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Recertification Practice Quiz and Answers


Issue: April 2008
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These questions are similar to those asked on the American Board of Surgery Recertification Examination. Use them to prepare for the examination, fulfill learning requirements for various maintenance of competence programs, or simply improve your surgical knowledge. Answers can be viewed by following the "Read the Answers" link at the end.

  1. The most common cause of wound dehiscence is
    1. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    2. Steroid use
    3. Technical error
    4. Ascites
    5. Suture breakage

  2. All of the following signs are absolute indications for neck exploration after penetrating neck trauma, except
    1. Open airway
    2. Branham's sign
    3. Large hematoma
    4. Subcutaneous emphysema
    5. Pulsatile bleeding

  3. Rhabdomyolysis
    1. Is characterized by low creatine phosphokinase (CPK) levels
    2. Occurs after 6 hours of muscle ischemia
    3. Is improved after reperfusion
    4. Requires alkalinization of the urine to solubilize myoglobin
    5. Is best treated with diuresis induced by furosemide

  4. The nerve that runs along the spermatic cord and supplies sensation to the upper medial thigh is the
    1. Iliohypogastric
    2. Ilioinguinal
    3. Obturator
    4. Genitofemoral
    5. Lumboinguinal

  5. Carotid artery stenting for atherosclerotic occlusion
    1. Is indicated in patients who have undergone cervical radiation previously
    2. Has the same stroke rate as endarterectomy
    3. Has no effect on the contralateral carotid artery
    4. Should not be performed in conjunction with coronary artery bypass graft surgery
    5. Lowers the risk of distal embolization

  6. Preparation of a patient with sickle cell disease for elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy should include all of the following, except
    1. Hydration
    2. Normothermia
    3. Oxygenation
    4. Prophylactic antibiotics
    5. Exchange transfusion

  7. The MELD score
    1. Includes ascites in the determination
    2. Measures the expected success rate of liver transplantation
    3. Determines the expected 3-month mortality rates without transplantation
    4. Is less objective than the Child classification
    5. Is highly dependent on the level of serum albumin

  8. Acute cholangitis
    1. Can be distinguished from acute cholecystitis by the presence of jaundice
    2. Requires immediate cholecystectomy
    3. Carries a mortality rate of 12%
    4. Is best treated using operative common duct exploration
    5. Is a component of acalculous cholecystitis

  9. Neuroblastomas
    1. Occur most frequently in the mediastinum
    2. Frequently cause diarrhea due to hypersecretion of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)
    3. Have a better prognosis if discovered before age 1 year
    4. Are stage III if unresectable and associated with positive ipsilateral lymph nodes
    5. Have the worst prognosis if the primary is in the mediastinum

  10. Pseudoaneurysms
    1. Are most commonly caused by trauma
    2. Are generally asymptomatic
    3. Occur most commonly in the iliac artery
    4. Can be treated using ultrasonography-guided thrombin injection
    5. Are best diagnosed using computed tomography

  11. Epigastric hernias
    1. Occur overwhelmingly in females
    2. Are common in children
    3. Are multiple in 20% of patients
    4. Require mesh for repair
    5. Are generally asymptomatic

  12. All of the following are indications for operative therapy for bleeding duodenal ulcers, except
    1. Hemorrhage severe enough to induce shock
    2. Bleeding with no prior symptoms
    3. Persistent bleeding despite endoscopic therapy
    4. Bleeding in a patient who has ischemic heart disease
    5. Need for transfusion of 2 units of blood

Read the Answers


Related Articles - Recertification Practice Quiz and Answers

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