Q 61 Most common site of accessory spleen A. Hilum B. Gastrosplenic ligament C. Mesentery D. Retroperitoneal
A 61
a
Spleneculi are accessory spleen that can be single or multiple
10-30% of people have them
50% near hilum
30% near splenic vessel or tail of pancreas
Others - Mesocolon, Ligaments of spleen
Applied anatomy- Have to be searched and removed during splenectomy for haematological diseases
REf Bailey 26th page 1089
Q62) Crypts of Lieberkühn is seen in A. Small Intestine B. Colon C. Rectum D. Stomach
62 ) a
Ref Sabiston 20 page 1240
Q 63 Most common Malignancy of small bowel
A. Adenocarcinoma
B. Carcinoids
C. Leiomyosarcoma
D. Lymphoma
63 ) a, Adenocarcinoma
Adenocarcinoma is the most common, (50%) followed by neuroendocrine tumors (30%) . Malignant neoplasms are mostly symptomatic
Benign lesions are common in distal small bowel and malignant in proximal
Ref Sabiston page 1268
Q64) Which segment of bowel recovers from paralytic ileus first after surgery
a) Ileum
b) Colon
c) stomach
d) Rectum
64) A
Ileum
After laparotomy small bowel is the first to regain function. Gastric motility returns after 48 hours and colon after 72 hours
Sabiston page 306
Q65) Post Lap cholecystectomy, biopsy comes as Ca gall bladder with invasion of peri muscular connective tissue. Most appropriate for this patient is A. IVB & V resection nodal clearance B. IV B & V plus nodal clearance with port site excision C. Wedge excision of liver with Lymphadenectomy D. Wedge excision, Lymphadenectomy and Port excision
65) b
Management of Carcinoma GB after lap cholecystectomy depends on the depth of invasion of disease
a) T1a - only serosa- Nothing is to be done
T1b- serosa - Cholecystectomy if margins are negative
T1 b if perineural, lymphatic or vascular invasion- Extended cholecystectomy
T2-Extended cholecystectomy
An excision of 2 cm of liver parenchyma is must adjacent to the GB bed.
Port site excision should be done in all cases as recurrence has been shown to occur even with in situ Ca GB
Ref Blumgart 799
Q 66) Not indicated in Fissure in ano A. Inj BOTOX B. Topical steroids C. Topical Calcium Channel Blocker D. Topical Nitro glycerine
66) b
Steroids have no role
Treatment options in Anal fissure are
Midline fissure - Medical management - Nitrates, Calcium channel blocker, botulinum injections Surgery - Lateral sphincterotomy Fails to heal a) Hypotonic sphincter- Excise and advancement flap b) Hypertonic - Again sphincterotomy
It was initially devised to assess liver transplant wait list mortality. A MELD score of 14 means a patient's chance of being alive in a year is about 86%.
Higher the MELD Score, more urgent is the need for liver transplant
Ref Sabiston 20, page 640
Q68) All are true in Milan criteria except? A. Single lesion <5cm B. 3 nodules <3cm C. >5 nodules
D. No extrahepatic disease
68) c
Milan criteria
It was devised by Mazzaferro in Italy to devise criteria
Mazzaferro et al. reported that liver transplantation was an effective treatment for small, unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with cirrhosis in 1996 .
It set criteria (single tumors ≤5 cm in diameter or no more than three tumors ≤3 cm in diameter)
The 5 cm was the generally accepted cutoff for small intrahepatic tumors, which was used in patient selection for the studies before Mazzaferro’s report. In the report of Bismuth, patients with no more than three tumors and ≤3 cm in diameter were considered eligible for transplantation
Q 69. Best investigation to diagnose Colonic diverticulitis A. Ba enema B. CT scan
C. USG
D. MRI
69) b
Barium Enema are limited and give information only about the luminal pathology. They cannot be used in cases of suspected perforation
CT abdomen is now the standard of management in acute colonic diverticulitis. It tells about the site, severity, extent and external structures involved. CT guided aspirations can also help in deciding further management options. The use of MRI and Ultrasound is not as reliable as CT
Ref Sabiston 1331-1332
Q 70 Meckel’s diverticulum true is A. Mc congenital anomaly of the intestine B. Always heterotopic mucosa C. Pseudodiverticula D. Located on mesenteric border
70) a
Most common congenital anomaly of intestine, seen in 2% of population. It is located at antimesenteric border of intestine. It is formed due to incomplete closure of vitelline duct.
It is seen in equal ratio in both sexes. It can harbour pancreatic and even colonic mucosa. Its a true diverticulum .