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Test your basic knowledge |
Clinical Surgery
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
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health-sciences
,
surgery
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. What investigations would you perform to help you in your diagnosis?
Lymphangiomas can be:Cystic - Solid or diffuse - Cutaneous
Chest x-ray to map the caudal extent of the cystic hygroma - CT/MRI scanning especially if it is complex
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
'Watch and wait' or aspiration followed by 3 weeks of immobilzation
2. What are the neurological symptoms in thoracic outlet obstruction more commonly due to?
3. What are the pathological features of thyroglossal cyst?
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
Hyperkeratoses(thickening of the keratin layer) - Focal parakeratosis - Irregular acanthosis - Basal layer atypia only
Cervical sympathectomy and amputation of the affected phalanges - Cervical sympathectomy may not be a permanent solution and may only relieve symptoms for 2 years or less - Amputate only if digits are threatened with gangrene
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.
4. To whom is the surgical treatment of Graves' disease particularly useful?
Defective gene on chromosome 22 with variable penetrance - Cutaneous signs are less often seen in this type.
Anti-salivary antibodies - rheumatoid factor - but two specific antibodies present are anti-SSA-Ro and anti-SSA-La
For patients who refuse radiation therapy or relapse after an adequate course - pregnant patients or those wishing to become pregnant within 4 years - patients under the age of 40 years and those with nodular or large goitres
Mnemonic: WBC - White - blanching of digits - Blue - cyanosis of pain - Crimson - reactive hyperaemia - fingers turn red in colour
5. What is the mean age for presentation of follicular carcinoma of the thyroid?
Causes may be classified as the 3 Ps: Physiological - Pathological - decreased androgens - androgen resistance - increased secretion -increased peripheral aromatization - Potions that is drugs such as recreational drugs - GI drugs - cardiovascular dr
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 -
Found below the inguinal ligament - Usually not reducible - Commoner in women - but inguinal herniae are still commoner in women than femoral hernias. Risk of strangulation is high - Cough impulse usually absent
Mean age is 50 years at presentation(F for fifty)
6. What should you mention when considering the management of a surgical patient?
A horizontal ellipse of stretched supra or infra-umbilical skin is excised - deeping the incision to the rectus sheath and identifying the fibrous band Which is the neck of the sac - The sac is dissected free from the surrounding tissues - which may
It helps to give an indication as to What the exact aetiology is.
History - Examination - Special Investigations - Treatment
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
7. What is a dermoid cyst?
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
A dermoid cyst is a skin-lined cyst deep to the skin. They may be congenital or acquired.
It will show you if it is malignant or inflammatory
Characteristic cold-induced changes associated with vasospasm
8. What are the two main systems which need to be examining thyroid status in a surgical patient?
Classic Kaposi's sarcoma - AIDS-associated Kaposi's sarcoma - Endemic(central African) variety - Transplantation-associated Kaposi's sarcoma
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
Found below the inguinal ligament - Usually not reducible - Commoner in women - but inguinal herniae are still commoner in women than femoral hernias. Risk of strangulation is high - Cough impulse usually absent
Hands and Eyes
9. How would you treat a branchial cyst?
10. What needs to be taken into consideration when marking the stoma site?
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
Characteristic cold-induced changes associated with vasospasm
The protein content of a sample of effusion fluid is measured and the classification depends on this value:Transudate is equal to a protein value of less than 30g/L - Exudate is equal to a protein value of more than 30g/L
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
11. What are the complications of a sebaceous cyst?
Clinical diagnosis if at least two or the following triad is present: Keratoconjunctivitis sicca(dry eyes) - Xerostomia(dry mouth) - Associated connective tissue disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis(50% of cases) - scleroderma -SLE -Polymyositis or
Traumatic - Iatrogenic(following angiography and bypass)
Superior thyroid artery - Inferior thyroid artery - Thyroidea ima(in 3% of people)
Mneumonic : I - CHUM - Infection(frequent) - Calcification - Ulceration - sebaceous Horn formation - Malignant change
12. What are the signs in the mouth of Addison's disease?
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
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.
Mouth and lips are hyperpigmented
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)
13. What are the specific complications of a Cimino-Brescia fistula?
Thrombosis during or just after haemodialysis - which may be due to relative hypotension and damage to the intima of the vein - Venous hypertension in the hand causes swelling and ischemia of the fingertips. This should be avoided by the ligation of
A pyogenic granuloma is a rapidly growing capillary haemangioma whic usually measures less than 1cm in diameter
The Branham-Nicoladoni sign indicates the degree of shunting and cardiac impairment resulting from a large AV fistula - The carotid pulse is palpated and then a tourniquet placed around the proximal affected limb and inflated above systolic pressure
Mnemonic : PACT - Prominent nodule in a multinodular goitre - Adenoma - Cyst/Carcinoma/Lymphoma - Thyroiditis
14. What are the non-surgical treatment options for lymphoedema?
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
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.
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
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
15. Under what circumstances would patients (with popliteal aneurysms) they be treated?
Those related to anaesthesia
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
Surgery is indicated for: Symptomatic aneurysms - Those containing thrombus - Those greater than 2cm
Derived from capillary endothelial cells or from fibrous tissue - It is linked to human herpes virus 8
16. What is the non-surgical treatment of venous ulcers?
The vaginal type of hydrocoele may be secondary to a number of local pathologies: Testicular tumours - Torsion - Orchitis - Trauma - Following inguinal hernia repair
The major differential diagnoses would be with a renal tumour and adult polcystic kidney disease and if there is any doubt of a tumour - then the cyst fluid may be sent for cytological analysis
Jaundice is yellow discolouration of the skin and mucous membranes caused by the accumulation of bile pigments.
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
17. What is the 'reconstruction ladder'?
General - Thermoregulatory - Dermatological - Musculoskeletal - Gastrointestinal - Cardiovascular - Gynaecological - Psychiatric - Neurological
Some 50% are present at birth and they are thought to represent a congenital abnormality during the evolution of embryonic lymph nodes into the adult type
This is the array of plastic surgeon techniques of increasing complexity that is available to the surgeon and Which is used according to their suitability for individual patients
An abnormal communication between two epithelial surfaces(or endothelial surfaces such as in arteriovenous fistula)
18. How is a testicular tumour removed?
Mnemonic : HIS PRIPS - Ischaemia/gangrene - Haemorrhage - Retraction - Prolapse/intussusception - Parastomal Hernia - Stenosis - Skin excoriation
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
Mnemonic : PISS - Persistent Pain - Incarceration/Intestinal Obstruction(often intermittent) - Strangulation - Skin Excoriation
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
19. What are the main points to be elicited during a clerking of the surgical patient?
Demographics - Presenting Complaint - History of Presenting Complaint - Medical and Surgical History - Drugs and any other allergies - Family History - Social History - Systemic Enquiry
Pleomorphic adenoma(commonest) and Warthin's tumour
Cardiac and respiratory disease should be controlled first - Other risk-factors should be optimized - Preoperative weight loss should be encourage
Investigation and treatment of concurrent abnormalities - Management of hypertension
20. What are the surgical problems associated with AF?
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
Treatment involves the use of artificial tears and saliva - use of systemic steroids and careful follow-up due to increased risk of lymphoma development
Non-surgical - same as in incisional hernia with possible investigations : LFTs - H.pylori serology and Upper GI endoscopy
Cervical sympathectomy and amputation of the affected phalanges - Cervical sympathectomy may not be a permanent solution and may only relieve symptoms for 2 years or less - Amputate only if digits are threatened with gangrene
21. How can the extent of the obstruction be determined?
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
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.
An intravenous injection of contrast into the veins in the arm can illustrate the degree of obstruction - A CT Scan of the thorax may demonstrate the cause of the obstruction and the length of the SVC affected
Mnemonic : PS : PLS C TiT - Pharyngeal pouch - Sublingual dermoid cyst - Plunging ranula - Lymph nodes - Subhyoid bursa - Ca - larynx/trachea/oesophagus - Thyroglossal cyst - Thyroid swelling
22. What is a useful mneumonic to remember what you have to present when examining a lump or swelling?
Painless - Associated with normal appearance of the surrounding skin - Associated with local sensory loss
Simple colloid goitre - Graves' disease - Thyroiditis
Should The Children Ever Find Lumps Readily
10% per year
23. How may pleural effusions be classified?
At two levels:ABO Compatibility - HLA Compatibility
Treatment involves the use of artificial tears and saliva - use of systemic steroids and careful follow-up due to increased risk of lymphoma development
Affect any age - Males = females - All races may be affected
The protein content of a sample of effusion fluid is measured and the classification depends on this value:Transudate is equal to a protein value of less than 30g/L - Exudate is equal to a protein value of more than 30g/L
24. What do you know about Kaposi's Sarcoma?
Well-differentiated - Myxoid and round cell - Pleomorphic liposarcoma
Derived from capillary endothelial cells or from fibrous tissue - It is linked to human herpes virus 8
Unilateral - Bilateral
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
25. If the patient has noticed pale stools and dark urine - what other questions would you ask?
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
50%
Weight loss - Change in bowel habit - Loss of appetite - Back pain
True umbilical herniae occur through the umbilical scar and are usually congenital in origin and particulary common in patients of Afro-Caribbean origin
26. What is the pathogenesis of Raynaud's phenomenon?
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
Cervical spondylosis - Pancoast's tumour - Cervical disc protrusions - Ulnar nerve neuropathy
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
Treatment with radiotherapy and doxorubicin gives best survival of 1 year
27. How would you treat a pharyngeal pouch?
Non-surgical : Leave alone if small and asymptomatic - Surgical : minimally invasive surgery or surgical excision
Extrusion of peritoneum and abdominal contents through a weak scar of accidental wound on the abdominal wall - Represents a partial wound dehiscence where the skin remains intact
Neoplasia(benign -malignant -lymphoma and leukaemia) - Stone(sialolithiasis) - Infection/inflammation(mumps -acute sialadenitis -chronic recurrent sialadenitis -HIV - salivary gland disease) - Autoimmune(sjogren's syndrome) - Infiltration(sarcoidosis
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
28. What are the complications with regards to the surgical treatment of a ganglion?
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.
Wound complications - Recurrence - Damage to adjacent neurovascular structures
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
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
29. What is the differential diagnosis of a dermatofibroma?
Sunlight - Pre-existing skin lesions - Previous melanoma
Mainly teratoma or seminomas - other types are: Embryonal carcinoma - Choriocarcinoma - Yolk sac tumour - Leydig cell tumours - Sertoli cell tumours - Lymphoma
Chest x-ray to map the caudal extent of the cystic hygroma - CT/MRI scanning especially if it is complex
It is important to exclude malignant tumours such as: Malignant melanoma - Basal cell carcinoma
30. What are the aetiologies arising inside the parotid gland in a unilateral swelling of the parotid gland?
31. What is the pathogenesis of an acquired dermoid cyst?
Early - haematoma - Intermediate - Infection and nerve damage e.g saphenous in stripping - Late - Recurrence
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.
The vaginal type of hydrocoele may be secondary to a number of local pathologies: Testicular tumours - Torsion - Orchitis - Trauma - Following inguinal hernia repair
Sympathetic overstimulation and restrictive myopathy of levator palpebrae superioris
32. What is a hydrocoele?
Haemorrhage - Hoarseness - Hyperthyroidism
10% per year
Excess accumulation of fluid in the processus vaginalis.
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
33. What are the appearances of the blood film after a splenectomy?
More worrying features for a tumour would include: Thick or irregular wall - Extensive calcification within the cavity or wall of the cyst - Multilocular cysts
Increased platelet count and large platelets - Increased neutrophils - Nucleated red cells with Howell-Jolly bodies and target cell - Tend to mount more of a leukocytosis in response to infection
Treatment with radiotherapy and doxorubicin gives best survival of 1 year
Non-Surgical : leave alone if asymptomatic and if patient does not want intervention - Surgical : Simple excision followed by histology
34. What are the general complications of a stoma?
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
Via the lymphatic route(Y for yellow = lymph)
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.
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
35. Simple cysts are found in 33% of patients by the age of 60. How should they be managed?
Lymphangiomas can be:Cystic - Solid or diffuse - Cutaneous
Resection of a lobe including its bronchial origin with re-anastamosis of the proximal and distal bronchus
Preoperative - Age -Immunocompromised state -obesity -malignancy -abdominal distension from obstruction or ascites - Operate - Poor technical closure of the wound -placing drains through wounds - Postoperative - wound infection or haematoma - early m
History and Clinical Examination - they usually present incidentally but occasionally with a renal mass or haematuria
36. What are the categorical causes of digital clubbing?
Thyroidectomy
Venous disease
Idiopathic Which is the most common - Gastrointestinal - Respiratory - Cardiac - Rare causes
Cardiac disease - hypertension -myocardial infarction -ischaemia -mitral valve disease - cardiomyopathy -endocarditis - Respiratory disease - Pneumonia - lung cancer - sarcoidosis - Other: Hypothyroidism and idiopathic ( lone AF)
37. What is the treatment of Sjogren's syndrome?
Auscultation - Percussion of the thyroid gland and downwards for retrosternal extension
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
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
Treatment involves the use of artificial tears and saliva - use of systemic steroids and careful follow-up due to increased risk of lymphoma development
38. What are the features of acral lentiginous melanoma?
Sunlight - Carcinogens - Previous radiotherapy - Malignant transformation in pre-existing skin lesion
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
Least common - Occurs on hairless skin - Irregular area of brown or black pigmentation
These are due to a defect through the linea alba adjacent to the umbilicus and usually due to obesity stretching the fibres.
39. How does follicular carcinoma spread?
Via the bloodstream(R is equal to red is equal to blood)
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.
Pressure effects - Deafness with involvement of the 8th cranial nerve - Sarcomatous transformation - Intra-abdominal effects - Skeletal changes
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
40. What investigations are appropriate for deep venous disease?
Duplex - shows area of reflux and deep venous occlusion - Venography - ascending which identifies deep venous patency and perforator incompetence and descending which identifies areas of reflux - Varicography - shows sites of communication - Ambulato
Raynaud's phenomenon - Thrombangiitis obliterans - Takayasu's arteritis
Secondary Raynaud's phenomenon associated with other diseases
Increased sweating - Palmar erythema - Thyroid acropachy - Onycholysis - Areas of vitiligo - Pulse - Fine Tremor
41. What is exopthalmos secondary to?
Necrotizing vasculitis - Purpuric -haemorrhagic bullae
Retro-orbital inflammation and lymphocytic infiltration leading to oedema and an increase in retrobulbar orbital contents
Look - Feel - Press - Move - Listen - Transilluminate and Examine Surrounding Areas.
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
42. In the tourniquet test - What do collapsed veins below the tourniquet indicate?
The incompetent vein is at or above the level of the tourniquet
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.
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
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
43. What other non-surgical treatments are available for ischaemic ulcers?
The aneurysm is surgically repaired by either an excision bypass -where the popliteal artery is ligated above and below the diseased segment and a graft interposed - or a simple resection and anastamoses without the use of a graft - Acute ischemia ca
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
'Watch and wait' or aspiration followed by 3 weeks of immobilzation
Bright-red raised strawberry-like lesion - Present from birth - but 60% undergo spontaneous resolution by the age of 3 years - Only treated if obscuring a visual field or spontaneous resolution not occurring.
44. How do true umbilical herniae occur?
Retro-orbital inflammation and lymphocytic infiltration leading to oedema and an increase in retrobulbar orbital contents
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
True umbilical herniae occur through the umbilical scar and are usually congenital in origin and particulary common in patients of Afro-Caribbean origin
Pleomorphic adenoma(commonest) and Warthin's tumour
45. What syndrome is associated with a port-wine stain?
Via greater superficial petrosal nerve to lacrimal - nasal and palatine glands
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
Sturge-Weber syndrome is the association of a facial port-wine stain with a corresponding haemangioma in the brain - leading to contralateral focal fits.
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
46. What are the cardiac causes of digital clubbing?
Autosomal dominant - 1 in 500 - Chromosomes 4 and 16 are affected - Age of Presentation is between 30s and 50s
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
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
Cyanotic congenital heart disease - Infective endocarditis - Atrial myxoma (rare)
47. What are the indications for surgery in ulcerative colitis?
48. How would you treat hidradenitis suppurativa?
Skin : as above - Lungs : pneumonitis - pulmonary fibrosis - Heart : Ischemic heart disease - Arteries: radiation arteritis -Spinal cord : myelopathy - Gonadal damage : infertility - Thyroid : hypothyroidism due to depletion of follicular thyroid cel
Well-localized abscesses are treated by incision and drainage under antibiotic cover - Larger lesions are treated by radical excision and full-thickness skin grafting usually harvested from the groins or abdomen
Subtotal colectomy with ileostomy plus or minus mucous fistula formation in acute severe colitis - Proctocolectomy and permanent ileostomy when the patient chooses or if patient not suitable for a restorative procedure - Restorative proctocolectomy W
Wound complications - Recurrence - Damage to adjacent neurovascular structures
49. How would you treat an acquired dermoid cyst?
Autosomal dominant - 1 in 500 - Chromosomes 4 and 16 are affected - Age of Presentation is between 30s and 50s
A blind-ending track -typically lined by epithelial or granulation tissue - which opens onto an epithelial surface
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
Surgical treatment involves complete excision of the cyst.
50. Radiological investigations for hepatomegaly
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.
Ultrasound - first line - Which is used to define the liver architecture and give an idea of the size and may identify the pathology - Contrast-enhanced CT may also be useful - especially to further investigate solid lesions
Fibroadenomas - Breast cysts - Fat necrosis - Breast cancer
Unilateral total lobectomy and isthmusectomy