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IM tips & Q-bank for SMLE and part https://tellonym.me/user.IMhub/nhie Ask me here: @llqkq

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16 year old patient presented with cyanosis and lower extremity clubbing only. Which of the following is true?
Anonymous voting

Hypokalemia and HTN: 1- Hyperaldosteronism 2- Liddles syndrome 3- Cushing Hypokalemia and hypo/normotensive: 1- Bartters syndrome (associated with kidney stone) 2- Gitelmans syndrome (associated with low Mg)

Which one of the following is a cause of hypertension and hypokalemia?
Anonymous voting

All the following are associated with pseudogout except?
Anonymous voting

Think of 👀 - Mesenteric thrombus: think of PNH - splenic/hepatic/portal thrombus: think of JAK2 mutation - thrombosis and bleeding: thinks of dysfibrinogenemia - venous & arterial thrombosis: think of Hyperhomocysteinemia, Antiphospholipid syndrom or dysfibrinogenemia

السلام عليكم حرصًا على تطوير هذه القناة وتقديم أفضل دعم لكم أود إعلامكم بأنني متواجد للإجابة على أي استفسار يخص التجميعات أو لتوضيح أي سؤال غير واضح التواصل معي على الرابط بالأسفل هدفي هو أن تكون القناة مصدرًا موثوقًا ومفيدًا للجميع https://tellonym.me/user.IMhub/nhie

💡 Explanation: This is Brucella Spondylitis: management is Doxycycline and Rifampin for 12 weeks PLUS: - Streptomycin for 14-21 days - Gentamicin for 7-10 days Otherwise standard regimens include Doxycycline for 6 weeks plus one of the following: - Streptomycin for 14-21 days - Gentamicin for 7-10 days - Rifampin for 6 weeks Rifampin and Doxycycline is the only fully oral regimen of the above but aminoglycoside containing regimens are preferred

40 Y/O male with a history of cattle exposure present with fever, low back pain and headache for 1m. Imaging reveals sacroilitis, gram stain: G-ve coccobacilli What is the most appropriate treatment?
Anonymous voting

Summary of APS management in different situations
Summary of APS management in different situations

In patients with a low-risk aPL profle, who had frst venous thrombosis in the presence of a known transient risk factor, anticoagulation could be limited to 3–6 months

Thrombosis risk in APS
Thrombosis risk in APS

COPD patient with FEV1 of 38% based on GOLD classification which class of severity is this patient?
Anonymous voting

Acute vs Chronic DIC
Acute vs Chronic DIC

COPD tips
+3
COPD tips

SOB approach
SOB approach

photo content

💡 Systemic scleroderma tips: - 40% of patient with SS & SRC progress to ESRD (even with ACEi) - risk increase with; early disease, diffuse cutaneous SS, >15mg/d pred and RNA Pol III Ab

Scleroderma Ddx: - Scleromyxedema - Hypothyroidism - Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis - Esinophilic fasciitis - Amyloidosis - GVHD - Diabetes scleredema

🌍 Epidemiology: - 20-30% of psoriasis patients develop arthritis - 20% of IBD patients develop IBD associated arthritis (CD > UC)

Ddx of ESR more than 100: - malignancy (MM & lymphoma) - vasculitis (GCA) - endocarditis - TB - OM