Rapid Review: Gastrointestinal Flashcards

1
Q

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

A

Emergent laparotomy to repair a perforated viscus

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2
Q

The 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 who 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:

  1. Most common
  2. Recent antibiotic use
  3. Camping
  4. Traveler’s
  5. Church picnics/mayonnaise
  6. Uncooked hamburgers
  7. Fried rice
  8. Poultry/eggs
  9. Raw seafood
  10. AIDS
  11. Pseudoappendicitis
A
  1. Campylobacter
  2. Clostridium difficle
  3. Giardia
  4. ETEC
  5. Staph aureus
  6. E coli O157:H7
  7. Bacillus cereus
  8. Salmonella
  9. Vibrio, HAV
  10. Isospora, Cryptosporidium, Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC)
  11. Yersinia
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9
Q

A 25 year old Jewish man presents with pain and watery diarrhea after meals. Examination 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 an increased 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, primary 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–signs of ascending cholangitis

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15
Q

Reynolds’ Pentad

A

Charcot’s triad plus shock and mental status changes—signs of suppurative ascending cholangitis

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16
Q

Medical treatment for hepatic encephalopathy

A

Decreased protein intake, lactulose, rifaximin

17
Q

The first step in the management of a patient with an acute GI bleed

A

ABCs

18
Q

A 4 year old child presents with oliguria, petechiae, and jaundice following an illness with bloody diarrhea. Most likely diagnosis and cause?

A

Hemolytic uremic syndrome due to E coli O157:H7

19
Q

Post-HBV exposure treatment

A

HBV immunoglubulin

20
Q

Classic causes of drug induced hepatitis

A

TB medications, 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?

A

Femoral

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”