I've got 99 problems and the first 98 are that I am 99 and hospitalized with a UTI
Cancer I hardly know her
What it feels like to chew five gum after also having ayahuasca
A colonoscopy is just an endoscopy through the opposite end
Not related
100

23 y/o, presenting with visual hallucinations, fine tremor and nausea x16 hours, hx of polysubstance abuse. No pupillary exam findings. Denies taking street drugs recently.

Alcohol Hallucinosis

Pearl: Visual but accusatory most common, 12-48 hours after last drink, DIFFERENT from hallucinations with DTs.

100

HPV testing is required to start at what time and what interval to follow? 

21 and q3 three years until 30, at which point it either remains at q3 or becomes q5 if high risk HPV and cytology is performed

100

15 y/o without PMHx arriving home from a night out with friends found to have progressive confusion, agitation, hypertension, mydriasis. Labs pending.

Sympathomimetic Toxidrome

Pearl: Signs of acute catecholaminergic are most commonly drug side effects. PCP, "wet", cocaine, amphetamines are all examples.

100

The current initial age to start colon cancer screening in a NORMAL risk individual 

What is 45
100

3 y/o with <2 mm ulcers on the posterior oropharynx, low grade fever, goes to day camp. Other than pain with swallowing pt. seems unphased.

Herpangina/CXA

Pearl: HSV mucogingival dz usually has HIGH fever, malaise and ulcers are anterior buccal +/- lip involvement

200

75 y/o with chronic "dementia" times years, now complicated by visual hallucinations that pt. reports but is not bothered by as well as tremor. HDS afebrile.

Lewy Body Dementia

Pearl: Criteria includes progressive dementia + 2 of the following: fluctuating mentation, parkinsonism, visual hallucinations, delusions. Thought to account for a total of 20% dementia.

200

52 y/o arriving for a visit, current smoker. However, they note that they started later in life and have not smoked "that much". What pack year hx would this person require to meet criteria for lung cancer screening? 

>20 pack year hx


Pearl: Requirements include - >20 pack year, age > 50, and if they quit is has to be <15 years ago

200

14 y/o arriving for abdominal discomfort, found to have large volume ascites, no pmhx. Initial lab work revealed: Coombs negative hemolytic anemia, AST predominant transaminitis 400/100, ALP of 6, mixed elevated bilirubinemia to 2.5, cr of 2.5. Exam notable for AAOx2 and dysarthria.

Wilson's Disease

Pearls: A few here - although low ceruloplasmin is the "hallmark" of wilson's, the sensitivity/spef are both <50. AST:ALT ratio of 2.2, ALP/total bilirubin <4 are both >90 for both sense/spef.

200

52 y/o defers colonoscopy in lieu of FIT testing. What is the screening interval for testing ? 

What is Annually 

200

62 y/o with known small cell lung cancer stage 3 in treatment, arriving to the office for evaluation for new weakness. Labs in house are at baseline, CPK is not elevated. Exam pertinent for new mild right sided ptosis, cancer is on the left. EMG pending. Afebrile and hemodynamically stable. No rashes.

Lambert-Eaton Syndrome

Pearl: Most commonly secondary to cancer (of which, SCC is the most common) or autoimmunity. Most notable hallmark is improved weakness after use, but other very common symptoms include dysautonomia, areflexia.

300

45 y/o s/p STEMI complicated by mediastinitis treated appropriately with resolution of symptoms/fever, about to be downgraded, now having acute hallucinations and agitation. Vitals and labs unchanged.

ICU syndrome or psychosis/Delirium

Pearl: Delirium can affect any age, esp. with a prolonged ICU course. Hallucinations can be part of the presentation.

300

What is the range of breast cancer screening in AVERAGE risk women with life expectancy greater then 10 years?

What is 50-74/75

Pearl: If pt. has a life expectancy <10 years, consider reducing the rate of ALL screenings

300

12 y/o pt. left home during the school day due to URI symptoms. When parents arrive home, pt. is confused, febrile, and agitated. Her URI symptoms were malaise and rhinorrhea, mom also had the illness without complication. Arrives febrile and tachycardiac. Exam pertinent for muscular rigidity and confusion. No drug paraphernalia found, no hx of substance use, parents do not have any of their medications at home.

Dextromorphan Toxicity 

Pearl: Found in mucinex/robitussion, common OTCs. Cases often reveal that OD was not intentional, mis-reading label is common.

300

Pt.'s father was diagnosed with colon cancer at the age of 35. What age should the pt. be tested? 

What is 25

300

8 y/o with these progression of symptoms: rash around b/l ankles -> arthralgias and "coca-cola" urine -> hyperacute abdominal pain  

What is HSP +/- IgA nephropathy 

Pearl: There are distinct criteria for a lot of diseases, this is one of them: Characteristic rash is REQUIRED, followed by 2/4: Hematuria/proteinuria, abdominal pain, arthalgias, + biopsy. In this case, the abdominal pain is likely secondary to luminal hematoma causing intussusception, which is common in individuals with HSP. 

400

67 y/o with multiple back-to-back admissions for COPD exacerbation (3 within a month, also visited urgent care once) arriving from home for AMS, spouse noted they were confused and combative. Vitals unremarkable, afebrile. Labs unremarkable. Becomes better in a few days without intervention

CCS psychosis 

Pearl: Tricky entity - unlike other CCS ADRs, less predictable. Has been documented to occur, after 1st dose of CCS, prolonged use, and after discontinuation.

400

42 y/o pt., newly diagnosed cirrhotic in the context of alpha 1AT arriving for annual visit. She is wondering about her risk of liver cancer. In cirrhotics, what is the recommended screening guidelines 

US +/- AFP q6 months 

400

DAILY DOUBLE 

Serotonin Syndrome

Pearl: Similar to CCS, serotonin syndrome does not have a set threshold that causes symptoms. More likely in pt.'s on multiple serotonergics, but can happen on a single serotonergic, and does not necessarily correlate directly with initiation of the med or increase in dose. 

Hunter's criteria: Helps make clinical diagnosis. 

400

Pt.'s family has a long hx of colon cancer: Father was diagnosed at 52, grandfather diagnosed at 40. What is the recommended screening age? 

What is 40

This is a tricky one - recs are for FIRST degree relatives only in terms of early screening, grandfather does not count. For first degree relatives, it is recommended either TEN YEARS BEFORE that person diagnosed or FORTY, and whatever comes first 

400

32 y/o with hx of left eye blindness from retinal A. occlusion, pulmonary arterial hypertension, mitral regurgitation on exam pending echo with: acute onset kidney failure, encephalopathy, lace like rash, and demand ischemia. 

What is (Catastrophic) APLS

Pearl: APLS criteria is basically: clotting + serology results (beta2, cardiolipin, antiphospholipid). However, >3 organ system dysfunction in <1 week is considered "catastrophic APLS", essentially triggered hypercoagulability, which changes management. The rash is livedo reticularis, which is exceptionally common in APLS 

500

58 y/o brought to the hospital after being found at a CVS, accosting patrons. No spouse or anyone else in his house. Closet relative is his son, who tells you he called him 2 months ago and he was complaining of memory difficulties and muscle spasms. Exam pertinent for AAOx1 and ataxia. The diagnosis is confirmed by Real-time Quaking Induced conversion.

What is CJD

Pearl: Cases do exist (saw 1 my intern year) RtQIC is the current way this is confirmed - board exams may still ask for "14-3-3 protein", but that has much lower sense/spef. RtQIC has 100% sensitivity. It is done on CSF 

500

50 y/o with refractory GERD undergoes an endoscopy, barrett's pathology discovered. When is he next due for an endoscopy? 

Within one year

Pearl: This is mostly a tested question, if GI is on board usually, they manage this for you (however, would not 100% rely on that either). Once Barrets is discovered, one more endoscopy should be performed that year (no specified interval) and then if still normal every 3-5 years

500

10 y/o is brought to the hospital for confusion and agitation. Over the last week, she has developed ataxia, lateral gaze deviation, and encephalopathy. HDS, afebrile. Exam pertinent for areflexia. Diagnosis is confirmed by serology. 

What is Bickerstaff Encephalitis 

Pearl: The two most common variants of GBS are: miller fisher syndrome and Bickerstaff Encephalitis. They share a significant overlap in terms of symptoms (Ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, areflexia) and both can be diagnosed via anti-GD1q antibodies. Bickerstaff encephalitis is the same symptoms as miller fisher syndrome, but includes encephalopathy and possible brainstem involvement 

500

21 y/o is diagnosed with UC via colonoscopy, pathology shows sigmoid colitis but no dysplasia. When is pt. NEXT due for a colonoscopy?  

What is 29-31 

Pearl: AFTER diagnosis, as long as there is no metaplasia, UC/Crohn's pt.'s need to be screened 8-10 years later to evaluate for disease progression. If there is still no metaplasia, screening is then every 1-2 years. 

500
Called to the nursery to evaluate a hypoglycemic infant: glucose 10 5 hours after birth despite hypoglycemic measures. No maternal DM2 or perinatal stress. Labs reveal no acidosis or signs of infection. Requiring exceptional amounts of dextrose laden fluids in the NICU, unable to wean. Day 5, newborn screen is reported as normal. 

What is Primary Hyperinsulinism

Pearl: Hypoglycemia in a newborn is usually caused by perinatal stress, LGA/SGA, sepsis or maternal DM. Additional causes include inborn errors of metabolism. Without acidosis, IEOM with hypoglycemia is either: insulin related or fatty acid chain disorder. FACD is identified on the newborn screen, and has manageable hypoglycemia. In true primary hyperinsulinism, there is nonstop insulin release, and these kids cannot wean no matter what you do. 

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