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Test your basic knowledge |
Clinical Surgery
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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. What is the differential diagnosis of a dermatofibroma?
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.
Scar extends beyond wound margins - It is found mostly on earlobes - chin -neck -shoulder and chest.
Wounds associated with - Infection - Trauma - Burns - Tension especially over the sternum such as after CABG - Wounds on certain areas of the body
2. What are the 3 objectives that one should look out for in the palpation of varicose veins?
State of the skin/subcutanaeous tissues - Sites of fascia defects - Site of incompetence(including the Trendelenburg and Tourniquet Tests)
Demographics - Presenting Complaint - History of Presenting Complaint - Medical and Surgical History - Drugs and any other allergies - Family History - Social History - Systemic Enquiry
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
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
3. What are the signs in the mouth of Peutz-Jegher disease?
Pigmented freckles around the lips and inside the mouth - associated with intestinal intussusception and gastrointestinal bleeding from colonic polyps
Cirrhosis - Malignancy - Lymphatic rupture or damage
Painless - Associated with normal appearance of the surrounding skin - Associated with local sensory loss
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Dysplastic naevus syndrome - Large congenital naevi - Family history in first-degree relatives
4. What are the surgical principles in Mayo's operation?
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
Superior thyroid artery - Inferior thyroid artery - Thyroidea ima(in 3% of people)
Cyanotic congenital heart disease - Infective endocarditis - Atrial myxoma (rare)
Commonest in children and young adults(P for Paediatric)
5. What are the features of an inguinal hernia?
Non-Surgical : leave alone if asymptomatic and if patient does not want intervention - Surgical : Simple excision followed by histology
Superior thyroid artery - Inferior thyroid artery - Thyroidea ima(in 3% of people)
Use of gloves and discontinuing any predisposing drugs e.g beta blockers - Using warm pads in gloves and socks in the winter - Encourage patients to stop smoking
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
6. What investigations are appropriate for deep venous disease?
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
Wound complications - Recurrence - Damage to adjacent neurovascular structures
Anxiety - Hyperthyroidism - Hyperhidrosis erythematosus traumatica - Phaeochromocytoma
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
7. What are the specific complications of inguinal hernia repair?
Urinary retention - Bruising - Pain - often very severe and patients should be discharged with adequate analgesia; chronic groin pain persists in 5% of patients - Haematoma - 10% - Ischaemic orchitis - 0.5%(prev. vasectomy predisposing cause and diss
Rolled or raised edge - Often on sun-damaged skin
Extrahepatic : caused by increased resistance to flow e.g : portal or splenic vein thrombosis - Intrahepatic : due to cirrhosis - right heart failure - sarcoidosis and schistosomiasis(the latter is the most important cause worldwide - ova of the para
Tenderness over the graft - Reduction in urine output - Rising creatinine
8. What are the treatment options available for Basal Cell Carcinoma?
Raynaud's phenomenon - Thrombangiitis obliterans - Takayasu's arteritis
Non-surgical : Leave alone if small and asymptomatic - Surgical : minimally invasive surgery or surgical excision
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
Less than 0.5
9. How do true umbilical herniae occur?
An absolute pressure of less than 50mmHg
True umbilical herniae occur through the umbilical scar and are usually congenital in origin and particulary common in patients of Afro-Caribbean origin
Thyroidectomy
Physical preparation - marking of side - explanation of procedure - anaesthetic work up - Pyschological preparation - Breast care nurse preoperatively and discussion of reasons for mastectomy - option of reconstructive surgery
10. How might a patient with a popliteal aneurysms present?
Popliteal aneurysms represent 80% of all peripheral (non-aortic) aneurysms - The patient may have presented with a lump behind the knee if the aneurysm has grown to such a size that it has expanded beyond the popliteal fossa - 50% present with distal
Non-surgical : cryotherapy - topical application of 5-fluorouracil - retinoic acid - Surgical : Shaving of affected skin
Schirmer's test for xeropthalmia - Slit-lamp examination of the cornea - Lip biopsy for histological examination of the minor salivary glands
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
11. What is the surgical treatment of pressure sores?
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
Mouth and lips are hyperpigmented
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.
Non-surgical - same as in incisional hernia with possible investigations : LFTs - H.pylori serology and Upper GI endoscopy
12. What are the features of ulcers in patients with rheumatoid arthritis?
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
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
Necrotizing vasculitis - Purpuric -haemorrhagic bullae
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
13. What is a dermatofibroma?
Loss of hair on outer-third of eyebrows - Lid retraction - Lid lag - Ophthalmoplegia - Exophthalmos - Chemosis - Proptosis
A dermatofibroma is a benign neoplasm of dermal fibroblasts.
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
Rolled or raised edge - Often on sun-damaged skin
14. What is Frey's syndrome?
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
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
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
Pressure effects - Deafness with involvement of the 8th cranial nerve - Sarcomatous transformation - Intra-abdominal effects - Skeletal changes
15. What side effect would you warn this patient about if considering cervical sympathectomy?
16. What is primary lymphoedema?
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
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.
Commonest form of thyroid abnormality - Secondary to hyperplasia of the gland to meet physiological demand for thyroxine - Secondary to defective production of thyroid hormone
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
17. What is the differential diagnosis of a testicular tumour?
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
Liver Cirrhosis - Inflammatory Bowel disease - Malabsorption - Gastrointestinal lymphoma
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
TIMEC - Trauma/Tumor - Infection/Inflammation/Ischemia - Metabolic -Mechanical - Endocrine - Congenital
18. What are the signs in the mouth of Hereditary telangiectasia?
Temperature - Capillary Refill - Peripheral Pulses
Congenital ptosis - Myopathies - Syphillis
Multiple telangiectasia around the mouth and on the tongue and lips
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
19. What are the causes of bilateral ptosis?
Presence of multiple neurofibromas in a patient - in combination with other dermatological manifestations(six cafe-au-lait psots) - It is an autosomal dominant condition with two types: 1 and 2.
Congenital ptosis - Myopathies - Syphillis
This removes the possibility of recurrent disease appears to improves the outcome for patietns with significant eye disease and eliminates the need for annual TFT monitoring to assess remnant function. It does - of course - demand thyroxine replaceme
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
20. What are the two main classifications for thyroid enlargement?
Mechanical obstruction - Coordination abnormalities
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
Treatment is radical surgery with follow-up using sequent calcitonin assays
The cyst may be surgically excised - whole if possible - although this may be difficult if there has been previous infection - Bonney's blue dye can be injected into the fistula/sinus allowing accurate surgical excision and therefore reduces recurren
21. What is the treatment of a chemodectoma?
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
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
Scar confined to wound margins - It is found across flexor surfaces and skin creases
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
22. What are the hepatobiliary complications of IBD?
Liver - fatty change - chronic active hepatitis -cirrhosis and amyloid deposition - Gall bladder and bile ducts - gallstones - sclerosing cholangitis - and cholangiocarcinoma
The primary lesion could be treated with excision with 1cm margin and Moh's staged chemosurgery with histological assessment of margins and electrodessication - for lesions of the eyelids -ears and nasolabial folds. Radiotherapy is applied for unrese
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
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
23. What are the complications of incisional hernia?
Aneurysms are most common in: Men - Aged more than 60 years - Smokers - Hypertensive patients - Often strong family history
Nerve to stapedius - Nerve to posterior belly of digastric - Five divisions within the parotid gland - temporal - zygomatic - buccal - mandibular and cervical
Rolled or raised edge - Often on sun-damaged skin
Mnemonic : PISS - Persistent Pain - Incarceration/Intestinal Obstruction(often intermittent) - Strangulation - Skin Excoriation
24. What is the medical treatment of Graves disease?
Mnemonic : PISS - Persistent Pain - Incarceration/Intestinal Obstruction(often intermittent) - Strangulation - Skin Excoriation
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
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
Commonest in children and young adults(P for Paediatric)
25. What are the indications for lung resection?
A dermatofibroma is a benign neoplasm of dermal fibroblasts.
Chest x-ray to map the caudal extent of the cystic hygroma - CT/MRI scanning especially if it is complex
Dilatation of normal capillaries - Can be secondary to skin irradiation - Can be part of hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia
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
26. What are the contents of the spermatic cord?
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
Injection sclerotherapy with 1% sodium tetradecyl sulphate - this has a high recurrence rate and indicated for postoperative recurrence of veins - below knee varicosities if the long saphenous vein and short saphenous vein are not involved.
General - Specific
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
27. What do you know about thyroid cysts?
True cysts with a complete smooth wall are very rare - Most are composite lesions with colloid degeneration - necrosis or haemorrhage in benign or malignant tumours - Only benign if completely abolished by aspiration - Cytology can be false-negative
The advantages of having surgery are a six-fold reduction in the rate of stroke at 3 years - The operative risk of stroke is 2% and operative mortality 1-2% - Specific risks of haematoma -hypoglossal nerve injury and numbness of the ipsilateral earlo
Congenital Which is rare and Acquired Which is very common.
More common in females - Occur most commonly in the fourth or fifth decade - 10% in middle-aged are malignant but 50% are malignat in the young and the elderly - FNAC is the most important investigation
28. What is the one-year survival of amputations?
50%
Scar extends beyond wound margins - It is found mostly on earlobes - chin -neck -shoulder and chest.
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
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
29. What are the appearances of the blood film after a splenectomy?
Hyperthyroidism - Recurrent - Hypothyroidism - Hypertrophic scarring
Immediate : Facial nerve transection - Reactionary haemorrhage - Early : Wound infection - Temporary facial weakness -salivary fistula and division of the greater auricular nerve which means loss of sensation to the pinna - Late : Wound dimple - Frey
Hyperthyroidism - Late Hypothyroidism - Later Hyperparathyroidism
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
30. What are the congenital predisposing factors for malignant melanomas?
Mnemonic : PACT - Prominent nodule in a multinodular goitre - Adenoma - Cyst/Carcinoma/Lymphoma - Thyroiditis
Xeroderma pigmentosum - Dysplastic naevus syndrome - Large congenital naevi - Family history in first-degree relatives
Skin and soft tissues such as a sebaceous cyst -lipoma or sarcoma - Bowel - ca caecum - crohns mass in terminal ileum - TB terminal ileum - appendicular mass or abscess - Gynaecological organs - ovarian tumours or fibroid uterus - Male Reproductive S
Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber Syndrome - Parkes-Weber syndrome
31. What is neurofibromatosis?
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
Presence of multiple neurofibromas in a patient - in combination with other dermatological manifestations(six cafe-au-lait psots) - It is an autosomal dominant condition with two types: 1 and 2.
Arising inside the parotid gland - Arising outside the parotid gland
It reduces intravascular hydrostatic pressure and the stockings increase extracellular hydrostatic pressure - together reducing the level of tissue oedema.
32. What are the features of nodular melanoma?
Unilateral - Bilateral
Arising inside the parotid gland - Arising outside the parotid gland
Pre-hepatic - Hepatic - Post-hepatic
Second most common type - Occurs most often on the trunk - Polypoid in shape and is raised - Smooth surface - Irregular edge - Frequently ulcerated
33. What is the differential diagnosis of swollen legs?
Central causes - RHF - hypoalbuminaemia -nephrotic syndrome and hypothyroidism - Peripheral - venous disease such as DVT - Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome - chronic venous insufficiency or post-phlebitic limb - Rare - angio-oedema - arteriovenous malforma
The aorta is narrowed below the origin of the left subclavian artery and therefore blood flow to the abdomen and legs is reduced - The prominent vessels over the back are large collateral that have developed to bypass the obstruction and supply the l
Excision of an entire lung
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
34. What are the surgical treatment principles of incisional hernia?
Dissection of the hernial sac from surrounding tissues and definitioni of tissue bordering the defect on all sides to 2-3cm - Closing the defect(if small) and/or using mesh overlapping adequately( more than 5 to 8cm) over normal tissues to allows for
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
Use of gloves and discontinuing any predisposing drugs e.g beta blockers - Using warm pads in gloves and socks in the winter - Encourage patients to stop smoking
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
35. What radiological investigations would be helpful in distinguishing the different causes?
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
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
'Watch and wait' or aspiration followed by 3 weeks of immobilzation
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
36. What factors predispose to incisional hernia?
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
Elderly(A for Aged)
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%
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 -
37. What level does the serum bilirubin need to rise to before jaundice can be detected on clinical examination?
Non-surgical : risk factor modification such as establishment of good diabetic control and for recurrent infections eradication of nasal carriage of staphylococcus aureus with antiseptics and/or antibiotics such as chlorhexidine and mupirocin - Surgi
Excision of an entire lung
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
Benign skin lesions: Moles -freckles -lentigo -pigmented seborrhoeic keratoses - dermatofibromas and thrombosed haemangiomas - When it comes to malignant skin lesions - pigmented basal cell carcinomas
38. In which patients are abdominal aortic aneurysms most common?
Necrotizing vasculitis - Purpuric -haemorrhagic bullae
Aneurysms are most common in: Men - Aged more than 60 years - Smokers - Hypertensive patients - Often strong family history
Found above the inguinal ligament - Usually reducible - Commoner in males - 6:1 - Risk of strangulation is low - Cough impulse present
Triple assessment which consists of: Clinical : history and physical examination - Radiological : ultrasound or mammography - Pathological : cytology(fine-needle aspiration) or histological(tru-cut biopsy)
39. What are the rare causes of digital clubbing?
40. How would you treat a cystic hygroma?
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
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
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.
Lymphocyte-mediated destruction of the exocrine glands secondary to B-cell hyper-reactivity and associated loss of suppressor T-Cell activity
41. In What age group does anaplastic carcinoma usually present in?
Elderly(A for Aged)
Unilateral total lobectomy and isthmusectomy
If untreated - 25% progress to invasive squamous cell carcinoma
Mnemonic : NO SPECS - No signs or symptoms - Only signs of upper lid retraction and stare - with or without lid lag and exopthalmos - Soft-tissue involvement - Proptosis - Exopthalmos - Corneal Involvement - Slight loss due to optic nerve involvemen
42. What would you tell patients about their recovery from inguinal hernia repair?
Hypertrophic scars tend to appear soon after injury and usually regress spontaneously - while keloid scars appear months after injury and continue to grow
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
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
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
43. What are the cardiac causes of digital clubbing?
Extrahepatic : caused by increased resistance to flow e.g : portal or splenic vein thrombosis - Intrahepatic : due to cirrhosis - right heart failure - sarcoidosis and schistosomiasis(the latter is the most important cause worldwide - ova of the para
Are you having difficulties swallowing liquids - or solids - or both? - Did the problem start suddenly or was the onset gradual? - Do you ever regurgitate food? - Can you eat a full meal? - How long have you had this problem for? - Where does the foo
Cyanotic congenital heart disease - Infective endocarditis - Atrial myxoma (rare)
Mnemonic : No POMP - No opthalmic features are seen - Progression of simple diffuse goitre to nodular enlargement - Overactivity in parts of an MNG may lead to mild hyperthyroidism(Plummer's syndrome) - Middle-aged women - Positive family history
44. What are the complications of atrial fibrillation?
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
Lobectomy - Pneumonectomy - Non-anatomical resection are often performed for traumatic injury - Sleeve resection
Diffuse enlargement - smooth or nodular - Solitary nodule
An abnormal protrusion of abdominal contents through a defect in the linea alba - usually halfway between the xiphoid process and umbilicus
45. What is the prophylactic treatment of pressure sores?
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
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
Auscultation - Percussion of the thyroid gland and downwards for retrosternal extension
Sunlight - Pre-existing skin lesions - Previous melanoma
46. What are the common causes of ascites?
Excision for the main lesion with varying margins depending on the size of the lesion. - If there is nodal spread - Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology or Lymph node biopsy - Therapeutic Block Dissection(if palpable lymph nodes) - Palliation adjuvant th
Chronic Liver disease - Right Heart Failure - Intra-abdominal Malignancy - Hypoalbuminaemia
As the perfusion of the leg begins to decrease in a patient with peripheral vascular disease; the ratio begins to fall.
Anti-salivary antibodies - rheumatoid factor - but two specific antibodies present are anti-SSA-Ro and anti-SSA-La
47. What is the normal ABPI?
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
1
Cardiac disease - hypertension -myocardial infarction -ischaemia -mitral valve disease - cardiomyopathy -endocarditis - Respiratory disease - Pneumonia - lung cancer - sarcoidosis - Other: Hypothyroidism and idiopathic ( lone AF)
A carbuncle is an extensive infection of hair follicles by the same organism with involvement of adjacent follicles and development of draining sinuses. It is associated with diabetes and is treated with a combination of systemic antibiotics and surg
48. What are the non-surgical treatment options for coarctation of aorta?
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
Investigation and treatment of concurrent abnormalities - Management of hypertension
Non-Surgical : Leave alone if asymptomatic(particularly in young patients) - Surgical : Complete excision of lesion with histology(.
Fibroadenomas - Breast cysts - Fat necrosis - Breast cancer
49. What is a useful mneumonic to remember what you have to present when examining a lump or swelling?
Should The Children Ever Find Lumps Readily
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
The characteristic presentation is insidious with progressive weight-loss and dysphagia - The patient initally hass difficulty swallowing solids and often describes the food getting stuck in the lower part of the oesophagus - They may also describe o
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
50. How is a Cimino-Brescia arteriovenous fistula fashioned?
Solar keratosses are squamous cell carcinoma in situ
The pain is caused by a reduced blood supply to the distal aspects of the limb. The pain gets worse at night because the perfusion of the limb is further reduced when the patient is lying down - This is due to: Decreased cardiac output at night - Red
Reflux Trahere transplantation - Kistner's operation - Obstruction: Palma Operation - Warren Bypass
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