1022 question surgery

A 23-year-old woman comes to the physician because of a 4-week history of a whistling noise during respiration. She underwent a difficult rhinoplasty a few months ago. The noise is getting louder and is annoying. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Nasal septal perforation
Allergic rhinitis
Nasal polyp
Nasal furunculosis
Nasal foreign body
A 32-year-old female presents with intermittent blood staining of her bra from her left breast. She has not felt any lumps on either breast. Physical examination shows no breast mass or axillary lymphadenopathy. Ultrasonogram of the breast is within normal limits. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Fibrocystic changes
Ductal carcinoma in situ
Fibroadenoma
Hyperprolactinemia
Lntraductal papilloma
A 22-year-old man is stabbed in the right chest with a 5-cm-long knife blade. On arrival at the emergency department, he is wide awake and alert. He is speaking with a normal tone of voice but complaining of shortness of breath. The right hemithorax is hyperresonant to percussion and has no breath sounds; the rest of the initial survey is negative. His blood pressure is 110/75 mm Hg, pulse is 86/min, and venous pressure is 3cm H2O. Pulse oximetry shows a saturation of 85%. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in patient care?
Infusion of 2 L Ringer's lactate
Chest x-ray and insertion of a chest tube
Securing an airway by orotracheal intubation
Sonographically guided evacuation of the pericardial sac
Immediate insertion of a needle into the right pleural space
A 48-year-old woman develops constipation postoperatively and self-medicates with milk of magnesia. She presents to clinic, at which time her serum electrolytes are checked, and she is noted to have an elevated serum magnesium level. Which of the following represents the earliest clinical indication of hypermagnesemia?
Loss of deep tendon reflexes
Hypotension
Flaccid paralysis
Stupor
Respiratory arrest
A 68-year-old man is brought to the emergency department following a high-speed automobile accident. He is alert and complains of chest pain and mild back pain. His blood pressure is 80/60 mm Hg. Chest x-ray shows a widened mediastinum, tracheal deviation, bronchial displacement, and loss of the aortic knob. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Cardiac tamponade
Tension pneumothorax
Myocardial contusion
Traumatic aortic rupture
Pulmonary contusion
A one-year-old boy is brought to the emergency department with scalds on both the buttocks and thighs. His mother states that the child was burned because she accidentally drew a bath for the child with water that was too hot. She states the injury occurred 2 days ago. On examination, the child is irritable. Second-degree burns are noted on the buttocks, genitalia, waist, proximal thighs and feet. There is an abrupt demarcation between the burned and unaffected skin. A faint yellow patch of discoloration is noted on the left thorax with a slight violaceous hue. The child has not yet had his 1-year vaccinations. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Give wound care instructions and send the patient home with analgesics
Ask the mother if the child is being abused
Admit the patient and do a skeletal survey
Advise the mother of the suspected abuse, but do not notify authorities because this is a violation of patient confidentiality
Give wound care instructions and advise the mother that she should keep the temperature of the water heater below 140 F to avoid such injuries in future
A 47-year old woman comes to the clinic because of worsening left breast swelling and pain. She had mastitis when she nursed her first child 20 years ago. She has not seen a doctor since that time. She is afebrile. Breast examination shows the left breast is enlarged with a 7 x 6 cm area of edema and erythema. A poorly localized mass without fluctuation is palpated in that area. Scant non-bloody discharge is noted on the nipple, and several large axillary nodes are palpated. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Antibiotic active against Streptococci and Staphylococci
Biopsy for culture and treatment depending on the findings of the culture
Culture of the discharge and treatment depending on the findings of the culture
Biopsy for histology and treatment depending on the findings of the histology
Drainage, culture of the drained exudate and treatment depending on the findings of the culture
A 35-year-old man comes to the physician because of persistent dull perineal pain and dysuria for 6 months. The patient denies urinary tract infections or urethral discharge. His temperature is 37 C (98.6 F). On digital rectal examination, the prostate is slightly tender and boggy but not enlarged or indurated. Urinalysis is normal. Expressed prostatic secretions show the following: Leukocytes 30 cells/high power field Bacteria None Cultures of prostatic secretion and urine are negative for bacteria. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Acute cystitis
Chronic nonbacterial prostatitis@
Acute prostatitis
Prostatodynia
Chronic bacterial prostatitis
An otherwise healthy 28-year-old man comes to his physician because of painless enlargement of the right testis. He began to feel a sensation of heaviness in the right hemiscrotum approximately 6 months ago. Physical examination reveals diffuse enlargement of the right testis, but it is difficult to determine whether this is due to an intratesticular or extratesticular lesion. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in diagnosis?
CT scanning
Needle biopsy
Serum levels of hCG, alpha-fetoprotein, and LDH
Inguinal orchiectomy
Scrotal ultrasonography
A man involved in a high-speed, head-on automobile collision arrives at the emergency department in a deep coma. His pupils react poorly to light but are of equal size. An airway is placed, and the patient is sent for CT scan of the head with extension to the neck. The study shows no cervical spine fractures, but does reveal a small, crescent-shaped hematoma on the right side, with no deviation of the midline structures. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
High-dose steroids
Surgical evacuation of his epidural hematoma
Hyperventilation, diuretics, and fluid restriction
Surgical evacuation of his subdural hematoma
Systemic vasodilators and alpha blockers
A 19-year-oldgangmemberisshotintheabdomenwith a .38 caliber revolver. The entry wound is in the epigastrium, to the left of the midline. The bullet is lodged in the psoas muscle on the right. He is hemodynamically stable, and the abdomen is moderately tender. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in diagnosis?
Close clinical observation
Diagnostic peritoneal lavage
Emergency ultrasound
Exploratory laparotomy
CT scan of the abdomen
Five days after an uneventful cholecystectomy, an asymptomatic middle-aged woman is found to have a serum sodium level of 125 mEq/L. Which of the following is the most appropriate management strategy for this patient?
Administration of hypertonic saline solution
Hemodialysis
Restriction of free water
Aggressive diuresis with furosemide
Plasma ultrafiltration
A 50-year-old patient presents with symptomatic nephrolithiasis. He reports that he underwent a jejunoileal bypass for morbid obesity when he was 39. Which of the following is a complication of jejunoileal bypass?
Pseudohyperparathyroidism
Hyperoxaluria
Hyperuric aciduria
Sporadic unicameral bone cysts
Hungry bone syndrome
Following surgery a patient develops oliguria. You believe the oliguria is due to hypovolemia, but you seek corroborative data before increasing intravenous fluids. Which of the following values supports the diagnosis of hypovolemia?
Urine sodium of 28 mEq/L
Urine/serum creatinine ratio of 20
Urine chloride of 15 mEq/L
Urine osmolality of 350 mOsm/kg
Fractional excretion of sodium less than 1
A football player is tackled, and he develops severe knee swelling and pain. On physical examination with the knee flexed at 90 degrees, the leg can be pulled anteriorly, like a drawer being opened. A similar finding can be elicited with the knee flexed at 20 degrees by grasping the thigh with one hand, and pulling the leg with the other. Which of the following is the most likely injured structure?
Anterior cruciate ligament
Medial meniscus
Lateral collateral ligament
Posterior cruciate ligament
. Medial collateral ligament
A 33-year-old woman is undergoing a diagnostic work-up because she appears to have Cushing syndrome. She has elevated levels of cortisol, which are not suppressed when she is given high-dose dexamethasone. ACTH levels are greater than 200 pg/ mL. A chest x-ray film shows a central, 3-cm round mass on the hilum of the right lung. Bronchoscopy and biopsies confirm a diagnosis of small cell carcinoma of the lung. Which of the following is the preferred treatment for this woman?
Bilateral adrenalectomy
Radiation and chemotherapy directed at the lung cancer
General support only
Trans-sphenoidal hypophysectomy and pulmonary lobectomy
Pneumonectomy
A 53-year-old woman comes to the physician because of a "lump" in her neck. She says that her masseuse noticed it 1 month ago. There is no associated pain, pressure, or hoarseness. She feels fine and has no other complaints. She has no history of radiation exposure. Examination reveals a palpable thyroid nodule that is approximately 3 cm. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in diagnosis?
Cutting needle biopsy
Surgical resection
Fine needle aspiration (FNA)
Thyroid hormone replacement
Neck ultrasound
A 56-year-old man has been having bloody bowel movements on and off for the past several weeks. He reports that the blood is bright red, it coats the outside of the stools, and he can see it in the toilet bowl even before he wipes himself. When he does so, there is also blood on the toilet paper. After further questioning, it is ascertained that he has been constipated for the past 2 months and that the caliber of the stools has changed. They are now pencil thin, rather the usual diameter of an inch or so that was customary for him. He has no pain. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Anal fissure
External hemorrhoids
Cancer of the cecum
Internal haemorrhoids
Cancer of the rectum
A multiple trauma patient receives 14 units of packed red cells and several liters of Ringer's lactate solution during a laparotomy for multiple intra-abdominal injuries. The surgeons note that blood is oozing from all dissected raw surfaces, as well as from his TV line sites. His core temperature is normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Proceed with surgery and give blood transfusions as needed
Abort the operation and close the abdomen with towel clips
Obtain a stat coagulation profile to guide specific therapy
Leave the abdomen open and covered with mesh until coagulation parameters can be corrected
Empiric administration of fresh frozen plasma and platelet packs
A 75-year-old man slips and falls at home, hitting his right chest wall against the kitchen counter. He has an area of exquisite pain to direct palpation over the seventh rib, at the level of the anterior axillary line. A chest x-ray film confirms the presence of a rib fracture, with no other abnormal findings. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial step in management?
Supplemental oxygen to compensate for hypoventilation
Intercostal nerve block to minimize pain
Systemic narcotic analgesics
Open reduction and internal fixation to accelerate healing
Binding of the chest to limit motion
A 45-year-old woman with Crohn disease and a small intestinal fistula develops tetany during the second week of parenteral nutrition. The laboratory findings include: Na: 135 mEq/L K: 3.2 mEq/L Cl: 103 mEq/L HCO3: 25 mEq/L Ca: 8.2 mEq/L Mg: 1.2 mEq/L PO4: 2.4 mEq/L Albumin: 2.4 An arterial blood gas sample reveals a pH of 7.42, PCO2 of 38 mm Hg, and PO2 of 84 mm Hg. Which of the following is the most likely cause of the patient’s tetany?
Hyperventilation
Essential fatty acid deficiency
Hypocalcemia
Focal seizure
Hypomagnesemia
A patient with a nonobstructing carcinoma of the sigmoid colon is being prepared for elective resection. Which of the following reduces the risk of postoperative infectious complications?
A single preoperative parenteral dose of antibiotic effective against aerobes and anaerobes
Postoperative administration of parenteral antibiotics effective against aerobes and anaerobes until the patient’s intravenous lines and all other drains are removed
Avoidance of oral antibiotics to prevent emergence of Clostridium difficile
Redosing of antibiotics in the operating room if the case lasts for more than 2 hours
Postoperative administration for 48 hours of parenteral antibiotics effective against aerobes and anaerobes
A 75-year-old man with a history of myocardial infarction 2 years ago, peripheral vascular disease with symptoms of claudication after walking half a block, hypertension, and diabetes presents with a large ventral hernia. He wishes to have the hernia repaired. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in his preoperative workup?
He should undergo an electrocardiogram (ECG).
He should undergo a persantine thallium stress test and echocardiography.
He should undergo an exercise stress test.
His history of a myocardial infarction within 3 years is prohibitive for elective surgery. No further testing is necessary.
He should undergo coronary artery bypass prior to operative repair of his ventral hernia.
A young man is shot with a .45 caliber revolver, point blank in the lower abdomen, just above the pubis. The entrance wound is at the midline, and there is no exit wound. X-ray films show the bullet embedded in the sacral promontory, to the right of the midline. Digital rectal examination and proctoscopic examination are negative, but he has gross hematuria. He is hemodynamically stable. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
CT scan of the abdomen
Diagnostic peritoneal lavage
Intravenous pyelogram
Exploratory laparotomy
Retrograde cystogram
A front-seat passenger in a car involved in a head-on collision relates that he hit the dashboard with his knees, however, he is specifically complaining of severe pain in his right hip, rather than knee pain. He lies in the stretcher in the emergency department with the right lower extremity shortened, adducted, and internally rotated. Which of the following is the most likely injury?
Femoral neck fracture
Posterior dislocation of the hip
Fracture of the shaft of the femur
Posterior dislocation of the knee
Intertrochanteric fracture
A 71-year-old woman is brought to the physician by her distressed daughter. The daughter relates that, 3 days ago, her mother began to complain of right upper quadrant abdominal pain. She did not want to eat and "took to her bed sick." The daughter recalls that she complained of chills, nausea, and some vomiting. Physical examination reveals an obtunded, hypotensive, and obviously very sick elderly woman. She has impressive pain to deep palpation in the right upper quadrant, along with muscle guarding and rebound. Her temperature is 40 C (104 F), and laboratory analysis shows a white cell count of 22,000/mm3 with multiple immature forms, a bilirubin of 5 mg/dL and alkaline phosphatase of 840 U/L. The serum amylase is normal. An emergency sonogram shows multiple stones in the gallbladder, normal thickness of the gallbladder wall without pericholecystic fluid, dilated intrahepatic ducts, and common duct with a diameter of 2.1 cm. The sonographer cannot identify stones in the common duct. In addition to IV fluids and antibiotics, which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Elective cholecystectomy
Emergency surgical exploration of the common duct
Emergency decompression of the common duct
Emergency transhepatic cholecystostomy
Emergency cholecystectomy
A 25-year-old man is shot with a .22 caliber revolver. The entrance wound is in the anteromedial aspect of his upper thigh, and the exit wound is about 3 inches lower, in the posterolateral aspect of the thigh. He has a large, expanding hematoma in the upper inner thigh. There are no palpable pulses in the foot. The bone is intact by physical examination and x-ray films. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Doppler studies
Embolectomy
Venogram
Surgical exploration
Arteriogram
A 7-year-old boy passes a large, bloody bowel movement. He is hemodynamically stable, and he has a hemoglobin of 14 g/dL. Nasogastric aspiration yields clear, greenish fluid. Physical examination, including anoscopy, is unremarkable. Which of the following is the most appropriate next diagnostic test?
Celiac arteriogram
Radioactively tagged red cell study
Colonoscopy
Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy
Radioactively labeled technetium scan
An 81-year-old man with Alzheimer disease who lives in a nursing home undergoes surgery for a fractured femoral neck. On the 5th postoperative day, it is noted that his abdomen is grossly distended and tense, but not tender. He has occasional bowel sounds. The rectal vault is empty on digital examination, and there is no evidence of occult blood. X-ray films show a few distended loops of small bowel and a very distended colon. The cecum measures 9 cm in diameter, and the gas pattern of distention extends throughout the entire large bowel, including the sigmoid and rectum. No stool is seen in the films. Other than the abdominal distention, and the ravages of his mental disease, he does not appear to be ill. Vital signs are normal for his age. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Fecal impaction
Paralytic ileus
Mechanical intestinal obstruction
Volvulus of the sigmoid colon
Ogilvie syndrome
A 46-year-old woman was applying her make-up while also drinking her morning cup of coffee. She noticed in the mirror that a round, 2-cm mass would move up and down in the lower part of her neck whenever she swallowed. Her physician confirms that she has a single, firm, thyroid nodule in the right lobe. There are no other abnormalities in the history or physical examination. Her pulse is 82/min and regular. Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) is within normal limits. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Clinical observation, repeating the TSH at least once a year
Fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology of the mass
Determination of T3 and T4 levels
Right thyroid lobectomy
Radionuclide thyroid scan
A 44-year-old woman is recovering from a mild episode of acute ascending cholangitis secondary to choledocholithiasis. When seen initially, she had a spiking fever, leukocytosis, and a very high alkaline phosphatase; however, all these findings subsided rapidly after she was placed on IV antibiotics. A sonogram of the right upper quadrant on the day of admission showed the presence of gallstones in the gallbladder, but the diameter of the biliary ducts was normal. It was assumed that she had passed a common duct stone, and plans to do an endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatogram (ERCP) were canceled. While awaiting elective cholecystectomy, she again developed a fever and leukocytosis, and her liver function tests showed minimal elevation of her bilirubin (to 2.5 mg/dL) and alkaline phosphatase (to 115 U/L). A repeat sonogram shows no changes in her biliary ducts, but now there is a 6-cm abscess in the right lobe of the liver. Which of the following is the most appropriate treatment for this new development?
Metronidazole
Percutaneous drainage of the liver abscess
Long-term IV antibiotics
Open surgical resection of the right lobe of the liver
ERCP and biliary drainage
A 55-year-old, HIV-positive man has a fungating mass growing out of the anus. He can feel it when he wipes himself after having a bowel movement, but it is not painful. For the past 6 months, he has noticed blood on the toilet paper, and from time to time there has also been blood coating the outside of the stools. He has lost weight, and he looks emaciated and ill. On physical examination, the mass is easily visible. It measures 3.5 cm in diameter, is fixed to surrounding tissues, and appears to grow out of the anal canal. He also has rock-hard, enlarged lymph nodes on both groins, some of them as large as 2 cm in diameter. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Adenocarcinoma of the rectum
Rectal prolapse
Condyloma acuminata of the anus
Squamous cell carcinoma of the anus
External hemorrhoids
A 79-year-old man with atrial fibrillation develops an acute abdomen. When seen 2 days after the onset of the abdominal pain, he has a silent abdomen, with diffuse tenderness and mild rebound. There is a trace of blood on the rectal examination. He also has acidosis and looks quite sick. X-ray films show distended small bowel and distended right colon, up to the middle of the transverse colon. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Acute pancreatitis
Perforated viscus
Mesenteric ischemia
Primary peritonitis
Midgut volvulus
A 42-year-old, right-handed man has had a history of progressive speech difficulties and right hemiparesis for 5 months. He has had progressively severe headaches for the past 2 months, which are worse in the mornings. At the time of admission, he is confused and vomiting, and has blurred vision, papilledema, and diplopia. Shortly thereafter, his blood pressure increases to 190/110 mm Hg, and he develops bradycardia. Which of the following is most likely the significance of the hypertension and the bradycardia?
The brain tumor has produced tentorial herniation
The genesis of his symptoms is aortic dissection
The brain tumor is pressing on the hypothalamus
There is a near-terminal increase in intracranial pressure
The chronic subdural hematoma has ruptured
After a grand mal seizure, a 32-year-old epileptic woman notices pain in her right shoulder, and she cannot move it. She goes to a minor emergency clinic, where she has a limited physical examination and anteroposterior (AP) x-ray films of her shoulder. The films are read as negative, and she is diagnosed as having a sprain and given pain medication. The next day, she still has the same pain and is unable to move her arm. She comes to the emergency department holding her arm close to her body, with her hand resting on her anterior chest wall. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Acromioclavicular separation
Posterior dislocation of the shoulder
Anterior dislocation of the shoulder
Torn teres major and minor muscles
Articular cartilage crushing
A 69-year-old man who smokes and drinks and has rotten teeth, has a hard, fixed, 4-cm mass in his left neck. The mass is just medial to and in front of the sternomastoid muscle, at the level of the upper notch of the thyroid cartilage. It has been there for at least 6 months, and it is growing. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in diagnosis?
Radionuclide scan of the thyroid gland
Open incisional biopsy of the mass
Sputum cytology and CT scan of the lungs
Open excisional biopsy of the mass
Panendoscopy (triple endoscopy) and mucosal biopsies
On the 5th postoperative day, it is noticed that large amounts of clear, pink, salmon-colored fluid are soaking the wound dressings of a patient who had a negative exploratory laparotomy for a stab wound of the abdomen. The laparotomy was done through a midline supraumbilical and infraumbilical incision. When seen by the surgical staff, the patient is lying in bed in the supine position, with the dressings removed. In the dim light of his hospital room, the incision appears intact and not particularly red or inflamed, but there are indeed traces of the clear pink fluid on his skin. He has no specific complaints. He is still NPO and on IV fluids, but has already been passing gas per rectum, and plans had been made to feed him today. The abdomen is not distended, and he has normal bowel sounds. He is afebrile. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Culture the pink fluid and start empiric antibiotic therapy
Stop plans for oral feedings and start total parenteral nutrition
Gently probe the wound at several points until pus is found and drained
Tape the wound securely, bind the abdomen, and avoid events that would suddenly increase his intra-abdominal pressure
Help the patient out of bed and have him walk to the examining room for proper inspection of the wound
A 2-year-old child has been shot in the arm in a drive-by shooting. His brachial artery was partially transected, and there was copious bleeding. The EMTs control the site of bleeding by local pressure, and the child is no longer losing blood; however, he is hypotensive and tachycardic. IV fluid resuscitation is urgently needed, but several attempts at starting peripheral IV lines have been unsuccessful. Which of the following would be the best alternative route in this situation?
Central line via subclavian puncture
Percutaneous femoral vein cannulation
Hypodermoclysis
Saphenous vein cut-down
Intraosseous cannulation in the proximal tibia
A 24-year-old woman sustains multiple injuries in a car accident, including a pelvic fracture. She is hemodynamically stable. Initial assessment shows no vaginal or rectal injuries; however, when a Foley catheter is inserted, bloody urine is recovered. Which of the following would be the best way to evaluate her urologic injury?
Sonogram of the bladder
Retrograde cystogram including post-void films
Intravenous pyelogram
Retrograde cystogram including views of the ureters
Cystoscopy
A 62-year-old woman has a 4-cm, hard mass under the nipple and areola of her rather small left breast. The mass occupies most of the breast, but the breast is freely movable from the chest wall. There is no dimpling or ulceration of the skin over the mass, and careful palpation of the axilla is completely negative. A core biopsy of the breast mass has established a diagnosis of infiltrating ductal carcinoma, and the mammogram showed no other lesions in that breast or the other one. A chest x-ray film and liver function tests are normal. She has no symptoms suggestive of brain or bone metastasis. Which of the following should be offered to this woman
Lumpectomy only
Modified radical mastectomy (including axillary sampling)
Lumpectomy with axillary sampling and post-op radiation
Radical mastectomy (including complete axillary dissection)
Total mastectomy only
A 54-year-old man, who 5 years ago underwent a laparotomy for a gunshot wound to the abdomen, is admitted to the hospital because of protracted vomiting and progressive abdominal distention. The symptoms began 5 days earlier, and since then he has not had a bowel movement or passed any gas. At the time of hospitalization, he has hyperactive bowel sounds and some abdominal discomfort, but does not have an acute abdomen. His abdominal x-ray films show dilated loops of small bowel, multiple air-fluid levels, and no free air under the diaphragms. He is placed on nasogastric suction and IV fluids. After 6 hours, he develops fever, leukocytosis, abdominal tenderness, and rebound tenderness, and his abdomen is silent. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Add antibiotics
Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and introduction of a long intestinal tube
Barium tag and serial abdominal x-ray films
Emergency exploratory laparotomy
CT scan of the abdomen
While running to catch a bus, and old man twists his ankle and falls on his inverted foot. Anteroposterior (AP), lateral, and mortise x-ray films show displaced fractures of both malleoli. Which of the following would be the preferred form of treatment?
Closed reduction and casting
Replacement with a metal prosthesis
Skeletal traction
Fusion of the ankle joint
Open reduction and internal fixation
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