Inflammatory
Infectious
Mechanical Trauma
Benign & Cancerous Lesions
Pediatric
100

This chronic inflammatory condition is characterized by silvery scales on erythematous plaques and may demonstrate a positive Auspitz sign.

Psoriasis

100

Painful grouped vesicles on the lip treated with acyclovir or valacyclovir.

Herpes simplex virus type 1

100

This medication is considered first-line treatment for most mammalian bite wounds requiring antibiotic prophylaxis.


Amoxicillin-clavulanate (Augmentin)

100

This benign lesion is often described as having a "stuck-on" waxy appearance.

Seborrheic keratosis

100

Which pathogen causes vesicles on the hands, feet, and oral mucosa?

Coxsackievirus

200

A patient presents with an intensely pruritic rash, dry skin, and a family history of asthma and allergic rhinitis.

Atopic dermatitis

200

This bacterial skin infection often presents as honey-colored crusted lesions around the nose and mouth.

Impetigo

200

Before closing an animal bite wound, the NP should carefully assess the need for this viral prophylaxis.

Rabies prophylaxis

200

This benign lesion appears as a bright red-to-purple vascular papule commonly found on the trunk.

Cherry angioma

200

This childhood viral illness presents with cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, fever, and a maculopapular rash.

Measles

300

A 15-year-old presents with mild acne vulgaris consisting primarily of comedones and a few inflammatory papules. What is the most appropriate first-line treatment?

benzoyl peroxide (or topical tretinoin)

300

A patient presents within 24 hours of developing a painful vesicular rash distributed along a thoracic dermatome. What medication should be started?

Valacyclovir (or acyclovir/famciclovir)

300

A patient presents with severe swelling and dyspnea after a bee sting. What should be addressed first?

Anaphylaxis

300

A rough, scaly lesion on a sun-exposed area that can progress to squamous cell carcinoma.

Actinic keratosis

300

Pearly, umbilicated papules on the trunk.

Molluscum contagiosum

400

This facial condition commonly presents with papules, pustules, flushing, and telangiectasias, but lacks comedones.

Rosacea

400

What bacteria is most commonly responsible for folliculitis?

Staphylococcus aureus

400

A child is diagnosed with scabies. Besides prescribing permethrin cream, what additional management step is essential?

Treating all household contacts

400

This is the most common skin cancer and often appears as a pearly papule with telangiectasias.

Basal cell carcinoma

400

This viral illness classically causes unilateral followed by bilateral parotid swelling.

Mumps

500

An adult with extensive plaque psoriasis involving multiple body regions has failed topical therapy. What treatment modality should be considered next?

UVB phototherapy

500

A patient with tinea capitis has failed multiple topical antifungals. What is the next best treatment?

Oral griseofulvin

500

A patient presents with severe itching of the scalp and visible nits attached to hair shafts. What is the most appropriate treatment?

Permethrin or other pediculicides plus nit removal with a fine-toothed comb.

500

A 52-year-old patient presents with a rapidly growing scaly lesion on the lower lip that bleeds easily. The patient has a history of heavy sun exposure.

Squamous cell carcinoma

500

A child develops a generalized vesicular rash. The NP should avoid prescribing this medication due to risk of Reye syndrome.

Aspirin

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