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Fischer Question Link - eddy
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would appreciate if anyone can send me the link for Fischer Question.My email address is edwinimiere.
thanks
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brainX Digital Learning System
Study Session of KnowledgeBase: Practice Exam 1

Record # 1

Question/Fact:

A 39-year-old Polish man comes to the clinic for painful calves after walking long distances and for discoloration of the fingers with changes in temperature. He says his symptoms started two months ago, and he gets no relief from the ibuprofen. He has previously been healthy. He currently smokes a pack a day and drinks socially. He has no history of drug abuse. On physical examination, his blood pressure is 140/90 mm Hg, heart rate is 68/min, and he is afebrile. Examination of the hands reveals distal digital ischemia and trophic changes in the nails of both hands. Radial pulses are absent bilaterally, but all other pulses are present. His right calf shows evidence of a superficial thrombophlebitis. Laboratory studies show: white cell count 9,600/mm3, hematocrit 38.6%, MCV 89 μm3, ESR 40 mm/h, and C-ANCA as negative. The rheumatoid factor and ANA are negative. Which of the following should be done next for this patient?

(A) Heparin
(B) Prednisone
© Arterial bypass
(D) Cyclophosphamide
(E) Abstention from tobacco

Answer:

(E) Abstention from tobacco

Explanation:

This patient has thromboangiitis obliterans (Buerger's disease), which is an inflammatory occlusive disorder involving small and medium-sized arteries and veins in the distal and upper extremities. The prevalence is highest in men of Eastern European descent under the age of 40. Although the cause is unknown, there is a definite relationship to cigarette smoking and an increased incidence of HLA-B5 and -A9 antigens in patients with this disorder. Clinical features of thromboangiitis obliterans often include a triad of claudication of the affected extremity, Raynaud's phenomenon, and migratory superficial thrombophlebitis. Claudication is confined to the lower calves and feet or forearms and hands because this disorder primarily affects the distal vessels. Hand examination can reveal severe digital ischemia, trophic nail changes, ulceration, and gangrene at the tips of the fingers. Brachial and popliteal pulses are usually present, but radial, ulnar, and/or tibial pulses may be absent. Smooth, tapering, segmental lesions in the distal vessels are present on angiography. The diagnosis can be confirmed by excisional biopsy of an involved vessel. There is no specific treatment, except abstention from tobacco. The prognosis is worse in those who continue to smoke, but results are relatively good in those who stop. C-ANCA antibodies are usually found in Wegener's granulomatosis. Arterial bypass may be indicated in disease confined to larger vessels. The hand abnormalities effectively exclude peripheral vascular disease. If these measures fail, amputation may be required. Cyclophosphamide and prednisone do not help. Again, the management is to stop smoking.
==============

Topic:

Rheumatology

Record # 2

Question/Fact:

A 25-year-old woman with Crohn's disease presents to your office with recurrent abdominal pain and diarrhea. She has been taking mesalamine 4 grams per day for the last year. Last fall, after developing diarrhea and pain, she was placed on prednisone 60 mg daily. She had a complete remission and, after a 3-month tapering of the prednisone, suffered a relapse. Prednisone was restarted 2 months ago at 60 mg daily, and now as the dose has decreased to 20 mg per day, the diarrhea has recurred. She is having 6 to 8 water stools per day, crampy pain, and some weight loss. What would be the best next step?

(A) Restart the prednisone and plan to maintain the dose at 40-60 mg indefinitely
(B) Restart the prednisone with 6-mercaptopurine and plan on prednisone taper in 2 months
© Stop the prednisone and add cyclosporine
(D) Admit to the hospital and give high-dose intravenous steroids to induce remission
(E) Stop the mesalamine and add methotrexate

Answer:

(B) Restart the prednisone with 6-mercaptopurine and plan on prednisone taper in 2 months

Explanation:

Prednisone is effective in treating active Crohn's disease for short durations (3-6 months). Long-term use for maintenance is not indicated. 6-Mercaptopurine and azathioprine are steroid-sparing medications used to limit the need for prednisone. Prednisone, like other corticosteroids, has numerous side effects and should only be used for treating active flares of disease, not maintenance of remission. Cyclosporine and methotrexate have limited roles in the management of Crohn's disease.


Topic:

Gastroenterology

Record # 3

Question/Fact:

A 65-year-old man presents to the emergency room with complaints of weakness, generalized swelling in his extremities, and right leg pain. At the time of presentation, he appears to be in moderate distress from the leg pain. The patient states that his symptoms started two days ago. The patient also has frequent urination and increased thirst. He states that he has felt weak for the past few months. Physical examination reveals a tender, erythematous, and swollen right calf. He also has 2+ pitting edema in all extremities. Blood pressure is 107/55 mm Hg, and temperature is 100.3 F. Venous ultrasound is positive for lower extremity deep vein thrombosis. Laboratory studies reveal:

White cell count 11,000/mm3; hematocrit 32.3%; platelets 105,000/mm3; K 4.0 mEq/L; BUN 24 mg/dL; creatinine 1.7 mg/dL. The PT/PTT are normal.

Total bilirubin 0.4 mg/dL, AST 28 U/L, albumin l.9 g/dL, cholesterol 326 mg/dL; triglycerides 425 mg/dL.

Urine dipstick shows protein 3+, hemoglobin 1+, white cells 1+; 24-hour urine shows 6.2 grams of protein.

What is the next step in the treatment of this patient?

(A) Renal biopsy
(B) Plasmapheresis
© Anticoagulation
(D) Cyclophosphamide
(E) Prednisone

Answer:

© Anticoagulation

Explanation:

This patient has nephrotic syndrome based on the presence of edema, hyperproteinuria, hypoproteinemia, and hyperlipidemia. Such patients are predisposed to developing a hypercoagulable state secondary to the renal losses of proteins C and S and antithrombin III, as well as increased platelet activation. Patients with evidence of venous thrombosis should be anticoagulated for at least 6 months. Recurrent thrombosis and renal vein thrombosis warrant lifelong anticoagulation.

Although he may need a renal biopsy, he needs to have his thrombus treated first as the "next" step. The same is true of using cyclophosphamide and prednisone. This patient most likely has membranous glomerulonephritis simply because he is an adult with nephrotic syndrome, and this is the most common cause in adults. Colonoscopy should also be done in a patient like this because there is a strong association of glomerulonephritis with solid tumors, such as colon and breast cancer.
Topic:

Nephrology

Record # 4

Question/Fact:

A 42-year-old man from Vietnam, who had been a bus driver in Thailand, presents to the emergency department after having shortness of breath while playing soccer with his son this morning. Over the last several months, he has been having several episodes of shortness of breath. Several of the episodes were associated with chest pain. He denies any significant medical history. He has a 25-pack-year use of tobacco, and he has a sedentary lifestyle. His father had a myocardial infarction at the age of 59. His heart rate is 72/min, blood pressure is 140/66 mm Hg, and respiratory rate is 14/min. His examination shows mild jugulovenous distention with a collapsing carotid arterial pulse. His cardiac examination reveals a point of maximal impulse that is displaced laterally and inferiorly and a mild diastolic blowing murmur at the base while he sits up. His sensory examination shows loss of vibration sense in all extremities, and an abnormal Romberg test. EKG shows normal sinus rhythm with left axis deviation and ST-segment depression and T-wave inversion in leads I, aVL, V5, and V6. The chest x-ray shows an enlarged heart with dilatation of the proximal aorta. The CBC, chemistries, and cardiac enzymes are negative. The echocardiogram shows an ejection fraction of 60%. What is the next best step in the management of this patient?
(A) Treat with digitalis
(B) Exercise stress test
© Cardiac catheterization
(D) VDRL and lumbar puncture, followed by penicillin therapy
(E) Aortic valve replacement

Answer:

(D) VDRL and lumbar puncture, followed by penicillin therapy

Explanation:

This patient has a murmur of aortic regurgitation (AR) and an abnormal neurological examination, suggesting syphilis. Therefore, this patient needs a VDRL and a lumbar puncture. Syphilis of the aorta involves the intima of the coronary arteries and may narrow the coronary ostia, leading to myocardial ischemia. There is also destruction of the medial muscle layers of the aorta, leading to aortic dilation. Myocardial ischemia in AR happens because oxygen requirements are elevated secondary to left ventricular (LV) dilatation and elevated LV systolic wall tension. Coronary blood flow is normally during diastole when the diastolic arterial pressure is subnormal. This leads to decreased coronary perfusion pressure.

Nifedipine or ACE inhibitors are only used once the patient develops severe AR. Digoxin is of very limited use at any time. An exercise stress test is not indicated because of the baseline EKG abnormalities. You normally detect the presence of ischemia on a stress test by looking for the development of ST-segment depression. This patient already has baseline ST-segment depression. A thallium or sestamibi scan would be required in a case like this. If you were investigating for ischemia, surgical treatment does not restore normal LV function. Patients with AR and normal LV function are followed until surgery is indicated. This is when the patient has LV dysfunction but before the development of symptomatic congestive failure. Valve replacement is also indicated in asymptomatic patients when the ejection fraction falls to <55% or LV end-diastolic volume is >55 mL/m2. Although catheterization may be useful before surgery, it would not be done before a specific diagnosis of syphilitic aortitis has been confirmed and treatment with penicillin has been given.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 5

Question/Fact:

A 40-year-old woman is brought to the emergency department by her daughter who states that she found her mother at home several hours ago, confused, lethargic, and unable to get up from her chair or speak. Her mother has a seizure disorder for which takes an antiseizure medication. She also has a history of alcohol abuse in the remote past. For the past several weeks, her mother has been complaining of difficulty sleeping and anxiety. The patient is stuporous and unresponsive to verbal stimuli. Her blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, heart rate is 50/min, and respiratory rate is 9/min. The pupils are pinpoint, and there is horizontal nystagmus. Asterixis is present.

Laboratory examinations reveal: white cell count 9,800/mm3, sodium 150 mEq/L, BUN 18 mg/dL, creatinine 0.9 mg/dL, glucose 50 mg/dL, calcium 5 mg/dL, ammonia 100 μg/dL, albumin 3.0 g/dL, AST 100 U/L, ALT 80 U/L. The urinalysis and lumbar puncture are normal. A CT scan of the brain shows cerebral edema. Arterial blood gas shows a pH of 7.20, a pCO2 of 46 mm Hg, and a pO2 of 79 mm Hg. Osmolar gap is zero. The toxicology screen is negative for benzodiazepines and opioids. What is the most likely substance that this patient overdosed on?

(A) Phenytoin
(B) Carbamazepine
© Valproic acid
(D) Ethanol
(E) Valium

Answer:

© Valproic acid

Explanation:

This patient most likely is intoxicated with valproic acid. This drug is widely used in the management of seizure and mood disorders. Valproic-acid intoxication produces a unique syndrome consisting of hypernatremia, metabolic acidosis, hypocalcemia, elevated serum ammonia, and mild liver aminotransferase elevation. Hypoglycemia may occur as a result of hepatic metabolic dysfunction. Coma with small pupils may be seen, and this can mimic opioid poisoning. Encephalopathy and cerebral edema can occur.

Phenytoin and carbamazepine are also commonly used antiseizure medications. Phenytoin intoxication can occur with only slightly increased doses. The overdose syndrome is usually mild. The most common manifestations are ataxia, nystagmus, and drowsiness. Hepatic encephalopathy would be unusual. Choreoathetoid movements are occasionally seen. Carbamazepine is a first-line agent for temporal lobe epilepsy, as well as trigeminal neuralgia. Intoxication causes drowsiness, stupor, coma, or seizures. However, dilated pupils and tachycardia are more common.

Signs of ethanol intoxication are similar to the signs of anticonvulsant medication. In addition, it causes a high osmolar gap. Valium is an unlikely cause of intoxication because this patient's blood benzodiazepine levels are negative.

Topic:

Poisoning

Record # 6

Question/Fact:

A 52-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with fever, weakness, and abdominal pain for the past three days. It has been associated with nausea and three episodes of vomiting. Her husband states that her temperatures have been as high as 103.5 F and that she has not been herself lately, appearing confused and lethargic. She has a history of hypothyroidism and migraine headaches. She appears lethargic, dehydrated, and is oriented only to person. Her blood pressure is 75/50 mm Hg, temperature is 102.9 F, and pulse is 108/min. She has dry oral mucosa and hyperpigmented areas of her skin spread diffusely over the posterior neck, hands, and knuckles. Rales are heard over the right lower lung field, and the chest x-ray shows a right lower lobe infiltrate. The EKG is normal. The patient is placed on intravenous hydration. Laboratory studies show a white cell count of 6,300/mm3, and the differential shows 82% neutrophils, 7% lymphocytes, and 9% eosinophils. The sodium level is 112 mEq/L, with a potassium of 5.9 mEq/L and a chloride of 92 mEq/L. Bicarbonate level is 20 mg/dL, and BUN is 32 mg/dL. The creatinine level is normal. The glucose level is 60 mg/dL, and the urinalysis is normal. What is the best initial test to diagnose this disorder?

(A) Immediate cortisol and assess ACTH level
(B) Metyrapone stimulation test
© Early morning cortisol
(D) A cosyntropin stimulation test
(E) 24-hour urine cortisol

Answer:

(A) Immediate cortisol and assess ACTH level

Explanation:

In the context of acute adrenal crisis, the most appropriate initial diagnostic test is to obtain a random cortisol level before initiating treatment with intravenous hydrocortisone. In a patient who is hypotensive and hemodynamically unstable, it is inappropriate to perform any diagnostic maneuvers that require several steps to obtain a diagnosis. (The metyrapone stimulation and the cosyntropin stimulation are such tests.) The early-morning cortisol is diagnostically useful if it is very low, which confirms adrenal insufficiency, or very high, which excludes adrenal insufficiency. A 24-hour urine for cortisol is a test used to confirm the diagnosis of the hypersecretion of cortisol, also known as Cushing's syndrome, which is the opposite of adrenal insufficiency.

Topic:

Endocrinology

Record # 7

Question/Fact:

A 45-year-old woman presents to your office after developing a pruritic rash and a fever. She first noticed it on her wrists two weeks ago but states that it has now spread to her feet as well. Her past medical history is significant for a seizure disorder following the removal of a meningioma. She has been treated with Dilantin. Physical examination is significant for icteric sclera. There are polygonal, flat-topped, violaceous papules limited to her wrists and her ankles. A white, reticulated, lacy lesion is also evident on examination of her buccal mucosa. Her liver is enlarged and is nontender to palpation. Laboratory analysis reveals: PT 11 seconds, albumin 3.6 g/dL, alkaline phosphatase 160 U/L, AST 700 U/L, ALT 960 U/L, ANA 1:160. Anti-hepatitis C virus (second generation) is negative; anti-hepatitis-B surface antibody (HBs) is positive; and anti-hepatitis-B core antibody (Hbc)is negative. She has an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 20 mm/h and a cholesterol of 160 mg/dL. Anti-smooth muscle antibody test is negative, and an ultrasound of the abdomen is normal. What would you do next?

(A) Start prednisone
(B) Initiate interferon--2b therapy
© Administer N-acetylcysteine
(D) Stop Dilantin
(E) Start methotrexate

Answer:

(D) Stop Dilantin

Explanation:

The patient has Dilantin-induced hepatitis. Drug-induced hepatitis may resemble autoimmune hepatitis, including the presence of hypergammaglobulinemia and positive antinuclear antibodies (ANAs). This can result in a false-positive anti-HCV ELISA test. The liver biopsy confirms the picture of drug-induced cholestatic hepatitis. Prednisone and/or azathioprine are the initial treatments of choice for autoimmune hepatitis. Although this patient had a positive ANA, additional tests, such as anti-smooth muscle antibody and anti-LKM (liver, kidney, microsomes), are needed to confirm the diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis.

Topic:

Gastroenterology

Record # 8

Question/Fact:

A 28-year-old female comes to the emergency department with a headache and fever. She has not had any recent infections, nor has she been exposed to any drugs. Her medical history is unremarkable. On examination, the patient appears lethargic. Her temperature is 100.5 F, pulse is 100/minute, blood pressure is 130/85 mm Hg, and respirations are 18/min. Her conjunctivae are yellowish, and scattered petechiae are noted on the lower extremities. The liver and spleen are not enlarged.

Laboratory studies show the following results: WBC 12,000/mm3; hematocrit 27%; platelets 14,000/mm3; bilirubin 4.5 mg/dL; direct bilirubin 0.5 mg/dL; BUN 40 mg/dL; creatinine 3.5 mg/dL. PT, fibrinogen, and PTT are all normal. Her peripheral blood smear shows fragmented red blood cells.

What is the most effective treatment for this patient?

(A) Splenectomy
(B) Glucocorticoids
© Plasmapheresis
(D) Intravenous immunoglobulins
(E) Platelet transfusion

Answer:

© Plasmapheresis

Explanation:

This woman has a combination of hemolytic anemia with fragmented RBCs on peripheral smear; thrombocytopenia; fever; neurologic symptoms; and renal dysfunction -- a classic pentad of symptoms that characterizes thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP). Approximately 90% of patients will respond to plasmapheresis. Patient should be emergently treated with large-volume plasmapheresis. Sixty to 80 mL/kg of plasma should be removed and replaced with fresh-frozen plasma. Treatment should be continued daily until the patient is in complete remission. Platelet transfusions in patients with TTP are contraindicated and can be associated with acute clinical deterioration. Antiplatelet agents, splenectomy, intravenous immunoglobulin, and immunosuppressive agents have not been of reliable benefit to patients with TTP. Each is less effective than plasmapheresis. Glucocorticoids are useful in patients if plasmapheresis does not work.

Topic:

Hemotology-Oncology

Record # 9

Question/Fact:

A 58-year-old woman comes to your office. She is currently in atrial fibrillation and is asymptomatic. Her rate is 70/min. She denies hypertension, diabetes, and congestive failure. There is no other past medical history. What is the most appropriate management of this patient?

(A) Warfarin and clopidogrel
(B) Heparin followed by warfarin
© Low-molecular-weight heparin
(D) Aspirin (325 mg) daily
(E) Warfarin to maintain an INR of 2 to 3

Answer:

(D) Aspirin (325 mg) daily

Explanation:

This is a young patient who has an episode of atrial fibrillation in the absence of other preexisting conditions. The American College of Chest Physicians has established guidelines for anticoagulation in nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation. Patients with risk factors for the formation of thrombi such as a previous stroke, transient ischemic attack, systemic thromboembolism, left ventricular dysfunction, recent congestive heart failure, systemic hypertension, or diabetes should be placed on warfarin to an INR of 2 to 3. Patients with no risk factors who are younger than 65 years are considered to be low risk and should take one aspirin daily. Aspirin is also suitable for patients with a contraindication to warfarin therapy. The efficacy of other antiplatelet agents has not been proven in patients with atrial fibrillation.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 10

Question/Fact:

A 62-year-old man presents to your clinic complaining of four days of dysuria, frequency, and urgency. He feels slightly feverish and has had dull, lower-back pain for the past few months. He has had several episodes of the dysuria over the last several months. Each time he was given antibiotics for one week, and the symptoms resolved. Currently his temperature is 100.4 F. The genital examination is unremarkable, and the digital rectal examination reveals a nontender prostate, which is normal in size and consistency, with no palpable masses. After gentle massage of the prostate, a small amount of purulent discharge is extruded from the urethral meatus. The urine culture grows 100,000 colonies/mL of E. coli. Urine cultures from his prior symptomatic episodes also grew E. coli but only 10,000 colonies/mL. Which of the following is most appropriate?

(A) Cystoscopy
(B) Ciprofloxacin and azithromycin orally once now
© Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole for one week
(D) Renal ultrasound
(E) Ciprofloxacin for 4 to 6 weeks

Answer:

(E) Ciprofloxacin for 4 to 6 weeks

Explanation:

This patient has chronic bacterial prostatitis. Chronic prostatitis can present with lower abdominal pain, perineal pain, or low back pain. There is usually no dysuria unless there is accompanying cystitis. On physical examination, the prostate usually feels normal and is nontender. As in this patient, chronic prostatitis may manifest as a recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI). The key to the diagnosis is culture of urine or urethral discharge. Pathogens for chronic prostatitis in older men are the same as for a UTI, with E. coli being the most common organism identified. One may extrude purulent discharge by massaging the prostate, which will grow the offending organism. One can also culture the urine post massage of the prostate, which should grow ten times more colonies than premassage urine. This patient cultured 10,000 colonies of E. coli in prior cultures, and currently he grew 100,000 colonies postprostatic massage. Ciprofloxacin for 7 days would be appropriate treatment if this were just a UTI. Therapy for one week is not long enough to clear chronic bacterial prostatitis. Most antibiotics don't have good penetration into the prostate, and it takes at least four weeks of therapy with ciprofloxacin to clear the infection. Ciprofloxacin and azithromycin for a single dose would be the treatment for urethritis. This patient does have a urethral discharge, which may be confused with urethritis. However, since the discharge is extruded only on palpation of the prostate, this strongly suggests that the prostate is the source of infection. Cystoscopy would be useful in a patient with recurrent UTIs in whom you suspected a structural malformation of the genitourinary tract. This patient's UTIs are originating from his chronically infected prostate. Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole for 12 weeks is an acceptable alternative for treating chronic prostatitis.

Topic:

Infectious Diseases

Record # 11

Question/Fact:

A 29-year old man comes to your office for a routine visit. His only complaint is leg pain after walking a three-block distance. He states that six months ago he was able to walk a longer distance without having to stop. His father died of a heart attack at the age of 44. His mother had diabetes mellitus, and she too died of a heart attack at the age of 47. His older brother, who is now 35 years old, had a stroke and underwent a carotid endarterectomy last year.

The patient presents as a thin individual with a blood pressure of 135/70 mm Hg and a heart rate of 78/min. Physical examination findings are remarkable for the presence of multiple xanthelasmas on the face, chest, and upper back. There is bilateral, irregular, firm, and nodular thickening in the Achilles tendons and extensor tendons of the hands. This patient's medications include atorvastatin, gemfibrozil at maximum doses, and niacin, which was added to the regimen six months ago. He is maintaining a fat-free diet and exercises regularly. Laboratory test results show: total cholesterol 815 mg/dL, triglycerides 515 mg/dL, and HDL 55 mg/dL. The level of total cholesterol has increased by 15% since the last visit.

What would you recommend to this patient?

(A) Nutritionist consult
(B) Stress test for detection of silent ischemia
© Plasmapheresis
(D) Liver transplantation
(E) Increase the dose of statins as long as transaminases are within the normal range

Answer:

© Plasmapheresis

Explanation:

This patient presents with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), which is a common autosomal dominant disorder due to absent or defective LDL receptors and resulting in a decreased capacity to remove plasma LDL. LDL cholesterol levels are markedly increased. It is associated with characteristic xanthomas in the Achilles, patellar, and extensor tendons of the hands and by the presence of xanthelasma. Corneal arcus is frequently seen. It is frequently associated with early coronary artery disease (CAD), peripheral vascular disease, and cerebral vascular disease. The plasma cholesterol level is generally in the range of 300 to 500 mg/dL, and in some patients homozygous for FH, it can exceed 800 to 1,000 mg/dL. Triglyceride levels are usually normal, but in 10% of patients, they may be mildly elevated.

Because of the risk of CAD, these patients need especially vigorous therapy. A low-fat and low-cholesterol diet should be initiated, although it gives only a moderate result and will not be enough to control the problem by itself. Effective therapy can be achieved with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) as first-line therapy. They lower LDL by 20 to 45%. When they are combined with a bile acid-binding resin, levels of LDL may be decreased by 50 to 60%. In some patients, triple therapy with a statin, a bile acid-binding resin, and niacin may be necessary. Patients homozygous for FH may not be responsive to these measures. For them, measures such as plasmapheresis or LDL apheresis are indicated. Liver transplant is the last resort when all else fails as treatment.

This patient is already on maximum doses of statins and bile acid-binding agent. The addition of niacin did not help. There is very little chance that any additional medical therapy will solve this patient's problem; that is why plasmapheresis is indicated.



Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 12

Question/Fact:

A 37-year-old, HIV-positive man comes for evaluation of generalized weakness, diffuse muscle pain, and frequent headaches that began eight weeks after the start of new HIV medications. He has never had any symptoms from his HIV infection, and he has a CD4 of 255/μL and an HIV RNA viral load of 25,000 (by PCR). He was recently started on zidovudine, lamivudine, and ritonavir/lopinavir. His past medical history is significant for hypertension and hypercholesterolemia. His medications include simvastatin and metoprolol. His physical examination is significant for diffuse muscle tenderness of the extremities. The range of motion is decreased because of pain with movement. His potassium level is 5.4 mEq/L, serum bicarbonate is 16 mEq/L, BUN is 35 mg/dL, creatinine is 1.6 mg/dL, and his viral load is RNA 40,000. The genotyping test result is pending. What will you do while waiting for this result?

(A) Switch zidovudine and lamivudine to didanosine and stavudine, and continue ritonavir
(B) Switch zidovudine, lamivudine, and ritonavir/lopinavir to didanosine, stavudine, and indinavir, and stop simvastatin
© Continue all medications but stop simvastatin
(D) Continue zidovudine and lamivudine, and switch ritonavir/lopinavir to efavirenz
(E) Switch to didanosine, stavudine, and efavirenz, and stop simvastatin

Answer:

(E) Switch to didanosine, stavudine, and efavirenz, and stop simvastatin

Explanation:

This patient presents with a drug interaction between the protease inhibitors and the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor. In this case, it is with ritonavir and simvastatin. This can produce significant toxicity from the statin. Ritonavir can increase the serum concentration of simvastatin, causing severe myalgias, rhabdomyolysis, and potential renal insufficiency. The next necessary step is to stop simvastatin or change the protease inhibitor to a non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor, such as efavirenz. However, in this case, the patient also presents with failure to achieve a reduction in HIV viral load of 1 log after eight weeks of therapy. In the event of inadequate treatment of HIV infection, the best choice would be to start two new nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and use efavirenz instead of ritonavir, in addition to discontinuing the simvastatin. It is not enough to change ritonavir to indinavir because high-level cross-resistance is very likely. Genotyping guides the therapeutic choice of all treatment failures. The best thing to do when treatment is insufficient is to use as least two, and preferably three, new drugs.

Topic:

Infectious Diseases

Record # 13

Question/Fact:

A 55-year-old man presents with abdominal pain and diarrhea for the past 3 months. He has also noticed a weight loss of 10 lb during this period. He denies nausea, vomiting, melena, or hematochezia. He consumes five to six beers each weekend, smokes half a pack of cigarettes a day, but has never used intravenous drugs. The past medical history is significant for osteoarthritis, newly diagnosed diabetes on a trial diet for 2 months, and recurrent duodenal ulcers found on four separate upper endoscopies. He takes diclofenac/misoprostol and famotidine 40 mg bid. Three years ago, he had taken triple antibiotics to treat H. pylori. He also tells you that tumors run in his family. His vital signs are normal. Physical examination is significant for mild epigastric tenderness to deep palpation without radiation. Routine labs ordered show: WBC 8,500/mm3, hemoglobin 13.4 g/dL, hematocrit 40.1%, platelets 256,000/mm3, amylase 155 U/L, sodium 141 mEq/L, potassium 4.2 mEq/L, chloride 106 mEq/L, CO2 23 mm Hg, BUN 15 mg/dL, creatinine 1.0 mg/dL, glucose 188 mg/dL, and calcium 11.2 mg/dL (elevated). What test would you order next?

(A) Serum lipase
(B) Upper endoscopy with biopsy
© Abdominal ultrasound
(D) Fasting serum gastrin level
(E) Liver enzyme studies

Answer:

(D) Fasting serum gastrin level

Explanation:

This patient's history of "tumors in the family" is consistent with MEN-1 (hyperparathyroidism, gastrinomas, and pituitary tumors). He presents with symptoms of gastrinoma, such as recurrent ulcer refractory to multiple treatments (H. pylori regimen and high-dose H2 blockers) and diarrhea. He also has an incidental hypercalcemia most likely secondary to his underlying diagnosis of MEN-1. The diagnosis of gastrinoma requires the demonstration of fasting hypergastrinemia and an increased basal gastric output.

Topic:

Gastroenterology

Record # 14

Question/Fact:

A slim, healthy 30-year-old woman is scheduled for a dental prosthodontic procedure and was sent for medical evaluation of a known history of mitral valve prolapse (MVP). The patient is a highly active individual and denies palpitations, chest pain, or shortness of breath. She admits to having a family history of heart disease, notably her father, who had died of a heart attack in his forties, and her mother, who had mitral valve prolapse. On physical examination, the patient is comfortable and has normal vital signs. Auscultation of the heart reveals a normal S1 and S2 and a prominent midsystolic click, which is accentuated in the standing position. No systolic murmur is appreciated. What is your overall assessment and plan for this patient?

(A) Get an echocardiogram to evaluate mitral valve motion and blood flow prior to clearing her for the procedure
(B) Prescribe empiric antibiotics for endocarditis prophylaxis and clear her for the procedure
© Get a cardiology consultation prior to medical clearance because the patient has a significant family history of heart disease
(D) Clear her for the procedure without endocarditis prophylaxis
(E) Clear her for the procedure with endocarditis prophylaxis

Answer:

(D) Clear her for the procedure without endocarditis prophylaxis

Explanation:

Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a commonly diagnosed valvular disorder affecting women more often than men in a 3:1 ratio. MVP is most commonly diagnosed in people between the ages of 20 and 40. Most people have no presenting symptoms. There is myxomatous degeneration of the valve leaflets, resulting in a stretching of the leaflets and chordae tendinae. Because of the disproportionate size of the left ventricle and mitral valve, there is uneven closure of the valve during each heartbeat and subsequent prolapse of the leaflets into the left atrium. The prolapse is similar to the opening of a parachute. The prolapse causes the classic mid-to-late systolic click. If there is regurgitation of blood back into the atrium, an apical systolic murmur can often be appreciated upon auscultation.

This patient is generally healthy and has a known history of MVP. On examination, she is found to have the midsystolic click but no systolic murmur. The lack of a murmur indicates that blood is not being regurgitated into the atrium. In this setting, the patient does not require antibiotics for endocarditis prophylaxis prior to the dental procedure. Prophylaxis for patients with MVP is recommended if a murmur is present or if evidence of nontrivial mitral regurgitation is found on the echocardiogram. Because the patient has a known history of MVP, she would not require a cardiology consultation or echocardiogram to reconfirm the diagnosis. In fact, an echocardiogram is not a required study to diagnose MVP because dynamic auscultation can be more reliable. Furthermore, the fact that she has remained symptom- and complaint-free would indicate that her condition is stable, and so no study should be warranted at this time. Besides all this, dental prosthodontic procedures do not need antibiotic prophylaxis.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 15

Question/Fact:

A 40-year-old man comes to the office because of pain in his right knee for the past three days. The patient denies fever, vomiting, or dysuria. He has no history of trauma but admits to prior episodes of pain, especially after binge drinking. It usually occurs in the knee, ankle, or big toe and is relieved somewhat by ibuprofen. He takes no medications and has no allergies. He has a 25-pack-year smoking history and drinks about half a case of beer when hanging out with friends. His mother developed the same symptoms at the age of 50. On examination, the right knee appears swollen, red, and tender to palpation and has a limited range of motion. You decide to aspirate the knee joint. Which of the following is most consistent with his diagnosis?

(A) Positively birefringent, rhomboid-shaped crystals and 200 white cells/μL
(B) Bipyramidal crystals and 2,000 white cells/mL
© Negatively birefringent, rhomboid-shaped crystals and 20,000 white cells/μL
(D) Cloudy and watery fluid with weakly positive birefringent crystals and 20,000 white cells/μL
(E) Watery fluid with strongly negative birefringent crystals and 20,000 white cells/μL

Answer:

(E) Watery fluid with strongly negative birefringent crystals and 20,000 white cells/μL

Explanation:

Gout is a metabolic disease that most often occurs in men at middle age or older. It rarely occurs in women until they are postmenopausal. The acute gouty episode typically happens at night and is brought on by excessive alcohol use, trauma, surgery, dietary excess, or glucocorticoid withdrawal. The joint fluid aspirate appears cloudy because of the numerous white cells. They typically range in number from 5,000 to 50,000/μL. The cell count in this range can be found in any kind of inflammatory arthritis, such as gout, pseudogout, or rheumatoid arthritis. Crystal analysis is required to distinguish them. Gout will have negatively birefringent, needle-shaped crystals, whereas pseudogout will have weakly positive, rhomboid-shaped crystals. Rheumatoid arthritis should have no crystals. Septic arthritis from infection usually gives >50,000/μL white cells in the synovial fluid. The inflammatory process causes breakdown of hyaluronate in the joint fluid and makes it become watery.

Topic:

Rheumatology

Record # 16

Question/Fact:

A 35-year-old man comes to the hospital after an episode of syncope. There were no preceding symptoms, and the patient recovered rapidly and completely with no residual effects. The patient did not have seizure activity during the episode. There is no history of heart disease and no previous episodes of syncope. The patient lives in rural Connecticut. His only previous medical problem was bilateral facial palsy several months ago. Currently, the physical examination is normal, except for a heart rate of 52/min. His blood pressure is normal. An EKG shows a sinus rhythm with Mobitz II second-degree heart block with a PR interval of 0.34 seconds. Echocardiogram is normal. He has a positive VDRL and a negative FTA. What is the most appropriate management of this patient?

(A) Doxycycline in addition to electrophysiological studies
(B) Ceftriaxone in addition to pacemaker
© Ceftriaxone in addition to prednisone
(D) Ceftriaxone
(E) Doxycycline in addition to permanent pacemaker

Answer:

(B) Ceftriaxone in addition to pacemaker

Explanation:

This patient seems to have second-degree heart block secondary to Lyme disease. He lives in Connecticut, which is an endemic area. (The city of Lyme is in Connecticut.) Facial palsy is the most common neurological manifestation of Lyme disease. The false positive VDRL is characteristic as well. Besides, the patient is very young and has no other reason to have heart block, such as ischemic heart disease. In Lyme disease, high-grade AV block with a PR interval of >0.3 seconds is an indication for intravenous therapy with either ceftriaxone or penicillin. A pacemaker should be placed at least temporarily in those with a Mobitz II heart block because of the risk of progressing on to third-degree block. This patient is also severely symptomatic from his heart block and has had syncope. Prednisone was used in the past but is inferior to an antibiotic alone. Steroids would only be used in those for whom the heart block does not improve with antibiotics. More minor forms of Lyme disease can treated with oral doxycycline. Doxycycline can be used with those who have just the rash, joint symptoms, facial palsy, or first-degree heart block.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 17

Question/Fact:

A 21-year-old man with no significant past medical history presents to office with complaints of blood in his urine and mucosal bleeding while brushing his teeth. The patient complains of intermittent "ringing in the ears." He denies any drug or alcohol use. He has no family history of bleeding disorders. Petechiae are noted in the oral cavity, as is dried blood in the nostrils.

Laboratory studies show the following:

Hematocrit 32%; white blood cell count 8,000/mm3 with 60% neutrophils; platelet count 13,000; PT 13 seconds; PTT 28 seconds; LDH 1,200 U/L; elevated indirect bilirubin.

Coombs' test is positive; abdominal examination is normal; and the peripheral smear shows spherocytes.

What is the most likely diagnosis?

(A) Alport's syndrome
(B) Bernard-Soulier syndrome
© Felty's syndrome
(D) Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
(E) Evans' syndrome
(F) Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)

Answer:

(E) Evans' syndrome

Explanation:

Evans' syndrome is the association of autoimmune hemolysis with autoimmune thrombocytopenia. It is treated initially with steroids and may occasionally need splenectomy to control the disease.

Alport's syndrome is the congenital association of glomerulonephritis with sensorineural hearing loss and ocular problems.

Bernard-Soulier syndrome is a functional platelet disorder presenting with platelet-related bleeding with a normal platelet count.

Felty's syndrome is the association of rheumatoid arthritis with neutropenia and splenomegaly. It is occasionally associated with thrombocytopenia. This patient has no history of rheumatoid arthritis, and the spleen and neutrophil count are normal.

ITP would not give the evidence of hemolysis that is present here, such as an increased bilirubin, positive Coombs' test, high LDH, or anemia. This patient does not have the renal failure or fever associated with TTP. In addition, TTP should give fragmented red cells on peripheral smear.

Topic:

Hemotology-Oncology

Record # 18

Question/Fact:

A 31-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with three hours of shortness of breath. She had been walking her dog this afternoon and had not been outside for more than a few minutes before she began to feel chest tightness, wheezing, and a cough. She has not had any relief from her bronchodilators or steroid inhalers that she uses daily. She states that her daily activities have become affected by frequent episodes of shortness of breath that recur a few times during each week. These attacks can last days at a time, and she is afraid that her current medications are no longer of assistance to her. On physical examination, she has a temperature of 98.8 F, a pulse of 98/min, a blood pressure of 136/90 mm Hg, and a respiratory rate of 23/min. There is some evidence of hyperemia and secretions in the nasal passages bilaterally. She is using her accessory muscles to breathe, and wheezing is audible. Pulmonary function testing reveals an FEV1 of 68% of predicted, with a reduced FEV1/FVC ratio. This increases by 14% after high-dose bronchodilators are administered. Her peak expiratory flow was 158 L/min before bronchodilators were given. Arterial blood gases on room air are: pH 7.36, pCO2 48 mm Hg, and pO2 60 mm Hg. Chest x-ray shows evidence of hyperinflated lungs. The severity of this patient's clinical condition corresponds with which of the following classifications of asthma?

(A) Moderate intermittent
(B) Severe intermittent
© Mild persistent
(D) Moderate persistent
(E) Severe persistent

Answer:

(D) Moderate persistent

Explanation:

This patient presents with an acute attack of asthma, likely precipitated by allergens from the environment. Her symptoms are suggestive of moderate persistent asthma, as she requires the daily use of an inhaled short-acting β2-agonist, the exacerbations are affecting her daily activities, and they recur at a frequency of more than twice per week, lasting days at a time. Other parameters consistent with moderate persistent asthma are the occurrence of nocturnal symptoms more than once per week. Her FEV1 value of 68% is consistent with the criteria for the FEV1 to fall between 60 and 80% of predicted, a reduced ratio of FEV1/FVC to <75%, and the reversibility of airflow obstruction with bronchodilators of greater than 12%. A peak expiratory flow of less than 200 L/min indicates severe airflow obstruction. During a mild asthma exacerbation, arterial blood gases may be normal or reveal a respiratory alkalosis with an increased A-a gradient. The combination of an increased PaCO2 and respiratory acidosis may indicate respiratory failure, and the need for mechanical ventilation should be considered.

There are four classifications of asthma:
1. Mild intermittent -- symptoms less than 2×/week and FEV1 >80%
2. Mild persistent -- symptoms greater than 2×/week but less than l×/day with FEV1 >80%
3. Moderate persistent -- daily symptoms greater than 2×/week with FEV1 >60 and <80%
4. Severe persistent -- continual symptoms with limited physical activity and FEV1 <60%

Topic:

Pulmonary

Record # 19

Question/Fact:

What is the appropriate mode of colorectal cancer screening for the following case?

A 44-year-old man whose father died of colon cancer at age 77 and who is asymptomatic.

(A) Colonoscopy now and every 10 years
(B) Flexible sigmoidoscopy now and every 5 years
© Colonoscopy at age 50 and every 10 years
(D) Colonoscopy now and every 10 years
(E) Stool occult cards every year; colonoscopy if positive
(F) Colonoscopy at age 40 and every 5 years
(G) Colonoscopy in 3 years
(H) Colonoscopy in 1 year
(I) Colonoscopy every 1 to 2 years

Answer:

(F) Colonoscopy at age 40 and every 5 years

Explanation:

Colonoscopy is the preferred method of screening for colon cancer. Average-risk persons should undergo colonoscopy at age 50, and if normal, every 10 years. If a polyp is found, the colonoscopy should be repeated after 3 years. When there is a family history of colon cancer, screening should begin at age 40 or ten years prior to the age of the family member. The earlier date is respected. Follow-up examinations for persons with family histories of colon cancer should occur at 5-year intervals. When there are multiple family members, screening colonoscopy should be performed at age 25 and every 1 to 2 years (characteristic of persons with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (Lynch syndrome). Colonoscopy is recommended 1 year after a hemicolectomy for colon cancer to verify the absence of recurrence and the presence of new lesions.

Topic:

Gastroenterology

Record # 20

Question/Fact:

A 69-year-old woman with a history of severe asthma is brought to the emergency department by her daughter because of severe lightheadedness. The patient also complains of worsening shortness of breath and progressive fatigue over the last year. For the last three months, the patient is able to walk only 2 to 3 blocks before developing a profound shortness of breath. She recently started using three pillows for sleep during the night. She denies chest pain and diaphoresis. The patient's daughter states that three weeks ago, her mother had a syncopal episode that lasted for two minutes on her way to the supermarket. At that time, she did not seek medical attention. The patient's current medications include lisinopril, digoxin, and furosemide.

In the emergency room, her heart rate is 102/min, blood pressure is 115/70 mm Hg, and respiratory rate is 22/min. Physical examination reveals jugulovenous distension and bibasilar crackles. Heart auscultation demonstrates a diminished S1, a loud P2, and an S3 gallop. There is a 1+ pitting edema of both extremities. EKG shows normal sinus rhythm with several multifocal premature contractions (PVCs) and a four-beat run of ventricular tachycardia (VT) at a rate of 128/min. The echocardiogram reveals an ejection fraction below 25% and no evidence of aortic stenosis. The patient is admitted to the telemetry unit, and recordings show PVCs and 12 runs of nonsustained VT of 4 to 18 beats in duration during the first day.

Which of the following is the most appropriate management at this time?

(A) Increase the dose of digoxin
(B) Start metoprolol
© Start amiodarone
(D) Cardiac catheterization
(E) Perform electrophysiologic study

Answer:

© Start amiodarone

Explanation:

This 69-year-old woman with nonischemic cardiomyopathy has presyncopal and syncopal episodes most likely caused by nonsustained ventricular tachycardia. She is at a high risk for death from a cardiac arrhythmia and should be placed on amiodarone, which is effective in reducing this risk. Beta-blockers also can be beneficial in reducing the risk of cardiac arrhythmias; however, this patient has a history of severe asthma. Therapy with beta-blockers would not be the best choice. Although intravenous loading with amiodarone is not necessary at this time, oral loading is appropriate. Cardiogenic syncope can occur on a mechanical or arrhythmic basis. Mechanical problems that can cause syncope include aortic stenosis, pulmonary stenosis, and hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. Episodes are commonly exertional or postexertional. Neurological causes of syncope are far less common and less dangerous than are cardiac causes. Increasing the dose of digoxin will not change the risk of developing a ventricular dysthymia. Electrophysiolocal studies should be performed in patients in whom the syncope seems to be of a cardiac etiology and a definite cause cannot be found. This patient already has VT documented on the EKG. Electrophysiological studies are also done to see if the patient needs an implantable defibrillator, but this would not be the most appropriate next best step.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 21

Question/Fact:

A 65-year-old man presents to the emergency department complaining of palpitations that started 20 minutes ago. He states he had a "heart attack" one year ago. He smoked for twenty years and has had diabetes for ten years. He watches his diet and takes aspirin and atorvastatin. On physical examination, you find a heart rate of 145/min, a blood pressure of 148/85 mm Hg, and a respiratory rate of 22/min. He has intermittent waves in his jugular veins consistent with canon "a" waves, and his lungs are clear. The S1 varies in intensity. The EKG shows that the QRS complex is approximately 0.16 seconds in duration, with dissociation of the p waves from the QRS complexes. All the QRS complexes are positively deflected in all leads. How would you treat this gentleman?

(A) Verapamil
(B) Cardioversion
© Adenosine
(D) Insert a pacing catheter
(E) Procainamide

Answer:

(E) Procainamide

Explanation:

This patient has ventricular tachycardia based on the presence of a wide complex tachycardia and cannon "a" waves in the jugular veins. Cannon "a" waves are due to the unsynchronized contraction of the ventricles and the atria. This results in a retrograde flow of blood back to the jugular veins with atrial systole. The variation of the intensity of S1 is caused by the ventricle contracting at times when the AV valves are open and at other times when they are closed. Procainamide, amiodarone, and lidocaine are the most effective treatments for a hemodynamically stable patient.

Verapamil and adenosine can be dangerous in a patient like this. Verapamil is useful in supraventricular tachycardia (SVT), not ventricular tachycardia. Verapamil can decrease blood pressure. Adenosine is useful only for SVT. Inserting a pacing catheter into the apex of the right ventricle and trying to terminate the tachycardia by override pacing is indicated in a stable patient who does not respond to medication. Cardioversion is used for hemodynamically unstable patients. Beta-blockers post-myocardial infarction decrease the occurrence of arrhythmias, such as those seen in this patient.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 22

Question/Fact:

A 36-year-old woman comes to your office claiming that she has been feeling generalized weakness, along with stiff hands, wrists, and knees upon awakening, which lasts about 2 hours. She has also had a 4-pound weight loss over the last 2 1/2 weeks and an itchy rash on her chest. She claims the symptoms began only 2 to 3 weeks ago, and they have been debilitating. The stiffness and pain are bilateral and symmetrical. The symptoms have caused her to be late to work and have interfered with her duties. She appears tired. Her vital signs are normal. There is a maculopapular, fine rash on her anterior chest wall, which is not restricted to the skin fold areas. There are no nodules. The lungs, heart, and abdomen are normal. Her extremities are not edematous, but there is tenderness upon palpation of wrists and knees but no effusions or joint deformity. There is no tenderness over the tendon sheaths. Laboratory studies show: white cell count 8,600/mm3, hematocrit 39.4%, platelets 215,000/mm3, BUN 8 mg/dL, creatinine 0.9 mg/dL, glucose 125 mg/dL, and calcium 8.6 mEq/L. The rheumatoid factor and ANA are negative. X-rays of the joints are normal. Which of the following is the most appropriate action?

(A) Anti-double-stranded DNA
(B) Ceftriaxone and doxycycline
© Methotrexate
(D) Intravenous immunoglobulin G (IgG)
(E) Serum Parvovirus B19 IgM

Answer:

(E) Serum Parvovirus B19 IgM

Explanation:

This woman most likely had an acute infection with Parvovirus B19, which can cause a syndrome that mimics rheumatoid arthritis. Arthralgias from Parvovirus B19 most commonly occur in woman in their thirties, whereas rheumatoid arthritis occurs more commonly in older individuals. Parvovirus B19 gives a polyarthritis that affects the proximal interphalangeal joints of the hands, wrists, and knees. Arthralgias are common. The diagnosis is mostly clinical when one gets a lacy, maculopapular, truncal rash, along with malaise and a headache with little fever. There is a laboratory test for serum IgM and IgG for Parvovirus B19. Treatment is symptomatic, and most of these symptoms will resolve on their own.

Methotrexate is an incorrect choice because the patient's symptoms are too new to be considered rheumatoid arthritis, which is usually at least 6 weeks in duration and would be associated with a positive test for a rheumatoid factor in 75% of patients. The ANA is also weakly and nonspecifically positive in rheumatoid arthritis. Treatment for rheumatoid arthritis involves NSAIDs accompanied with disease-modifying drugs, such as hydroxychloroquine or sulfasalazine. There may be a need for using three agents in very severe disease. Some of the other drugs that could be used are methotrexate, cyclosporine, and steroids.

Intravenous immunoglobulins are used to treat aplastic crisis from parvovirus. This patient's hematocrit is normal. The arthralgias of parvovirus should resolve without specific therapy, and NSAIDs are only used for symptomatic relief. Ceftriaxone and doxycycline would be used for gonococcal or chlamydial arthritis. In that case, one would expect fever, migratory arthritis, a petechial rash, and tenosynovitis. Testing for anti-double stranded DNA would be appropriate for evaluating a patient for lupus.

Topic:

Rheumatology

Record # 23

Question/Fact:

A 55-year-old woman comes to the clinic after being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes mellitus during a routine screening performed at work. She is currently asymptomatic and denies any history of frequent urination. On physical examination, you note a normal blood pressure. Her heart, lungs, and the remainder of the physical examination are within normal limits. When you ask the nurse to weigh your patient, you note her body mass index (BMI) to be 34. What is the next step in the management of this patient?

(A) Begin intense insulin therapy
(B) Begin glipizide
© Begin pioglitazone
(D) Begin acarbose
(E) Begin metformin

Answer:

(E) Begin metformin

Explanation:

In the obese patient with new-onset, type-2 diabetes mellitus, the initial therapy of choice is metformin. Of all the oral hypoglycemics, metformin is the only medication that results in weight loss and a more favorable lipid profile. Metformin works primarily by suppression of hepatic gluconeogenesis. As a result, this oral medication will never cause hypoglycemia as a side effect.

Topic:

Endocrinology

Record # 24

Question/Fact:

A 56-year-old man presents to the emergency department with complaints of dyspnea on exertion for the last three days. The patient is normally able to walk about eight blocks without any problems, but now can only walk one. He doesn't take any medications and denies alcohol and tobacco use. Vital signs are: temperature 98.7 F, pulse 126/min, blood pressure 124/68 mm Hg, and respirations 18/min. The jugulovenous pressure is elevated, and there is a soft diastolic rumble at the apex with an opening snap. Rales are present at both bases. EKG shows atrial fibrillation at a rate of 126/min. What is the next best step in the management of this patient?

(A) Furosemide
(B) Diltiazem
© Transesophageal echocardiogram
(D) Start coumadin
(E) Mitral valvotomy
(F) Electrical cardioversion

Answer:

(B) Diltiazem

Explanation:

This patient has a diastolic murmur and an opening snap consistent with mitral stenosis. All the therapies described may be useful in the management of mitral stenosis. As is often the case on board tests, all the answers are partially correct. The initial step is to relieve this patient's symptoms by controlling the heart rate. Ventricular filling is impaired by mitral stenosis. The ventricle fills during diastole. The rapid rate of atrial fibrillation shortens diastolic filling time and causes the symptoms. The only therapy listed in the answer choices that controls heart rate is diltiazem. Although furosemide will decompress the lungs, it will not slow the heart rate. And although he may eventually need balloon valvotomy, this would not be done before the heart rate has been controlled. Coumadin will eventually be needed; worrying about a clot that might form in a year is not as important as controlling the symptoms of dyspnea now. It is unlikely that anything found on an echocardiogram will make you not control the rate. The echocardiogram is needed but will not change the initial management. Electrical cardioversion is not indicated for several reasons. First, he is not acutely unstable. The dyspnea is on exertion, not right now. Second, with mitral stenosis and what is surely an accompanying left atrial dilation, he will probably revert back to atrial fibrillation. The more abnormal the atrium is anatomically, the harder it is to successfully cardiovert. Finally, you would not want to cardiovert atrial fibrillation in a patient with three days of symptoms without either a transesophageal echo to exclude a clot or without having given three weeks of anticoagulation prior to the cardioversion.

Topic:

Cardiology

Record # 25

Question/Fact:

A 51-year-old man is admitted to the hospital with the acute onset of hypotension, generalized weakness, and confusion. He has experienced progressive shortness of breath over the past two years, which occurs now even on minimal exertion. He has a history of multiple transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), a pulmonary embolus last year, and a chronic deep venous thrombosis (DVT). Evaluation for a hypercoagulable state was unrevealing. He has been on coumadin over the last year. His temperature is 100.2 F, blood pressure is 80/20 mm Hg, and pulse is 104/min. His skin is hyperpigmented. There is jugular venous distention and small testicles. He has a systolic murmur heard over the third to fourth intercostal space, along the left sternal border. On lung auscultation, there are crackles bilaterally, and the liver edge is palpable 3 cm below the right costal margin. There is bilateral leg edema, and the stool is guaiac-positive. His white cell count is 16,800/mm3. Other laboratory tests show: sodium 122 mEq/L, potassium 5.5 mEq/L, glucose 48 mg/dL, calcium 11.3 mg/dL, BUN 88 mg/dL, and creatinine 2.2 mg/dL. His prothrombin time is 34 seconds, INR is 4.5, and partial thromboplastin time is 64 seconds. The albumin level is 1.2 g/dL, and hematocrit is 28%. What would be most important initial step in the management of this patient?

(A) Order blood transfusion and start normal saline
(B) The cosyntropin stimulation test
© Send blood for cortisol and treat with hydrocortisone and normal saline
(D) Send blood and sputum cultures and start broad-spectrum antibiotics
(E) Vitamin K and fresh frozen plasma

Answer:

© Send blood for cortisol and treat with hydrocortisone and normal saline

Explanation:

Acute adrenal insufficiency must be distinguished from other causes of shock, such as sepsis, the heart, or hemorrhage. Patients with acute adrenal insufficiency may present with headache, nausea, vomiting, mental status changes, hypoglycemia, hyperkalemia, hyponatremia, and hypercalcemia. The blood pressure is usually low. Fever may be as high as 40 C (104 F) or higher. Body fluid cultures may be positive if a bacterial infection is the precipitating cause. Adrenal crisis may occur following stress, trauma, infection, fasting, bilateral adrenalectomy, injury to adrenal glands by trauma, hemorrhage, thrombosis, anticoagulant therapy, or metastatic carcinoma. The diagnosis is made by a simplified cosyntropin-stimulation test. But if the diagnosis is suspected on a clinical basis, you should immediately draw a sample of blood for a cortisol level and start hydrocortisone and saline intravenously without waiting for results. Thereafter, continue hydrocortisone for at least several days. Rapid treatment is lifesaving.

Topic:

Endocrinology

Record # 26

Question/Fact:

A 28-year-old woman presents to your office complaining of fatigue, weakness, anorexia, arthralgias, and some oral ulcers that interfere with eating. She also has been seen by a dermatologist for treatment of an erythematous rash that gets worse with sun exposure. All of these symptoms have been developing slowly over the past several months. Her past medical history is significant a positive PPD, for which she has been taking isoniazid. She also had Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, which is being treated with procainamide. She has had two brief episodes of confusion over the past few months that had resolved spontaneously. There is maculopapular rash on the areas exposed to the sun. Her ANA is positive. The hematocrit is 33.1%, platelets are 112,000/mm3, BUN is 32 mg/dL, and creatinine is 2.2 mg/dL. Her urinalysis shows 2+ protein and some red cell casts. What is the next best step?

(A) Antibody to single-stranded DNA
(B) LE cell preparation
© Antihistone antibodies
(D) Renal biopsy
(E) Antimitochondrial antibody

Answer:

(D) Renal biopsy

Explanation:

Although the patient is on procainamide and isoniazid, which can both give a positive ANA and lupus, her clinical presentation is not consistent with drug-induced lupus. She has very clear renal involvement with proteinuria and red cell casts in the urine, as well as an elevated BUN and creatinine. She also experienced some episodes of confusion, which might be lupus cerebritis. Neither central nervous system nor renal involvement is found with drug-induced lupus. She also has hematological disease, which is rare with drug-induced lupus. The best way to confirm the diagnosis is with a renal biopsy. Antihistone antibodies, LE cells, and single-stranded DNA antibodies can be found in both spontaneous lupus and drug-induced lupus. In addition, the renal biopsy will greatly help in the choice of therapy because it tells us who needs cyclophosphamide or azathioprine in addition to steroids for the management of diffuse proliferative renal disease. Antimitochondrial antibodies are seen with primary biliary cirrhosis, not lupus.

Topic:

Rheumatology

Record # 27

Question/Fact:

A 22-year-old man with a known family history of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) presents to the emergency department with an episode of syncope while climbing the stairs to get to his third-floor apartment. He was started on a beta-blocker twelve months ago but continued to have symptoms of dyspnea and lightheadedness. Verapamil was added six months ago, but he still has had persistent symptoms. What would be the next best step in the management of this patient?

(A) Cardiac transplantation
(B) ACE inhibitors
© Electrophysiology studies
(D) Surgical myomectomy
(E) Injection of absolute alcohol into the myocardium

Answer:

(E) Injection of absolute alcohol into the myocardium

Explanation:

When beta-blockers or negatively inotropic calcium blockers such as verapamil are not effective, the patient will most likely need an anatomic repair of his heart. ACE inhibitors are not only useless but can actually be dangerous by increasing left ventricular emptying and increasing the outflow tract obstruction. Cardiac transplantation should never be tried before a simple attempt at reducing the mass of the ventricular septum is made. Although surgical myomectomy is the traditional procedure, the septum can be reduced in size by using a catheter to inject absolute
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janfeb u Rock!! Thx
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thank you janfeb


is this for Step 3?

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U R GREAAAAAAAAAT
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