I went through the whole thread, and I couldn't find answers to these questions. Any help would be very much appreciated. My test is in a few days, and I found it a little unsettling that most of the questions I got wrong weren't even mentioned in this thread.
1- 75 year old comes to physician because of leg swelling. physical exam shows JVD. Lungs clear to auscultation. imaging will show enlargement of?
(a) IVC and LA
(b) LA and LV
(c) RA and LA
(d) RA and RV
(e) RV and LA
any way you can also PLEASE explain to me why you put your answer? I'm having trouble with these questions and I was so sure the answer was LA and LV, i.e. answer choice B. My reasoning was that left heart failure was more common than right heart failure, and that the most common reason for right heart failure was left failure. I thought the heart was having trouble pumping out the blood from the LV, so the blood was backing up into the LA, so the blood backed up all the way into the other side causing the right heart symptoms (i.e. JVD).
2- 45 yr old woman, 3 month history decreased energy and concentration. Tingling in both hands, constipation, 4lb wt gain. Appears apathetic. Coarse hair, doughy skin, tapping median nerves results in parasthesias. Relaxation of muscle stretch reflexes is slowed.
half this question stem sounds like hypothyroidism, and the other half sounds like a problem with calcium. Isn't there a technique where you place a blood pressure cuff on someone's arm, and if they're having calcium issues, the hands spasms or something? i may be mixing stuff up i guess. The word "tapping" threw me off - any clue what they were trying to get at? Anything important we've learned that involves tapping?
3- 79 yo woman brought in by her son because she's having chest pain. Type 2 DM. Two packs a day smoker until 70 yo. Chest x-ray shows mildly enlarged cardiac silhouette. ST segment elevation. What's the dx?
(a) acute coronary syndrome
(b) acute pericarditis
(c) bilateral pneumonia
(d) cerebrovascular event
(e) pulmonary embolism
4- TB test. The question is asking about what cell is predominant. I put CTL. Someone earlier in this thread said that the answer is macrophages. I have never gotten a single one of these TB skin test questions right. can someone PLEASE explain to me why it's not CTLs? actually here's my question: if a question is talking about a TB skin test, will there ever be a time when the answer is going to be CTLs? I'm frustrated because I was so sure I got it right when I put CTLs.
5- 24 yo dude brought in by his wife. 2 day history of progressive confusion. His words look pretty but don't make any sense, etc. etc etc
(a) toxoplasma
(b) HSV encephalitis
(c) HIV encephelopathy
(d) meningococcal meningitis
(e) subdural empyema
Will someone please tell me what the difference is between encephalopathy and encephalitis? is it that one of them involves foreign organisms and the other doesn't? Or is it just that one is reversible and the other isn't?
thank you again for all your help! 😍