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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
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. How do you stage malignant melanomas?
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2. What are the congenital predisposing factors for malignant melanomas?
90% of lung resections in the Western world are performed for bronchial carcinoma. Other indications include traumatic injury - bronchiectasis - chronic infection including tuberculosis - benign tumours e.g carcinoid and metastatic tumour
'Watch and wait' or aspiration followed by 3 weeks of immobilzation
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)
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Dysplastic naevus syndrome - Large congenital naevi - Family history in first-degree relatives
3. In What age group is papillary carcinoma more common in?
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
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 :
If the ulcer fails to heal - careful consideration should be given to excluding other causes such as malignant Marjolin ulcer and the area may need to be biopsied - Otherwise a split skin graft should be considered with excision of the dead skin and
Commonest in children and young adults(P for Paediatric)
4. What are the cause of cervical lymphadenopathy that you know of?
Size - Tenderness - Mobility - Consistency
Mneumonic : LIST Lymphoma and Leukaemia - Infection(further subdivided into Bacterial - Viral - Protozoal and Toxoplasmosis) - Sarcoidosis - Tumours
Donor renal artery is anastamosed to either the internal or external iliac artery - The donor renal vein is anastamosed to the external iliac vein - The ureter is anastamosed seperately to the patient's bladder - The renal pelvis the most anterior st
Excision of a single lobe of the lung
5. What are the 3 objectives that one should look out for in the inspection of varicose veins?
40 X increased risk of developing lymphoma - usually B-Cell non-Hodgkin's type
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
Axillary vein thrombosis - Damage to axillary drainage following surgery such as axillary dissection in breast surgery
Site and size of varicosities - including the presence of saphena varix - Skin for changes and scars - Swelling of the ankle
6. How would you treat solar keratoses?
Clinical examination - Fine-needle aspiration which would show an opalescent fluid containing cholesterol crystals or pus.
Non-surgical : cryotherapy - topical application of 5-fluorouracil - retinoic acid - Surgical : Shaving of affected skin
Via greater superficial petrosal nerve to lacrimal - nasal and palatine glands
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
7. Large hernia
Sympathetic overstimulation and restrictive myopathy of levator palpebrae superioris
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
Autoimmune condition - Intermittent or constant swelling of one or all of the salivary glands
May require the placing of postoperative drains
8. What needs to be taken into consideration when marking the stoma site?
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
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
Complications should be divided into specific to the amputation and general for any operation - and also immediate within 24 hours - early up to 1 month and late beyond 1 month
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
9. If the patient has noticed pale stools and dark urine - what other questions would you ask?
Weight loss - Change in bowel habit - Loss of appetite - Back pain
Chest x-ray to map the caudal extent of the cystic hygroma - CT/MRI scanning especially if it is complex
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
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
10. What complication can neurofibromata give rise to?
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)
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
Mnemonic : LEGS - Lipodermatosclerosis - Eczema - Gaps in the skin i.e ulceration - active and healed - Swelling - pedal oedema
Pressure effects - Deafness with involvement of the 8th cranial nerve - Sarcomatous transformation - Intra-abdominal effects - Skeletal changes
11. In the tourniquet test - What do collapsed veins below the tourniquet indicate?
The incompetent vein is at or above the level of the tourniquet
If the ulcer fails to heal - careful consideration should be given to excluding other causes such as malignant Marjolin ulcer and the area may need to be biopsied - Otherwise a split skin graft should be considered with excision of the dead skin and
Transfemoral radiological embolization of the testicular vein - using either a spring coil or sclerosant
Pleomorphic adenoma(commonest) and Warthin's tumour
12. What are the categorical causes of digital clubbing?
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
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
Idiopathic Which is the most common - Gastrointestinal - Respiratory - Cardiac - Rare causes
An absolute pressure of less than 50mmHg
13. What are the indications for surgery in goitre?
The five Ms - Mechanical - obstructive symptoms - Malignancy - Marred Beauty - cosmetic reasons - Medical treatment failure - thyrotoxicosis - Mediastinal(retrosternal) extension - unable to perform FNAC or monitor change clinically
Autosomal dominant - 1 in 500 - Chromosomes 4 and 16 are affected - Age of Presentation is between 30s and 50s
Transfemoral radiological embolization of the testicular vein - using either a spring coil or sclerosant
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)
14. What is the commonest cause of unilateral ankle oedema?
Venous disease
Fibroadenomas - Breast cysts - Fat necrosis - Breast cancer
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
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
15. What does surgical excision involved in the surgical treatment of a pharyngeal pouch?
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
Least common - Occurs on hairless skin - Irregular area of brown or black pigmentation
Iodine deficiency - Increased physiological demand - Goitrogens(less common) - Defects of thyroid hormone production
Simple inversion and oversewing(diverticulopexy) - as pouch is left in situ - risk of missing a possible diverticular carcinoma - or diverticulectomy.
16. How do you classify skin flaps?
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
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
Donor renal artery is anastamosed to either the internal or external iliac artery - The donor renal vein is anastamosed to the external iliac vein - The ureter is anastamosed seperately to the patient's bladder - The renal pelvis the most anterior st
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
17. What is a skin flap?
Non-Surgical : leave alone if asymptomatic and if patient does not want intervention - Surgical : Indicated only if malignant growth suspected; post-excision - local regrowth is common as neurofibromata cannot be surgically detached from underlying n
Barium swallow may be useful - If diagnosis is in doubt - endoscopy with biopsies and brushings should be performed to exclude a carcinoma - Physiological function could be tested using 24-hour oesophageal pH studies to exclude reflux and manometry
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.
Iodine deficiency - Increased physiological demand - Goitrogens(less common) - Defects of thyroid hormone production
18. How would you treat pyoderma gangrenosum?
Emergency procedures e.g following penetrating chest trauma - Cardiac surgery - Resection of lung cancer
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
Cyanotic congenital heart disease - Infective endocarditis - Atrial myxoma (rare)
Gradual elastic compression stocking - grade 2 compression - Encourage weight loss and regular exercise
19. How would you prepare a patient who is going for surgery which will involve forming a stoma?
Wounds associated with - Infection - Trauma - Burns - Tension especially over the sternum such as after CABG - Wounds on certain areas of the body
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
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
If the ulcer fails to heal - careful consideration should be given to excluding other causes such as malignant Marjolin ulcer and the area may need to be biopsied - Otherwise a split skin graft should be considered with excision of the dead skin and
20. What are the pathological features of thyroglossal cyst?
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
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.
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
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.
21. What are the signs in the mouth of Addison's disease?
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.
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
It will show you if it is malignant or inflammatory
Mouth and lips are hyperpigmented
22. What is Frey's syndrome?
Duplex Ultrasound - Angiography - CT/MRI
Cardiac failure - Tricuspid regurgitation - Constrictive pericarditis
A skin graft involves the transfer of skin from a donor site to a recipient site independent of a blood supply. The graft 'takes' by acquiring a blood supply from a healthy donor bed. Skin grafts may either be full thickness or partial thickness - bu
It is known also as auriculotemporal syndrome and it brings about increased sweating of the facial skin when eating - due to reinnervation of the divided sympathetic nerves to the facial skin by fibres of the secretomotor branch of the auriculotempor
23. What are the surgical options in Crohns disease?
A chemodectoma is a tumour of the paraganglion cells of the carotid body located at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery. They are usually benign(but locally invasive) - but occassionally - they are malignant with potential to metastasize to
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
Least common - Occurs on hairless skin - Irregular area of brown or black pigmentation
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
24. What is a keratoacanthoma?
Idiopathic(50%) - Myeloproliferative disorders - Autoimmune hepatitis - More common in males than females
Sympathetic overstimulation and restrictive myopathy of levator palpebrae superioris
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
VINTA MEDIC - Vascular - Iatrogenic - Neoplastic - Traumatic - Autoimmune - Metabolic - Endocrine - Degenerative - Inflammatory/Infective - Congenital
25. What are the major causes of pre-hepatic jaundice?
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26. What is the anatomical classifcations of hydrocoeles?
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.
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
Vaginal Hydrocoele - fluid accumulates in the tunica vaginalis - Hydrocoele of the cord - fluid accumulates around the spermatic cord - Congenital Hydrocoele - Infantile Hydrocoele
Hypertrophic scars tend to appear soon after injury and usually regress spontaneously - while keloid scars appear months after injury and continue to grow
27. What are the indications for flap reconstruction?
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28. What is the prophylactic treatment of pressure sores?
Refers to congenital disease or primary lymphatic failure. It is three times more common in women and the pathology originates from within the lymphatics. It is also known as Milroys disease.
Those related to anaesthesia
If untreated - 25% progress to invasive squamous cell carcinoma
Regular skin inspection - Frequent turning of immobile patients( 2 to 4 hourly) - Massage - Toileting - The use of special mattresses and cushion which redistribute the pressure on at-risk areas
29. What are the indications for forming a stoma?
Is there evidence of a new or old stoma site? Is there evidence of a small incision to one side of the scar(from a drain - this may have been due to a bowel operation) - Are there also scars in the groins? - Are there striae gravidarum
Solar keratosses are squamous cell carcinoma in situ
Mnemonic: DELFT(D) Feeding e.g feeding gastrostomy/jejunostomy - Lavage e.g appendicostomy - Decompression - bypass of an obstructing bowel lesion distal to the stom - Diversion - protection of a distal bowel anastamosis and urinary diversion followi
Duration and change in size - Cosmetic symptoms - Discomfort during swallowing/dysphagia - Dyspnoea - Hoarseness - Pain
30. 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
Superior thyroid artery - Inferior thyroid artery - Thyroidea ima(in 3% of people)
Conservative - Medical - Surgical
Necrotizing vasculitis - Purpuric -haemorrhagic bullae
31. It is know that the pulses are preserved in the diabetic - why is this?
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
Calcification of the walls of the vessel preserves the pulses until late in the natural history of disease - and prevent the sphygmomanometer from compressing the vessels. This tends to lead to an abnormally(and reassuringly) high ankle brachial pres
Trauma - Hypersplenism
It is a point halfway along a line joining the ASIS and the midline Which is equal to the location of femoral artery
32. What are the intracranial causes of facial nerve palsy?
Defective gene on chromosome 22 with variable penetrance - Cutaneous signs are less often seen in this type.
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
Debridement of dead tissue which can be performed by the tissue viability nurse since it does not require anaesthesia and reconstruction using a variety of fascial and muscle-containing composite flaps.
Vascular - Cerebrovascular accident - Tumour - acoustic neuroma - Infection - Meningitis(rarely
33. What is the differential diagnosis for an enlarged kidney?
Have you noticed any change in the colour of your urine? Have you noticed any change in the colour of your stools? - Have you noticed yourself feeling itchy?
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
Schirmer's test for xeropthalmia - Slit-lamp examination of the cornea - Lip biopsy for histological examination of the minor salivary glands
Carcinoma of the stomach and oesophagus - lymphomas and with endocrine disorders such as acromegaly - Cushing's - diabetes complicated by severe insulin resistance
34. How would you treat a pyogenic granuloma?
A skin graft involves the transfer of skin from a donor site to a recipient site independent of a blood supply. The graft 'takes' by acquiring a blood supply from a healthy donor bed. Skin grafts may either be full thickness or partial thickness - bu
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 -
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
Defective gene on chromosome 22 with variable penetrance - Cutaneous signs are less often seen in this type.
35. What is a branchial cyst?
Non-surgical - same as in incisional hernia with possible investigations : LFTs - H.pylori serology and Upper GI endoscopy
Duplex Ultrasound - Angiography - CT/MRI
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
A branchial cyst is thought to develop because of a failure of fusion of the embryonic second and third branchial arches. An alternative - and currently - popular - hypothesis is that it is an acquired condition due to cystic degeneration in cervical
36. What is the differential diagnosis of a dermatofibroma?
It is important to exclude malignant tumours such as: Malignant melanoma - Basal cell carcinoma
Hands and Eyes
A blind-ending track -typically lined by epithelial or granulation tissue - which opens onto an epithelial surface
Wounds associated with - Infection - Trauma - Burns - Tension especially over the sternum such as after CABG - Wounds on certain areas of the body
37. What are the features of infantile polycystic kidney disease?
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
Excision of an entire lung
Via the bloodstream(R is equal to red is equal to blood)
Autosomal recessive - 1 in 5000 to 40000 - Chromosome 6 is affected - It presents perinatally
38. What are the signs of chronic venous insufficiency?
Arising inside the parotid gland - Arising outside the parotid gland
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)
Mnemonic : LEGS - Lipodermatosclerosis - Eczema - Gaps in the skin i.e ulceration - active and healed - Swelling - pedal oedema
Those related to anaesthesia
39. What is the differential diagnosis of a testicular tumour?
Axillary vein thrombosis - Damage to axillary drainage following surgery such as axillary dissection in breast surgery
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
Risk factor modification - stopping smoking - good diabetic and hypertensive control and optimized serum lipid levels - Symptom modification - avoidance of drugs which might worsen symptoms - commencement of low-dose aspirin daily -IV prostaglandins
Testicular tumours can be mimicked by chronic or old infection leading to scarring such as in orchitis or tuberculosis - Occasionally a long-standing hydrocoele may develop calcification and become harder - clinically similar to a tumour - Tumours oc
40. Which are the gastrointestinal causes of clubbing?
Liver Cirrhosis - Inflammatory Bowel disease - Malabsorption - Gastrointestinal lymphoma
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)
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
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
41. What is a chemodectoma?
Mouth and lips are hyperpigmented
Hands and Eyes
A chemodectoma is a tumour of the paraganglion cells of the carotid body located at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery. They are usually benign(but locally invasive) - but occassionally - they are malignant with potential to metastasize to
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
42. What are the venous symptoms in thoracic outlet obstruction more commonly due to?
Iodine deficiency - Increased physiological demand - Goitrogens(less common) - Defects of thyroid hormone production
Triple assessment which consists of: Clinical : history and physical examination - Radiological : ultrasound or mammography - Pathological : cytology(fine-needle aspiration) or histological(tru-cut biopsy)
A pyogenic granuloma is a rapidly growing capillary haemangioma whic usually measures less than 1cm in diameter
Axillary vein thrombosis - Damage to axillary drainage following surgery such as axillary dissection in breast surgery
43. What are the treatment options available for Basal Cell Carcinoma?
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
Necrotizing vasculitis - Purpuric -haemorrhagic bullae
Liver - fatty change - chronic active hepatitis -cirrhosis and amyloid deposition - Gall bladder and bile ducts - gallstones - sclerosing cholangitis - and cholangiocarcinoma
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
44. What are the causes of venous ulcers?
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
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
Calcification of the walls of the vessel preserves the pulses until late in the natural history of disease - and prevent the sphygmomanometer from compressing the vessels. This tends to lead to an abnormally(and reassuringly) high ankle brachial pres
Transfemoral radiological embolization of the testicular vein - using either a spring coil or sclerosant
45. What is primary lymphoedema?
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
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
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)
Refers to congenital disease or primary lymphatic failure. It is three times more common in women and the pathology originates from within the lymphatics. It is also known as Milroys disease.
46. What are the specific early complications of amputations?
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47. What are the major indications for renal transplantation?
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
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
Axillary vein thrombosis - Damage to axillary drainage following surgery such as axillary dissection in breast surgery
Early mobilization is important - They should keep the area clean and wash carefully -especially after the clip/sutures have been removed - They are able to bathe immediately - They may need to be off work for 6 weeks if their job involves heavy lift
48. How should one treat a sebaceous cyst?
Donor renal artery is anastamosed to either the internal or external iliac artery - The donor renal vein is anastamosed to the external iliac vein - The ureter is anastamosed seperately to the patient's bladder - The renal pelvis the most anterior st
Non-Surgical : May be left alone if small and asymptomatic - Surgical : To prevent recurrence - complete excision of the cyst and its contents is required and this is done through the removal of an elliptical portion of skin containing the punctum.
General - Specific
Non-surgical : cryotherapy - topical application of 5-fluorouracil - retinoic acid - Surgical : Shaving of affected skin
49. What are the features of an inguinal hernia?
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Gorlin's syndrome
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
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
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
50. What are the acquired predisposing factors for malignant melanomas?
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
Iodine deficiency - Increased physiological demand - Goitrogens(less common) - Defects of thyroid hormone production
Sunlight - Pre-existing skin lesions - Previous melanoma
Heamolysis - Hereditary e.g : gilbert's syndrome