Surgery K.B part 2

A detailed surgical scene featuring a diverse surgical team in an operating room, working on a patient, with various surgical instruments visible, high-quality, realistic

Surgery Knowledge Base: Part 2

Test your expertise in surgical knowledge with our comprehensive quiz designed for medical professionals and students alike. This quiz covers a wide range of topics related to surgical procedures, patient management, and critical care scenarios.

Key Features:

  • 229 challenging questions
  • Multiple-choice format
  • Immediate feedback on answers
  • Great for exam preparation and review
229 Questions57 MinutesCreated by SavingSurgical101
201. A 72-year-old man undergoes resection of an abdominal aneurysm. He arrives in the ICU with a core temperature of 33°C (91.4°F) and shivering. Which of the following is a physiologic consequence of the shivering?
Rising mixed venous O2 saturation
Increased production of CO2
Decreased consumption of O2
Rising base excess
Decreased minute ventilation
202. A 39-year-old woman with a known history of von Wille-brand disease has a ventral hernia after a previous cesarean section and desires to undergo elective repair. Which of the following should be administered preoperatively?
High-purity factor VIII: C concentrates
Low-molecular-weight dextran
Fresh-frozen plasma (FFP)
Cryoprecipitate
Whole blood
203. You are the physician on call for the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) service. There are 5 calls today, but only one machine and one technologist available. Which of the following patients is the most appropriate recipient of this service?
1-day-old, full-term, anencephalic 4-kg boy suffering from meconium aspiration syndrome and hypoxia
1-day-old, full-term, anencephalic 4-kg boy suffering from meconium aspiration syndrome and hypoxia
A neonate with a diagnosis of severe pulmonary hypoplasia who is in respiratory failure
A 5-year-old girl with rhabdomyosarcoma metastatic to the lungs
A 3-day-old boy preoperative for a congenital diaphragmatic hernia
204. A 72-year-old man has multiple injuries and an altered sensorium after a high-speed motor vehicle collision. He is intubated for his decreased mental status. During intubation, a large amount of gastric contents are noted in the posterior pharynx and he aspirates. Which of the following is the appropriate initial treatment?
Bronchoscopy for aspiration of particulate matter
Steroids
Prophylactic antibiotics
Inhaled nitric oxide
High positive end-expiratory pressure
205. A patient with severe neurological devastation after head trauma has a prolonged course in the intensive care unit. He has been mechanically ventilated for his entire hospital stay. Which of the following clinical findings is diagnostic of a ventilator-associated pneumonia?
White blood cell count of greater than 12,000/mL
Greater than 10,000 colony-forming U/mL of an organism on bronchoalveolar lavage
Greater than 10,000 colony-forming U/mL of an organism on bronchoalveolar lavage
Purulent tracheal secretions
Right lower lobe infiltrate on chest x-ray
206. Shortly after the administration of an inhalational anesthetic and succinylcholine for intubation prior to an elective inguinal hernia repair in a 10-year-old boy, he becomes markedly febrile, displays a tachycardia of 160, and his urine changes color to a dark red. Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment at this time?
Complete the procedure but pretreat with dantrolene prior to future elective surgery.
Administer inhalational anesthetic agents
Administer succinylcholine.
Hyperventilate with 100% O2.
Acidify the urine to prevent myoglobin precipitation in the renal tubules
207. A 42-year-old man has had a rocky course for the 3 days following a bowel resection for intestinal perforation due to inflammatory bowel disease. His CVP had been 12 to 14 but is now 6, in the face of diminished blood pressure and oliguria. Which of the following is the most likely etiology of his hypotension?
Pulmonary embolism
Hypervolemia
Positive-pressure ventilation
Pneumothorax
Gram-negative sepsis
208. Acute renal failure occurs following aortic angiography in a 72-year-old man. His weight has been rising, his lungs show rales at both bases, and he is dyspneic. His fractional excretion of sodium is greater than 1. He has eosinophilia on his peripheral smear, an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and proteinuria with microscopic hematuria. Which of the following is the most likely cause of his renal failure?
Hypovolemia
Renal artery cholesterol embolism
Acute tubular necrosis
Cardiogenic shock
Aortic dissection
209. A 55-year-old woman has been hospitalized because of recurrent pancreatitis, ARDS, prolonged ileus, and need for parenteral nutrition. She demonstrates weakness, lassitude, orthostatic hypotension, nausea, and fever. Which of the following abnormalities is most likely to explain these symptoms?
Hypothermia
Hypokalemia
Hyperglycemia
Hyponatremia
Hypervolemia
210. A 19-year-old man sustains severe lower-extremity trauma, including a femur fracture and a crush injury to his foot. He requires vascular reconstruction of the popliteal artery. On the day after surgery, he becomes dyspneic and hypoxemic and requires intubation and mechanical ventilation. Which of the following is the most likely etiology of his decompensation?
Aspiration
Atelectasis
Fat embolism syndrome
Fluid overload
Pneumonia
211. A 33-year-old woman is brought to the emergency room from the scene of a severe motor vehicle accident. She is combative, confused, uncooperative, and appear dusky and dyspneic. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of her airway?
Awake endotracheal intubation is indicated in patients with penetrating ocular injury.
Steroids have been shown to be of value in the treatment of aspiration of acidic gastric secretions.
The stomach may be assumed to be empty only if a history is obtained indicating no ingestion of food or liquid during the prior 8 hours.
Intubation should be performed as soon as possible (in the emergency room) if the patient is unstable
Cricothyroidotomy is contraindicated in the presence of maxillofacial injuries.
212. Following a boating injury in an industrial-use river, a patient begins to display fever, tachycardia, and a rapidly expanding area of erythema, blistering, and drainage from a flank wound. An x-ray shows gas in the soft tissues. Which of the following measures is most appropriate?
Administration of an antifungal agent
Administration of antitoxin
Wide debridement
Administration of hyperbaric O2
Early closure of tissue defect
213. Following pelvic gynecologic surgery, a 34-year-old woman becomes dyspneic, her peripheral arterial O 2 saturation falls from 94% to 81%, and her measured PaO2 is 52 on a 100% non-rebreather mask. She is hemodynamically stable. A CT angiogram is consistent with a right lower lobe pulmonary embolus. Which of the following is the next step in her management?
Systemic anticoagulation with heparin infusion
Systemic anticoagulation with warfarin
Placement of an inferior vena cava filter
Mbolytic therapy
Open pulmonary embolectomy
214. A 72-year-old woman who is planning to undergo ventral hernia repair is on warfarin for atrial fibrillation. She is advised to cease her warfarin several days before her surgery and is hospitalized preoperatively for heparinization. During her hospital stay, she complains of severe abdominal and flank pain. Her prothrombin time (PT) is normal, but her activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) is elevated. An abdominal CT scan demonstrates a large retroperitoneal hematoma. Which of the following should be administered to reverse the effects of the heparin?
Thrombin
Vitamin K
Protamine sulphate
Aprotinin
Platelet transfusion
215. A 42-year-old man who was in a house fire is transferred to your burn unit. He has singed nose hairs and facial burns. Direct laryngoscopy in the emergency room demonstrates pharyngeal edema and mucosal sloughing. He has 60% total body surface area burns. Which of the following is the next step in the management of this patient?
Hyperbaric oxygen
Intravenous steroids
Inhaled steroids
Bronchoscopy
Intubation
216. 24-year-old man presents in septic shock from an empyema. He is febrile to 103°F, tachycardic in the 120s, and hypotensive to the 90s. His oxygen saturation is 98% on 2-L oxygen. His white blood cell count is 25,000/mL and creatinine is 0.8 mg/dL. His blood pressure does not respond to fluid administration despite a CVP of 15. Which of the following therapies is indicated in managing this patient?
Intubation
Recombinant human activated protein C
Epinephrine
Norepinephrine
Dobutamine
217. A 45-year-old woman is seen with wasting of the intrinsic muscles of the hand, weakness, and pain in the wrist. Which of the following nerves has most likely been injured?
Ulnar nerve
Radial nerve
Brachial nerve
Axillary nerve
Median nerve
218. A 68-year-old woman presents with a pigmented lesion on the trunk. Upon further examination the lesion has an irregular border, darkening coloration, and raised surface. An incisional biopsy is performed and confirms a melanoma with a thickness of 0.5 mm. The patient is scheduled for a wide local excision of the melanoma in the operating room. Which of the following is the smallest margin recommended for excision?
3 mm
5 mm
1 cm
2 cm
5 cm
219. A 25-year-old woman presents with a benign nevus on the right upper arm. She desires removal and undergoes a clean incision and then closure of the incision without complication. With regard to the healing process, which of the following cell types are the first infiltrating cells to enter the wound site, peaking at 24 to 48 hours?
Macrophages
Neutrophils
Fibroblasts
Lymphocytes
Monocytes
220. A 3-year-old boy is brought to the emergency room after spilling bleach onto his lower extremities. He is diagnosed with a chemical burn and all involved clothing are removed. In addition to resuscitation, which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?
Treatment of the burn wound with antimicrobial agents.
Neutralize the burn wound with weak acids.
Lavage of the burn wound with large volumes of water.
Wound debridement in the operating room.
Treatment of the burn wound with calcium gluconate gel
221. A 35-year-old man with new diagnosis of Crohn disease presents with rapidly enlarging painful ulcerations on the lower extremities. Cultures of the lesion are negative, and skin biopsy reveals no evidence of malignancy. Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment option
Surgical debridement of the wound with skin grafting
Local wound care with silver sulfadiazine
Topical corticosteroids
Systemic steroids and immunosuppressants
Saphenous vein stripping and compressive stockings
222. Following a weekend of snowmobiling, a 42-year-old man comes to the emergency department with pain, numbness, and discoloration of his right forefoot. You diagnose frostbite. Which of the following is the proper initial treatment?
Debridement of the affected part followed by silver sulfadiazine dressings
Administration of corticosteroids
Administration of vasodilators
Immersion of the affected part in water at 40°C-44°C (104°F-111.2°F)
Rewarming of the affected part at room temperature
223. A 63-year-old man with history of poorly controlled diabetes presents with right leg swelling and pain. The patient denies trauma to the leg and reports it was normal yesterday. Examination of the right lower extremity is significant for extreme tenderness to palpation, erythema, and edema extending up to the knee. X ray of the right leg shows tissue swelling without gas or osteomyelitis. The patient’s vital signs are normal and he is started on broad-spectrum IV antibiotics and insulin. An hour later the patient’s heart rate increases to 125 beats per minute and the erythema has progressed to the thigh with new blister formation on the leg. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Repeat x-ray of the right lower extremity
CT scan of the right lower extremity
MRI of the right lower extremity
Bone scan of the right lower extremity
Immediate surgical intervention with incision and direct visualization of potentially infected tissue
224. A 35-year-old woman undergoes an elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy for symptomatic cholelithiasis. Which of the following wound class’s best describes her procedure?
Class I, Clean
Class II, Clean/contaminated
Class III, Contaminated
Class IV, Dirty
None of the above
225. A 65-year-old woman presents with a 1-cm lesion with a pearly border on her nose, and punch biopsy is consistent with a basal cell carcinoma. She is scheduled to undergo Mohs surgery. Which of the following is a benefit of Mohs surgery over wide local excision?
Mohs surgery results in a smaller cosmetic defect while obtaining negative margins circumferentiallyv
Mohs surgery offers a shorter operating time.
Mohs surgery can be performed on many different types of skin cancers.
Mohs surgery results in less recurrence and metastases.
Mohs surgery does not depend on intraoperative evaluation of specimen margins with frozen sections
226. A 60-year-old woman presents with the skin lesion shown here. She reports a history of a burn injury to the hand while cooking a few years ago. She reports the wound has never healed completely. You are concerned about the skin lesion and perform a punch biopsy. Which of the following is the most accurate diagnosis given the patient’s history?
Basal cell carcinoma
Malignant melanoma
Erythroplasia of Queyrat
Bowen disease
Marjolin ulcer
227. A 25-year-old man is brought to the emergency room after sustaining burns during a fire in his apartment. He has blistering and erythema of his face, left upper extremity, and chest. He also has circumferential frank charring of his right upper extremity with decreased capillary refill. He is agitated, hypotensive, and tachycardic. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of his wounds?
Topical antibiotics should be applied to the burn wounds.
Excision of facial and hand burns
Escharotomy of the right upper extremity
Excision of all third-degree burns.
Split-thickness skin grafts over the areas of third-degree burns.
228. A 24-year-old firefighter sustains 30% total body surface area (TBSA) burns to his torso, face, and extremities. His wounds are treated topically with silver nitrate. Which of the following complications is associated with use of this agent?
Hypernatremia
Metabolic acidosis
Hyperchloremia
Neutropenia
Hyponatremia
229. A 54-year-old man sees you because of a growth on his lower lip. He smokes tobacco, has a fair complexion, and works outdoors. The biopsy report confirms a carcinoma. Which of the following is the most common diagnosis for tumors involving the lips?
Squamous cell carcinoma
Basal cell carcinoma
Malignant melanoma
Keratoacanthoma
Verrucous carcinoma
230. A 40-year-old woman complains of mild, intermittent pain and paresthesias in her right wrist. She reports the pain is worse at night and with driving. On physical examination hyperflexion of the right wrist reproduces the paresthesia. With regard to her diagnosis, which of the following is the most appropriate initial treatment?
Ice pack to the affected wrist at nighttime
Heat pad to the affected wrist at nighttime
Wrist splint worn at nighttime
Surgical treatment with division of the flexor retinaculum
Surgical treatment with division of the extensor retinaculum
231. A 60-year-old diabetic man undergoes incision and drainage of an infected boil on his back. The wound is left open and packed daily. Week by week, the wound grows smaller and eventually heals. Which of the following terms describes the method of wound closure by the patient?
Primary intention
Secondary intention
Tertiary intention
Delayed primary closure
Delayed secondary closure
232. A 70-year-old man is concerned when his dentist finds a white patch on his oral mucosa during a routine examination. Proper management should include which of the following?
Excisional biopsy of all lesions
Application of topical antibiotics
Low-dose radiation therapy
Strict oral hygiene and avoidance of alcohol and tobacco
Application of topical chemotherapeutic agents
233. A 60-year-old man presents with a 6-mm basal cell carcinoma on the tip of his nose. He is scheduled to undergo excision of the tumor in the operating room with repair of the defect using skin and subcutaneous tissue from his earlobe. Which of the following terms most appropriately describes this form of reconstructive surgery?
Split-thickness graft
Full-thickness graft
Composite graft
Pedicle flap
Free flap
234. A 40-year-old woman undergoes an incisional biopsy of a pigmented lesion on her right thigh. Pathologic examination reveals malignant melanoma with a thickness of 3 mm. Findings on examination of the groin are normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in her management?
Wide local excision of the melanoma with a 1-cm margin from the tumor, followed by radiation to the groin
Wide local excision of the melanoma with a 1-cm margin from the tumor and sentinel lymph node biopsy
Wide local excision of the melanoma with a 1-cm margin from the tumor and groin lymph node dissection
Wide local excision of the melanoma with a 2-cm margin from the tumor and sentinel lymph node biopsy
Wide local excision of the melanoma with a 2-cm margin from the tumor and groin lymph node dissection
235. A 22-year-old healthy African-American woman presents with a recurrent growth on her right thigh. She has a childhood history of a third-degree scald burn to the same area that did not require skin grafting. The growth was completely removed 2 years ago. On physical examination there is a 5 cm × 2 cm, raised, irregularly shaped purple lesion with a smooth top. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Angiosarcoma
Malignant melanoma
Squamous cell carcinoma
Kaposi sarcoma
Keloid
236. A 12-year-old boy is in a motor vehicle collision in which the car caught fire. He sustains significant inhalation injury and a circumferential burn without fractures or other soft tissue trauma to his left lower extremity during extrication from the burning vehicle. He is intubated and aggressively resuscitated in the intensive care unit. Which of the following is the most appropriate method of assessing for compartment syndrome of the left lower extremity?
X-ray of the left lower extremity
Doppler signals of the left lower extremity
Computed tomography (CT) scan of the left lower extremity
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the left lower extremity
Left lower extremity angiogram
237. During a bar brawl, a 19-year-old man sustains a 4-in laceration on his left arm from glass and presents to the emergency room the following morning, 10 hours later. He is neurovascularly intact and the wound is deep, extending down to fascia. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of the wound?
Closure of the skin only and administration of oral antibiotics for 1 week
Closure of the skin and subcutaneous tissue and administration of oral antibiotics for 1 week
A single dose of intravenous antibiotics and closure of the skin only
A single dose of intravenous antibiotics and closure of the skin and subcutaneous tissue
Local wound care without wound closure or antibiotics
238. A 59-year-old woman undergoes an exploratory laparotomy for peritonitis and is found to have perforated diverticulitis. She undergoes a sigmoid resection with an end colostomy. She is administered a third-generation cephalosporin within 1 hour prior to the incision and the antibiotic is continued postoperatively. One week later, she develops an intra-abdominal abscess, which is percutaneously drained. Bacteroides fragilis is isolated from the cultures. Which of the following statements regarding her perioperative antibiotic regimen is most accurate?
The preoperative dose of antibiotics should have been given closer to the time of incision.
The patient should have received several doses of antibiotics prior to laparotomy.
The patient should have received a first-generation cephalosporin.
The patient did not have adequate gram-negative coverage
The patient did not have adequate anaerobic coverage
239. A 30-year-old man with a history of Crohn disease develops an enterocutaneous fistula and is placed on total parenteral nutrition through a right subclavian central venous catheter. After 5 days, the patient develops a fever and leukocytosis; CT scan of the abdomen reveals no intra-abdominal abscess. The subclavian catheter insertion site is inspected and noted to be erythematous and painful. Blood cultures are positive. Which of the following organisms is the most likely cause of his fever?
Coagulase-positive staphylococci
Coagulase-negative staphylococci
Group A Streptococcus
Enterococcus
Escherichia coli
240. A 65-year-old man sustains a 50% TBSA burn while burning trash in the backyard. The patient is resuscitated with lactated Ringer (LR) solution using the Parkland formula and a weight of 80 kg. What is the rate of LR given in the first 8 hours?
100 mL/h
500 mL/h
1000 mL/h @
5000 mL/h
10,000 mL/h
241. A 67-year-old man presents to his primary care physician with a 1-cm skin lesion on his left forearm. On examination, it has a waxy appearance with rolled pearly borders surrounding a central ulcer. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Mohs surgery
Curettage of the lesion
Electrodesiccation of the lesion
Laser vaporization of the lesion
Surgical excision
242. A 43-year-old man with a gangrenous gallbladder and gram-negative sepsis agrees to participate in a research study. An assay of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is performed. Which of the following is the origin of this peptide?
Fibroblasts
Damaged vascular endothelial cells
Monocytes/macrophages
Activated T lymphocytes
Activated killer lymphocytes
243. A 49-year-old man who underwent liver transplantation 5 years ago for alcoholic cirrhosis presents with a gradually increasing bilirubin level. He undergoes a liver biopsy, which demonstrates a paucity of bile ducts. Which of the following is his best option for treatment?
Increase his immunosuppression
Administration of a monoclonal antibody against T cells
Exploratory laparotomy with hepatic arterial reconstruction
Exploratory laparotomy with thrombectomy of the portal vein
Retransplantation
244. A 52-year-old woman in renal failure is listed as a transplant candidate. In order to assess the propriety of the transplant, which of the following combinations represents how a cross-match is performed?
Donor serum with recipient lymphocytes and complement
Donor lymphocytes with recipient serum and complement
Donor lymphocytes with recipient lymphocytes
Recipient serum with a known panel of multiple donor lymphocytes
Recipient serum with donor red blood cells and complement
245. A 39-year-old woman presents with generalized malaise and lymphadenopathy. Biopsy of a supraclavicular lymph node reveals non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Forty-eight hours after initiation of chemotherapy, she develops a high-grade fever and her laboratory studies demonstrate hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hypocalcemia. Which of the following cells mediate this syndrome?
Macrophages
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes
Natural killer cells
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes
Helper T lymphocytes
246. A 33-year-old diabetic man receives a renal allograft. The physicians choose cyclosporine as one of the antirejection medications. Which of the following functions does cyclosporine A primarily inhibit?
Macrophage function
Antibody production
Interleukin 1 production
Interleukin 2 production
Cytotoxic T-cell effectiveness
247. A 24-year-old woman presents with lethargy, anorexia, tachypnea, and weakness. Laboratory studies reveal a BUN of 150 mg/dL, serum creatinine of 16 mg/dL, and potassium of 6.2 mEq/L. Chest x-ray shows increased pulmonary vascularity and a dilated heart. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Emergency kidney transplantation
Creation and immediate use of a forearm arteriovenous fistula
Placement of a catheter in the internal jugular vein and initiation of hemodialysis
A 100-g protein/day diet
Renal biopsy
248. A hypertensive 47-year-old man is proposed for kidney transplantation. He is anemic but is otherwise functional. Which of the following would preclude renal transplantation?
Positive cross-match
Donor blood type O
Two-antigen HLA match with donor
Blood pressure of 180/100 mm Hg
Hemoglobin level of 8.2 g/dL
249. 56-year-old woman is undergoing a cadaveric renal transplant. After revascularization of the transplanted kidney, the transplanted renal parenchyma becomes swollen and blue. The surgeon suspects hyperacute rejection. What is the treatment of choice for this patient?
There is no therapy for hyperacute rejection
Systemic anticoagulation
Catheter-directed anticoagulation into the renal artery
Intravenous steroids
Intravenous steroids and cyclosporine
250. A 57-year-old man has end-stage heart failure due to atherosclerosis. His cardiologist refers him for evaluation for heart transplantation. Which of the following is an absolute contraindication for heart transplantation?
Cirrhosis
Age over 65
Diabetes without end-organ damage
Reversible high pulmonary vascular resistance
History of colon cancer resected 5 years ago with no evidence of recurrence
251. A 47-year-old man with hypertensive nephropathy develops fever, graft tenderness, and oliguria 4 weeks following cadaveric renal transplantation. Serum creatinine is 3.1 mg/dL. A renal ultrasound reveals mild edema of the renal papillae but normal flow in both the renal artery and the renal vein. Nuclear scan demonstrates sluggish uptake and excretion. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step?
Performing an angiogram
Decreasing steroid and cyclosporine dose
Beginning intravenous antibiotics
Performing renal biopsy, steroid boost, and immunoglobulin therapy
Beginning FK 506
252. Approximately 6 weeks following a kidney transplant, a 59-year-old woman develops fever, malaise, and myalgias and is found to have a cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. Which of the following is a potential sequela of CMV infection?
Pyelonephritis
Gastrointestinal (GI) ulceration and haemorrhage
Cholecystitis
Invtra-abdominal abscess
Parotitis
253. A 55-year-old man presents with worsening cirrhosis. After evaluation by a hepatologist, he presents for evaluation for hepatic transplantation. He is informed that prioritization for transplantation is based on the Model of End-stage Liver Disease (MELD) score, and that patients with higher MELD scores have a greater benefit from transplantation. Which of the following contributes to the MELD score?
Platelet count
Total bilirubin
Albumin
Encephalopathy
Ascites
254. A young woman who has received a transplant has posttransplant fever and malaise. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is diagnosed. This has occurred most commonly with the transplantation of which of the following?
Kidney
Lung
Heart
Bone marrow
Pancreas
255. A brain-dead potential donor has become available. You must plan for the dispersal of the thoracic organs. Which of the following will necessitate a heart-lung transplant?
Primary pulmonary hypertension
Cystic fibrosis
End-stage emphysema
Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy with long-standing secondary pulmonary hypertension
End-stage pulmonary fibrosis secondary to sarcoidosis
256. A 35-year-old man who has had type 1 diabetes for many years undergoes a pancreas transplant with enteric drainage (connection of the donor duodenum to the recipient jejunum). Postoperatively, he has increased pain near his pancreas transplant. Which of the following should be performed to confirm a diagnosis of rejection?
Percutaneous biopsy of the transplanted pancreas
Measurement of serum amylase levels
Measurement of serum lipase levels
Measurement of urinary amylase levels
Determination of the ratio of the level of urinary amylase to serum amylase
257. A 55-year-old woman who has end-stage liver disease is referred to a hepatologist for evaluation. Which of the following would prevent her from being a transplantation candidate?
Use of alcohol 3 months ago
Two 2-cm hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) in the right lobe of the liver
A 4-cm hepatocellular carcinoma in the right lobe of the liver
Development of hepatorenal syndrome requiring hemodialysis
History of breast cancer 5 years ago with no evidence of disease currently
258. A kidney transplant recipient presents with severe acute rejection that does not respond to steroid treatment. Administration of which of the following agents is the best step in her management?
Cyclosporine
Tacrolimus
Azathioprine
Muromonab-CD3
Sirolimus
259. A 19-year-old college student presents with a testicular mass, and after treatment he returns for regular follow-up visits. Which of the following is the most useful serum marker for detecting recurrent disease after treatment of nonseminomatous testicular cancer?
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)
Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG)
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA)
CA125
P53 oncogene
260. An edentulous 72-year-old man with a 50-year history of cigarette smoking presents with a nontender, hard mass in the lateral neck. Which of the following is the best diagnostic test for establishing a diagnosis of malignancy?
Fine-needle aspiration cytology
Bone marrow biopsy
Nasopharyngoscopy
Computed tomography (CT) scan of the head and neck
Sinus x-ray
261. (PTS,13th,211) A 49-year-old woman undergoes surgical resection of a malignancy. The family asks about the prognosis. The histopathology is available for review. For which of the following malignancies does histologic grade best correlate with prognosis?
Lung cancer
Melanoma
Colonic adenocarcinoma
Hepatocellular carcinoma
Soft tissue sarcoma
262. A mother notices an abdominal mass in her 3-year-old son while giving him a bath. There is no history of any symptoms, but the boy’s blood pressure is elevated at 105/85 mm Hg. Metastatic workup is negative and the patient is explored. The mass shown here is found within the left kidney. Genetic testing reveals deletion of 2 genes on chromosome band 11p13. Which of the following anomalies in addition to the identified tumor is associated with these chromosomal deletions?
Cardiac anomalies
Hemihypertrophy
Hypoglycemia
Macroglossia
Aniridia
263. An 11-year-old girl presents to your office because of a family history of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. Physical examination is normal. Which of the following tests should you perform?
Urine vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) level
Serum insulin level
Serum gastrin level
Serum glucagon level
Serum somatostatin level
264. A 37-year-old woman has developed a 6-cm mass on her anterior thigh over the past 10 months. The mass appears to be fixed to the underlying muscle, but the overlying skin is movable. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in her management?
Above-knee amputation
Excisional biopsy
Incisional biopsy
Bone scan
Abdominal CT scan
265. A 50-year-old man is incidentally discovered to have a low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma on biopsy of the stomach during esophagogastroduodenoscopy for dyspepsia. CT scans of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis demonstrate no evidence of enlarged regional lymph nodes or distant metastases. Which of the following is the initial treatment of choice?
Total gastrectomy with esophagojejunostomy
Total gastrectomy with esophagojejunostomy and adjuvant chemotherapy
Chemotherapy
Steroids
Antibiotics
266. A 33-year-old woman seeks assistance because of a swelling of her right parotid gland. Biopsy is performed and reveals acinar carcinoma. You consent the patient for resection and inform her that at the very least, she will require superficial parotidectomy. Which of the following intraoperative findings would require sacrifice of the facial nerve?
Invasion of the deep lobe of the parotid
Invasion of the lateral lobe of the parotid.
Proximity of the carcinoma to the facial nerve.
Encasement of the facial nerve by carcinoma.
The facial nerve should always be preserved regardless of intraoperative findings.
267. A 42-year-old man is undergoing chemotherapy after resection of a cecal adenocarcinoma with positive lymph nodes. You are asked to see him regarding a potential surgical complication. Which of the following potentially operable complications is a common occurrence among patients receiving systemic chemotherapy?
Acute cholecystitis
Perirectal abscess
Appendicitis
Incarcerated femoral hernia
Diverticulitis
268. A 28-year-old medical student seeks your attention because of a testicular mass. Biopsy is consistent with pure seminoma. There is no evidence of enlarged retroperitoneal lymph nodes on CT scan. Which of the following is the best treatment strategy for this patient?
Orchiectomy alone
Orchiectomy followed by chemotherapy
Orchiectomy with retroperitoneal lymph node dissection
Orchiectomy with retroperitoneal lymph node dissection followed by external beam radiation
Orchiectomy followed by external beam radiation to the retroperitoneal lymph nodes
269. A 25-year-old woman with end-stage renal disease is exploring the benefits of renal transplantation. Which of the following is an advantage of dialysis over renal transplantation?
Better patient survival
More cost-effective longterm
More cost-effective longterm
No need for lifelong immunosuppression
More cost-effective if the renal transplant functions for more than 2 years
270. A 30-year-old previously healthy man presents with refractory hypertension on four medications. Urinalysis is positive for metanephrines. He was adopted as an infant and therefore does not know his family history. Which of the following inherited syndromes is not associated with this disease?
MEN2A
MEN2B
Von Hippel-Lindau disease
Neurofibromatosis I
Neurofibromatosis II
271. A 24-year-old man whose father was just diagnosed with colon cancer presents to his family physician to discuss screening colonoscopy. His physician suspects that he has hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) or Lynch syndrome and recommends screening colonoscopy beginning at age 25. Which of the following is most supportive of a clinical diagnosis of HNPCC?
A father with colon cancer at 52 years of age
A father and an uncle (same side of the family) with colon cancer
A father and grandfather (same side of the family) with colon cancer
A father and 2 uncles (same side of the family) with colon cancer
A father, uncle, and grandfather (same side of the family) with colon cancer at 50 years of age
272. A 53-year-old woman presents with bright red blood per rectum, increased abdominal distention, and weight loss. She is found to have a large fungating mass 8 cm from the anal verge. No other lesions are identified. Biopsy is consistent with invasive rectal adenocarcinoma. Endorectal ultrasound shows invasion of the tumor into the perirectal fat and multiple enlarged lymph nodes. CT scans of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis do not show any metastases. She would like to preserve her sphincter if possible. Which of the following is the best treatment option for this patient given her preferences?
Abdominoperineal resection
Neoadjuvant chemoradiation followed by low anterior resection
Neoadjuvant chemoradiation followed by abdominoperineal resection
Transanal excision followed by adjuvant chemoradiation
Neoadjuvant chemoradiation followed by transanal excision
273. A 35-year-old woman presents with a right breast mass. You perform a thorough history and physical examination as well as a core biopsy of the right breast mass. In which of the following circumstances would a sentinel lymph node biopsy be indicated?
The core biopsy is consistent with ductal carcinoma in situ without comedo necrosis for which the patient desires partial mastectomy only.
The core biopsy is consistent with ductal carcinoma and the patient has a positive pregnancy test.
The core biopsy is consistent with ductal carcinoma and the patient desires partial mastectomy
The core biopsy is consistent with ductal carcinoma and the patient has palpable axillary lymph nodes
The core biopsy is consistent with ductal carcinoma and the patient has a bone scan suspicious for metastasis.
274. A patient requires both cardiac and renal transplantation. Preparation for the procedures has begun. How do cardiac allografts differ from renal allografts?
Cardiac allografts are matched by HLA tissue typing and renal allografts are not.
Cardiac allografts can tolerate a longer period of cold ischemia than renal allografts
One-year graft survival for cardiac allografts is substantially lower than that for renal allografts
Cardiac allografts are matched only by size and ABO blood type
Cyclosporine is a critical component of the immunosuppressive regimen for cardiac allografts but not renal allografts.
275. A patient with colon cancer has a mass in the upper lobe of his left lung 2.5 years following resection of his colon cancer and subsequent 12 months of chemotherapy. His CEA level is rising. Which of the following predicts a 5-year survival rate of greater than 20% following resection of pulmonary metastases?
Other organ metastases are present
Lung lesions are solitary
Local tumor recurrence is found.
The tumor doubling time is less than 20 days.
The patient has received prior chemotherapy.
276. A 61-year-old man undergoes upper endoscopy for evaluation of weight loss and is identified to have a submucosal mass in the stomach. Biopsy is consistent with a gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). Workup reveals the presence of liver metastases. Which of the following is the best initial treatment for this patient?
Tyrosine kinase inhibitor (Imatinib)
Monoclonal antibody against interleukin-2 receptor (Daclizumab)
Monoclonal antibody against tumor necrosis factor α (Infliximab)
Monoclonal antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor A (Bevacizumab)
Monoclonal antibody against epidermal growth factor receptor (Cetuximab)
277. A 57-year-old woman develops bony metastases 1 year after right modified radical mastectomy for breast cancer. The tumor was estrogen receptor-negative, progesterone receptor-negative, and Her-2/neu positive. Which of the following agents is indicated for treatment of her metastatic disease?
Antiestrogen (Tamoxifen)
Selective estrogen receptor modulator (Raloxifene)
Monoclonal antibody (Trastuzumab)
Aromatase inhibitor (Anastrozole)
5-fluorouracil
278. A 42-year-old man is diagnosed with an osteosarcoma. His family history is significant for a 37-year-old sister with breast cancer and an uncle with adrenocortical carcinoma. His family physician suspects that he may have Li-Fraumeni syndrome and suggests genetic testing. Which of the following genes is most likely to be mutated if he has the syndrome?
A 42-year-old man is diagnosed with an osteosarcoma. His family history is significant for a 37-year-old sister with breast cancer and an uncle with adrenocortical carcinoma. His family physician suspects that he may have Li-Fraumeni syndrome and suggests genetic testing. Which of the following genes is most likely to be mutated if he has the syndrome?
RET
P53
Phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN)
P16
279. A patient with a solid malignancy discusses chemotherapy with his oncologist. He is interested in the risks of the treatment. What is the primary toxicity of doxorubicin (Adriamycin)?
Cardiomyopathy
Pulmonary fibrosis
Peripheral neuropathy
Uric acid nephropathy
Hepatic dysfunction
280. A 22-year-old woman has a known family history of breast cancer in her first-degree relatives. She undergoes genetic testing and is found to be a BRCA1 mutation carrier. She does not currently desire bilateral prophylactic mastectomy. Which of the following is the next best option to manage her risk for breast cancer?
Mammography every 6 months starting at age 25
Mammography every 6 months starting at age 35
Mammography every 12 months starting at age 25
Mammography every 12 months starting at age 35
Tamoxifen for chemoprevention
281. A 56-year-old woman is undergoing chemotherapy. She presents today with complaints of burning on urination and bloody urine. Which of the following agents causes hemorrhagic cystitis?
Bleomycin
5-fluorouracil
Cisplatin
Vincristine
Cyclophosphamide
282. A 38-year-old woman who underwent a cadaveric renal transplant 8 years ago presents with fevers, fatigue, and weight loss. Evaluation included CT scans of the head, neck, chest, abdomen, and pelvis; she is noted to have diffuse lymphadenopathy and pulmonary nodules. A biopsy and histologic examination of a lymph node is performed. Which of the following viruses is most likely to be present in the lymph node?
Cytomegalovirus
Human papillomavirus
Human herpesvirus 8
Epstein-Barr virus
Coxsackie virus
283. A 41-year-old man underwent a successful living-related kidney transplantation 1 year ago with good results. Preoperatively, he was noted to have an elevated calcium level; post-transplantation, he continues to have elevated calcium levels and associated symptoms. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
99mTc sestamibi scanning
Ultrasound of the neck
CT scan of the neck and mediastinum
Total parathyroidectomy with autotransplantation of a portion of a gland into the forearm
Measurement of urinary calcium levels
284. A 53-year-old man presents with constipation and a 20-lb weight loss over the course of 6 months. Colonoscopy reveals a fungating mass in the sigmoid colon; biopsy is consistent with adenocarcinoma. His metastatic workup is negative. A CEA level is obtained and is 4-fold greater than normal. Which of the following is the appropriate use of this test?
As an indication for neoadjuvant chemotherapy
As an indication for postoperative radiation therapy
As an indication for preoperative PET scanning
As an indication for a more aggressive sigmoid resection
As a baseline measurement prior to monitoring postoperatively for recurrence
285. A 45-year-old woman complains to her primary care physician of nervousness, sweating, tremulousness, and weight loss. The thyroid scan shown here exhibits a pattern that is most consistent with which of the following disorders?
Hypersecreting adenoma
Graves disease
Lateral aberrant thyroid
Papillary carcinoma of thyroid
Medullary carcinoma of thyroid
286. A patient with mild skin pigmentation is admitted emergently to your service because of sudden abdominal pain, fever, and a rigid abdomen. Her blood work indicates a marked leukocytosis, a blood sugar of 55 mg/dL, a sodium value of 119 mEq/dL, and a potassium value of 6.2 mEq/dL. Her blood pressure is 88/58-mmHg. She undergoes an exploratory laparotomy. Which of the following is the definitive treatment for her primary condition?
10% dextrose infusion
Bicarbonate
Hypertonic saline
Corticosteroids
Vasopressors
287. A 35-year-old woman with a history of previous right thyroidectomy for a benign thyroid nodule now undergoes completion thyroidectomy for a suspicious thyroid mass. Several hours postoperatively, she develops progressive swelling under the incision, stridor, and difficulty breathing. Orotracheal intubation is successful. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step?
Fiberoptic laryngoscopy to rule out bilateral vocal cord paralysis
Administration of intravenous calcium
Administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics and debridement of the wound
Wound exploration
Administration of high-dose steroids and antihistamines
288. A 62-year-old woman presents with invasive ductal carcinoma of the right breast. Which of the following findings would still allow her to receive breast conservation surgery (partial mastectomy)?
Diffuse suspicious microcalcifications throughout the breast
Multifocal disease
Previous treatment of a breast cancer with lumpectomy and radiation
Large tumor relative to breast size
Persistently positive margins after multiple reexcisions of the breast cancer
289. A 29-year-old woman presents with a 6-month history of erythema and edema of the right breast with palpable axillary lymphadenopathy. A punch biopsy of the skin reveals neoplastic cells in the dermal lymphatics. Which of the following is the best next step in her management?
A course of nafcillin to treat the overlying cellulitis and then neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer
Modified radical mastectomy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy
Modified radical mastectomy followed by hormonal therapy
Combined modality chemotherapy and radiation therapy to the right breast with surgery reserved for residual disease
Combined modality therapy with chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation
290. A 15-year-old otherwise healthy female high school student begins to notice galactorrhea. A pregnancy test is negative. Which of the following is a frequently associated physical finding?
Gonadal atrophy
Bitemporal hemianopsia
Exophthalmos and lid lag
Episodic hypertension
Buffalo hump
291. A 52-year-old woman sees her physician with complaints of fatigue, headache, flank pain, hematuria, and abdominal pain. She undergoes a sestamibi scan that demonstrates persistent uptake in the right superior parathyroid gland at 2 hours. Which of the following laboratory values is most suggestive of her diagnosis?
Serum acid phosphatase above 120 IU/L
Serum alkaline phosphatase above 120 IU/L
Serum calcium above 11 mg/dL
Urinary calcium below 100 mg/day
Parathyroid hormone levels below 5 μmol/L
292. A 53-year-old woman presents with weight loss and a persistent rash to her lower abdomen and perineum. She is diagnosed with necrolytic migrating erythema and additional workup demonstrates diabetes mellitus, anemia and a large mass in the tail of the pancreas. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Verner-Morrison syndrome (VIPoma)
Glucagonoma
Somatostatinoma
Insulinoma
Gastrinoma
293. A 49-year-old obese man has become irritable, his face has changed to a round configuration, he has developed purplish lines on his flanks, and he is hypertensive. A 24-hour urine collection demonstrates elevated cortisol levels. This is confirmed with bedtime cortisol measurements of 700 ng/mL. Which of the following findings is most consistent with the diagnosis of Cushing disease?
Decreased ACTH levels
Glucocorticoid use for the treatment of inflammatory disorders
A 3-cm adrenal mass on computed tomography (CT) scan
Suppression with high-dose dexamethasone suppression testing
A 1-cm bronchogenic mass on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
294. A 35-year-old woman presents with a lump in the left breast. Her family history is negative for breast cancer. On examination the mass is rubbery, mobile, and nontender to palpation. There are no overlying skin changes and the axilla is negative for lymphadenopathy. An ultrasound demonstrates a simple 1-cm cyst in the area of the palpable mass in the left breast. Which of the following represents the most appropriate management of this patient?
Reassurance and re-examination
Immediate excisional biopsy
Aspiration of the cyst with cytologic analysis
Fluoroscopically guided needle localization biopsy
Mammography and reevaluation of options with new information
295. A 55-year-old woman presents with a slow-growing painless mass on the right side of the neck. A fine-needle aspiration of the nodule shows a well-differentiated papillary carcinoma. A complete neck ultrasound demonstrates a 1-cm nodule in the right thyroid without masses in the contralateral lobe or lymph node metastasis in the central and lateral neck compartments. With regards to this patient, which of the following is associated with a poor prognosis?
Age
Sex
Grade of tumor
Size of tumor
Lymph node status
296. A 55-year-old woman presents with a 6-cm right thyroid mass and palpable cervical lymphadenopathy. Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of one of the lymph nodes demonstrates the presence of calcified clumps of sloughed cells. Which of the following best describes the management of this thyroid disorder?
The patient should be screened for pancreatic endocrine neoplasms and hypercalcemia.
The patient should undergo total thyroidectomy with modified radical neck dissection
The patient should undergo total thyroidectomy with frozen section intraoperatively, with modified radical neck dissection reserved for patients with extra-capsular invasion.
The patient should undergo right thyroid lobectomy followed by iodine 131 (131I) therapy.
The patient should undergo right thyroid lobectomy
297. A 45-year-old woman is found to have suspicious appearing calcifications in the right breast on a screening mammogram. Stereotactic biopsy of the calcifications shows lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS). On examination both breasts are dense without palpable masses. The neck and bilateral axilla are negative for lymphadenopathy. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Frequent self-breast examinations and yearly screening mammograms
Chemotherapy
Radiation
Right total mastectomy with sentinel lymph node biopsy
Bilateral modified radical mastectomy
298. A 14-year-old black girl has her right breast removed because of a large mass. The tumor weighs 1400 g and has a bulging, very firm, lobulated surface with a whorl-like pattern, as illustrated here. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Cystosarcoma phyllodes
Intraductal carcinoma
Malignant lymphoma
Fibroadenoma
Juvenile hypertrophy
299. A 53-year-old woman presents with complaints of weakness, anorexia, malaise, constipation, and back pain. While being evaluated, she becomes somewhat lethargic. Laboratory studies include a normal chest x-ray, serum albumin 3.2 mg/dL, serum calcium 14 mg/dL, serum phosphorus 2.6 mg/dL, serum chloride 108 mg/dL, blood urea nitrogen (BUN) 32 mg/dL, and creatinine 2.0 mg/dL. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management?
Intravenous normal saline infusion
Administration of thiazide diuretics
Administration of intravenous phosphorus
Use of mithramycin
Neck exploration and parathyroidectomy
300. Which of the following patients with primary hyperparathyroidism should undergo parathyroidectomy?
A 62-year-old asymptomatic woman
A 54-year-old woman with fatigue and depression
A 42-year-old woman with a history of kidney stones
A 59-year-old woman with mildly elevated 24-hour urinary calcium excretion
A 60-year-old woman with mildly decreased bone mineral density measured at the hip of less than 2 standard deviations below peak bone density
301. A 45-year-old woman presents with hypertension, development of facial hair, and a 7-cm suprarenal mass. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Myelolipoma
Cushing disease
Adrenocortical carcinoma
Pheochromocytoma
Carcinoid
302. 36-year-old woman presents with palpitations, anxiety, and hypertension. Workup reveals a pheochromocytoma. Which of the following is the best approach to optimizing the patient preoperatively?
Fluid restriction 24 hours preoperatively to prevent intraoperative congestive heart failure
Initiation of an α-blocker 24 hours prior to surgery
Initiation of an α-blocker at 1 to 3 weeks prior to surgery
Initiation of a β-blocker 1 to 3 weeks prior to surgery
Escalating antihypertensive drug therapy with β-blockade followed by α-blockade starting at least 1 week prior to surgery
303. A 33-year-old pregnant woman notices a persistent, painless lump in the left breast. On examination the left breast has a single mobile mass without evidence of skin changes or lymphadenopathy in the neck or axilla. An ultrasound demonstrates a solid, 1-cm mass in the upper outer quadrant of the breast. A core-needle biopsy shows invasive ductal carcinoma. The patient is in her first trimester of pregnancy. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Termination of the pregnancy followed by modified radical mastectomy
Immediate administration of chemotherapy followed by modified radical mastectomy after delivery of the baby
Administration of radiation in the third trimester followed by modified radical mastectomy after delivery of the baby
Total mastectomy with sentinel lymph node biopsy
Modified radical mastectomy
304. A 40-year-old woman presents with a rash involving the nipple-areola complex for the last month with associated itching. On physical examination there is crusting and ulceration of the nipple with surrounding erythema involving the areola and surrounding skin, no palpable breast masses, and no cervical or axillary lymphadenopathy. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in the management of this patient?
Reexamine the patient in 1 month
Corticosteroid cream to the affected area
Administration of oral antibiotics
Mammogram and biopsy of the affected area
Modified radical mastectomy
305. A 50-year-old man presents with intractable peptic ulcer disease, severe esophagitis, and abdominal pain. Which of the following is most consistent with the diagnosis of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome?
Hypercalcemia
Fasting gastrin level of 10 pg/mL
Fasting gastrin level of 100 pg/mL
Increase in gastrin level (> 200 pg/mL) after administration of secretin
Decrease in gastrin level (> 200 pg/mL) after administration of secretin
306. A 29-year-old woman with a history of difficulty becoming pregnant presents to her primary care physician and is diagnosed with Grave disease on iodine uptake scan; her thyrotropin (TSH) level is markedly suppressed and her free thyroxine (T4) level is elevated. She desires to conceive as soon as possible and elects to undergo thyroidectomy. After she is rendered euthyroid with medications preoperatively, which of the following management strategies should also be employed to reduce the risk of developing thyroid storm in the operating room?
Drops of Lugol iodine solution daily beginning 10 days preoperatively
Preoperative treatment with phenoxybenzamine for 3 weeks
Preoperative treatment with propranolol for 1 week
Twenty-four hours of corticosteroids preoperatively
No other preoperative medication is required.
307. A 30-year-old woman presents with hypertension, weakness, bone pain, and a serum calcium level of 15.2 mg/dL. Hand films below show osteitis fibrosa cystica. Which of the following is the most likely cause of these findings?
Sarcoidosis
Vitamin D intoxication
Paget disease
Metastatic carcinoma
Primary hyperparathyroidism
308. A 35-year-old woman presents with a serum calcium level of 15.2 mg/dL and an elevated parathyroid hormone level. Following correction of the patient’s hypercalcemia with hydration and furosemide, which of the following is the best therapeutic approach?
Administration of steroids
Radiation treatment to the neck
Neck exploration and resection of all 4 parathyroid glands
Neck exploration and resection of a parathyroid adenoma
Avoidance of sunlight, vitamin D, and calcium-containing dairy products
309. A 58-year-old man presents with tachycardia, fever, confusion, and vomiting. Workup reveals markedly elevated (triiodothyronine) T 3 and (thyroxine) T4 levels. He is diagnosed as having a thyroid storm. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in the management of this patient?
Emergent subtotal thyroidectomy
Emergent total thyroidectomy
Emergent hemodialysis
Administration of fluid, antithyroid drugs, β-blockers, iodine solution, and steroids
Emergent radiation therapy to the neck
310. A 34-year-old woman presents with hypertension, generalized weakness, and polyuria. Her electrolyte panel is significant for hypokalemia. Which of the following is the best initial test given her presentation and laboratory findings?
Plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone concentration
Urine electrolytes
Plasma cortisol level
Overnight low-dose dexamethasone suppression test
Twenty-four-hour urinary aldosterone level
311. Incisional biopsy of a breast mass in a 35-year-old woman demonstrates cystosarcoma phyllodes at the time of frozen section. Which of the following is the most appropriate management strategy for this lesion?
Wide local excision with a rim of normal tissue
Lumpectomy and axillary lymphadenectomy
Modified radical mastectomy
Excision and postoperative radiotherapy
Excision, postoperative radiotherapy, and systemic chemotherapy
312. Excision, postoperative radiotherapy, and systemic chemotherapy 312. A 36-year-old woman, 20 weeks pregnant, presents with a 1.5-cm right thyroid mass. FNA is consistent with a papillary neoplasm. The mass is cold on scan and solid on ultrasound. Which of the following methods of treatment is contraindicated in this patient?
Right thyroid lobectomy
Subtotal thyroidectomy
Total thyroidectomy
Total thyroidectomy with lymph node dissection
131 I radioactive ablation of the thyroid gland
313. A 63-year-old woman notices lumps on both sides of her neck. A fine-needle aspirate is nondiagnostic, and she undergoes total thyroidectomy. Final pathology reveals a 2-cm Hürthle cell carcinoma. Which of the following is the most appropriate postsurgical management of this patient?
No further therapy is indicated
Chemotherapy.
External beam radiotherapy
Radioiodine ablation
Chemotherapy, external beam radiotherapy, and radioiodine ablation.
314. A 51-year-old man presents with a 2-cm left thyroid nodule. Thyroid scan shows a cold lesion. FNA cytology demonstrates follicular cells. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial treatment of this patient?
External beam radiation to the neck
Multidrug chemotherapy
TSH suppression by thyroid hormone
Prophylactic neck dissection is indicated along with a total thyroidectomy.
Thyroid lobectomy
315. A 41-year-old woman has noted bilateral thin serous discharge from her breasts. There seems to be no mass associated with it. Which of the following statements would be appropriate to tell the patient?
Intermittent thin or milky discharge can be physiologic
Expressible nipple discharge is an indication for open biopsy.
Absence of a mass on mammogram rules out malignancy.
Galactorrhea is indicative of an underlying malignancy
Pathologic discharge is usually bilateral.
316. A 52-year-old woman presents with hypertension, obesity, and new skin striae. You are concerned about possible Cushing syndrome. Which of the following is the most common cause of Cushing syndrome?
Adrenocortical hyperplasia
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)–producing pituitary tumor
Primary adrenal neoplasms
Ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)–secreting carcinoid tumor
Pharmacologic glucocorticoid use @
317. A 34-year-old woman has recurrent fainting spells induced by fasting. She also reports palpitations, trembling, diaphoresis, and confusion prior to the syncopal episodes. She has relief of symptoms with the administration of glucose. Which of the following findings is most consistent with the diagnosis of an insulinoma?
Serum glucose level > 50 mg/dL, elevated serum insulin levels, elevated C-peptide levels
Serum glucose level > 50 mg/dL, elevated serum insulin levels, decreased C-peptide levels
Serum glucose level < 50 mg/dL, elevated serum insulin levels, elevated C-peptide levels
Serum glucose level < 50 mg/dL, elevated serum insulin levels, decreased C-peptide levels
Serum glucose level < 50 mg/dL, decreased serum insulin levels, decreased C-peptide levels
318. A 36-year-old woman whose mother has just undergone treatment for breast cancer is asking about how this affects her and what can be done to lessen her chances of having the disease. Which of the following has the lowest risk factor for breast cancer?
Dietary fat intake
Paternal relative with breast cancer 1 (BRCA1) mutation
Excessive estrogen exposure—early menarche, late menopause, nulliparity
Previous biopsy with atypical hyperplasia
Exposure to ionizing radiation
319. A 75-year-old woman with history of angina is admitted to the hospital for syncope. Examination of the patient reveals a systolic murmur best heard at the base of the heart that radiates into the carotid arteries. Electrocardiogram (ECG) is notable for left ventricular hypertrophy with evidence of left atrial enlargement. ECG reveals an aortic valve area of 0.7 cm2. What is the most appropriate next step in her management?
Medical management with a nitrate and an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor
Bilateral carotid endarterectomies
Percutaneous coronary artery angioplasty and stenting
Coronary artery bypass surgery
Aortic valve replacement
320. A 68-year-old man is diagnosed with lung cancer. In preparation for pulmonary resection he undergoes pulmonary function tests. Which of the following results indicate a favorable prognosis?
Elevated PCO2
Forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) more than 60% of predicted
Carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DLCO) less than 40%
Low FEV1/FVC (forced vital capacity)
Normal FEV1/FVC
321. A 71-year-old woman with a 40-year smoking history is noted to have a peripheral nodule in her left upper lobe on chest x-ray. Workup is consistent with small cell lung cancer with ipsilateral mediastinal lymph node involvement but no extrathoracic disease. What is the best treatment option for this patient?
Thoracotomy with left upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection
Thoracotomy with left upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection followed by adjuvant chemotherapy
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by thoracotomy with left upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymphnode dissection
Neoadjuvant chemoradiation followed by thoracotomy with left upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymph-node dissection
Chemoradiation
322. A 42-year-old homeless man presents with a 3-week history of shortness of breath, fevers, and pleuritic chest pain. Chest x-ray (CXR) reveals a large left pleural effusion. Thoracentesis reveals thick, purulent-appearing fluid, which is found to have glucose less than 40 mg/dL and a pH of 6.5. A chest tube is placed, but the pleural effusion persists. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Placement of a second chest tube at the bedside and antibiotic therapy
Infusion of antibiotics via the chest tube
Intravenous antibiotics for 6 weeks
Thoracotomy with instillation of antibiotics into the pleural space
Thoracotomy with decortication and antibiotic therapy
323. A 63-year-old man is seen because of facial swelling and cyanosis, especially when he bends over. There are large, dilated subcutaneous veins on his upper chest. His jugular veins are prominent even while he is upright. Which of the following conditions is the most likely cause of these findings?
Histoplasmosis (sclerosing mediastinitis)
Substernal thyroid
Thoracic aortic aneurysm
Constrictive pericarditis
Bronchogenic carcinoma
324. During endoscopic biopsy of a distal esophageal cancer, perforation of the esophagus is suspected when the patient complains of significant new substernal pain. An immediate chest film reveals air in the mediastinum. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Placement of a nasogastric tube to the level of perforation, antibiotics, and close observation
Spit fistula (cervical pharyngostomy) and gastrostomy
Left thoracotomy, pleural patch oversewing of the perforation, and drainage of the mediastinum
Left thoracotomy with esophagectomy
Thoracotomy with chest tube drainage and esophageal exclusion
325. A 63-year-old woman with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) presents with a several-week history of fever, night sweats, weight loss, and cough. Her CXR is noted to have a density in the left upper lobe with a relatively thin-walled cavity. Bronchoscopy and computed tomographic (CT) scan are suggestive of a lung abscess rather than a malignant process. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?
Percutaneous drainage of the lung abscess
Systemic antibiotics directed against the causative agent
Tube thoracostomy
Left upper lobectomy
Surgical drainage of the abscess
326. A 45-year-old man with poorly controlled hypertension presents with severe chest pain radiating to his back. An ECG demonstrates no significant abnormalities. A CT scan of the chest and abdomen is obtained, which demonstrates a descending thoracic aortic dissection extending from distal to the left sub-clavian take off down to above the iliac bifurcation. A Foley catheter is placed, and urine output is 30 to 40 cc/h. His feet are warm, with less than 2-second capillary refill. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management?
Emergent operation for repair of the aortic dissection
Angiography to confirm the diagnosis of aortic dissection
Echocardiography to rule out cardiac complications
Initiation of a β-blocker
Initiation of a vasodilator such as nitroprusside
327. A stockbroker in his mid-40s presents with complaints of episodes of severe, often incapacitating chest pain on swallowing. Diagnostic studies on the esophagus yield the following results: endoscopic examination and biopsy mild inflammation distally; manometry prolonged high-amplitude contractions from the arch of the aorta distally, lower esophageal sphincter (LES) pressure 20 mm Hg with relaxation on swallowing; barium swallow 2 cm epiphrenic diverticulum. Which of the following is the best management option for this patient?
Myotomy along the length of the manometric abnormality
Diverticulectomy, myotomy from the level of the aortic arch to the fundus, fundoplication
Diverticulectomy, cardiomyotomy of the distal 3 cm of esophagus and proximal 2 cm of stomach with antireflux fundoplication
A trial of calcium-channel blockers
Pneumatic dilatation of the LES
328. A 4-year-old boy is seen 1 hour after ingestion of a lye drain cleaner. No oropharyngeal burns are noted. The CXR is normal, but the patient continues to complain of significant chest pain. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in his management?
Parenteral steroids and antibiotics
Esophagogram with water-soluble contrast
Administration of an oral neutralizing agent
Induction of vomiting
Rapid administration of a quart of water to clear remaining lye from the esophagus and dilute material in the stomach
329. A previously healthy 20-year-old man is admitted to the hospital with acute onset of left-sided chest pain. Electrocardiographic findings are normal, but CXR shows a 40% left pneumothorax. Appropriate treatment consists of which of the following procedures?
Observation
Barium swallow
Thoracotomy
Tube thoracostomy
Thoracostomy and intubation
330. A 50-year-old salesman is on a yacht with a client when he has a severe vomiting and retching spell punctuated by a sharp substernal pain. He arrives in your emergency room 4 hours later and has a chest film in which the left descending aorta is outlined by air density. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in his workup?
Contrast esophagram
Echocardiogram
Flexible bronchoscopy
Flexible esophagogastroscopy
Aortography
331. A 26-year-old man is brought to the emergency room after being extricated from the driver’s seat of a car involved in a head-on collision. He has a sternal fracture and is complaining of chest pain. He is hemodynamically stable and his electrocardiogram (ECG) is normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate management strategy for this patient?
Admit to telemetry for 24-hour monitoring
Admit to the regular ward with serial ECGs for 24 hours
Emergent cardiac catheterization
Immediate operative plating of the sternal fracture
Discharge to home with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents for the sternal fracture
332. A 63-year-old man underwent a 3-vessel coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) 5 hours ago. Initially, his mediastinal chest tube output was 300 mL blood/h, but an hour ago, there was no further evidence of bleeding from the tube. His mean arterial pressure has fallen, and several fluid boluses were administered. His central venous pressure (CVP) is elevated to 20 mm Hg, and he has required the addition of inotropes. Which of the following is the best management strategy?
Addition of vasopressors along with the inotropes
Transfusion of packed red blood cells
Return to the operating room for exploration of the mediastinum
Placement of an intraaortic balloon pump
Infusion of streptokinase into the mediastinal chest tube
333. Several days following esophagectomy, a patient complains of dyspnea and chest tightness. A large pleural effusion is noted on chest radiograph, and thoracentesis yields milky fluid consistent with chyle. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?
Immediate operation to repair the thoracic duct
Immediate operation to ligate the thoracic duct
Tube thoracostomy and low-fat diet
Observation and low-fat diet
Observation and antibiotics
334. A 56-year-old woman presents for evaluation of a murmur suggestive of mitral stenosis and is noted on echocardiography to have a lesion attached to the fossa ovalis of the left atrial septum. The mass is causing obstruction of the mitral valve. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Endocarditis
Lymphoma
Cardiac sarcoma
Cardiac myxoma
Metastatic cancer to the heart
335. A 56-year-old woman has been treated for 3 years for wheezing on exertion, which was diagnosed as asthma. Chest radiograph, shown here, reveals a midline mass compressing the trachea. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Lymphoma
Neurogenic tumor
Lung carcinoma
Goiter
Pericardial cyst
336. A 59-year-old man is found to have a 6-cm thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm which extends to above the renal arteries for which he desires repair, but he is concerned about the risk of paralysis postoperatively. Which of the following maneuvers should be employed to decrease the risk of paraplegia after repair?
Infusion of a bolus of steroids immediately postoperatively with a continuous infusion for 24 hours
Maintenance of intraoperative normothermia
Clamping of the aorta proximal to the left subclavian artery
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
337. An 89-year-old man has lost 30 lb over the past 2 years. He reports that food frequently sticks when he swallows. He also complains of a chronic cough. Barium swallow is shown here. What is the best treatment option for this patient?
Placement of an esophageal stent
Diverticuloplasty
Excision of the diverticulum
Excision of the diverticulum and administration of a promotility agent
Excision of the diverticulum and cricopharyngeal myotomy
338. A 70-year-old woman undergoes a cardiac catheterization for exertional chest pain. Her pain continues to worsen and she is interested in having either surgery or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Which of the following would be an indication for her to undergo either coronary artery bypass grafting or PCI?
Two-vessel coronary disease with proximal left anterior descending artery stenosis and depressed left ventricular ejection fraction
Isolated left main stenosis, no diabetes, and normal left ventricular ejection fraction
Isolated left main stenosis and diabetes
Left main stenosis and additional coronary artery disease with depressed left ventricular ejection fraction
Three-vessel coronary artery disease and diabetes
339. A 27-year-old woman seeks your advice regarding pain and numbness in the right arm and hand. She reports that it is exacerbated by raising her arm over her head. On examination, the right radial pulse disappears when the patient takes a deep breath and turns her head to the left. A provisional diagnosis is made. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial treatment for this patient?
Physical rehabilitation
Gabapentin to treat neuropathic pain
Right first rib resection
Thoracoscopic sympathectomy
Upper thoracic discectomy
340. A 35-year-old man with a history of melanoma status post wide local excision with negative margins and lymph node dissection presents with 2, peripherallylocated pulmonary lesions seen on chest CT scan. Percutaneous biopsy of the lesion is consistent with metastatic melanoma. He has no evidence of recurrence or extrathoracic disease and is in good general health. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Chemotherapy
Radiation therapy
Pulmonary metastasectomy
Pulmonary metastasectomy followed by radiation therapy
Neoadjuvant radiation therapy followed by pulmonary metastasectomy
341. A 65-year-old woman has had pain in her right shoulder and has been treated with analgesics without relief. The CXR reveals a mass in the apex of the right chest. A transthoracic needle biopsy documents carcinoma. Superior pulmonary sulcus carcinomas (Pancoast tumors) are bronchogenic carcinomas that typically produce which of the following clinical features?
Atelectasis of the involved apical segment
Horner syndrome
Pain in the T4 and T5 dermatomes
Nonproductive cough
Hemoptysis
342. A 63-year-old man has a chylothorax that after 2 weeks of conservative therapy appears to be persistent. The chest tube output is approximately 600 mL/day. Appropriate management at this time includes which of the following procedures?
Neck exploration and ligation of the thoracic duct
Subdiaphragmatic ligation of the thoracic duct
Thoracotomy and repair of the thoracic duct
Thoracotomy and ligation of the thoracic duct
Thoracotomy and abrasion of the pleural space
343. A 32-year-old woman has a CXR screening, and a 1.5-cm mass is noted in the right lower lobe. She is a nonsmoker. Bronchoscopy shows a mass in the right lower lobe orifice, covered with mucosa. Biopsy indicates this is compatible with a carcinoid tumor. Imaging suggests ipsilateral mediastinal lymph node involvement but no extrathoracic disease. Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment plan?
Right lower lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection
Right lower lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection followed by adjuvant chemotherapy
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by right lower lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection
Neoadjuvant chemoradiation followed by right lower lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection
Chemoradiation
344. Six months ago at the time of lumpectomy for breast cancer, a 60-year-old female attorney quit a 30-year smoking habit of 2 packs per day. She had the chest radiograph shown here as part of her routine follow-up examination. Based on her age and history of smoking, you are concerned for either a new primary lung or metastatic breast malignancy. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in the management of this lesion?
Follow-up CT scan in 3 months
Magnetic resonance imaging of bilateral breasts to evaluate for recurrence of the breast cancer
Transthoracic fine-needle aspiration of the lesion
Mediastinoscopy
Thoracotomy with lobectomy
345. A 42-year-old man presents with a solitary lung lesion. At the time of operation on this patient, a firm, rubbery lesion in the periphery of the lung is discovered. It is sectioned in the operating room to reveal tissue that looks like cartilage and smooth muscle. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Fibroma
Chondroma
Osteochondroma
Hamartoma
Aspergilloma
346. A 45-year-old woman presents with dysphagia, regurgitation of undigested food, and weight loss. She had x-rays shown here as part of her workup. Upper endoscopy reveals no evidence of malignancy and esophageal motility studies show incomplete lower esophageal sphincter relaxation. Which of the following is the next best step in the treatment of this patient?
Laparoscopic myotomy of the lower esophageal sphincter (Heller)
Laparoscopic posterior 180° (Toupet) fundoplication
Laparoscopic anterior 180° (Dor) fundoplication
Laparoscopic 360° (Nissen) fundoplication
Transhiatal esophagectomy
347. A 64-year-old woman complains of right calf pain and swelling. She recently underwent an uncomplicated left hemicolectomy for diverticular disease. A duplex ultrasound confirms the presence of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) of the calf. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?
Pneumatic compression stockings
Warfarin
Heparin
Thrombolysis
Inferior vena cava filter
348. For the first 6 hours following a long and difficult surgical repair of a 7-cm abdominal aortic aneurysm, a 70-year-old man has a total urinary output of 25 mL since the operation. Which of the following is the most appropriate diagnostic test to evaluate the cause of his oliguria?
Renal scan
Aortogram
Left heart preload pressures
Urinary sodium concentration
Creatinine clearance
349. A 72-year-old man undergoes an aortobifemoral graft for symptomatic aortoiliac occlusive disease. The inferior mesenteric artery (IMA) is ligated at its aortic attachment. Twenty-four hours after surgery the patient has abdominal distention, fever, and bloody diarrhea. Which of the following is the most appropriate diagnostic study for this patient?
Aortogram
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
Computed tomographic (CT) scan
Sigmoidoscopy
Barium enema
350. A 25-year-old woman presents to the emergency room complaining of redness and pain in her right foot up to the level of the midcalf. She reports that her right lower extremity has been swollen for at least 15 years, but her left leg has been normal. On physical examination, she has a temperature of 39°C (102.2°F) and the right lower extremity is nontender with nonpitting edema from the groin down to the foot. There is cellulitis of the right foot without ulcers or skin discoloration. The left leg is normal. Which of the following is the most likely underlying problem?
Congenital lymphedema
Lymphedema praecox
Venous insufficiency
Deep venous thrombosis
Acute arterial insufficiency
351. A 76-year-old woman presents with acute onset of persistent back pain and hypotension. A CT scan is obtained (shown below), and the patient is taken emergently to the operating room. Three days after surgery she complains of abdominal pain and bloody mucus per rectum. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Staphylococcal enterocolitis
Diverticulitis
Bleeding arteriovenous (AV) malformation
Ischemia of the left colon
Bleeding colonic carcinoma
352. An 80-year-old man is found to have an asymptomatic pulsatile abdominal mass. An arteriogram is obtained (shown below). Which of the following is the most frequent and lethal complication of this condition?
Rupture
Acute thromboembolism
Dissection
High-output congestive heart failure
Myocardial infarction
353. A 75-year-old man is found by his internist to have an asymptomatic carotid bruit. Which of the following is the most appropriate next test?
Transcranial Doppler studies
Doppler ultrasonography (duplex)
Spiral CT angiography
Arch aortogram with selective carotid artery injections
Magnetic resonance arteriogram (MRA)
354. A 69-year-old man with mild hypertension and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) presents with transient ischemic attacks and the angiogram shown here. Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment recommendation?
Medical therapy with aspirin 325 mg/day and medical risk factor management
Medical therapy with warfarin
Angioplasty of the carotid lesion followed by carotid endarterectomy if the angioplasty is unsuccessful
Carotid endarterectomy
Medical risk factor management and carotid endarterectomy if neurologic symptoms develop
355. A 55-year-old man with recent onset of atrial fibrillation presents with a cold, numb, pulseless left lower extremity. He is immediately taken to the operating room for an embolectomy of the left popliteal artery. Which additional procedure should be performed along with the embolectomy?
Electromyography (EMG) of the leg
Measurement of anterior compartment pressure in the leg
Fasciotomy of the anterior compartment in the leg
Fasciotomy of all the compartments in the leg
Application of a posterior splint to the leg
356. A 58-year-old man presents with pain in the left leg after walking more than one block that is relieved with rest. On physical examination, distal pulses are not palpable in the left foot and there is dry gangrene on the tip of his left fifth toe. An ankle-brachial index on the same side is 0.5. Which of the patient’s symptoms or signs of arterial insufficiency qualifies him for reconstructive arterial surgery of the left lower extremity?
Ankle-brachial index less than 0.7
Rest pain
Claudication
Absent palpable pulses
Toe gangrene
357. A 64-year-old man with a history of a triple coronary artery bypass 2 years ago presents with peripheral arterial occlusive disease. His only medication is a thiazide diuretic. Which of the following medications would be most appropriate in the medical management of his atherosclerosis?
Aspirin
Warfarin
Low-dose heparin
High-dose heparin
Low-molecular-weight heparin
358. A patient who has had angina as well as claudication reports feeling light-headed on exertion, especially when lifting and working with his arms. The subclavian steal syndrome is associated with which of the following hemodynamic abnormalities?
Antegrade flow through a vertebral artery
Venous congestion of the upper extremities
Occlusion of the carotid artery
Occlusion of the vertebral artery
Occlusion of the subclavian artery
359. A 66-year-old woman presents with severe right lower extremity claudication. Surgery is considered, but her hypertension, smoking, and diabetes puts her at risk for associated coronary heart disease. What test is most predictive of postoperative ischemic cardiac events following surgery?
Exercise stress testing
Electrocardiography (ECG)
Coronary angiography
Dipyridamole-thallium imaging
Transesophageal echocardiography
360. A 60-year-old man is admitted to the coronary care unit with a large anterior wall myocardial infarction. On his second hospital day, he begins to complain of the sudden onset of numbness in his right foot and an inability to move his right foot. On physical examination, the right femoral, popliteal, and pedal pulses are no longer palpable. The left lower extremity is normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Duplex imaging of the right lower extremity arteries
CT angiogram of the right lower extremity
CT angiogram of bilateral lower extremities
Embolectomy of the right femoral artery
Embolectomy of the right femoral artery with exploration of the contralateral femoral artery
361. A 60-year-old man is found on a routine physical examination to have a 3-cm pulsatile mass in the right popliteal fossa. X-ray of the right of the right lower extremity is shown below. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Antiplatelet therapy
Anticoagulation
Thrombolytic therapy
Surgery
Reassurance and re-examination if the patient develops symptoms
362. A 65-year-old male cigarette smoker reports onset of claudication of his right lower extremity approximately 3 weeks previously. He can walk 3 blocks before the onset of claudication. Physical examination reveals palpable pulses in the entire left lower extremity, but no pulses are palpable below the right groin level. Non-invasive flow studies are obtained and are pictured here. What is the level of the occlusive process in this patient?
Right anterior tibial artery
Right superficial femoral artery
Right profunda femoris artery
Right external iliac artery
Right internal iliac artery
363. 56-year-old woman presents to her primary care physician for a routine checkup. She states that she was recently hospitalized for surgery and was told she had some metal placed in a large blood vessel to prevent blood clots from moving to her lungs. An abdominal x-ray is shown here. Which of the following is the most appropriate indication for placement of this device?
Recurrent pulmonary embolus despite adequate anticoagulation therapy
Axillary vein thrombosis
Pulmonary embolus due to DVT of the lower extremity that occurs 2 weeks postoperatively
DVT in a patient with patient with metastatic carcinoma
Pulmonary embolus in a patient with metastatic carcinoma
364. Two days after admission to the hospital for a myocardial infarction, a 65-year-old man complains of severe, unremitting midabdominal pain. His cardiac index is 1.6. Physical examination is remarkable for an absence of peritoneal irritation or distention despite the patient’s persistent complaint of severe pain. Serum lactate is 9 mmol/L (normal is < 3 mmol/L). Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in this patient’s management?
Perform computed tomography
Perform mesenteric angiography
Perform laparoscopy
Perform flexible sigmoidoscopy to assess the distal colon and rectum.
Defer decision to explore the abdomen until the arterial lactate is greater than 10 mmol/L.
365. A postoperative patient with swelling and pain in his right calf is suspected of having a deep venous thrombosis. Prior to initiating treatment with anticoagulants, he requires a confirmatory examination. Which of the following is a limitation of the duplex ultrasound in evaluating a DVT?
It is not very sensitive for detecting calf thrombi in symptomatic patients.
It is invasive.
It cannot differentiate between acute and chronic venous thrombi.
It is expensive
It cannot image the proximal veins (iliac veins, IVC).
366. A 72-year-old woman with severe COPD who requires home oxygen is unable to ambulate inside her home without experiencing severe left hip pain. She was hospitalized 1 year ago for a viral pneumonia and was ventilator-dependent at that time for 6 weeks. On examination, her blood pressure is 165/80 mm Hg. She has weakly palpable bilateral femoral pulses. An angiogram demonstrates severe aortoiliac disease involving bilateral iliac vessels. Which of the following is the most appropriate vascular procedure for this patient?
Femorofemoral bypass
Axillofemoral bypass
Femoropopliteal bypass
Aortobifemoral bypass
Common femoral and profunda femoral endarterectomise
367. A 60-year-old man sees a urologist for what he describes as bloody urine. A urine sample is positive for cytologic evidence of malignancy. Cystoscopy confirms the presence of superficial transitional cell carcinoma. Which of the following is the recommended treatment for stage A (superficial and submucosal) transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder?
Topical (intravesicular) chemotherapy
Radical cystectomy
Radiation therapy
Local excision and topical (intravesicular) chemotherapy
Systemic chemotherapy
368. A 36-year-old man presents to the emergency room with renal colic. His vital signs are normal and a urinalysis shows microscopic hematuria. A radiograph reveals a 1.5-cm stone. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Hydration and analgesics
α-Adrenergic blocker
Extracorporeal lithotripsy
Percutaneous nephrostomy tube
Open surgery to remove the stone
369. An 8-month-old boy is seen by a pediatrician for the first time. The physician notes that there are no testes in the scrotum. Which of the following is the optimal management of bilateral undescended testicles in an infant?
Immediate surgical placement into the scrotum
Chorionic gonadotropin therapy for 1 month; operative placement into the scrotum before age 2 if descent has not occurred
Observation until age 2; operative placement into the scrotum if descent has not occurred
Observation until age 5; if no descent by then, plastic surgical scrotal prostheses before the child enters school
No therapy; reassurance of the parent that full masculinization and normal spermatogenesis are likely even
370. A 32-year-old man presents with an asymptomatic mass in his right testicle. On examination, the mass cannot be transilluminated. Ultrasound shows a solid mass in the right testicle. Which of the following is the most accurate method in obtaining a diagnosis of testicular cancer?
Serum levels of alpha-fetoprotein and beta human chorionic gonadotrophin
Percutaneous biopsy of the testicular mass
Incisional biopsy of the testicular mass through a scrotal incision
Excisional biopsy of the testicular mass through a scrotal incision
Radical inguinal orchiectomy
371. A 10-year-old boy presents to the emergency room with pain in the left testicle. The pain was acute in onset and began 1 hour ago. On physical examination, he is noted to have a high-riding, firm, and markedly tender left testis. The right testicle is normal. Urinalysis is unremarkable. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Manual detorsion of the left testicle with external rotation toward the thigh; orchiopexy if the condition recurs
Manual detorsion of the left testicle with internal rotation toward the thigh; orchiopexy if the condition recurs
Orchiopexy of the left testicle
Orchiopexy of bilateral testicles
Orchiectomy of the left testicle
372. A 45-year-old woman presents with a 7-cm renal cell carcinoma with radiologic evidence of abdominal lymph node involvement with no distant metastases. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Radical nephrectomy
Radiation
Chemotherapy
Radiation followed by nephrectomy
Chemotherapy followed by nephrectomy
373. A 58-year-old man is found to have high serum prostate–specific antigen (PSA) concentration with a normal prostate examination. A biopsy of the prostate confirms low-grade carcinoma. The patient wishes to avoid therapy involving any risk for impotence. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Observation
Chemotherapy
Prostatectomy
Radiation therapy
Hormonal therapy
374. A 60-year-old man seeks medical attention because of recurrent urinary tract infections. The patient also reports a history of increasing difficulty in urination (decreased flow, straining, and hesitancy) over the last several months. A prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level is mildly elevated and a prostate biopsy proves benign. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)?
α-Adrenergic blocker
5-alpha reductase inhibitor
α-Adrenergic blocker and 5-alpha reductase inhibitor
Transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP)
Open prostatectomy
375. The left ureter is partially transected (50% of circumference) during the course of a difficult operation on an unstable, critically ill patient. Which of the following would be the most appropriate management of this injury given the patient’s unstable condition?
Placement of an external stent through the proximal ureteral stump with delayed reconstruction
Ipsilateral nephrectomy
Ipsilateral nephrectomy
Placement of a closed-suction drain adjacent to the injury
Bringing the proximal ureter up to the skin as a ureterostomy
376. A pedestrian is hit by a speeding car. Radiologic studies obtained in the emergency room, including a retrograde urethrogram (RUG), are consistent with a pelvic fracture with a rupture of the urethra superior to the urogenital diaphragm. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in this patient’s management?
Immediate percutaneous nephrostomy
Immediate placement of a Foley catheter through the urethra into the bladder to align and stent the injured portions
Immediate reconstruction of the ruptured urethra after initial stabilization of the patient
Immediate exploration of the pelvis for control of hemorrhage from pelvic fracture and drainage of pelvic hematoma
Immediate placement of a suprapubic cystostomy tube
377. A 55-year-old man presents with fever and pain in the perineal region. Upon further questioning he also complains of frequency, urgency, dysuria, and a decreased urinary stream. On physical examination his abdomen is soft, nondistended, and nontender. Digital rectal examination demonstrates exquisite tenderness on the anterior aspect. Laboratory examination reveals leukocytosis and findings on urinalysis are consistent with a bacterial infection. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
A 55-year-old man presents with fever and pain in the perineal region. Upon further questioning he also complains of frequency, urgency, dysuria, and a decreased urinary stream. On physical examination his abdomen is soft, nondistended, and nontender. Digital rectal examination demonstrates exquisite tenderness on the anterior aspect. Laboratory examination reveals leukocytosis and findings on urinalysis are consistent with a bacterial infection. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Benign prostatic hyperplasia
Prostatitis
Pyelonephritis
Nephrolithiasis
378. An 18-year-old football player is seen in the emergency ward with severe knee pain incurred after being hit by a tackler while running. Which of the following findings on physical examination is most sensitive for an anterior cruciate ligament injury?
Excessive valgus laxity of the knee
Excessive varus laxity of the knee
Locked knee
Positive Lachman test
Positive posterior drawer test
379. A 34-year-old man is extricated from an automobile after a motor vehicle collision. The patient has an obvious deformity of his right thigh consistent with a femur fracture. Upon closer examination of the right thigh, there is bone visible through an open wound. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of his open femur fracture?
Intravenous (IV) antibiotics and cast or splint placement
IV antibiotics and internal or external fixation
Early irrigation and debridement, IV antibiotics, and cast or splint placement
Early irrigation and debridement, IV antibiotics, and internal or external fixation
Early irrigation and debridement, IV antibiotics, compartment decompression, and internal or external fixation
380. A 6-year-old boy is brought into the emergency room by his mother for walking with a limp for several weeks. On examination, the patient has tenderness over his right thigh without evidence of external trauma. An x-ray of the pelvis shows a right femoral head that is small and denser than normal. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE)
Legg-Calve-Perthes (LCP) disease
Dysplasia of the hip
Talipes equinovarus
Blount disease
381. A 65-year-old man presents with acute onset of pain, swelling, and erythema of the left knee. He denies previous episodes or trauma to the knee. The differential diagnosis includes septic arthritis and gout. Which of the following is the best study to differentiate between gout and septic arthritis?
White blood cell count
X-ray of the knee
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the knee
Bone scan
Evaluation of synovial fluid aspirate
382. While playing with his children, a 44-year-old man falls and lands on his right shoulder. There is immediate pain and deformity. In an uncomplicated dislocation of the glenohumeral joint, the humeral head usually dislocates primarily in which of the following directions?
Anteriorly
Superiorly
Posteriorly
Laterally
Medially
383. A 29-year-old construction worker fell 15 ft from a roof and broke his right humerus, as depicted in the accompanying radiograph. Given his injury, which of the following nerves is most at risk?
Median nerve
Radial nerve
Posterior interosseous nerve
Ulnar nerve
Ascending circumflex brachial nerve
384. In a failed suicide gesture, a depressed student severs her radial nerve at the wrist. Which of the following is her expected disability?
Loss of ability to extend the wrist
Loss of ability to flex the wrist
Wasting of the intrinsic muscles of the hand
Sensory loss over the thenar pad and the thumb web
Palmar insensitivity
385. After being injured by a bull on his mother’s farm, a young man is placed in a cast for a supracondylar fracture of his humerus. A few hours later he begins to experience intense pain, swelling, and weakness in the ipsilateral hand. Pulses are normal in bilateral upper extremities. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?
Observation
Repeat imaging of the humerus
Elevation of the extremity
Removal of the cast
Surgical decompression (fasciotomy)
386. A 39-year-old man presents with an isolated fracture of the tibia after being hit on the leg with a car. The patient is stable and a radiograph of the leg shows a tibial shaft fracture with severe dislocation. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of the fracture?
Closed reduction and application of a long leg cast
Intramedullary nailing
Surgical fixation with unreamed nailing
External fixation
Plate fixation
387. A severely traumatized woman is seen in the emergency room (ER) with decreased mental status. Prior to intubation, she does not open her eyes, withdraws with all of her extremities, and makes incomprehensible sounds. What is her Glasgow coma scale score?
3
4
5
6
7
388. 25-year-old unhelmeted man involved in a motorcycle collision has multiple cerebral contusions on head computed tomographic (CT) scan. He is agitated but hemodynamically stable, with a heart rate of 80 beats per minute and a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of 90 mm Hg. An intracranial pressure monitor is placed, and the initial ICP reading is 30 mm Hg. Which of the following is the most appropriate in the management of his traumatic brain injury (TBI) over the next few days?
Hyperventilation to maintain a cerebral PCO2 of 25 to 30 mm Hg
Administration of neosynephrine to increase his MAP and, consequently, his cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP)
Administration of mannitol (1g/kg) to reduce his ICP
Placement of the patient in Trendelenburg position to increase cerebral perfusion
Avoidance of all sedating drugs in the first 24 to 48 hours in order to accurately assess his neurologic status
389. A 50-year-old woman complains of headaches and lateralizing weakness. A CT scan of the brain reveals an irregular mass in the right cerebral hemisphere. A biopsy documents that this is a glioblastoma. Which of the following is the best treatment strategy for potential cure?
Chemotherapy with temozolomide alone
Combination chemotherapy with carmustin, cisplatin, and temozolomide
External beam radiation alone
Surgical resection alone
Combined surgical resection, external beam radiation, and chemotherapy with temozolomide
390. A 60-year-old otherwise healthy woman presents to her physician with a 3-week history of severe headaches. A contrast CT scan reveals a small, circular, hypodense lesion with ringlike contrast enhancement. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Brain abscess
High-grade astrocytoma
High-grade astrocytoma
Metastatic lesion
Toxoplasmosis
391. A 16-year-old adolescent boy sustains head trauma in a motor vehicle collision. He has a GCS of 15 and an obvious depressed skull fracture with 1cm displacement. During his hospital stay, he notices clear fluid draining from his nose. What is the best management strategy for this patient?
Immediate surgical elevation of the skull fracture
Delayed surgical elevation of the skull fracture
Immediate dural repair
Elevation of the head of the bed and placement of a lumbar drain
Antibiotic therapy for sinusitis
392. A 39-year-old man presents to his physician with the complaint of loss of peripheral vision. Which of the following findings are demonstrated by the subsequent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan, shown here?
Cerebral atrophy
Pituitary adenoma
Optic glioma
Pontine hemorrhage
Multiple sclerosis plaque
393. An 18-year-old man is admitted to the ER following a motorcycle accident. He is alert and fully oriented, but witnesses to the accident report an interval of unresponsiveness following the injury. Skull films disclose a fracture of the left temporal bone. Following x-ray, the patient suddenly loses consciousness and dilation of the left pupil is noted. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
A ruptured berry aneurysm
An acute subdural hematoma
An epidural hematoma
An intra-abdominal hemorrhage
A ruptured arteriovenous malformation
394. A 42-year-old woman presents to the ER with the worst headache of her life. A noncontrast CT scan of the head is negative for lesions or hemorrhage. She then undergoes a lumbar puncture, which appears bloody. All 4 tubes collected have red blood cell counts greater than 100,000/mL. Which of the following steps is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Repeat the head CT scan with intravenous contrast
B. Perform an angiogram of the aorta and lumbar branches for immediate embolization of the injured vessel.
Perform a 4-vessel cerebral angiogram
Administer a dose of mannitol.
Consult neurosurgery for immediate ventriculostomy
395. A trauma patient with a closed-head injury is being monitored in the neurosurgical intensive care unit (ICU). His ICP measurement is seen to rise precipitously. An acute increase in ICP is characterized by which of the following clinical findings?
Respiratory irregularities
Decreased blood pressure
Tachycardia
Papilledema
Compression of the fifth cranial nerve
396. A 24-year-old patient with known neurofibromatosis type 2 undergoes an MRI for ringing in his ears. The MRI demonstrates lesions in bilateral auditory canals. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Gangioneuroma
Schwannoma
Ependymoma
Meningioma
Pituitary adenoma
397. An 18-year-old high school senior develops peripheral vision abnormalities. A CT scan of the brain reveals a cystic suprasellar mass with some calcification noted. Clinically, this is compatible with a craniopharyngioma. What is the best next step in treatment?
Growth hormone therapy
Cerebral angiography with tumor embolization
Transsphenoidal decompression of the optic nerve and optic chiasm
Surgical resection
Radiotherapy
398. Following significant head trauma, a 34-year-old woman undergoes a CT scan that demonstrates bilateral frontal lobe contusions of the brain. There is no midline shift. She has a GCS of 14. Which of the following is the best initial management of this patient?
Observation alone
Observation and administration of anticonvulsive medication for 1 week
Placement of an intracranial pressure monitor
Administration of 25 g of mannitol
Intubation and hyperventilation
399. A 45-year-old woman presents with left-sided weakness. A CT scan of the head demonstrates a well-circumscribed mass abutting the skull in the right hemisphere. Workup of the mass reveals a meningioma. Which of the following is the best next step in treatment?
Cerebral angiography with tumor embolization
Preoperative radiation therapy followed by surgical excision
Surgical excision
Chemotherapy with adriamycin
Chemoradiation
400. A middle-aged homeless man is brought to the ER by EMS for altered mental status, seizures, and vomiting. On physical examination he has no fever, neck stiffness, or evidence of head trauma. He does, however, have multiple dental caries and a focal neurologic deficit. Which of the following is the best next step in the patient’s workup?
Lumbar puncture
Noncontrast head CT
Contrast-enhanced head CT
Placement of ICP monitor
Placement of ventriculoperitoneal shunt
401. A 14-year-old boy is brought to medical attention because of nasal fullness and bleeding. Inspection reveals enlarged cervical lymph nodes as well. Biopsy of a lymphnode confirms nasopharyngeal carcinoma. What is the best management strategy for this patient?
Chemoradiation
External beam radiation therapy
Intracavitary radiation therapy
Surgical resection
Surgical resection followed by adjuvant chemoradiation
402. A young motorcycle driver is thrown against a concrete bridge abutment and sustains severe trauma about the face, with marked periorbital edema and ecchymosis as well as epistaxis. He is obtunded with rapid, shallow breathing. Which of the following is the next appropriate step in his workup and management?
Evaluation of the cervical spine
Blind nasopharyngeal intubation with cervical in-line stabilization.
Oropharyngeal intubation with cervical in-line stabilization
Oropharyngeal intubation with cervical in-line stabilization
Emergency cricothyroidotomy.
403. A 48-year-old man with a strong history of cigarette use and heavy alcohol intake presents with an intraoral mass. Biopsy shows squamous cell cancer. Chest xray shows hyperinflated lungs but is otherwise normal. Which of the following is indicated as part of his staging workup?
Measurement of serum alkaline phosphatase and calcium levels.
Bronchoscopy.
Esophagoscopy.
Echocardiography.
No further workup is necessary
404. Your patient presents with a complaint of a mass on her right cheek, which has been slowly enlarging. Biopsy shows a pleomorphic adenoma. Which is the next step in her management?
Superficial parotidectomy with preservation of the facial nerve
Superficial parotidectomy with resection of the facial nerve
Total parotidectomy with preservation of the facial nerve
Total parotidectomy with resection of the facial nerve
Enucleation of the adenoma
405. A 5-year-old child presents with a small mass near the anterior border of the sternocleidomastoid muscle. The mass is associated with localized erythema and induration, and the child is febrile. Which of the following is the definitive treatment of this problem?
Antibiotic therapy
Incision and drainage
Incision and drainage followed by complete excision after resolution of the inflammation and infection
Partial excision followed by clinical observation
Immediate excision followed by postoperative antibiotic therapy for 1 week
406. A 21-year-old woman asks you to evaluate a small painless lump in the midline of her neck that moves with swallowing. You make the clinical diagnosis of thyroglossal duct cyst. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Excision of the cyst
Excision of the cyst and the central portion of the hyoid bone
Excision of the cyst, the central portion of the hyoid bone, and the tract to the base of the tongue
Excision of the cyst, the central portion of the hyoid bone, and the tract to the base of the tongue, with sampling of central cervical lymph nodes
Excision of the cyst, the central portion of the hyoid bone, and the tract to the base of the tongue, with biopsy of the thyroid gland
407. A 60-year-old smoker is seen because of a 3-cm midline ulcerating mass that is visualized when he sticks out his tongue. Biopsy establishes that this is squamous cell carcinoma. Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment of his cancer?
Radiation therapy alone
Partial glossectomy
Partial glossectomy and cervical lymph node sampling
Partial glossectomy and bilateral neck dissections
Partial glossectomy followed by chemoradiation
408. A 38-year-old woman who underwent total thyroidectomy for multinodular goiter 6 months ago presents with persistent hoarseness. Which of the following nerves was most likely injured during her operation?
Superior laryngeal nerve
Bilateral recurrent laryngeal nerves
Unilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve
Hypoglossal nerve
Marginal mandibular branch of the facial nerve
409. A 4-year-old boy is brought into the emergency room by his parents for difficulty in breathing and swallowing. On physical examination the child is febrile, tachycardic, and tachypneic. He is anxious, drooling, and becomes increasingly exhausted while struggling to breathe. A lateral cervical spine radiograph is shown here. Which of the following is the most appropriate management of this patient?
Examine the larynx at bedside
IV antibiotics and admission to the floor
Immediate endotracheal intubation in the emergency room
Immediate endotracheal intubation in the operating room
Immediate tracheostomy in the operating room
410. A 58-year-old man is found to have a small mass in the right neck on a yearly physical examination. The patient reports that the mass has been slowly growing for the last few months and is not associated with pain or drainage. He has an otherwise negative review of systems. On examination there is a hard, mobile 2 cm mass along the mid-portion of the right sternocleidomastoid muscle. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial step in the workup of the neck mass?
No further workup is needed. Reevaluate the mass after a course of antibiotics for 2 weeks.
Fine-needle aspiration (FNA).
Core needle biopsy.
Incisional biopsy
Excisional biopsy.
411. A 62-year-old man presents with a 3-month history of an enlarged lymph node in the left neck. He is a long-time smoker of cigarettes and denies fevers, night sweats, fatigue, or cough. On physical examination there is a 1.5 cm hard, fixed mass below the angle of the mandible in the left neck. Which of the following is the most likely cause of an enlarged lymph node in the neck?
Thyroglossal duct cyst
Dermoid tumor
Carotid body tumor
Branchial cleft cyst
Metastatic squamous cell carcinoma
412. A neonate is examined in the nursery and found to have no anal orifice; only a small perineal fistulous opening is visualized. A complete workup is negative for any cardiac, esophageal, genitourinary, or musculoskeletal anomalies. Which of the following is the best next step in the management of this patient?
Diverting colostomy only
Posterior sagittal anorectoplasty only
Posterior sagittal anorectoplasty with diverting colostomy
Perineal operation only
Perineal operation with diverting colostomy
413. A 2-month-old boy is examined because he has been straining while passing stool and has a distended abdomen. He is very low on the growth chart for age. The primary care physician suspects that the boy has Hirschsprung disease. Which of the following findings on workup is diagnostic?
Absence of ganglion cells on full-thickness rectal biopsy 2 cm above the dentate line
Absence of ganglion cells on full-thickness rectal biopsy 1 cm above the dentate line
Absence of ganglion cells on suction rectal biopsy 1 cm above the dentate line
Identification of a transition zone between the sigmoid colon and the distal rectum on barium enema
Inhibition of the resting anal inhibitory reflex on anorectal manometry
414. A newborn has a midline defect in the anterior abdominal wall. The parents ask what, if anything, should be done. Spontaneous closure of which of the following congenital abnormalities of the abdominal wall generally occurs by the age of 4?
Umbilical hernia
Patent urachus
Patent omphalomesenteric duct
Omphalocele
Gastroschisis
415. A neonate is found to have an imperforate anus. As the pediatric surgeon you recommend studies to search for other anomalies. Which of the following is an associated abnormality?
Congenital pulmonary airway malformation
Hydrocephalus
Hydrocephalus
Congenital heart disease
Corneal opacities
416. A 36-hour-old infant presents with bilious vomiting and an increasingly distended abdomen. At exploration, the segment pictured here is found as the point of obstruction. What is the best next step in management?
Gentle, persistent traction on the specimen
Enteroenterostomy
Small bowel resection with exteriorization of the ends
Small bowel resection with anastomosis
Lysis of Ladd band
417. A 1-year-old child has repeated episodes of vomiting and abdominal distention. An x-ray shows obstruction at the second portion of the duodenum. Laparotomy is performed and an annular pancreas is discovered. For a symptomatic partial duodenal obstruction secondary to an annular pancreas, which of the following is the operative treatment of choice?
A Whipple procedure
Gastrojejunostomy
Vagotomy and gastrojejunostomy
Partial resection of the annular pancreas
Duodenoduodenostomy
418. Approximately 2 weeks after a viral respiratory illness, an 18-month-old child complains of abdominal pain and passes some bloody mucus per rectum. A long, thin mass is palpable in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen. No peritoneal signs are present. Intussusception is suspected. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step?
Diagnostic air enema with subsequent observation and serial abdominal examinations
Hydrostatic reduction with air enema
Diagnostic laparoscopy with laparoscopic reduction
Exploratory laparotomy with bowel resection
Decompressive colonoscopy with placement of a rectal tube
419. An 18-year-old woman presents with abdominal pain, fever, and leukocytosis. With the presumptive diagnosis of appendicitis, a right lower quadrant (McBurney) incision is made and a lesion 60 cm proximal to the ileocecal valve is identified (see photo). Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Intestinal duplication
Mesenteric cyst
Meckel diverticulum
Ileoileal intussusception
Christmas tree” type of ileal atresia
420. A newborn infant born from a mother with polyhydramnios presents with excessive salivation along with coughing and choking with the first oral feeding. An xray of the abdomen shows gas in stomach and a nasogastric tube coiled in the esophagus. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Esophageal atresia
Tracheoesophageal fistula
Esophageal atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF)
Omphalocele
Gastroschisis
421. An infant is born with a defect in the anterior abdominal cavity. Upon examination there are abdominal contents (small bowel and liver) protruding directly through the umbilical ring. Which of the following should be considered in the management of this condition?
No further workup is indicated prior to closure of the abdominal wall defect.
A Silastic silo should be placed with immediate reduction of the viscera into the abdominal cavity
Broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics should be administered prophylactically
Topical antimicrobial solutions should be administered prophylactically
Enteral feeds for nutritional support should be initiated early prior to operative management
422. A 2-week-old infant presents with sudden onset of bilious emesis. Plain films of the abdomen show evidence of an intestinal obstruction. An upper gastrointestinal (UGI) contrast series reveals a midgut volvulus with the site of obstruction at the third portion of the duodenum. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC)
Intussusception
Hirschsprung disease
Anomalies of intestinal rotation and fixation
Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
423. A 29-week-old previously healthy male infant presents with fevers, abdominal distention, feeding intolerance, and bloody stools at 3 weeks of age. The patient undergoes x-ray and ultrasound examination for possible necrotizing enterocolitis. Which of the following findings on imaging is an indication for surgical management?
Pneumoperitoneum
Ascites
Portal venous gas
Ileus
Pneumatosis intestinalis
424. A newborn presents with signs and symptoms of distal intestinal obstruction. Abdominal x-rays reveal dilated loops of small bowel, absence of air-fluid levels, and a mass of meconium within the right side of the abdomen mixed with gas to give a ground-glass appearance. Which of the following should be performed as the initial management of the patient?
Administration of oral polyethylene glycol
Bowel rest with nasogastric tube decompression and broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics
Contrast enema
Surgical evacuation of the luminal meconium
Resection of the dilated terminal ileum
425. A 4-week-old male infant presents with projectile, nonbilious emesis. Ultrasound of the abdomen reveals a pyloric muscle thickness of 8 mm (normal 3-4 mm). Which of the following is the best initial management of this patient?
Urgent pyloromyotomy
Urgent pyloromyotomy
Urgent gastroduodenostomy
Fluid hydration and correction of electrolyte abnormalities prior to operative management
Administration of sodium bicarbonate to correct aciduria prior to operative management
426. A 1-month-old female infant presents with persistent jaundice. A serum direct bilirubin is 4.0 mg/dL and an ultrasound of the abdomen shows a shrunken gallbladder and inability to visualize the extrahepatic bile ducts. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial management of this patient?
NPO and total parenteral nutrition
Oral choleretic bile salts
Methylprednisolone
IV antibiotics
Exploratory laparotomy
427. A full-term male newborn experiences respiratory distress immediately after birth. A prenatal sonogram was read as normal. An emergency radiograph is shown here. The patient is intubated and placed on 100% O2. Arterial blood gases reveal pH 7.24, PO 2 60 kPa, and PCO2 52 kPa. The baby has sternal retractions and a scaphoid abdomen. Which of the following should be performed in the management of this patient?
Administration of intravenous steroids
Placement of bilateral tube thoracostomies
Immediate thoracotomy with lung resection
Immediate laparotomy with repair of the diaphragm
Mechanical ventilation with low tidal volumes
428. A 2-year-old asymptomatic child is noted to have a systolic murmur, hypertension, and diminished femoral pulses. Which of the following should be performed as part of the preoperative workup and management of this child’s disorder?
Administration of indomethacin if there is a patent ductus arteriosus
Ligation of a patent ductus arteriosus
Echocardiography
Aortogram with bilateral lower extremity runoffs
Cardiac catheterization
429. A 35-week-term infant presents with cyanosis shortly after birth. His arterial oxygen saturation is only 30%. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Patent ductus arteriosus
Coarctation of the aorta
Atrial septal defect
Ventricular septal defect
Transposition of the great vessels
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