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Pass the Medical Council of Canada MCCQE Part 1 MCCQE Questions and answers with Dumpstech

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Viewing questions 11-20 out of questions
Questions # 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

Questions # 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.

Questions # 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.

Questions # 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.

Questions # 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.

Questions # 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

Questions # 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.

Questions # 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

Questions # 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

Questions # 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

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