Surgery (UWorld Step 2)
Surgery (UWorld Step 2)
Surgery (UWorld Step 2)
C. diff infection:
• Watery diarrhea, can be followed by Toxic Megacolon – bowel loop dilation and abdominal distension.
Post-surgery/trauma nutrition:
• Start Enteral feeds as soon as possible – helps maintain gut wall integrity, lowers risk of sepsis, etc.
o Delay only if patient is hemodynamically unstable – i.e, inadequate perfusion to gut.
• Parenteral feeds (TPN) is needed only if patient is unable to tolerate enteral feeds or needs more than
enteral feeding can supply (hypermetabolic state).
o Otherwise, the risks of TPN are too high, and it has none of the benefits of Enteral feeding.
• Occurs in severe acute illness (high cytokine levels) or in patients on high-dose glucocorticoids.
• Glucocorticoids/cytokines suppress the peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 (thyroid hormone).
o i.e, Low T3, but normal T4 and TSH.
Acromegaly:
Surgery can often be delayed!! Ex: Up to 72 hours, for femur neck fracture.
• If the patient has signs of some medical illness that may be more important, especially
cardiac/respiratory – patient must be stable before surgery.
o Ex: Atrial fibrillation, Pneumonia, Pleural effusion.
• So, treat the patient’s medical condition first, THEN go for surgery.
Bacterial/post-op endophthalmitis:
• Infection of aqueous or vitreous humor by conjunctival bacteria, usually in the process of cataract
surgery.
• A/w decreasing vision and ache in the eye.
• Emergency situation – diagnose clinically and treat with intravitreal injection of antibiotics.
Bloody ascites = Malignancy
• Ascitic fluid only appears bloody if RBC count > 50,000 /mm3.
• The malignancy disrupts and erodes nearby blood vessels.
Pheochromocytoma:
Cryptorchidism:
Priapism:
Splenic abscess:
• Happens after abdominal surgery; Left-sided abdominal pain with splenomegaly, sometimes radiating
to the back.
• Diagnose by CT scan; Treatment: Aspiration often fails – tiny occult abscesses reseed the spleen.
Splenectomy is usually needed.
Lemierre syndrome:
• Fusobacterium infection – initial pharyngitis, then local spread into neck, infecting the internal jugular
vein (pain along sternocleidomastoid).
o Then spreads hematogenously to other organs (septic emboli) – especially the lungs (Multiple
lung nodules).
Reason for Post-op Ileus:
• Splanchnic sympathetic nerve stimulation during surgery (sympathetic = decreased bowel motility).
• OR, Opioid analgesic use.
Thyroid nodule: If TSH is low, first do Radionuclide scan, then FNAC.
Dumping syndrome:
• In gastric bypass patients, large amount of carbohydrate is ‘dumped’ into small bowel – leads to
osmotic fluid shift into bowel.
• This causes hypotension and sympathetic activation – tachycardia, sweating, etc.
Circumcision benefits:
Breast mass:
Aneurysm repair involves clamping of the aorta and grafting that can shear off some small branches – can
cause ischemic symptoms (infarction) of other organs.
• Ex: Spinal cord infarction – anterior half of spinal cord, which is supplied by small segmental branches
of the aorta that can be sheared off during graft repair.
o The posterior half is supplied from the vertebral/posterior inferior cerebellar arteries –
branches of carotid circulation, which are supplied before the site of clamping/repair.
Risks of Succinylcholine:
• Occurs in obese adolescents, but does not have fever. Also, is a chronic pain with hip deformity.
• Because the pacemaker lead has to pass through the valve – can be damaged while placing.
• Tricuspid regurgitation = holosystolic murmur at left sternal border.
o VSD also has the same murmur, but may also have a palpable thrill.
o Also, VSD is not a/w pacemaker implantation.
Squamous cell carcinoma:
• < 3 months post-op → virulent organisms like Staph aureus and Pseudomonas.
o A/w fever, leukocytosis, synovial WBC > 50000.
• 3-12 months post-op → less virulent, like CONS (Staph epidermidis) or Propionibacterium.
o Synovial WBC > 1000, but <50000.
o Unlikely to have fever, erythema, etc. Mostly just a mild join ache.
• Massive third spacing of fluid into the abdomen in inflammatory settings – patient goes into
hypovolemic shock as all fluid moves into the abdomen.
• Abdomen is tense and distended; pushes up the diaphragm causing difficulty breathing (bibasilar
atelectasis on x-ray).
o This extrinsic pressure causes increased central venous pressure (CVP), adding to the decreased
preload (venous return).
• Usually not done, since the whole lesion should be inspected (may miss something by only examining a
small part).
• Can be done for very large lesions, or those on the face/ear (where full excision is
difficult/problematic).
Hemorrhoid treatment:
• Suspect in patients with low sodium/high potassium (low glucose may also be an indicator).
• Autoimmune destruction of all layers of adrenal cortex.
• Sudden stress, like surgery/endoscopy/anesthesia will precipitate adrenal crisis.
o Due to low mineralocorticoid (hypoaldosteronism).
o Severe hypotension and tachycardia, refractory to volume resuscitation and vasopressors like
epinephrine (since cortisol is needed to ‘permit’ epinephrine to act).
• So, Rx: Volume resuscitation + Glucocorticoid.
o Dexamethasone is preferred (doesn’t alter plasma cortisol levels, which are important for
diagnosis.
o Mineralocorticoid replacement takes several days to show its effects (still done, just after
resuscitation).
Aortic dissection:
• Can cause pleural effusion (direct extension – hemothorax, or inflammatory reaction of blood irritating
the pleural lining).
• And may have elevated d-dimer.
• Ischemia is more common at the splenic flexure and rectosigmoid junction – not the hepatic flexure.
• Small bowel is usually involved in embolic/thrombotic episodes – not due to hypotension.
• Requires EMERGENCY decompression (by opening the incision again – surgical exploration).
• Emergency because it can cause airway compromise, or compress the neck vessels.
Back pain that is worse at night and unrelieved by rest = Metastatic cancer.
• Epidural – in young adults; tear of middle meningeal artery at the pterion (frontotemporal region).
o Classically LOC f/b lucid interval, but that only happens in 20-50%.
o May instead remain alert, but quickly decompensate due to the expanding hematoma
compressing the brain.
o Due to trauma.
• Subdural – tear of the bridging veins, usually in old/on blood thinners patients.
o Coma from onset, no lucid interval.
o Due to trauma.
• Subarachnoid hemorrhage – thunderclap heachache a/w LOC; NOT due to trauma (usually aneurysmal
rupture).
Deep diabetic wound/ulcer infections: Almost always polymicrobial, with contiguous spread to bone.
Ibuprofen/Colchicine – Rx for idiopathic/viral pericarditis (would only have small pericardial effusion).
Charcot arthropathy – destruction of the ankle joint because of lack of sensation/proprioception in diabetics.
• Patient does not automatically adjust to avoid/minimize normal wear and tear, thus heavily damaging
the joint.
Acalculous cholecystitis:
• Has a high risk for pneumonia & atelectasis – due to shallow breathing and not coughing because of
the pain.
• So, to prevent pneumonia, PAIN CONTROL (analgesia) is important.
o Will ensure adequate breathing and cough.
o NSAIDs or Opioids can be used – respiratory depression of opioids is outweighed by the
benefits of adequate pain control.
Blunt abdominal trauma with intraperitoneal bleeding = Splenic laceration.
• Colonic motility is lost due to several causes – Ex: Electrolyte abnormalities – causing autonomic
derangement.
o A/w severe trauma, massive diarrhea, major surgery, neurologic disorders, etc.
• Patient presents with severe intestinal obstruction.
• Targeting encapsulated organisms, we use amoxicillin-clavulanic acid!! For those with penicillin
allergy, use Levofloxacin.
• Can be due to repetitive motions (like pitching a baseball), weightlifting, central venous catheters, and
malignancy.
• Manifests as acute arm edema with erythema; risk of PE is present.
Lymphedema is chronic, not acute.
Superficial thrombophlebitis is pain and erythema along the vein, not the whole arm.
Rectal bleeding:
• ‘Fixed teardrop’ pupil – iris lacerated by the foreign body; or decreased anterior chamber
depth/intraocular pressure (as fluid leaks out).
• Rx: Eye shield and Emergent surgical opthal consult.
Hypopyon will eventually form, but that is a chronic finding.
Acute corneal opacification is a sign of angle closure glaucoma.
• Blood glucose shoots up in stressful conditions, ex: trauma, sepsis due to release of cortisol and
catecholamines.
• Identified by normal HbA1c – NO TREATMENT needed!
• Could be kidney (pyelonephritis, etc) but could also be Abdominal aortic aneurysm rupture!!
• Marked hypotension without fever → AAA.
• Diagnosed by adduction of the shoulder across the body (compresses the AC joint) causing pain.
• Occurs when the shoulder hits the ground in a lateral angle.
• Mild sprain → Normal x-rays.
Prevent post-op pneumonia – Incentive spirometry (CPAP only if it fails and pneumonia develops).
Diaphragmatic hernia: Look for the nasogastric tube circling back up – causes breathlessness despite chest
tubes.
• Murmur is best heard at the LEFT sternal border (unlike Right for normal AR).
• May be a leak through the valve (transvalvular) or around the valve (paravalvular).
Fothergill sign:
• Abdominal mass that does not cross the midline and does not move with movement of the lower
limbs.
o It is a sign of rectus sheath hematoma.
• The sign helps differentiate between an abdominal wall mass and an intra-abdominal mass – positive
sign → abdominal wall mass.
Rectus sheath hematoma is a/w severe coughing, and has a +ve Fothergill sign.
Leydig cell tumor can produce BOTH testosterone (expected) and estrogen.
• Definitive Rx: ablation of the atrial reentrant circuit, which is the cause of the flutter.
• But that is only needed if patient is severely symptomatic.
Autonomic dysreflexia:
Large pericardial effusion (or cardiac tamponade) → Inability to palpate cardiac apex (point fo maximal
impulse).
• Subfalcine → Lower extremity weakness due to anterior cerebral artery occlusion (remember it as the
motor homunculus having the lower limbs towards the middle).
• Uncal/Transtentorial → Ipsilateral fixed and dilated pupil – compression of the ipsilateral oculomotor
nerve and the associated parasympathetic fibers.
• Tonsillar → Fixed, mid-position pupils (both sympathetic and parasympathetic supply are disrupted).
• Hypotonic hyponatremia due to a. Water retention and b. Natriuretic peptide-mediated urine sodium
excretion (because of high volume from water retention).
• Present with non-specific nausea/fatigue.
• So, patient on Desmopressin → Check electrolytes.
• Placed if patient has contraindication to anticoagulation OR has developed complications (ex: bleeding)
from anticoagulation.
• Usually placed temporarily to avoid complications from dislodged filter.
• Note that coffee/tea are actually slightly protective for colon cancer, probably due to antioxidant
effects.
Pediatric neck masses:
• Think of Botulism infection – botulinum toxin can cause weakness and palsies.
o Descending motor paresis, beginning with the cranial nerves; sensory innervation is usually
normal.
o A/w Respiratory acidosis – respiratory muscle (diaphragm) weakness.
o Autonomic dysfunction – ileus, urinary retention, etc. is also possible.
Tophaceous gout may present without the usual signs of acute inflammation.
• In patients taking bisphosphonates (ex: zoledronic acid) – high doses for cancer or osteoporosis.
• Usually seen after tooth extraction – failed wound healing, swelling/erythema, and exposed bone.
• Rx: Mostly supportive, good oral hygiene and antibacterial rinses.
o Antibiotics/debridement only in severe cases (when needed).
• Frequent episodes of flank pain and hematuria – mild discomfort rather than pain.
• A/w mild nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, likely from tubular dysfunction – serum vasopressin levels
are increased.
o Vasopressin agonists decrease cyst formation – ex: Tolvaptan.
• A/w HTN due to localized renal ischemia (from the cysts) → high renin → HTN.
• Always check for osteomyelitis – even if the bone is not exposed and there are no signs of infection.
• Hyperbaric oxygen is a late treatment option for non-healing ulcers, but osteomyelitis diagnosis and
antibiotics are more urgent.
Bladder rupture – intraperitoneal free fluid is seen, but no peritonitis (because urine is typically sterile).
• The rupture is at the dome, the weakest part of the bladder (usually).
• Do a Retrograde cystography with a water-soluble contrast (to avoid causing peritonitis with the
contrast leaking).
Testicular torsion – usually scrotal pain, some patients present with lower abdominal pain.
• Might be intermittent, self-resolving and recurring; pain intensifies with lifting of the scrotum.
• Rx: Surgical detorsion and fixation (+ checking the contralateral testes); manual detorsion if surgery not
available.
• May occur spontaneously, or after mild trauma.
• Well-circumscribed mass, hyperechoic on USG; may compress the bile tract – elevated ALP/GGT.
• Do NOT biopsy – high risk of bleeding. If necessary (ex: severe bile obstruction), do surgical excision.
• May rupture and send the patient into hemorrhagic shock.
• Just need reassurance and observation, unless other abnormalities (hypotension, hypercapnia, etc.)
are present.
o It is usually seen in adults with existing psychiatric history (ex: PTSD).
• Don’t jump immediately to withdrawal.
• Due to beta-2 amyloid deposition in the carpal tunnel – inflammation from dialysis increases amyloid
deposition.
• Symptoms worsen during dialysis due to increased venous pressure. And vascular steal from the fistula
causing relative ischemia of the hand (ischemic neuropathy).
o Symptoms are more severe in the hand that has the vascular access.
Pelvic fracture: separation of pubic symphysis, lower limb adducted, flexed and internally rotated.
• = High risk of posterior urethral injury – blood at the meatus, high-riding prostate.
• Diagnosis – retrograde urethrography.
o NOT cystography – cystography uses a Foley in the bladder to fill it with dye; in urethral injury,
catheterization is contraindicated.
Patellofemoral pain syndrome: Overuse(?) type pain under the patella.
• Provoked by flexion movements at the knee, which press the patella into the trochlear groove of the
femur. A/w buckling/give-way sensation – a very nonspecific finding of ANY ligament/muscle injury.
• Rx: Decreased activity, NSAIDs, and strengthening of quadriceps/abductors to stabilize the joint.
Strategies to minimize preventable errors:
Sensory and/or motor loss in Upper limb with Lower limb sparing:
• Lytic bone lesion, with periosteal elevation (Codman’s triangle)/Sunburst pattern on X-ray.
o Concentric layers of reactive bone == ‘Sunburst’
o
• Associated with severe pain that is worse at night (unable to sleep) and refractory to NSAIDs.
Insect bite (while putting clothes on) f/b small ulcer at the site:
• Perform the surgery in unison with the usual lifestyle modifications – hence why readiness to change is
important.
• So long as the criteria are fulfilled, bariatric surgery is done immediately.
o Do NOT need to wait for failure of lifestyle modifications/drugs.
o Usually, pharmacological methods are used while evaluating and prepping the patient for
surgery.
• Patients with schizophrenia episodes are not disoriented – their time, place and person is intact.
• Also, schizophrenia does NOT cause tachycardia/HTN.
Opioid withdrawal – Heroin has a half-life of 12 hours (alcohol – 2 days). Symptoms are also more GI and
myalgia – only mild elevation of heart rates is seen.
Long-standing CKD == Decreased Vitamin D (= Low calcium) and Increased phosphate (less excretion).
• = Risk of infertility and testicular atrophy – due to the slightly elevated temperatures.
• Diagnosis – USG.
• So, in older men → no need for intervention; reproductive age/pre-pubertal boys → surgical
correction (IF patient starts to exhibit low fertility on semen analysis – periodic monitoring is essential).
Avascular necrosis: Risk factors
• Excess alcohol use is a major risk factor. Corticosteroids – only with long, chronic use.
• X-ray:
• High prevalence of salt-preserved food (damages stomach lining) and nitroso compounds
(carcinogenic).
• Predispose to gastric carcinoma – epigastric tenderness and weight loss.
• Diagnosis – UGI endoscopy.
General advice for muscle injuries – maintain normal physical activity (walking, moving around, etc.) – just
avoid stressful/provocative movements.
• Cause: Due to pain/muscle weakness post-op, patient takes shallow breaths and has a weak cough
reflex.
o I.e, alveoli collapse as the inspired air isn’t enough, and mucus plugs form since the cough is too
weak to dislodge them == Atelectasis.
• So, Rx: Pain control, Deep breathing exercises, Directed coughing, Incentive spirometry.
Acute pancreatitis:
Nodular malignant melanoma – grows vertically, so doesn’t have the usual signs of a melanoma.
• Diabetes is NOT a risk factor at all for aneurysm – only for atherosclerosis/CAD.
Pancreaticopleural fistula:
Otosclerosis:
• Imbalance of bone deposition and resorption that finally ends with fixation of the stapes – i.e,
dampening of air conduction of sounds (i.e, conductive hearing loss).
• High likelihood of progression during pregnancy – so symptoms appear towards the end/after
pregnancy.
Normal-pressure hydrocephalus:
• Ventriculomegaly on MRI.
• Complaint of gait instability and magnetic gait – feeling as though the feet are ‘stuck’ to the ground.
UMN lesions symptoms may also be seen.
• Diagnosis – symptoms improving after large volume LP.
• Rx: Ventriculo-peritoneal shunt.
Ludwig angina – infection of submandibular space.
Patient with hemoptysis and an upper lobe mass → High suspicion for TB (especially if patient is from an
endemic area).
• 1st place the patient is respiratory isolation!!! Keep them in isolation until he tests negative for TB.
• Next, sputum analysis (bronchoscopy only if sputum is indeterminate or patient is in active hemoptysis
to control bleeding).
•
• CT scan (contrast) for adults; USG +/- MRI for children and pregnant women.
• Note Rx options for Nonperforated and Perforated appendix in the algorithm
• For Primary MR (i.e, pathology of the valve itself) Valve repair if LV Ejection fraction is 30%-60% (i.e,
<60% = surgical repair).
o Regardless of symptoms! Even if asymptomatic.
• If Secondary MR (i.e, valve is normal but ventricle is dilated, causing MR – like Dilated
cardiomyopathy), use ACE inhibitors or Beta-blockers.
•
• Angiodysplasia also occurs in elderly and presents as telangiectasias, but mucosal pallor/friability and
the history of radiation point to Radiation proctitis.
Flail chest:
•
• The paradoxical motion of the flail segment compromises the respiratory effort – i.e, lower tidal
volume and increased work of breathing.
o Also, the force a/w flail injury causes pulmonary contusion → decreased oxygen diffusion →
further increased work of breathing.
• With time, the patient becomes fatigued due to the increased work of breathing and starts to
deteriorate into respiratory failure.
Fat embolism:
• Occludes the capillaries, so there is no visible filling defect on CT Angiography (capillaries are too small
to be visualized).
o B/L ground-glass opacities are seen – pulmonary edema mimicking ARDS.
• A/w tachypnea/hypoxia, confusion, and a petechial rash (50% of cases).
Diaphragmatic rupture:
• A/w blunt thoracoabdominal trauma – sudden increase in pressure tears the diaphragm.
• Left is more susceptible – congenital weakness, and Right has the liver as protection.
• May be asymptomatic for months/years – symptoms usually of lung compression/incarcerated bowel.
Wound infection in Burn injuries:
• Neurological symptoms due to rapid expansion and uncal herniation – contralateral hemiparesis from
compression of the midbrain by the herniated part, and ipsilateral oculomotor nerve palsy
(compression against the tentorium cerebelli).
• Also contralateral homonymous hemianopia with macular sparing (PICA compression – occipital lobe).
• Endemic to Southern China (and parts of East Asia/South America) – due to cured/salted foods with
nitroso compounds.
• EBV DNA is found in the tumor cells.
• Symptoms – Nasal congestion, recurrent epistaxis, cervical lymphadenopathy.
• Also, the blood is contained in the capsule/membranes and tamponades itself – so they usually
respond well to volume resuscitation.
Liver laceration is Intraperitoneal – blood is not contained, so patient does NOT respond to volume
resuscitation (ex: no improvement with 2 L fluid bolus).
Abdominal aortic laceration/rupture – usually exsanguinates before reaching hospital.
• If they don’t, it is because the blood was contained retroperitoneally – so no intraperitoneal fluid.
Biliary atresia – symptoms (jaundice and hepatomegaly) appear at 2-8 weeks. Baby is normal at birth.
• Usually friable (bleeds on touch) and a/w history of smoking or immunocompromised status.
• HPV is a major risk factor (especially for Oral SCC).
• It is a depolarizing blocker – it causes sodium influx and potassium efflux, setting the membrane into a
refractory period, and thus, paralysis.
• Therefore, it causes severe hyperkalemia → cardiac arrythmia.
• Microvascular emboli slip past pulmonary circulation and cause systemic infarction – ex: brain
(confusion, agitation), dermal capillaries (skin rash).
• The fat emboli can also cause inflammation, worsening the occlusion.
• Develop pulmonary edema (ground-glass opacity) and thrombocytopenia (sometimes).
Spinal cord compression: Immediate glucocorticoids 1st.
• Bone scan/Skeletal survey can identify bone metastasis, but the immediate concern here is the
neurological symptoms – need an MRI to visualize.
C. diff can also cause Toxic megacolon – Rx: Bowel rest, nasogastric tube (to relieve distension) and aggressive
antibiotics against C.diff. Also, discontinue anti-motility drugs (like opioids/anticholinergics/loperamide).
Hidradenitis suppurativa:
• (See Rx).
• BCI can cause clinically silent tamponade or wall rupture – abnormal ECG → 24 hour monitoring with
cardiac enzymes and echocardiography.
• Erythema and gingival inflammation with exposed bone – usually after a dental extraction.
• Rx: Supportive – antibacterial rinses and oral hygiene.
o Antibiotics/Debridement only when needed.
• Periodontal abscess is usually more acute, with localized swelling and lymph node involvement (and
fever) – doesn’t expose the bone.
Fecal elastase – low levels are a marker of chronic pancreatitis (not acute).
CT Cervical spine is the preferred test for emergent C-spine injury (or any spinal injury).
• Way more sensitive that Plain X-ray – but x-ray is still used for Chest/Pelvis.
• C-spine imaging is particularly important in high-energy collisions and in patients with neurological
deficits/distracting injuries.
Presence of a single vertebral fracture → CT Image the entire spine!! Risk of a 2nd, non-contiguous fracture is
as high as 20%. Also done generally for high-energy injuries. (CT is more sensitive than plain X-ray).
Nerve conduction study – to determine the site of block in peripheral neuropathy (ex: carpal tunnel).
Eythema nodosum: Painful erythematous nodules on the shins, usually 2-3 cm in size.
Renal Abscess:
Infection/Sepsis in Diabetics:
• Often do NOT exhibit the usual local or systemic signs of infection, because of impaired leukocyte
function (immunosuppression).
• Even fever may be absent.
Testicular trauma:
• Multiple strictures and dilations of the intra- and extra-hepatic bile ducts.
o ALP and GGT elevated.
• >90% associated with Inflammatory bowel disease – so, always do a colonoscopy to check.
o Annual colonoscopy for Colon cancer – increased risk in both PSC and IBD.
Fibroadenoma:
•
• Calcified rim = Porcelain gallbladder, NOT Hydatid cyst (image below).
o
Sialadenosis: Benign, non-inflammatory swelling (bilateral) of parotid glands.
• Mass >0.8 cm in size with any other risk factors → Biopsy/Surgical excision.
Ogilvie syndrome:
• Fibrous plaque on the penile surface – due to trauma during sexual intercourse and aberrant wound
healing.
• Causes pain and abnormal curvature of the penis, leading to erectile dysfunction or difficulty
penetrating the vagina.
• Rx: Pentoxifylline for fibrosis, or collagenase (local injection). Surgery for refractory cases.
Tertiary syphilis can cause plaques (gumma) but they are painless and usually ulcerate.
Penile cancer is also usually painless and may/may not ulcerate.