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{{WBRQuestion
{{WBRQuestion
|Category=Neurology
|QuestionAuthor=Anonymous (Edited by Will Gibson and Alison Leibowitz)
|SubCategory=Microbiology
|ExamType=USMLE Step 2 CK
|Prompt= A 13-year-old boy is brought to the emergency room for a laceration to his forearm while playing "tag" in a park. He states that he cut himself on a broken bottle when he fell and is otherwise in too much pain to answer history questions. His father quickly arrives at the hospital and tells you that they have just moved to the area from out of state and his medical records are unavailable. Although he states he doesn't know his son's immunization history, he does deny any known allergies. His physical exam shows a 6-cm open, linear laceration through the dermis and into the subcutaneous fat layer of the left dorsal forearm. His bleeding has slowed to some extent with direct pressure to the wound, and the distal neurovascular status remains unimpaired. You use 1% lidocaine without epinephrine to provide local anesthesia and then explore the wound during debridement. No tendon injury seems apparent and you decide to complete primary closure of the wound. What is the next step in management of this patient?
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|Answer=Complete a rabies antibody screen in case the boy is not being truthful about the injury mechanism.,Start tetanus toxoid primary series.,Give one dose of tetanus toxoid series.,Give tetanus immunoglobulin.  
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|Right Answer=Start tetanus toxoid primary series and give tetanus immunoglobulin.
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|Explanation=This patient has a wound classifiable as "dirty" and also has no certain history of completion of tetanus primary immunization series. Thus, he must be assumed to have not had prior adequate tetanus immunization and should be given both tetanus immunoglobulin and the primary series.
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|MainCategory=Internal medicine
|SubCategory=Oncology, Oncology
|Prompt=A 52-year-old man presents to his primary care physician for recent fatigue, low-grade fever, anorexia, and pruritus. He states that he can feel small bumps under the skin in his neck and that they seem to become painful when he drinks alcohol.  Laboratory studies reveal the following:
 
WBC - 6,500/mm 3
 
Hematocrit - 45%
 
Hemoglobin - 15 g/dL
 
Creatinine - 0.8 mg/dL
 
Glucose - 85 mg/dL           
 
You refer him to a surgeon to obtain a lymph node biopsy. The histology of the biopsy taken is shown below:
[[File:Reed-Sternberg (Hodgkin's Lymphoma).jpg]]
 
What is the most likely diagnosis?
|Explanation=This patient has many classic signs of [[lymphoma]] which are: low-grade fever, night sweats, weight loss, itchy skin (pruritus), or fatigue. Classically, involved nodes are painful after alcohol consumption, though this phenomenon is rare. Patients may also present with a cyclic high-grade fever known as Pel-Ebstein fever.  Systemic symptoms such as fever and weight loss are known as B symptoms. The laboratory results are indicative of an early disease.
 
The biopsy picture shown above reveals the presence of complete or partial effacement of the lymph node architecture by scattered large malignant cells known as [[Reed-Sternberg cells]] (typical and variants) admixed within a reactive cell infiltrate composed of variable proportions of lymphocytes, histiocytes, eosinophils, and plasma cells. The Reed-Sternberg cells are identified as large often bi-nucleated cells with prominent nucleoli and an unusual CD45-, CD30+, CD15+/- immunophenotype. In approximately 50% of cases, the Reed-Sternberg cells are infected by the [[Epstein-Barr virus]].
 
Around one to five percent of patients with Hodgkin's disease experience alcohol-related pain; it is a rare but highly specific presentation for Hodgkin's lymphoma.
 
 
|AnswerA=Tuberculosis
|AnswerAExp=Tuberculosis is a common infectious disease, especially in the developing countries, caused by mycobacteria, mainly ''[[Mycobacterium tuberculosis]]''.  Tuberculosis most commonly attacks the lungs (as pulmonary TB) but can also affect the central nervous system, the lymphatic system, the circulatory system, the genitourinary system, bones, joints and even the skin. The presence of acid-fast-bacilli (AFB) on a sputum smear or other specimen often indicates TB disease (at least 10,000c is needed on the smear to get a postive acid fast bacilli (AFB) stain).
|AnswerB=Hepatitis
|AnswerBExp=Although this is highly unlikely. Hepatitis refers to liver injury characterized by presence of inflammatory cells in the liver tissue. The symptoms include:  Abdominal pain or distention, breast development in males, dark urine and pale or clay-colored stools, fatigue, fever, itching, jaundice (yellowing of the skin or eyes), loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, and weight loss.
 
Hepatitis typically causes a rise in liver function tests. In particular, there is often a disproportionate rise in transaminases relative to the alkaline phosphatase, but this is not universal and the pattern can be suggestive of cause. Hepatitis is usually diagnosed by serological tests, depending on the cause.
 
 
|AnswerC=Metastatic cancer
|AnswerCExp=This is unlikely due to the absence of classic symptoms of malignancy in this patient such as weight loss and derangement of laboratory parameters.
|AnswerD=Non Hodgkin's lymphoma
|AnswerDExp=The presence of Reed-Sternberg cells differentiates Hodgkin's from a non-hodgkin's lymphoma.
|AnswerE=Hodgkin's lymphoma
|AnswerEExp=The histology above demonstrates the presence of Reed-Sternberg cells which is pathognomonic to Hodgkin's lymphoma.
|EducationalObjectives=A middle-aged/elderly patient with lymphadenopathy and classic B symptoms has a high probability of having lymphoma.  The presence of Reed-Sternberg cells on histology confirms the diagnosis of Hodgkin's lymphoma.
|References=First Aid 2012, page 389
 
Bobrove AM (June 1983). "Alcohol-related pain and Hodgkin's disease". The Western Journal of Medicine 138 (6): 874–5.
 
http://www.wikidoc.org/index.php/Hodgkin%27s_lymphoma
|RightAnswer=E
|WBRKeyword=Cancer, Hodgkins, Lymphoma, Leukemia, Histology
|Approved=No
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 23:02, 27 October 2020

 
Author PageAuthor::Anonymous (Edited by Will Gibson and Alison Leibowitz)
Exam Type ExamType::USMLE Step 2 CK
Main Category MainCategory::Internal medicine
Sub Category SubCategory::Oncology, SubCategory::Oncology
Prompt [[Prompt::A 52-year-old man presents to his primary care physician for recent fatigue, low-grade fever, anorexia, and pruritus. He states that he can feel small bumps under the skin in his neck and that they seem to become painful when he drinks alcohol. Laboratory studies reveal the following:

WBC - 6,500/mm 3

Hematocrit - 45%

Hemoglobin - 15 g/dL

Creatinine - 0.8 mg/dL

Glucose - 85 mg/dL

You refer him to a surgeon to obtain a lymph node biopsy. The histology of the biopsy taken is shown below:

What is the most likely diagnosis?]]

Answer A AnswerA::Tuberculosis
Answer A Explanation [[AnswerAExp::Tuberculosis is a common infectious disease, especially in the developing countries, caused by mycobacteria, mainly Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Tuberculosis most commonly attacks the lungs (as pulmonary TB) but can also affect the central nervous system, the lymphatic system, the circulatory system, the genitourinary system, bones, joints and even the skin. The presence of acid-fast-bacilli (AFB) on a sputum smear or other specimen often indicates TB disease (at least 10,000c is needed on the smear to get a postive acid fast bacilli (AFB) stain).]]
Answer B AnswerB::Hepatitis
Answer B Explanation [[AnswerBExp::Although this is highly unlikely. Hepatitis refers to liver injury characterized by presence of inflammatory cells in the liver tissue. The symptoms include: Abdominal pain or distention, breast development in males, dark urine and pale or clay-colored stools, fatigue, fever, itching, jaundice (yellowing of the skin or eyes), loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, and weight loss.

Hepatitis typically causes a rise in liver function tests. In particular, there is often a disproportionate rise in transaminases relative to the alkaline phosphatase, but this is not universal and the pattern can be suggestive of cause. Hepatitis is usually diagnosed by serological tests, depending on the cause.]]

Answer C AnswerC::Metastatic cancer
Answer C Explanation AnswerCExp::This is unlikely due to the absence of classic symptoms of malignancy in this patient such as weight loss and derangement of laboratory parameters.
Answer D AnswerD::Non Hodgkin's lymphoma
Answer D Explanation AnswerDExp::The presence of Reed-Sternberg cells differentiates Hodgkin's from a non-hodgkin's lymphoma.
Answer E AnswerE::Hodgkin's lymphoma
Answer E Explanation AnswerEExp::The histology above demonstrates the presence of Reed-Sternberg cells which is pathognomonic to Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Right Answer RightAnswer::E
Explanation [[Explanation::This patient has many classic signs of lymphoma which are: low-grade fever, night sweats, weight loss, itchy skin (pruritus), or fatigue. Classically, involved nodes are painful after alcohol consumption, though this phenomenon is rare. Patients may also present with a cyclic high-grade fever known as Pel-Ebstein fever. Systemic symptoms such as fever and weight loss are known as B symptoms. The laboratory results are indicative of an early disease.

The biopsy picture shown above reveals the presence of complete or partial effacement of the lymph node architecture by scattered large malignant cells known as Reed-Sternberg cells (typical and variants) admixed within a reactive cell infiltrate composed of variable proportions of lymphocytes, histiocytes, eosinophils, and plasma cells. The Reed-Sternberg cells are identified as large often bi-nucleated cells with prominent nucleoli and an unusual CD45-, CD30+, CD15+/- immunophenotype. In approximately 50% of cases, the Reed-Sternberg cells are infected by the Epstein-Barr virus.

Around one to five percent of patients with Hodgkin's disease experience alcohol-related pain; it is a rare but highly specific presentation for Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Educational Objective: A middle-aged/elderly patient with lymphadenopathy and classic B symptoms has a high probability of having lymphoma. The presence of Reed-Sternberg cells on histology confirms the diagnosis of Hodgkin's lymphoma.
References: First Aid 2012, page 389

Bobrove AM (June 1983). "Alcohol-related pain and Hodgkin's disease". The Western Journal of Medicine 138 (6): 874–5.

http://www.wikidoc.org/index.php/Hodgkin%27s_lymphoma]]

Approved Approved::No
Keyword WBRKeyword::Cancer, WBRKeyword::Hodgkins, WBRKeyword::Lymphoma, WBRKeyword::Leukemia, WBRKeyword::Histology
Linked Question Linked::
Order in Linked Questions LinkedOrder::