FARR Gastrointestinal Flashcards

1
Q

A patient presents with sudden onset of severe, diffuse abdominal pain. Exam reveals peritoneal signs, and AXR reveals free air under the diaphragm. Management?

A

Emergent laparotomy to repair perforated viscus.

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2
Q

he most likely cause of acute lower GI bleed in patients > 40 years of age.

A

Diverticulosis.

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3
Q

Diagnostic modality used when ultrasound is equivocal for cholecystitis.

A

HIDA scan.

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4
Q

Risk factors for cholelithiasis.

A

Fat, female, fertile, forty, flatulent.

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5
Q

Inspiratory arrest during palpation of the RUQ.

A

Murphy’s sign, seen in acute cholecystitis.

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6
Q

The most common cause of SBO in patients with no history of abdominal surgery.

A

Hernia.

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7
Q

The most common cause of SBO in patients with a history of abdominal surgery.

A

Adhesions.

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8
Q
Identify key organisms causing diarrhea:
■ Most common organism
■ Recent antibiotic use
■ Camping
■ Traveler’s diarrhea
■ Church picnics/mayonnaise
■ Uncooked hamburgers
■ Fried rice
■ Poultry/eggs
■ Raw seafood
■ AIDS
■ Pseudoappendicitis
A
Campylobacter 
Clostridium difficile 
Giardia
ETEC
S. aureus
E. coli O157:H7
Bacillus cereus
Salmonella
Vibrio, HAV
Isospora, Cryptosporidium, Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC)
Yersinia
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9
Q

A 25-year-old Jewish man presents with pain and watery diarrhea after meals. Exam shows fistulas between the bowel and skin and nodular lesions on his tibias.

A

Crohn’s disease.

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10
Q

Inflammatory disease of the colon with ↑ risk of colon cancer.

A

Ulcerative colitis (greater risk than Crohn’s).

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11
Q

Extraintestinal manifestations of IBD.

A

Uveitis, ankylosing spondylitis, pyoderma gangrenosum, erythema nodosum, 1° sclerosing cholangitis.

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12
Q

Medical treatment for IBD.

A

5-ASA agents and steroids during acute exacerbations.

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13
Q

Difference between Mallory-Weiss and Boerhaave tears.

A

Mallory-Weiss—superficial tear in the esophageal mucosa; Boerhaave—full-thickness esophageal rupture.

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14
Q

Charcot’s triad.

A

RUQ pain, jaundice, and fever/chills in the setting of ascending cholangitis.

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15
Q

Reynolds’ pentad.

A

Charcot’s triad plus shock and mental status changes, with suppurative ascending cholangitis.

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16
Q

Medical treatment for hepatic encephalopathy.

A

↓ protein intake, lactulose, rifaximin.

17
Q

First step in the management of a patient with an acute GI bleed.

A

Establish the ABCs.

18
Q

A four-year-old child presents with oliguria, petechiae, and jaundice following an illness with bloody diarrhea. Most likely diagnosis and cause?

A

Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) due to E. coli O157: H7.

19
Q

Post-HBV exposure treatment.

A

HBV immunoglobulin.

20
Q

Classic causes of drug-induced hepatitis.

A

TB medications (INH, rifampin, pyrazinamide), acetaminophen, and tetracycline.

21
Q

A 40-year-old obese woman with elevated alkaline phosphatase, elevated bilirubin, pruritus, dark urine, and clay-colored stools.

A

Biliary tract obstruction.

22
Q

Hernia with highest risk of incarceration—indirect, direct, or femoral?

A

Femoral hernia.

23
Q

A 50-year-old man with a history of alcohol abuse presents with boring epigastric pain that radiates to the back and is relieved by sitting forward. Management?

A

Confirm the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis with elevated amylase and lipase. Make the patient NPO and give IV fluids, O2, analgesia, and “tincture of time.”