Anatomy
Pharmacology
CCS
Physiology
CDT
100

What type of joint allows for least movement of adjacent structures? Where would you find this type of joint?

Fibrous joints. Can be found in sutures, tibiofibular joint, radio-ulnar joint

100

Explain affinity and efficacy with respect to agonists and competitive antagonists

Affinity: strength of binding

Efficacy: effect upon binding

Agonist has affinity and efficacy

Competitive antagonist has affinity but no efficacy

100

Describe the general steps in a physical examination

1. Introduction

2. Inspection

3. Vital signs

4. Palpation

5. Percussion

6. Auscultation

7. Conclusion

100

List 6 clinical features of Down Syndrome

Brushfield spots, short neck, slanted eyes with prominent epicanthal fold, single palmar crease, short stature, folding of ear helix, small flattened nose, hypotonia, hyperglossia, clinodactyly

100

What are the 4 components of the Public Health Framework/Model?

1. Surveillance

2. Risk Factor Identification

3. Development and Evaluation of Interventions

4. Implementations

200

Order the contents of the femoral sheath (5)

Nerve, Artery, Vein, Empty space (femoral hernia), Lymph

NAVEL

200

Name 3 types of drugs that can be used in a patient with hypertension

ACE inhibitors (prils)

Angiotensin II Receptor Inhibitors (sartans)

Beta Blockers (lols)

Diuretics (e.g. frusemide)

200

Describe 3 abnormalities involving the chest wall (relevant to respiratory examination)

Barrel chest - increased anteroposterior diameter

Funnel chest (pectus excavatum) - localised depression at lower end of the sternum

Pigeon chest (pectus carinatum) - localised prominence of the sternum and costal cartilages

Harrison's sulcus - linear depression of the lower ribs just above costal margins (can result from severe asthma in childhood, or rickets)

200

List the 5 different immunoglobulins and briefly describe

IgM (pentamer - 10 Ag binding sites) - primary Ab produced in response to initial Ag exposure

IgG (most abundant) - involved in long term immunity and Ab-mediated defense, can cross placenta to protect foetus

IgA (dimer - allows it to cross epithelial cells) - predominates in mucosal areas and body secretions (e.g. breastmilk), low concentration in plasma

IgD - on the surface of B cells, function not clear

IgE - involved in allergic reactions and defense against parasitic infections

200

What are the 4 criteria in obtaining patient consent?

Voluntary, Informed, Specific, Capacity

VISC

300

What are the structures at the sternal angle (angle of Louis)?

Rib (2nd costal cartilage), Aortic arch, Tracheal bifurcation, Pulmonary trunk bifurcation, Ligamentum arteriosum, Arch of azygos vein, Nerve (left recurrent laryngeal), Thoracic duct (crosses thorax)

300

What are 5 factors involved in oral absorption of a drug?

Lipid solubility, Molecular size (if water soluble), Full/Empty stomach, Taken with or without food, Stability of drug, Type and Properties of the form of administration (tablet vs liquid), First pass metabolism

FILMS GF

300

What is Dupuytren's contracture? (GIT)

A visible and palpable thickening and contraction of the palmar fascia causing permanent flexion, most often of the ring finger (often bilateral, associated with alcoholism)

300

Explain the 4 classes of shock (Class 1 to Class 4)

Class 1: HR<100, RR=14-20, BP normal, Blood loss <750mL (<15%), PP norm/incr, Urine output >30mL/hr

Class 2: HR>100, RR=20-30, BP norm, Blood loss =750-1500 (15-30%), PP decr, Urine output =20-30mL/hr

Class 3: HR>120, RR=30-40, BP decr, Blood loss =1500-2000 (30-40%), PP decr, Urine output =5-15mL/hr

Class 4: HR>140, RR>35, BP decr, Blood loss >2000 (>40%), PP decr, Urine negl

300

What is Gillick competence?

What are the factors?

'Gillick competence' refers to a young person under 16 with capacity to make any relevant decision

  • age
  • psychiatric, psychological and emotional state
  • understanding of the nature and consequences of the illness and its treatment
  • maturity, intellect and life experience
  • ability to understand wider consequences of the decision, including the effect on other people, and moral and family issues

 

400

Name the 11 structures in the transpyloric plane

Hila of kidneys, Hepatic portal vein, L1 vertebra, Pancreatic neck, Pylorus of Stomach, Transverse mesocolon, 9th costal cartilage, Fundus of gallbladder, Duodenojejunal flexure, Origin of SMA, Spinal Cord termination

400

Why does St John’s wort reduce the effectiveness of the oral contraceptive pill?

St John's Wort is an inducer of the CYP3A4 enzyme (which metabolises the active ingredients in the OCP - ethinyloestradiol and  levonorgestrel). Therefore St John's Wort will speed up the inactivation of the OCP and reduce its efficacy.

400

What are 3 high-yield questions to ask a patient presenting with constipation?

What is the colour/consistency/odour of your stool?

Any pain or straining?

Has your bowel habits changed recently?

Is there any blood in the stools?

Have you experienced any recent weight loss?

Do you have a history of colon polyps or cancer?

Is there a family history of colon cancer?

400

Describe the three phases of the menstrual cycle

1. Proliferative (follicular) - endometrium thickens, follicle grows and oocyte develops, LH surge triggers ovulation

2. Secretory (luteal) - fate of the oocyte and developing corpus luteum decided, progesterone predominates

3. Menstruation - stratum functionale degenerates and is sloughed off, coiled arteries undergo cell death, progesterone withdrawal

400

List the 5 criteria for mandatory reporting for children and young adults

1. Emotional abuse

2. Sexual abuse

3. Physical abuse

4. Neglect

5. Family violence

500

What is the uncinate process of the pancreas? What are the anterior and posterior anatomical relations? 

Bonus points for clinical significance

The uncinate process is an extension of the head of the pancreas

Anteriorly: Lies posterior to the superior mesenteric vessels (artery/vein)

Posteriorly: Adjacent to the inferior vena cava (IVC) and sometimes the abdo aorta

Clinical: Whipple procedure (pancreaticoduodenectomy) - wary of superior mesenteric vessels

500

Describe the Penicillin mechanism of action

Penicillin is a beta-lactam antibiotic class of drugs that interferes with cell wall synthesis. The β-Lactam is a D-Alanine analogue, which competitively binds to penicillin-binding protein (PBPs) to prevent peptidoglycan synthesis

500

Where is McBurney's point and what is its clinical significance?

McBurney's point lies 2/3 of the way from the umbilicus to the anterior superior iliac spine.

It corresponds to the location of the base of the appendix

500

Describe the stages of haemoglobin metabolism

Haemoglobin from old RBCs is broken down into globin (degraded to amino acids) and haem. 

Haem is first oxidised to biliverdin by haem oxygenase-1 with the release of iron. 

Biliverdin is oxidised to unconjugated bilirubin by biliverdin reductase.

Bilirubin is released into plasma where it is largely bound to albumin

Bilirubin is conjugated in the liver by GDP glucoronyl transferase and excreted as bile

The GIT bilirubin is catabolised by gut microflora to urobilinogen (most is reabsorbed and returns to liver, some reaches the kidneys and is excreted as urobilin (orange), some is oxidised further to stercobilin and excreted in faeces)

500

Name the 9 Bradford Hill criteria

Strength of association, Coherence, Specific, Biological Gradient, Plausibility, Consistency, Analogy, Experimental Evidence, Temporal

ACCESS PTB

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