A Cysteine: Well Done, You Have Selected The Right Answer
A Cysteine: Well Done, You Have Selected The Right Answer
A Cysteine: Well Done, You Have Selected The Right Answer
A Cysteine
B Uric acid
C Struvite
D Calcium oxalate
E Hydrogen
Question 2. A 32-year-old man has a renal stone 3 years following laparotomy and
ileal resection for Crohn's disease. What metabolic factor most likely accounts for
this?
A Hypocitraturia
B Hyperoxaluria
C Hyperuricosuria
D Hypercalciuria
E Hypocalciuria
Question 3. A 68-year-old man presents with recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI).
He has a history of recurrent renal stones and has three previous percutaneous
nephrolithotomies in the right kidney. Current evaluation confirms a recurrent 3 cm
stone in the right renal pelvis. An isotope study (DMSA) performed 3 months after
treatment of his UTI shows 5% function in the right kidney. What is the best treatment
strategy for the right renal stone?
D Nephrectomy
E Conservative treatment
A Gentamicin
B Lithium
C Tamsulosin
D Amphotericin B
E ACE inhibitor
B Contrast-induced nephropathy
C Diabetic nephropathy
E Bladder cancer
B Intravenous urography
C CT urogram
D Gadolinium-enhanced MRI
A Cervical carcinoma
B Multiple myeloma
E Prostate cancer
C A 20 g prostate
Question 2. A 70-year-old man presents with painless retention and wetting at night,
with a residual of 2 L. You diagnose high pressure chronic retention.
A Beta-blockers
B Calcium channel blockers
D Alpha-agonists
E ACE inhibitors
A Anticholinergic medication
B Clam ileocystoplasty
D Mirabegron
Question 1. What would be the best treatment option for a 48-year-old woman with no
relevant past medical history who presents with symptoms of stress urinary
incontinence?
A Anticholinergics
C Colposuspension
A Anticholinergics
B Beta-3 agonists
E Sacral neuromodulation
Question 3. What would be the best treatment option for a 61-year-old woman with
severe overactive bladder syndrome (OAB) symptoms who has failed treatment with
pharmacological agents? She attempted to learn self-catheterise but was unable to
do this.
D Augmentation cysoplasty
E Sacral neuromodulation
Question 5. What would be the best treatment option for a 63-year-old man who
developed severe stress urinary incontinence following a radical prostatectomy for
prostate cancer 3 years previously followed by radiotherapy. He has been performing
pelvic floor exercises since his operation with no significant benefit and continues to
wear seven heavy pads a day.
A Duloxetine
E Sacral neuromodulation
B Urodynamic evaluation
E Beta-3 agonist
Well done, you have selected the right answer.
The correct answer is B. Overall, the patient describes symptoms of bladder outflow
obstruction which would indicate most likely prostatic obstruction. However, before
embarking on a definitive procedure one must eliminate any evidence of detrusor
overactivity that may be causing his symptoms, as if this is present any outlet surgery can
worsen the patient's symptoms.
C Autonomic dysreflexia
D Detruser overactivity
A Hypertension
B Bradycardia
A Risk of cancer
Question 1. Which of the following UTIs is a common risk factor for squamous cell
carcinoma of the bladder?
A Staphylococcus aureus
B Schistosomiasis
C Escherichia coli
D Proteus mirabilis
A Klebsiella
B Proteus mirabilis
C Escherichia coli
D Staphylococcus aureus
A Citrobacter
B Enterococcus faecalis
C Ureaplasma urealyticum
D Escherichia coli
E All of the above
B Tissue necrosis
C Abscess formation
D Positive urine culture
Question 1. A teenage boy presents with left testicular pain. Which of the following
options need to be excluded first?
A Orchitis
B Epididymitis
D Testicular torsion
E Testicular tumour
A Orchitis
B Epididymitis
D Testicular torsion
E Testicular tumour
Question 3. A 22-year-old man presents with a day history of right testicular pain. On
examination there is significant tenderness on the epididymis but not the testis. He
has a history of unprotected intercourse and chlamydia. What is the most likely
diagnosis?
A Orchitis
B Epididymitis
D Testicular torsion
E Testicular tumour
Question 4. A teenage boy presents with left testicular pain for 12 hours. The pain
has gradually improved but there is an apparent swelling and a blue dot is visible
under the skin on the upper pole of the testis. What is the most likely diagnosis?
A Orchitis
B Epididymitis
D Testicular torsion
E Testicular tumour
Question 5. A 28-year-old man presented with a 2 month history of a dull ache in his
left testis. On examination you can feel a hard lump on the testis which is tender.
Which diagnosis needs to be excluded first?
A Orchitis
B Epididymitis
D Testicular torsion
E Testicular tumour
A Orchitis
B Cancer
D Cryptorchidism
E Idiopathic
B False
A Thyroid gland
B The hypothalamus
C Pituitary gland
D Parotid gland
E None of above
C If a man experiences nocturnal penile erection, but cannot achieve erection for
intercourse, he is likely to have psychogenic ED
E The dorsal penile and pudendal nerves carry the efferent fibres to the spinal cord at S2–4
level
B Tadalafil is effective after 30 minutes after administration and its efficacy is maintained
for up to 36 hours and is affected by food
C If oral therapy fails surgical implantation of a penile prosthesis is the treatment of choice
D ED is not associated with hyperprolactinaemia
A The PDE-5i are initiators of erection and usually do not require sexual stimulation
A Diabetes
B Penile fracture
C Peyronie's disease
D Psychogenic
E Priapism
D ECG
E Serum testosterone
A Tricyclic antidepressants
B Parkinson's disease
D Trimethoprim
E Radical prostatectomy
C Prostate cancer
D Renal cancer
D Renal cancer
C Prostate cancer
D Renal cancer
Question 4. A 79-year-old man presents with a 3-year history of voiding LUTS (poor
stream, incomplete emptying, hesitancy) and a 3-month history of hip and lower back
pain which is worse at night. His adjusted serum calcium is 2.9 mmol/L (reference
range 2.25–2.5 mmol/L). What is the most likely diagnosis?
C Penile adenocarcinoma
D Prostate cancer
E Renal cancer
Question 5. A man presents with a hard, enlarging lump in his left testicle.
Examination suggests possible testicular cancer. Which lymph nodes does testicular
cancer spread to first?
A External iliac
B Inguinal
C Para-aortic
D Supraclavicular
E Lung
Well done, you have selected the right answer.
The correct answer is C. The gonads develop in early gestation in the peritoneal cavity in
both sexes. Their blood supply and lymphatic drainage thus take origin in the retroperitoneal
cavity at a level just inferior to the renal hilum. This patient should have an urgent
ultrasound scan (ideally the same day) and bloods for tumour markers (AFP, LDH, HCG).
Inguinal lymphadenopathy with a scrotal pathology suggests a skin lesion.
B Penile adenocarcinoma
C Penile melanoma
E Zoon's balanitis
A Hyperthyroidism
B Diverticulitis
C Appendicitis
D Hyperparathyroidism
E Pyelonephritis
Question 2. A 22-year-old medical student has recently returned from his elective in
Africa and is complaining of fever, abdominal pain and blood in the urine. What is the
likely causative organism?
A Plasmodium falciparum
B Schistosomiasis haematobium
C Aedes aegypti
D E. coli
E Pseudomonas
A Ethambutol
B Rifampicin
C Pyrazinimide
D Isoniazid
E Gentamicin
Question 4. A 45-year-old man presents to accident and emergency with fever, chest
pain, haemoptysis and haematuria. Blood test analysis revealed: urea 16 mmol/L,
creatinine of 140 μmol/L and eGFR 16 and the presence of anti-glomerular basement
membrane (anti-GBM) antibodies. What is the likely diagnosis?
A Vasculitis
B Wegener's granulomatosis
C Goodpasture's syndrome
E Pyelonephritis
A Bladder cancer
B Prostatitis
C Urinary colic
D Prostate cancer
E Urethral strictures
A Ventral chordee
B Hooded foreskin
D Proximal meatus
Sorry, you have selected the wrong answer.
The correct answer is C. The other three options are all classically described in
hypospadias. A dorsal meatus is seen in epispadias. In hypospadias the meatus will be
ventral and more proximal than normal.
Question 2. Undescended testes:
C BXO does not usually occur until after the age of 5 years
A Visible haematuria
B Systolic blood pressure >90 mmHg since the injury and non-visible haematuria
E Penetrating trauma
A Immediate detumescence
E Pain
Sorry, you have selected the wrong answer.
The correct answer is A. Superficial dorsal vein rupture is a rare condition which can mimic
penile fracture. Both conditions present with a grossly swollen and bruised penis, often
following sexual intercourse. Penile fracture is typically accompanied by a snapping or
popping sound and immediate detumescence whereas dorsal vein rupture is not.
B Perineal bruising/haematoma
D Haematuria
E Haemodynamic instability
A Fill at low pressure, reflex emptying once full to capacity, complete emptying
A 1 month
B 14 days
C 7 days
D 3 months
E 6 months
Question 2. Which type of ultrasound probe would you ideally use to image the
testicle?
C Curved 3 MHz
D Flat 3 MHz
C A Sim's speculum is used to examine women when in the supine position
D Male doctors should examine female patients with a chaperone present
D Must not be assessed with bimanual examination under anaesthesia if there is a diagnosis
of bladder cancer
A Induction of malignancy
B Alopecia
C Cataracts
D Diarrhoea
E Skin irritation
D Pregnant women
Question 3. A patient presents with a history suggestive of renal colic. What is the
best imaging investigation?
A Renal ultrasound
B IVU
C MRI
E CT urogram
The correct answer is D. It may suggest, although non-specific, renal artery stenosis in the
appropriate clinical setting. It is particularly indicative when the bruit is continuous (systolic–
diastolic). A bruit can vary in intensity with fluctuation of the systemic blood pressure, or
disappear if renal artery stenosis progresses to near or total occlusion. An abdominal bruit
can also occur in association with a renal artery aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation.
Question 4. The left kidney in a normal patient: