Nutrition MCQs for Surgery Exam — mcqsurgery.com

Q1) All of the following are used for Nutritional Assessment except

a) Albumin
b) Prealbumin
c) Transferrin
d) PT/INR

Answer: d) PT/INR

Visceral protein measurement (e.g., albumin, transferrin, prealbumin) are used for nutritional assessment. Serum albumin < 3.5 g/dL (35 g/L) in a stable, hydrated patient suggests depletion; half-life 14–20 days. Serum prealbumin reflects acute changes: 10–17 mg/dL = mild depletion, 5–10 mg/dL = moderate, <5 mg/dL = severe; half-life 2–3 days. Serum transferrin < 200 mg/dL; half-life 8–10 days. Indirect calorimetry / predictive equations (Fick, Harris–Benedict, Estimated REE) estimate calorie needs and are not markers of previous nutritional status.

Teaching point: Use prealbumin for short-term changes and albumin for chronic protein status; PT/INR assesses coagulation, not nutrition.

Q2) IV fluid of choice to increase calories to provide parenteral nutrition by peripheral route is:

a) DNS
b) Lipid Emulsions
c) Arginine in DNS
d) 25% dextrose

Answer: b) Lipid Emulsions

Lipid emulsions can be administered peripherally; they are energy-dense and reduce reliance on high-concentration dextrose which can cause thrombophlebitis if given peripherally. 25% dextrose has high osmolarity — generally for central lines; DNS/arginine additions are less efficient for calories.

Teaching point: For peripheral parenteral nutrition prioritize lipid-based components to provide calories while avoiding high dextrose osmolarity.

Q3) Best indicator to assess short term nutritional status is

a) Albumin
b) Prealbumin
c) Transferrin
d) Any can be used

Answer: b) Prealbumin

Half-life: albumin ~18–21 days, transferrin ~8–10 days, prealbumin ~2 days — prealbumin is best for short-term assessment.

Teaching point: For tracking rapid nutritional response (days), prealbumin is preferred; albumin reflects longer-term status.

Q4) Harris Benedict equation components are all except?

a) Height
b) Weight
c) Age
d) BMI

Answer: d) BMI

Harris–Benedict estimates resting energy expenditure (REE). Example formulas:
Men: REE = 66.5 + 13.75×Weight(kg) + 5.003×Height(cm) − 6.755×Age(years).
Women: REE = 655.1 + 9.563×Weight(kg) + 1.85×Height(cm) − 4.676×Age(years).

Teaching point: BMI is an index (weight/height²), not a direct variable in the Harris–Benedict formula used for BMR/REE.

Q5) In which situation is enteral nutrition best suited?

a) Patient on high vasopressor
b) Ileostomy with output 700 ml
c) Gastritis bleed requiring transfusions
d) Closed loop bowel obstruction

Answer: b) Ileostomy with output 700 ml

Enteral nutrition is preferred whenever the gut is functional. Contraindications include mechanical obstruction, uncontrolled GI bleeding, and high-dose vasopressors. Ileostomy outputs under ~800 ml are usually compatible with enteral feeding.

Teaching point: Start enteral feeds early when feasible — it preserves mucosal integrity and lowers infectious complications.

Q6) Things to do to decrease stress in surgery — all except?

a) Minimally invasive surgery
b) Afferent block
c) 8 hours fasting
d) Early mobilization

Answer: c) 8 hours fasting

Minimally invasive surgery, regional/afferent blocks, and early mobilization reduce surgical stress. Prolonged fasting increases insulin resistance — modern protocols recommend shorter fasting times (clear fluids up to 2 hours, solids 6 hours).

Teaching point: ERAS principles reduce physiologic stress: limit fasting, use multimodal analgesia, and encourage early activity.

Q7) In a critically ill patient the best way to monitor cardiac output is by:

a) Pulmonary artery catheter
b) Pulmonary vein catheter
c) Femoral artery catheter
d) Subclavian vein catheter

Answer: a) Pulmonary artery catheter

Pulmonary artery (Swan–Ganz) catheters measure cardiac output (thermodilution), cardiac index, and mixed venous oxygen saturation — but are invasive and carry risks (arrhythmia, thrombosis, rare PA rupture).

Teaching point: Reserve invasive CO monitoring for patients where noninvasive methods are insufficient or when guided hemodynamic therapy is planned.

Q8) False statement about emergency airway management

a) Cricothyroidotomy is preferred
b) Skin incision is vertical
c) Membrane incision is vertical
d) Airway is prepared before cricothyroidotomy

Answer: d) Airway is prepared before cricothyroidotomy

Emergency cricothyroidotomy is performed when rapid airway access is needed (cannot intubate/cannot ventilate); there is usually no time for formal airway preparation.

Teaching point: Know the landmarks and practice timed technique — cricothyroidotomy is life-saving in airway emergencies.

Q9) Restrictive strategy of transfusion in acute GI bleed — all are true except?

a) Should be started at a hemoglobin < 7 g/dl
b) Will not alter the risk of re-bleed
c) Child A and B patients had significantly lower risk of re-bleed
d) (left blank)

Answer: b) Will not alter the risk of re-bleed (this is false)

A restrictive transfusion threshold (Hb <7 g/dL) reduces further bleeding risk compared with liberal transfusion. In cirrhotic patients (Child–Pugh A/B) restrictive strategy lowered risk; effect in Child–Pugh C was similar between groups. (NEJM study).

Teaching point: Use restrictive transfusion thresholds in acute GI bleed unless there are specific cardiac or ischemic indications.

Q10) Commonest cause of breathing difficulty in unconscious patient is

a) Foreign body
b) Tongue
c) Blood
d) Impacted teeth

Answer: b) Tongue

In unconscious patients the tongue falls back and obstructs the airway. Positioning (lateral or semi-prone), airway adjuncts, and suction are important.

Teaching point: Airway patency is the first priority — simple maneuvers (jaw thrust, airway adjuncts) often restore ventilation.

Q11) Which of the following is a clinical marker of myocardial ischemia?

a) Troponin I
b) LDH
c) Alkaline phosphatase
d) CPK MB

Answer: a) Troponin I

Troponin I is the most sensitive and specific marker for myocardial injury (peaks within ~9 hours). CK-MB is useful to detect reinfarction; LDH and ALP are non-specific.

Teaching point: Use troponins for diagnosis of MI; CK-MB may help detect re-infarction due to faster clearance.

Q12) Which trace element deficiency causes impaired glucose tolerance, anemia, neutropenia and leukopenia?

a) Zinc
b) Copper
c) Molybdenum
d) Selenium

Answer: b) Copper

Copper deficiency causes hematologic abnormalities (anemia, neutropenia), impaired glucose tolerance, skin/hair changes, and can be linked to arrhythmias. Copper is important for collagen/elastin crosslinking and antioxidant function.

Teaching point: Consider trace element deficiencies in malnourished patients or those on long-term TPN without trace element supplementation.

Q13) Which does not form a part of Virchow's triad?

a) Endothelial damage
b) Slow blood flow
c) Platelet defects
d) Hypercoagulable state

Answer: c) Platelet defects

Virchow's triad: endothelial injury, stasis (slow flow), and hypercoagulability — these describe venous thrombosis risk. Platelet defects are more relevant to arterial thrombosis.

Teaching point: Venous and arterial thromboses have different dominant mechanisms — manage and prophylax accordingly.

Q14) Which of the following parameters will be of least worry to the anesthetist due to chronic kidney disease?

a) Cardiac
b) Fluid and electrolyte
c) Coagulational
d) Pulmonary

Answer: d) Pulmonary

CKD patients have increased perioperative risk largely from cardiac disease, fluid/electrolyte disturbances, and uremic bleeding diathesis. Pulmonary issues occur but are often secondary to fluid imbalance.

Teaching point: Optimize cardiac status, correct electrolytes, and address coagulopathy before major surgery in CKD patients.

Q15) Which of the following is not true for malignant hyperthermia?

a) Symptoms can occur up to 60 mins after stopping the anesthetic agent
b) Rhabdomyolysis and hypokalemia are common
c) An increase in end tidal CO2 despite increased minute ventilation is seen
d) Treatment is IV dantrolene 2.5 mg/kg

Answer: b) Rhabdomyolysis and hypokalemia are common (this is false)

Malignant hyperthermia typically causes rhabdomyolysis and hyperkalemia (not hypokalemia). Early sign: rising end-tidal CO2 despite increased ventilation. Treat with IV dantrolene.

Teaching point: Recognize early signs (ETCO2 rise, tachycardia) and give dantrolene promptly; monitor potassium and treat hyperkalemia if present.

Q16) What should be done to prevent refeeding syndrome in a 70-year-old on TPN?

a) Infuse amino acids and lipids separately
b) Slowly increase calories
c) Avoid lipid TPN
d) Slow infusion of TPN

Answer: b) Slowly increase calories

Refeeding syndrome causes hypophosphatemia, hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia and should be prevented by gradual calorie increases, adequate vitamin (thiamine) supplementation and monitoring.

Teaching point: Identify high-risk patients (prolonged fasting/malnutrition) and start feeds slowly with electrolyte/vitamin monitoring.

Q17) Which is not a complication of TPN given through central line?

a) Aspiration
b) Refeeding syndrome
c) Pneumothorax
d) Osteoporosis

Answer: a) Aspiration

Aspiration is mainly a risk with enteral feeding. Central line TPN complications include line-related pneumothorax, infection, metabolic complications and bone demineralization with long-term use. Refeeding can occur with both enteral and parenteral routes.

Teaching point: Prevent central line complications with sterile technique and monitor metabolic/bone health with prolonged TPN.

Q18) 48-year-old male: on mouth opening only hard palate is seen. Which modified Mallampati grade is this?

a) Grade I
b) Grade II
c) Grade III
d) Grade IV

Answer: d) Grade IV

Modified Mallampati (Samsoon & Young): Grade I = faucial pillars, soft palate, uvula visible; Grade II = soft palate & part uvula; Grade III = soft palate only; Grade IV = only hard palate visible.

Teaching point: Higher Mallampati grade predicts more difficult intubation — prepare airway strategy accordingly.

Q19) Which of the following is an absolute contraindication to percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) placement?

a) INR 3.1
b) Hiatal hernia
c) Partial gastrectomy
d) None

Answer: a) INR 3.1

INR >1.5, PTT >50 s, platelets <50,000/mm³ are contraindications due to high bleeding risk. Other absolute contraindications: hemodynamic instability, peritonitis, severe ascites, lack of safe tract, gastric outlet obstruction in some contexts.

Teaching point: Correct coagulopathy and assess abdominal wall anatomy before PEG placement; multidisciplinary decision-making is essential.

Q20) Which of the following components are used in the Harris–Benedict equation to calculate Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)?

a) Age, weight, height, and gender
b) Age, weight, height, gender, and activity level
c) Age, weight, and gender
d) Weight, height, and gender only

Answer: a) Age, weight, height, and gender

The original Harris–Benedict equations use age, weight, height and sex to estimate BMR/REE. Activity factor is applied separately to estimate total daily energy expenditure (TDEE).

Teaching point: Use REE × activity/stress factors to estimate total needs; monitor and adjust by clinical response.