Rhinosinusitis
Dysuria
Jaundice
Pediatric GER
Vision loss
100

First line antibiotics for acute bacterial rhinosinusitis (list 2)

What are amoxicillin-clavulanate and amoxicillin?

100

3 STIs to consider for symptomatic urethritis in males

What are Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, Mycoplasma genitalium, Trichomonas, Ureaplasma urealyticum?

100

A reason for appearing jaundiced but no elevated bilirubin

What is spray-tanning, carotenemia, Addison disease, or anorexia nervosa?

100
(T/F) Prescribing H2 blockers or PPIs for crying, distress or visible regurgitation in otherwise healthy infants should be avoided.

What is TRUE?

100

List 3 symptoms of retinal detachment

What are flashes, floaters, falling curtain?

200

Indications for antibiotics for rhinosinusitis

What are fever, facial pain, and purulent nasal drainage for 7-10 days, improvement and then worsening of symptoms (double-sickening), and severe symptoms lasting 3 or more days?
200

Next step if 3+ RBC on a urine dipstick

What is send for microscopic urinalysis?

200

Next step if etiology of jaundice is unclear despite laboratory testing and imaging

What is liver biopsy?

200

List at least 1 feeding modifications for infants with GERD AND

List 2 conservative measures for GERD in children

What are:

Infant GERD:

1. Add thickening agents to formula

2. Reduce feeding volumes while increasing feeding frequency

3. Switch to extensively hydrolyzed or amino acid-based formula

2. Children GERD

1. Weight control for children with obesity

2. Last meal should occur 2-3 hours before sleep

3. Modified sleeping positions, including head elevation and lateral decubitus positioning

200

List 3 differential diagnoses for painful vision loss >24 hrs with headache and orbital pain

What are migraine with aura, acute angle-closure glaucoma, idiopathic intracranial hypertension, optic neuritis, giant cell arteritis?

300

The duration of acute rhinosinusitis according to IDSA

What is up to 4 weeks?


(Typically resolve within 7-10 days)

300

T/F: All UTIs in males are considered complicated.

What is true?

300

If an adult patient has unconjugated hyperbiliurinbemia, the 3 labs to order to determine if hemolysis is present

What are peripheral blood smear, direct antibody test, Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme testing?

300

GERD triggers in maternal diet for breastfeeding infants

What are dairy, wheat, soy and eggs?

300

What diagnosis has a fundoscopic exam with a pale retina except for a prominent red spot at the center of the macula?

What is retinal artery occlusion?

400

Consider this antibiotic and dose if patient has risk factors for hospitalization 

What is high dose amoxicillin-clavulanate? Adults: 1000-625mg tablet, 2 extended release tablets, 2x/day

Children 2 or younger: 90mg/kg per day, divided every 12 hrs

Risk factors: younger than 2 yo, older than 65, attending daycare, recent hospitalization, immunocompromised, received antibiotic treatment in past month, signs of systemic toxicity, multiple comorbidities

400

4 common dietary bladder irritants

What are citrus fruits, tomato, onion, beans, nuts, yogurt, spicy food, vinegar, chocolate, caffeinated carbonated beverages?

400

7 causes of conjugated hyperbilirubinemia

Intrahepatic-alcoholic liver disease, autoimmune hepatitis, PBC, cirrhosis, Dubin-Johnson, Rotor, Wilson, hemochromatosis, HCC, amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, IHCP, sepsis, TPN, viral hepatitis, steatohepatitis

Extrahepatic cholestasis-cholangiocarcinoma, biliary atresia, chronic pancreatitis, parasitic infections, trauma, PSC

DILI-allopurinol, amiodarone, anesthetic agents, Augmentin, fluoroquinolones, isoniazid, macrolides, Bactrim, macrobid, antiepileptics (lamotrigine, carbamazepine), acetaminophen, TNFalpha, methotrexate, PPI, statins, supplements

400

Indications for referral to Pediatric GI for infant GERD

When is nonpharmacological therapy maximized and cannot wean after trial of acid suppression for 4-8 weeks? (or symptoms do not improve with medication)

400

T/F: In patients with suspected giant cell arteritis, obtain temporal artery biopsy before initiating empiric steroids

What is False?

500

List 2 antibiotic choices for children with beta-lactam allergies for rhinosinusitis

What is levofloxacin or clindamycin plus cefixime or cefpodoxime (third generation cephalosporin)?

500

Definition of recurrent UTI in female

What are 2 UTIs in 6 months or 3 UTIs in 12 months?

500

5 causes of unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia

What are Autoimmune hemolytic anemia, drug induced, hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell, thalassemia), hereditary disorders (Crigler-Najjar, Gilbert), Impaired bilirubin uptake by liver (CHF, cirrhosis), G6PD, elliptocytosis, spherocytosis?

500
List 1 adverse side effect of H2 blocker for neonates and

List 2 adverse side effect of PPI for children

1. H2 blocker: What is increased risk of necrotizing enterocolitis in very low birthweight infants?

2. PPI: What are risks of respiratory infection, GI infection and asthma?

500

List 3 causes of transient vision loss in both eyes

What are TIA, migraine, syncope, seizure, idiopathic intracranial hypertension?