20.2 The breast does NOT receive sensory innervation from the
a. Long thoracic
b. Thoracodorsal
c. Anterior intercostals
d. Posterior intercostals
e. Supraclavicular
Thoracodorsal = Lat dorsi
Long Thoracic = Serratus
There have been a couple versions of this question and these two nerves are probably the correct answer unless some question explicitly states mastectomy with lat dorsi flap (in which case thoracodorsal would be involved)
20.2 The recommended antibiotic prophylaxis for surgical termination of pregnancy is
a. Clindamycin 600 mg
b. Cephalexin 500 mg
c. Doxycycline 400 mg
d. Cephazolin 2g
e. Cephazolin 2g and metronidazole
c. Doxycycline 400mg
Mirena: no antibiotics
Mirena + acute PID: clindamycin
Instrumental delivery: augmentin
https://ranzcog.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Prophylactic-Antibiotics-in-Obstetrics-and-Gynaecology.pdf
20.2 The water capacity of an oxygen transport cylinder is 2 litres. The gauge is reading 150 bar. At an oxygen flow rate of 10 litres per minute, the number of minutes the cylinder will last is
A. 15 min
B. 30 min
C. 45 min
D. 60 min
E. 2 hours
B. 30 min
P1x V1= P2xV2
P x V / Q = 150x2/10 = 30 min
150bar x 2l = 1bar x Unknown Volume
150 x 2/1= Unknown Volume
300L = unknown volume
300/10l/min = 30mins
20.2 Risk factors for chronic post-surgical pain do NOT include
a) Previous chronic pain
b) Young age
c) Higher education
d) Smoker
e) Anxiety
Higher education
RFs for CPSP
1. Young age
2. alcohol use
3. smoking
4. unemployed
5. disability
6. obesity
7. type of surgery.
20.2 The anion which contributes the most to the anion gap is
a) Albumin
b) Chloride
c) Phosphate
d) HCO3
e) Urate
a) Albumin
https://litfl.com/anion-gap/
○ albumin is the major unmeasured anion and contributes almost the whole of the value of the anion gap.
20.2 You are resuscitating a 60 kg man in cardiac arrest secondary to severe hyperkalaemia. You decide to give intravenous sodium bicarboate. Australian and New Zealand resuscitation guidelines state the initial dose of 8.4% sodium bicarbonate should be
a. 30ml
b. 40 ml
c. 50 ml
d. 60 ml
e. 70ml
60 mL
1mmol/kg
100mL bottle 8.4% sodium bicarbonate
= 1 mmol/mL Na+ / HCO3-
20.2 Prothrombinex VF is a factor concentrate. It is indicated for the management of bleeding caused by
a Von Willebrand disease
b Haemophilia a
c Haemophilia b
d Haemophilia c
e Congenital fibrin deficiency
Bonus: contents
active (3 + 1)
inactive (5)
c Haemophilia b
PTX: F2/9/10
Low F8
AT3/Heparin/Alb/NS/Na-citrate
20.2 A patient has a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) inserted. The follow-up chest X-ray shows the tip positioned in the (Chest X-Ray shown)
a) Azygos vein
b) Coronary sinus
c) SVC
d) R atrium
e) L atrium
a) Azygos vein
Correct positioning in image
20.2 You are called to assist with a patient in the intensive care unit who has had cardiac surgery three days ago and is now in cardiac arrest. External cardiac massage should aim for a systolic blood pressure of
a. 40
b. 60
c. 80
d. 100
e. 120
b. 60
BJA Article - Management of cardiac arrest following cardiac surgery - BJA Education
In the CICU, the effectiveness of ECC is confirmed by monitoring the arterial pressure trace with a target compression rate and depth to achieve a systolic impulse of > 60 mm Hg to maintain a mean perfusion pressure, preventing ventricular distension, LV wall stress, and ischaemia.
20.2 You have been asked to anaesthetise a patient with a history of severe depression that has been well controlled on moclobemide. The most appropriate medications in combination with propofol are
a Sevoflurane, morphine, phenylephrine
b Sevoflurane, pethidine, phenylephrine
c Midazolam, fentanyl, ephedrine
d Midazolam, fentanyl, metaraminol
e Sevolfurane, morphine, ephedrine
a. Sevo/Morph/Phenyl
Moclobemide = MAOi
Avoid - pethidine, indirect sympathomimetics
20.2 A 55-year-old patient who has undergone trans-sphenoidal hypophysectomy for a growth-hormone secreting adenoma has a urine output of one litre in the first postoperative hour. The following results are obtained. The most appropriate early management is
Na 145
Urinary osm ~200
Serum Osmolarity ~320
a) DDAVP
b) Hypertonic saline
c) Normal Saline 1 L bolus
d) 100 ml/hr of saline
e) Fluid restrict
Central DI Mx
1. match hourly UO with NS
2. DDAVP
Which would you do first - probably IVF
20.2 The main advantage of using noradrenaline (norepinephrine) over phenylephrine for the prevention of hypotension as a result of spinal anaesthesia for elective caesarean section is
a) Better APGAR
b) Better foetal acid-base balance
c) Less nausea & vomiting
d) Less maternal bradycardia
Less maternal bradycardia
20.2 A 40 year old man suffers a hydrofluoric acid burn to 60% of his total body surface area in an industrial accident. An expected electrolyte disturbance is
a. Hypokalaemia
b. Hyponatremia
c. Hypophosphatemia
d. Hypomagnesemia
e. Hypocalcemia
e. Hypocalcemia
UTD:
> HF penetrates quickly through the epidermal layer into the dermis and deeper.
Fluoride ions complex with calcium and magnesium, which can lead to hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia.
These electrolyte abnormalities and the direct cardiotoxic effects of fluoride ions contribute to the development of cardiac arrhythmias, which are the primary cause of death in HF burns.
Hypocalcemia may stimulate an efflux of potassium ions from cells resulting in hyperkalemia, and predisposing to cardiotoxicity.
QTc interval prolongation, due to hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, and/or hypocalcemia may be seen.
Calcium salts are the mainstay of treatment of hydrofluoric acid burns; the dose and route depend upon the clinical situation
20.2 An ASA 1 28 year old male attends for inguinal hernia repair under general anaesthesia. He is administered propofol 180mg morphine 8mg rocuronium 50mg cephazolin 2g Post induction he develops an erythematous rash on his chest and arms, swelling of his lips and face, and severe hypotension. Preliminary blood results show …
Elevated tryptases (100 -> 40)
normal Ig E level
elevated morphine RAST.
The most likely diagnosis is
a) Ig E mediated morphine allergy
b) IgE mediated rocuronium allergy
c) Morphine induced histamine release
d) IgE mediated cephazolin allergy
e) Mastocytosis
b) IgE mediated (i.e. anaphylaxis)
rocuronium allergy
Morphine RAST is most sensitive (88%) and specific (100%) test for NMBD as cause of anaphylaxis (quaternary ammonium epitope)
20.2 A patient with a purely metabolic acidosis has a serum bicarbonate of 14 mmol/L and a lactate of 3.8 mmol/L. The expected PaCO2 is
a. 24
b. 29
c. 35
d. 40
b. 29
Metab Acid: Winter’s formula
pCO2 = 1.5 HCO3 + 8
lower CO2 = concomitant RESP alkalosis
higher CO2 = concomitant RESP acidosis
20.2 A 34-year-old woman with cystic fibrosis has had a recent transthoracic echocardiogram to evaluate pulmonary pressure and suitability for lung transplantation. Below is a continuous wave Doppler trace through the tricuspid valve.
Peak velocity = 3m/s
Her central venous pressure is 5 mmHg.
Her estimated right ventricular systolic pressure (RVSP) is….
a) 39
b) 41
c) 45
d) 50
e) 61
b) 41 mmHg
RVSP = 4 x TV2 + CVP
4x3x3+5 = 41
20.2 In maternal cardiac arrest the most common arrhythmia is
a) PEA
b) VT
c) VF
d) Asystole
e) SVT
PEA due to hypovolaemia
20.2 The initial dose of IV adrenaline recommended for Grade 2 (moderate) anaphylaxis in an adult is
a) 10mcg
b) 20mcg
c) 100mcg
d) 500mcg
e) 1000mcg
10mcg (technically 10-20mcg)
https://media.anzaag.com/2022/11/22131220/Card-1-Adult-Immediate-Management-Nov2022.pdf
Grade (ANZAAG)
1 - mucocutaneous only (mild)
2 - mucocutaneous and hypotension and/or bronchospasm (moderate)
3 - life threatening hypotension and/or high airway pressure (severe)
4 - arrest
For adults, put 3mg into a 50ml syringe
(or 6mg into 100mls saline; and running in mls/hr = mcg/min)
Doses:
- Grade 2: 10-20 50 if no response
- Grade 3: 50-100 200 if no response
- Grad 4: 1mg (arrest)
For Paediatrics:
- put 1mg into 50ml syringe, (20mcg/ml; run @ 0.3ml/kg/hr = 0.1mcg/kg/min)
- 2mcg/kg = Grade 2 (0.1ml/kg of this dilution)
- 4-10 mcg/kg = Grade 3
- 10 mcg/kg = Grade 4 (0.1ml/kg of 1:10 000 (i.e. 100mcg/ml concentration))
20.2 Dental damage risk to be determined in your department. 100 cases reviewed, zero cases of dental damage. What is the 95% confidence interval?
a) 0/100
b) 1/100
c) 3/100
d) 5/100
e) 9/100
Answer: 3/100
In statistical analysis, the rule of three states that if a certain event did not occur in a sample with n subjects, the interval from 0 to 3/n is a 95% confidence interval for the rate of occurrences in the population. When n is greater than 30, this is a good approximation of results from more sensitive tests. For example, a pain-relief drug is tested on 1500 human subjects, and no adverse event is recorded. From the rule of three, it can be concluded with 95% confidence that fewer than 1 person in 500 (or 3/1500) will experience an adverse event. By symmetry, for only successes, the 95% confidence interval is [1−3/n,1].
The rule is useful in the interpretation of clinical trials generally, particularly in phase II and phase III where often there are limitations in duration or statistical power. The rule of three applies well beyond medical research, to any trial done n times. If 300 parachutes are randomly tested and all open successfully, then it is concluded with 95% confidence that fewer than 1 in 100 parachutes with the same characteristics (3/300) will fail.
20.2 Complications of hyperbaric oxygen therapy do NOT include
a) Myopia
b) Central retinal occlusion
c) Seizures
d) Hypoglycaemia
e) Bradycardia
b) Central retinal occlusion
SE’s from HBOT:
- progressive myopia (reversible)
- seizures
- hypoglycaemia
- sinus bradycardia from stimulation of vagal activity bassociated with hyperbaric pressures
20.2 You are anaesthetising a 35 year old woman undergoing a laparoscopic appendicectomy. She uses a levonorgestrel-secreting intrauterine device (MirenaTM) for contraception and you have used sugammadex for reversal of neuromuscular blockade at the end of the procedure. Your post-operative
advice to her regarding contraception should state that
a. Barrier protection for a week
b. Barrier protection until the next period.
c. The mirena is sufficient
d. OCP for a week
e. OCP until next period
a. Barrier protection for a week
In the case of non-oral hormonal contraceptives, the patient must use an additional non hormonal contraceptive method for the next 7 days
20.2 In cardiac surgery, volatile-based anaesthesia compared to total intravenous anaesthesia
a) Lower 30 day post-op mortality
b) Higher 30 day post-op mortality
c) Lower post-operative MI
d) No difference
d) No difference
no observed beneficial effect of sevoflurane on the composite endpoint of prolonged ICU stay, mortality, or both in patients undergoing high-risk cardiac surgery
20.2 Interventions that reduce the risk of agitation following electroconvulsive therapy include all of the following EXCEPT
a Low dose of propofol following the seizure
b Low dose of midazolam following the seizure
c Premedication with olanzapine
d Premedication with dexmedetomidine
e Induction with remifentanil
e. induction with remifentanil
e) Remifentanil bolus
Induction agents:
Propofol:
-0.75-2.5mg/kg
- shortest seizure duration
- improved CVS stability, less PONV, quicker emergence
- pain on injection
Etomidate
- 0.15-0.3mg/kg
- Prolonged seizure activity, may reduce seizure threshold
- Useful in resistant seizures
- Hyperdynamic response more pronounced compared with propofol, increased PONV, longer emergence time
Methohexital
- 0.5-1.5 mg/kg
- “gold standard” for ECT seizure quality
- long history of use
- reduced availability; lack of familiarity with sue
Thiopental
- 2-5mg/kg
- Seizure duration reduced but better than propofol
- need to reconstitute, has increased dysrhythmias
Ketamine
- 0.7-2.8mg/kg
- unclear effect on seizures: reduced and prolongesd in different studies
- usefull in resistant seizures
- emergence phenomena, reduced CVS stability and increases ICP
Sevoflurane
-6-8% inspired concentration; MAC1-2
- reduced seizure duration compared to methohexital
- useful if difficult IV access, reduces uterine contractions in pregnancy
- extra equipment needed; more time consuming
Induction agents in the descending order of CMRO2 reducing ability:
Propofol > sevoflurane > thiopental and methohexital > etomidate > ketamine.
Induction agents in the descending order of CBF and ICP reducing ability:
Propofol > thiopental and methohexital > etomidate > ketamine.
Induction agents in the descending order of emergence time:
Ketamine > etomidate > barbiturates > propofol > sevoflurane.
Emergence time is the time from drug administration for general anaesthesia till eye opening or following commands. The differences in emergence time among induction agents suitable for ECT are small, and these small variations in emergence should not govern drug choice.
Induction agents in descending order of seizure threshold reducing property are:
Etomidate > ketamine > methohexital > thiopental > propofol.
Opioid:
- Alfentanil (10-20mcg/kg) or remifentanil (1mcg/kg) can be used along with the induction agent to increase the seizure duration and reduce haemodynamic response.
- It is unclear if the effect on seizure duration is an inherent effect of the opioid or as a result of its dose sparing effect.
NMB:
-Neuromuscular blocking agents reduce muscular convulsions and decrease the risk of serious injury.
- Sux at 0.5mg/kg most commonly used, larger doses upto 1.5mg/kg nay be required
Adjuncts:
- used to reduce dose of induction agent, or mitigate cardiovascular response to ECT in high risk patients
To treat adverse PNS effects
Glycopyrolate:
superior anti-sialogogue effect
no adverse CNS effects
less post ECT tachycardia
Atropine
routine atropine pre-medicattion is not recommended due to adverse effects of increased myocardial work and O2 demand
To treat Adverse SNS effects:
- B-blockers: atenolol (pre-ECT) or labetalol and esmolol (intra-ECT), this may reduce seizure duration
-CCB: sublingual nifedapine and IV nicardipine for Htn but may reduce seizure duration
- a-2 agonists: Dexmedetomidine blunts the hyperdynamic rsponse as does GTN and should be considered in patients at high risk of ischaemia
- Dexmedetomidine reduces the incidence of post-ECT adverse effects such as headache, agitation, postictal delirium, or pain associated with propofol injection
-IV lignocaine is not effective
Emergence agitation:
- Small doses of midazolam may be useful if simple measures such as a secluded, calm recovery environment do not help
-However, we avoid administration of any benzodiazepine such as midazolam before performing an ECT procedure, due to known anticonvulsant properties that would make seizure induction more difficult
- In patients with a history of severe postictal agitation, intravenous (IV) benzodiazepines or propofol may be administered at the end of the seizure Dexmedetomidine may be useful in the treatment of refractory cases
20.2 The structure labelled A shows (gastric ultrasound image shown)
a. Empty stomach
b. Full stomach with Solids
c. Full stomach with liquids and Air
d. Gall Bladder
e. Abdominal Aorta
c. Full stomach with liquids and Air