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2 526
*⚠️ Examination Sequence Mistake 1 – Respiratory Exam*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*❌ Common Mistake:*
Jumping straight to auscultation without completing inspection → palpation → percussion first.
*✅ Correct Sequence* :
*1️⃣ Inspection* – respiratory rate, chest shape, scars, use of accessory muscles
*2️⃣ Palpation* – chest expansion, tracheal position, tactile fremitus
*3️⃣ Percussion* – dull / resonant / hyperresonant
*4️⃣ Auscultation* – breath sounds + added sounds
*5️⃣ Vocal Resonance* – whisper pectoriloquy if needed
*💡 PACES Tip:*
Examiners award marks for sequence, not just technique.
Breaking the order signals poor structure — even if your findings are correct.
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*📋 Mini OSCE Checklist 1 – Respiratory Examination*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*✅ 1. Introduction & Safety*
Introduce yourself, confirm patient identity
Gain consent
Wash/sanitise hands
Expose chest appropriately
Ensure patient comfort (sitting at 45°)
---
*✅ 2. General Inspection*
Respiratory rate, use of accessory muscles
Cyanosis, pallor, cachexia
Chest wall shape (barrel chest, pectus deformities)
Any medical devices (O₂, neb mask, sputum pot)
---
*✅ 3. Hands & Arms*
Tar staining, clubbing
Peripheral cyanosis
Flap for CO₂ retention
Pulse (rate, rhythm)
Resp rate (count visibly)
---
*✅ 4. Face & Neck*
Conjunctival pallor
Central cyanosis
JVP
Trachea position
Lymph nodes
---
*✅ 5. Chest Examination*
Inspection → Palpation → Percussion → Auscultation
Chest expansion (symmetry)
Tactile vocal fremitus
Percussion note (resonant / dull / hyperresonant)
Breath sounds (vesicular / bronchial)
Added sounds (crackles, wheeze, pleural rub)
Vocal resonance
---
*✅ 6. Posterior Chest*
Repeat the above steps (many signs are clearer posteriorly).
---
*✅ 7. End the Examination*
Examine legs for edema / DVT signs if relevant
Thank the patient
Summarise findings to examiner
Suggest further tests (CXR, ABG, spirometry, CT)
2 526
🟢 ONLINE CRASH COURSE FOR PACES – ADMISSIONS OPEN!
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✅ Practice & discussion of 60 exam cases (including recent diets), covering:
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2 526
🟢 ONLINE CRASH COURSE FOR PACES – ADMISSIONS OPEN!
📅 24 Nov – 05 Dec 2025
🎯 PACES MRCP (UK) & CLINICAL EXAM MRCPI
🚨 At a very affordable fee
✅ 10-Day Intensive Online Course
✅ Covers ALL 7 SKILLS in detail (as in our weekly free sessions)
✅ Practice & discussion of 60 exam cases (including recent diets), covering:
• 30 cases of consultations
• 30 cases of communications.
✅ Personalized feedback to sharpen weak areas
✅ Ideal for beginners & upcoming exam candidates
🎓 Slots Available:
🔹 Active participation – First come, first served
🔹 Listener slots also available
📩 Join Us!
📱 WhatsApp: +92 334 6036496
📧 Email: drtanzeelbukhari@gmail.com
🚀 Join, Learn, Practice & Succeed!
GOOD LUCK
2 526
*👀 Common Physical Sign 1 – Xanthelasma*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*🔸 What you see:*
Yellowish, soft, cholesterol-rich plaques around the eyelids — usually medial canthus.
*🔸 What it suggests:*
Hyperlipidaemia (most common association)
Familial dyslipidaemias
Cholestatic liver disease (e.g., PBC)
Type 2 diabetes
Sometimes seen in normal lipid levels but still clinically important
*🔸 Why examiners care:*
It is a subtle sign that should immediately prompt you to:
Check cardiovascular risk factors
Assess for arcus senilis, tendon xanthomas
Ask about pruritus or fatigue (if suspecting PBC)
Review medications affecting lipids
*💡 PACES Tip:*
Candidates often miss xanthelasma. Spotting it early can lead you straight toward a cardiovascular or hepatobiliary differential even before touching the patient.
2 526
*🩺 Focused Examination Tip 1 – Cardiovascular System (CVS)*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*🔹 Start with the “Big 3” overview*
In any PACES cardiovascular exam, ALWAYS begin with these three observations before touching the patient chest :
*1️⃣ General Appearance*
Breathlessness?
Cyanosis?
Pallor?
Discomfort or pain?
*2️⃣ Hands & Pulses*
Warm or cold?
Capillary refill
Radial pulse: rate, rhythm, character
Collapsing pulse (AR)
Radio–femoral delay (CoA)
*3️⃣ Neck & JVP*
Height
Waveform
Hepato-jugular reflux
These three alone can give you up to 50% of the diagnosis before even placing the stethoscope.
2 526
*🔷 Medical Flowchart 1 – Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS)*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*🔵 Step 1: Symptoms* → Suspect ACS
Chest pain
Radiation
Sweating
Nausea
➡️ Think ACS immediately
---
*🔵 Step 2: Do an ECG*
*ST Elevation* → STEMI
*ST Depression / T Inversion* → NSTEMI / Unstable Angina
*Normal ECG* → Repeat + Troponin
---
*🔵 Step 3: Troponin*
*High* → NSTEMI
*Normal* → Unstable Angina (if symptoms typical)
---
*🔵 Step 4: Immediate Management*
Aspirin + Ticagrelor
Oxygen if hypoxic
Nitrates
Morphine (if needed)
LMWH
Beta-blocker (if no contraindication)
---
*🔵 Step 5: Definitive Plan*
*STEMI:* Primary PCI
*NSTEMI:* Risk scoring → Early invasive strategy
*Unstable Angina:* Optimise meds + cardiology review
2 526
*🌱 Mini Reflection 1 – The Value of Pausing*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
One of the most powerful skills in PACES is knowing when to pause.
Most candidates rush because they fear silence — but silence is not a weakness.
*💡 Lesson:*
A 2–3 second pause allows you to:
Organise your thoughts
Avoid saying the wrong thing
Sound calm and confident
Show the examiner you are thinking safely
In the exam, a pause is often the difference between a rushed guess and a structured, high-scoring answer.
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