Blackboard EMQs CVS Flashcards

1
Q

48 yr old man presents with central chest pain on unusual exertion. Resting ECG is normal and there are no obvious risk factors. He would prefer not to take medication until a definitive diagnosis is made.

Choose the most appropriate initial management from the list of options
A.	Beta blockers
B.	Exercise ECG
C.	Long acting nitrates
D.	Nifedipine
E.	Angioplasty
F.	CABG
G.	Coronary angiography
H.	Thallium scan
I.	Ace inhibitors
A

B. Exercise ECG

This patient has presented with stable angina. Resting ECG is often normal however during exercise stress ECG (most often the Bruce Protocol) there will be ST segment depression during exercise indicative of ischaemia. Those unable to exercise to an adequate level may need stress myocardial perfusion imaging or stress echocardiography. 1st line treatment involves lifestyle changes and antiplatelet therapy with aspirin. Anti-anginal theray will also be given, first line being beta-blockade. Statin therapy, blood sugar control in diabetics and BP control with antihypertensives may also be necessary. Those with LMS disease, 3 vessel disease or a reduced EF may benefit from CABG. Single vessel disease may benefit from PCI.

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2
Q

55 yr old man is taking increasing doses of sublingual GTN for established stable angina. He also has COPD with a reduced PEFR. Coronary angiography has shown diffuse disease but he has refused intervention.

Choose the most appropriate initial management from the list of options
A.	Beta blockers
B.	Exercise ECG
C.	Long acting nitrates
D.	Nifedipine
E.	Angioplasty
F.	CABG
G.	Coronary angiography
H.	Thallium scan
I.	Ace inhibitors
A

D. Nifedipine

First line anti-anginal therapy for stable angina is a beta blocker such as metoprolol. However, this patient has COPD and beta blockers are relatively contraindicated due to bronchospasm (even those considered to be cardioselective). 2nd line treatment is with a CCB such as nifedipine. Long acting nitrates can be used as additional therapy or in patients where beta blockers and CCBs are contraindicated.

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3
Q

60 yr old man with stable angina is awaiting surgery. He is on the highest tolerated dose of beta blocker and CCB but is still symptomatic. BP is 170/95 mmHg.

Choose the most appropriate initial management from the list of options
A.	Beta blockers
B.	Exercise ECG
C.	Long acting nitrates
D.	Nifedipine
E.	Angioplasty
F.	CABG
G.	Coronary angiography
H.	Thallium scan
I.	Ace inhibitors
A

C. Long acting nitrates

Long acting nitrates such as isosorbide mononitrate or transdermal GTN is indicated as the patient is still symptomatic on beta blockers and CCBs. Appropriate nitrate-free periods will be needed to avoid tolerance. Severe hypotension may occur if combined with a phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor.

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4
Q

50 yr old man presents with typical history of exertional angina with ischaemic changes on resting ECG. Coronary angiography shows 70% stenosis of the left anterior descending artery with no significant lesions elsewhere.

Choose the most appropriate initial management from the list of options
A.	Beta blockers
B.	Exercise ECG
C.	Long acting nitrates
D.	Nifedipine
E.	Angioplasty
F.	CABG
G.	Coronary angiography
H.	Thallium scan
I.	Ace inhibitors
A

E. Angioplasty

Those with LMS disease, 3 vessel disease or a reduced EF may benefit from CABG. Most single vessel disease can be adequately managed with PCI.

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5
Q

A 62 year old man, 3 months after an MI, taking asprin, atenolol and simvistatin, whose echocardigram shows worsening left ventricular function

Choose the best option for reducing CVS risk
A. Cholesterol lowering therapy with a statin
B. Aspirin therapy
C. Reduced alcohol intake
D. Antihypertensive drugs
E. Weight reduction and increased physical activity
F. Weight reduction and metformin therapy
G. Smoking cessation
H. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy

A

H. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy

This patient has worsening LV function in line with heart failure. First line treatment is with an ACE inhibitor which reduces morbidity and mortality associated with the condition. All patients with LV dysfunction should receive ACE inhibitors, whether symptomatic or not. Caution should be taken if the patient has renal impairment, cardiogenic shock or hyperkalaemia. All patients with chronic heart failure will also receive a beta blocker such as carvedilol.

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6
Q

A 46 year old woman, normal blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar, body mass index 32

Choose the best option for reducing CVS risk
A. Cholesterol lowering therapy with a statin
B. Aspirin therapy
C. Reduced alcohol intake
D. Antihypertensive drugs
E. Weight reduction and increased physical activity
F. Weight reduction and metformin therapy
G. Smoking cessation
H. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy

A

E. Weight reduction and increased physical activity

This woman is obese (BMI greater than or equal to 30) and needs to lose weight. Central obesity has a greater correlation with co-morbidities than peripheral obesity so arguably waist circumference is a better indicator of risk than body mass index. The mainstay of treatment is with diet and exercise. This patient is obese and drug therapy can be considered as an adjunct. This is primarily with orlistat which inhibits fat absorption by inhibiting lipases. For weight loss, the recommended intake is 1200-1500 kcal/day for men and 1000-1200kcal/day for women, producing a 500-1000kcal/day deficit.

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7
Q

A 77 year old man, normal blood pressure, not diabetic, who has had 3 episodes of transient left sided weakness in the last month

Choose the best option for reducing CVS risk
A. Cholesterol lowering therapy with a statin
B. Aspirin therapy
C. Reduced alcohol intake
D. Antihypertensive drugs
E. Weight reduction and increased physical activity
F. Weight reduction and metformin therapy
G. Smoking cessation
H. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy

A

B. Aspirin therapy

A TIA is colloquially called a ‘mini stroke’ with symptoms typically lasting under an hour. An antiplatelet drug such as aspirin is effective secondary prevention if the patient is not already anticoagulated. The patient will be anticoagulated if they have a likely or known cardioembolic source such as AF. Clopidogrel is an alternative in those who do not tolerate aspirin.

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8
Q

A 54 year old man, normal blood pressure, normal lipid profile, body mass index 28, random blood sugar 15 mmol/L, fasting blood sugar 8.5mmol/L

Choose the best option for reducing CVS risk
A. Cholesterol lowering therapy with a statin
B. Aspirin therapy
C. Reduced alcohol intake
D. Antihypertensive drugs
E. Weight reduction and increased physical activity
F. Weight reduction and metformin therapy
G. Smoking cessation
H. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy

A

F. Weight reduction and metformin therapy

This patient has DM. Symptomatic patients need a single random blood glucose of >11.1 or single fasting glucose of >7. Asymptomatic patients need two separate elevated readings for a diagnosis. Alternatively if there are borderline results, an OGTT can be conducted to see if plasma glucose is raised >11.1 two hours after an oral glucose load of 75g. A patient is said to have impaired fasting glucose if fasting glucose falls between 6.1-6.9. Impaired glucose tolerance is present if plasma glucose 2 hours after oral glucose load in OGTT falls between 7.8-11.0. First line intervention in this situation is diet and lifestyle advice and changes. Metformin will be added if there is no adequate response. In terms of this question, this option will reduce cardiovascular risk the most for this patient. Metformin is a biguanide and suppresses hepatic glucose production.

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9
Q

30 yr old man attends for a routine pre employment medical. On examination of the CVS system the doctor finds a soft ejection systolic murmur at the apex. He has no previous cardiac or respiratory problems, and has normal pulse and BP

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mixed aortic valve disease
B.	Mitral stenosis - rheumatic
C.	Infective endocarditis
D.	Innocent murmur
E.	Mixed mitral valve disease
F.	Mixed mitral and ahortic valve disease
G.	Mitral regurgitation- rheumatic
H.	Aortic regurgitation
I.	Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
J.	Mitral incompetence
K.	Aortic stenosis
A

D. Innocent murmur

This is a functional murmur which is not caused by a structural cardiac defect. Functional murmurs tend to be systolic, occuring in an otherwise healthy individual with no symptoms. They are also characteristically position dependent and soft in nature. Ones that occur in children tend to disappear as the child grows. Benign paediatric murmurs include Still’s murmur.

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10
Q

60 yr old Irish woman comes to see you with a progressive one year history of shortness of breath and recent onset of paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea. She has been previously well apart from Sydenham’s chorea as a child. She had six normal pregnancies. Examination= plethoric cheeks, pulse is 110 bpm irregular and small volume. BP 128/80mmHg. The JVP is normal. The apex is in the 5th i.c.s. and m.c.l and tapping in nature. The 1st heart sound is loud and P2 accentuated. A low pitched mid-diastolic murmur is heard in the apex.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mixed aortic valve disease
B.	Mitral stenosis - rheumatic
C.	Infective endocarditis
D.	Innocent murmur
E.	Mixed mitral valve disease
F.	Mixed mitral and ahortic valve disease
G.	Mitral regurgitation- rheumatic
H.	Aortic regurgitation
I.	Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
J.	Mitral incompetence
K.	Aortic stenosis
A

B. Mitral stenosis - rheumatic

Sydenham’s chorea (St Vitus Dance) are dancelike movements seen in rheumatic fever. The major criteria for rheumatic fever can be remember by CASES: carditis, arthritis, Sydenham’s chorea, erythema marginatum and subcutaneous nodules. Practically every single case of mitral stenosis is caused by rheumatic heart disease. The process tends to also cause regurgitation. This is characteristically a grade 1-2 low pitch murmur heard in mid-diastole which has a rumbling nature and there is no radiation. There can be an associated malar flush, tapping apex beat and a diastolic thrill palpable at the apex, in the 5th intercostal space in the MCL. The first heart sound is also characteristically loud and often this is the most striking feature on ascultation. It is a difficult murmur to pick up so if you are ever asked at this stage to spot this murmur, it will most likely be based on the loud S1.

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11
Q

50 yr old man attends A&E with SOB, fever and hyperdynamic regular pulse of 100. BP 160/60 mmHg. He has a murmur at the left sternal edge. On further enquiry it is found he attended for a routine dental procedure 2 months ago.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mixed aortic valve disease
B.	Mitral stenosis - rheumatic
C.	Infective endocarditis
D.	Innocent murmur
E.	Mixed mitral valve disease
F.	Mixed mitral and ahortic valve disease
G.	Mitral regurgitation- rheumatic
H.	Aortic regurgitation
I.	Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
J.	Mitral incompetence
K.	Aortic stenosis
A

C. Infective endocarditis

Any patient presenting with fever and a new murmur should always make you think of bacterial endocarditis. The classic new or worsening murmur is actually rare. As are splinter haemorrhages, which this patient has. Other uncommon signs you may find include Janeway lesions (painless macular haemorrhagic plaques on the palms and soles) and Osler nodes (painful nodules on the pads of the fingers and toes). Roth spots may also be seen on fundoscopy. Three sets of bood cultures are required and this patient will have to go for an echocardiogram.The Duke criteria is used for diagnosis.
Personally I think aortic regurgitation is an acceptable answer here given the wide pulse pressure and location of the mumur.

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12
Q

80 yr old woman presents with recent onset of effort related chest pain. On examination: loud ejection systolic murmur and a low pulse pressure with a slow rising pulse.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mixed aortic valve disease
B.	Mitral stenosis - rheumatic
C.	Infective endocarditis
D.	Innocent murmur
E.	Mixed mitral valve disease
F.	Mixed mitral and ahortic valve disease
G.	Mitral regurgitation- rheumatic
H.	Aortic regurgitation
I.	Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
J.	Mitral incompetence
K.	Aortic stenosis
A

K. Aortic stenosis

Aortic stenosis can present with chest pain, dyspnoea and syncope. It is characterised by a harsh ejection systolic murmur heard loudest at the right upper sternal edge at end expiration, which radiates up towards the carotids. The pulse pressure is narrow and there may be an associated slow-rising and plateau pulse. Doppler echo is vital for diagnosis and shows a pressure gradient across the narrowed valve orifice. 20% of cases are due to a congenital bicuspid valve. The most common cause of aortic stenosis in adults is calcification of normal trileaflet valves. Clinically stable patients may be considered for surgical repair or TAVR.

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13
Q

65 yr old man had an inferior MI 10 days ago. His initial course was uncomplicated. He suddenly deteriorates with LVF. On examination pulse is regular 100bpm and normal volume and character. BP 110/160mmHg. Apex beat is dynamic. There is a loud grade III apical pan-systolic murmur radiating to the axilla.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mixed aortic valve disease
B.	Mitral stenosis - rheumatic
C.	Infective endocarditis
D.	Innocent murmur
E.	Mixed mitral valve disease
F.	Mixed mitral and ahortic valve disease
G.	Mitral regurgitation- rheumatic
H.	Aortic regurgitation
I.	Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
J.	Mitral incompetence
K.	Aortic stenosis
A

J. Mitral incompetence (same thing as regurgitation)

MR is loudest at the apex and radiates to the axilla and tends to be around grade 4. It is associated with a systolic thrill at the apex. TTE is the investigation of choice for diagnosis. Chronic MR is associated with a laterally displaced apex beat with LV dilatation. Mitral valve prolapse is a strong risk factor for development of MR.

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14
Q

33 year old woman complains of giddiness on standing & can no longer cross a road on her own as she is worried that she may pass out. She developed diabetes when age 12 & has had treatment to her eyes 2 years ago.

Match the cause of hypotension to the following case histories.
A.	Blood loss
B.	Addison’s disease
C.	Arrhythmia
D.	Autonomic neuropathy
E.	Drug induced
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	Cardiogenic shock
H.	Volume depletion
I.	Septicaemia
A

D. Autonomic neuropathy

Autonomic neuropathy is a complication of diabetic neuropathy. Symptoms of autonomic neuropathy include… resting tachycardia (late findings due to vagal impairment), impaired HR variation, erectile dysfunction (affects many diabetic men though is not solely due to autonomic neuropathy), decreased libido and dyspareunia, orthostatic hypotension (measure BP supine and then standing after 1, 2, 3 and sometimes 5 minutes – an abnormal drop when standing is indicative) and urinary symptoms of frequency, urgency, incontinence, nocturia, weak stream and retention. Other symptoms include constipation, faecal incontinence and sweating dysfunction. Fludrocortisone may be helpful in this woman.

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15
Q

76 year old woman was admitted with confusion. She had been increasingly unable to care for herself. On admission, she was found to have cool peripheries & her blood pressure was 100/70. Blood results showed plasma urea 25mmol/l & plasma creatinine 120umol/l.

Match the cause of hypotension to the following case histories.
A.	Blood loss
B.	Addison’s disease
C.	Arrhythmia
D.	Autonomic neuropathy
E.	Drug induced
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	Cardiogenic shock
H.	Volume depletion
I.	Septicaemia
A

H. Volume depletion

Volume depletion is a reduction in ECF volume due to salt and fluid losses which exceed intake. Causes include vomiting, bleeding, diarrhoea, diuresis and third space losses. Symptoms do not occur until large losses have alrady occured. Cool peripheries are a sign of peripheral shut down. Confusion may reflect poor cerebral flow or uraemia.Volume depletion has led to the low BP. Other symptoms include postural hypotension and tachycardia, weight loss and signs of shock. Serum urea and creatinine is elevated (you need to eyeball the patient when looking at creatinine – a very big body builder will have a much higher creatinine), indicating poor renal blood flow. This patient needs IV saline fluid replacement.

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16
Q

22 year old man presented with vomiting. He had not been feeling himself for some weeks. On examination, the skin creases of his hands were dark. Blood results showed plasma urea 8.5mmol/l, sodium 121mmol/l & potassium 5.1mmol/l.

Match the cause of hypotension to the following case histories.
A.	Blood loss
B.	Addison’s disease
C.	Arrhythmia
D.	Autonomic neuropathy
E.	Drug induced
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	Cardiogenic shock
H.	Volume depletion
I.	Septicaemia
A

B. Addison’s disease

Hyperpigmentation in the palmar creases points towards Addison’s disease. Hyperpigmentation due to excess ACTH production can be mucosal or cutaneous and is more pronounced in the palms, knuckles and around scars. MSH is a byproduct of the production of ACTH from the cleavage of POMC. Sodium is low and potassium elevated. Vomiting is present in 75% of patients and nausea is a common finding. Additionally, postural hypotension may be present. The presence of other autoimmune diseases is a risk factor for the development of Addison’s.

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17
Q

45 year old man presented with severe chest pain radiating down his left arm. He was pale, cold & sweaty. Blood pressure was 80/50mmHg, pulse rate was 100 & regular. JVP was raised by 3cm & auscultation of the chest revealed basal creps. Over the next few hours, he became progressively short of breath despite being given intravenous diuretics. Chest x-ray showed signs of pulmonary congestion.

Match the cause of hypotension to the following case histories.
A.	Blood loss
B.	Addison’s disease
C.	Arrhythmia
D.	Autonomic neuropathy
E.	Drug induced
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	Cardiogenic shock
H.	Volume depletion
I.	Septicaemia
A

G. Cardiogenic shock

Cardiogenic shock is pump dysfunction. This may occur, like in this case, after MI (shock complicates just under 10% of MIs) or may be due to cardiomyopathy, valve dysfunction or arrhythmias. This cause of shock in this patient is obviously apparent. Clinical signs of shock include stress responses of tachycardia and tachypnoea, hypotension (<90 systolic) with signs of hypoperfusion (for example, cold extremities). Raised JVP, basal crackles and pulmonary oedema support cardiac failure. Treatment begins with your ABCs. In this case, urgent revascularisation of the coronary arteries is indicated.

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18
Q

67 year old man was observed to be very drowsy 12 hours after an aortic aneurysm repair. There had been considerable blood loss & he had been given 4 units of blood during surgery. He had been written up for pethidine 50-100mg 3 hourly postoperatively & had had 3 doses. BP had been 150/80 post-operatively & was now 100/60 with a pulse rate of 75/minute. Oxygen saturation was low at 85%.

Match the cause of hypotension to the following case histories.
A.	Blood loss
B.	Addison’s disease
C.	Arrhythmia
D.	Autonomic neuropathy
E.	Drug induced
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	Cardiogenic shock
H.	Volume depletion
I.	Septicaemia
A

E. Drug induced

Opioid OD symptoms include CNS depression (drowsiness, sleepiness), respiratory depression and relative bradycardia. This patient needs ventilation prior to the administration of naloxone, titrated to patient response.

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19
Q

An 80 year old man with a history of ischaemic heart disease trips over a paving stone & fractures his hip. An ambulance takes him to A&E. 1 hour after arrival, he develops crushing central chest pain.

Choose the most useful investigation from the list of options.
A.	Coronary angiogram
B.	Thoracic spine x-ray
C.	Chest x-ray in expiration
D.	CT scan abdomen
E.	Exercise ECG
F.	Chest x-ray rib views
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Barium swallow
I.	V/Q scan
J.	CPK (creatine phosphokinase)
K.	ECG
L.	Transthoracic echo
M.	Upper GI endoscopy
A

K. ECG

This patient’s crushing central chest pain sounds like an MI. Chest pain is classically severe and heavy in nature, located centrally with possible radiation to the left arm or jaw and lasts for >20 minutes. SOB due to pulmonary congestion and sweating due to high sympathetic output are common symptoms. Risk factors incorporate the standard set of cardiovascular risks such as smoking, high BP, DM, obesity and dyslipidaemia. An ECG is indicated. If ECG shows STEMI, new LBBB or confirmed posterior MI then PCI/thrombolysis is indicated. It is worth noting that RV infarction is present in 40% of inferior infarcts so if ST elevation is seen in II, III and aVF, right sided ECG leads should be obtained.

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20
Q

A 19 year old male medical student develops acute chest pain during a game of squash. On examination he is distressed there but examination is otherwise unremarkable. There is a family history of sudden death.

Choose the most useful investigation from the list of options.
A.	Coronary angiogram
B.	Thoracic spine x-ray
C.	Chest x-ray in expiration
D.	CT scan abdomen
E.	Exercise ECG
F.	Chest x-ray rib views
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Barium swallow
I.	V/Q scan
J.	CPK (creatine phosphokinase)
K.	ECG
L.	Transthoracic echo
M.	Upper GI endoscopy
A

L. Transthoracic echo

This patient has likely HOCM. The patient’s young age makes it unlikely to be atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (unstable angina). HOCM is the most likely cardiomyopathy and the most frequent cause of sudden cardiac death in younger people. The FH of sudden death is suggestive of this diagnosis. This has a benign prognosis is most people though symptomatic patients are treated medically with beta blockade, CCBs or disopyramide. Chest pain on exertion (playing squash) is a common presentation in those who are symptomatic, as is dyspnoea on exertion, palpitations (such as due to AF) and a history of either pre-syncope or syncope (due to LV outflow obstruction). Inheritance is autosomal dominant with a variable penetrance.

Examination findings may be normal or may reveal an ejection systolic murmur which is positionally responsive and a double carotid or apex pulsation due to the transient interruption of CO. A fourth heart sound may also be heard due to hypertrophy. Echocardiography must be performed to establish a diagnosis, though ECG and CXR will also be done and may also show changes. Echo will show septal hypertrophy. There may also be MR.

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21
Q

A 55 year old obese female complains of a 6 month history of chest pain which radiated to the jaw and both shoulders. The pain is reported to be more severe at night. ECG and chest x-rays are normal.

Choose the most useful investigation from the list of options.
A.	Coronary angiogram
B.	Thoracic spine x-ray
C.	Chest x-ray in expiration
D.	CT scan abdomen
E.	Exercise ECG
F.	Chest x-ray rib views
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Barium swallow
I.	V/Q scan
J.	CPK (creatine phosphokinase)
K.	ECG
L.	Transthoracic echo
M.	Upper GI endoscopy
A

M. Upper GI endoscopy

This patient has GORD characterised by heartburn and regurgitation of acid. It is more severe at night when the patient is lying flat and also when the patient is bending over. Risk factors include obesity and hiatus hernia. Diagnosis is generally clinical and can also be achieved by a diagnostic trial of a PPI. Normally an upper GI endoscopy is reserved for complications such as strictures, Barrett’s or cancer, or for atypical features. An OGD may show oesophagitis or Barrett’s (red velvety), however OGD may be normal. Manometry and pH monitoring may also be performed, but in this case, this patient will probably just have a therapeutic and diagnostic trial of a PPI instead of an OGD.

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22
Q

A 30 year old male alcoholic presents nausea and pain in the lower chest in a band radiating around to the back. The pain makes the patient curl up in a ball and movement worsens it. On examination there is decreased breath sounds on the left side which is stony dull to percussion at the base.

Choose the most useful investigation from the list of options.
A.	Coronary angiogram
B.	Thoracic spine x-ray
C.	Chest x-ray in expiration
D.	CT scan abdomen
E.	Exercise ECG
F.	Chest x-ray rib views
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Barium swallow
I.	V/Q scan
J.	CPK (creatine phosphokinase)
K.	ECG
L.	Transthoracic echo
M.	Upper GI endoscopy
A

D. CT scan abdomen

This patient has acute pancreatitis. He has vomited and is describing mid-epigastric pain radiating around to the back which is relieved in the fetal position and is worse with movement. He is an alcoholic and alcoholic pancreatitis is seen more frequently in men usually after an average of 4-8 years of alcohol intake. Binge drinking also increases the risk. This patient also has nausea and may describe vomiting too, with agitation and confusion. The examination findings described here allude to a pleural effusion which is seen in half of patients with acute pancreatitis. Complicated haemorrhagic pancreatitis may exhibit Cullen’s sign, Grey-Turner’s sign and Fox’s sign. Make sure you know what these are and you are familiar with the causes of acute pancreatitis. Those caused by hypocalcaemia may display Chvostek’s sign and Trousseau’s sign.

Key to diagnosis is serum amylase or lipase levels which are massively elevated. Prognostic criteria are outlined in Ranson’s criteria applied on admission and after 48 hours, or the modified Glasgow score which you can find in your Oxford Handbook. An abdominal CT is however the most sensitive and specific study and findings may include enlargement of the pancreas with irregular contours, necrosis, pseudocysts and peripancreatic fat obliteration.

For interest, urinary trypsinogen-2 is now considered a better screening test than amylase but is not currently clinically used.

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23
Q

An 80 year old woman on corticosteroids develops acute chest pain while standing up. It is posteriorly sited, radiating anteriorly under the breast. The pain is worse on movement and there is tenderness on the back of the chest. Cardiovascular and respiratory examination are normal.

Choose the most useful investigation from the list of options.
A.	Coronary angiogram
B.	Thoracic spine x-ray
C.	Chest x-ray in expiration
D.	CT scan abdomen
E.	Exercise ECG
F.	Chest x-ray rib views
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Barium swallow
I.	V/Q scan
J.	CPK (creatine phosphokinase)
K.	ECG
L.	Transthoracic echo
M.	Upper GI endoscopy
A

B. Thoracic spine x-ray

This patient likely has osteoporotic vertebral collapse/fracture which is compressing the intercostal nerve and causing her sudden pain in the back of her chest. The pain tends not to be related to traumatic activities and can occur on standing up or bending forwards, even coughing and sneezing. The history of corticosteroid use is associated with osteoporosis through multiple mechanisms. The thoracic spine plain x-ray would show loss of height in one of the thoracic vertebrae. Osteoporotic changes may also be seen such as osteopenia. Treatment depends on the extent of spinal involvement and the severity of the pain and whether it is complicated by spinal deformity such as kyphosis. For the diagnosis of osteoporosis, a DEXA scan is needed indicating a T score of less than or equal to -2.5.

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24
Q

A 62 year old gentleman presents with fatigue, breathlessness & anorexia. On examination his JVP is noted as being elevated, he has hepatomegaly & swollen ankles.

Choose the appropriate diagnosis.
A.	Decubitus angina
B.	Unstable angina
C.	Atrial flutter
D.	Myocardial infarction
E.	Left ventricular failure
F.	Constrictive pericarditis
G.	Atrial fibrillation
H.	Stable angina
I.	Congestive cardiac failure
J.	Bacterial endocarditis
A

I. Congestive cardiac failure

The key manifestation is dyspnoea and tiredness. CCF is a term used for patients who are breathless with oedema (signs of LVF and RVF). Elevated JVP, hepatomegaly and peripheral oedema are all signs of RVF. Initial investigations should include ECG, CXR, TTE and bloods including BNP levels. First line treatment is with an ACE inhibitor which reduces morbidity and mortality. Salt and fluid restriction is also beneficial. All patients with chronic heart failure will also receive a beta blocker such as carvedilol. Other adjuncts include spironolactone, diuretics, hydralazine and a nitrate, and digoxin. The NYHA classification criteria can be used based on symptoms to describe functional limitations and ranges from Class I to Class IV with symptoms occuring at rest. Many patients are asymptomatic for long periods of time because mild cardiac impairment is balanced by compensation.

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25
Q

A 55 year old gentleman with a history of systemic hypertension presents to A&E with breathlessness on exertion & orthopnoea. Examination reveals cardiomegaly & a displaced apex beat to the left.

Choose the appropriate diagnosis.
A.	Decubitus angina
B.	Unstable angina
C.	Atrial flutter
D.	Myocardial infarction
E.	Left ventricular failure
F.	Constrictive pericarditis
G.	Atrial fibrillation
H.	Stable angina
I.	Congestive cardiac failure
J.	Bacterial endocarditis
A

E. Left ventricular failure

This patient has no signs of RVF mentioned above. You should know the distinction between LVF and RVF. RVF leads to a backlog of blood and congestion of the systemic capillaries. This causes peripheral oedema and ascites and hepatomegaly may develop. Nocturia may be a symptom as fluid returns from the legs when the patient lies down flat. LVF causes congestion in the pulmonary circulation so the symptoms are respiratory. As seen in this patient, there is SOB on exertion and orthopnoea. This is why you can ask patients in a cardiac history how many pillows they sleep with. PND can also occur as well as ‘cardiac asthma’.

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26
Q

A diabetic, 66 year old lady presents to A&E with breathlessness, sweating, nausea & vomiting. She is feeling very distressed. She has no pain. On inspection she appears pale, sweaty & grey.

Choose the appropriate diagnosis.
A.	Decubitus angina
B.	Unstable angina
C.	Atrial flutter
D.	Myocardial infarction
E.	Left ventricular failure
F.	Constrictive pericarditis
G.	Atrial fibrillation
H.	Stable angina
I.	Congestive cardiac failure
J.	Bacterial endocarditis
A

D. Myocardial infarction
This diabetic is having a silent MI without chest pain. Silent MIs are more common in the elderly and those with DM probably due to autonomic neuropathy.

Tachycardia is a common feature of MI especially anterior wall MI. Chest pain of MI is classically severe and heavy in nature, located centrally with possible radiation to the left arm or jaw and lasts for >20 minutes. SOB due to pulmonary congestion and sweating due to high sympathetic output are common symptoms. This patient also has pallor which is due to a high sympathetic output. Risk factors incorporate the standard set of cardiovascular risks such as smoking, high BP, DM, obesity and dyslipidaemia. Patients with DM are at increased risk of CAD by a variety of mechanisms which are not fully known.

If ECG shows STEMI, new LBBB or confirmed posterior MI then PCI/thrombolysis is indicated. It is worth noting that RV infarction is present in 40% of inferior infarcts so if ST elevation is seen in II, III and aVF, right sided ECG leads should be obtained. Cardiac biomarkers include CK-MB and troponin.

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27
Q

A 49 year old man presents to A&E with a 2 week history of a ‘tight’ central chest pain radiating to the jaw experienced when he is lying down.

Choose the appropriate diagnosis.
A.	Decubitus angina
B.	Unstable angina
C.	Atrial flutter
D.	Myocardial infarction
E.	Left ventricular failure
F.	Constrictive pericarditis
G.	Atrial fibrillation
H.	Stable angina
I.	Congestive cardiac failure
J.	Bacterial endocarditis
A

A. Decubitus angina

Usually as a complication of heart failure. This patient has chest pain which occurs on lying down, which is decubitus angina by definition.

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28
Q

A 45 year old man comes to A&E with shortness of breath, giving a history of decreased exercise tolerance. On examination the patient is noted as having an irregular pulse, warm vasodilated peripheries, exopthalmos & a goitre.

Choose the appropriate diagnosis.
A.	Decubitus angina
B.	Unstable angina
C.	Atrial flutter
D.	Myocardial infarction
E.	Left ventricular failure
F.	Constrictive pericarditis
G.	Atrial fibrillation
H.	Stable angina
I.	Congestive cardiac failure
J.	Bacterial endocarditis
A

G. Atrial fibrillation

This patient has hyperthyroidism. More specifically, Graves’ disease (peripheral manifestations such as ophthalmopathy do not occur with other causes of hyperthyroidism). Treatment of Graves’ aims to normalise thyroid function and is achieved by radioactive iodine, antithyroid medications or with surgery. They are all effective and relatively safe options. Symptomatic therapy is given with beta blockers such as propranolol. This patient has AF which has occured as a result of his hyperthyroid state which affects around 10% of untreated patients. Irregular HR is the hallmark feature of AF. Have a think about what the ECG would show.

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29
Q

Mrs James is a 50 year old diabetic lady who complains of a tightness in her chest plus a cramping sensation in her jaw and neck after climbing 2 flights of stairs to her apartment.

For each patient below, choose the most likely cause of the symptom
A.	VSD
B.	HOCM (hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy)
C.	Romano-Ward syndrome
D.	Infective endocarditis
E.	Pericarditis
F.	MI
G.	Congestive cardiac failure
H.	Left ventricular failure
I.	Angina
J.	ASD
A

I. Angina

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30
Q
A 45 year old man developed severe central chest pain, lasting for approximately 30 mins. He vomited with the pain, became acutely breathless &amp; sweated profusely.
For each patient below, choose the most likely cause of the symptom
A.	VSD
B.	HOCM (hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy)
C.	Romano-Ward syndrome
D.	Infective endocarditis
E.	Pericarditis
F.	MI
G.	Congestive cardiac failure
H.	Left ventricular failure
I.	Angina
J.	ASD
A

F. MI

Chest pain of MI is classically severe and heavy in nature, located centrally with possible radiation to the left arm or jaw and lasts for >20 minutes. SOB due to pulmonary congestion and sweating due to high sympathetic output are common symptoms. N&V was believed to be associated with inferior wall infarction but this has been disputed. If ECG shows STEMI, new LBBB or confirmed posterior MI then PCI/thrombolysis is indicated. Risk factors incorporate the standard set of cardiovascular risks such as smoking, high BP, DM, obesity and dyslipidaemia.

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31
Q
Jean is a 35 year old lady who has recently given birth to her 3rd baby. 2 weeks ago she developed a fever, malaise &amp; night sweats. She feels too tired to care for the baby &amp; is losing weight. She attended her GP following the loss of control in her left arm. On examination there was weakness on the left side of her body. Her BP was normal, 120/80. Urinalysis showed small amounts of blood &amp; auscultation revealed a loud pansystolic murmur plus bilateral basal crepitations.
For each patient below, choose the most likely cause of the symptom
A.	VSD
B.	HOCM (hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy)
C.	Romano-Ward syndrome
D.	Infective endocarditis
E.	Pericarditis
F.	MI
G.	Congestive cardiac failure
H.	Left ventricular failure
I.	Angina
J.	ASD
A

D. Infective endocarditis

Any patient presenting with fever and a new murmur should always make you think of bacterial endocarditis. The classic new or worsening murmur is actually rare. Other uncommon signs you may find include splinter haemorrhages, Janeway lesions (painless macular haemorrhagic plaques on the palms and soles) and Osler nodes (painful nodules on the pads of the fingers and toes). Roth spots may also be seen on fundoscopy. Septic embolic are common in IE and urinalysis may show active sediment. Three sets of bood cultures are required and this patient will have to go for an echocardiogram.The Duke criteria is used for diagnosis.

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32
Q

John is a 20 year old man with breathlessness and chest pain after exertion. 5 days ago he developed palpitations & fainted during a game of squash. Examination revealed a jerky pulse and a systolic murmur. His ECG showed changes of left ventricular hypertrophy.

For each patient below, choose the most likely cause of the symptom
A.	VSD
B.	HOCM (hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy)
C.	Romano-Ward syndrome
D.	Infective endocarditis
E.	Pericarditis
F.	MI
G.	Congestive cardiac failure
H.	Left ventricular failure
I.	Angina
J.	ASD
A

B. HOCM

This patient has HOCM. The patient’s young age makes it unlikely to be atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (unstable angina). HOCM is the most likely cardiomyopathy and the most frequent cause of sudden cardiac death in younger people. This has a benign prognosis in most people though symptomatic patients are treated medically with beta blockade, CCBs or disopyramide. Chest pain on exertion (playing squash) is a common presentation in those who are symptomatic, as is dyspnoea on exertion, palpitations (such as due to AF) and a history of either pre-syncope or syncope (due to LV outflow obstruction). Inheritance is autosomal dominant with a variable penetrance and there may be a FH of sudden death. Examination findings may be normal or may reveal an ejection systolic murmur which is positionally responsive and a double carotid or apex pulsation due to the transient interruption of CO. The arterial pulse is described as ‘jerky’. A fourth heart sound may also be heard due to hypertrophy. Echocardiography must be performed to establish a diagnosis, though ECG and CXR will also be done and may also show changes. Echocardiography will show septal hypertrophy. There may also be MR.

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33
Q

Mark developed a sharp sternal chest pain 10 days after a flu-like illness. The pain radiated down the arm & to the left shoulder. It was aggravated by lying flat, inspiration, coughing & swallowing. It was relieved by sitting forward.

For each patient below, choose the most likely cause of the symptom
A.	VSD
B.	HOCM (hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy)
C.	Romano-Ward syndrome
D.	Infective endocarditis
E.	Pericarditis
F.	MI
G.	Congestive cardiac failure
H.	Left ventricular failure
I.	Angina
J.	ASD
A

E. pericarditis

This patient has presented with pericarditis. Symptoms include a sharp and severe chest pain retrosternally which is worse on inspiration and when supine, relieved by sitting forwards. The classical finding on examination is a friction rub which is said to sound like ‘walking on snow’. There may be diffuse ST elevations on ECG, an effusion on echocardiography and blood results suggesting inflammation. Complications include tamponade and constrictive pericarditis. The prior viral infection is a risk factor with the most common pericardial infection being viral. Bacterial purulent pericarditis also occurs. The inflammation is due either to direct viral attack or immune mediated damage. Other risk factors include male gender, post-MI (both ‘early’ and Dressler’s), post-pericardiotomy syndrome, neoplasm from local tumour invasion, uraemia and autoimmune conditions such as RA and SLE.

34
Q

A 45 year old Caucasian lady presents with a 4cm chronic ulcer on the medial aspect of the lower leg. She has a history of “bursting” pain in the calf on walking. The skin around the ulcer is brown & heavily indurated.

For each option below, choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Venous ulcer
B.	Malignant ulcer
C.	Arterial ulcer
D.	TB
E.	DVT
F.	Neuropathic ulcer
G.	RA
H.	Cardiac failure
I.	Lymphoedema
J.	Cellulitis
K.	Pyoderma gangrenosum
L.	Syphilis
A

A. Venous ulcer

Venous ulcers occur on a background of deep venous insufficiency. There is oedema and a brown skin discolouration due to leaching of pigments and haemosiderin deposition. In addition there may be lipodermatosclerosis and an inflammatory response, which is seen as an eczema-like thickening and hardening of the skin. The skin can also be drawn tightly around the ankle. Ulceration usually follows trauma and is usually on the medial gaiter region. The base has granulation tissue and is sloughy in nature and there is a sloping edge to the ulcer. The shape is often irregular. Look up some photos to help you remember. Once significant arterial disease is excluded (ulcers can have mixed components), the mainstay of treatment is with compression bandaging, appropriate dressings and treatment of any infection with antibiotics. Maggots can also be used and varicose veins should be treated where possible to reduce recurrence. If the ulcer is not healing, a biopsy should be considered (Marjolin’s ulcer).

35
Q

A 50 year old Asian woman, who is known to be diabetic, presents with a painless ulcer on the ball of her foot. She has been complaining of a burning feeling of the soles of her feet for the last year.

For each option below, choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Venous ulcer
B.	Malignant ulcer
C.	Arterial ulcer
D.	TB
E.	DVT
F.	Neuropathic ulcer
G.	RA
H.	Cardiac failure
I.	Lymphoedema
J.	Cellulitis
K.	Pyoderma gangrenosum
L.	Syphilis
A

F. Neuropathic ulcer

This is a case of diabetic neuropathy. This is a microvascular complication of DM and is characterised by peripheral nerve dysfunction. Pain is a common complaint such as the burning sensation this patient describes. Patient’s may also describe the pain as prickling or sticking. Complications range from the painless neuropathic ulcer described, at areas of the foot where there is weight loading (particularly the metatarsal heads), to the Charcot foot with severe architectural destruction of the foot. Foot ulceration is a common precusor to amputation. Foot care is crucial in DM. Examination should include peripheral pulses, reflexes and sensation to light touch with a 10g monofilament, vibration (128Hz tuning fork), pinprick and proprioception. The pain may be treated with medications like pregabalin and gabapentin.

36
Q

A 70 year old man, with ischaemic heart disease & COPD, presents with an ulcer between the great & second toes on the right foot. This is associated with pain in the whole foot at night.

For each option below, choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Venous ulcer
B.	Malignant ulcer
C.	Arterial ulcer
D.	TB
E.	DVT
F.	Neuropathic ulcer
G.	RA
H.	Cardiac failure
I.	Lymphoedema
J.	Cellulitis
K.	Pyoderma gangrenosum
L.	Syphilis
A

C. Arterial ulcer

Arterial ulcers are deep and painful with a well defined edge, usually found on the shin or foot. There may be local changes such as cold peripheries, loss of hair, dusky cyanosis and toenail dystrophy. On examination, peripheral pulses may be absent or reduced. An angiogram with contrast will define the lesion and determine whether it can be improved by surgical intervention. Pain often increases when your legs are at rest and elevated. They can occur between the webs of toes so it is important to always check these in your peripheral vascular examination.

37
Q

A 30 year old woman with long-standing ulcerative colitis, which is in remission, presents with 2 areas of ulceration on the right mid-thigh

For each option below, choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Venous ulcer
B.	Malignant ulcer
C.	Arterial ulcer
D.	TB
E.	DVT
F.	Neuropathic ulcer
G.	RA
H.	Cardiac failure
I.	Lymphoedema
J.	Cellulitis
K.	Pyoderma gangrenosum
L.	Syphilis
A

K. Pyoderma gangrenosum

Pyoderma gangrenosum is mainly associated with IBD (UC more so than CD), RA and the myeloid blood dyscrasias. It causes necrotic tissue leading to deep ulcers, often found on the legs. There are dark red borders.

38
Q

A 60 year old male smoker complains of severe central chest pain radiating to the left arm. This is post operational following a sigmoidectomy the previous day.

Choose the most likely diagnosis 
A.	Congestive heart failure
B.	Anxiety
C.	Variant angina
D.	GORD
E.	Stable angina
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	MI
H.	Unstable angina
A

G. MI

NSTEMI is a common complication of surgical procedures and is often detected as a rise in cardiac markers in the days following surgery. Chest pain of MI is classically severe and heavy in nature, located centrally with possible radiation to the left arm or jaw and lasts for >20 minutes. SOB due to pulmonary congestion and sweating due to high sympathetic output are common symptoms. If ECG shows STEMI, new LBBB or confirmed posterior MI then PCI/thrombolysis is indicated. Risk factors incorporate the standard set of cardiovascular risks such as smoking, high BP, DM, obesity and dyslipidaemia, though there are variations in risk factors attributed to STEMIs and NSTEMIs.

39
Q

A 40 year old obese male presents with a burning chest pain which is worsened by lying down.

Choose the most likely diagnosis 
A.	Congestive heart failure
B.	Anxiety
C.	Variant angina
D.	GORD
E.	Stable angina
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	MI
H.	Unstable angina
A

D. GORD

This is a common condition and the patient here is complaining of heartburn and acid regurgitation. The diagnosis is easily made clinically as the symptoms the patient describes are worse on lying down or bending over. Typically a patient will describe a burning sensation after meals which is not exertional. Reflux of acid into the mouth can leave a sour taste. Aside from obesity, other strong risk factors include advanced age, family history and hiatus hernia. This patient will need a trial of a PPI which will both be therapeutic and diagnostic. Complications of GORD include stricture formation, Barrett’s and oesophageal carcinoma.

40
Q

A 59 year old female is admitted to A&E with chest pain. The pain is central in origin and came on while she was watching television. The patient has a BMI of 34 and is a known hypertensive. Troponin and CK-MB are not elevated.

Choose the most likely diagnosis 
A.	Congestive heart failure
B.	Anxiety
C.	Variant angina
D.	GORD
E.	Stable angina
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	MI
H.	Unstable angina
A

H. Unstable angina

This is UA characterised by chest pain at rest. ECG will typically show ST depression and T wave inversion. Acute management includes antiplatelets and antithrombotics to reduce damage and complications. Long term management aims at reducing risk factors. Key risk factors include obesity, hypertension, smoking, hyperlipidaemia, FH, DM and positive FH. People with diabetes may again present with atypical symptoms. Cardiac biomarkers will not be elevated although in a patient who has had an acute MI days earlier, troponin may remain elevated (remains elevated up to 10-14 days after release). All patients with presumed cardiac chest pain should in the first instance get oxygen, morphine and GTN with antiplatelet therapy in the absence of contraindications.

41
Q

A 62 year old male complains of chest pain at rest. An ECG performed in A&E shows ST elevation. A subsequent angiogram with a provocative agent showed an exaggerated spasm of the coronary arteries.

Choose the most likely diagnosis 
A.	Congestive heart failure
B.	Anxiety
C.	Variant angina
D.	GORD
E.	Stable angina
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	MI
H.	Unstable angina
A

C. Variant angina

Variant angina (Prinzmetal) is angina caused by coronary artery vasospasm rather than atherosclerosis. It occurs at rest and in cycles. Many patients will also have some degree of atherosclerosis although not in proportion to the severity of the chest pain experienced. ECG changes are of ST elevation (rather than depression) when the patient is experiencing an attack and a stress ECG will be negative. Patients with Prinzmetal angina are often treated for ACS and indeed, cardiac biomarkers may be raised as vasospasm can cause damage to the myocardium. The gold standard investigation is with coronary angiography and the injection of agents to try to provoke a spasm.

42
Q

A 45 year old merchant banker is referred by her GP to the Rapid Access Chest Pain clinic. She is asked to perform the treadmill test & complains of chest pain 9 minutes into the test.

Choose the most likely diagnosis 
A.	Congestive heart failure
B.	Anxiety
C.	Variant angina
D.	GORD
E.	Stable angina
F.	Pulmonary embolus
G.	MI
H.	Unstable angina
A

E. Stable angina

This patient has presented with stable angina. Resting ECG is often normal and the patient is asymptomatic. However during exercise stress ECG (most often the Bruce Protocol) there will be ST segment depression during exercise indicative of ischaemia and the patient will complain of chest pain. Those unable to exercise to an adequate level may need stress myocardial perfusion imaging or stress echocardiography. 1st line treatment involves lifestyle changes and antiplatelet therapy with aspirin. Anti-anginal theray will also be given, first line being beta-blockade. Statin therapy, blood sugar control in diabetics and BP control with antihypertensives may also be necessary. Those with LMS disease, 3 vessel disease or a reduced EF may benefit from CABG. Single vessel disease may benefit from PCI.

43
Q

A 49 year old man with recent history of long-haul travel presents with shortness of breath & haemoptysis. He also complains of chest pain & ECG shows sinus tachycardia.

Match the patient decription with the correct diagnosis.
A.	Oesophageal spasm
B.	Angina
C.	MI
D.	Pulmonary embolism
E.	Coronary artery disease
F.	Hiatus hernia
G.	Tietze’s syndrome
H.	Pericarditis
I.	Dissecting aortic aneurysm
J.	Anxiety
A

D. Pulmonary embolism
Patients with a high clinical suspicion of PE should be anticoagulated while waiting a definitive diagnosis unless contraindicated. The underlying pathophysiology is based on Virchow’s triad. SOB and chest pain are common symptoms and there may also be haemoptysis. This patient has recent air travel, which is actually a weak risk factor but seems to crop up a lot on EMQs. Strong risk factors include DVT, obesity, surgery in the past 2 months, prolonged bed rest, malignancy, previous VTE, pregnancy and the thrombophilias such as factor V Leiden. ECG may be normal, or may show tachycardia, new RAD, new RBBB or the classical S wave in I, Q wave with T inversion in III. Various clinical probability scores exist for PE and D-dimer can be used to exclude PE as a diagnosis.

44
Q

A 53 year old lady complains of central “crushing” chest pain, sudden onset & spontaneous remission, with no attributable cause. She has no history of hypertension, current BP is 116/76.

Match the patient decription with the correct diagnosis.
A.	Oesophageal spasm
B.	Angina
C.	MI
D.	Pulmonary embolism
E.	Coronary artery disease
F.	Hiatus hernia
G.	Tietze’s syndrome
H.	Pericarditis
I.	Dissecting aortic aneurysm
J.	Anxiety
A

J. Anxiety

The presence of anxiety does not exclude a cardiac cause and appropriate investigations are required even if the patient obviously has anxiety.The absence of an attributable cause and the sudden onset and spontaneous remission with no cardiac risk factors make this likely to be due to anxiety.

45
Q
A 73 year old gentleman presents to A&amp;E with sudden “tearing” chest pain, radiating to the back. The house officer on duty notices unequal arm pulses &amp; BP.
Match the patient decription with the correct diagnosis.
A.	Oesophageal spasm
B.	Angina
C.	MI
D.	Pulmonary embolism
E.	Coronary artery disease
F.	Hiatus hernia
G.	Tietze’s syndrome
H.	Pericarditis
I.	Dissecting aortic aneurysm
J.	Anxiety
A

I. Dissecting aortic aneurysm

The tearing chest pain suggests aortic dissection. There may also be interscapular pain with dissection of the descending aorta. Dissecting aneurysms are either type A, which involves the ascending aorta, or type B. Type A dissections require urgent surgery whereas type B can be managed medically if it is not complicated by end organ ischaemia. BP differential between the 2 arms is a hallmark feature. Pulse differences may also be present in the lower limbs. There may also be the diastolic murmur of AR in proximal dissections.

46
Q

A 63 year old gentleman develops acute central chest pain, radiating down the left arm. He appears very pale & sweaty, & has a strong family history of ischaemic heart disease.

Match the patient decription with the correct diagnosis.
A.	Oesophageal spasm
B.	Angina
C.	MI
D.	Pulmonary embolism
E.	Coronary artery disease
F.	Hiatus hernia
G.	Tietze’s syndrome
H.	Pericarditis
I.	Dissecting aortic aneurysm
J.	Anxiety
A

C. MI

Chest pain of MI is classically severe and heavy in nature, located centrally with possible radiation to the left arm or jaw and lasts for >20 minutes. SOB due to pulmonary congestion and sweating due to high sympathetic output are common symptoms. This patient also has pallor which is due to a high sympathetic output. Risk factors incorporate the standard set of cardiovascular risks such as smoking, high BP, DM, obesity and dyslipidaemia.

If ECG shows STEMI, new LBBB or confirmed posterior MI then PCI/thrombolysis is indicated. It is worth noting that RV infarction is present in 40% of inferior infarcts so if ST elevation is seen in II, III and aVF, right sided ECG leads should be obtained. Cardiac biomarkers include CK-MB and troponin. Troponins rise 4-6 hrs after onset of infarction and peak at 18-24 hours and may persist for 7-10 days.

47
Q

A 67 year old man recovering from an inferior MI complains of sharp retrosternal chest pain. He comments that leaning forward provides relief of the pain. The attending medical student claims to have heard a “rub” on auscultation.

Match the patient decription with the correct diagnosis.
A.	Oesophageal spasm
B.	Angina
C.	MI
D.	Pulmonary embolism
E.	Coronary artery disease
F.	Hiatus hernia
G.	Tietze’s syndrome
H.	Pericarditis
I.	Dissecting aortic aneurysm
J.	Anxiety
A

H. Pericarditis

This patient has presented with pericarditis. Symptoms include a sharp and severe chest pain retrosternally which is worse on inspiration and when supine, relieved by sitting forwards. The classical finding on examination is a friction rub which is said to sound like ‘walking on snow’. There may be diffuse (saddle-shaped) ST elevations on ECG, an effusion on echocardiography and blood results suggesting inflammation. Complications include tamponade and constrictive pericarditis. The prior viral infection is a risk factor with the most common pericardial infection being viral. Bacterial purulent pericarditis also occurs. The inflammation is due either to direct viral attack or immune mediated damage. Other risk factors include male gender, post-MI (both ‘early’ and Dressler’s), post-pericardiotomy syndrome, neoplasm from local tumour invasion, uraemia and autoimmune conditions such as RA and SLE.

48
Q

There is a harsh pan-systolic murmur loudest at the lower left sternal edge & inaudible at the apex. The apex is not displaced.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Tricuspid stenosis
B.	Left ventricular aneurysm
C.	Aortic regurgitation
D.	Aortic stenosis
E.	Patent ductus arteriosus
F.	Aortic sclerosis
G.	HOCM
H.	Pulmonary stenosis
I.	Atrial septal defect
J.	Tricuspid regurgitation
K.	Ventricular septal defect
L.	Mitral stenosis
M.	Mitral regurgitation
N.	Mitral valve prolapse
A

J. Tricuspid regurgitation
The murmur of TR is a lower left parasternal systolic murmur (pansystolic, or less, depending on severity). The murmur commonly increases on inspiration (Carvallo’s sign). The apex is not displaced in TR whereas it may be displaced in MR. Key risk factors for TR include LVF, rheumatic heart disease, endocarditis and the presence of a permanent pacemaker. Patients typically present with SOB, periperal oedema and tiredness. There may also be abdominal distension. An enlarged and pulsatile liver is normally seen in severe TR and caused by a reversal in blood flow during systole. It is worth noting that mild to moderate TR is not necessarily abnormal and is present in many asymptomatic young adults.

49
Q

There is a mid-systolic click and a soft late systolic murmur at the apex.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Tricuspid stenosis
B.	Left ventricular aneurysm
C.	Aortic regurgitation
D.	Aortic stenosis
E.	Patent ductus arteriosus
F.	Aortic sclerosis
G.	HOCM
H.	Pulmonary stenosis
I.	Atrial septal defect
J.	Tricuspid regurgitation
K.	Ventricular septal defect
L.	Mitral stenosis
M.	Mitral regurgitation
N.	Mitral valve prolapse
A

N. Mitral valve prolapse

This is mitral valve prolapse characterised by the mid-systolic click and the late systolic murmur, the combination of which is specific for mitral prolapse but not sensitive enough for diagnosis. It occurs when one or more leaflets of the mitral valve prolapse into the LA in systole. Dynamic manoevres such as Valsalva or squatting change the timing of the murmur and click. Patients also commonly suffer from palpitations. Diagnosis can be confirmed with an echocardiogram. Connective tissue diseases such as Marfan’s are key risk factors. The exact cause of MVP is unknown but genetic links have been identified and there is histological myxomatous degeneration in MVP. MR is a complication of MVP.

50
Q
The pulse is slow rising. There is an ejection systolic murmur loudest at the right upper sternal border radiating to the carotids.
Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Tricuspid stenosis
B.	Left ventricular aneurysm
C.	Aortic regurgitation
D.	Aortic stenosis
E.	Patent ductus arteriosus
F.	Aortic sclerosis
G.	HOCM
H.	Pulmonary stenosis
I.	Atrial septal defect
J.	Tricuspid regurgitation
K.	Ventricular septal defect
L.	Mitral stenosis
M.	Mitral regurgitation
N.	Mitral valve prolapse
A

D. Aortic stenosis

Aortic stenosis can present with chest pain, dyspnoea and syncope. It is characterised by a harsh ejection systolic murmur heard loudest at the apex at end expiration, which radiates up towards the carotids. The pulse pressure is narrow and there may be an associated slow-rising and plateau pulse. Carotid parvus et tardus may also be present. Doppler echo is vital for diagnosis and shows a pressure gradient across the narrowed valve orifice. 20% of cases are due to a congenital bicuspid valve which experience abnormal shear stress. Bicuspid valves are more common in those with aortic co-arctation and Turner’s. The most common cause of aortic stenosis in adults is calcification of normal trileaflet valves. Clinically stable patients may be considered for surgical repair or TAVR. The murmur of aortic sclerosis is usually less than grade 2 and describes leaflet thickening without obstruction. The pulse character is normal in sclerosis as blood flow is normal. It is the beginning of a spectrum of calcific aortic disease with severe stenosis at the end of the spectrum.

51
Q

The pulse is irregularly irregular and jerky in character. There is an ejection systolic murmur lessened by squatting loudest at the lower left sternal edge. There is a double apical impulse felt. The apex beat is not displaced.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Tricuspid stenosis
B.	Left ventricular aneurysm
C.	Aortic regurgitation
D.	Aortic stenosis
E.	Patent ductus arteriosus
F.	Aortic sclerosis
G.	HOCM
H.	Pulmonary stenosis
I.	Atrial septal defect
J.	Tricuspid regurgitation
K.	Ventricular septal defect
L.	Mitral stenosis
M.	Mitral regurgitation
N.	Mitral valve prolapse
A

G. HOCM

This patient has HOCM which is the most frequent cause of sudden cardiac death in younger people. Examination findings may be normal or may reveal an ejection systolic murmur which is positionally responsive and a double carotid or apex pulsation due to the transient interruption of CO. A fourth heart sound may also be heard due to hypertrophy. There may also be MR. The arterial pulse is described as ‘jerky’ and this patient is also in AF which warrants anticoagulation and anti-arrhythmics. Echocardiography must be performed to establish a diagnosis, though ECG and CXR will also be done and may also show changes. Echo will show septal hypertrophy. This has a benign prognosis in most people though symptomatic patients are treated medically with beta blockade, CCBs or disopyramide. Chest pain on exertion is a common presentation in those who are symptomatic, as is dyspnoea on exertion, palpitations (such as due to AF) and a history of either pre-syncope or syncope (due to LV outflow obstruction). Inheritance is autosomal dominant with a variable penetrance. It is worth noting that ventricular hypertrophy causes concentric hypertrophy i.e. the wall of the ventricle gets thicker inwards. Hence the apex beat is not displaced unlike in DCM.

52
Q

There is a constant ‘machinery-like’ murmur throughout systole & diastole.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Tricuspid stenosis
B.	Left ventricular aneurysm
C.	Aortic regurgitation
D.	Aortic stenosis
E.	Patent ductus arteriosus
F.	Aortic sclerosis
G.	HOCM
H.	Pulmonary stenosis
I.	Atrial septal defect
J.	Tricuspid regurgitation
K.	Ventricular septal defect
L.	Mitral stenosis
M.	Mitral regurgitation
N.	Mitral valve prolapse
A

E. Patent ductus arteriosus

The ductus arteriosus is a fetal structure which normally closes within 2 days of birth. Persistence can result in heart failure and increased pressures in the pulmonary vasculature as blood is shunted from the aorta into the pulmonary artery. The classic murmur is known as a Gibson murmur or machinery murmur and is best heard in the left infraclavicular area, usually peaking in late systole and continuing into diastole. Maternal rubella infection in the first trimester is a predisposing risk factor for PDA. The definitive diagnostic test is an echocardiogram.

53
Q

A 60 year old gentleman, who has recently suffered a myocardial infarction, was making progress after discharge from hospital. However he has noticed his exercise tolerance is worsening. He is fatigued and has begun to suffer from palpitations.

Choose whether an ECG or an echocardiogram would be most appropriate

A

ECG

An ECG will be required to gain an insight into the nature of the palpitations this man is suffering from. This could be ectopic beats or paroxysmal AF/atrial flutter. Whilst this patient may have an underlying condition, his palpitations need to be investigated first.

54
Q

A lady who has recently had a heart attack is complaining of swelling in her legs which goes all the way up to her thighs, and she feels may be extending into her lower stomach. She says she feels depressed and thinks these are side-effects of the medications she is on. You notice that she has pulsation in her neck and her face appears engorged.

Choose whether an ECG or an echocardiogram would be most appropriate

A

Echocardiogram

Elevated JVP and peripheral oedema are signs of RVF. This patient may have CCF. This is a post-MI complication which can occur as a result of myocardial damage. The key investigation is a TTE coupled with Doppler flow studies which allows quantification of systolic and diastolic function and calculation of the EF. Whilst ECG and CXR may show changes, these are not as diagnostic. First line treatment is with an ACE inhibitor which reduces morbidity and mortality. Salt and fluid restriction is also beneficial. All patients with chronic heart failure will also receive a beta blocker such as carvedilol. Other adjuncts include spironolactone, diuretics, hydralazine and a nitrate, and digoxin.

55
Q

Mr H suffered a myocardial infarction 2 days ago. He is now complaining of sharp central chest pain. On direct questioning, he says this is worse when he lies down or moves.

Choose whether an ECG or an echocardiogram would be most appropriate

A

ECG

This patient has presented with pericarditis. Symptoms include a sharp and severe chest pain retrosternally which is worse on inspiration and when supine, relieved by sitting forwards. The classical finding on examination is a friction rub which is said to sound like ‘walking on snow’. An ECG is the most useful diagnostic test (changes occur in 90%) and there may be diffuse concave ‘saddle-shaped’ ST elevations seen with PR depression (reversed in aVR and V1). PR depressions are noted before ST elevations if the patient is seen soon after onset. Complications include tamponade and constrictive pericarditis. Risk factors include viral/bacterial infection, male gender, post-MI (both ‘early’ and Dressler’s), post-pericardiotomy syndrome, neoplasm from local tumour invasion, uraemia and autoimmune conditions such as RA and SLE. This patient is having pericarditis 2 days after an MI indicating this is the early form caused by local inflammation. Dressler’s occurs from 1 week to several months after infarction and has a much lower incidence.

56
Q

A 57 year old lady who had a myocardial infarction 6 days ago. She says she now is suffering from palpitations with some breathlessness when she lies down. On auscultation there is a prominent third heart sound and a pansystolic murmur.

Choose whether an ECG or an echocardiogram would be most appropriate

A

Echocardiogram

MR may present with SOB, palpitations and reduced exercise tolerance. There is a pansystolic murmur which is described as blowing in quality heard best at the apex, radiating into the axilla. A third heart sound may be present. Causes of S3 include heart failure, MR/TR and normal in youth. Orthopnoea is also a common presentation, though there are no pathognomic features to diagnose MR based on the medical history. The MI may have resulted in damage to the mitral valve which predisposes to MR. A TTE is the first investigation to order and will show the presence and allow quantification of the severity of MR. An ECG will also be done to screen for any disturbances in rhythm. A TOE can be considered as a better test, although it is invasive and uncomfortable for the patient.

57
Q

Mr A had a MI 2 weeks ago. He now has a fever which comes and goes. He looks pale and feels tired. He experiences chest pain, which is stabbing in nature and worse when he is breathing, sneezing or moving. OE he has reduced expansion on the right hand side and diminished breath sounds over the same area.

Choose whether an ECG or an echocardiogram would be most appropriate

A

ECG

This is percarditis again, likely to be Dressler’s syndrome. This is believed to be an autoimmune process with myocardial neo-antigens implicated in the aetiology and occurs typically 2-3 weeks post-MI. Typical treatment is with aspirin. See above.

58
Q

34 year old male complaining of headaches, anxiety attacks, recurrent sweating and postural dizziness

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Coarctation of the aorta
B.	Doxazosin
C.	Patent ductus arteriosus
D.	Renal artery stenosis
E.	Addisons Disease
F.	Phaeochromocytoma
G.	Hyperthyroidism
H.	Phenelzine
I.	Conns syndrome
J.	Cushings disease
A

F. Phaeochromocytoma

Phaeochromocytomas presents with paroxysmal episodes of palpitations, anxiety, excessive sweating, pallor and hypertension. The postural dizziness is thought to be due to a reduction in volume secondary to alpha stimulation. Episodic panic attacks are seen commonly in adrenaline producing phaeochromocytomas. Headaches occur in up to 90% of those symptomatic. It can be inherited in MEN2, von Hippel-Lindau syndrome and NF1. Diagnosis is based on raised urinary and serum catecholamines, metanephrines and normetanephrines. 24 hour urinary VMA will be elevated. CT is used to localise the tumour. Treatment includes medical with the use of phenoxybenzamine, phentolamine and surgical options. Surgical excision is carried out under alpha and beta blockade to protect against the release of catecholamines into circulation when the tumour is being manipulated. The 10% rule is often quoted: 10% are bilateral, 10% malignant, 10% extraadrenal and 10% hereditary.

59
Q

23 year old female with a complaint of progressive weight loss, palpitations and frequent loose motions

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Coarctation of the aorta
B.	Doxazosin
C.	Patent ductus arteriosus
D.	Renal artery stenosis
E.	Addisons Disease
F.	Phaeochromocytoma
G.	Hyperthyroidism
H.	Phenelzine
I.	Conns syndrome
J.	Cushings disease
A

G. Hyperthyroidism

This woman has hyperthyroidism. Symptoms include those mentioned and heat intolerance, sweating, tremor and tachycardia. In countries where sufficient iodine intake is not an issue, Graves’ disease is the most common cause of hyperthyroidism. Treatment aims to normalise thyroid function and is achieved by radioactive iodine, antithyroid medications or with surgery. Symptomatic therapy is given with beta blockers such as propranolol.

60
Q

54 year old asymptomatic male. A left paraumbilical bruit was noted on examination.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Coarctation of the aorta
B.	Doxazosin
C.	Patent ductus arteriosus
D.	Renal artery stenosis
E.	Addisons Disease
F.	Phaeochromocytoma
G.	Hyperthyroidism
H.	Phenelzine
I.	Conns syndrome
J.	Cushings disease
A

D. Renal artery stenosis
This is a renal bruit which is best heard in the MCL at the costal margin. The finding of a bruit in the abdomen should make you suspicious of renal artery stenosis. RAS is due, typically, to atherosclerosis and often presents with hypertension and worsening renal function. A form of imaging is required for diagnosis.

61
Q
17 year old male with radiological apperance of rib notching on chest radiograph
Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Coarctation of the aorta
B.	Doxazosin
C.	Patent ductus arteriosus
D.	Renal artery stenosis
E.	Addisons Disease
F.	Phaeochromocytoma
G.	Hyperthyroidism
H.	Phenelzine
I.	Conns syndrome
J.	Cushings disease
A

A. Coarctation of the aorta

Aortic coarctation is characterised by a BP difference between the upper and lower extremities. Posterior rib notching is due to enlargement of collateral vessels due to aortic narrowing. Diagnosis is made on demonstrating narrowing of the aortic arch, typically shown by echocardiography. Treatment may involve surgical repair such as the placement of a stent. This condition is typically congenital with a male predominance. It is commonly detected in the first decade and is associated with Turner’s and DiGeorge. An ejection systolic murmur is also common present over the LSB and back.

62
Q

18 year old female with progressive weight gain and gradual development of bitemporal hemianopia

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Coarctation of the aorta
B.	Doxazosin
C.	Patent ductus arteriosus
D.	Renal artery stenosis
E.	Addisons Disease
F.	Phaeochromocytoma
G.	Hyperthyroidism
H.	Phenelzine
I.	Conns syndrome
J.	Cushings disease
A

J. Cushing’s disease

There is weight gain in Cushing’s due to hypercorticolism. Gradual bitemporal hemianopia occurs due to an enlarging pituitary adenoma. Cushing’s disease is due to an ACTH secreting pituitary adenoma and is responsible for most cases of Cushing’s syndrome. A low dose 1mg overnight dexamethasone suppresion test can be done, or a 24 hour urinary free cortisol collection to diagnose Cushing’s syndrome. Plasma ACTH should guide further investigation. If ACTH is suppressed, the problem is likely to be with the adrenals. If it not suppressed, pituitary or ectopic disease is more likely. The treatment of choice in this case is surgical resection of the adenoma.

63
Q

A 78 year old male with an ejection systolic murmur loudest at the aortic area and radiating to the neck.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mitral valve prolapse
B.	Pulmonary hypertension
C.	Atrial septal defect
D.	Chemotherapy
E.	Aortic regurgitation
F.	Aortic stenosis
G.	Mitral stenosis
H.	Systemic hypertension
I.	Alcohol
A

F. Aortic stenosis

Aortic stenosis is characterised by a harsh ejection systolic murmur heard loudest at the right upper sternal border at end expiration, which radiates up towards the carotids. The pulse pressure is narrow and there may be an associated slow-rising and plateau pulse. Doppler echo is vital for diagnosis and shows a pressure gradient across the narrowed valve orifice. 20% of cases are due to a congenital bicuspid valve. The most common cause of AS in adults is calcification of normal trileaflet valves. Clinically stable patients may be considered for surgical repair or TAVR. Presentation includes chest pain, dyspnoea and syncope.

64
Q

56 year old male with ankylosing spondylitis. Collapsing pulse was noted on peripheral pulse examination.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mitral valve prolapse
B.	Pulmonary hypertension
C.	Atrial septal defect
D.	Chemotherapy
E.	Aortic regurgitation
F.	Aortic stenosis
G.	Mitral stenosis
H.	Systemic hypertension
I.	Alcohol
A

E. Aortic regurgitation

Aortic regurgitation is the leakage of blood back into the LV in diastole. The collapsing pulse is also known as a water hammer or Corrigan’s pulse and describes the rapid rise and quick ‘collapse’ of the arterial pulse resulting in a wide pulse pressure. The murmur in AR is early diastolic in mild cases and increases to pansystolic in severe cases. Risk factors include a bicuspid valve, rheumatic fever, endocarditis, anklylosing spondylitis and Marfan’s. Other commonly seen signs in EMQs, although uncommon in clinical practice include Traube’s, Quincke’s, Duroziez’s and de Musset’s sign. Occasionally although uncommon, an Austin Flint murmur may be heard which is a rumbling mid-diastolic murmur best heard at the apex, produced by the regurgitant jet hitting the LV endocardium. Its presence indicates severe AR and the absence of a loud S1 or an opening snap distinguishes this from the murmur of mitral stenosis.

65
Q

65 year old female with a mid-systolic click and a late systolic murmur.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mitral valve prolapse
B.	Pulmonary hypertension
C.	Atrial septal defect
D.	Chemotherapy
E.	Aortic regurgitation
F.	Aortic stenosis
G.	Mitral stenosis
H.	Systemic hypertension
I.	Alcohol
A

A. Mitral valve prolapse

This is mitral valve prolapse characterised by the mid-systolic click and the late systolic murmur, the combination of which is specific for mitral prolapse but not sensitive enough for diagnosis. It occurs when one or more leaflets of the mitral valve prolapse into the LA in systole. Dynamic manoevres such as Valsalva or squatting change the timing of the murmur and click. Patients also commonly suffer from palpitations. Diagnosis can be confirmed with an echocardiogram. Connective tissue diseases such as Marfan’s are key risk factors. The exact cause of MVP is unknown but genetic links have been identified and there is histological myxomatous degeneration in MVP.

66
Q

44 year old diabetic with renal impairment. Fundoscopy revealed AV nipping, silver wiring and small haemorrhages.

Choose the most likely diagnosis
A.	Mitral valve prolapse
B.	Pulmonary hypertension
C.	Atrial septal defect
D.	Chemotherapy
E.	Aortic regurgitation
F.	Aortic stenosis
G.	Mitral stenosis
H.	Systemic hypertension
I.	Alcohol
A

H. Systemic hypertension

Fundoscopy clearly demonstrates changes associated with hypertensive retinopathy. There are 4 grades:

Grade 1: ‘Silver wiring’ and tortuous vessels,
Grade 2: Plus ‘AV nipping’,
Grade 3: Plus cotton wool spots (previously called soft exudates but they are not exudates) and flame haemorrhages,
Grade 4: Plus papilloedema

67
Q

A 50 year old male smoker describes episodes of dull central chest pain on exertion lasting 10 minutes & relieved by rest.

Choose the most discriminatory investigation
A.	Thallium perfusion scan
B.	Upper GI endoscopy
C.	Liver function tests
D.	Creatine kinase
E.	Coronary angiogram
F.	ECG
G.	Abdominal ultrasound
H.	Chest x-ray
I.	Arterial blood gases
J.	CT chest
K.	Exercise ECG
L.	Lower limb venogram
M.	Ventilation/perfusion scan
N.	Sputum culture
A

K. Exercise ECG

This patient has presented with stable angina. Resting ECG is often normal however during exercise stress ECG (most often the Bruce Protocol) there will be ST segment depression during exercise indicative of ischaemia. Those unable to exercise to an adequate level may need stress myocardial perfusion imaging or stress echocardiography. 1st line treatment involves lifestyle changes and antiplatelet therapy with aspirin. Anti-anginal theray will also be given, first line being beta-blockade. Statin therapy, blood sugar control in diabetics and BP control with antihypertensives may also be necessary. Those with LMS disease, 3 vessel disease or a reduced EF may benefit from CABG. Single vessel disease may benefit from PCI.

68
Q

A 60 year old man who is waiting to have a knee replacement, describes daily episodes of central chest pain when he gets up in the morning. The pain lasts 15 minutes & settles with rest.

Choose the most discriminatory investigation
A.	Thallium perfusion scan
B.	Upper GI endoscopy
C.	Liver function tests
D.	Creatine kinase
E.	Coronary angiogram
F.	ECG
G.	Abdominal ultrasound
H.	Chest x-ray
I.	Arterial blood gases
J.	CT chest
K.	Exercise ECG
L.	Lower limb venogram
M.	Ventilation/perfusion scan
N.	Sputum culture
A

E. Coronary angiogram

Variant angina (Prinzmetal) is angina caused by coronary artery vasospasm rather than atherosclerosis. It occurs at rest and in cycles. Many patients will also have some degree of atherosclerosis although not in proportion to the severity of the chest pain experienced. ECG changes are of ST elevation (rather than depression) when the patient is experiencing an attack and a stress ECG will be negative. Patients with Prinzmetal angina are often treated for ACS and indeed, cardiac biomarkers may be raised as vasospasm can cause damage to the myocardium. The gold standard investigation is with coronary angiography and the injection of agents to try to provoke a spasm.

69
Q
A 25 year old pregnant woman, who has returned from Australia, developed sudden severe pleuritic pain and mild breathlessness. Her left leg was swollen yesterday, but not today.
Choose the most discriminatory investigation
A.	Thallium perfusion scan
B.	Upper GI endoscopy
C.	Liver function tests
D.	Creatine kinase
E.	Coronary angiogram
F.	ECG
G.	Abdominal ultrasound
H.	Chest x-ray
I.	Arterial blood gases
J.	CT chest
K.	Exercise ECG
L.	Lower limb venogram
M.	Ventilation/perfusion scan
N.	Sputum culture
A

M. Ventilation/ perfusion scan

This patient has a PE. The study of choice is a CTPA with direct visualisation of the thrombus. If there is a contraindication to a CT scan such as contrast allergy or pregnancy, then a V/Q scan is indicated. If a V/Q scan is not possible, alternatives such as MRA can be requested. It is worth noting that in patients with cardiopulmonary disease, these tests may not be accurate. A TTE can also be used to detect RV strain seen with PE.

70
Q

A 30 year old man has had a 12 hour history of central chest pain, relieved by sitting forwards. He recently had a sore throat.

Choose the most discriminatory investigation
A.	Thallium perfusion scan
B.	Upper GI endoscopy
C.	Liver function tests
D.	Creatine kinase
E.	Coronary angiogram
F.	ECG
G.	Abdominal ultrasound
H.	Chest x-ray
I.	Arterial blood gases
J.	CT chest
K.	Exercise ECG
L.	Lower limb venogram
M.	Ventilation/perfusion scan
N.	Sputum culture
A

F. ECG

This patient has presented with pericarditis. Symptoms include a sharp and severe chest pain retrosternally which is worse on inspiration and when supine, relieved by sitting forwards. The classical finding on examination is a friction rub which is said to sound like ‘walking on snow’. ECG is the investigation of choice with changes seen in 90%. There may be diffuse (saddle-shaped) ST elevations on ECG. Also, an effusion may be seen on echocardiography and blood results suggesting inflammation. Complications include tamponade and constrictive pericarditis. Risk factors include viral/bacterial infection (this patient’s sore throat), male gender, post-MI (both ‘early’ and Dressler’s), post-pericardiotomy syndrome, neoplasm from local tumour invasion, uraemia and autoimmune conditions such as RA and SLE.

71
Q

82 year old man with hypertension for many years. He presents with increasing shortness of breath particularly when lying flat, & ankle swelling. On examination JVP is raised, BP 140/60, pulse 120/minute in atrial fibrillation.

Choose the most useful investigation
A.	Full blood count
B.	Lymphangiogram
C.	Arterial doppler studies
D.	Plasma creatinine
E.	Liver function tests
F.	24 hour urine protein
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Pelvic ultrasound
I.	Coagulation screen
J.	Venous doppler studies
A

G. Chest x-ray
The signs and symptoms this patient has points to CCF (congestive cardiac failure). This patient has a history of hypertension and is elderly. Other key cardiovascular risk factors include MI, DM and dyslipiaemia. SOB with orthopnoea due to the sudden increase in pre-load, indicates LV failure. Neck vein distension is also present, which is a major Framingham criteria for diagnosis. Tachycardia and ankle oedema are both minor criteria for diagnosis. Other major criteria for diagnosis include S3 gallop, cardiomegaly and hepatojugular reflux. For all patients, initial investigations should include ECG, CXR, TTE and bloods including BNP levels.

CXR may reveal pulmonary vascular redistribution to the upper zones, Kerley B lines, an increased CTR (cardiomegaly) and pleural effusion.

72
Q

54 year old Asian woman with type 2 diabetes for 15 years. She comes to the clinic complaining of ankle swelling. On examination, BP 170/95, JVP not raised & bilateral oedema to the knees. Albumin is low.

Choose the most useful investigation
A.	Full blood count
B.	Lymphangiogram
C.	Arterial doppler studies
D.	Plasma creatinine
E.	Liver function tests
F.	24 hour urine protein
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Pelvic ultrasound
I.	Coagulation screen
J.	Venous doppler studies
A

F. 24 hour protein

The most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in adults with long standing diabetes is diabetic nephropathy. However, non-diabetic renal disease cannot be excluded. Nephrotic syndrome is defined by the presence of proteinuria (>3.5g/24h), oedema and hypoalbuminaemia. Some definitions add hyperlipidaemia. Do not confuse this with nephritic syndrome. Diagnosis is made by quantification of proteinuria with a 24 hour urine collection, although now it is common to do a spot urine protein-to-creatinine ratio for practical reasons.

73
Q

65 year old woman with weight loss, malaise & ankle swelling. She smokes 20 cigarettes/day. There is a past history of irritable bowel syndrome. On examination; pulse 80/min irregularly irregular, JVP not seen, BP 135/85, clear chest, bilateral oedema & large mass in pelvis. Urine testing reveals protein +.

Choose the most useful investigation
A.	Full blood count
B.	Lymphangiogram
C.	Arterial doppler studies
D.	Plasma creatinine
E.	Liver function tests
F.	24 hour urine protein
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Pelvic ultrasound
I.	Coagulation screen
J.	Venous doppler studies
A

H. Pelvic ultrasound

There is a large mass in the pelvis which is most likely malignant given the history. This needs to be investigated by pelvic ultrasound.

74
Q

73 year old man was reviewed in the diabetic clinic. He was complaining of increasing tiredness & loss of appetite. His ankles had become more swollen over the last few weeks.

Choose the most useful investigation
A.	Full blood count
B.	Lymphangiogram
C.	Arterial doppler studies
D.	Plasma creatinine
E.	Liver function tests
F.	24 hour urine protein
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Pelvic ultrasound
I.	Coagulation screen
J.	Venous doppler studies
A

D. Plasma creatine

Diabetic patients are at risk of diabetic nephropathy and need to have their plasma creatinine regularly checked to monitor renal function. Tiredness, loss of appetite, confusion and pruritis can all be subtle signs of worsening renal function.

75
Q

66 year old man presents with swelling of his right leg to the knee. He had had a right hip replacement 5 weeks previously.

Choose the most useful investigation
A.	Full blood count
B.	Lymphangiogram
C.	Arterial doppler studies
D.	Plasma creatinine
E.	Liver function tests
F.	24 hour urine protein
G.	Chest x-ray
H.	Pelvic ultrasound
I.	Coagulation screen
J.	Venous doppler studies
A

J. Venous doppler studies

Recent surgery, especially orthopaedic surgery, is a strong risk factor for developing a DVT. Other strong risks include active malignancy, pregnancy, obesity and coagulopathies such as factor V Leiden. A Wells score is determined in all patients with a suspected DVT with the condition being likely if the score is 2 or more. If the Wells score is <2 then a D-dimer level is indicated. A compression ultrasound of the proximal deep venous system is the first line investigation in those where there is a high clinical suspicion. However, Doppler venous flow studies can be used when all other tests are unavailable although this test has a low sensitivity and requires a trained technician. A low flow in the veins is indicative of a DVT.

76
Q

A man who works in the city suffers from burning, retrosternal discomfort radiating from epigastrium to jaw & throat. Worse on lying down.

Choose the most diagnostic investigation
A.	Ultrasound scan
B.	BNP level
C.	Exercise ECG
D.	Chest X-ray
E.	V/Q scan
F.	CTPA
G.	CT scan
H.	Upper GI endoscopy
I.	MRI scan
A

H. Upper GI endoscopy

This patient has GORD characterised by heartburn and regurgitation of acid. It is more severe at night when the patient is lying flat and also when the patient is bending over. Risk factors include obesity and hiatus hernia. Diagnosis is generally clinical and can also be achieved by a diagnostic trial of a PPI. Normally an upper GI endoscopy is reserved for complications such as strictures, Barrett’s or cancer, or for atypical features. An OGD may show oesophagitis or Barrett’s (red velvety), however OGD may be normal. Manometry and pH monitoring may also be performed, but in this case, this patient will probably just have a therapeutic and diagnostic trial of a PPI instead of an OGD.

77
Q

A gentleman suffers from intermittent episodes of nausea, sweating, central crushing pain, radiating to jaw, lasting a few minutes, which is made worse by exercise.

Choose the most diagnostic investigation
A.	Ultrasound scan
B.	BNP level
C.	Exercise ECG
D.	Chest X-ray
E.	V/Q scan
F.	CTPA
G.	CT scan
H.	Upper GI endoscopy
I.	MRI scan
A

C. Exercise ECG

During exercise stress ECG (most often the Bruce Protocol) there will be ST segment depression during exercise indicative of ischaemia. Those unable to exercise to an adequate level may need stress myocardial perfusion imaging or stress echocardiography. 1st line angina treatment involves lifestyle changes and antiplatelet therapy with aspirin. Anti-anginal theray will also be given, first line being beta-blockade. Statin therapy, blood sugar control in diabetics and BP control with antihypertensives may also be necessary. Those with LMS disease, 3 vessel disease or a reduced EF may benefit from CABG. Single vessel disease may benefit from PCI.

78
Q

A lady suffers from dyspnoea, coughing up blood as well which is mixed with frothy sputum and is stony dull to percuss.

Choose the most diagnostic investigation
A.	Ultrasound scan
B.	BNP level
C.	Exercise ECG
D.	Chest X-ray
E.	V/Q scan
F.	CTPA
G.	CT scan
H.	Upper GI endoscopy
I.	MRI scan
A

D. Chest x-ray

This patient has pulmonary oedema likely due to heart failure. There is also a pleural effusion which may be due to LVF. CXR may show pulmonary vascular redistribution to the upper zones, Kerley B lines, an increased CTR (cardiomegaly) and pleural effusion consistent with pulmonary oedema. Other investigations should include ECG, TTE and bloods including BNP levels. First line treatment for chronic heart failure is with an ACE inhibitor which reduces morbidity and mortality. Salt and fluid restriction is also beneficial. All patients with chronic heart failure will also receive a beta blocker such as carvedilol. Other adjuncts include spironolactone, diuretics, hydralazine and a nitrate, and digoxin.

79
Q

30 year old women returning from holiday. Sudden onset chest pain with shortness of breath, coughed blood. She has no other lung disease

Choose the most diagnostic investigation
A.	Ultrasound scan
B.	BNP level
C.	Exercise ECG
D.	Chest X-ray
E.	V/Q scan
F.	CTPA
G.	CT scan
H.	Upper GI endoscopy
I.	MRI scan
A

F. CTPA

This patient has a PE. Regardless of whether there is lung disease, guidelines state that the study of choice if there is an initial high probability of PE is a CTPA with direct visualisation of the thrombus (a filling defect is seen). If there is a contraindication to a CT scan such as contrast allergy or pregnancy, then a V/Q scan is indicated.

80
Q

An older man collapses with sudden chest pain radiating to back.

Choose the most diagnostic investigation
A.	Ultrasound scan
B.	BNP level
C.	Exercise ECG
D.	Chest X-ray
E.	V/Q scan
F.	CTPA
G.	CT scan
H.	Upper GI endoscopy
I.	MRI scan
A

G. CT scan

A CT scan is indicated as soon as a diagnosis of aortic dissection is suspected and should be from the chest to the pelvis to see the full extent of the dissecting aneurysm. MRI is more sensitive and specific but is more difficult to obtain acutely.

Aortic dissection typically presents with tearing/ripping chest pain and classically radiates through to the back. There may be interscapular pain with dissection of the descending aorta. Dissecting aneurysms are either type A, which involves the ascending aorta, or type B. Type A dissections require urgent surgery whereas type B can be managed medically if it is not complicated by end organ ischaemia. BP differential between the 2 arms is a hallmark feature. Pulse differences may also be present in the lower limbs. There may also be the diastolic murmur of AR in proximal dissections.