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  • Question 1 - A 50 year old man undergoes a colonoscopy due to the finding of...

    Incorrect

    • A 50 year old man undergoes a colonoscopy due to the finding of blood in his stools. The colonoscopy revealed four polyps which were variable in size from one at 0.5cm, 2 at approximately 1.5cm and one at 2 cm. When should this patient have a follow up colonoscopy?

      Your Answer: 1 year

      Correct Answer: 3 years

      Explanation:

      For the question, you need knowledge of the British Society of Gastroenterology guidelines. This patient has 3-4 adenomas with 3 of them > 1 cm. This places him at medium risk and the recommendation if for a 3-year follow up period.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      5403.9
      Seconds
  • Question 2 - Which of the following stimulates bicarbonate secretion from the pancreas and liver? ...

    Incorrect

    • Which of the following stimulates bicarbonate secretion from the pancreas and liver?

      Your Answer: Cholecystokinin

      Correct Answer: Secretin

      Explanation:

      Secretin stimulates bicarbonate secretion from the pancreas and liver. VIP induces relaxation of the stomach and gallbladder, secretion of water into pancreatic juice/ bile, and inhibits gastric acid secretion/absorption. CCK classically stimulates gallbladder contraction and relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi. Gastrin stimulates the secretion of HCl by parietal cells in the stomach. Motilin, as the name suggests, increases motility.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      19
      Seconds
  • Question 3 - Which of the following is most commonly associated with the development of pseudomembranous...

    Correct

    • Which of the following is most commonly associated with the development of pseudomembranous colitis?

      Your Answer: Cefuroxime

      Explanation:

      Pseudomembranous colitis is caused by a C. difficile infection that causes membranes to form on the colon wall. It is caused most commonly by broad-spectrum antibiotics. This would include cephalosporins, broad-spectrum penicillin, and clindamycin. Macrolides and quinolones have also been reported as potential aetiologies, but much less commonly.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      23
      Seconds
  • Question 4 - A 17-year-old Caucasian woman presents with lethargy and chronic nausea. Her mother is...

    Correct

    • A 17-year-old Caucasian woman presents with lethargy and chronic nausea. Her mother is worried she may be depressed. On examination, there are signs of chronic liver disease and a gold-yellow ring at the periphery of the iris in both eyes. Her serum copper level is low. What is the most likely diagnosis?

      Your Answer: Wilson’s disease

      Explanation:

      This patient has Wilson’s disease. They Kayser-Fleischer ring (ring that encircles the iris) is diagnostic of this. Low serum copper is seen in Wilson’s disease. With the Kayser-Fleischer ring, this makes all of the other answer choices incorrect.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      23.4
      Seconds
  • Question 5 - The increased risk of oesophageal malignancy in patients with Barrett’s oesophagus is approximately:...

    Correct

    • The increased risk of oesophageal malignancy in patients with Barrett’s oesophagus is approximately:

      Your Answer: 50 - 100 times risk

      Explanation:

      Barrett’s oesophagus is the transformation of the normal squamous epithelium of the oesophagus to columnar, intestinal type epithelium. It is often seen in patients with reflux and there is a 50-100 fold increased risk of oesophageal adenocarcinoma in patients with Barrett’s oesophagus.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      8.2
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  • Question 6 - A 28-year-old woman presents with intermittent episodes of diarrhoea, constipation, abdominal bloating and...

    Correct

    • A 28-year-old woman presents with intermittent episodes of diarrhoea, constipation, abdominal bloating and flatulence. Clinical examination is unremarkable. Faecal occult bloods are negative and haematological and biochemical investigations are unremarkable. Which of the following is the next most appropriate management step?

      Your Answer: Trial of dairy-free diet

      Explanation:

      The best next step is to try a dairy-free diet, many patients may develop this in their lifetime. IBS is a diagnosis of exclusion, and one would need to rule lactose intolerance out as a potential aetiology first. She is only 28, and without overt bleeding or signs/sxs/labs suggestive of obstruction or inflammation; colonoscopy, flex sig and a barium enema are not indicated.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      13
      Seconds
  • Question 7 - Which of the following statements is true concerning gastrin? ...

    Incorrect

    • Which of the following statements is true concerning gastrin?

      Your Answer: It is secreted by the parietal cells in the stomach

      Correct Answer: Release is triggered by GI luminal peptides

      Explanation:

      Gastrin is released by G cells in the antrum of the stomach. It stimulates secretion of gastric acid (HCl) by the parietal cells of the stomach and also aids in gastric motility. It is released in response to the following stimuli: vagal stimulation, antrum distention, hypercalcemia. It is inhibited by the following: presence of acid in stomach, SST, secretion, GIP, VIP, glucagon, calcitonin.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      18.9
      Seconds
  • Question 8 - A 53-year-old man is brought into the emergency department by the paramedics. He...

    Correct

    • A 53-year-old man is brought into the emergency department by the paramedics. He collapsed oat home suffering from a myocardial infarction and was subsequently resuscitated following a cardiac arrest. Blood tests show impaired liver function (ALT 1400 u/l). He is on a statin, and at his appointment last week his LFT was normal. There is nothing to note on examination and he is currently not complaining of any pain. Given this man's presentation, what is the most likely cause of his impaired liver function tests?

      Your Answer: Ischaemic hepatitis

      Explanation:

      When you have abnormal liver function tests after a cardiac arrest, the most likely aetiology, barring history that is known or given excluding this diagnosis, would be ischemia. Chronic alcohol abuse would not see an acute elevation like this. Hepatitis B is just unlikely given the clinical picture, ischemia is much more likely. The same is for Budd-Chiari syndrome (venous thrombosis) and Wilson’s disease.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      29.5
      Seconds
  • Question 9 - With respect to liver cirrhosis, which of the following statements is correct? ...

    Incorrect

    • With respect to liver cirrhosis, which of the following statements is correct?

      Your Answer: Transforming growth factor is a potent promoter of the fibrogenic response by hepatocytes

      Correct Answer: The final common pathway of hepatic fibrosis is mediated by the hepatic stellate cell

      Explanation:

      The development of hepatic fibrosis reflects an alteration in the normally balanced processes of extracellular matrix production and degradation. [6] The extracellular matrix, the normal scaffolding for hepatocytes, is composed of collagens (especially types I, III, and V), glycoproteins, and proteoglycans. Increased collagen in the space of Disse (space b/w sinusoids and hepatocytes) leads to capillarization of sinusoids, and stellate cells also have contractile properties when activated. This is fibrosis processes. This can lead to the development of portal hypertension.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      26.5
      Seconds
  • Question 10 - A 54-year-old female presents with fatigue and xerostomia. Bloods tests reveal the following:...

    Correct

    • A 54-year-old female presents with fatigue and xerostomia. Bloods tests reveal the following: Hb 13.9 g/dL, WBC 6.1 *109/L, Platelets 246 *109/L, Bilirubin 33 µmol/L, ALP 292 u/l ALT 47 u/l What is the most likely diagnosis?

      Your Answer: Primary biliary cirrhosis

      Explanation:

      With a bilirubin of 33, automatically the diagnosis from the choices listed is primary biliary cirrhosis or autoimmune hepatitis, not SLE, mono, or Primary Sjogren’s Syndrome. With autoimmune hepatitis, however, you would not expect such a high bilirubin and would expect very high AST/ALT, which here is just mildly elevated. This makes primary biliary cirrhosis the most likely answer. The classic presentation is itching in a middle-aged woman. The dry mouth is likely due to Sicca Syndrome, which occurs in 70% of cases of PBC, but with these liver function tests, PBC is most the likely answer.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      13.2
      Seconds
  • Question 11 - Which of the following is the most common route of hepatitis B transmission...

    Incorrect

    • Which of the following is the most common route of hepatitis B transmission worldwide?

      Your Answer: Blood inoculation through needles

      Correct Answer: Perinatal transmission

      Explanation:

      Perinatal transmission is the most common cause of Hepatitis B infection worldwide. Post-exposure prophylaxis should be provided, which consists of hepatitis B immune globulin and hepatitis B vaccine within 12 hours of birth. Without this, about 40% will develop chronic infection.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      7
      Seconds
  • Question 12 - If a patient has HIV what is the most likely cause of persistent...

    Incorrect

    • If a patient has HIV what is the most likely cause of persistent watery diarrhoea?

      Your Answer: Salmonella

      Correct Answer: Cryptosporidium

      Explanation:

      When you have a patient with HIV and diarrhoea on the exam, think Cryptosporidium. In those who are immunocompetent this organism doesn’t usually cause symptoms, but in immunocompromised people like those with HIV, it causes infection and diarrhoea. Typically those with CD4 counts of <100 cells/µL1 have the greatest risk for prolonged, severe, or extraintestinal cryptosporidiosis.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      7.1
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  • Question 13 - Which is the most common type of inherited colorectal cancer: ...

    Incorrect

    • Which is the most common type of inherited colorectal cancer:

      Your Answer: Fanconi syndrome

      Correct Answer: Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal carcinoma

      Explanation:

      Hereditary non-polyposis syndrome (HNPCC) is the most common type of inherited colorectal cancer. It often presents in younger and younger generations down a family. FAP presents with 100’s-1000’s of polyps and is less common. Li-Fraumeni syndrome and Fanconi syndrome are rare. For Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, the thing you will look for in the question stem is discoloured spots on the lips, this is classic.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      12.9
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  • Question 14 - A 25-year-old man presents with bloody diarrhoea associated with systemic upset. Blood tests...

    Correct

    • A 25-year-old man presents with bloody diarrhoea associated with systemic upset. Blood tests show the following: Hb 13.4 g/dL, Platelets 467 * 109/L, WBC 8.2 * 109/L, CRP 89 mg/l A diagnosis of ulcerative colitis is suspected. Which part of the bowel is most likely to be affected?

      Your Answer: Rectum

      Explanation:

      The most COMMON site of inflammation from ulcerative colitis is the rectum, making this the correct answer. This is simply a fact you need to memorize. In general, ulcerative colitis only occurs in colorectal regions– nothing in the small bowel (unless there is backwash into the terminal ileum) and nothing further up the GI tract. In Crohn’s it can affect the entire GI tract from mouth to anus.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      32.6
      Seconds
  • Question 15 - A 36-year-old man with diabetes is referred with abnormal liver biochemistry. Which of...

    Correct

    • A 36-year-old man with diabetes is referred with abnormal liver biochemistry. Which of the following is in keeping with a diagnosis of haemochromatosis?

      Your Answer: Transferrin saturation 78% (20-50)

      Explanation:

      A high transferrin saturation is seen in hemochromatosis, as well as a high iron level (>30), a high ferritin level, and a LOW TIBC (<20). Think of it like the opposite findings of iron deficiency anaemia which is a low iron, low ferritin, high TIBC.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      44.3
      Seconds
  • Question 16 - A 32-year-old man presents with progressive central abdominal pain and vomiting associated with...

    Incorrect

    • A 32-year-old man presents with progressive central abdominal pain and vomiting associated with significant weight loss (five stone in 3 months).He gives a history of binge drinking and depression, and smokes twenty cigarettes per day. Because eating provokes abdominal pain and vomiting, he has eaten virtually nothing for a month. CT scanning of his abdomen showed a normal pancreas but dilated loops of small bowel with a possible terminal ileal stricture. His albumin level was 20 and C-reactive protein level was 50. Which statement is NOT true?

      Your Answer: Chronic pancreatitis is very unlikely in view of the normal CT

      Correct Answer: Infliximab should be prescribed as soon as possible

      Explanation:

      Stricturing is associated with Crohn’s disease, and elevated CRP supports this diagnosis in this patient, as well. Infliximab should not yet be started. Acute treatment is steroids (of a flare) however this man needs surgery. Although surgery should be avoided if at all possible in Crohn’s disease, and minimal surgery should occur (resecting as little as possible, given possible need for future resections), including possible stricturoplasty instead of resection. Chronic pancreatitis is unlikely given it would not cause stricture. Patients undergoing surgery should always have informed consent, which always includes risk of a stoma for any bowel surgery. Given the amount of weight he has lost he is at significant risk for refeeding syndrome, which can cause hypokalaemia, hypophosphatemia and hypomagnesemia.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      84.5
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  • Question 17 - A 47-year-old man is seen in clinic with a 3 month history of...

    Incorrect

    • A 47-year-old man is seen in clinic with a 3 month history of chronic epigastric discomfort. The pain comes and goes and radiates to his back and his right shoulder tip at times. It is worse after meals but there is no relieving factor. He feels nauseous most of the time and has foul-smelling stools. He has lost 2 stones in weight. He also complains of intermittent light-headedness. He drinks a bottle of wine on most nights and smokes 20 cigarettes /day. On examination, he is thin and looks neglected. His abdomen is soft, but tender on deep palpation in the epigastric area. He has a 2 cm non-tender liver edge. He also has decreased sensation to light touch on both feet. Bloods: sodium 131 mmol/L, potassium 4.2 mmol/L, creatine 64 μmol/L, amylase 35 U/l, alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 104 U/l, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) 121 U/l, bilirubin 24 μmol/L, calcium 2.01 mmol/L, whole cell count (WCC) 12.1 Ă— 109/L, haemoglobin (Hb) 10.2 g/dL, platelets 462 Ă— 109/L. Abdominal X-ray (AXR) was normal and oesophago-gastro duodenoscopy (OGD) showed mild gastritis. Campylobacter-like organism (CLO) test negative. Ultrasound abdomen showed a mildly enlarged liver with fatty change, spleen and kidneys normal, pancreas partially obscured by overlying bowel gas. 72-h stool fat was 22 g in 72 h. He is referred for a secretin test: volume collected 110 ml, bicarbonate 52 mEq/l. What is the most likely diagnosis?

      Your Answer: Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-secreting tumour (VIPoma)

      Correct Answer: Chronic pancreatitis

      Explanation:

      The question describes an alcohol abusing man with chronic epigastric discomfort, radiating into his back, worse with meals, and foul-smelling stools, weight loss, as well as chronic nausea. This is likely, thus chronic pancreatitis due to alcohol abuse. Hepatomegaly and peripheral neuropathy secondary to anaemia support the diagnosis of long term alcohol abuse. Bacterial overgrowth may present with diarrhoea and is a less likely diagnosis than pancreatitis. Celiac disease is a less likely diagnosis than pancreatitis, and you would also expect mention of diarrhoea. VIPoma would also likely present with diarrhoea. Cecal carcinoma would more than likely present with blood in the stool.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      15.8
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  • Question 18 - A 69-year-old man on the cardiology ward who is hypotensive, and tachycardic is...

    Incorrect

    • A 69-year-old man on the cardiology ward who is hypotensive, and tachycardic is having profuse melaena. He was commenced on dabigatran 150mg bd by the cardiologists 48 hours earlier for non-valvular atrial fibrillation. Following appropriate resuscitation which of the following treatments is most likely to improve his bleeding?

      Your Answer: Haemodialysis

      Correct Answer: Idarucizumab (Praxbind)

      Explanation:

      Idarucizumab (Praxbind) is a newer antidote for dabigatran, the first of its kind. It is a monoclonal antibody fragment that binds dabigatrin with a higher affinity than thrombin. It is very expensive.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      29.8
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  • Question 19 - A 45-year-old man who had a liver transplant just over 3 months ago,...

    Correct

    • A 45-year-old man who had a liver transplant just over 3 months ago, now has primary sclerosing cholangitis. He complains of fever, abdominal pain and diarrhoea, which has come on over the last week. He has a platelet count of 60 x 109/L and alanine transaminase (ALT) of 300 U/L with a normal bilirubin. He is taking tacrolimus and prednisolone for immunosuppression, and tells you that he recently stopped taking valganciclovir. What is the most likely diagnosis?

      Your Answer: Donor-acquired cytomegalovirus

      Explanation:

      The fact that he has recently stopped taking his valganciclovir, anti-viral, is key to the answer to this question. This makes the answer quite plainly donor-acquired CMV infection over all of the other answer choices. He needs to stay on prophylaxis against this, particularly in the first 3 months after transplant. Symptoms and presentations of CMV infection can include fever, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, pneumonitis, hepatitis, hematologic abnormalities, retinitis, and esophagitis.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      18.4
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  • Question 20 - A 24-year-old woman presents as an emergency to her GP with acute vomiting...

    Incorrect

    • A 24-year-old woman presents as an emergency to her GP with acute vomiting which began some 3–4 hours after attending an afternoon meeting. Cream cakes were served during the coffee break. Which of the following organisms is the most likely cause of this acute attack of vomiting?

      Your Answer: Campylobacter sp

      Correct Answer: Staphylococcus aureus

      Explanation:

      Staph. aureus is the most likely cause. It is found in foods like dairy products, cold meats, or mayonnaise. It produces a heat-stable ENDOTOXIN (remember this) that causes nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea 1-6 hours after ingestion of contaminated food. B. cereus is classically associated with fried rice being reheated. Salmonella is typical with raw eggs and undercooked poultry. Campylobacter which is most commonly associated with food poisoning, is seen with poultry 50% of the time. Yersinia enterocolitica is seen with raw or undercooked pork, and may be a case presenting with mesenteric adenitis.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      6.4
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  • Question 21 - Which of the following forms of acute viral hepatitis has a much higher...

    Incorrect

    • Which of the following forms of acute viral hepatitis has a much higher mortality in pregnant than non-pregnant females?

      Your Answer: Hepatitis G

      Correct Answer: Hepatitis E

      Explanation:

      Pregnant patient in a third world country with hepatitis: The answer is most likely Hepatitis E. The mortality for Hepatitis E in pregnant women is very high. It is transmitted faecal-orally. There is no hepatitis G. Hepatitis C, B, A are less likely to be the correct answer than E given it’s classic association with pregnancy and poor living conditions.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      24.8
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  • Question 22 - A 28-year-old woman is investigated for bloody diarrhoea which started around six weeks...

    Incorrect

    • A 28-year-old woman is investigated for bloody diarrhoea which started around six weeks ago. She is currently passing 3-4 loose stools a day which normally contain a small amount of blood. Other than feeling lethargic she remains systemically well with no fever or significant abdominal pain. A colonoscopy is performed which shows inflammatory changes in the ascending colon consistent with ulcerative colitis. Bloods show the following: Hb: 14.2 g/dL, Platelets: 323 * 109/L, WBC: 8.1 * 109/L, CRP: 22 mg/l. What is the most appropriate first-line medication to induce remission?

      Your Answer: Rectal corticosteroids

      Correct Answer: Oral aminosalicylate

      Explanation:

      Given she is not showing signs of systemic illness, you do not need to treat for an acute flair (which would be steroids), but you need to put her on maintenance medication. Oral ASA would be the best option for this, it is first line. You cannot give rectal ASA because the location of her disease is in the ascending colon and the enema will not reach.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      20.8
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  • Question 23 - A 76-year-old woman is admitted with a productive cough and pyrexia. Chest x-ray...

    Incorrect

    • A 76-year-old woman is admitted with a productive cough and pyrexia. Chest x-ray shows a pneumonia and she is commenced on intravenous ceftriaxone. Following admission a stool sample is sent because of diarrhoea. This confirms the suspected diagnosis of Clostridium difficile diarrhoea and a 10-day course of oral metronidazole is started. After 10 days her diarrhoea is ongoing but she remains clinically stable. What is the most appropriate treatment?

      Your Answer: Oral clindamycin for 7 days

      Correct Answer: Oral vancomycin for 14 days

      Explanation:

      When a patient fails treatment with metronidazole (Flagyl) treatment, the next course of action is to change to oral vancomycin, which is shown to be effective in the treatment of c diff colitis. Oral rifampicin is not a treatment for c diff. Oral metronidazole is not resolving her symptoms so is not the correct answer. clindamycin is a cause of c diff colitis, not a treatment. IV Vanc is not active in the gut so is not the treatment; oral is active in the gut.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      21.5
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  • Question 24 - A 32-year-old woman was referred for endoscopy and found to have a duodenal...

    Incorrect

    • A 32-year-old woman was referred for endoscopy and found to have a duodenal ulcer and a positive urease test. She was given lansoprazole, amoxicillin and clarithromycin for 7 days. Which of the following is the most appropriate way of determining the successful eradication of H. pylori?

      Your Answer: Faecal antigen testing

      Correct Answer: Urea breath test

      Explanation:

      Urea breath test is the most sensitive test to determine if there has been RESOLUTION/ERADICATION of the infection with H. pylori. The best test for initial diagnosis would be EGD with biopsy.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      31.1
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  • Question 25 - A 28-year-old man who is admitted with bright red haematemesis, which occurred after...

    Incorrect

    • A 28-year-old man who is admitted with bright red haematemesis, which occurred after a bout of vomiting. He had been out with friends on a stag party and consumed 12 pints of beer. Upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy proves unremarkable and haemoglobin (Hb) is stable at 12.5 g/dl the morning after admission, there is no sign of circulatory compromise. There have been no previous similar episodes. Which of the following stems represents the best course of action for this patient?

      Your Answer: Refer for surgical opinion

      Correct Answer: Send home

      Explanation:

      This is a classic clinical presentation, with alcohol intake and nausea/vomiting that leads to hematemesis, of a Mallory-Weiss tear. In Mallory-Weiss tear, they typically present as a hemodynamically stable patient after a night of binge drinking and excessive resultant vomiting. Given his EGD did not show any other pathology and he is now stable, he can be discharged home.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      29.1
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  • Question 26 - A 25-year-old lady with a history of ulcerative colitis presents to clinic. She...

    Correct

    • A 25-year-old lady with a history of ulcerative colitis presents to clinic. She had extensive colitis 10 years ago, which has improved with medical treatment. Last year she had been diagnosed with primary sclerosing cholangitis. Her last colonoscopy was 6 months ago, which detected no active disease, and random biopsies were normal. She is remaining well and asymptomatic. When should colonic screening be performed on this patient?

      Your Answer: Colonoscopy should be performed annually

      Explanation:

      Colonoscopy screening should begin 10 years after the first diagnosis in ulcerative colitis, given the increased risk for colon cancer. Given that she has developed primary sclerosing cholangitis, her risk of colon cancer is even higher. Colonoscopy screening should occur at 3 year intervals in the second decade, 2 year intervals in the third decade, and 1 year intervals by the first decade, making A the correct answer choice.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      13.3
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  • Question 27 - A social worker has been diagnosed with hepatitis C infection. Which test will...

    Incorrect

    • A social worker has been diagnosed with hepatitis C infection. Which test will conclusively establish the presence of this infection?

      Your Answer: ELISA–3

      Correct Answer: HCV RNA

      Explanation:

      The most sensitive test for detecting Hepatitis C infection (acute) is HCA RNA; it can be detected 1-2 weeks after infection. Anti-HCV antibodies take at least 6 weeks to develop and be positive.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      26.5
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  • Question 28 - An 18 year old prospective medical student is tested for hepatitis B. Her...

    Incorrect

    • An 18 year old prospective medical student is tested for hepatitis B. Her liver tests show alanine transaminase (ALT) 120 U/L and serology shows her to be positive for HBsAg, HBcAb and HBeAg, with a viral load of 105 genome equivalents/mL. A liver biopsy is reported as showing early fibrosis with evidence of moderate inflammation. Which of the following treatments should be offered?

      Your Answer: Basiliximab

      Correct Answer: Interferon alfa 2b

      Explanation:

      Interferon alfa alone, not interferon alfa and ribavirin, has been shown to achieve HBeAg seroconversion for patients with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
      19.8
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  • Question 29 - A 72-year-old woman presents with a 3 month history of colicky abdominal pain...

    Incorrect

    • A 72-year-old woman presents with a 3 month history of colicky abdominal pain after eating, and diarrhoea. She has lost 7 kg in weight over the last few months. A recent gastroscopy and colonoscopy were normal. Her past medical history includes angina and a right carotid endarterectomy at the age of 62 years. Her current medication includes aspirin, atenolol, simvastatin and losartan. right carotid endarterectomy at the age of 62 years. Her current medication includes aspirin, atenolol, simvastatin and losartan. Blood tests revealed: Haemoglobin (Hb) 118 g/l, Mean corpuscular volume (MCV) 80 fl, White cell count (WCC) 12.3 x 109/L, Platelets 210 x 109/L, Na+ 133 mmol/L, K+ 5.2 mmol/L, Urea 8.1 mmol/L, Creatinine 134 mmol/L. Select the most appropriate further investigations.

      Your Answer: Gastroscopy

      Correct Answer: Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) of the abdomen

      Explanation:

      The patient is 74 years old. She has had a recent gastroscopy and colonoscopy. She has a history of angina and a right CEA. She is having colicky abdominal pain after meals and weight loss, which points to a possible diagnosis of chronic mesenteric ischemia. Thus, you would want to do a contrast-enhanced CT scan of the abdomen to look for this. A 24 hour cardiac monitor would also be helpful to look for any abnormal rhythm that could be a potential aetiology of her disease.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
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  • Question 30 - A 36-year-old lady presents to the emergency department with right upper quadrant pain....

    Incorrect

    • A 36-year-old lady presents to the emergency department with right upper quadrant pain. She has also noticed that her skin seems slightly yellower over the last week or so and you notice a yellow tinge to her sclera. On further questioning, she complains of itching of her arms. Her only past medical history of note includes ulcerative colitis for which she takes mesalazine. Given her presentation, what is the best investigation to diagnose the most likely underlying condition?

      Your Answer:

      Correct Answer: ERCP (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography)

      Explanation:

      With biliary obstructive symptoms in a patient with ulcerative colitis, one should immediately think of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). PSC is characterized by inflammation and fibrosis of the intrahepatic and extrahepatic ducts. The best diagnostic test for PSC is ERCP. ANCA antibiotics may be positive, but not the best test to DIAGNOSE THE CONDITION. The same can be said of serum transaminase levels– they will be abnormal but nonspecific. While a liver ultrasound may be helpful, it is not the best test. Liver biopsy would be used to stage the PSC later.

    • This question is part of the following fields:

      • Gastroenterology
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SESSION STATS - PERFORMANCE PER SPECIALTY

Gastroenterology (23/29) 79%
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