pace your MRCP-PACES
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*📊 Data Interpretation Pearl 2 – Interpreting an Elevated D-Dimer*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*💡 Key Principle:*
A raised D-dimer does NOT mean PE or DVT.
It only tells you that clot breakdown is happening somewhere in the body — but this is non-specific.
---
*🔍 When is a raised D-dimer meaningful?*
Only when the pre-test probability is low or intermediate.
Example:
A patient with mild pleuritic pain, low Wells score →
🔹 Normal D-dimer rules out PE
🔹 Raised D-dimer requires imaging (CTPA)
---
*🔥 Common causes of a raised D-dimer (other than PE/DVT):*
Infection / sepsis
Recent surgery
Trauma
Cancer
Pregnancy
Liver disease
Increasing age
This is why you never diagnose PE on D-dimer alone.
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*👁️ Physical Examination Insight 2 – The Value of “The First Look”*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
Many candidates rush into the examination, but examiners often form their first impression in the first 5 seconds — before you even touch the patient.
*🔍 What “The First Look” should include:*
1️⃣ General appearance
– Comfortable or distressed?
– Breathless? Anxious? Pale?
– Signs of pain or toxic appearance?
2️⃣ Surroundings & clues
– Oxygen mask nearby
– Inhalers, sputum pot
– Walking aid
– Water jug (polydipsia)
– IV antibiotics
These clues immediately guide your differential.
3️⃣ Observation before examination
– Respiratory rate
– Pattern of breathing
– Symmetry of chest
– Finger deformities, clubbing, tremors
– JVP from a distance
*🔑 Why this matters in PACES:*
Candidates who pause, observe, and comment on their findings score higher because they show:
Situational awareness
Structured approach
Clinical maturity
Safety and confidence
*💡 PACES Tip:*
A strong opening line is:
> “On first inspection, the patient appears comfortable, breathing pattern normal, no obvious distress.”
This immediately tells the examiner: You know what you’re doing.
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*🧠 Clinical Reasoning Pearl 2 – “One Symptom, Two Systems” Approach*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
A very common PACES mistake is jumping to one system too quickly.
Strong candidates always consider at least two systems that could explain the same symptom.
---
*🔍 Example: Shortness of Breath*
Always think:
1️⃣ Cardiac causes
Heart failure
Acute coronary syndrome
Arrhythmias
Valvular disease (AS/MS)
2️⃣ Respiratory causes
Pneumonia
PE
COPD/asthma
Pneumothorax
---
*🔑 Why this makes you score higher:*
Examiners want to hear balanced reasoning:
> “With shortness of breath, I’m considering both cardiac and respiratory causes.
I will look for JVP, ankle swelling, crackles, as well as chest findings and oxygen levels.”
This immediately shows breadth of thinking, structured reasoning, and safe differential building.
---
*💡 PACES Tip:*
For every symptom, mentally ask:
“Which TWO systems can cause this?”
This prevents tunnel vision and demonstrates mature clinical reasoning.
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*🟦 ECG Logic in One Line 2*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*📌 One-Line ECG Rule:*
“Peaked T waves are the earliest ECG sign of hyperkalaemia.”
---
*Why this matters:*
Hyperkalaemia follows a predictable ECG progression:
1️⃣ Tall, narrow, peaked T waves → earliest change
2️⃣ PR prolongation
3️⃣ QRS widening
4️⃣ Sine-wave → ventricular standstill
---
*⭐ ECG Take-Home:*
If you see tall peaked T waves → treat hyperkalaemia immediately.
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*⚠️ Exam Technique Mistake 2 – Ignoring Patient’s Position Before Starting the Examination*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
One of the most COMMON and costly PACES mistakes is starting the examination without adjusting the patient’s position.
*🔹 What candidates do wrong:*
Begin respiratory exam while the patient is half-lying
Start cardiovascular exam without raising the bed
Perform abdominal exam with the patient sitting up
Forget to expose correctly before starting
This immediately signals poor technique and unsafe practice to the examiner.
---
*🔹 What examiners want to see:*
A simple, safe, structured line:
> “Let me adjust the bed and make sure you’re comfortable before we begin.”
Then:
Respiratory exam → patient at 45°
Cardiovascular exam → 45°
Abdominal exam → lying flat with pillow
Lower limb exam → lying flat
Neurology → depends on the system, but ALWAYS ensure comfort + correct angle
---
*🔹 Why this mistake loses marks:*
Suggests lack of structure
Appears rushed
Considered unsafe
Reduces accuracy of findings
---
*💡 PACES Tip:*
Before touching the patient, ALWAYS think:
“Bed angle – exposure – comfort – consent.”
Examiners give marks for this even before the real exam starts
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168.Dr Tan Wei Loon
167.Dr Muhammad Afkham ( MRCPI )
166.Dr Ismail Fawaz ( MRCPI )
165.Dr Javeria
164.Dr Adan
163.Dr Aisha
162.Dr Mehwish Touseef
161.Dr Mahabalraj
160.Dr Gouri.
159.Dr Nicholas
158.Dr Sashank Chavali
157.Dr Charles Chun
156.Dr Johnny Khor
155. Dr G Karthikeyan
154.Dr Irshad Khan
153.Dr Umamah
152.Dr Ammara Ansar
151.Dr Tasnuva Aman Khan
150.Dr Mohammed Akif Bin Haleem
149.Dr Adil Tahseen
148.Dr Meera Patil
147.Dr Ashini ( MRCPI )
146.Dr Ali Moùsa ( MRCPI )
145.Dr Naomi ( MRCPI )
144.Dr Samreen Mazhar
143.Dr Sairam
142.Dr Priya
141.Dr Yousuf
140.Dr Moe Pwint Phyu
139.Dr Fahad Ul Fazal
138.Dr Ravi Bangeja
137.Dr Vamshidhar Vanam
136.Dr Hanadi ( MRCPI )
135.Dr Azher ( MRCPI )
134.Dr Noman Hossain
133.Dr Abhinav Meelu
132.Dr Nurul Islam
131.Dr kadhaum ibrahem
130.Dr Inayut
129.Dr Susovan Mitra
128.Dr Bhavesh Kaswala
127.Dr Rashid Ali Khan
126.Dr Bisma
125.Dr Samiah
124.Dr Madiha Mahmood
123.Dr Ratan Kumar
122.Dr Dilfuza Usmanova
121.Dr Mohd Hafiz
120.Dr Colin Cheah
119.Dr Kuan Yau Yeh
118.Dr Satesh Ramasundram
117.Dr Calvin
116.Dr Wan Mohamad
115.Dr Aravinthan Balakrishnan
114.Dr Athirah Azizol
113.Dr Massum
112.Dr Rafa Faaria Alam
111.Dr Benojeer Akter
110.Dr Sonal Karpe
109.Dr Shahla
108.Dr Muhammad Faizal
107.Dr Aisha Sohail
106.Dr Sheetal
105.Dr Anand Kumar
104.Dr Paul
103.Dr Ehsan Ul Haq
102.Dr Amna Gardezi
101.Dr Muhammad Rahib
100.Dr Shilpa
99.Dr Nagaraj Patil
98.Dr Vincent Jose ( MRCPI )
97.Dr Hana Abdalla Adam Mohamed ( MRCPI )
96.Dr Thanuja Alahakoon
95.Dr Farehah ( MRCPI )
94.Dr Sankar Nath Jha ( MRCPI )
93.Dr Saadia Khan
92.Dr Montasir Elmobark
91.Dr Kiran
90.Dr Ai Yun Loh
89.Dr Eow
88.Dr Lim
87.Dr Lalitha
86.Dr Ashwin Mathew
85.Dr Kasthuri
84.Dr Rohit
83.Dr Sangshaptak Saha
82.Dr Hira Jamil
81.Dr Santa Subhra Chatterjee
80.Dr Shishir
79.Dr Rubeya Ahmad
78.Dr Javaria Imran
77.Dr Rishi Gopalakrishnan
76.Dr Ramandeep Kaur
75.Dr Shakeel
74.Dr Shamla
73.Dr Murtaza
72.Dr Urvashi
71.Dr Urmimala Bhattacharjee
70.Dr Jayalakshmi
69.Dr Steffin Methai Kattor
68.Dr Yew
67.Dr Cyrin
66.Dr Farhat Nazneen
65.Dr Meenal
64.Dr Adil
63.Dr Umar Iftikhar
62.Dr Sohail ( MRCPI )
61.Dr Amarnath duraikannan
60.Dr Maha
59.Dr Samar
58.Dr Sidra German
57.Dr Mahmood Akhtar
56.Dr Muhammad Hashim
55.Dr Manmohan
54.Dr Pooja
53.Dr Haithem Alghebra ( MRCPI )
52.Dr Amna
51.Dr Nandhakumar
50.Dr Ew Ju Vern
49.Dr Mohamed Muslim
48.Dr Jerry John
47.Dr Majid Iqbal
46.Dr Phoebe
45.Dr Aimi N Zainudin
44.Dr Tahseen Azim
43.Dr Samina
42.Dr Suzi
41.Dr Samia
40.Dr Tan
39.Dr Kalpesh Kondalkar
38.Dr Sunil Abhishek
37.Dr Faiz Mashood ( MRCPI )
36.Dr Sharalaa Engatramana
35.Dr Prasad ( MRCPI )
34.Dr Kalyan Nath ( MRCPI )
33.Dr Reshma Thalikan
32.Dr Aneesa Shahul
31.Dr Arooj
30.Dr Esraa Soliman
29.Dr Amitave Chatterjee
28.Dr Malik Dilaver
27.Dr Ravi
26.Dr Priya
25.Dr Mujtaba Waris
24.Dr Shaheen Noman
23.Dr Apoorv Tiwari
22.Dr Niaz
21.Dr Janaki
20.Dr Lavanya Devi Palaniswamy
19.Dr Waqas
18.Dr Sadaf Hammad
17.Dr Osama Abdelaziz
16.Dr Rajeev Sharma
15.Dr Nehal Kunjomoidu
14.Dr Steffy
13.Dr Mustafizur Rahman (MRCPI)
12.Dr Vareeja Kasibian
11.Dr Niya Jamaludheen
10.Dr Farook Abdelgioum
9.Dr Kamran Ali
8.Dr Anik Rahman
7.Dr Manoj Dodiyah
6.Dr Madhusha
5.Dr Komal Zahid
4.Dr Hina Shaikh
3.Dr Sameer Abdus Samad
2.Dr Saurabh Gaba
1.Dr Rithik Mohan
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*Hall of fame PACES*
*pace your MRCP-PACES*
We are thankful to our respected colleagues who have made us proud by their success in PACES MRCP ( UK ) and PART 2 CLINICAL EXAM MRCPI.
We believe that this number will keep on increasing.
352.Dr Faisal Khan
351.Dr Safwa
350.Dr Anil Kumar
349.Dr Hamza
348.Dr Amber Usama
347.Dr Mst. Tajlina Khatun
346.Dr Mumtaz Ahmed
345.Dr Saraswathi Kalki
344.Dr Bilal Azam
343.Dr Sofi Hafizi
342.Dr Asifa
341.Dr Amr Akef
340. Dr Ahmed Syed Hamadi
339.Dr Hotchand
338. Dr Sawson Abdeklaziz
337.Dr Ramsha Kashif
336.Dr Riaz
335.Dr Azima Sultana
334.Dr Mosab Yosef
333.Dr Abdul Rahman
332.Dr Syeda Fatima
331.Dr Alaa Hussein
330.Dr Usman
329.Dr Ahmad Khan
328.Dr Ayesha Zubair
327.Dr Choney Wangmo
326.Dr Awais Shafi
325.Dr Atefah
324.Dr Lacumi
323.Dr Mon Ei Ei Moe.
322.Dr Muhammad Hamza Sazeed
321.Dr Chan
320.Dr Anusri
319.Muhammad Nadeem Qureshi
318.Dr Sumeet
317. Dr Mohamed Peer
316.Dr Kholoud Algoshiti
315.Dr Tricia Lopez
314.Dr Aqtab
313.Dr Raghav Bansal
312.Dr Alston
311.Dr Shuvashis Saha Shuvo
310.Dr Muhammad Silarsab
309.Dr Jayasree
308.Dr Prabal
307.Dr Ananto Kumar
306.Dr Aparna
305.Dr Deepa Vanjari
304.Dr Priyanka Hinduja
303. Dr Jissa Mariam
302. Dr Anna Nalumansi.
301.Dr Jeevan Kumar
300.Dr Najee
299.Dr Mahmood
298.Dr Aathiyaa
297.Dr Asma Hussin
296.Dr Wajeeha
295.Dr Nahush chafekar
294.Dr Ong
293.Dr Rakesh
292.Dr Prabal Chakraborty
291.Dr Rahul Abir
290.Dr Suhanya
289.Dr Sowndhariya VA
288.Dr Bilal Hameed
287.Dr Swati Chouhan
286.Dr Mohammed Elfadil
285.Dr Ayondyuti Bora
284.Dr Mohammed Ali
283.Dr Abhishek Ghosh
282.Dr Mamun
281.Dr Noor Ul Nisa
280.Dr Taleea
279.Dr Marsin ( MRCPI )
278.Dr Wania Rafaey
277.Dr Mohammed Omar Yousofzai
276.Dr Ayesha Javed
275.Dr Samia
274.Dr Durga Rao
273.Dr Vinayraj
272.Dr Kartiben Nagarajan ( MRCPI )
271.Dr Alaa Hussein ( MRCPI )
270.Dr Haleem Baksh
269.Dr Upasana
268.Dr T Nivethitha
267.Dr R Kavitha
266.Dr Olufemi Pirisola
265.Dr Afia Tani
264.Dr Fatema Tuj Johara
263.Dr Saneeya Shafaat
262.Dr Kumar Santosh Sekhani
261.Dr Mohammed Imran Undre
260.Dr Shahina Saleem
259.Dr Zahid Ahmed Khan
258.Dr Muhd Ilham Azib
257.Dr Puteri
256.Dr Versha
255.Dr Usman Rasheed
254.Dr Lee Ling Wei
253.Dr Warda
252.Dr Shaista Qamar
251.Dr Nusayba Mustafa
250.Dr Shakilone Tharmaseelan
249.Dr Fatema
248.Dr Yousry Yousif ( MRCPI )
247.Dr Shilpi Shukla
246.Dr Dibbs
245.Dr Shaon Sikder Tutu
244.Dr Lakshmi J
243.Dr Tamrina Parvin
242.Dr Aiman Nasir
241.Dr Asad Saleem
240.Dr Ali Tanvir Rahat Haque
239.Dr Shoaib
238.Dr Zainab Mahmood
237.Dr Khaing Pyae Pyae Win
236.Dr Mansoor
235.Dr Harini
234.Dr Ben Cheah
233.Dr Parichatra
232.Dr Sabreen Mohammed
231. Dr Soe Min Maung
230.Dr Aniruddha Jog
229. Dr Praveen Kumar
228.Dr Samson Charan
227.Dr Riyaz
226.Dr Geethika
225.Dr Adeyemo Abiodun Waliyullah
224.Dr Dipika
223.Dr Raihan
222.Dr Rafeea Shah
221.Dr Jason
220.Dr Ashiru Sikirat Yetunde
219.Dr Ghulam
218.Dr Mehwish Usman
217.Dr Lau Wen Jie
216.Dr H.Kumara
215.Dr Darshini
214.Dr Geetha
213.Dr seema
212.Dr Akheri Parvin
211.Dr Syed Najam Al Hassan Shah
210.Dr Umair
209.Dr Rakhwin Sandhu
208. Dr Raymond Madzivanyika
207.Dr Nabeel
206.Dr Sidra Aslam
205.Dr Narendra
204.Dr Rashmy Arun
203.Dr Sandhya
202.Dr Narayanee Rajasekaran
201.Dr Ismail Fawaz
200.Dr Daphnie
199.Dr Stephen Ponnampalam
198.Dr Mohammed Ahmed
197.Dr Yasmin Yusuf
196.Dr Praveetha
195.Dr Sarthak Rastogi
194.Dr Ahammed Ashar
193.Dr Mohamed Abdullahi
192.Dr Sankar Nath Jha
191.Dr Asim
190.Dr Chia
189.Dr Md Kabir Udin
188.Dr Khai Leng
187.Dr Shaima Bashir
186.Dr Joel Quadros
185.Dr Suroop Chand
184.Dr Mayesha
183.Dr Poornima Nair
182.Dr Munira
181.Dr Maryam Abdalla
180.Dr Kokila
179.Dr Thushani
178.Dr Irfan Ahmad Mir
174.Dr Mohammed Abubaker
173.Dr Asrul
172.Dr Toqeer Bhatti
171.Dr Elanchezian
170.Dr Muthumani
169.Dr Muhammad Idrees
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*🗣️ Patient Explanation Skill – Explaining High Blood Pressure*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*🧠 Scenario:*
A patient’s repeated readings show high blood pressure.
They look anxious and ask:
> “Doctor, is this serious? Will I need medicines forever?”
---
*✅ How to Explain High Blood Pressure in PACES*
*1️⃣ Start with reassurance*
“I want to reassure you — your blood pressure is high, but it’s manageable, and you’re not in immediate danger.”
*2️⃣ Explain what it means*
“High blood pressure means your heart is having to work a bit harder to push blood around your body.
Over many years, this can increase the risk of stroke, heart disease, and kidney strain —
but we can prevent these complications by controlling it early.”
*3️⃣ Give a clear plan — structured and practical*
“We’ll manage it in two ways:
a) Lifestyle changes
Reduce salt
Regular walking
Weight control
Avoid smoking
Manage stress
These alone can bring the BP down significantly.
b) Medication
“Because your readings are consistently high, starting a tablet will help protect your heart and prevent long-term problems.
Most BP medicines are safe and well-tolerated.”
*4️⃣ Address the biggest fear: “lifelong medication”*
“You may not need it forever.
If your readings improve with lifestyle changes, we can reduce or even stop the medication.
We will review it regularly together.”
*5️⃣ Check understanding and offer partnership*
“I want to work with you on this.
Do you have any worries about taking medication or changing your lifestyle?”
---
*💡 PACES Tip:*
Examiners look for:
Reassurance
Avoiding panic
Mentioning long-term risk without scaring
A structured plan (lifestyle + medication)
Checking understanding
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*✔️ True or False 2 – Statements.*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
1️⃣ A normal chest X-ray excludes a pulmonary embolism.
2️⃣ In COPD exacerbation, oxygen should be targeted to 88–92%.
3️⃣ Wheeze is always due to asthma.
4️⃣ Silent chest in asthma is a life-threatening sign.
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*🧠 Match the Pairs 2 – Cardiology.*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
Match the clinical presentation (A–E) with the most likely diagnosis (1–5).
*A* . Sudden palpitations + narrow-complex tachycardia
*B* . Exertional chest pain relieved by rest
*C* . Sudden tearing chest pain radiating to the back
*D* . Pedal oedema + raised JVP + basal crackles
*E* . Syncope during exercise in a young adult
*1* . Aortic dissection
*2* . Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HOCM)
*3* . SVT (Supraventricular Tachycardia)
*4* . Stable Angina
*5* . Congestive Cardiac Failure
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*🗣️ Communication Scenario 2 – Explaining a New Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*🧠 Scenario:*
You are seeing a 52-year-old patient whose blood tests confirm Type 2 Diabetes.
The patient looks worried and asks:
> “Does this mean my life is going to change completely?”
---
*✅ How to explain it (safe, empathetic, structured — without making it a bad news)*
*1️⃣ Start with reassurance — soften the emotional impact*
“Firstly, I want to reassure you — this is not bad news, and it does not mean something serious or dangerous has happened today.”
*2️⃣ Acknowledge feelings*
“It’s natural to feel worried when you hear the word diabetes, and I completely understand.”
*3️⃣ Give simple, positive, balanced information*
“Your blood test shows Type 2 Diabetes, which means your body is not using insulin as effectively as it should.
But the important point is:
It is very manageable,
Many people lead completely normal lives,
And we will work together to control it step by step.”
*4️⃣ Outline a clear plan (gives control and reduces fear)*
Improving diet and activity
Starting metformin if needed
Monitoring HbA1c every 3–6 months
Annual eye, kidney, and foot checks
*5️⃣ Address the patient’s fear directly*
“This diagnosis does not mean your life will drastically change.
You won’t lose your routine or freedom — we just need some gradual adjustments.”
*6️⃣ Check understanding & explore concerns*
“Can you share what worries you the most so I can help clarify it?”
---
*💡 PACES Tip:*
When giving a diagnosis like Type 2 Diabetes, always combine:
Reassurance + Normalisation + Clear plan,
so the patient never feels it is a “bad news conversation.”
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*🩺 Case of the Week 2 – Neurology*
(by pace your MRCP – Dr Tanzeel Bukhari)
*🧠 Scenario:*
A 45-year-old man presents with progressive unilateral facial weakness over 24 hours.
He cannot close his right eye fully, struggles to smile, and reports altered taste.
No limb weakness, no fever, and no ear pain.
*O/E:*
Right LMN facial palsy
Forehead involved
No other cranial nerve deficits
Limb exam normal
---
*❓ Question:*
What is the most likely diagnosis, and what key steps are needed in immediate management?
---
*✅ Answer:*
🔹 Most likely diagnosis:
Bell’s palsy (LMN facial nerve palsy)
*🔹 Key management steps:*
1️⃣ Prednisolone within 72 hours
2️⃣ Eye care: lubricating drops + eye patch at night
3️⃣ Check for red flags (rash, vesicles → consider Ramsay Hunt)
4️⃣ Safety-net: return if worse or no improvement in 3 weeks
---
*💡 PACES Tip:*
Always differentiate between UMN vs LMN facial palsy:
Forehead spared → UMN
Forehead involved → LMN (Bell’s palsy)
اکنون در دسترس! پژوهش تلگرام ۲۰۲۵ — مهمترین بینشهای سال 
