Gastrointestinal Flashcards

1
Q

A 52-year-old man presents with a 6-month history of heartburn and atypical chest pain, both unrelated to food. He also described ‘gurgling’ sounds in his chest. A month before presentation he developed intermittent dysphagia to both solids and liquids, regurgitation, and weight loss of 3 kg.

A

Achalasia

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2
Q

A 65-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with a 2-day history of progressive RUQ pain that she rates as 9/10. She reports experiencing fever, and being unable to eat or drink due to nausea and abdominal pain at baseline, exacerbated by food ingestion. Her bowel movements are less frequent and have started to become loose but with no diarrhoea, bright red blood, or black tarry stools. Her pain is not relieved by bowel movement and is not related to food. She has not recently taken antibiotics, nor does she use non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or drink alcohol. On examination, she is febrile at 39.4°C (102.9°F); supine BP is 97/58 mmHg; standing BP is 76/41 mmHg; HR is 127 bpm; and respiratory rate is 24 breaths per minute with normal oxygen saturation. Her examination is remarkable for scleral and sublingual icterus, tachycardia, RUQ pain with no rebound, and involuntary guarding on the right side. She has elevated WCC, ALT, ALP and bilirubin.

A

Cholangitis

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3
Q

A 45-year-old alcoholic man presents to the emergency department with restlessness and tremors. He is anxious, pacing in the hallway. Initial vital signs show a heart rate of 121 beats per minute and blood pressure of 169/104 mmHg; other vital signs are normal. On further questioning by the nurse he states that he is nauseous and wants something to help with the shakes.

A

Alcohol withdrawal

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4
Q

A 50-year-old man presents to his general practitioner with complaints of fatigue for 2 months. The patient also notes distension of his abdomen and shortness of breath beginning 2 weeks ago. His wife reports that the patient has been having episodes of confusion lately. The patient has a significant medical history of chronic heavy alcohol consumption of about half a pint of vodka daily for around 20 years. On physical exam the patient is noted to have scleral icterus, tremors of both hands, and spider angiomata on the chest. There is abdominal distension with presence of shifting dullness, fluid waves, and splenomegaly. Laboratory examination shows low haemoglobin, low platelets, low sodium, AST elevation > ALT elevation, and high PT and INR. Ultrasound of the abdomen shows liver hyperechogenicity, portal hypertension, splenomegaly, and ascites.

A

Alcoholic liver disease

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5
Q

A 38-year-old man presents to the emergency department for severe alcohol abuse with nausea and vomiting. He has a significant medical history of chronic heavy alcohol consumption of half a pint of vodka daily for about 5 years until 1 year ago; since then he has had severe intermittent binge alcohol intake. He reports no other significant medical problems. The patient is confused and slightly obtunded, and hepatomegaly is discovered on physical exam. His BMI is 22. Pertinent positive laboratory values show low haemoglobin, AST elevation > ALT elevation, normal PT and INR, and very high serum alcohol level. Ultrasound of the abdomen shows fatty infiltration in the liver.

A

Alcoholic liver disease

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6
Q

A 79-year-old man presents with dyspnoea on exertion for 1 year and lower extremity oedema. As part of a cardiac work-up, the echo shows concentric left ventricular hypertrophy. Cardiac catheterisation shows normal coronary arteries and he is referred for further evaluation of non-cardiac dyspnoea.

A

Amyloidosis

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7
Q

A 62-year-old man is referred for management of atypical multiple myeloma. He has a mild anaemia of 120 g/L (12 g/dL), a urinary protein loss of 2.2 g/day with a urinary immunofixation showing free lambda light chains. However, the bone marrow shows only 5% plasma cells and does not fulfil criteria for multiple myeloma.

A

Amyloidosis

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8
Q

A 28-year-old woman presents with a history of severe pain on defecation for the last 3 months. She has noticed a small amount of blood on the stool. The pain is severe and she is worried about the pain she will experience with the next bowel action.

A

Anal fissure

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9
Q

A 22-year-old male presents to the emergency department with abdominal pain, anorexia, nausea, and low-grade fever. Pain started in the mid-abdominal region 6 hours ago and is now in the right lower quadrant of the abdomen. The pain was steady in nature and aggravated by coughing. Physical examination reveals a low-grade fever (38°C; 100.5°F), pain on palpation at right lower quadrant (McBurney’s sign), and leukocytosis (12 x 10^9/L or 12,000/microlitre) with 85% neutrophils.

A

Appendicitis

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10
Q

A 12-year-old girl presents with sudden-onset severe generalised abdominal pain associated with nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea. On examination she appears unwell and has a temperature of 40°C (104°F). Her abdomen is tense with generalised tenderness and guarding. No bowel sounds are present.

A

Appendicitis

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11
Q

A 45-year-old woman presents with insidious onset of fatigue, malaise, lethargy, anorexia, nausea, abdominal discomfort, mild pruritus, and arthralgia involving the small joints. Her past medical history includes coeliac disease. Physical examination reveals hepatomegaly and spider angiomata.

A

Autoimmune hepatitis

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12
Q

A 55-year-old obese man presents with frequent heartburn. He describes a post-prandial, retrosternal burning sensation following fatty and spicy meals. This symptom also frequently wakes him from sleep, with occasional coughing and a sour taste in his throat. He has tried many OTC antacids, which only relieve symptoms in the short term. He has suffered from this symptom for over 10 years. He denies dysphagia, odynophagia, or weight loss, but reports frequent hoarseness in the mornings. His past medical history is significant only for HTN. His family history is unremarkable. He did smoke cigarettes, but stopped 5 years ago.

A

Barrett’s oesophagus

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13
Q

A 65-year-old woman presents to her primary care physician with a 4-month history of intermittent abdominal pain localised to the RUQ with radiation to the epigastrium; the pain increases with the ingestion of fatty food and decreases with fasting. In the last 2 weeks the pain has been more frequent and steady. The patient complains of nausea, pruritus, anorexia, and weight loss, which she relates to the lack of appetite. At physical examination, there is RUQ tenderness and jaundice of the conjunctival sclera. No lymphadenopathy or palpable masses are found.

A

Cholangiocarcinoma

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14
Q

A 20-year-old obese woman with a 2-year history of gallstones presents to the emergency department with severe, constant RUQ pain, nausea, and vomiting after eating fried chicken for dinner. She denies any chest pain or diarrhoea. Three months ago she developed intermittent, sharp RUQ pains. On physical examination she has a temperature of 38°C (100.4°F), moderate RUQ tenderness on palpation, but no evidence of jaundice.

A

Cholecystitis

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15
Q

A 56-year-old man with a remote history of intravenous drug use presents to an initial visit complaining of increased abdominal girth but denies jaundice. He drinks about 2 to 4 glasses of wine with dinner and recalls having had abnormal liver enzymes in the past. Physical examination reveals telangiectasias, a palpable firm liver, mild splenomegaly, and shifting dullness consistent with the presence of ascites. Liver function is found to be deranged with elevated aminotransferases (AST: 90 U/L, ALT: 87 U/L), and the patient is positive for anti-hepatitis C antibody.

A

Cirrhosis

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16
Q

A 60-year-old woman with a past medical history of obesity, diabetes, and dyslipidaemia is noted to have abnormal liver enzymes with elevated aminotransferases (ALT: 68 U/L, AST: 82 U/L), and normal alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin. She denies significant alcohol consumption, and tests for viral hepatitis and autoimmune markers are negative. An abdominal ultrasound reveals evidence of fatty infiltration of the liver and slight enlargement of the spleen.

A

Cirrhosis

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17
Q

A 46-year-old woman presents with fatigue and is found to have iron deficiency with anaemia. She has experienced intermittent episodes of mild diarrhoea for many years, previously diagnosed as irritable bowel syndrome and lactose intolerance. She has no current significant gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhoea, bloating, or abdominal pain. Examination reveals two oral aphthous ulcers and pallor. Abdominal examination is normal and results of faecal testing for occult blood are negative.

A

Coeliac disease

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18
Q

A 9-year-old boy presents with vomiting for 5 days. His growth has been normal and he has not experienced any other possible symptoms of coeliac disease, except for intermittent constipation. Immunoglobulin A-tissue transglutaminase titre is 5 times the upper limit of normal.

A

Coeliac disease

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19
Q

A 70-year-old man presents to his primary care physician with a complaint of rectal bleeding. He describes blood mixed in with the stool, which is associated with a change in his normal bowel habit such that he is going more frequently than normal. He has also experienced some crampy left-sided abdominal pain and weight loss. He has previously been fit and well and there was no family history of GI disease. Examination of his abdomen and digital rectal examination are normal.

A

Colorectal carcinoma

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20
Q

A 25-year-old white man presents to his general practitioner with cramping abdominal pain for 2 days. He reports having loose stools and losing 6.8 kg over a 3-month duration. He also reports increased fatigue. On physical examination, his temperature is 37.6°C (99.6°F). Other vital signs are within normal limits. Abdomen is soft with normal bowel sounds and moderate tenderness in the right lower quadrant, without guarding or rigidity. Rectal examination is normal and the stool is guaiac positive. The rest of the examination is unremarkable.

A

Crohn’s disease

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21
Q

A 16-year-old girl presents to emergency care with perianal pain and discharge. She reports a 2-year history of intermittent bloody diarrhoea with nocturnal symptoms. On examination, she is apyrexial with normal vital signs. Her abdomen is soft and slightly tender on palpation in the left lower quadrant. Rectal examination is difficult to perform due to pain, but an area of erythematous swelling is visible close to the anal margin, discharging watery pus from its apex. Several anal tags are also present.

A

Crohn’s disease

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22
Q

A 57-year-old female with history of hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia presents to the emergency department with a 24-hour history of gradually worsening left-lower quadrant abdominal pain associated with nausea and vomiting. Prior to this episode, the patient did not have any significant gastrointestinal (GI) problems, except slight constipation and occasional dyspepsia after heavy meals. She felt feverish but did not take her temperature. Her family history is negative for GI disorders.

A

Diverticular disease

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23
Q

A 32-year-old obese, but otherwise healthy, male presents to the emergency department with onset of acute lower abdominal pain of 2-hour duration. He has no fever and there is no history of any previous significant illness, except loud snoring, possible sleep apnoea, and being overweight.

A

Diverticular disease

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24
Q

A 34-year-old mother of three presents to her family physician with a 3-week history of abdominal cramping pain in both lower quadrants. She has been having frequent small, soft stools accompanied by some mucus but no blood. Her symptoms are improved with bowel movement or passage of flatus. She has had these symptoms almost monthly since she was in college, but they have been worse recently. Past history is negative except for three normal pregnancies. Family history is negative for colon cancer. A sister has similar symptoms but has not seen a physician. Personal/social history reveals that she is an accountant working long hours. Her firm is about to merge with another, and she fears her job situation is tenuous. Review of systems is otherwise negative. She has not lost any weight or had any other constitutional symptoms. On physical examination, the only finding is some mild tenderness in the right lower quadrant. No mass is felt.

A

irritable bowel syndrome

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25
Q

A 40-year-old housewife complains of recurrent constipation. She has had problems since her 20s, but they are worse now. The constipation is accompanied by abdominal bloating and abdominal pain, and the discomfort is only better when she has a bowel movement. On her gynaecologist’s advice, she has tried more fibre in her diet, including fresh fruits and leafy vegetables, but that has only made the bloating worse. Her past history includes a cholecystectomy and a hysterectomy. Physical examination is entirely normal. Rectal examination reveals normal consistency stool. Stool samples test negative for occult blood.

A

irritable bowel syndrome

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26
Q

A 46-year-old obese woman presents with a 6-hour history of moderate steady pain in the RUQ that began after eating dinner and radiates through to her back. This pain gradually increased and became constant over the last few hours. She has had previous episodes of similar pain for which she has not sought medical advice. Her vital signs are normal. The pertinent findings on physical examination are tenderness to palpation in the right upper quadrant without guarding or rebound.

A

Cholelithiasis (gallstones and biliary colic)

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27
Q

A 77-year-old man presents to his general practitioner with weight loss of 6.8 kg (15 lbs) and a 3-month history of dysphagia and abdominal pain. The only abnormal finding on physical examination is stools positive for occult blood. He is referred for an upper endoscopy, which shows an exophytic, ulcerated mass in the cardia of the stomach.

A

Gastric cancer

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28
Q

A 42-year-old woman has heartburn after meals and a sour taste in her mouth. For the past 4 to 6 months she has had symptoms several times per week. Symptoms are worse when she lies down or bends over. Antacids help somewhat. The patient has no dysphagia, vomiting, abdominal pain, exertional symptoms, melaena, or weight loss. Past medical history and family history are non-contributory. The patient drinks alcohol occasionally and does not smoke. On physical examination, height is 1.63 m (5 feet 4 inches), weight 77.1 kg, and BP 140/88 mmHg. The remainder of the examination is unremarkable.

A

GORD

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29
Q

A 42-year-old man presents with a 48-hour history of bloody diarrhoea. He has been opening his bowels 6 to 8 times per day, and has associated nausea, lethargy, and generalised abdominal discomfort. There is no recent travel history. He lives with his wife and 2 children, who are all well. They had a meal in a restaurant 5 days ago, when he ate a beef burger and French fries. A friend who was with them ate the same meal and has developed similar symptoms. Exam shows a low-grade pyrexia (37.5°C) but is otherwise unremarkable. FBC reveals a raised white cell count (15,000/mm^3). Stool culture results are available 3 days later and are positive for Escherichia coli

A

Gastroenteritis

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30
Q

A 21-year-old woman presents with profuse watery diarrhoea 15 to 20 times per day. There is associated nausea, anorexia, and lethargy. She returned 4 days ago from Kenya, where she had tried many local delicacies, often from street vendors. On exam she has dry mucous membranes and reduced skin turgor. She is hypotensive (blood pressure 95/50 mmHg) and tachycardic (pulse 110 bpm). Abdominal exam is unremarkable. She responds well to intravenous fluid replacement, with resolution of her symptoms within 48 hours. Stool cultures are subsequently positive for enterotoxigenic E coli (ETEC).

A

Gastroenteritis

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31
Q

A 30-year-old man with a history of ulcerative colitis presents with severe abdominal pain and distention. He is currently being treated for an acute colitis flare characterised by 20 bloody bowel movements daily, fevers to 38.9°C (102°F), and left upper quadrant pain. Physical examination reveals tachycardia and hypotension. Abdominal examination shows distention with signs of focal peritonitis in the left lower quadrant.

A

Toxic colitis

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32
Q

A 60-year-old woman presents to the accident and emergency department with a 4-day history of watery diarrhoea, fevers, and worsening abdominal pain. Her significant past medical history includes sinusitis, for which she has been taking antibiotics for the past 3 weeks. On physical examination, she is tachycardic and febrile, and her abdominal examination reveals diffuse abdominal tenderness and distention.

A

Toxic colitis

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33
Q

A 68-year-old male presents to A&E with acute onset of severe upper abdominal pain which is worse on breathing, which radiates to the back and shoulders. On examination, he has board like rigidity in his abdomen, with marked guarding and tenderness. His CXR revelas air under the diaphragm. He recently underwent abdominal surgery to repair a left inguinal hernia.

A

GI perforation

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34
Q

A 57-year-old man is evaluated for progressive arthralgias. There is swelling and tenderness over the first, second, and third metacarpophalangeal joints of both hands. Findings on hand radiographs are suggestive of calcium pyrophosphate deposition. Iron studies are obtained, showing a transferrin saturation of 88% and serum ferritin of nearly 2700 picomols/L (1200 nanograms/mL).

A

Haemochromatosis

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35
Q

A 50-year-old man with a history of obesity and heavy alcohol use presents with a 2-month history of weakness, jaundice, and ascites. Laboratory testing shows a transferrin saturation of 76% and ferritin of 11,000 picomols/L (5000 nanograms/mL). Imaging studies demonstrate a cirrhotic-appearing liver with an ill-defined mass in the right lobe and multiple pulmonary nodules suspicious for metastases. Hepatic iron overload with metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma is confirmed at autopsy.

A

Haemochromatosis

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36
Q

A 42-year-old man presents to his primary care physician complaining of a 3-month history of lower intestinal bleeding. He describes the bleeding as painless, bright blood appearing on the tissue following a bowel movement. He has had 2 episodes recently where blood was visible in the toilet bowl following defecation. He denies any abdominal pain and any family history of GI malignancy. Physical examination reveals a healthy man with the only finding being bright blood on the examining finger following a digital rectal examination.

A

Haemorrhoids

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37
Q

A 28-year-old woman presents complaining of rectal pain of 3 days’ duration. She states that on the day before the onset of symptoms she had been moving boxes at her home. She describes the pain as sharp and present constantly, but worse with bowel movements or sitting. She denies any fevers or chills or perianal discharge. Physical examination reveals a 2-cm, painful, bluish lesion adjacent to the anal canal.

A

Haemorrhoids

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38
Q

A 60-year-old Asian man with a long-standing history of chronic hepatitis B virus complicated by cirrhosis presents to his primary care physician with abdominal distension, yellow eyes, right upper quadrant (RUQ) abdominal pain, decreased appetite, weight loss, and change in his sleep pattern for several weeks. Physical examination reveals a cachectic man with jaundice, palmar erythema, ascites, a palpable mass in RUQ, and asterixis.

A

Hepatocellular carcinoma

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39
Q

A 55-year-old black man with a history of intravenous drug use, heavy alcohol drinking, and chronic hepatitis C virus with cirrhosis of the liver is referred to a liver specialist with an elevated serum alpha fetoprotein of 200 micrograms/L (200 ng/mL) and a 2 cm liver mass in the screening ultrasound of the abdomen. Physical examination reveals palmar erythema, bilateral leg oedema, and ascites.

A

Hepatocellular carcinoma

40
Q

A 68-year-old female presents to his primary medical doctor with a 3-week history of a dull dragging discomfort in his right groin toward the end of the day. The discomfort is associated with a lump while standing but disappears when lying supine. He denies any other significant past medical or surgical history. On physical examination, a bulge is present when standing that disappears when supine.

A

Inguinal hernia

41
Q

A 70-year-old female presents with a small, firm, non-reducible lump inferior and lateral to the pubic tubercle, which disappears when you push it straight back

A

Femoral hernia (reducible)

42
Q

A 51-year-old man with moderate obesity (body mass index of 34 kg/m²) is seen in consultation for heartburn and regurgitation. He has a diagnosis of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease and has been treated with proton-pump inhibitors. His heartburn is less severe with the medication, but he is still bothered by regurgitation. His physical examination is unremarkable. A barium oesophagram and upper endoscopy demonstrate a type I (sliding) hiatus hernia, with about one third of the upper stomach in the chest. The patient has free reflux to the level of the cervical oesophagus.

A

Hiatus hernia

43
Q

A 72-year-old male presents to the emergency department with sudden-onset, diffuse abdominal pain that began 18 hours ago. He has not been vomiting, but he has had several episodes of diarrhoea, the last of which was bloody. He was hospitalised 1 week ago for an acute MI.

A

Intestinal ischaemia

44
Q

A 48-year-old female complains of intermittent diffuse abdominal pain, worse after eating meals. The pain has been present for the previous 6 months, but has worsened recently. She has had significant weight loss since the onset of symptoms. Her past medical history includes SLE, which has been difficult to manage medically.

A

Intestinal ischaemia

45
Q

A 27-year-old male presents with crampy abdominal pain of sudden onset, emesis, and failure to pass any flatus or stool for 24 hours. The patient has no history of prior surgery. Physical examination reveals peritonitis, and abdominal x-rays demonstrate air-fluid levels.

A

Small bowel obstruction

46
Q

A 43-year-old female with a prior history of open cholecystectomy presents with gradual onset of nausea, vomiting, absolute constipation, and abdominal distention. Physical examination does not demonstrate peritonitis. Abdominal x-rays demonstrate scattered air-fluid levels.

A

Small bowel obstruction

47
Q

A man in his early 70s presents with acute-onset, colicky, lower abdominal pain and distension, failing to pass flatus or faeces in the preceding 12 to 24 hours. He reports a recent change in his bowel habit with increased frequency of defecation, some weight loss, and the passage of blood mixed with his stools. On examination he is generally unwell, is pyrexial, and has a distended tympanic abdomen along the distribution of the large bowel, with tenderness in the right lower quadrant. He has an empty rectum on digital rectal examination.

A

Large bowel obstruction

48
Q

A healthy 55-year-old man presents with a 1-week history of fevers, chills, fatigue, and anorexia, followed by right shoulder pain, paroxysmal cough, and generalised abdominal pain. He is ill-appearing, and his physical examination is notable for a temperature of 38.3°C (101°F) and a tender liver edge that is palpated approximately 2 cm below the right costal margin. Percussion or movement worsens the pain.

A

Liver abscess

49
Q

A 57-year-old male presents with a large palpable abdominal mass in the RUQ and hepatomegaly. He has a distended abdomen. His bloods show mildly elevated LFTs.

A

Liver cyst (PCLD=polycystic liver disease)

50
Q

A 48-year-old woman with a history of migraine headaches presents to the emergency department with altered mental status over the last several hours. She was found by her husband, earlier in the day, to be acutely disorientated and increasingly somnolent. On physical examination, she has scleral icterus, mild right upper quadrant tenderness, and asterixis. Preliminary laboratory studies are notable for a serum ALT of 6498 units/L, total bilirubin of 95.8 micromol/L (5.6 mg/dL), and INR of 6.8. Her husband reports that she has consistently been taking pain medications and started taking additional 500-mg paracetamol pills several days ago for lower back pain. Further history reveals a medication list with multiple paracetamol-containing preparations.

A

Acute liver failure

51
Q

A 48-year-old man presents to hospital after several episodes of vomiting blood following periods of forceful retching and vomiting. He had been binge drinking alcohol over the preceding 2 days.

A

Mallory-Weiss tear

52
Q

A 64-year-old man presents to hospital after 4 episodes of vomiting over the past 2 days. He describes the appearance of the vomit as resembling coffee grounds. Black, tarry stool was seen during rectal examination; however, no other physical findings were seen.

A

Mallory-Weiss tear

53
Q

A 42-year-old man is referred to the liver clinic with mild elevation in alkaline phosphatase and aminotransferases for several years. He has a medical history significant for obesity, hypertension, and hypercholesterolaemia. He does not smoke or drink alcohol and there is no high-risk behaviour. He has a family history of premature cardiac disease. He is taking a diuretic and discontinued a statin several months ago. Other than complaints of mild fatigue, the patient feels well. Examination is notable for a BMI of 37 kg/m^2, truncal obesity, and mild hepatomegaly.

A

NASH

54
Q

A 63-year-old woman is admitted to the hospital with new-onset ascites. She has a history of long-standing diabetes and hypertension. She has never formally been given a diagnosis of liver disease. Despite increasing abdominal distension, she has lost 13.5 kg in the last year. Physical examination reveals a lethargic-appearing woman with temporal wasting, massive ascites, and 2+ pitting oedema. She has numerous spider nevi over her chest wall and marked palmar erythema.

A

NASH

55
Q

A 55-year-old man presents with severe dysphagia to solids and worsening dysphagia to liquids. His social history is significant for 40 pack-year cigarette smoking and a 6-pack of beer per day. He has lost over 10% of his body weight and currently is nourished only by milkshake supplements. He complains of some mild odynophagia and is constantly coughing up mucus secretions.

A

Oesophageal cancer

56
Q

An otherwise healthy 45-year-old male executive complains of heartburn. He has tried over-the-counter medications with no relief. He was tried on a course of proton pump inhibitors for 6 weeks, but still has heartburn. He has no weight loss or dysphagia.

A

Oesophageal cancer

57
Q

A 70-year-old man who smokes heavily presents with a 6-month history of intermittent abdominal pain and nausea. He has lost 10 kg of weight in the past 2 months, which he thinks is due to a decreased appetite, and he complains of pruritus. On physical examination there is icterus in the conjunctival sclerae and epigastric tenderness but no abdominal mass or lymphadenopathy. Blood tests demonstrate elevated bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase; the rest of the blood tests are within the normal range.

A

Pancreatic cancer

58
Q

A 45-year-old woman presents to her physician with vague upper abdominal (epigastric) pain. After treatment with proton-pump inhibitors, analgesics, and antacids over a period of 3 months, which were ineffective, the patient also started to experience back pain. This prompted an initial upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, which was normal. Nearly 4 months after initial presentation, an upper abdominal ultrasound reveals a pancreatic mass with liver metastases.

A

Pancreatic cancer

59
Q

A 53-year-old man presents to the emergency department complaining of severe mid-epigastric abdominal pain that radiates to the back. The pain improves when the patient leans forwards or assumes the fetal position and worsens with deep inspiration and movement. He also complains of nausea, vomiting, and anorexia, and gives a history of heavy alcoholic intake this past week. He is tachycardic, tachypnoeic, and febrile with hypotension. He is slightly agitated and confused. He is diaphoretic with decreased breath sounds over the base of the left lung

A

Acute pancreatitis

60
Q

A 47-year-old overweight woman is admitted with generalised abdominal pain. She has been unable to eat or drink due to nausea and vomiting. She states the pain started in the right upper quadrant, similar to previous episodes that she had been to the emergency department with over the past few months. An ultrasound obtained on her last visit to the emergency department revealed gallstones with no inflammation of the gallbladder, and she was told that she should see a surgeon. She looks jaundiced and in distress. She has point tenderness under her ribs on the right, which is worsened with deep palpation. No mass is palpable.

A

Acute pancreatitis

61
Q

A 41-year-old alcoholic man has a 6-year history of recurrent attacks of pancreatitis characterised by epigastric pain radiating to the back. The initial attack required hospitalisation for severe pain, and clinical chemistry showed a >15-fold elevation in serum amylase and lipase. Subsequent attacks were less severe, managed primarily as an outpatient, and lasted less than 10 days, with long symptom-free intervals. After detoxification 6 months ago he had no further attacks, but has recently developed evidence of diabetes and steatorrhoea. Computed tomography imaging shows pancreatic calcifications but no cystic or mass lesions.

A

Chronic pancreatitis

62
Q

A 40-year-old man presents to his primary care physician with a 2-month history of intermittent upper abdominal pain. He describes the pain as a dull, gnawing ache. The pain sometimes wakes him at night, is relieved by food and drinking milk, and is helped partially by ranitidine. He had a similar but milder episode about 5 years ago, which was treated with omeprazole. Physical examination reveals a fit, apparently healthy man in no distress. The only abnormal finding is mild epigastric tenderness on palpation of the abdomen.

A

Peptic ulcer disease

63
Q

A 42-year-old man presents with a recent history of abdominal pain, distension, and nausea. Urea breath testing for Helicobacter pylori is positive.

A

Gastritis

64
Q

A 58-year-old white woman of North European descent presents with a 2-month history of increasing fatigue, difficulty with ambulation, and memory deficits. Family history is notable for autoimmune disease. Laboratory findings are remarkable for a macrocytic anaemia, a markedly reduced serum vitamin B₁₂, and presence of anti-parietal cell antibodies.

A

Gastritis

65
Q

A 32-year-old man presents to the emergency department complaining of perineal pain and swelling. The symptoms began 24 hours earlier and have become progressively worse. The patient denies any rectal bleeding and describes the pain as very severe and localised to the area of the swelling. He relates a subjective history of fever but denies any change in bowel habits. He also denies any history of recent or chronic medical problems.

A

Perineal abscess/fistulae

66
Q

A 53-year-old man with a history of hepatitis C presents with a complaint of abdominal distention, fever, vomiting, and blood in his stool. He has presented numerous times previously with abdominal distention and has received paracenteses, which have improved the symptoms.

A

Peritonitis

67
Q

A 46-year-old woman with a history of long-standing alcoholism and previous episodes of hepatic encephalopathy presents with altered mental status and worsening abdominal distention.

A

Peritonitis

68
Q

A 20-year-old man reports chronic offensive discharge of pus and blood from his natal cleft. He relates that several months previously he had a ‘boil’ in the same region, which was painful and then burst spontaneously. On examination, the patient has dense body hair. There are several sinus tracts in the midline or just lateral to the natal cleft, from which offensive-smelling discharge can be expressed.

A

Pilonidal disease

69
Q

A 40-year-old woman presents with acute onset of upper abdominal pain and ascites. She has been on the combined oral contraceptive pill for 7 years. On examination she has tender hepatomegaly. There is no hepatojugular reflux and no lower limb oedema. Cardiovascular exam revealed no medical abnormalities. She is known to have polycythaemia vera of 10 years’ duration.

A

Budd-Chiari syndrome

70
Q

A 50-year-old man with a history of essential thrombocytosis of 12 years’ duration presents with mild jaundice and vague RUQ pain. Physical examination reveals minimal ascites, hepatomegaly, and splenomegaly.

A

Budd-Chiari syndrome

71
Q

A 50-year-old woman undergoing health screening is found to have a cholestatic pattern on her LFT results. Her alkaline phosphatase and gamma-GT concentrations are elevated, although transaminases, bilirubin, and albumin concentrations are normal. On questioning she mentions that she had been getting increasingly tired over the past few years but felt that this was simply a result of her age and work pattern. She also describes occasional itch that feels as if it is deep underneath the skin and that is not associated with a rash. She had no other past medical history but had a family member who had autoimmune thyroid disease. Clinical examination reveals no abnormal findings other than excoriations related to itch and xanthelasmata around the eyes.

A

Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC)

72
Q

A 43-year-old man with a history of mild ulcerative colitis is noted to have an elevated serum alkaline phosphatase, slightly elevated aminotransferases, and normal bilirubin on routine laboratory testing. He complains of fatigue and upper abdominal pain. He denies pruritus or fevers. Physical examination is unremarkable.

A

Primary sclerosing cholangitis

73
Q

A 94-year-old male presents with a history of blood stained faeces and rectal pain, especially on straining. Examination reveals a protruding mass per rectum.

A

Rectal prolapse

74
Q

A 27-year-old man with a 3-month history of rectal bleeding and diarrhoea is referred for evaluation. Laboratory tests show mild anaemia, a slightly elevated sedimentation rate, and the presence of white blood cells in stool. Stool culture is negative. Colonoscopy shows continuous active inflammation with loss of vascular pattern and friability from the anal verge up to 35 cm, with a sharp cut-off. The colonic mucosa above 35 cm appears normal, as does the terminal ileum. Biopsy specimens show active chronic colitis.

A

Ulcerative colitis

75
Q

A 34-year-old man presents 2 weeks after returning from a month-long trip to India. He denies attending pre-travel vaccination clinic and did not take prophylaxis of any sort while in India. He reports a 6-day history of malaise, anorexia, abdominal pain, nausea with emesis, and dark urine. He admits to dietary indiscretion and consumed salad at a road-side vendor 3 weeks before onset of symptoms. On examination there is icterus. His alanine transaminase (ALT) is 5660 units/L, and total bilirubin 153.9 micromols/L (9 mg/dL). Serum IgM anti-hepatitis A virus (HAV) antibodies are detected.

A

Hepatitis A (viral)

76
Q

A 60-year-old man presents with several months of gradually worsening abdominal swelling, intermittent haematemesis, and dark stool. He denies chest pain or difficulty breathing. Past medical and family history are not contributory. Past surgical history is significant for back surgery requiring blood transfusion in 1990. Social history is significant for occasional alcohol use. BP is 110/80 mmHg. Physical examination is significant for spider angiomata on the upper chest, gynaecomastia, caput medusae, and a fluid wave of the abdomen. The rest of the examination is normal.

A

Hepatitis C (viral)

77
Q

A 62-year-old man presents for a routine initial visit in New York. He has occasional arthralgia or myalgia, and takes an ACE inhibitor and a thiazide diuretic for hypertension. A retired accountant and non-smoker, he drinks 1 or 2 beers per week and denies current drug use. Physical examination is normal except for being overweight. Routine blood chemistries are normal, but a screening hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody test is positive. At follow-up, the patient is concerned about whether he will develop liver problems. He had heard on television that new oral medications are easier to take than older regimens that used injections and asks about the next diagnostic and treatment steps.

A

Hepatitis C (viral)

78
Q

A 40-year-old asymptomatic man presents for a routine visit with elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level (55 international units [IU]/mL). His mother died of hepatocellular carcinoma and he has a middle-aged sister with “hepatitis B infection”. He has a normal physical examination and has no stigmata of chronic liver disease.

A

Hepatitis B (viral)

79
Q

A 68-year-old man presents for a routine physical examination and follow-up for his hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, and hypothyroidism. He complains of mild fatigue but is otherwise healthy. Laboratory evaluation is remarkable for a haematocrit of 0.34 (34%), with an MCV of 110 fL (110 micrometres^3). On further query, he denies alcohol use and any other symptoms.

A

Vitamin B12 deficiency

80
Q

A 70-year-old man presents for routine physical examination. He complains of fatigue, shortness of breath, and painful swallowing. He admits to daily alcohol consumption and decreased consumption of fresh vegetables and fruits. Physical examination reveals pallor, glossitis, flow murmur, and normal neurological examination.

A

Folate deficiency

81
Q

A 19-year-old man presents with a 4-month history of problems seeing at night time. He is otherwise fit and well, with no significant past medical or ocular history. He has a grandfather who is registered as partially sighted, although he is unsure of the cause. General medical examination is unremarkable. The patient’s visual acuity is 6/6 (Snellen chart) and confrontational fields appear constricted in both eyes. The optic discs appear pale on examination with a direct ophthalmoscope.

A

Vitamin A deficiency –> causing night blindness

82
Q

A 55-year-old male smoker is admitted with pneumonia. He lives alone and has been unemployed for several years, receiving unemployment benefit but no additional social support. He is unkempt and thin, with a BMI of 19 kg/m^2. His LFTs show moderately raised transaminases (AST 82 IU/L, ALT 130 IU/L) and gamma-glutamyl transferase (300 IU/L). On admission the patient seems confused. This is attributed to fever from the underlying sepsis, and intravenous fluids, including dextrose (which can precipitate Wernicke’s encephalopathy), are commenced. The following day it is noted that the man is increasingly confused and requiring full nursing support as he is too unsteady to stand unaided. The ward doctor notes that he has nystagmus. High alcohol intake is queried, but no independent social history is available. The patient gradually improves but has continuing problems with his memory and seems to invent events to compensate for this. He remains unsteady on his feet and is found to have poor sensation in his lower limbs. The patient is judged no longer able to care for himself, and is admitted to a nursing home for long-term care.

A

Vitamin B1 deficiency (N.B. causes Wernicke’s encephalopathy and beri beri)

83
Q

A 60-year-old woman with a 2-month history of poor appetite and vomiting is found to have gastric cancer on endoscopy. She undergoes a surgical resection but develops an enterocutaneous fistula. Treatment involves resting the bowel, and feeding with total parenteral nutrition is commenced. After 10 days the patient becomes hypotensive, tachypnoeic, and tachycardic. She is found to have a metabolic acidosis with a plasma lactate of 5 mmol/L.

A

Vitamin B1 deficiency (N.B. causes Wernicke’s encephalopathy and beri beri)

84
Q

A 49-year-old man is admitted to hospital with mental confusion and disorientation. He is a chronic alcoholic who has been admitted to hospital 5 times over the past 8 years. His sister reports that he has lost his appetite and has been unable to eat for a few days prior to hospitalisation. He is emaciated, confused, disorientated, and agitated because of hallucinations. He has delirium tremens and is markedly ataxic. GI symptoms include anorexia, diarrhoea, and vomiting. He has glossitis and skin lesions that appear as vesicles over the extremities. Eczema-like lesions around the nose and mouth, as well as desquamation and roughened skin over the hands, are also present. Neurological examination reveals gait disturbance and extrapyramidal rigidity. Laboratory tests indicate anaemia. His serum proteins are less than 6 g/L and LFTs show marked elevations of AST and ALT. [7] The urinary 2-pyridone/N-methylnicotinamide ratio was <0.5 (mg/g creatinine).

A

Vitamin B3 deficiency (N.B. leads to pellagra)

85
Q

A 15-year-old girl with anorexia nervosa has been abusing laxatives and vomiting in addition to starving herself over a period of 8 months. Her BMI is currently 17 kg/m^2. She has erythema on sun-exposed areas, glossitis, and stomatitis. She also has nausea, occasional diarrhoea, paralysis of the extremities, and fatigue. In addition, she is suffering from anxiety and depression. The only notable laboratory findings reveal a decreased level of 24-hour urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. She is given 150 mg of oral nicotinic acid (niacin), and within 48 hours her symptoms resolve.

A

Vitamin B3 deficiency (N.B. leads to pellagra)

86
Q

In a winter following a severe drought, 4 members of a family of subsistence farmers living in an area of conflict present to a medical outpost with varying degrees of fatigue, joint pains, bleeding gums, and thinning hair. One family member, a 3-year-old girl, cannot walk due to leg pains. Although there was fighting nearby, they have not been to refugee camps or received assistance from any public outreach programmes. Examination reveals varying clinical findings including gingival friability with loose teeth, ecchymoses on the limbs and torso, and friable corkscrew hairs. One of the adults has a painful knee effusion; another has peripheral oedema without cardiac murmur. Other community members experienced similar illness and fatalities 10 years prior, during a similarly poor year of farming.

A

Vitamin C deficiency

87
Q

A slender 6-year-old boy with autism presents with gait disturbance. Although he does not complain of pain, his parents had initially noted limping and an eventual unusual gait with wincing. He has been doing well since enrolling in an early intervention programme at age 4, but his family is concerned about regression in behavioural and social milestones over the last few weeks. He maintains a stable height and weight trajectory on growth charts (25th percentile height, 5th percentile weight), without any recent weight loss. On examination, the child is afebrile, is non-verbal, and avoids eye contact. His hips are tender to palpation with a bruise over the left forearm. His family is unaware of any recent trauma. Upon further review of the history, he is a picky eater, tending to favour salty foods such as savoury biscuits, crisps, crackers and sweets. He has refused to take his chewable vitamins for the past 4 months.

A

Vitamin C deficiency

88
Q

A 20-month-old black girl presents with failure to thrive and delayed achievement of motor milestones. She seems irritable on examination and is noted to have bowed legs, thick wrists, and dental caries. Her weight and height are below the 3rd percentiles for her age. Her diet consists predominantly of breastfeeding.

A

Vitamin D deficiency

89
Q

A 76-year-old white woman presents with fatigue and severe, unrelenting, aching bone discomfort. She has so far enjoyed good health. However, she currently resides in a home for older people and has minimal exposure to sunlight. On physical examination, minimum pressure applied with the index finger on sternum, radius, and anterior tibia produces wincing bone pain. In addition, she has difficulty getting up from a sitting position, suggesting proximal muscle weakness.

A

Vitamin D deficiency

90
Q

A 39-year-old man presents to his GP with disorientation, vision problems and increasing muscle weakness. On examination, he is hypo-reflexive and has difficulty looking upwards.

A

Vitamin E deficiency

91
Q

A 3-month old baby presents to A&E with unstoppable bruising. On examination, multiple bruises and petechiae are observed on the arms and legs. The parents have two other children who are healthy, and there are no safeguarding concerns.

A

Vitamin K deficiency

92
Q

A 7-day-old female infant is brought to the emergency department with acute-onset bilious vomiting of 6 hours’ duration. The patient has previously tolerated breastfeeding without emesis and has stooled normally. Physical exam is benign without significant tenderness or distention.

A

Intestinal volvulus (twisting)

93
Q

A 1-month-old male infant is brought to the emergency department with acute onset of inconsolable discomfort and bilious vomiting of 6 hours’ duration. Physical exam reveals a tight, distended abdomen with some dark blood in the nappy. He is tachycardic and tachypnoeic.

A

Intestinal volvulus (twisting)

94
Q

A 20-year-old previously healthy man has an episode of jaundice associated with tiredness. He is found to have elevated serum aminotransferase enzymes (AST 150 units/L, ALT 175 units/L) and elevated serum bilirubin 77.0 micromols/L (4.5 mg/dL). Ophthalmological examination for Kayser-Fleischer rings is negative.

A

Wilson’s disease

95
Q

An 18-year-old woman presents with bilateral tremor of the hands. She is a senior in high school and during the year her grades have plummeted to the point that she is failing. She says her memory is now poor, and she has trouble focusing on tasks. Her behaviour has changed in the past 6 months in that she has frequent episodes of depression, separated by episodes of bizarre behaviour, including shoplifting and excessive drinking. Her parents and other authorities have begun to suspect her of using street drugs, which she denies. Her handwriting has become very sloppy. Her parents have noted slight slurring of her speech. Physical examination reveals upper extremity tremor, mild dystonia of the upper extremities and mild incoordination involving her hands. Slit-lamp examination reveals Kayser-Fleischer rings.

A

Wilson’s disease