Questions 101-150 Flashcards

1
Q
  1. A 72-year-old female presents with a 2-month history of constipation. She says she has to strain to evacuate at least half the time and reports that her stools have become clay-like in consistency and narrower in caliber. At least half the time she has the sensation that evacuation is not complete, and she has occasionally used manual maneuvers to complete evacuation. She had a normal colonoscopy 8 years ago.

An abdominal examination is normal, and stool with a clay-like consistency is palpated during a rectal examination. No prolapse is seen with straining, and the anal wink is present. Screening laboratory tests indicate a mild microcytic, hypochromic anemia.

Which one of the following would be most appropriate at this time?

A) A trial of lactulose
B) Lifestyle modifications
C) Phosphosoda enemas
D) Colonoscopy
E) Pelvic floor muscle exercises
A

ANSWER: D

This patient has several red flags that require complete colon evaluation with endoscopy: age >50, a change in stool caliber, and obstructive symptoms. Other red flags include heme-positive stools, anemia consistent with iron deficiency, and rectal bleeding. Malignancy should be eliminated as a possible diagnosis prior to initiating any treatment. Biofeedback training is used to manage pelvic floor dysfunction caused by incoordination of pelvic floor muscles during attempted evacuation. Common symptoms include prolonged or excessive straining, soft stools that are difficult to pass, and rectal discomfort. The other options are appropriate management strategies once malignancy has been eliminated as a possibility.

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2
Q
  1. A 45-year-old male recently recovered from a second episode of left lower extremity cellulitis. He has onychomycosis on his left foot but is otherwise in good health.

Which one of the following treatments is best overall if eradication of the onychomycosis is necessary?

A) Ciclopirox topical (Penlac Nail Lacquer)
B) Oral fluconazole (Diflucan)
C) Oral griseofulvin (Grifulvin V)
D) Oral itraconazole (Sporanox)
E) Oral terbinafine (Lamisil)
A

ANSWER: E

Onychomycosis is a difficult condition to treat successfully. If symptoms are minimal, treatment is often deferred. Cellulitis of the involved extremity may be related to the onychomycosis and is an accepted reason to consider eradication treatment. Oral terbinafine is the best treatment in terms of cure rate and tolerability (SOR A). Significant liver disease is a contraindication.

Itraconazole is less effective and more toxic, and griseofulvin is significantly less effective. Topical ciclopirox lacquer is also less effective than terbinafine, although it eliminates the risk for systemic toxicity. Fluconazole is not indicated for onychomycosis.

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3
Q
  1. Effective communication with patients from other countries requires knowledge of communication styles within various cultures. Which one of the following is consistently appropriate for all patients from non–English-speaking countries?

A) Discouraging the use of family members as interpreters

B) Expecting patients to make their own decisions regarding care

C) Discussing test results with the patient only

D) Maintaining eye contact with the patient

A

ANSWER: A

Providing quality health care to individuals from diverse sociocultural backgrounds requires effective communication. Low health literacy in almost half of the U.S. population makes communication more difficult. When a language barrier exists it is better to have a professional interpreter than a family member, and children should be used as interpreters only in cases of emergency when no other source is available.

The typical approach to medical care in the United States assumes that patients want to make their own decisions based on guidance from their health care providers. However, there are cultures in which patient autonomy is not the norm. There may be a specific authority figure in the family that is regarded as the decision maker.

Effective communication also involves knowledge of communication styles within various cultures. Nonverbal communication can be through touch, eye contact, and personal space. For example, there are cultures in which direct eye contact is avoided, but in other cultures it is considered a sign of respect.

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4
Q
  1. A 55-year-old male with type 1 diabetes mellitus is being treated in the wound care clinic for a skin ulcer on his lower right leg. The ulcer is slow to improve. He comes to see you in the office because over the past 2 days his right knee has become swollen, red, warm, painful, and difficult to flex. When you examine him, his right knee is swollen, erythematous, indurated, and held in full extension. Active and passive ranges of motion are limited. Areas of erythema and induration continue to surround his leg ulcer. His WBC count is mildly elevated, but his erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein level are normal.

Which one of the following would be most appropriate at this point?

A) Plain radiographs
B) Ultrasonography
C) MRI
D) Arthrocentesis
E) Antinuclear antibody studies
A

ANSWER: D

Any patient with risk factors for infection who presents with acute joint swelling, pain, erythema, warmth, and joint immobility should be evaluated for septic arthritis. Risk factors for septic arthritis in this patient include a cutaneous ulcer and diabetes mellitus. Serum markers such as the WBC count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and C-reactive protein levels are often used to determine the presence of infection or inflammatory response. However, patients with confirmed septic arthritis may have normal erythrocyte sedimentation rates and C-reactive protein levels.

Because the clinical presentation of septic arthritis may overlap with that of other causes of acute arthritis, arthrocentesis is needed to differentiate between the various causes and, in the case of septic arthritis, to identify the causative agent and determine appropriate therapy. No findings on imaging studies are pathognomonic for septic arthritis. Antinuclear antibody studies may be indicated later in the course of management if synovial fluid analysis is not consistent with infection, and if synovial fluid cultures are negative.

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5
Q
  1. In addition to fluid resuscitation, which one of the following is the recommended first-line agent for the management of hypotension in a patient with sepsis?
A) Albumin
B) Dopamine
C) Epinephrine
D) Norepinephrine (Levophed)
E) Phenylephrine (Neo-Synephrine)
A

ANSWER: D

Norepinephrine is the recommended first-line vasopressor agent to correct hypotension in patients with sepsis (SOR A). Vasopressor therapy is required to sustain life and maintain perfusion in the face of life-threatening hypotension, even when hypovolemia has not yet been resolved. Maintaining a mean arterial pressure of at least 65 mm Hg is critical for tissue perfusion. Dopamine is recommended as an alternate first-line agent to elevate arterial pressure, but it is less potent compared to norepinephrine. Dobutamine is recommended as the first-line agent for managing hypotension in cardiogenic shock. Phenylephrine is recommended as the second-line agent for managing hypotension in patients with septic shock who also have tachycardia or dysrhythmias. Albumin and epinephrine are not recommended as first-line agents for managing hypotension in patients with sepsis.

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6
Q
  1. The husband of a 25-year-old white female consults you about his wife. Eighteen months ago, her last pregnancy was complicated by placental abruption, hemorrhagic shock, and the birth of a stillborn infant. She did not lactate and has not menstruated since the delivery. Since that time she has become increasingly fatigued and apathetic and has noticed a marked decrease in her libido.

Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A) Prolonged grief reaction
B) Postpartum pituitary necrosis
C) Postpartum depression
D) Iron deficiency anemia

A

ANSWER: B

A prolonged grief reaction, postpartum depression, and iron deficiency anemia could all cause fatigue, apathy, and decreased libido, but none of these conditions is characterized by failure to lactate and amenorrhea. This patient most likely has postpartum pituitary necrosis (Sheehan’s syndrome), a complication of childbirth in which hemorrhagic shock leads to pituitary necrosis. The syndrome is caused by the lack of hormonal influence from the anterior pituitary gland on other endocrine glands, resulting in failure to lactate, breast atrophy, mental apathy, low blood pressure, absence or deficiency of sweating, loss of secondary hair characteristics and libido, and loss of ovarian function, resulting in amenorrhea.

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7
Q
  1. A 58-year-old postmenopausal female sees you for an initial health maintenance visit. Her examination is normal and she has no complaints. You perform a Papanicolaou (Pap) test, which she has not had done in 15 years. The smear is read as “negative for intraepithelial lesion and malignancy, benign endometrial cells present.”

What would be the most appropriate follow-up for this finding?

A) A repeat Pap test in 4–6 months
B) A repeat Pap test in 1 year
C) HPV testing
D) An endometrial biopsy
E) Colposcopy and endocervical curettage
A

ANSWER: D

This patient should have an endometrial biopsy (SOR C). Approximately 7% of postmenopausal women with benign endometrial cells on a Papanicolaou smear will have significant endometrial pathology. None of the other options listed evaluate the endometrium for pathology. An asymptomatic premenopausal woman with benign endometrial cells would not need an endometrial evaluation because underlying endometrial pathology is rare in this group.

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8
Q
  1. Which one of the following is most likely to cause hypoglycemia when used as monotherapy?
A) Acarbose (Precose)
B) Exenatide (Byetta)
C) Pioglitazone (Actos)
D) Repaglinide (Prandin)
E) Sitagliptin (Januvia)
A

ANSWER: D

Repaglinide is a non-sulfonylurea agent that interacts with a different portion of the sulfonylurea receptor to stimulate insulin secretion. It has a relatively short duration of action, and while it may cause hypoglycemia this is less likely than with a sulfonylurea agent. Pioglitazone reduces insulin resistance and has no hypoglycemic effect. Acarbose delays absorption of carbohydrates such as starch, sucrose, and maltose, but does not affect the absorption of glucose and other monosaccharides. Sitagliptin inhibits the enzyme responsible for the breakdown of the naturally occurring incretins, and its major advantage is the absence of side effects. Exenatide stimulates insulin secretion in a glucose-dependent fashion, inhibits glucagon secretion, slows gastric emptying, and may have a central satiety effect. It does not cause hypoglycemia when used as monotherapy, but may increase the risk when used with an insulin secretagogue such as glyburide or glipizide.

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9
Q
  1. During hospital rounds you are called to attend the resuscitation of one of your patients, a chronic alcoholic with known esophageal varices secondary to hepatic cirrhosis, who just experienced sudden massive hematemesis that resulted in aspiration and respiratory arrest. Endotracheal intubation and suctioning appear to improve her respiratory crisis momentarily, but her pulse quickly becomes too weak to palpate. After 20 minutes of resuscitative effort, cardiac monitoring fails to detect any cardiac electrical activity, no spontaneous respiratory activity is noted, and the process is halted.

When completing the death certificate for this patient, the diagnosis most appropriately listed as the immediate cause of death is

A) cardiac arrest
B) respiratory arrest
C) upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage
D) esophageal varices
E) cirrhosis of the liver
A

ANSWER: C

Although the registration of death is a state function and the details may vary based on the laws and regulations of each state, recorded data is contractually shared with the National Vital Statistics System. To ensure consistency of reporting, the National Center for Health Certificates coordinates collection of the data points by providing a standard form which most state certificates are modeled from. The standard format includes a section titled “Cause of Death,” which is subdivided into two parts. In part 1, the immediate cause of death is to be recorded on the top line (labeled “a”). This is defined as the final disease, injury, or complication directly causing the death, and the directions clearly state that terminal events such as cardiac arrest, respiratory arrest, or ventricular fibrillation are not to be entered without showing the etiology.

Additional lines are provided to list conditions leading to the cause of death, including a final line for entering the disease or injury that initiated the process leading to death. In this case, the proximate cause of death was the upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage. The source of the bleeding was most likely from esophageal varices resulting from hepatic cirrhosis, so those conditions should be entered respectively in the next two lines. The appropriate entry for the final line in part 1 would be chronic alcoholism.
Space is provided in part 2 to include significant conditions contributing to death, such as other chronic illness and tobacco use.

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10
Q
  1. Which one of the following patients is eligible for the Medicare hospice benefit?

A) A patient with end-stage COPD with a life expectancy of 6 months

B) A patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with a life expectancy of 9 months

C) A patient on hemodialysis with a life expectancy of 12 months

D) A patient with stage IV breast cancer with a life expectancy of 18 months

A

ANSWER: A

Patients with a life expectancy of 6 months or less are eligible for the Medicare hospice benefit. This benefit allows patients to receive hospice care in either the home or hospital setting. In addition to patients with terminal cancer, patients with end-stage cardiac, pulmonary, and chronic debilitating diseases are eligible. Approximately two-thirds of patients enrolled in hospice die from non–cancer-related diagnoses, and approximately 60% of Medicare patients are not enrolled in hospice at the time of their death.

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11
Q
  1. A 16-year-old male asthmatic with no other medical problems presents with a severe attack of respiratory distress and a peak expiratory flow rate less than 40%. After 1 hour of acute treatment his respiratory distress has resolved, but he complains of blurred vision.

Which one of the following therapeutic agents would be the most likely cause?

A) Nebulized albuterol (Proventil, Ventolin)
B) Nebulized ipratropium bromide
C) Nebulized levalbuterol (Xopenex)
D) Subcutaneous terbutaline
E) Intravenous methylprednisolone
A

ANSWER: B

Ipratropium bromide is an anticholinergic agent. When nebulized it can sometimes cause inadvertent ocular effects. Blurred vision and pupil inequality may occur. Ipratropium has been shown to decrease the rate of hospital admissions in severe asthmatic attacks.
Corticosteroids may elevate glucose levels in diabetic patients. The onset would be more gradual, however. Adrenergic agents used for acute asthma do not commonly produce adverse ocular effects (level of evidence 3).

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12
Q
  1. A 77-year-old male presents for a periodic health evaluation. Your practice is organized as a patient-centered medical home, and this is the patient’s initial visit. His records indicate that he received all recommended screening tests and immunizations 4 years ago, and he asks what screening tests are necessary at his age.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends that this patient be screened for which one of the following?

A) Prostate cancer
B) Colorectal cancer
C) Abdominal aneurysm
D) Dementia
E) Depression
A

ANSWER: E

While the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends against screening for prostate cancer using prostate-specific antigen testing, other screening methods have not been evaluated in controlled studies. For men who have smoked, one-time ultrasonography is recommended as a screen for aortic aneurysm between the ages of 65 and 75. The USPSTF has no recommendation for men who have never smoked.

The USPSTF states that no evidence supports routine colorectal cancer screening in patients age 76–85, but that there may be some individuals with specific considerations for whom colorectal cancer screening would be recommended.

At present, there is no evidence to support screening of older adults for dementia, but it is recommended that all adults be screened for depression when staff support is in place to ensure adequate diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up. In most instances, the elderly population will present to a primary care provider with somatic complaints (level of evidence 1b).

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13
Q
  1. An 82-year-old white male consults you following several syncopal episodes that are clearly orthostatic in nature. During the course of your evaluation you find that he has a large tongue, mild cardiomegaly, and findings suggestive of bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome.

The most likely diagnosis at this time is

A) pernicious anemia
B) cervical spondylosis
C) amyloidosis
D) cardiomyopathy
E) polymyalgia rheumatica
A

ANSWER: C

Amyloidosis is defined as the extracellular deposition of the fibrous protein amyloid at one or more sites. It may remain undiagnosed for years. Features that should alert the clinician to the diagnosis of primary amyloidosis include unexplained proteinuria, peripheral neuropathy, enlargement of the tongue, cardiomegaly, intestinal malabsorption, bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome, or orthostatic hypotension. Amyloidosis occurs both as a primary idiopathic disorder and in association with other diseases such as multiple myeloma.

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14
Q
  1. Which one of the following is true concerning people in the United States who do not have health insurance?

A) Most uninsured people are members of a family with at least one working adult

B) Most uninsured people who are employed full-time work for large companies

C) Most uninsured people who work part-time and have incomes below the poverty line are
eligible for Medicaid

D) On average, uninsured people have as much access to routine health care as those with
insurance

A

ANSWER: A

Most uninsured people in the United States are members of a family with at least one working adult. Most uninsured people who are employed work for small companies or work part-time. Most uninsured people who work part-time with incomes below the poverty line are not eligible for Medicaid. On average, uninsured people have less access to care and have poorer health outcomes.

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15
Q
  1. A 36-year-old male requests further testing for infertility. His female partner has undergone all testing, and her results are normal. He has recently undergone a semen analysis, which revealed azoospermia. Suspecting hypogonadism, you evaluate morning levels of FSH and total serum testosterone levels to help distinguish between primary and secondary causes.

Which one of the following would you expect with primary hypogonadism?

A) Normal levels of both FSH and testosterone
B) Low levels of both FSH and testosterone
C) Low FSH and increased testosterone
D) High FSH and low testosterone
E) High levels of both FSH and testosterone

A

ANSWER: D

If semen analysis suggests hypogonadism (e.g., severe oligospermia or azoospermia), it is important to distinguish between primary and secondary causes (SOR C). Evaluation of morning FSH and total serum testosterone levels can help make this determination. Low testosterone levels correlate with hypogonadism. High levels of FSH in the presence of low testosterone levels correlate with primary hypogonadism (SOR B). Low levels of both hormones suggest secondary hypogonadism (SOR B). High testosterone levels are unlikely to be associated with hypogonadism.

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16
Q
  1. A 32-year-old female presents with a history of recurring headaches. They are usually unilateral, last for 24–48 hours, have a pulsatile quality, and are associated with nausea. She sometimes experiences photophobia as well. The patient describes the headaches as intense, usually requiring her to limit her activities. She has tried several over-the-counter migraine medications that have been minimally effective in aborting these headaches, and requests a prescription for an abortive therapy.

Which one of the following would be the best choice for first-line therapy?

A) Acetaminophen
B) Acetaminophen/oxycodone (Percocet)
C) Butalbital/aspirin/caffeine (Fiorinal)
D) Prednisone
E) Sumatriptan (Imitrex)
A

ANSWER: E

Several medications from different classes are recommended as first-line abortive therapies to treat acute migraine. Because relatively few trials have directly compared the different medication classes, there are no definitive algorithms as to which class works best. NSAIDs and acetaminophen/aspirin/caffeine are recommended as first-line therapies and can be obtained over the counter (SOR A). Triptans are effective and safe for treatment of acute migraine and are recommended as first-line therapy (SOR A) but require a prescription. Opiates and barbiturates are not recommended because of their potential for abuse (SOR C). Acetaminophen alone is not effective, and the same is true of oral corticosteroids.

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17
Q
  1. A 24-year-old female presents to your office for a health maintenance evaluation. She mentions that she has had several episodes of indigestion after meals and started taking an over-the-counter proton pump inhibitor, which she feels has been helpful. She asks if it would be harmful to take this medicine on a long-term basis.

You tell her that evidence has shown that continuing to take this medication will increase her risk for which one of the following?

A) Hypomagnesemia

B) Vitamin B12 deficiency

C) Clostridium difficile colitis

D) Having a child with birth defects (if taken in the first trimester)

E) Colon cancer

A

ANSWER: C

Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) have a powerful effect on inhibiting the production of acid in the stomach. This dramatically reduces symptoms of acid-mediated gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, and gastroesophageal reflux. However, a significant reduction in stomach acidity may cause unintended consequences involving processes that are physiologically dependent on low pH in the gastrointestinal tract. These theoretical risks include decreased levels of vitamin B12, iron, and/or magnesium; decreased bone density; an increase in gut infections or pneumonia; an increase in gastrointestinal neoplasms; and changes in absorption of other medications.

The evidence has been conflicting on some of these risks. Currently, consensus is emerging that chronic use of PPIs increases the risk for pneumonia and gut infections, primarily Clostridium difficile colitis (SOR B). PPIs may also decrease bone density in subsets of patients. These risks need to be weighed against the benefits that these medicines provide before prescribing them on a long-term basis.

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18
Q
  1. For adolescents with scoliosis, observation is always indicated for a curve below a threshold of

A) 20°
B) 30°
C) 40°
D) 50°

A

ANSWER: A

The diagnosis of idiopathic scoliosis is based on a coronal plane curvature >10°. It is a diagnosis of exclusion after congenital, neuromuscular, and myopathic diseases and conditions have been ruled out. Adolescent scoliosis is most common, and occurs in about 2%–3% of adolescents. More marked curvature (>30°) occurs in about 0.3% of adolescents, as measured on posterior-anterior and lateral radiographs using the Cobb method. For mild degrees of curvature there is an even distribution between girls and boys, but girls have a tenfold greater risk for more severe curvature.

Screening for scoliosis in the asymptomatic adolescent is controversial; the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends against routine screening in its most recent update in 2004 (D recommendation). However, if idiopathic scoliosis is discovered incidentally or when the adolescent or parent expresses concern about scoliosis, options for further evaluation and treatment include observation for curvatures of less than 20° and consideration for bracing and/or surgery for more severe curvatures. The risk of progression depends on the amount of growth remaining, the magnitude of the curve, and the patient’s gender.

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19
Q
  1. A 40-year-old male presents with a 3-month history of persistent low back pain and stiffness. He cannot recall any specific episode associated with the onset of the pain, and intermittent ibuprofen has provided little benefit. The pain does not radiate into his legs. He has experienced similar back pain before, but it had always resolved within 2 weeks with rest, cutting back on his activities, and taking ibuprofen. During his third episode about a year ago MRI of his lumbosacral spine did not show any significant pathology.

When you examine the patient he describes mild, generalized discomfort with palpation throughout his lumbosacral region, but has full range of motion of his back, normal deep tendon reflexes, and good muscle strength in his legs. The straight leg–raising test produces mild low back discomfort but does not result in any leg pain.

Which one of the following treatment options has the best evidence for restoring function in this situation?

A) Acupuncture
B) Back school
C) Back exercises
D) Spinal manipulation
E) Epidural corticosteroid injection
A

ANSWER: C

This patient suffers from chronic low back pain, defined as pain, muscle tension, or stiffness localized below the costal margin and above the inferior gluteal folds, with or without sciatica, that has persisted for 12 weeks or more and is not attributed to a recognizable pathology. Among all the listed treatment options for chronic low back pain, only back exercises are given the “beneficial” recommendation in a systematic review. Acupuncture and spinal manipulation are in the “likely to be beneficial” category. Back school and epidural corticosteroid injections are of “unknown effectiveness.”

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20
Q
  1. A 63-year-old white male has been diagnosed with myasthenia gravis and is experiencing progressive muscle weakness despite maximum pharmacotherapy. Which one of the following surgical options would be most likely to improve his condition?
A) Thyroidectomy
B) Radioactive thyroid ablation
C) Adrenalectomy
D) Removal of a pituitary microadenoma
E) Thymectomy
A

ANSWER: E

Myasthenia gravis is a neuromuscular illness with an underlying immune-related cause. Corticosteroids and anticholinesterase medications such as oral pyridostigmine can be helpful, but thymectomy may be appropriate for patients with generalized disease not responding to medication. Thymectomy increases the remission rate and improves the clinical course.

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21
Q
  1. You are preparing to evaluate a patient in the emergency department. A BNP level was ordered by the physician from the previous shift who handed the patient over to you. The level is reported as 459 pg/mL. You have not yet interviewed or examined the patient.

Based upon the information you have at this point, which one of the following is true regarding this patient?

A) The patient has diastolic heart failure
B) The patient has systolic heart failure
C) The patient has acute heart failure
D) The patient does not have heart failure
E) The patient’s diagnosis is uncertain

A

ANSWER: E

According to the 2010 American Heart Association scientific statement regarding acute heart failure syndrome, levels of natriuretic peptides such as BNP lack the specificity necessary to function as absolute indicators of acute heart failure syndrome even when they exceed established thresholds for the diagnosis. BNP levels vary with age, sex, body habitus, renal function, and abruptness of symptom onset.

Elevated BNP levels also have been associated with renal failure (because of reduced clearance), pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension, and chronic hypoxia. BNP measures are not a substitute for a comprehensive assessment for signs and symptoms of heart failure, and a laboratory test by itself cannot be used to determine the diagnosis or management of heart failure. Clinical evaluation and follow-up are essential to assure proper care for patients with heart failure or any other cardiac problem.

22
Q
  1. A 45-year-old patient develops acute erythema and pain in the first metatarsophalangeal joint, the second such episode in 4 months. There is no apparent joint effusion. Results of a standard laboratory profile are normal, including an erythrocyte sedimentation rate, CBC, liver enzymes, BUN/creatinine, electrolytes, calcium, and uric acid. A radiograph is read as normal.

The most likely diagnosis is

A) hydroxyapatite crystal disease
B) Morton’s neuroma
C) systemic lupus erythematosus
D) acute gouty arthritis

A

ANSWER: D

Erythema, redness, and pain in the first metatarsal-phalangeal joint are typical symptoms of gout. The uric acid level can be normal at various times in gout. Acute synovitis is occasionally caused by apatite deposition disease, but it is usually associated with long-standing osteoarthritis, and the joints involved are most commonly the shoulder, hip, and knee. Morton’s neuroma is an entrapment neuropathy of the interdigital nerve, usually occurring between the third and fourth toes, not associated with erythema and redness. Acute arthritis in systemic lupus erythematosus typically involves the wrists, the small joints of the hands, and the knees.

23
Q
  1. A 73-year-old female presents with signs of an acute ischemic stroke, which began 2 hours earlier. She has a National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 14. Noncontrast head CT shows no sign of hemorrhage.

Which one of the following treatments is recommended and FDA approved for patients with this problem who have no contraindications?

A) Intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)
B) Warfarin (Coumadin)
C) Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor antagonists
D) Aspirin and clopidogrel (Plavix)
E) Heparin

A

ANSWER: A

Studies have shown that the use of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator offers sustained patient benefit at 6 and 12 months if given within 3 hours of symptom onset (SOR B). All other listed interventions have not been shown to be efficacious.

24
Q
  1. Which one of the following jaundiced infants can be treated expectantly without a full workup for pathologic causes?

A) A 12-hour-old term infant with a total bilirubin of 10 mg/dL

B) A 1-day-old term infant with a total bilirubin of 20 mg/dL

C) A 2-day-old term infant with a total bilirubin of 10 mg/dL

D) A 1-week-old term infant with a total bilirubin of 25 mg/dL

A

ANSWER: C

Term infants with an onset of jaundice before 24 hours of age, jaundice persisting beyond 3 weeks of age, or a bilirubin level requiring intensive phototherapy should not be considered healthy, and require further evaluation. A 2-day-old term infant with a total bilirubin of 10 mg/dL may be followed expectantly.

25
Q
  1. Your laboratory reports a borderline low vitamin B12 level in an anemic patient. Which one of the following tests can confirm vitamin B12 deficiency?
A) LDH
B) Methylmalonic acid
C) Mean corpuscular volume
D) Serum ferritin
E) Homocysteine
A

ANSWER: B

Vitamin B12 and folate deficiencies typically cause macrocytic anemias. When the serum vitamin B12 level is borderline low, an elevated methylmalonic acid level can be used to confirm a vitamin B12 deficiency. An elevated homocysteine level plays a similar role for folate deficiency anemia. Hemolysis can be associated with an elevated LDH level, and serum ferritin is useful for diagnosing iron deficiency anemia.

26
Q
  1. A clinical trial reports that a new therapy is non-inferior to your usual choice of treatment. You can assume which one of the following?

A) The new treatment has proven efficacy

B) A large placebo group was studied

C) The study was both double blind and placebo controlled

D) The new therapy is not superior to what you are currently using

E) The new therapy is not less effective than what you are currently using

A

ANSWER: E

Noninferiority trials compare an active control group with a new therapy. The use of a placebo group would be unethical, since the present therapy is either lifesaving or prevents serious injury. The new therapy may prove superior to or slightly less effective than the standard therapy.

27
Q
  1. A 35-year-old white female schoolteacher presents with anxiety, fatigue, and insomnia. The symptoms began after a heart murmur was discovered on a routine physical examination. An echocardiogram revealed mild mitral valve prolapse. A student at her school recently died suddenly on a school field trip because of undiagnosed idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and the patient is now afraid she will die in a similar manner. She is anxious, sleepless, and fearful of physical activity. You perform a physical examination and EKG, with normal results.

Which one of the following would be most appropriate at this point?

A) Reassurance regarding the benign course of her condition

B) A stress test

C) Clonazepam (Klonopin)

D) Referral to a cardiologist

E) Referral for group psychotherapy

A

ANSWER: A

Much of the psychological distress caused by the diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse is related to a lack of information and a fear of heart disease, which may be reinforced by the death of a friend or relative. A clear explanation of mitral valve prolapse, along with printed material, is a powerful aid in relieving the patient’s emotional distress. The American Heart Association publishes a helpful booklet about this condition which can be given to these patients. It is important to avoid reinforcing illness behavior with unnecessary testing, medications, or referrals to specialists.

28
Q
  1. A 37-year-old male returns for his first follow-up visit after being diagnosed with major depression 4 weeks earlier. The patient is taking citalopram (Celexa), 20 mg/day. He is tolerating the medication well and his energy level and sleep are improved, but he still complains of anhedonia. He has no other health problems and takes no other medications.

The most reasonable management at this point is to

A) add aripiprazole (Abilify)
B) increase the dosage of citalopram
C) add bupropion (Wellbutrin)
D) add levothyroxine (Synthroid)

A

ANSWER: B

All of the treatment options listed may improve the patient’s depression, but it is unnecessary to add a second agent until the initial drug is at the maximum recommended dosage. Citalopram can be increased to a dosage of 40 mg/day.

29
Q
  1. You have recently diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis in a 49-year-old female. She has started methotrexate (Rheumatrex) for disease-modifying therapy.

You counsel her that she is at increased risk for various diseases related to her arthritis, but that the leading cause of death in patients with rheumatoid arthritis is

A) infection
B) cardiovascular disease
C) lymphoma
D) lung cancer

A

ANSWER: B

Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are at increased risk for various extra-articular manifestations of the inflammatory disease, as well as side effects of the medications used to manage it. The leading cause of death in RA patients is cardiovascular, related to accelerated atherosclerosis (SOR C). Patients with RA should be screened for cardiovascular risk factors and managed appropriately to lower their risk.

Patients with RA are also at increased risk for other problems that are not leading causes of mortality. Their risk for infection is increased, which can be related to either the RA itself or to the use of immunosuppressive agents. Patients with RA also have a twofold increase in their risk for lymphoma. This is independent of whether or not they are on immunosuppressive agents. Their risk for lung cancer related to interstitial lung disease is also increased, and smoking increases this risk further.

30
Q
  1. A 25-year-old male graduate student develops an acute headache, fever, and rash while visiting his parents during fall break. When he comes to the emergency department he has a widespread petechial rash and a stiff neck, and his blood pressure is 78/40 mm Hg. He is treated with appropriate empiric antibiotics, and the spinal fluid from a tap reveals a large number of polynuclear leukocytes and gram-negative diplococci.

What is the most appropriate treatment at this point?

A) Ceftriaxone (Rocephin)
B) Rifampin (Rifadin)
C) Ciprofloxacin (Cipro)
D) Amoxicillin
E) Doxycycline
A

ANSWER: A

This patient likely has meningitis due to Neisseria meningitidis. Ceftriaxone is recommended as first-line therapy and should not be delayed once the diagnosis is suspected (SOR B). Ciprofloxacin and rifampin are not recommended as first-line therapy for infected individuals, but are recommended as prophylaxis for close contacts (SOR B). Doxycycline and amoxicillin are not proven to be effective for treatment or prophylaxis.

31
Q
  1. While on vacation you get up for an early morning swim and find a young man face down in the hotel lap pool. He is flaccid and unresponsive when you pull him from the water. You are alone, there is no automated external defibrillator (AED) available, and the telephone is at the opposite side of the room.

Which one of the following actions is most consistent with American Heart Association 2010 guidelines for resuscitation?

A) Turning the victim on his side to drain upper airway fluid before starting CPR

B) Performing the Heimlich maneuver before starting CPR

C) Performing 10 minutes of CPR before activating emergency medical services

D) Attempting ventilation before chest compression

E) Maintaining cervical spine immobilization with whatever is available

A

ANSWER: D

The 2010 American Heart Association guidelines for resuscitation emphasize the importance of chest compression in CPR. Compression-Airway-Breathing (C-A-B) is now recommended over Airway- Breathing-Compression (A-B-C). Individualization of this sequence is recommended, however, and in drowning victims the A-B-C approach is preferred because of the hypoxic nature of the cardiac arrest.

Emergency medical services (EMS) should be activated when the victim is found flaccid and unresponsive. In certain situations CPR may be performed for up to 2 minutes before calling 911, but a 10-minute interval is excessive. The Heimlich maneuver and attempts to positionally drain the airway may be harmful and delay effective CPR.

The reported incidence of cervical spine injury in drowning victims is 0.009%. Attempts at cervical spine immobilization are not necessary and may impede airway maintenance (SOR C).

32
Q
  1. Which one of the following is most appropriate for the treatment of gonorrhea?

A) Azithromycin (Zithromax)
B) Azithromycin plus ceftriaxone (Rocephin)
C) Cefixime (Suprax)
D) Ciprofloxacin (Cipro)

A

ANSWER: B

Because of increased resistance to fluoroquinolones, ciprofloxacin is no longer recommended for the treatment of gonorrhea. In addition, there appears to be emerging resistance to cephalosporins, as evidenced by an increase in the minimum inhibitory concentrations of cephalosporins between 2000 and 2010. Unfortunately, no other well-studied and effective alternative antibiotic treatment regimens are currently available. It also appears that gonococcal resistance to cefixime might develop before resistance to ceftriaxone. As a result, in 2011 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended dual treatment with ceftriaxone, 250 mg intramuscularly, and azithromycin, 1 g orally, as the most effective treatment for uncomplicated gonorrhea.

33
Q
  1. A 63-year-old male presents with increasing shortness of breath over the past year. He smokes a pack of cigarettes a day, and has done so since he was 18 years old. Your evaluation leads to a diagnosis of COPD.

Which one of the following interventions has been shown to slow the decline in lung function
in this situation?

A) Smoking cessation

B) Regular use of an inhaled short-acting B2-agonist

C) Regular use of an inhaled long-acting B2-agonist

D) Regular use of an inhaled long-acting anticholinergic agent

E) Regular use of oral corticosteroids

A

ANSWER: A

Smoking cessation slows the decline of lung function in COPD. Long-acting B2-agonists, anticholinergic agents, and inhaled corticosteroids are useful for improving the symptoms of COPD. They improve exercise tolerance and quality of life, and can reduce the frequency of exacerbations. However, they do not slow the progression of COPD. Oral corticosteroids, along with antibiotics, are useful in treating acute exacerbations of COPD, but long-term treatment is not recommended.

34
Q
  1. A 25-year-old medical assistant presents with a 3-month history of a tremor that began shortly after the death of her husband. The tremor starts abruptly and then spontaneously remits. It is not an action tremor and has no association with posture.

On examination you notice the tremor severity increases with questions calling attention to her tremor symptoms and lessens when she is distracted with questions about her hobbies and summer plans. Her neurologic examination is completely normal, including no signs of dystonia, and she has no laboratory or radiologic evidence of disease. She denies taking any medications or using any substances that might cause a tremor. The patient also reports that the tremor does not improve with moderate alcohol consumption, and it did not respond to a trial of anti-tremor medications prescribed by another physician.

Based on your findings, you suspect this patient most likely has which type of tremor?

A) Cerebellar 
B) Dystonic 
C) Essential
D) Parkinsonian 
E) Psychogenic
A

ANSWER: E

This patient most likely has a psychogenic tremor, given its abrupt onset, spontaneous remission, changing tremor characteristics, and extinction with distraction (SOR C). Other characteristics of this case that suggest psychogenic tremor are the associated stressful life event, the patient’s employment in a health care setting, and no evidence of disease by laboratory or radiologic investigations. In addition, the tremor increases with attention and has been unresponsive to anti-tremor medications (SOR C).

Dystonic tremor is a rare tremor found in less than 1% of the population, and other signs of dystonia, such as abnormal flexion of the wrists, are usually present. Essential tremor is an action tremor and is usually postural; however, persons with essential tremor typically have no other neurologic findings. Essential tremor typically improves with alcohol consumption (2 drinks/day). A cerebellar tremor is usually associated with other neurologic signs, such as dysmetria (overshoot on finger-to-nose testing), dyssynergia (abnormal heel-to-shin testing and/or ataxia), and hypotonia. A parkinsonian tremor is most often a resting tremor, and although it may become less prominent with voluntary movement, it usually does not spontaneously remit.

35
Q
  1. Which one of the following is associated with testosterone replacement for men with hypogonadism?
A) Osteoporosis
B) Depression
C) Reduced cognitive function
D) Increased fat deposition
E) Infertility
A

ANSWER: E

Testosterone replacement therapy can improve many of the effects of hypogonadism. Beneficial effects include improvements in mood, energy level, sexual functioning, sense of well-being, lean body mass and muscle strength, erythropoiesis, bone mineral density, and cognition. However, there are also some risks associated with testosterone use, including an increased risk for prostate cancer, worsening of symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia, liver toxicity and tumor, worsening of sleep apnea and heart failure, gynecomastia, infertility, and skin diseases. Testosterone replacement therapy is not appropriate in men who are interested in maintaining fertility, as exogenous testosterone will suppress the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis.

36
Q
  1. A 70-year-old male sees you for a preoperative evaluation 3 days prior to iliofemoral bypass surgery. He has a 54–pack-year history of cigarette smoking, and has a long-term history of hypertension and peripheral vascular disease. His current medications include lisinopril (Prinivil, Zestril), hydrochlorothiazide, and low-dose aspirin. He has no past history of myocardial infarction, diabetes mellitus, or hyperlipidemia.

His blood pressure is 156/84 mm Hg and his pulse rate is 80 beats/min. The cardiopulmonary examination is normal. Foot pulses are diminished but present bilaterally.

In order to reduce this patient’s risk of perioperative cardiac complications, which one of the following is recommended prior to his surgery?

A) A pharmacologic cardiac stress test
B) Discontinuation of aspirin
C) Starting a B-blocker
D) Starting enoxaparin (Lovenox)
E) Starting a statin
A

ANSWER: E

In addition to their lipid-lowering effects, statins have been shown to have plaque-stabilizing and vascular anti-inflammatory effects. There is strong clinical evidence that perioperative statin therapy, even when initiated within days of the procedure and without regard to lipid levels, significantly reduces cardiovascular risk for patients undergoing vascular surgery (SOR A).

There is strong clinical evidence of benefit in perioperative cardiovascular risk reduction for continuation of B-blockers before, during, and after vascular surgery in patients who have been on them for at least 4 weeks preoperatively (SOR A). However, in patients who have not been on a B-blocker for at least 1–4 weeks preoperatively, initiation prior to surgery may be harmful (SOR B).

Traditionally, aspirin has been discontinued prior to surgery for fear of increased surgical bleeding complications. However, studies have shown that in most cases it is safe to continue low-dose aspirin in the perioperative period, and doing so reduces cardiovascular complications. This is especially true for patients with a past history of myocardial infarction or with coronary stents (SOR B).

Preoperative cardiac stress testing is of little value in patients with low or medium cardiovascular risk status, such as the patient described here. Enoxaparin would not be indicated preoperatively in this patient.

37
Q
  1. In counseling a 35-year-old female about smoking cessation, you find that her greatest concern is that she will gain weight. Among the following therapies, which one is most strongly associated with weight gain after smoking cessation?

A) Bupropion (Wellbutrin)
B) Clonidine (Catapres)
C) Varenicline (Chantix)
D) Nicotine gum

A

ANSWER: C

At every office visit, family physicians should encourage smokers to quit (SOR A). Patients who are ready to quit may be helped by various pharmacologic treatments. Sustained-release bupropion and nicotine replacement, especially gum and lozenges, may delay the weight gain often associated with smoking cessation. Varenicline has a variety of side effects, including an increased risk for cardiovascular events and a multitude of neuropsychiatric symptoms. It is also the agent most commonly associated with post–smoking cessation weight gain. Clonidine, considered a second-line, off-label alternative for smoking cessation, is not associated with weight gain.

38
Q
  1. You make a diagnosis of polymyalgia rheumatica in a 72-year-old female. This is a new diagnosis for this patient and she has not received any treatment for this condition up to this point.

Which one of the following prednisone regimens would be the best initial treatment?

A) 15 mg daily with a slow taper
B) 15 mg daily with a rapid taper
C) 30 mg daily with a slow taper
D) 30 mg daily with a rapid taper
E) 60 mg daily with a rapid taper
A

ANSWER: A

For the initial treatment of polymyalgia rheumatica, current evidence suggests using prednisone, 15 mg daily, or its equivalent, with slow tapering. Relapses are more common with an initial dosage of 10 mg daily, and slow tapering is associated with fewer relapses. Few patients require a dosage greater than 15 mg/day, which increases the risk for adverse effects.

39
Q
  1. An otherwise healthy 53-year-old male presents with acute shortness of breath and pleuritic chest pain. His O2 saturation on room air is 85%, and he is hemodynamically stable. The patient underwent an appendectomy 2 weeks ago and his postoperative course was complicated by an abscess, which required a week-long hospital stay.

Which one of the following should be the initial test to further evaluate this patient?

A) D-dimer
B) CT angiography of the chest
C) Pulmonary angiography
D) Venous ultrasonography

A

ANSWER: B

This patient has a high probability of pulmonary embolism, given his clinical presentation and recent hospitalization with bed rest. Multidetector CT is the best initial test to confirm pulmonary embolism in this situation. D-dimer testing is of limited value in patients with a high probability of pulmonary embolism. If positive for deep-vein thrombosis, venous ultrasonography of the lower limbs can eliminate the need for CT or lung scans, but this occurs in only about 10% of patients. Pulmonary angiography is currently reserved for the rare case in which catheter-based treatment is indicated.

40
Q
  1. A 52-year-old male presents with major depressive disorder. He reports a decrease in his libido and is concerned about the impact of medication on his sex life.

Which one of the following antidepressants is least likely to cause sexual dysfunction?

A) Bupropion (Wellbutrin)
B) Duloxetine (Cymbalta)
C) Fluoxetine (Prozac)
D) Mirtazapine (Remeron)
E) Paroxetine (Paxil)
A

ANSWER: A

Paroxetine has been shown to cause the highest rate of sexual dysfunction among the SSRIs and other antidepressants. The fewest sexual side effects occur with bupropion.

41
Q
  1. A hospitalized 75-year-old white male with well-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus is scheduled for abdominal CT with oral and intravenous iodinated contrast. Which one of the following medications should be withheld for at least 48 hours after the procedure?
A) Acarbose (Precose)
B) Glipizide (Glucotrol)
C) Glyburide (Micronase, DiaBeta)
D) Metformin (Glucophage)
E) Rosiglitazone (Avandia)
A

ANSWER: D

Contrast-induced nephropathy is a concern in patients undergoing contrast studies, and can lead to decreased renal function. Theoretically, this can cause an increased risk of lactic acidosis in patients taking metformin. Current guidelines recommend stopping metformin use before imaging procedures that use contrast, and restarting it 48 hours after the procedure if renal function is unchanged. The other drugs listed do not carry this risk, although they can cause other problems in hospitalized patients, such as hypoglycemia, depending on the situation.

42
Q
  1. An adult male has obvious gynecomastia, without galactorrhea, that has been present for the past 10 years. A careful drug history, physical examination, and endocrine and malignancy workups are negative. He wants the problem resolved.

Which one of the following is the treatment of choice?

A) Clomiphene (Clomid, Serophene)
B) Danazol
C) Tamoxifen (Soltamox)
D) Topical testosterone (AndroGel)
E) Surgery
A

ANSWER: E

When gynecomastia persists for a prolonged period, the initial glandular hyperplasia is transformed to a progressive fibrosis and hyalinization. Surgery remains the mainstay of therapy. Medical management is most useful when the onset is recent or to prevent the initial development of the problem. All the drugs listed have been tried with varying success in this context, but their clinical usefulness is not established.

43
Q
  1. A 46-year-old African-American male presents to your office with a 1-day history of the sudden onset of severe dizziness. His symptoms include a sensation of abnormal rotation of his environment, as well as occasional headaches. He has felt nauseated but has not vomited. On examination he has resting nystagmus. There is no hearing loss, and a thorough neurologic examination is otherwise normal. He is vertiginous in all positions.

Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A) Basilar artery migraine with vertigo
B) Benign positional vertigo
C) Vestibular neuronitis
D) Meniere’s disease
E) Eustachian tube dysfunction
A

ANSWER: C

This patient’s presentation is characteristic of vestibular neuronitis, a common condition affecting the vestibular apparatus. The exact location and cause of the derangement is uncertain, although a viral or post-viral cause has been postulated.

Benign positional vertigo is characterized by brief attacks of vertigo. Meniere’s disease is associated with tinnitus and hearing loss. Migraines have a more gradual onset, and the symptoms of eustachian tube dysfunction would be milder.

44
Q
  1. A 48-year-old female has had no menses for the past 12 months. She complains of hot flashes, especially at night, which significantly interfere with sleep. She also complains of fatigue, decreased appetite, unrefreshed sleep, and feeling “down” 4 or 5 days per week. A physical examination and laboratory findings are unremarkable. The patient prefers not to take estrogen replacement therapy.

Which one of the following medications would be appropriate for this patient?

A) Bupropion (Wellbutrin)
B) Nortriptyline (Pamelor)
C) Escitalopram (Lexapro)
D) Imipramine (Tofranil)

A

ANSWER: C

Many patients are concerned about the risks associated with estrogen replacement therapy, and alternative options should be addressed. Escitalopram has been shown to be effective for hot flashes in postmenopausal women. This would be a reasonable choice for this patient, who also likely has depression.

45
Q
  1. Which one of the following can cause a person’s normal hemoglobin level to be lower than the reference range?

A) Hemochromatosis
B) African-American ethnicity
C) Cigarette smoking
D) Living at a high altitude

A

ANSWER: B

The range of normal hemoglobin values for healthy individuals varies with age, sex, pregnancy, smoking, altitude, and ethnicity to an extent that an adjustment derived from population-based studies is appropriate in each of these situations. A healthy individual should have their lifetime highest hemoglobin concentrations at full-term birth, exclusive of any later changes from altitude or smoking. Hemoglobin levels fall during the first 2 months of life and thereafter gradually increase until stabilizing at approximately 6 months of age.

Studies of ethnic groups in the U.S. demonstrate no significant differences in normal hemoglobin values among East Asians, Hispanics, Japanese, Native Americans, and non-Hispanic whites; hemoglobin values of African-Americans tend to be 1 g/dL lower compared to the other U.S. ethnic groups studied. Living at higher altitudes has a direct effect on hemoglobin levels, and a hemoglobin reference range adjustment of +1 g/dL at 1000 meters up to +5.5 g/dL at 5000 meters is appropriate. Similarly, smoking increases hemoglobin levels by 3 g/dL for a 1 pack/day smoker to as high as +7 g/dL for individuals smoking more than 2 packs/day. The plasma volume expansion that occurs during pregnancy results in a 1.0–1.5 g/dL reduction in normal hemoglobin levels.

46
Q
  1. When stratifying patient risk to determine whether an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator is indicated for the primary prevention of sudden cardiac death, which one of the following is associated with the greatest risk?

A) Atrial fibrillation

B) Heart failure, with an ejection fraction less than or equal to 35%

C) Uncontrolled hypertension

D) Complete heart block

A

ANSWER: B

Sudden cardiac death affects 500,000 people in the United States each year, causing more deaths than lung cancer, breast cancer, and stroke combined. The most common final pathway is ventricular tachycardia degenerating into ventricular fibrillation. The best predictor of sudden cardiac death is an ejection fraction less than or equal to 35%. Thus, it is critical for family physicians to evaluate the ejection fraction of patients with heart disease.

47
Q
  1. A 72-year-old male is hospitalized for pneumonia. During his hospitalization he develops diarrhea due to Clostridium difficile infection. Appropriate antibiotics are prescribed. What other measures should be taken to prevent the spread of infection in the hospital?

A) Contact precautions with gown and gloves plus handwashing with soap and water

B) Contact and respiratory precautions with gown, gloves, and face mask

C) Use of hand sanitizers before and after patient contact

D) Placing the patient in a reverse airflow room

A

ANSWER: A

Clostridium difficile infection is a common cause of diarrhea in hospitalized patients, and recent antibiotic use is a risk factor for infection. The bacteria can be spread in a hospital setting by contact, and contact precautions with gown and gloves are indicated in addition to hand washing with soap and water to ensure removal of spores (SOR A). Hand sanitizer is inadequate, as it does not kill the spores. Respiratory precautions are not necessary.

48
Q
  1. A 23-year-old male comes to your office accompanied by his girlfriend to talk about attention-deficit disorder. He minimizes the concerns she raises, which include sleeping less (sometimes just 2–3 hours a night), rambling on tangentially during conversations, and being highly irritable. When you ask him about these observations, he agrees that they are true and reflect a change in his usual behavior. However, he explains that he is just becoming more social and that his girlfriend is probably jealous of his new popularity. The patient has no family history of attention-deficit disorder. His father died at a young age as a result of alcoholism. He denies stimulant use and a urine drug screen is negative.

Which one of the following mental disorders is most likely in this patient?

A) Attention-deficit disorder
B) Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
C) Generalized anxiety disorder
D) Major depressive disorder
E) Bipolar disorder
A

ANSWER: E

It is estimated that about one-third of patients with bipolar disorder seek medical care within a year of the onset of symptoms, but that nearly 70% do not receive an accurate diagnosis. The symptoms can often be subtle and may be attributed to other causes by patients or their loved ones.
A diagnosis of attention-deficit disorder requires that a patient’s symptoms be present since early childhood, although they are sometimes not recognized at the time. This patient and his girlfriend have both acknowledged that he is not his usual self. He presents with increased self-esteem, a decreased need for sleep, pressured/tangential speech, and irritability, which point to the possibility of a manic or hypomanic episode. Together these symptoms suggest bipolar disease (SOR C). Patients with full-blown mania are often out of touch with reality and easy to identify. However, patients with hypomania consider themselves to have increased well-being and productivity, and will not always seek attention or consider themselves to have a problem.

Other symptoms that should alert the physician to this diagnosis include substance abuse (present in over 70% of cases) and involvement in other pleasurable but destructive activities such as overspending or hypersexuality. If substance abuse is present, however, it must be addressed before making a diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Bipolar disorder is highly genetic, and asking about affected first degree family members can often assist in making the diagnosis.

49
Q
  1. A 73-year-old white female sees you for a routine visit. The patient is on multiple medications, and on examination her blood pressure is 140/80 mm Hg and her heart rate is 75 beats/min. She also has a systolic heart murmur, osteoarthritic changes of the knees, and a trace of peripheral edema. Her free T4 level is elevated, and her TSH level is less than 0.01 uU/mL (N 0.5–5.0).

Which one of the following medications the patient is taking is most likely to cause abnormal thyroid hormone levels?

A) Amiodarone (Cordarone)
B) Digoxin
C) Enalapril (Vasotec)
D) Furosemide (Lasix)
E) Lithium
A

ANSWER: A

This patient has asymptomatic hyperthyroidism, which is more common in the elderly. Elevated T4 and markedly suppressed TSH are diagnostic. Common causes include Graves’ disease, toxic adenoma, multinodular goiter, thyroiditis, and use of iodine-containing medications such as amiodarone. Amiodarone-associated hyperthyroidism may be related to either iodine excess or a toxic effect on the gland, causing thyroiditis (level of evidence 3). Lithium is associated with hypothyroidism.

50
Q
  1. You are writing a prescription for amoxicillin for a 6-year-old female with acute otitis media. Her mother has had an anaphylactic reaction to penicillin in the past and is concerned that she may have passed this trait down to her daughter. You reassure her that this is not usually the case but warn her about potential signs of an allergic reaction.

Which one of the following is the most concerning early symptom of a dangerous drug reaction?

A) Tachycardia and elevated blood pressure

B) Small, bright, erythematous macules diffusely over the trunk

C) Pruritus around the mouth and on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet

D) Eczematous patches in the antecubital and popliteal fossae

E) Diarrhea with blood on the tissue paper

A

ANSWER: C

Allergic reactions to medications have four primary mechanisms, referred to as Gell and Coombs classifications. The most frequent forms are type I reactions, which are immediate and mediated through IgE, and type IV reactions, which are delayed and mediated through T-cell hypersensitization. Severe type I reactions are often referred to as anaphylaxis and are the most likely to be life threatening with very little warning. Recognition of the early signs of anaphylaxis is the first step in preventing such catastrophes.

Anaphylactic reactions result from a massive release of histamine and start with pruritus around the mouth, on the scalp, and on the palms and soles; flushing of the face and neck, with rhinitis and conjunctivitis; angioedema of the oral mucosa, especially of the pharynx and larynx; severe urticaria; dyspnea and bronchospasm (especially in known asthmatics); and hypotension. A delay in lifesaving therapy during this phase will result in full shock, hypotension, and death. Type IV reactions usually result in benign, diffuse erythematous macules on the trunk and proximal extremities, often referred to as a drug rash. These reactions infrequently become more severe and rarely are life threatening. In severe cases the lesions become painful and palpable, and may involve blistering, mucositis, and ecchymosis.