - Necrotic ulcer with hypertrophic margins
It is important to exclude malignant tumours such as: Malignant melanoma - Basal cell carcinoma
Clinical examination - Fine-needle aspiration which would show an opalescent fluid containing cholesterol crystals or pus.
Benign skin lesions: Moles -freckles -lentigo -pigmented seborrhoeic keratoses - dermatofibromas and thrombosed haemangiomas - When it comes to malignant skin lesions - pigmented basal cell carcinomas
47. How might you be aware the transplant rejection is occurring?
Varicocoeles are dilated tortuous 'varicose' veins in the pampiniform plexus - the network of veins that drains the testis - They usually occur in 15% of younger men - often around puberty - and are thought to have an anatomical basis - If they appea
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.
A neurofibroma is a benign tumour derived from peripheral nerve elements.
Tenderness over the graft - Reduction in urine output - Rising creatinine
48. What do you know about thyroid adenomas?
Usually occurs in the over 50s although it may affect younger patients. It is the most common causes of a renal mass in women of childbearing age - Beck's Triad of: Haematuria - Mass - Loin Pain
Almost all are follicular adenomas - Usually 2 to 4 cm and encapsulated at presentation - Indistinguishable from carcinomas on FNAC - as the presence of a capsule cannot be demonstrated - Surgical excision is needed to confirm diagnosis
Schirmer's test for xeropthalmia - Slit-lamp examination of the cornea - Lip biopsy for histological examination of the minor salivary glands
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
49. How would you treat a papilloma?
Via the lymphatic route(Y for yellow = lymph)
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
True umbilical herniae occur through the umbilical scar and are usually congenital in origin and particulary common in patients of Afro-Caribbean origin
Via greater superficial petrosal nerve to lacrimal - nasal and palatine glands
50. What do you know about the epidemiology of thyroglossal cysts?
Scar confined to wound margins - It is found across flexor surfaces and skin creases
Investigation and treatment of concurrent abnormalities - Management of hypertension
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
A blepharoplasty can be performed where excess skin and fat are removed.