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Question 1
Incorrect
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A 29-year-old man with gunshot to the abdomen is transferred to the operating theatre, following his arrival in the A&E department. He is unstable and his FAST scan is positive. During the operation, extensive laceration to the right lobe of the liver and involvement of the IVC are found, along with massive haemorrhage.
What should be the most appropriate approach to blood component therapy?Your Answer: Use Factor VIII concentrates early
Correct Answer:
Explanation:There is strong evidence to support haemostatic resuscitation in the setting of massive haemorrhage due to trauma. This advocates the use of 1:1:1 ratio.
Uncontrolled haemorrhage accounts for up to 39% of all trauma-related deaths. In the UK, approximately 2% of all trauma patients need massive transfusion. Massive transfusion is defined as the replacement of a patient’s total blood volume in less than 24 hours or the acute administration of more than half the patient’s estimated blood volume per hour. During acute bleeding, the practice of haemostatic resuscitation has been shown to reduce mortality rates. It is based on the principle of transfusion of blood components in fixed ratios. For example, packed red cells, FFP, and platelets are administered in a ratio of 1:1:1.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 2
Incorrect
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A 29 year old female bus driver presents to her family doctor with severe retrosternal chest pain and recurrent episodes of dysphagia. She states that these occur at irregular intervals and often resolve spontaneously. There are no physical abnormalities on examination and she seems well. What is her diagnosis?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Achalasia
Explanation:Answer: Achalasia
Achalasia is a primary oesophageal motility disorder characterized by the absence of oesophageal peristalsis and impaired relaxation of the lower oesophageal sphincter (LES) in response to swallowing. The LES is hypertensive in about 50% of patients. These abnormalities cause a functional obstruction at the gastroesophageal junction (GEJ).
Symptoms of achalasia include the following:Dysphagia (most common)
Regurgitation
Chest pain (behind the sternum)
Heartburn
Weight loss
Physical examination is non-contributory.
Treatment recommendations are as follows:
Initial therapy should be either graded pneumatic dilation (PD) or laparoscopic surgical myotomy with a partial fundoplication in patients fit to undergo surgery
Procedures should be performed in high-volume centres of excellence
Initial therapy choice should be based on patient age, sex, preference, and local institutional expertise
Botulinum toxin therapy is recommended for patients not suited to PD or surgery
Pharmacologic therapy can be used for patients not undergoing PD or myotomy and who have failed botulinum toxin therapy (nitrates and calcium channel blockers most common).
The invasion of the oesophageal neural plexus by the tumour can cause nonrelaxation of the LES, thus mimicking achalasia. This condition is known as malignant pseudo achalasia. Since contrast radiography and endoscopy frequently fail to differentiate these 2 entities, patients with a presumed diagnosis of achalasia but who have a shorter duration of symptoms, greater weight loss, and a more advanced age and who are referred for minimally invasive surgery should undergo additional imaging studies, including endoscopic ultrasound and computed tomography with fine cuts of the gastroesophageal junction, to rule out cancer.
Effort rupture of the oesophagus, or Boerhaave syndrome, is a spontaneous perforation of the oesophagus that results from a sudden increase in intraoesophageally pressure combined with negative intrathoracic pressure (e.g., severe straining or vomiting). The classic clinical presentation of Boerhaave syndrome usually consists of repeated episodes of retching and vomiting, typically in a middle-aged man with recent excessive dietary and alcohol intake.
These repeated episodes of retching and vomiting are followed by a sudden onset of severe chest pain in the lower thorax and the upper abdomen. The pain may radiate to the back or to the left shoulder. Swallowing often aggravates the pain.
Typically, hematemesis is not seen after oesophageal rupture, which helps to distinguish it from the more common Mallory-Weiss tear.
Swallowing may precipitate coughing because of the communication between the oesophagus and the pleural cavity. Shortness of breath is a common complaint and is due to pleuritic pain or pleural effusion.
A pulmonary embolism is a blood clot that occurs in the lungs.
It can damage part of the lung due to restricted blood flow, decrease oxygen levels in the blood, and affect other organs as well. Large or multiple blood clots can be fatal.
The most common symptom of a pulmonary embolism is shortness of breath. This may be gradual or sudden.Other symptoms of a pulmonary embolism include:
anxiety
clammy or bluish skin
chest pain that may extend into your arm, jaw, neck, and shoulder
fainting
irregular heartbeat
light-headedness
rapid breathing
rapid heartbeat
restlessness
spitting up blood
weak pulse -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 3
Incorrect
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A 54 year old man undergoes Milligan Morgan haemorrhoidectomy. He had no associated co-morbidities. Which of the following would be the best option for immediate post operative analgesia?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Caudal block
Explanation:Open haemorrhoidectomy is traditionally viewed as a painful procedure. Most operations are performed under general or regional anaesthesia. Following excisional haemorrhoidectomy, severe pain is not unusual, a well placed caudal anaesthetic will counter this. A pudendal nerve block is an alternative but is less effective than a caudal.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 4
Incorrect
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A 6 year old boy previously diagnosed with a rare genetic disorder requires long term drug therapy for his condition. The drug needs to be administered intravenously. Lately, the child has been pulling at the current system of Hickman line and the parents are requesting an alternate. Which of the following would be the best alternative method?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Portacath device
Explanation:Portacaths are usually inserted when there is a need for long term access to a vein. This might be to provide medication, special intravenous feeding, fluids, blood and blood product transfusion and blood tests. Broviacs would pose the same core problems as a Hickman.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 5
Incorrect
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A 43 year old man presents with a perianal abscess which is managed by incision and drainage. The wound measures 2.5cm x 2.5cm. What is the best step in management?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Allow the wound to heal by secondary intention
Explanation:Answer: Allow the wound to heal by secondary intention
A perianal abscess is a type of anorectal abscess that is confined to the perianal space. Other causes can include inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn’s disease, as well as trauma, or cancerous origins. Patients with recurrent or complex abscesses should be evaluated for Crohn’s disease. Perianal abscesses are the most common type of anorectal abscesses. These abscesses can cause significant discomfort for patients. They are located at the anal verge and if left untreated can extend into the ischioanal space or intersphincteric space since these areas are continuous with the perianal space. They can also cause systemic infection if left untreated. Patients will complain of anal pain which may be dull, sharp, aching, or throbbing. This may be accompanied by fever, chills, constipation, or diarrhoea. Patients with perianal abscess typically present with pain around the anus, which may or may not be associated with bowel movements, but is usually constant. Purulent discharge may be reported if the abscess is spontaneously draining, and blood per rectum may be reported in a spontaneously draining abscess.
A physical exam can typically rule out other causes of anal pain, such as haemorrhoids, and will yield an area of fluctuance or an area of erythema and induration in the skin around the perianal area. Cellulitis should be noted and marked if extending beyond the fluctuant area.
Perianal abscesses are an indication for timely incision and drainage. Antibiotic administration alone is inadequate and inappropriate. Once incision and drainage are performed, there is no need for antibiotic administration unless certain medical issues necessitate the use. Such conditions include valvular heart disease, immunocompromised patients, diabetic patients, or in the setting of sepsis. Antibiotics are also considered in these patients or cases with signs of systemic infection or significant surrounding cellulitis.
Incision and drainage are typically performed in an office setting, or immediately in the emergency department. Local anaesthesia with 1% lidocaine may be administered to the surrounding tissues. A cruciate incision is made as close to the anal verge as possible to shorten any potential fistula formation. Blunt palpation is used to ensure no other septation or abscess pocket is missed. It is useful before completion of procedure to excise a skin flap of the cruciate incision or the tips of the four skin flaps to ensure adequate drainage and prevent premature healing of the skin over the abscess pocket. Packing may be placed initially for haemostasis. Continual packing may be further utilized for healing by secondary intention. Patients are encouraged to keep the incision and drainage site clean. Sitz baths may assist in pain relief.
More extensive abscesses may require the operating room for the adequate exam under anaesthesia to ensure adequate drainage, as well as inspect for other diseases such as fistula in ano.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 6
Incorrect
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A 32-year-old motorist was involved in a road traffic accident in which he collided head-on with another car at high speed. He was wearing a seatbelt and the airbags were deployed. When rescuers arrived, he was conscious and lucid but died immediately after.
What could have explained his death?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Aortic transection
Explanation:Aortic transection was the underlying cause of death in this patient.
Aortic transection, or traumatic aortic rupture, is typically the result of a blunt aortic injury in the context of rapid deceleration. This condition is commonly fatal as blood in the aorta is under great pressure and can quickly escape the vessel through a tear, resulting in rapid haemorrhagic shock and death. A temporary haematoma may prevent the immediate death. Injury to the aorta during a sudden deceleration commonly originates near the terminal section of the aortic arch, also known as the isthmus. This portion lies just distal to the take-off of the left subclavian artery at the intersection of the mobile and fixed portions of the aorta. As many as 80% of the patients with aortic transection die at the scene before reaching a trauma centre for treatment.
A widened mediastinum may be seen on the X-ray of a person with aortic rupture.
Other types of thoracic trauma include:
1. Tension pneumothorax and pneumothorax
2. Haemothorax
3. Flail chest
4. Cardiac tamponade
5. Blunt cardiac injury
6. Pulmonary contusion
7. Diaphragm disruption
8. Mediastinal traversing wounds -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 7
Incorrect
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A 57 year old man, known case of schizophrenia, undergoes a cholecystectomy. He is administered metoclopramide for post operative nausea. Twenty minutes later, he presents with agitation, marked oculogyric crises and oromandibular dystonia. Which of the following drugs would most likely alleviate his symptoms?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Procyclidine
Explanation:An acute dystonic reaction is characterized by involuntary contractions of muscles of the extremities, face, neck, abdomen, pelvis, or larynx in either sustained or intermittent patterns that lead to abnormal movements or postures. The symptoms may be reversible or irreversible and can occur after taking any dopamine receptor-blocking agents.
The aetiology of acute dystonic reaction is thought to be due to a dopaminergic-cholinergic imbalance in the basal ganglia. Reactions usually occur shortly after initiation of an offending agent or an increased dose of a possible offending agent.
Anticholinergic agents and benzodiazepines, procyclidine are the most commonly used agents to reverse or reduce symptoms in acute dystonic reaction. Acute dystonic reactions are often transient but can cause significant distress to the patient. Although rare, laryngeal dystonia can cause life-threatening airway obstruction. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 8
Incorrect
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A 64 year old man who has undergone a total hip replacement is given an infusion of packed red cells. Which of the following adverse effects is most likely to occur as a result of this treatment?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Pyrexia
Explanation:Acute transfusion reactions present as adverse signs or symptoms during or within 24 hours of a blood transfusion. The most frequent reactions are fever, chills, pruritus, or urticaria, which typically resolve promptly without specific treatment or complications.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 9
Incorrect
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An 80 year old woman is undergoing excision of a basal cell carcinoma from her periorbital region under local anaesthesia. Medical history reveals multiple medical comorbities. Which medication should be stopped prior to surgery?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Aspirin
Explanation:Answer: Aspirin
Aspirin increases bleeding time when taken orally. Aspirin causes several different effects in the body, mainly the reduction of inflammation, analgesia (relief of pain), the prevention of clotting, and the reduction of fever. Much of this is believed to be due to decreased production of prostaglandins and TXA2. Aspirin’s ability to suppress the production of prostaglandins and thromboxanes is due to its irreversible inactivation of the cyclooxygenase (COX) enzyme. Cyclooxygenase is required for prostaglandin and thromboxane synthesis. Prostaglandins are local chemical messengers that exert multiple effects including but not limited to the transmission of pain information to the brain, modulation of the hypothalamic thermostat, and inflammation. They are produced in response to the stimulation of phospholipids within the plasma membrane of cells resulting in the release of arachidonic acid (prostaglandin precursor). Thromboxanes are responsible for the aggregation of platelets that form blood clots.
Low-dose, long-term aspirin use irreversibly blocks the formation of thromboxane A2 in platelets, producing an inhibitory effect on platelet aggregation.Antihypertensive and antidiabetic medications do not need to be stopped when a patient is undergoing local anaesthesia. Steroid (Prednisolone) use cannot be stopped abruptly; tapering the drug gives the adrenal glands time to return to their normal patterns of secretion. Withdrawal symptoms and signs (weakness, fatigue, decreased appetite, weight loss, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain) can mimic many other medical problems. Some may be life-threatening.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 10
Incorrect
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A 24-year-old woman sustains a simple rib fracture resulting from a fall. On examination, a small pneumothorax is found.
What should be the most appropriate course of action?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Insertion of chest drain
Explanation:For a rib fracture to cause pneumothorax, there must also be laceration to the underlying lung parenchyma. This has the risk of developing into a tension pneumothorax. Therefore, a chest drain should be inserted and the patient admitted.
Pneumothorax is a collection of free air in the chest cavity that causes the lung to collapse. The most common cause of pneumothorax is lung laceration with air leakage. In some instances, the lung continues to leak air into the chest cavity and results in compression of the chest structures, including vessels that return blood to the heart. This is known as a tension pneumothorax and can be fatal if not treated immediately. Blunt or penetrating chest trauma that creates a flap-type defect on the surface of the lung can result in this life-threatening condition.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 11
Incorrect
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A 27-year-old man presents to the A&E department with a headache and odd behaviour after being hit on the side of his head by a bat. Whilst waiting for a CT scan, he becomes drowsy and unresponsive.
What is the most likely underlying injury?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Extradural haematoma
Explanation:Extradural haematoma is the most likely cause of this patient’s symptomology. The middle meningeal artery is prone to damage when the temporal side of the head is hit.
Patients who suffer head injuries should be managed according to ATLS principles and extracranial injuries should be managed alongside cranial trauma. Inadequate cardiac output compromises the CNS perfusion, irrespective of the nature of cranial injury.
An extradural haematoma is a collection of blood in the space between the skull and the dura mater. It often results from acceleration-deceleration trauma or a blow to the side of the head. The majority of extradural haematomas occur in the temporal region where skull fractures cause a rupture of the middle meningeal artery. There is often loss of consciousness following a head injury, a brief regaining of consciousness, and then loss of consciousness again—lucid interval. Other symptoms may include headache, confusion, vomiting, and an inability to move parts of the body. Diagnosis is typically by a CT scan or MRI, and treatment is generally by urgent surgery in the form of a craniotomy or burr hole.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 12
Incorrect
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A 55-year-old male presents with tearing central chest pain. On examination, he has an aortic regurgitation murmur. An ECG shows ST elevation in leads II, III and aVF. What is the likely explanation?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Proximal aortic dissection
Explanation:The patient’s ECG indicates Inferior myocardial infarction. However, the tearing central chest pain is more suggestive of Aortic Dissection.
Patients with acute aortic dissection typically present with the sudden onset of severe chest pain, although this description is not universal.
The location of the pain may indicate where the dissection arises. Anterior chest pain and chest pain that mimics acute myocardial infarction usually are associated with the anterior arch or aortic root dissection. This is caused by the dissection interrupting flow to the coronary arteries, resulting in myocardial ischemia. Pain in the neck or jaw indicates that the dissection involves the aortic arch and extends into the great vessels.High-probability ECG features of MI are the following:
ST-segment elevation greater than 1 mm in two anatomically contiguous leads
The presence of new Q wavesIntermediate-probability ECG features of MI are the following:
ST-segment depression
T-wave inversion
Other nonspecific ST-T wave abnormalities
Low-probability ECG features of MI are normal ECG findings. However, normal or nonspecific findings on ECGs do not exclude the possibility of MI.Localization of the involved myocardium based on the distribution of ECG abnormalities in MI is as follows:
– Inferior wall – II, III, aVF
– Lateral wall – I, aVL, V4 through V6
– Anteroseptal – V1 through V3
– Anterolateral – V1 through V6
– Right ventricular – RV4, RV5
– Posterior wall – R/S ratio greater than 1 in V1 and V2, and – T-wave changes in V1, V8, and V9
– True posterior-wall MIs may cause precordial ST depressions, inverted and hyperacute T waves, or both. ST-segment elevation and upright hyperacute T waves may be evident with the use of right-sided chest leads. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 13
Incorrect
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A 52-year-old male who is a known case of leukaemia visits the day unit for a blood transfusion. Five days later, he presents to the emergency department with a temperature of 38.5°C, and erythematous cutaneous eruptions.
What is the most likely explanation?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Graft-versus-host disease
Explanation:This is transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) occurring in an immunosuppressed patient. It can occur 4–30 days after a transfusion and follows a subacute pathway. Patients may also have diarrhoea and abnormal liver function tests. Management involves steroid therapy.
Acute transfusion reactions present during or within 24 hours of a blood transfusion. The most frequent clinical features are fever, chills, pruritus, or urticaria, which typically resolve promptly without specific treatment or complications. Other signs occurring in temporal relationship with a blood transfusion such as severe dyspnoea, pyrexia, or loss of consciousness may be the first indication of a more severe, potentially fatal reaction.
Transfusion reactions may be immune-mediated and non-immune-mediated. GvHD is a condition that might occur after an allogeneic transplant. The donated blood cells view the recipient’s body as foreign and attacks it. Immunosuppressed patients who receive white blood cells from another person are at increased risk of developing GvHD.
There are two forms of the disease:
1. Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGvHD): usually presents with skin and/or liver and/or gut involvement.
2. Chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGvHD).The diagnosis is clinical and usually one of exclusion; however, biopsy of affected tissues may be helpful in unclear cases.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 14
Incorrect
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A 38-year-old man presents to the A&E department after sustaining a single gunshot wound to his left thigh. He complains of paraesthesia in his left foot. On examination, he is noted to have a large haematoma on the medial aspect of his left thigh. There are weak palpable pulses distal to the injury, and the patient is unable to move his foot.
What should be the most appropriate initial management of this patient?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Immediate exploration and repair
Explanation:The classic presentation of arterial injury include the five Ps: pallor, pain, paraesthesia, paralysis, and pulselessness. In the extremities, the tissues most sensitive to anoxia are the peripheral nerves and striated muscles. Early development of paraesthesia and paralysis indicates that there is significant ischaemia present, and therefore, immediate exploration and repair are warranted. Presence of a palpable pulse does not exclude an arterial injury because this may represent a transmitted pulsation through a blood clot.
When severe ischaemia is present, the repair must be completed within six to eight hours to prevent irreversible muscle ischaemia and loss of limb function. Delay to obtain a conventional angiogram or to observe for change needlessly prolongs the ischaemic time. Fasciotomy may be required but should be done in conjunction with and after re-establishment of arterial flow. Local wound exploration is not recommended because brisk haemorrhage may be encountered without prior securing of vascular control.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 15
Incorrect
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A 34 year old man is undergoing an inguinal hernia repair as a day case procedure and is being given sevoflurane. Which of the following is the best option for maintaining his airway during the procedure?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Insertion of laryngeal mask
Explanation:The laryngeal airway mask (LAM) is a device for anaesthetic air way management. The primary advantage of the laryngeal airway mask (LAM) over the face mask during general anaesthesia includes the ability to obtain, secure, and maintain a patent airway. The laryngeal mask airway is passed beyond the tongue, forming a seal with the laryngeal inlet and eliminating the most common cause of upper airway obstruction in the non-intubated patient.
Maintenance of a patent airway with fewer episodes of oxygen desaturation has been demonstrated for the LAM as compared with the face mask. Environmental inhalational gas exposure values associated with the use of a LAM have been shown to be less than those achieved with a face mask and comparable to those with the use of an endotracheal tube. Ocular and facial nerve injuries associated with prolonged face mask use are also avoided. The advantages of the laryngeal mask airway include anaesthetic management, induction, maintenance, and emergence.
The placement of the LMA can be accomplished without muscle relaxants and laryngoscopy. The avoidance of succinylcholine may decrease the incidence of post-operative myalgias. Significant and potentially detrimental hemodynamic changes associated with both laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation are also attenuated and are of shorter duration with the use of the laryngeal mask airway. Compared with an endotracheal tube, the anaesthetic requirement for tolerance of the LAM has also been reported to be less. Differences in the response to the LAM are also seen during emergence from anaesthesia. The LAM is well tolerated, with a lower reported incidence of hyperactive respiratory occurrences (e.g., coughing, laryngospasm, breath holding) than with an endotracheal tube. The anatomic placement of the LAM, with its lack of impingement on the trachea and vocal cords, minimizes complications that are potentially associated with intubation. According to Swann et al. incidence of postoperative sore throat as well as hoarseness is less with the LAM compared with the endotracheal tube.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 16
Incorrect
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A 65 year old man is brought to the emergency department after he collapsed at the bus station. Clinical examination is significant for a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. On arrival he is hypotensive and moribund. Which of the following is most likely to be his ASA?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: 5
Explanation:ASA-V: A moribund patient who is not expected to survive without the operation. Examples include (but not limited to): ruptured abdominal/thoracic aneurysm, massive trauma, intracranial bleed with mass effect, ischemic bowel in the face of significant cardiac pathology or multiple organ/system dysfunction
ASA Grading
1 – No organic physiological, biochemical or psychiatric disturbance. The surgical pathology is localised and has not invoked systemic disturbance
2 – Mild or moderate systemic disruption caused either by the surgical disease process or though underlying pre-existing disease
3 – Severe systemic disruption caused either by the surgical pathology or pre-existing disease
4 – Patient has severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life
5 – A patient who is moribund and will not survive without surgery -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 17
Incorrect
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A 3-year-old boy is brought to the A&E department following a trauma. He is haemodynamically unstable. Initial attempts at intravenous access are proving unsuccessful.
What should be the best course of action?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Insert an intraosseous infusion system
Explanation:Gaining venous access in small children is challenging most of the times especially in cases of trauma. Therefore, intraosseous infusions should be preferred in this setting. Broviac lines are long-term IV access systems with narrow lumens and, hence, would be unsuitable.
Intraosseous access is typically undertaken at the anteromedial aspect of the proximal tibia and provides access to the marrow cavity and circulatory system. Although traditionally preferred in paediatric practice, it may be used in adults as well, and a wide range of fluids can be infused using this approach.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 18
Incorrect
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A 49-year-old male patient is recovering from a right hemicolectomy for Crohn's disease. He is oliguric and dehydrated owing to a high output ileostomy. His electrolytes are normal.
Out of the following, which intravenous fluid should be administered?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Hartmann's solution
Explanation:Hartmann’s solution is the preferred fluid among the listed options.
In UK, Guidelines on Intravenous Fluid Therapy for Adult Surgical Patients (GIFTASUP) and The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines were devised to try and develop a consensus on how to administer intravenous fluids (IV) postoperatively. A decade ago, it was a commonly held belief that little harm would occur as a result of excessive administration of normal saline, and many oliguric postoperative patients received enormous quantities of IV fluids. As a result, they developed hyperchloraemic acidosis. With greater understanding of this potential complication, the use of electrolyte-balanced solutions (Hartmann’s or Ringer Lactate solution) is now favoured over normal saline.
The guidelines further include:
1. Fluids given should be documented clearly.
2. Assess the patient’s fluid status when they leave the theatre.
3. If the patient is haemodynamically stable and euvolaemic, aim to restart oral fluid intake as soon as possible.
4. If the patient is oedematous, hypovolaemia if present should be treated first. This should then be followed by a negative balance of sodium and water, monitored closely.
5. Solutions such as Dextran 70 should be cautiously used in patients with sepsis as there is a risk of developing acute renal injury. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 19
Incorrect
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A young man is hit in the head with a bar stool and is rushed to the A&E department. On arrival, he opens his eyes in response to pain, his only verbal responses are in the form of groans and grunts. He flexes his forearms away from the painful stimuli when it is applied. Calculate his Glasgow coma score.
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: 8
Explanation:Answer: 8
Eye Opening Response
Spontaneous–open with blinking at baseline – 4 points
Opens to verbal command, speech, or shout – 3 points
Opens to pain, not applied to face – 2 point
None – 1 pointVerbal Response
Oriented – 5 points
Confused conversation, but able to answer questions – 4 points
Inappropriate responses, words discernible – 3 points
Incomprehensible speech – 2 points
None – 1 pointMotor Response
Obeys commands for movement – 6 points
Purposeful movement to painful stimulus – 5 points
Withdraws from pain – 4 points
Abnormal (spastic) flexion, decorticate posture – 3 points
Extensor (rigid) response, decerebrate posture – 2 points
None – 1 pointHe opens his eyes to pain and groans or grunts. He flexes his forearms away from the painful stimuli This gives him a Glasgow score of 8: eye opening response of 2, verbal response 2 and motor response 4.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 20
Incorrect
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A 23-year-old man receives a blood transfusion after being involved in a road traffic accident. A few minutes after the transfusion, he complains of loin pain. On examination, his heart rate is 130 bpm, blood pressure is 95/40 mmHg, and temperature is 39°C.
Which of the following is the best test to confirm his diagnosis?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Direct Coombs test
Explanation:The diagnosis for this case is acute haemolytic transfusion reaction, due to ABO incompatibility. Haemolysis of the transfused cells can cause loin pain, shock, and hemoglobinemia, which may subsequently lead to disseminated intravascular coagulation. A direct Coombs test should confirm haemolysis. Other tests include unconjugated bilirubin, haptoglobin, serum and urine free haemoglobin.
Delayed haemolytic reactions, however, are normally associated with antibodies to the Rh system and occur 5–10 days after transfusion.
Acute transfusion reactions present during or within 24 hours of a blood transfusion. The most frequent clinical features are fever, chills, pruritus, or urticaria, which typically resolve, promptly, without specific treatment or complications. Other signs occurring in temporal relationship with a blood transfusion such as severe dyspnoea, pyrexia, or loss of consciousness may be the first indication of a more severe, potentially fatal reaction. Transfusion reactions may be immune-mediated or non-immune-mediated.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 21
Incorrect
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A 58 year old lady who has had a mastectomy undergoes a breast reconstruction surgery. The breast implant is placed just anterior to her pectoralis major muscle. Which of the following methods of wound closure would be the most appropriate in this case?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Use of a pedicled myocutaneous flap
Explanation:The latissimus dorsi myocutaneous flap (LDMF) is one of the most reliable and versatile flaps used in reconstructive surgery. It is known for its use in chest wall and postmastectomy reconstruction and has also been used effectively for coverage of large soft tissue defects in the head and neck, either as a pedicled flap or as a microvascular free flap.
The latissimus dorsi may be transferred as a myofascial flap, a myocutaneous flap, or as a composite osteomyocutaneous flap when harvested with underlying serratus anterior muscle and rib. For even greater reconstructive flexibility, the latissimus can be harvested for free tissue transfer in combination with any or all of the other flaps based on the subscapular vessels (the so-called subscapular compound flap or “mega-flap”), including serratus anterior, scapular, and parascapular flaps
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 22
Incorrect
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A 44 year old woman suffers 20% partial and full thickness burns in a garage fire. There is also an associated inhalational injury. Her doctors have decided to administer intravenous fluids to replace fluid loss. Which of the following intravenous fluids should be used for initial resuscitation?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Hartmann's solution
Explanation:The goal of fluid management in major burn injuries is to maintain the tissue perfusion in the early phase of burn shock, in which hypovolemia finally occurs due to steady fluid extravasation from the intravascular compartment.
Burn injuries of less than 20% are associated with minimal fluid shifts and can generally be resuscitated with oral hydration, except in cases of facial, hand and genital burns, as well as burns in children and the elderly. As the total body surface area (TBSA) involved in the burn approaches 15–20%, the systemic inflammatory response syndrome is initiated and massive fluid shifts, which result in burn oedema and burn shock, can be expected.
The ideal burn resuscitation is the one that effectively restores plasma volume, with no adverse effects. Isotonic crystalloids, hypertonic solutions and colloids have been used for this purpose, but every solution has its advantages and disadvantages. None of them is ideal, and none is superior to any of the others.
Crystalloids are readily available and cheaper than some of the other alternatives. RL solution, Hartmann solution (a solution similar to RL solution) and normal saline are commonly used. There are some adverse effects of the crystalloids: high volume administration of normal saline produces hyperchloremic acidosis, RL increases the neutrophil activation after resuscitation for haemorrhage or after infusion without haemorrhage. d-lactate in RL solution containing a racemic mixture of the d-lactate and l-lactate isomers has been found to be responsible for increased production of ROS. RL used in the majority of hospitals contains this mixture. Another adverse effect that has been demonstrated is that crystalloids have a substantial influence on coagulation. Recent studies have demonstrated that in vivo dilution with crystalloids (independent of the type of the crystalloid) resulted in a hypercoagulable state.
Despite these adverse effects, the most commonly used fluid for burn resuscitation in the UK and Ireland is Hartmann’s solution (adult units 76%, paediatric units 75%). Another study has revealed that RL is the most popular type of fluid in burn units located in USA and Canada. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 23
Incorrect
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A 56-year-old male is admitted for an elective hip replacement. Three days postoperatively you suspect he has had a pulmonary embolism. He has no past medical history of note. Blood pressure is 120/80 mmHg with a pulse of 90/min. The chest x-ray is normal. Following treatment with low-molecular-weight heparin, what is the most appropriate initial lung imaging investigation to perform?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Computed tomographic pulmonary angiography
Explanation:According to the ECS Guidelines 2019, Multidetector Computed tomographic pulmonary angiography (CTPA) is the method of choice for imaging the pulmonary vasculature in patients with suspected PE. It allows adequate visualization of the pulmonary arteries down to the subsegmental level.112–114 The Prospective Investigation On Pulmonary Embolism Diagnosis (PIOPED) II study observed a sensitivity of 83% and a specificity of 96% for (mainly four-detector) CTPA in PE diagnosis.
D-dimer levels are elevated in plasma in the presence of acute thrombosis because of simultaneous activation of coagulation and fibrinolysis. The negative predictive value of D-dimer testing is high, and a normal D-dimer level renders acute PE or DVT unlikely. On the other hand, the positive predictive value of elevated D-dimer levels is low and D-dimer testing is not useful for confirmation of PE.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 24
Incorrect
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A 40-year-old man is brought to the A&E department following a motorcycle accident. He sustained a closed, unstable spiral tibial fracture and has been managed with an intramedullary nail. However, after being transferred to the ward, he is noted to have increasing pain in the affected limb. On examination, the limb is swollen and tender with pain felt on passive stretching of the toes.
What is the most likely diagnosis?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Compartment syndrome
Explanation:Severe pain in the limb following fixation with intramedullary devices should raise suspicion of compartment syndrome, especially in tibial fractures.
Compartment syndrome is a particular complication that may occur following fractures, especially supracondylar fractures and tibial shaft injuries. It is characterised by raised pressure within a closed anatomical space which may, eventually, compromise tissue perfusion, resulting in necrosis.
The clinical features of compartment syndrome include:
1. Pain, especially on movement
2. Paraesthesia
3. Pallor
4. Paralysis of the muscle group may also occurDiagnosis is made by measurement of intracompartmental pressure. Pressures >20mmHg are abnormal and >40mmHg are diagnostic.
Compartment syndrome requires prompt and extensive fasciotomy. Myoglobinuria may occur following fasciotomy, resulting in renal failure. Therefore, aggressive IV fluids are required. If muscle groups are frankly necrotic at fasciotomy, they should be debrided, and amputation may have to be considered.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 25
Incorrect
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A 64 year old man with a history of recurrent anal cancer undergoes a salvage abdominoperineal excision of the anus and rectum. He was treated with radical chemotherapy prior to the procedure. At the conclusion of the surgery, there is a 10cm by 10cm perineal skin defect. Which of the following closure options would be most appropriate in this case?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Pedicled myocutaneous flap
Explanation:As a reconstructive option after extensive surgery, pedicled musculocutaneous flaps offer several advantages in the setting of previous radiotherapy. Rotational skin flaps will comprise of irradiated tissue and thus won’t heal well.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 26
Incorrect
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A 55-year-old male undergoes a laparotomy for perforated bowel after a colonoscopy. 2 days after surgery the nursing staff report there is pink, serous fluid discharging from the wound. What is the next most appropriate management step?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Examine the wound for separation of the rectus fascia
Explanation:Surgical wound dehiscence (SWD) is the separation of the margins of a closed surgical incision that
has been made in the skin, with or without exposure or protrusion of underlying tissue, organs or implants. Separation may occur at single or multiple regions, or involve the full length of the incision, and may affect some or all tissue layers. A dehisced incision may, or may not, display clinical signs and symptoms of infection.
SWD can occur without warning. Incisions at risk of dehiscence may show signs of inflammation beyond the time and extent expected for normal healing, e.g. more exaggerated incisional redness, swelling, warmth and pain that extend beyond postoperative day 5. Palpation of the incision and surrounding area may reveal the warmth and a collection of fluid under some or all of the incision (a seroma, haematoma or abscess). A sudden increase in pain or discharge of serosanguineous fluid from the incision may herald SWD.Prior to assessment of SWD, the events, if any, leading to the dehiscence, e.g. coughing, vomiting, trauma, suture/clip removal, purulent drainage, should be ascertained. The duration of the dehiscence should also be determined: SWD occurring very soon after surgery and of very recent occurrence may be suitable for re-suturing.
The entire length of an incision with SWD should be fully assessed: the factors that led to the SWD may also be affecting other regions of the incision that remain closed. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Post-operative Management And Critical Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 27
Incorrect
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A 33-year-old man with a 4cm lipoma on his flank is due for its surgical removal, as a day case. He is, otherwise, completely asymptomatic.
According to the above description, what is his physical status according to the ASA classification?Your Answer:
Correct Answer: 1
Explanation:Absence of comorbidities and a small procedure with no likelihood of systemic compromise will equate to an ASA score of 1.
The ASA physical status classification system is a system for assessing the fitness of patients before surgery. It has six grades, as described below:
ASA 1: No physiological, biochemical, or psychiatric disturbance. The surgical pathology is localised and has not invoked systemic disturbance.
ASA 2: Mild or moderate systemic disruption caused either by the surgical disease process or through an underlying pre-existing disease.
ASA 3: Severe systemic disruption, not life-threatening, caused either by the surgical pathology or a pre-existing disease.
ASA 4: Patient has severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life.
ASA 5: Patient is moribund and will not survive without surgery.
ASA 6: A brain-dead patient whose organs are being removed with the intention of transplanting them into another patient.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 28
Incorrect
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A 34 year old man is suffering from septic shock and receives an infusion of Dextran 70. Which of the following complications may potentially ensue?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Anaphylaxis
Explanation:Dextran 40 and 70 have a higher rate of causing anaphylaxis than either gelatins or starches.
Dextrans are branched polysaccharide molecules, with dextran 40 and 70 available. The high-molecular-weight dextran 70 may persist for up to eight hours. They inhibit platelet aggregation and leucocyte plugging in the microcirculation, thereby, improving flow through the microcirculation. They are primarily used in sepsis.
Unlike many other intravenous fluids, dextrans are a recognised cause of anaphylaxis. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 29
Incorrect
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A 20 year old man is involved in a car accident where he is thrown out of the car. He is seen with distended neck veins and a weak pulse on admission. The trachea is central. Which of the following is the most likely cause?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Hemopericardium
Explanation:Answer: Hemopericardium
Hemopericardium refers to the presence of blood within the pericardial cavity, i.e. a sanguineous pericardial effusion. If enough blood enters the pericardial cavity, then a potentially fatal cardiac tamponade can occur. There is a very long list of causes but some of the more common are:
-ruptured myocardial infarction
-ruptured left ventricular aneurysm
-aortic dissection
-pericarditis
-trauma
-blunt/penetrating/deceleration
-iatrogenic, e.g. pacemaker wire insertion
-cardiac malignancies
-ruptured coronary artery aneurysm
-post-thrombolysisCardiac tamponade is a clinical syndrome caused by the accumulation of fluid in the pericardial space, resulting in reduced ventricular filling and subsequent hemodynamic compromise. The condition is a medical emergency, the complications of which include pulmonary oedema, shock, and death.
Symptoms vary with the acuteness and underlying cause of the tamponade. Patients with acute tamponade may present with dyspnoea, tachycardia, and tachypnoea. Cold and clammy extremities from hypoperfusion are also observed in some patients. Other symptoms and signs may include the following:
Elevated jugular venous pressurePulsus paradoxus
Chest pressure
Decreased urine output
Confusion
Dysphoria
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Emergency Medicine And Management Of Trauma
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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Question 30
Incorrect
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A 66 year old woman undergoes an emergency hip hemiarthroplasty. The procedure is complicated by a fracture of the femoral shaft following the insertion of the prosthesis. She is seen postoperatively to be unsteady on her feet and she is depressed. She remains bedbound for 2 weeks and is slow to progress despite adequate physiotherapy. Which of the following physiological changes is not seen after prolonged immobilization?
Your Answer:
Correct Answer: Bradycardia
Explanation:Answer: Bradycardia
Prolonged bed rest and immobilization inevitably lead to complications. Such complications are much easier to prevent than to treat. Musculoskeletal complications include loss of muscle strength and endurance, contractures and soft tissue changes, disuse osteoporosis, and degenerative joint disease. Cardiovascular complications include an increased heart rate (tachycardia), decreased cardiac reserve, orthostatic hypotension, and venous thromboembolism.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Peri-operative Care
- Principles Of Surgery-in-General
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