Test your basic knowledge |

Subjects : health-sciences, usmle
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 does autoimmune destruction of parietal cells lead to...






2. What are the borders of the femoral triangle






3. strictures - fistulas - perianal disease - malabsorption - nutritional depletion - colorectal cancer






4. Who is at risk for pancreatic adenocarcinoma






5. How do NSAIDs cause acute gastritis






6. What layer of fascia covers a direct inguinal hernia






7. How does abetalipoproteinemia lead to malabsorption






8. When and How does Abetalipoproteinemia present






9. What is a positive murphy's sign






10. Which kind of hemorrhoids are painful and why






11. Progressive dyshphage beginning with solids and moving to liquids and weight loss






12. Why would a self - limited lactase def occur following an injury (viral diarrhea)






13. This disease commonly presents as heartburn and regurg when lying down - What is another common presentation






14. What transforms conjugated bilirubin to urobilinogen






15. What cells make pepsin - What does it do - and what regulates it






16. What causes pancreatic insuff and What does it cause






17. Which IBD has skip lesions and can hit any portion of the GI tract but sprares the rectum - and Which is mainly has continuous lesions in the colon and always has rectal involvement






18. What can fistula between the gallbladder and small intestine create and how can you tell






19. What is the most common esophageal cancer worldwide and in the US






20. GIP - source - action regulation






21. What is the epi for CRC






22. external hemorrhoids and squamous cell carcinoma occur above or below the pectinate line






23. What is the triad of Plummer - Vinson syndrome






24. What color is the liver in dubin johnson - and what similar syndrome doesn't have gross color changes in the liver






25. What is Trousseau's sign






26. If trypsin activates more trypsinogen - what kind of feedback loop is established






27. What are the midgut structures and what supplies their blood and PANS innervation






28. If the abdominal aorta is blocked - How does blood get to the middle rectal artery






29. Where is there sclerosis in alcoholic cirrohosis






30. Abuse of what substance leads to acute gastritis






31. What kind of digestion is bile needed for






32. masses protruding into gut lumen leading to a sawtooth appearance - often rectosigmoid






33. Where and How is iron absorbed






34. Gastrin - source - action - regulation






35. What are the signs and symptoms of budd chiari






36. glandular metaplasia - replacement of nonkeratinized (stratified) squamous epithelium with intestinal (columnar) epithelium in the distal esophagus


37. In what clinical scenarior do you see portosystemic anastomoses






38. What congenital birth defect is associated with Hirschsprung






39. Between what structures do strong anastamoses exist






40. Gallstones that reach the common channel at ampulla can block which two ducts






41. What is the lumen of the pancreatic duct






42. gastric hypertrophy with protein loss - parietal cell atrophy and inc mucous cells






43. Which patients have pigment stones






44. What causes hirschsprungs






45. How does hirschsprung present and appear on imaging






46. What are the two molecular pathways that lead to CRC






47. concentric onion skin bile duct fibrosis






48. What are the foregut structures and what supplies their blood and PANS innvervation






49. What kind of salivary gland tumor is benign - heterotopic salivary gland tissue - trapped in lymph node and surrounded by lymphatic tissue


50. People of what decent are associated with celiac sprue and what findings/antibodies are present