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Medical Council of Canada MCCQE Dumps

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Total 348 questions

Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination Part 1 Exam Questions and Answers

Question 1

You are called to attend an 18-year-old woman, gravida 2, para 1, aborta 0, who is in precipitous labour. She did not realize she was pregnant and has not had any prenatal care. After the delivery, you examine the newborn boy; he is vigorous, and it appears that he was born at full term. Physical examination findings of the newborn are normal. Review of the prenatal record from the mother ' s last pregnancy shows the following:

HIV: Negative

Hepatitis B surface antibody: Positive

Hepatitis C: Negative

Syphilis serology: Negative

The mother ' s previous child was placed in foster care. The mother is withdrawn and uncommunicative after delivery. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Administer hepatitis B vaccine to the newborn

B.

Initiate feeding with donor breast milk

C.

Collect urine from the newborn for a drug screen

D.

Recommend immediate skin-to-skin care

Question 2

A 40-year-old woman presents to your clinic for follow-up regarding her major depressive disorder, which is being treated with the starting dosage of escitalopram. Most of her symptoms have now improved. However, she has noted anorgasmia since taking this medication. This has significantly affected her relationship with her wife. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Increase the patient ' s dosage of escitalopram

B.

Switch escitalopram to venlafaxine

C.

Add bupropion

D.

Maintain the current medication

Question 3

You are asked to see a 50-year-old man 2 hours after he underwent a laparotomy for gastric resection. Lab results are as follows:

pH

7.28 (7.35–7.45)

PaCO₂

60 mm Hg (35–40)

PaO₂

60 mm Hg (85–105) with 4 L/min via nasal prongs

Bicarbonate (HCO₃)

24 mmol/L (24–30)

Which one of the following is most consistent with this clinical presentation?

Options:

A.

Normal recovery from an inhalation anesthetic

B.

Respiratory insufficiency

C.

Metabolic acidosis

D.

Compensatory respiratory alkalosis

E.

Postoperative hypermetabolic period

Question 4

A 72-year-old man has had 4 episodes of weakness in her right arm and leg lasting 10 to 15 minutes each. During 1 episode, she had difficulty speaking and had blurring of the vision in the left eye. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Thrombosis of the left middle cerebral artery.

B.

Epilepsy.

C.

Left intracerebral hemorrhage.

D.

Occlusive disease of the left internal carotid artery.

E.

Occlusive disease of the left vertebrobasilar system.

Question 5

A 14-month-old boy is brought to see you for a well-baby check-up and is noted to have only one testis. Ultrasound confirms an undescended testis. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Observation for a year

B.

Surgical orchiopexy

C.

Hormonal therapy with testosterone

D.

Hormonal therapy with gonadotropins

E.

Surgical removal of the undescended testis

Question 6

A 29-year-old woman presents with vaginal spotting after 6 weeks of amenorrhea. She is asymptomatic otherwise. Serum β-hCG is 2150 IU/L, and pelvic ultrasound shows an empty uterus. She has been trying to conceive for 7 months. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Repeat pelvic ultrasonography in 10 days.

B.

Perform dilatation and curettage for chorionic villi.

C.

Administer intramuscular methotrexate.

D.

Arrange exploratory laparoscopy.

E.

Repeat serum β-hCG test in 48 hours.

Question 7

A 25-year-old woman, gravida 1, para 1, aborta 0, gave birth to a newborn who is hypotonic with a large protruding tongue and brachycephaly. The newborn has a single palmar crease bilaterally and short, broad hands with a curved fifth digit. These features best support a clinical diagnosis of which one of the following?

Options:

A.

Prader-Willi syndrome.

B.

Fetal alcohol syndrome.

C.

Turner syndrome.

D.

Congenital hypothyroidism.

E.

Trisomy 21.

Question 8

You are asked to see a 34-year-old patient at his long-term care facility for a 2-day history of fever. You diagnose a urinary tract infection. He has multiple sclerosis diagnosed 5 years ago and has lived in this long-term care facility for the past 2 years. He is bedbound and has an indwelling urinary catheter. For the past 3 months, he has been non-communicative. Prior to this, he had made it clear that he did not want any life-prolonging measures. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Prescribe antipyretics.

B.

Change his urinary catheter.

C.

Transfer him to the hospital.

D.

Call his family to consider antibiotics.

E.

Start antibiotics while waiting to contact the family.

Question 9

A 48-year-old woman presents with a 2-year history of regular, heavy menstrual flow. She has a BMI of 54, poorly controlled type 2 diabetes, and obstructive sleep apnea. Laboratory results are as follows:

Hemoglobin: 82 g/L (123–157)

Ferritin: 6 µg/L (11–307)

Endometrial biopsy: Absence of hyperplasia or malignancy

Transvaginal ultrasound:

• Uterus: 12 cm × 8.2 cm × 6 cm

• Intramural fibroids

• Endometrial thickness: 14 mm

• Ovaries: Normal

Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Hysterectomy

B.

Levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system

C.

Continuous combined oral contraception

D.

Cyclic medroxyprogesterone

Question 10

A mother brings her 10-year-old son for his well-child check-up. She mentions that her 38-year-old husband has just had a heart attack due to high cholesterol levels and wants information regarding prevention of cardiovascular disease for her son. Which one of the following is the best approach to managing this problem?

Options:

A.

Send the son for a lipid profile test

B.

Prescribe a low-fat diet for the son

C.

Reassure the mother as children do not have elevated lipid levels

D.

Prescribe a weight-lifting exercise program for her son

E.

Request a serum homocysteine and hemoglobin A1c

Question 11

A 71-year-old man is brought to the Emergency Department with sudden onset of shortness of breath and chest pain. He was discharged from hospital 1 week ago after a total hip arthroplasty. On examination, his respiratory rate is 32/min. There is visible respiratory distress, and chest auscultation is clear. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Myocardial infarction

B.

Fat embolus

C.

Aortic dissection

D.

Pulmonary embolus

E.

Cholesterol embolus

Question 12

A 30-year-old man comes to the office and asks you to write him a note for his employer that recommends a stress leave. He says he feels entitled to a rest. He comes across as irritable and impulsive. He appears to show little regard for the law and admits to recently embezzling $5,000 from his employer. He justifies his actions and shows no remorse. He has a history of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder as a child. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Bipolar II disorder.

B.

Klinefelter syndrome.

C.

Antisocial personality disorder.

D.

Borderline personality disorder.

E.

Narcissistic personality disorder.

Question 13

You are taking over a practice from a retiring family physician. The practice has paper records of patients dating back many years, including records of former patients. Which one of the following organizations is the most appropriate to contact regarding medical record retention requirements?

Options:

A.

Health Canada.

B.

The College of Family Physicians of Canada.

C.

The provincial/territorial regulatory authority.

D.

The Canadian Medical Association.

E.

The Medical Council of Canada.

Question 14

A 27-year-old man with a bowel obstruction secondary to a terminal ileum stricture has been on various medications since he was diagnosed with Crohn disease 8 years ago. You recommend a bowel resection, but he refuses this option because he is fearful of short bowel syndrome. He states that the only surgical procedure he will undergo is a bypass of the diseased segment so that the affected bowel will heal. You know that this is the wrong operation. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Obtain a formal competency assessment.

B.

Transfer care to a colleague that you know is receptive to the patient’s request.

C.

Administer a high dose of intravenous steroids for trial.

D.

Decline to do the bypass but carefully explain why.

E.

Get consent for exploratory laparotomy and do a resection.

Question 15

A 46-year-old woman with a palpable breast lump underwent diagnostic mammography that revealed a suspicious mass in her right breast. The radiologist recommended a breast biopsy. The referring physician did not see the mammogram report or the recommendation for biopsy. One year later, invasive breast cancer is diagnosed in the patient. Which one of the following is most likely to prevent this issue from happening again?

Options:

A.

Notifying patients only if there is an abnormal finding.

B.

Booking return appointments with the referring physician to follow up every result.

C.

Requiring radiologists to phone the referring physician with every result.

D.

Having a tracking system for all investigative reports.

E.

Asking patients to call laboratories and imaging centres for their test results.

Question 16

A 33-year-old man with severe bacterial meningitis is intubated and unresponsive in the Intensive Care Unit. If he receives immediate treatment, his prognosis is excellent. If he does not, he will likely die. Three years ago, the patient had Huntington disease diagnosed, but he has been asymptomatic since then. His advance directive, which was made before this hospitalization, states that he should be allowed to die if he contracts a life-threatening illness. His parents demand that he be treated for the meningitis. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Ask for a current mental capacity assessment

B.

Initiate treatment, using the parents as substitute decision-makers

C.

Consult a second physician for an opinion on emergent treatment

D.

Order an electroencephalography

E.

Do not provide any treatment other than comfort measures

Question 17

A 78-year-old man, who is accompanied by his eldest son, presents for follow-up of his chronic kidney disease and neurocognitive disorder due to vascular disease. He is married and has 4 children. His creatinine clearance has slowly deteriorated over the last few years and has reached the stage where you are considering starting renal replacement therapy. After your discussion, it is clear that the patient, his son, and his wife want to start dialysis. Based on your assessment, it is clear that he does not understand the information you have relayed to him. You inform the patient that you believe he is incapable of making this decision and he agrees. His son would prefer not to start dialysis as he is concerned about the impact this would have on his father’s quality of life. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Follow the son’s wishes to decline dialysis.

B.

Call the patient’s wife as she is, by law, his substitute decision-maker.

C.

Schedule a follow-up visit with his wife and 4 children to review this decision.

D.

Advise the patient against starting dialysis.

E.

Determine if the patient has a substitute decision-maker.

Question 18

A 16-year-old boy presents to the emergency department with a 12-hour history of fever and rigors. He has sickle cell anemia. On examination, his vital signs include the following:

Heart rate

110/min (60–100)

Respiratory rate

20/min (12–18)

Temperature

38.8 °C, oral (36.5–37.5)

Which one of the following places this patient at risk for sepsis?

Options:

A.

Functional asplenia

B.

Neutrophil dysfunction

C.

Immunoglobulin deficiency

D.

Chronic anemia

E.

Systemic iron overload

Question 19

A 42-year-old woman presents with a 2-day history of a low-grade fever and a painful left breast mass. On examination, there is a fluctuant erythematous tender mass with surrounding induration in the left breast and enlarged lymph nodes in the left axilla. An ultrasound shows a loculated cystic mass. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Abscess

B.

Ductal ectasia

C.

Fibroadenoma

D.

Fibrocystic changes

E.

Inflammatory breast cancer

Question 20

A 58-year-old woman presents to your office with heavy vaginal bleeding. She has a history of type 2 diabetes and hypertension. Some active bleeding is visible on speculum examination. Ultrasound reveals an endometrial thickness of 12 mm. Endometrial biopsy shows complex hyperplasia with atypia. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Arrange endometrial ablation

B.

Prescribe topical progesterone

C.

Obtain consent for dilatation and curettage

D.

Organize hysteroscopy

E.

Refer for hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy

Question 21

A 25-year-old woman who is at 8 weeks ' gestation plans to travel to rural Cambodia to care for her ill mother. Which one of the following treatments should be provided to her before the trip?

Options:

A.

Antimalarial chemoprophylaxis

B.

Hepatitis B immunoglobulin

C.

Ciprofloxacin for travellers ' diarrhea

D.

Tetanus and diphtheria booster if last received more than 5 years ago

Question 22

A 32-year-old woman, gravida 0, comes to your office for contraception counselling, specifically about insertion of a levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine device. She has a past history of breast cancer and is presently on tamoxifen. Which one of the following is the best advice for your patient?

Options:

A.

She has a high risk of irregular bleeding following insertion

B.

After consultation with her oncologist, she may choose this option

C.

It may increase her risk of breast cancer recurrence

D.

She will require pre-procedure antibiotics

E.

This device will increase her risk of future infertility

Question 23

A 22-year-old woman is brought to the Emergency Department by her boyfriend, who says that she is experiencing a fentanyl overdose. She is unresponsive and cyanotic. She regains consciousness after naloxone is injected intravenously and demonstrates no further respiratory depression during 8 hours of observation. She states that she is 22 weeks ' pregnant and wants to stop using opioids. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Admit the patient for medically supervised detoxification

B.

Refer the patient for initiation of methadone

C.

Prescribe medications for symptom control so that the patient can detoxify at home

D.

Refer the patient for opioid use disorder counselling

Question 24

You are asked to see a 30-year-old woman, gravida 8, para 4, aborta 1, for symptoms of postpartum depression. She immigrated to Canada 8 months ago. She has been reluctant to speak to members of the medical team without her family members, even when an interpreter is present. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Insist on conducting the interview with the patient alone

B.

Interview the patient and the family together

C.

Allow 1 family member to stay and act as the interpreter

D.

Ask the patient to write down her history and have it translated

Question 25

You receive a note from a pharmacist about your 82-year-old patient who is taking oxycodone extended-release 20 mg 3 times daily for spinal stenosis. The pharmacist suggests that you consider tapering the medication. Your patient has been taking his current dosage for 1 year. When you saw him a month ago, he was functioning well with no adverse effects from the medication. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Prescribe a lower dosage of oxycodone.

B.

Refer the patient to a pain specialist to help you decide on the best management.

C.

Refer the patient for physiotherapy and acupuncture.

D.

Reassess the patient.

Question 26

A 26-year-old woman, gravida 1, para 0, aborta 0, consults you at 36 weeks’ gestation regarding newborn care. She has HIV. Which one of the following is the best advice regarding reducing the risk for transmission of HIV to her newborn?

Options:

A.

Bottle-feed her newborn boiled expressed breast milk.

B.

Avoid kissing her newborn.

C.

Formula-feed her newborn.

D.

Bottle-feed her newborn expressed breast milk.

E.

Breastfeed her newborn during the colostrum period only.

Question 27

During an office visit, your 14-year-old patient requests a prescription for oral contraceptives. The province where you are working does not have a statutory age of consent. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Notify child protective services because of the possibility of sexual abuse.

B.

Give her the prescription and book a follow-up appointment.

C.

Advise her to return with her parents so that legal consent can be obtained.

D.

Determine her understanding of the medical issues before prescribing the pills.

E.

Refuse to prescribe the pills because she is less than 18 years of age.

Question 28

An 85-year-old woman who is your patient has advanced metastatic lung cancer. You are visiting her at her home for palliative care. She has previously indicated to you and her family that she hoped to die at home and that comfort is her priority. She is now weak to get out of bed and has had no oral intake for 2 days. She is confused most of the time, with brief lucid episodes. Despite attentive symptom management, her family reports that she is suffering and asks that you increase her medications to expedite her death. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Acknowledge the family ' s distress and offer support.

B.

Obtain written consent from the family to expedite the patient ' s death.

C.

Contact the regional medical assistance in dying (MAID) team to assist in the family ' s request.

D.

Add midazolam to ensure the patient is completely sedated.

Question 29

You are providing antenatal consultation to a primiparous woman of 37 weeks’ gestation who was admitted for labour induction. Repeat prenatal ultrasounds confirm a chronically small fetus who has never demonstrated easily detectable fetal movement. Maternal health has been normal throughout the pregnancy and she has received all antenatal serum screening. This fetus is at significant risk for which one of the following?

Options:

A.

Congenital hypothyroidism.

B.

Spina bifida.

C.

Fetal stroke.

D.

Chromosomal abnormalities.

E.

Infantile diabetes.

Question 30

A 34-year-old man with trisomy 21 is brought to the Emergency Department because of a painful, red great toe. He is accompanied by an older woman who begins giving you the history as you enter the room. The patient is sitting on the examination table with the foot exposed, but he does not speak. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Allow the woman to continue with the history to expedite the patient encounter.

B.

Establish the relationship between the woman and the patient and direct questions to the patient.

C.

Ask the woman to provide legal documentation of her responsibility for the patient.

D.

Have a nurse attend with you in case the patient needs restraint.

E.

Examine the uncovered foot immediately to provide comfort to the patient sooner.

Question 31

A 45-year-old man is brought to the Emergency Department with chest pain. He has no significant medical history. He is anxious and agitated, and he reports severe central chest pain that began about 90 minutes ago. His vital signs are as follows: blood pressure 200/110 mm Hg, heart rate 140/min, respiratory rate 30/min, oxygen saturation 98% on supplemental oxygen. Physical examination reveals a restless and slightly tremulous man. Pupils are 7 mm reactive. There are no focal neurologic signs. Cardiopulmonary examination is normal. The 12-lead electrocardiogram reveals sinus tachycardia; findings are otherwise normal. Which one of the following is the most likely cause of this clinical presentation?

Options:

A.

Alcohol.

B.

Heroin.

C.

Cocaine.

D.

Cannabis.

E.

Oxycodone.

Question 32

A 32-year-old primigravid woman is receiving magnesium sulfate for tocolysis. Her pregnancy is at 26 weeks ' gestation. You suspect magnesium sulfate toxicity. Which one of the following is the first sign of magnesium sulfate toxicity?

Options:

A.

Absent patellar reflexes

B.

Tachycardia

C.

Hypotension

D.

Tachypnea

E.

Oliguria

Question 33

A 2.5-year-old boy is brought to the Emergency Department after he consumed a button-shaped battery. Chest and abdomen radiographies are performed. Which one of the following locations mandates urgent removal of the battery?

Options:

A.

Duodenum

B.

Ileum

C.

Jejunum

D.

Esophagus

E.

Stomach

Question 34

A 42-year-old man presents to your office with acute left knee pain and difficulty walking. He denies any trauma. He reports 2 painful episodes involving his right great toe in the last year. He smokes half a pack of cigarettes a day and drinks at least 3 beers daily. He has a temperature of 38.2°C and has a red, swollen and warm left knee. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Aspirate the knee joint.

B.

Order radiography of the knee.

C.

Start acetaminophen.

D.

Start indomethacin.

E.

Order blood cultures.

Question 35

A 15-year-old boy is brought to the office by his father because he is having headaches. When alone, the boy appears withdrawn and admits to suicidal ideation. He shares that he is gay but does not want to tell his parents. He says that he faked the headaches so that one of his parents would make an appointment for him. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Start an antidepressant medication.

B.

Encourage the patient to disclose his sexual orientation to his parents.

C.

Suggest that the patient join a group at school for peer support.

D.

Refer the patient for an immediate mental health assessment.

Question 36

A 40-year-old woman presents with a 3-month history of discharge from her right nipple. The discharge was initially milky white, but over the last 2 weeks, the patient has noted blood stains on her bra. There is mild discomfort in the same breast around the time of menses periods. On physical examination, the upper outer quadrant of the breast is tender, but there are no palpable lumps. You are able to express fluid from the nipple which is in fact blood-tinged. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Staphylococcal infection.

B.

Ductal carcinoma in situ.

C.

Mammary duct ectasia.

D.

Intraductal papilloma.

E.

Paget disease.

Question 37

A 40-year-old woman has not left her house for 6 months. She says that she is trying to avoid the intense anxiety, palpitations, tremors, sweating, dizziness, choking sensation, and breathlessness that develops when she leaves home. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

A trial of lithium carbonate.

B.

Encouragement to take walks of increasing distance.

C.

Reassurance that this is not a serious disorder.

D.

Prescription of chlorpromazine in moderate doses.

E.

Hospitalization for observation.

Question 38

You are following an otherwise healthy 3-month-old girl whose severe bilateral sensorineural deafness was diagnosed after early identification through a universal newborn hearing screening program. She has reached the developmental milestones for her age and has no features of an underlying syndrome. There is no family history of hearing loss. The parents request information on the speech and language prognosis for their daughter. Which one of the following is the most appropriate response?

Options:

A.

Sign language and a school for the hearing impaired will be needed.

B.

Significant limitation in expressive and receptive speech should be expected.

C.

Long-term literacy is likely to be limited to a grade 4 level.

D.

Most children with this condition learn to hear and speak fluently with appropriate early intervention.

E.

The prognosis is unpredictable and not well known.

Question 39

You are on duty in the Emergency Department when 5 patients are brought in by ambulance after a high-speed motor vehicle collision. Which one of the following patients requires the most urgent medical care?

Options:

A.

A 4-year-old girl with a visibly displaced ankle fracture, in great pain, with normal distal pulses and normal vital signs

B.

A 32-year-old man with a swollen and angulated thigh, a blood pressure of 112/96 mm Hg, and a pulse of 122/min

C.

A 23-year-old woman who lost consciousness for about 5 minutes and has a headache despite a normal neurological screening examination

D.

A 13-month-old child who is screaming constantly and for whom the triage nurse finds no obvious explanation

E.

A 72-year-old man with a history of myocardial infarction, with a blood pressure of 163/94 mm Hg, a heart rate of 92/min, and a capillary saturation of 95%

Question 40

An otherwise healthy 43-year-old woman presents to your clinic for a left breast mass. Six months ago, she underwent a bilateral breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) after watching a television program on breast cancer prevention. An ultrasound-guided biopsy of a 1.5 cm mass confirmed, at the time, that she had fibroadenoma. The follow-up ultrasound now reveals a mass measuring 1.7 cm. Which one of the following is the best next step in the management of this patient?

Options:

A.

Repeat the biopsy to confirm the diagnosis.

B.

Proceed with needle-localized left lumpectomy.

C.

Order a MRI of both breasts to rule out anything else.

D.

Administer prophylactic tamoxifen to decrease the risk of cancer.

E.

Reassure the patient and reassess in 12 months.

Question 41

A 28-year-old woman, gravida 1, para 0, aborta 0, presents to your clinic for a prenatal visit. Her pregnancy is at 20 weeks’ gestation. Her ultrasonogram shows a normal fetus and a low-lying placenta. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Tell the patient that she will need a cesarean delivery.

B.

Advise the patient not to work for the remainder of the pregnancy.

C.

Suggest acupuncture to help with placental migration.

D.

Repeat ultrasonography at 32 weeks’ gestation.

E.

Explain to the patient that she is at high risk for bleeding.

Question 42

A patient ' s mother comes to you with a prospective cohort study linking autism to the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine. After reviewing the study carefully, you question the results because of problems with the study design and execution. Which one of the following sources of error would be most important in the study design or execution?

Options:

A.

Reporting standard error with point estimates of difference

B.

Vaccine company sponsorship of study

C.

Recruitment of study families at an autism seminar

D.

Parental recall of vaccine administration

E.

Not accounting for all potential confounders during recruitment

Question 43

A 34-year-old woman, gravida 3, para 2, comes to your office for prenatal care. Past medical history includes 2 precipitous uncomplicated term deliveries of infants greater than 4200 g. Which one of the following is she most at risk of developing?

Options:

A.

No identifiable risks.

B.

Postpartum hemorrhage.

C.

Pre-term delivery.

D.

Gestational hypertension.

E.

Deep vein thrombosis.

Question 44

A 35-year-old woman presents to your clinic with double vision and a gritty sensation in her eyes for the past several weeks. On examination, you notice her eyes are bulging. There is inflammation of her conjunctivae and swelling around her eyes. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Orbital pseudotumor

B.

Myasthenia gravis

C.

Allergic conjunctivitis

D.

Periorbital cellulitis

E.

Graves ophthalmopathy

Question 45

A 91-year-old man comes to the Emergency Department reporting blood in his stools, which has now resolved. He is able to give a history and mentions that this also happened 2 years ago. At that time, a colonoscopy was done and revealed diverticular disease as the cause. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Perform a computed tomography colonoscopy.

B.

Order a fecal immunochemical test (FIT).

C.

Reassure him that a colonoscopy does not need to be repeated.

D.

Recommend a surgical resection of the diverticular disease.

E.

Discuss the issue with his family before making a decision.

Question 46

You have just completed a well-baby check on a 6-month-old in the office where you have recently begun to practice. You ask the registered nurse to give the immunizations. She refuses, saying this is not within her scope of practice. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Insist that she give the immunizations as she should be competent to do so.

B.

Offer to be present while she gives the immunizations so that she will be supervised.

C.

Contact the provincial/territorial nursing regulatory body to make a complaint about her.

D.

Recognize your error in making the request and refrain from asking again.

E.

Give the immunizations yourself and then discuss the matter with the nurse later.

Question 47

You are treating a 78-year-old man for recent onset of diarrhea, tenesmus, and minor bleeding when he wipes. He has a history of prostate cancer that was treated by radiotherapy. Rectal examination findings are normal. Colonoscopy reveals a pale rectum with ulcerations and areas of mucosal hemorrhage. Which one of the following is the most likely explanation for this clinical presentation?

Options:

A.

Radiation proctitis

B.

Ulcerative colitis

C.

Diverticulosis

D.

Recurrent prostate cancer

E.

Rectal cancer

Question 48

A 10-day-old boy is brought to the Emergency Department with a fever. The newborn looks well. Other than a rectal temperature of 38.6 °C, findings of the physical examination are unremarkable. When you list all the recommended testing their baby will have to undergo, the parents become upset at all the testing their baby will have to undergo. Which one of the following is the best approach?

Options:

A.

Inform the parents that child protection services may be contacted if they refuse care.

B.

Advise the parents that their child will not remember painful procedures.

C.

Reassure the parents that their child will be given an appropriate analgesic.

D.

Proceed with testing and address the parents ' concerns afterwards.

E.

Encourage the parents not to be present during the procedures.

Question 49

You are a family physician caring for a healthy 60-year-old woman. Which one of the following preventative interventions is most useful?

Options:

A.

Cervical cytology every year.

B.

Fasting lipid profile every year.

C.

Bone densitometry every 2 years.

D.

Mammography every 2 years.

E.

Fasting blood glucose every year.

Question 50

A 45-year-old man presents to your clinic for follow-up regarding his obsessive-compulsive disorder. He currently takes a high dosage of paroxetine, which he would like to discontinue because he feels well. His condition has been stable taking this medication since he was discharged from inpatient care 2 years ago. Which one of the following is the most appropriate recommendation?

Options:

A.

Maintain the current dosage of paroxetine.

B.

Reduce the dosage of paroxetine by 50%.

C.

Discontinue paroxetine and refer for supportive psychotherapy.

D.

Switch paroxetine to sertraline.

Question 51

A 17-year-old boy presents to your clinic with a 6-month history of recurrent headaches. The headaches are excruciating, and he describes them as a stabbing pain, usually around his right eye. They occur several times daily for 2 to 3 weeks and recur every few months. The headaches are associated with tearing from his right eye and tend to get worse when he is overtired. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Sinusitis

B.

Migraine

C.

Brain tumour

D.

Cluster headache

E.

Post-concussive headache

Question 52

A 44-year-old woman presents to the office to discuss contraception. During the gynecologic examination, you notice an anterior cystocele to the hymenal ring. The woman denies any bulge symptoms but does report dribbling of urine, especially when she coughs or jogs.

Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Vaginal hysterectomy

B.

Topical estrogen

C.

Urology consultation

D.

Pelvic-floor physiotherapy

E.

No impact sports

Question 53

A 28-year-old woman presents to your office with a 6-month history of intermittent dizziness associated with nausea and a rotational sensation. Physical examination shows pallor of 1 optic disk, generalized hyperreflexia and nystagmus to the left. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Acoustic neuroma.

B.

Labyrinthitis.

C.

Ménière disease.

D.

Multiple sclerosis.

E.

Prolactinoma.

Question 54

You are counselling a couple that is concerned about the risk that their second child could be affected by the same X-linked recessive disorder (hemophilia A) as their last child, a boy. Neither parent has this disorder. What is the probability that their second child will be affected?

Options:

A.

25% if the child is a girl

B.

25% if the child is a boy

C.

50% if the child is a girl

D.

50% if the child is a boy

E.

100% whether the child is a boy or a girl

Question 55

A 45-year-old woman presents to your clinic for follow-up regarding her asthma. She is planning to attend a cultural event that includes ceremonial burning of tobacco. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Ask if tobacco smoke triggers the patient’s asthma.

B.

Update the chart to indicate that the patient smokes.

C.

Counsel the patient on the health effects of tobacco.

D.

Advise the patient to avoid tobacco exposure.

Question 56

A 63-year-old man is brought to the Emergency Department by ambulance after he injured his abdomen. While working on a house, he fell 1 m from a scaffold and landed on a metal pipe. He is clinically stable but reports localized abdominal pain. On examination, he has a 17-cm laceration to his abdomen in the left hypochondrium. The laceration is 4 cm deep, but there is no fascial laceration. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Primary repair of the laceration.

B.

Abdominal computed tomography.

C.

Surgical debridement and delayed closure.

D.

Antibiotic irrigation of the wound.

E.

Exploratory laparotomy.

Question 57

A 3-year-old boy is brought to your office because his daycare teachers are concerned about his language development. His parents speak both English and French at home, and he can say around 15 words combined in both languages. His history reveals that he has minimal interest in playing with other children. Which one of the following is most appropriate?

Options:

A.

Reassure that no intervention is needed.

B.

Evaluate for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

C.

Refer to a pediatric neurologist.

D.

Screen for autism spectrum disorder.

E.

Recommend use of one language at home.

Question 58

You have been asked to develop a program in your hospital for people who are at the highest risk of death by suicide. The hospital administrator asks you to describe the types of patients they should expect in the program. Which one of the following groups is the most likely prominent demographic?

Options:

A.

Men aged 50 to 70 years who have limited social supports and alcohol use disorder

B.

Women aged 20 to 40 years who have cluster B personality disorders and experience relationship losses

C.

Men aged 11 to 20 years who have histories of juvenile delinquency and narcotic use

D.

Women aged 14 to 20 years who have histories of being abused and who are experiencing financial hardships

E.

Patients of both sexes who have psychotic disorders

Question 59

A new patient, a 19-year-old man, presents to your office with low back pain. He has a history of opioid dependence and is now on a methadone maintenance treatment program. He is requesting opiate analgesics. After examination, you decide not to prescribe opiates for pain control. The patient gets upset and threatens to file a complaint with your licensing authority. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Prescribe a small amount of oral opiate.

B.

Give a single opiate injection.

C.

Direct him to his methadone management program.

D.

Call the police to have the patient removed from the office.

E.

Send him for a lumbar spinal radiography.

Question 60

A 20-year-old man is brought by a friend to the emergency department with an elevated temperature, generalized muscle rigidity, hypovolemia, a fluctuating level of consciousness, and impaired attention. The patient also may be responding to auditory hallucinations. The friend informs you that the patient overdosed with a prescribed medication. Which one of the following medications is most likely to cause these symptoms?

Options:

A.

Lamotrigine

B.

Amitriptyline

C.

Risperidone

D.

Lithium carbonate

E.

Lorazepam

Question 61

A 1-month-old boy is brought to your clinic after being born with asymmetric intrauterine growth restriction (third percentile at birth). He was born at 36 weeks’ gestation. He has been breastfeeding well and continues to grow around the third percentile. Which one of the following would be the best next step?

Options:

A.

High-dose vitamin D supplementation.

B.

Early introduction of solid foods.

C.

Switch to a hydrolyzed formula.

D.

Caloric-fortified feeding.

Question 62

A 42-year-old businessman known to have type 2 diabetes and ischemic heart disease is admitted to hospital with acute coronary syndrome. He admits to drinking 4 beers a day for the last 6 years and to binge drinking twice a year when his school buddies are in town. Your chart review reveals that he had a seizure secondary to alcohol withdrawal during his last admission. Which one of the following elements of his history puts him at highest risk of having another such seizure?

Options:

A.

The quantity of alcohol he consumes daily.

B.

His medical comorbidities.

C.

His previous episode of alcohol withdrawal.

D.

His binge drinking.

E.

The number of years he has consumed alcohol.

Question 63

A 34-year-old woman, gravida 2, para 1, aborta 0, presents to the labor and delivery ward at 32 weeks ' gestation with a 24-hour history of worsening frontal headache, photophobia, and neck stiffness. Vitals:

BP: 121/78 mm Hg

HR: 90 bpm

Temp: 38°C

Neuro exam reveals a 2-beat ankle clonus. Tone and power are otherwise normal. No localizing signs or papilledema. Abdomen is soft, fetus is cephalic.

Which one of the following is the best next investigation?

Options:

A.

Computed tomography of the head

B.

Lumbar puncture

C.

Fetal ultrasonography

D.

Amniocentesis with culture

E.

Urine protein to creatinine ratio

Question 64

A 70-year-old woman had a total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy 2 days ago. On examination today, her vital signs are as follows: She has been immobile since her operation. She is fatigued but is tolerating a full diet. Which one of the following is the most likely cause of this patient ' s fever?

Options:

A.

Septic pelvic thrombophlebitis.

B.

Pulmonary embolism.

C.

Wound infection.

D.

Bowel trauma during the operation.

E.

Atelectasis

Question 65

A 67-year-old man presents to the clinic because of elevated liver enzymes. He is asymptomatic. His medical history is significant for type 2 diabetes, which is being treated with metformin. On physical examination, he looks well. His blood pressure is 125/75 mm Hg, his heart rate is 80/min, and his BMI is 35. Findings of the remainder of the examination are normal. His blood work results are as follows:

Platelet count: 170 × 10⁹/L (130–380)

Creatinine: normal

GGT: 75 µmol/L (49–93)

ALT: 146 IU/L (15–85)

AST: 101 IU/L (17–63)

Bilirubin (total): 17 µmol/L (3–17)

INR: 1.2 (0.9–1.2)

Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Acute hepatitis B infection

B.

Carcinoma of the pancreas

C.

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis

D.

Metformin effect

E.

Hepatocellular carcinoma

Question 66

A 39-year-old woman comes to see you for her periodic health examination. Her father died at 55 of colon cancer, and she is concerned about the possible risk of her developing bowel cancer. Which one of the following would you advise her in terms of screening for colorectal cancer?

Options:

A.

Immediate sigmoidoscopy.

B.

Computed tomography colonography at age 50.

C.

Fecal immunochemical test (FIT) annually.

D.

Double contrast barium enema now.

E.

Colonoscopy at age 40.

Question 67

An 80-year-old man is admitted to hospital with what turns out to be tuberculosis. The attending physician informs all staff at the hospital of the patient ' s identity and diagnosis. Which one of the following best describes privacy concerns in this situation?

Options:

A.

The patient is not owed a right to privacy as he is a risk to others.

B.

The patient must give consent before others are told of his illness.

C.

Physicians ought only to reveal minimal patient-related information needed to protect others.

D.

Attending physicians may not disclose a patient ' s private health information to protect others.

E.

Physicians cannot be held liable if there is a breach of patient privacy.

Question 68

A 77-year-old woman is brought to the Emergency Department by ambulance because she has severe heel ulcers and dehydration. Her husband reports that she has been sick for the past 6 to 8 weeks with a cough and congestion. He shares that he has tried to bring her to medical attention on several occasions, but she refused. The paramedics reported that her bed at home was soiled and that they could hardly reach her room due to clutter. On questioning, her answers seem reasonable. Which one of the following is the most critical next step?

Options:

A.

Assess the patient’s decision-making ability

B.

Find out whether the husband has a criminal record

C.

Obtain pictures to confirm the state of their house

D.

Determine whether the patient has alcohol or substance use disorder

E.

Assess the risk of financial abuse by her husband

Question 69

A 19-year-old woman returns to your clinic to discuss her recent laboratory tests. She initially presented with dysuria, dyspareunia, and abnormal uterine bleeding. Her vulvovaginal examination was normal. Her last sexual encounter was 3 weeks prior to the onset of her symptoms. Which one of the following pathogens is most likely to explain this clinical presentation?

Options:

A.

Actinomyces israelii

B.

Herpes simplex virus

C.

Treponema pallidum

D.

Human papillomavirus

E.

Chlamydia trachomatis

Question 70

A 69-year-old woman with long-standing hypertension presents to the emergency department with a 2-hour history of persistent chest and back pain. A posteroanterior chest radiograph shows suspicious widening of the mediastinal shadow. Which one of the following is most likely to yield a clinical diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Transthoracic echocardiography

B.

Computed tomography of the chest

C.

Electrocardiography

D.

Ventilation-perfusion lung scan

E.

Pulmonary angiography

Question 71

A 46-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with left-sided pleuritic chest pain that improves when she sits up and leans forward. Her medical history is unremarkable and she takes no medications. Examination reveals a pericardial friction rub; the findings are otherwise normal. An electrocardiogram reveals diffuse ST segment elevation and PR interval depression. An echocardiogram reveals a small pericardial effusion. Which one of the following is the most appropriate treatment?

Options:

A.

High-dose acetylsalicylic acid.

B.

Apixaban.

C.

Pericardiocentesis.

D.

Levofloxacin.

E.

Metoprolol.

Question 72

A 78-year-old man presents to the office with urinary hesitancy, straining to void his bladder, and a sensation of incomplete bladder emptying. On history, he has a BMI of 36 and type 2 diabetes. Which one of the following medications would most likely help the patient’s symptoms?

Options:

A.

Nitrofurantoin.

B.

Fesoterodine.

C.

Empagliflozin.

D.

Hydrochlorothiazide.

E.

Tamsulosin.

Question 73

A 31-year-old woman, gravida 1, para 0, presents to Labour and Delivery with regular contractions at approximately 24 weeks’ gestation. As you review her prenatal records, which one of the following is the most reliable way of establishing gestational age?

Options:

A.

Serial ultrasound in 3rd trimester.

B.

Crown-rump length at 8–12 weeks.

C.

Last menstrual period.

D.

Mid 2nd trimester ultrasound.

E.

Symphysis fundal height.

Question 74

A 31-year-old woman, gravida 4, para 3, aborta 0, presents at 8 weeks’ gestation with scant vaginal bleeding and no abdominal pain. Her heart rate is 90/min and blood pressure is 100/70 mm Hg. A speculum examination reveals a closed cervix. The beta–human chorionic gonadotropin level is 300,000 IU/L. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Tubal pregnancy.

B.

Molar pregnancy.

C.

Incomplete abortion.

D.

Threatened abortion.

E.

Implantation bleeding.

Question 75

A 4-month-old boy is brought to the office by his parents to ask about the rotavirus vaccine. They would like to avoid the possibility of the infant coming down with gastroenteritis. Their older child was hospitalized with gastroenteritis at age 10 months. They have a friend who had intussusception after getting the rotavirus immunization, and they are worried about a possible link to the vaccine. Which one of the following is the most appropriate response?

Options:

A.

The vaccine is recommended as the risk of intussusception is extremely low.

B.

The risk of intussusception is markedly increased after vaccination but is offset by a decrease in severe diarrhea.

C.

Intussusception is an easily treatable condition.

D.

Intussusception only occurs in 1- to 3-year-old children, so any risk to the infant is minimal.

E.

Rotavirus infection is generally self-limited, so routine vaccination is not encouraged unless there are comorbidities.

Question 76

A 60-year-old man presents because of a 6-month history of involuntary lip smacking and tongue movements. His medical history is significant for schizophrenia, which has been very stable with haloperidol for the past 20 years. When educating the patient about these particular symptoms, which one of the following statements is accurate?

Options:

A.

These movements occur in the majority of patients who are taking antipsychotics

B.

His condition is potentially irreversible

C.

The symptoms will gradually decrease in intensity as he gets older

D.

Anticholinergics are effective treatments for this condition

Question 77

A 6-week-old boy is brought to your office by his parents for a follow-up following a recent urinary tract infection. His abdominal ultrasound shows dilated urinary bladder and ureters as well as bilateral hydronephrosis. Which one of the following historical findings would be most helpful in establishing the correct diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Recent circumcision

B.

Macroscopic hematuria

C.

Poor urinary stream

D.

Malodorous urine

E.

Crying during micturition

Question 78

A 38-year-old man presents to the office for a follow-up visit. For several years, he has been having constant abdominal pain and intermittent constipation. He struggles to fall asleep because he is worried about his symptoms, and he often spends hours researching possible investigations and causes. Although he recently had extensive investigations, which have all had normal results, he continues to visit multiple physicians hoping for more investigations. He worries that he will die because no one is taking him seriously. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Consult general internal medicine.

B.

Repeat investigations to confirm the results are unchanged.

C.

Schedule monthly appointments to discuss the patient’s concerns.

D.

Prescribe a regular exercise routine.

Question 79

A 3-year-old boy is brought to the office because he has progressive weight gain and short stature. He has marked truncal obesity, hypertrichosis of the upper lip, and facial swelling. Which one of the following is a physical examination most likely to reveal?

Options:

A.

Café-au-lait spots

B.

Hypertension

C.

Thyroid goiter

D.

Hepatomegaly

E.

Acanthosis

Question 80

A 37-year-old woman diagnosed with schizophrenia comes to her family physician because she has been choking on her food lately. She has a history of mild spasmodic dysphonia. She was recently started on haloperidol for auditory hallucinations. Which one of the following is the best short-term management?

Options:

A.

Change the haloperidol to quetiapine

B.

Arrange for an urgent laryngoscopy

C.

Begin dantrolene

D.

Provide reassurance

E.

Start lorazepam

Question 81

A 25-year-old woman presents to the Emergency Department with a 2-hour history of pelvic pain associated with no other symptoms. The first day of her last menstrual period was 14 days ago. On examination, her vital signs are as follows:

Blood pressure

108/72 mm Hg

Heart rate

110/min

Temperature

37 °C

Abdominal examination reveals rebound tenderness and guarding. Pelvic examination reveals exquisite left adnexal tenderness. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Diverticulitis

B.

Appendicitis

C.

Adenomyosis

D.

Endometriosis

E.

Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst

Question 82

A 24-year-old man is brought to the Emergency Department by ambulance with a severe pelvic fracture from a motor vehicle collision. After resuscitation and stabilization, he is noted to have a bloody penile discharge. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Retrograde urethrography.

B.

Voiding cystography.

C.

Transrectal ultrasound.

D.

Sonography of penis.

E.

Foley catheter and continuous bladder irrigation.

Question 83

A 45-year-old man with a developmental delay and a history of disruptive behavior presents to the clinic looking for his family doctor. He is well known to the clinic. He appears drunk and has accidentally broken 2 large beer bottles in the waiting room but remains calm. The office staff requests your help to deal with this situation. Which one of the following is the most appropriate initial step?

Options:

A.

Call the police, given the patient ' s presentation.

B.

Instruct the office staff to ignore him and let him calm down.

C.

Tell the patient that his behavior is unacceptable and ask him to leave.

D.

Assess the patient promptly.

E.

Call the social work crisis intervention team.

Question 84

A 30-year-old woman presents to the office with her partner and reports that they are planning for her to conceive soon. They visited Mexico recently and are concerned about exposure to the Zika virus. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Refer the couple to an infectious disease specialist

B.

Request serologic testing

C.

Recommend ceasing conception until 3 months after the couple ' s return to Canada

D.

Explain that condoms are ineffective in preventing sexual transmission of Zika virus

E.

Prescribe a prophylactic antiviral medication

Question 85

A 34-year-old woman, gravida 3, para 2, aborta 0, presents at 38 weeks ' gestation. She is in early labor with ruptured membranes. Her previous pregnancy was complicated by fever during labor. Which one of the following would increase the risk of fever recurrence?

Options:

A.

Multiparity

B.

Precipitous labor

C.

Advanced maternal age

D.

Epidural analgesia

Question 86

A 53-year-old man presents to the Emergency Department with a 3-week history of believing his neighbor is poisoning him by pumping gas through his home’s air vent. He appears distracted, irritable, and is speaking very quickly. He has a family history of depression. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Delirium

B.

Malingering

C.

Brief psychotic disorder

D.

Bipolar I disorder

E.

Psychotic disorder secondary to traumatic brain injury

Question 87

A 26-year-old man presents with pain, numbness, and weakness in his right upper extremity. He works as a computer programmer, and his BMI is 32. Symptoms have worsened since he started spending more time on the keyboard. He reports that his right hand feels clumsier while he is typing. Physical examination reveals mild weakness in the intrinsic muscles of that hand, with a positive Tinel sign at the ulnar nerve. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Wrist splint to test for carpal tunnel.

B.

Physiotherapy.

C.

Elbow extension brace for use during sleep.

D.

Magnetic resonance imaging of the cervical spine.

E.

Nerve conduction studies to localize the level of the lesion.

Question 88

A 65-year-old man presents to your clinic with a 2-month history of persistent erectile dysfunction. He reports having difficulties maintaining an erection. His last hemoglobin A1c level result was 6.4% (4.8–6.0). He had a negative result on his cardiac stress test 1 month ago. He has been taking stable dosages of citalopram, metformin, and ramipril for the past 2 years. His physical examination findings are normal, and his mood appears euthymic. Which one of the following investigations should be ordered before initiating treatment with sildenafil?

Options:

A.

Complete blood count.

B.

Echocardiography.

C.

Prostate-specific antigen.

D.

Urine culture.

E.

No further investigations.

Question 89

A 62-year-old man (wealthy philanthropist) with emphysema from smoking and a 21-year-old woman (elementary teacher) with cystic fibrosis are both compatible matches for a lung transplant. Which criterion determines organ allocation?

Options:

A.

The patient’s value and contributions to society.

B.

The patient has family members who rely on them for income.

C.

Whether the underlying condition is due to self-induced illness.

D.

The clinical severity of the patient’s pulmonary disease.

E.

The date the patient was placed on the waiting list.

Question 90

A 37-year-old man comes to the office for follow-up of his opioid use disorder. He receives opioid agonist treatment, including some take-home doses. At this follow-up visit, he reports some nonprescription opioid use since his last visit. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Taper the dosage of the opioid agonist

B.

Discontinue take-home doses

C.

Increase the frequency of follow-up visits

D.

Prescribe a cannabinoid

E.

Slowly taper and discontinue the opioid agonist

Question 91

A 67-year-old woman presents with headaches, muscle weakness, pain in her shoulders and hips, weight loss, and depression. While also arranging appropriate investigations to confirm a diagnosis, which one of the following is the most important objective of treatment?

Options:

A.

Improve the shoulder and hip pain.

B.

Prevent headaches from worsening.

C.

Alleviate the depression.

D.

Prevent blindness.

E.

Prevent jaw claudication.

Question 92

A 3.5-year-old girl has developed a stutter in the last 3 months. She repeats whole words several times before finishing a sentence. Her paternal uncle had a severe stuttering issue as a child. She has reached the developmental milestones for her age. Her new sibling was born 4 months ago. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Speech therapy.

B.

Audiology assessment.

C.

Cognitive behavior therapy.

D.

Play therapy for adjustment issues.

E.

Reassurance that this issue is common and transient.

Question 93

A 72-year-old man presents to your office with reports of a hard lump slowly enlarging in the right inguinal area. He is otherwise healthy. Which one of the following is most likely to reveal the cause of his lump?

Options:

A.

Digital rectal examination.

B.

Sexual history.

C.

Examination of the testicles.

D.

Palpation of the liver.

E.

Palpation of the spleen.

Question 94

A 72-year-old man reports that his wife says he has hearing trouble. Examination reveals that air conduction on the right side is less than on the left side and greater than bone conduction bilaterally. He hears a tuning fork placed on the top of his head better with his left ear. Which one of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?

Options:

A.

Computed tomography scan of the head.

B.

Audiometry.

C.

Magnetic resonance imaging of the posterior fossa.

D.

Wax removal from the ears by irrigation.

E.

Hearing aid.

Question 95

A couple is diagnosed with primary infertility secondary to azoospermia. They are not interested in in vitro fertilization techniques, so you recommend insemination with a sperm donor. The male partner is hesitant. He thinks he might have difficulty accepting raising a child who is not biologically his. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Arranging a consultation with a psychologist

B.

Tell the couple adoption is a better option

C.

Suggest transfer of care to another physician

D.

Propose a trial of ovulation induction with gonadotropins

E.

Recommend that the donor be a person who is known and significant to the couple

Question 96

A 78-year-old man presents to the Emergency Department with chest pain. His electrocardiogram and blood work confirm an acute myocardial infarction. He is admitted to the Intensive Care Unit. Three days later, he develops right-sided abdominal pain. An ultrasonogram reveals an inflamed gallbladder with no evidence of stones. He does not improve after 48 hours of antibiotics. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Broaden antibiotic therapy

B.

Arrange for endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography

C.

Send for laparoscopic cholecystectomy

D.

Arrange for percutaneous cholecystostomy

E.

Send for hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid (HIDA) scan

Question 97

A 35-year-old patient presents to your clinic for assessment of a chronic rash. With the patient’s consent, you take a photo of the rash and upload it to their electronic medical record. You explain that you would like to consult with a specialist. That evening, you post a description of the rash to your online physicians’ group, being careful to anonymize the details. You get a direct message from a physician who says they have extra training in dermatology and they ask you for a photo of the rash. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Text the anonymized photo directly to the physician.

B.

Verify the clinic contact details for the physician and send the photo via secure portal.

C.

Explain to the physician why you cannot share any photos.

D.

Call the patient and ask permission to send the photo.

Question 98

You are conducting a virtual appointment by voice-only call with a 68-year-old man regarding back pain. When he answers, you ask for him by name and identify yourself and the clinic from which you are calling. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Establish the reason for the virtual care visit.

B.

Confirm the name of the patient ' s primary care provider.

C.

Ask for additional confirmation of the patient ' s identity.

Question 99

A 62-year-old woman presents with abdominal pain, fever and chills. She was hospitalized 4 weeks ago for sigmoid diverticulitis. She felt well after her discharge from hospital until 5 days ago when the fever started. She is now anorexic. On examination, she has right upper quadrant pain and her temperature is 38.5 °C. Which one of the following investigations is most likely to confirm the diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Chest radiography.

B.

Abdominal radiography.

C.

Ultrasound of abdomen.

D.

Cholescintigraphy (HIDA scan).

E.

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography.

Question 100

A 67-year-old man underwent his first endoscopy. He has long-term reflux and heartburn, treated intermittently with antacids. Biopsies of the distal esophagus reveal Barrett epithelium. Which one of the following is most important in determining the frequency of surveillance endoscopy?

Options:

A.

Length of Barrett segment

B.

Depth of intestinal metaplasia

C.

Stricture formation

D.

Grade of dysplasia

E.

Family history of gastrointestinal malignancy

Question 101

A 56-year-old woman with a 4-year history of fibromyalgia presents for follow-up. She reports that she is struggling with her health and daily life. She is unhappy with her lack of progress and says she feels tired all the time and stays in bed all day. When asked why, she states she is confused about why she is not getting better. Physical exam and investigations are unchanged from baseline. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Prescribe cannabinoid therapy

B.

Initiate iron and vitamin B12 supplementation

C.

Educate the patient about her illness

D.

Start a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor

Question 102

A 34-year-old man sustained a blunt testicular trauma 2 hours ago. On physical examination, the patient has a 1.5-cm tall scrotal hematoma. You cannot palpate the testicle. Which one of the following is the best initial management?

Options:

A.

Observe for 24 hours and discharge if stable

B.

Plan surgical exploration

C.

Order ultrasonography of the scrotum

D.

Order a technetium 99m pertechnetate scan

E.

Discharge with analgesics

Question 103

A 38-year-old woman presents with diffuse nodularity in the outer upper quadrant of her right breast. There is no obvious dominant mass, nipple discharge, or skin dimpling. There are no palpable lymph nodes. Which one of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

Options:

A.

Fibrocystic change

B.

Paget disease

C.

Intraductal carcinoma

D.

Benign phyllodes tumour

E.

Mastitis

Question 104

A 60-year-old woman presents with a 7-day history of bloody diarrhea and diffuse mild abdominal tenderness. Stool tests (culture, ova/parasites) are negative. Which one of the following is the best next step?

Options:

A.

Prescribe broad-spectrum antibiotics.

B.

Order a diagnostic colonoscopy.

C.

Recommend symptomatic observation.

D.

Recommend a trial of loperamide.

E.

Prescribe tapered-dose steroids.

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