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Self-Evaluation Process 2010 Update in Hospital-Based Internal Medicine Module A0-K Version 10-1 Confidential Only for use at the ACP SWAN Learning Session held October 14-15, 2010. WARNING: This Self-Evaluation Process (SEP) is copyrighted work under the Federal Copyright Act. It is a federal criminal offense to copy or reproduce this work in any manner or to make adaptations of this work. It is also a crime to knowingly assist someone else in the infringement of a copyrighted work. No part of this work may be reproduced by any means or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the American Board of Internal Medicine. The making of adaptations from this work also is strictly forbidden. In addition to criminal penalties, the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C.§§101, et seq., provides a number of remedies for the infringement of a copyright, including injunctive relief, the award of statutory and actual damages, the award of attorney fees and costs, and confiscation and destruction of infringing works and materials. It is the policy of the Board to strictly enforce its rights to this copyrighted work. Question 1 Which of the following is the most specific diagnostic test for latent tuberculosis? (A) Interferon-gamma assay (B) Mantoux test (PPD, 5 TU) with specific cutoffs for different populations (C) Radiograph of the chest (D) Sputum stain and culture for acid-fast bacilli (E) Tine test © 2010 ABIM Question 1 Correct Answer: (A) Interferon-gamma Assay Question 1 Interferon-gamma Assay: • Measurement of interferon-γ release by T lymphocytes specific for M. tuberculosis. • Can only occur in patients exposed to MTb. • No false positives in those who have received BCG vaccine. Question 1 Mantoux test (PPD) • Higher possibility of both false positives and false negatives. Question 1 5 mm or more is positive in • HIV-positive person • Recent contacts of TB case • Persons with nodular or fibrotic changes on chest x-ray consistent with old healed TB • Patients with organ transplants and other immunosuppressed patients 10 mm or more is positive in • Recent arrivals (less than 5 years) from high-prevalence countries • Injection drug users • Residents and employees of high-risk congregate settings (e.g., prisons, nursing homes, hospitals, homeless shelters, etc.) • Mycobacteriology lab personnel • Persons with clinical conditions that place them at high risk (e.g., diabetes, prolonged corticosteroid therapy, leukemia, end-stage renal disease, chronic malabsorption syndromes, low body weight, etc.) • Children less than 4 years of age, or children and adolescents exposed to adults in high-risk categories 15 mm or more is positive in • Persons with no known risk factors for TB • (Note: Targeted skin testing programs should only be conducted among high-risk groups) A tuberculin test conversion is defined as an increase of 10 mm or more within a 2-year period, regardless of age. Question 1 Rapid Molecular Detection of Tuberculosis and Rifampin Resistance N Engl J Med 2010; 363:1005-1015September 9, 2010 • Samples from patients with suspected TB were assayed for TB and drug resistance with several different techniques. • An automated molecular test showed a sensitivity of 98% in smear-positive, culture-positive samples and a sensitivity of 72–90% in smear-negative, culturepositive samples, and it identified rifampin resistance >97% of the time. Question 2 A 62-year-old woman who has chronic exertional dyspnea is hospitalized with an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). She smoked cigarettes for many years but recently quit. She does not have a history of asthma, cystic fibrosis, or alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency. Current medications are an inhaled combination corticosteroid–long-acting beta-adrenergic blocking agent, inhaled ipratropium bromide, and oral mucolytics (only in the winter). BMI is 22. Temperature is normal, respirations are 20 per minute, and blood pressure is 124/70 mm Hg. FEV1 is 60% of predicted. Arterial blood PO2 is 40 mm Hg, PCO2 is 60 mm Hg, and pH is 7.42. © 2010 ABIM Question 2 - continued Which of the following interventions has been shown to reduce the rate of decline in pulmonary function in patients who have COPD? (A) Smoking cessation (B) Oral mucolytics (C) Inhaled ipratropium (D) Inhaled combination corticosteroid–long-acting beta-adrenergic blocking agent © 2010 ABIM Question 2 Correct answer: (A) Smoking Cessation Question 2 The Lung Health Study • Participants were followed up to 14.5 years and data for mortality rates were analyzed in terms of smoking habits. • Smoking cessation reduced not only deaths from COPD but also all-cause mortality. Reduced rate of decline of lung function has been demonstrated with smoking cessation in a number of studies. Question 2 No medication has been shown to reduce the progressive decline in lung function in COPD. Oral mucolytics may be beneficial in patients with viscous sputum, but have no long term benefit. Bronchodilators do reduce symptoms and hospitalizations, as well as overall health status. Inhaled corticosteroids have a limited role in the management of COPD and particularly in the elderly come with undesirable side effects. Question 3 A 74-year-old man who is hospitalized with stage IV non–small cell lung cancer has had progressively worsening shortness of breath for three weeks. You perform a therapeutic thoracentesis of a large right-sided pleural effusion. In addition to verbally confirming the patient's identity and the site of the procedure, which of the following elements has the Joint Commission identified as being a critical component of "time out" in the Universal Protocol for invasive procedures? (A) The patient's blood pressure (B) The patient's blood type (C) The patient's oxygen saturation level (D) The type of procedure (E) The follow-up plan after the procedure © 2010 ABIM Question 3 Correct Answer: (D) The type of procedure. Question 3 The Joint Commission’s 2009 National Patient Safety Goals for Hospitals Improve the accuracy of patient identification Improve the effectiveness of communication among caregivers Improve the safety of using medications Reduce the risk of health care–associated infections Accurately and completely reconcile medications across the continuum of care Reduce the risk of patient harm resulting from falls Encourage patients’ active involvement in their own care as a patient safety strategy Identify safety risks inherent in the organization’s patient population Improve recognition and response to changes in a patient’s condition Universal Protocol: Conducting a pre-procedure verification process, marking the procedure site, performing a time-out Question 3 Pre-procedure “time out” The Joint Commission Board of Commissioners originally approved the Universal Protocol for Preventing Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure and Wrong Person Surgery™ in July 2003, and it became effective July 1, 2004 for all accredited hospitals, ambulatory care and office-based surgery facilities. Question 4 A 44-year-old woman comes to the emergency department because of nonexertional syncope of several seconds duration during her child's birthday party at home. Before this episode, the patient was pale, felt warm, and had nausea. She had no headache, palpitations, dyspnea, or chest pain. She was lucid on waking, and experienced no bowel or bladder incontinence. Medical history is significant for hypertension. Family history is unremarkable. Her only current medication is chlorthalidone (25 mg daily). © 2010 ABIM Question 4 - continued Temperature is 35.8 C (98.3 F), pulse rate is 72 per minute, respirations are 14 per minute, and blood pressure is 132/74 mm Hg while supine and 118/70 mm Hg while standing. Cardiopulmonary and neurologic examinations are normal, as are complete blood count, serum electrolytes, and electrocardiogram. Which of the following should you do next? (A) Discharge the patient without further testing (B) Order Duplex ultrasonography of the carotid arteries (C) Order contrast-enhanced computed tomography of the head (D) Admit for observation and overnight telemetry monitoring © 2010 ABIM Question 4 Correct Answer: (A) Discharge the patient without further testing. Question 4 Attempt to stratify risk for arrhythmia or sudden death. Several recent studies have tried and failed to define prediction rules with sufficient sensitivity to detect life-threatening causes. While no rule has been validated for widespread use, the literature has identified several factors associated with a significantly increased risk of adverse events. Question 4 Risk Factors for Short-Term Adverse Outcomes from Syncope (American College of Emergency Physicians) • Abnormal ECG • Acute ischemia • New changes on ECG • Any rhythm other than sinus • Significant conduction abnormalities • Hematocrit <30% • History of heart failure, coronary artery disease, or structural heart disease • Older age Question 4 Other options were… • Carotid Duplex • CT Head • Admit for OBS and tele overnight. Question 5 A 72-year-old man who has severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was intubated by the paramedics and brought to the emergency department because of respiratory distress. Both his advance directive and hospital records indicate that the patient did not want to be intubated. The patient's son, who quit his job and moved in with his father to be his sole caregiver, states that his father recently changed his mind and would want the use of a ventilator, even if that treatment were to become permanent. Which of the following should you do? (A) Follow the written documents and extubate the patient and provide comfort care measures (B) Follow the son's verbal updates of his father's wishes and continue with mechanical ventilation (C) Request an ethics consultation © 2010 ABIM Question 5 Correct Answer: (C) Request an ethics consultation. Question 5 DNR/DNI • To be honored as per the patient record. • Open communication with patients and family about the decision. • Must be wary of conflict of interest in family members who may stand to benefit when the patient’s best interest or expressed wishes are not followed. Question 6 A ten-year-old hospital medicine service with increased patient volume demand must implement new electronic health records, computerized physician order entry, medication reconciliation compliance, and JCAHO-mandated institutional adjustments. Additionally, the emergency department has introduced a "no divert" policy. A new well-trained manager provided by the hospital is trying to apply industrial engineering techniques. Several physicians have left the group, and the hospital is having difficulty attracting high-quality new staff. Hospital margins hover at 1%, and the finance department has introduced a total hiring freeze. © 2010 ABIM Question 6 - continued Which of the following is the best management strategy for this hospital? (A) Add residents to the workforce (B) Eliminate conference times (C) Flow chart the current process and redesign the work to eliminate rework, defects, and other waste (D) Schedule morning transfers of care earlier (E) Schedule evening transfers of care later © 2010 ABIM Question 6 Correct Answer: (C) Flow chart the current process and redesign the work to eliminate rework, defects, and other waste. Question 6 Martin LA, Neumann CW, Mountford J, Bisognano M, Nolan TW. Increasing Efficiency and Enhancing Value in Health Care: Ways to Achieve Savings in Operating Costs per Year. IHI Innovation Series white paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; 2009. (Available on www.IHI.org) Question 6 Fundamental workflow design can be a positive, sustainable, cost-effective strategy to manage physician workload. Attention must be paid to preserving or enhancing patient, staff, and physician satisfaction as waste is removed in the health care processes. Question 7 A previously healthy 61-year-old man comes to the emergency department because of chest pain that began four hours ago. Electrocardiogram reveals 2-cm ST-segment depressions in the anterior leads. In this patient, early coronary intervention (within 24 hrs) versus delayed coronary intervention (longer than 36 hrs) is associated with prevention of which of the following at six months? (A) Recurrent ischemia (B) Myocardial infarction (C) Stroke (D) Death © 2010 ABIM Question 7 Correct Answer: (A) Recurrent Ischemia. Question 7 N Engl J Med. 2009 May 21;360(21):2165-75. Early versus delayed invasive intervention in acute coronary syndromes. Mehta SR, Granger CB, Boden WE, Steg PG, Bassand JP, Faxon DP, Afzal R, Chrolavicius S, Jolly SS, Widimsky P, Avezum A, Rupprecht HJ, Zhu J, Col J, Natarajan MK, Horsman C, Fox KA, Yusuf S; TIMACS Investigators. Question 7 ACS without ST elevation. Early invasive strategy (within 24 hours) • No benefit in preventing death, MI, or stroke over delayed intervention (median time 50 hours). • Modest benefit in decreasing occurrence of recurrent ischemia. Question 8 A patient who has type 2 diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia is admitted to the intensive care unit with septic shock due to pyelonephritis. After adequate fluid resuscitation with Ringer's lactate, temperature is 35.7 C (96.2 F), pulse rate is 118 per minute, respirations are 22 per minute, and blood pressure is 73/42 mm Hg. Plasma glucose is 162 mg/dL. Which of the following is most likely to improve mortality in patients who have septic shock? (A) Fluid resuscitation with colloid (B) Intensive insulin therapy to maintain euglycemia (C) Vasopressor therapy © 2010 ABIM Question 8 Correct Answer: (C) Vasopressor Therapy Question 8 Lessest of Three Evils • Fluid Resuscitation with Colloid • Increased risk for renal replacement therapy. Question 8 Lessest of Three Evils • Intensive Insulin Therapy to Maintain Euglycemia • Initially favored in the peri-op and ICU setting • Numerous studies have failed to show benefit. Question 8 Lessest of Three Evils • Vasopressor Therapy. • As a general concept, on occasion simply is required when volume expansion with crystalloid is ineffective in improving tissue perfusion. Question 9 A 32-year-old homeless man who was hospitalized with syncope and confusion is transferred to the telemetry unit because of hypotension. The patient has a history of substance abuse and intravenous opiate dependence. Current medications are lorazepam, disulfiram, and methadone. Temperature is 35.8 C (96.4 F), respirations are 10 per minute, and blood pressure is 92/50 mm Hg. Electrocardiogram reveals wide complex, variable-focus ventricular tachycardia. Toxicology screen is positive for tetrahydrocannabinol, alcohol, opiates, and acetaminophen. © 2010 ABIM Question 9 - continued Which of the following medications is the most likely cause of this patient's arrhythmia? (A) Alcohol (B) Benzodiazepines (C) Cannabis (D) Methadone (E) Oxycodone © 2010 ABIM Question 9 Correct Answer: (D) Methadone Question 9 J Interv Card Electrophysiol. 2010 Jun;28(1):1922. Epub 2010 Feb 23. Ventricular arrhythmias in patients treated with methadone for opioid dependence. Hanon S, Seewald RM, Yang F, Schweitzer P, Rosman J. Division of Cardiology, Beth Israel Medical Center, University Hospital and Manhattan Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, NY, USA. [email protected] Question 9 Case report of 12 cases of apparently methadone-induced TDP Related to Q-T prolongation Question 9 Other options: • • • • Alcohol Benzos Cannabis Oxycodone Question 10 A 64-year-old man is evaluated for worsening knee pain. He has had severe, progressive osteoarthritis for many years and is considering total knee arthroplasty. He has high cholesterol, hypertension, and coronary artery disease. Seven months ago, he underwent drug-eluting stent placement for worsening angina, and he has been asymptomatic since the surgery. Current medications are aspirin, clopidogrel, lisinopril, metoprolol, and simvastatin. After placement of drug-eluting stents, how long should elective noncardiac surgery be delayed? (A) One month (B) Two months (C) Six months (D) One year © 2010 ABIM Question 10 Correct Answer: (D) One year Question 10 Dual anti-platelet therapy post-stent: minimum of one month for bare metal stent and minimum of one year for drug-eluting stent. Elective noncardiac surgery should be delayed for at least 6 weeks following placement of a bare metal stent and for at least 1 year following a drug-eluting stent to allow for completion of the patient’s dual antiplatelet regimen. No role for routine stress testing or even ECGs post-stent placement, unless change in symptoms, physical exam, or medications. The risk of stent thrombosis is approximately 0.7% and is increased with the premature discontinuation of dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin and clopidogrel). Stent thrombosis is associated with a short-term mortality rate of 40%. Question 11 A 53-year-old man is admitted to the hospital for an exacerbation of heart failure. At baseline, he becomes mildly dyspneic with activities of daily living but he is currently dyspneic even at rest. He also has ischemic cardiomyopathy, with a left ventricular ejection fraction of 25%. Current medications are lisinopril, carvedilol, spironolactone, simvastatin, and aspirin. Estimated central venous pressure is 12 cm H2O. Bibasilar crackles are audible. Cardiac examination is normal except for an S3. Bilateral edema (3+) is noted in the lower extremities. Electrocardiogram reveals sinus rhythm and Q waves in the anterior leads. Left bundle branch block is also seen, with QRS duration of 160 msec. © 2010 ABIM Question 11 - continued Which of the following therapeutic interventions is most likely to improve mortality in this patient? (A) Digoxin (B) Furosemide (C) Isosorbide mononitrate (D) Cardiac resynchronization therapy © 2010 ABIM Question 11 Correct Answer: (D) Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Question 11 A meta-analysis found a 37% reduction in hospitalizations and a 22% reduction in all-cause mortality in patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction, prolonged QRS duration, and NYHA class III or IV symptoms who received CRT. Interventricular conduction delay is common in patients with heart failure and results in poor coordination of ventricular contraction, which contributes to the hemodynamic consequences of chronic left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Question 11 Question 11 Other morbidity decreasing modalities. Question 12 A 40-year-old man who has a history of alcohol dependence comes to the emergency department because of heart failure. Echocardiography shows a left ventricular ejection fraction of 30%. Which of the following should you do to satisfy the Joint Commission's hospital core measures for heart failure for this patient? (A) Document the use of or contraindication to ACE inhibitors (B) Document your discussion of alcohol cessation before discharge (C) Select an adequate dose of diuretics at discharge (D) Start digoxin to prevent readmission © 2010 ABIM Question 12 Correct Answer: (A) Document the use of or contraindication to ACE inhibitors. Question 12 Four Core Measures in HF Admissions: • • • • Measuring and documenting LVEF ACE/ARB for impaired LVEF Adult smoking cessation counseling and advice Discharge instructions Question 13 A 65-year-old woman is admitted to the intensive care unit because of community-acquired pneumonia. Gram stain of the blood shows gram-positive cocci in pairs. Despite aggressive fluid resuscitation, blood pressure remains 82/40 mm Hg; mean arterial pressure is 54 mm Hg. Which of the following vasopressor drugs should you order next? (A) Epinephrine (B) Norepinephrine (C) Phenylephrine (D) Vasopressin © 2010 ABIM Question 13 Correct Answer: (B) Norepinephrine Question 13 N Engl J Med. 2010 Mar 4;362(9):779-89. Comparison of dopamine and norepinephrine in the treatment of shock. De Backer D, Biston P, Devriendt J, Madl C, Chochrad D, Aldecoa C, Brasseur A, Defrance P, Gottignies P, Vincent JL; SOAP II Investigators. Although there was no significant difference in the rate of death between patients with shock who were treated with dopamine as the first-line vasopressor agent and those who were treated with norepinephrine, the use of dopamine was associated with a greater number of adverse events. Question 13 Vasopressor therapy with norepinephrine, vasopressin, or dopamine may be necessary when appropriate fluid challenge fails to restore adequate tissue perfusion or during lifethreatening hypotension, but no trials have established a single superior approach to handling initial vasopressor choice. Question 14 An 85-year-old woman who has osteoporosis is admitted to the hospital because of midscapular back pain. Neurologic examination is otherwise normal. Computed tomography reveals a thoracic vertebral compression fracture in one vertebra, without cord compression. Compared with placebo, which of the following is the most likely outcome of treatment with vertebroplasty for osteoporotic compression fractures? (A) No better pain control (B) Decreased disability (C) Improved physical functioning (D) Improved quality of life (E) Prevention of future osteoporotic fractures © 2010 ABIM Question 14 Correct answer: (A) No better pain control Question 14 N Engl J Med 2009; 361:569-579 A Randomized Trial of Vertebroplasty for Osteoporotic Spinal Fractures Kallmes DF et al. Improvements in pain and pain-related disability associated with osteoporotic compression fractures in patients treated with vertebroplasty were similar to the improvements in a control group Question 15 A previously healthy 65-year-old man was in a motor vehicle collision and underwent surgical repair of a hip fracture 24 hours ago. After the procedure, the patient receives acetaminophen and morphine. The patient is oriented to person but not the situation. Temperature is 38.4 C (101.2 F), pulse rate is 110 per minute, respirations are 18 per minute, and blood pressure is 150/90 mm Hg. The lungs are clear; no signs of infection are present. The patient has a mild resting tremor. Physical examination is otherwise normal. © 2010 ABIM Question 15 - continued Which of the following is the most important factor to consider in the differential diagnosis? (A) Alcohol withdrawal (B) Drug-induced delirium from morphine (C) Pneumonia (D) Wound infection © 2010 ABIM Question 15 Correct answer: (A) Alcohol withdrawal Question 15 Timing and spectrum of abnormalities is best explained by alcohol withdrawal 8% of the general hospital population at risk for alcohol withdrawal (Drug Alcohol Rev 1995;14:49–54. The incidence of alcohol-related problems and the risk of alcohol withdrawal in a general hospital population. Foy A, Kay J.) Question 16 A 28-year-old woman who has a history of cocaine use comes to the emergency department because of chest pain. She is otherwise healthy and has no history of tobacco or alcohol use. Serum creatine kinase and cardiac troponin are normal, as is electrocardiogram. Which of the following is most appropriate for this patient? (A) Treat with aspirin and a benzodiazepine and observe until chest pain resolves (B) Treat with aspirin and a beta-adrenergic blocking agent and order complete cardiac enzyme studies, then discharge after pain resolves (C) Treat with aspirin alone and order complete cardiac enzyme studies, then order a stress test before discharge © 2010 ABIM Question 16 Correct answer: (A) Treat with aspirin and a benzodiazepine and observe until chest pain resolves Beta-blockade is contraindicated due to risk for unbalanced alpha-adrenergic activity Stress testing would be very unlikely to add useful clinical information Morgan, JP. Cardiovascular complications of cocaine abuse. In: UpToDate, Basow, DS (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA, 2010. Question 17 A correlation exists between the use of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and which of the following? Clostridium difficile Hospital-acquired Osteoporosiscolitis pneumonia related fracture (A) No No No (B) Yes Yes No (C) No Yes Yes (D) Yes Yes Yes © 2010 ABIM Question 17 Correct answer: (D) All three diagnoses Question 17 PPI correlation to C. difficile colitis is least clear JAMA. 2005;294:2989-2995. Use of Gastric Acid–Suppressive Agents and the Risk of CommunityAcquired Clostridium difficile– Associated Disease Dial S, Delaney JAC, Barkun AN, Suissa S. Question 17 PPIs moreso than histamine-2 receptor antagonists are correlated with pneumonia JAMA. 2009;301(20):2120-2128. Acid-Suppressive Medication Use and the Risk for Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia Herzig SJ, Howell MD, Ngo LH, Marcantonio ER. Question 17 Use of PPIs was not associated with hip fractures but was modestly associated with clinical spine, forearm or wrist, and total fractures Arch Intern Med. 2010;170(9):765-771. Proton Pump Inhibitor Use, Hip Fracture, and Change in Bone Mineral Density in Postmenopausal Women: Results From the Women's Health Initiative Gray SL, LaCroix AZ, Larson J, Robbins J, Cauley JA, Manson JE, Chen Z. Question 17 Increased risk of adverse events after acute coronary syndrome is thought to be due to attenuation of clopidogrel effect Unclear if choice of PPI matters JAMA. 2009;301(9):937-944. Risk of Adverse Outcomes Associated With Concomitant Use of Clopidogrel and Proton Pump Inhibitors Following Acute Coronary Syndrome Maddox TM, Wang L, Fihn SD, Jesse RL, Peterson ED, Ho PM, Rumsfeld JS. Question 18 A 38-year-old man who works at a beef processing plant has fever, headache, and swollen erythematous hands, which have small painless papules. The papules progress to central vesicles, then turn necrotic with a painless black eschar. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis? (A) Bullous pemphigoid (B) Cutaneous anthrax (C) Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus infection (D) Pasteurella infection © 2010 ABIM Question 18 Correct answer: (B) Cutaneous anthrax Question 18 Anthrax classically presents after exposure to certain animal tissues as lesions of face, neck or hands progressing to vesicles and then painless eschar Wilson KH. Clinical manifestations and diagnosis of anthrax. In: UpToDate, Basow, DS (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA, 2010. Question 18 Pasteurella causes soft tissue infections, septic arthrits, osteomyelitis, meningitis, pneumonia, endocarditis, ocular infection, and intraabdominal infection. Cat bite or scratch Weber DJ, Rutala WA, Kaplan SL. Pasteurella infections. In: UpToDate, Basow, DS (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA, 2010. MRSA presents as cellulitis, folliculitis, etcetera Risk for Bullous pemphigoid is advancing age Question 19 A 44-year-old male hospital medicine physician does not use full barrier precautions when inserting central lines and does not wear gloves or isolation gowns consistently when visiting patients who are in isolation. He is aware of standard infection control procedures and has been counseled repeatedly by the nursing and medical staff. Which of the following is the best course of action? (A) Support the physician's decision (B) Practice informal counseling (C) Invite the physician to a seminar on blood stream infections (D) Redesign isolation setups (E) Inform the physician that you are required to report his actions © 2010 ABIM Question 19 Correct answer: (E) Inform the physician that you are required to report his actions Question 19 AMA Code of Medical Ethics Opinion 9.031 - Reporting Impaired, Incompetent, or Unethical Colleagues “When the inappropriate conduct of a physician continues despite the initial report(s), the reporting physician should report to a higher or additional authority” Question 20 A 68-year-old man had a myocardial infarction three months ago and underwent implantation of a cardioverter–defibrillator (ICD) one month ago. Today, he comes to the emergency department after an ICD shock. Pulse rate is 88 per minute, respirations are 20 per minute, and blood pressure is 102/54 mm Hg. Cardiac impulse is displaced laterally; S1 and S2 are normal. The lungs are clear. Which of the following is the prognosis for patients such as this who have heart failure and an ICD in place for primary prevention and have had a shock delivered by the ICD compared with similar patients who do not receive such shocks? (A) Comparable risk of death (B) Significantly decreased risk of death (C) Significantly increased risk of death © 2010 ABIM Question 20 Correct answer: (C) Significantly increased risk of death Question 20 Risk of death is about 4 times higher in 4 years of followup N Engl J Med 2008; 359:1009-1017 Prognostic Importance of Defibrillator Shocks in Patients with Heart Failure Poole JE, Johnson GW, Hellkamp AS, Anderson J, Callans DJ, Raitt MH, Reddy RK, Marchlinski FE, Yee R, Guarnieri T, Talajic M, Wilber DJ, Fishbein DP, Packer DL, Mark DB, Lee KL, Bardy GH. Question 21 A 72-year-old woman is evaluated for complicated cellulitis. History is remarkable for an allergy to vancomycin. Temperature is 39.0 C (102.2 F), pulse rate is 100 per minute, respirations are 16 per minute, and blood pressure is 100/68 mm Hg. Daptomycin is begun. The pharmaceutical manufacturer specifically advises that which of the following tests be performed weekly for patients who are treated with daptomycin for cellulitis complicated by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus? (A) Complete blood count (B) Serum ALT (C) Serum calcium (D) Serum creatine kinase (E) Serum creatinine © 2010 ABIM Question 21 Correct answer: (D) Serum creatine kinase Question 21 Weekly CPK recommended by the manufacturer and other authorities J Antimicrob Chemotherapy 55(4), 599600. Severe myopathy and possible hepatotoxicity related to daptomycin Echevarria K, Datta P, Cadena J, Lewis JS. Question 22 Which of the following is a contraindication to the herpes zoster vaccine? (A) Age younger than 60 years (B) Chronic post-herpetic neuralgia (C) History of shingles (D) Lymphoma (E) No history of varicella infection © 2010 ABIM Question 22 Correct answer: (D) Lymphoma Question 22 World Health Organization (WHO), Centers for Disease Control (CDC) list conditions with “impaired cellular immunity” as contraindications to live vaccines Question 23 An asymptomatic 27-year-old man who emigrated from India three years ago undergoes tuberculin skin testing as part of a pre-employment physical examination. He will be working as an aide in the emergency department of a hospital. He thinks that he received the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccination as a child. He has never been hospitalized, takes no medications, smokes one pack of cigarettes daily, and drinks alcoholic beverages occasionally. He is HIV negative. Physical examination is normal. Tuberculin skin test (PPD, 5 TU) shows 11 mm of induration at 48 hours, and a follow-up chest radiograph is normal. Serologic test for HIV is negative. © 2010 ABIM Question 23 - continued Based on the patient's results from the tuberculin skin test, which of the following should you recommend now? (A) No further testing (B) Repeat tuberculin skin test (C) Sputum stain and culture for acid-fast bacilli (D) Treatment for latent tuberculosis © 2010 ABIM Question 23 Correct answer: (D) Treatment for latent tuberculosis Question 23 Disregard BCG status Recipients are usually from high-incidence areas If x-ray positive or symptoms present, perform sputum analysis & consider treatment for active TB MMWR Recomm Rep, 2005, 30; 54(17):1-141. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Guidelines for Preventing the Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in HealthCare Settings, 2005 Question 23 Blood assay for M. tuberculosis (BAMT) is a specific method of diagnosis, but not currently listed as a recommendation Pai M, Menzies R. Diagnosis of latent tuberculosis infection in adults. In: UpToDate, Basow, DS (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA, 2010 >20% of BCG recipients after age 1 have positive PPD >10 year later Int J Tuber Lung Dis 2006; 10:1. False positive tuberculin skin tests: What is the absolute effect of BCG and non-tuberculous mycobacteria? Farhat, M, Greenaway, C, Pai, M, Menzies, D. Question 24 A healthy 32-year-old woman is admitted to the hospital after briefly losing consciousness and suffering a closed head injury during a fall at a party. Current medications are loratadine and an oral contraceptive. The patient is oriented and cooperative but moderately intoxicated. Pulse rate is 78 per minute, respirations are 16 per minute, and blood pressure is 112/70 mm Hg. A laceration and a right temporal hematoma are noted. Neurologic examination is negative for motor, sensory reflex, and cranial nerve abnormalities. Computed tomography of the head is normal. © 2010 ABIM Question 24 - continued Laboratory studies: Serum electrolytes INR Serum aminotransferase ALT AST Blood ethanol Normal Normal 60 U/L 47 U/L 205 mg/dL Which of the following interventions is the most feasible and effective strategy for addressing alcohol abuse? (A) Court-mandated attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) (B) Family intervention (C) Disulfiram (D) Screening, brief interventions, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) (E) Referral to a social worker © 2010 ABIM Question 24 Correct answer: (D) Screening, brief interventions, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) Question 24 No support in literature for the other foils Lancet 2004; 364: 1334–39 Screening and referral for brief intervention of alcohol-misusing patients in an emergency department: a pragmatic randomised controlled trial Crawford MJ, Patton R, Touquet R, Drummond C, Byford S, Barrett B, Reece B, Brown A,No JAH. Question 25 A 78-year-old woman came to your office last week because she had had fever for one week, cough for two days, and dyspnea for one day. Blood cultures taken at the time have grown methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Today, temperature is 39.0 C (102.2 F), pulse rate is 130 per minute, respirations are 30 per minute, and blood pressure is 90/52 mm Hg. Tubular breath sounds and crackles are audible in the left lower lobe. Cardiac examination reveals tachycardia and a grade 3/6 systolic murmur at the left sternal border and apex; S1 and S2 are normal. © 2010 ABIM Question 25 - continued For which of the following reasons is daptomycin contraindicated for the treatment of this patient's MRSA pneumonia? (A) MRSA has a high level of resistance to daptomycin (B) Daptomycin triggers parenchymal hemorrhage in lung tissue (C) Daptomycin diffuses poorly into the blood supply of the lungs (D) Daptomycin interacts with pulmonary surfactant, resulting in inhibition of antibacterial activity © 2010 ABIM Question 25 Correct answer: (D) Daptomycin interacts with pulmonary surfactant, resulting in inhibition of antibacterial activity Question 25 J Infect Dis. 2005 Jun 15;191(12):2149-52. Epub 2005 May 5. Inhibition of daptomycin by pulmonary surfactant: in vitro modeling and clinical impact. Silverman JA, Mortin LI, Vanpraagh AD, Li T, Alder J.