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Renal & Urology — MCQs

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73 questions
5 chapters
Q1

A 65-year-old man presents with painless hematuria. Cystoscopy shows a bladder tumor. Histology confirms transitional cell carcinoma. What is the most important risk factor for this condition?

Q2

A 29-year-old woman at 32 weeks gestation presents to the obstetric assessment unit with headache and right upper quadrant pain. She has no significant past medical history. Blood pressure is 168/112 mmHg. Blood tests show: haemoglobin 102 g/L, platelets 88 × 10^9/L, ALT 245 U/L, AST 312 U/L, bilirubin 34 μmol/L, creatinine 145 μmol/L (booking creatinine was 68 μmol/L), LDH 680 U/L. Urinalysis shows protein 3+. Peripheral blood film shows schistocytes. What is the most appropriate immediate management?

Q3

A 38-year-old man with chronic kidney disease stage 5 (eGFR 10 mL/min/1.73m²) secondary to focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is being prepared for renal replacement therapy. He has preserved urine output of approximately 1500 mL per day. He works full-time as a teacher and wishes to minimize time spent on dialysis. Blood tests show: haemoglobin 108 g/L, potassium 5.1 mmol/L, phosphate 1.72 mmol/L, albumin 36 g/L. He has good manual dexterity and lives with his partner. Which renal replacement modality would be most appropriate to offer first?

Q4

A 71-year-old woman with type 2 diabetes and hypertension is admitted with sepsis secondary to pneumonia. On admission, her creatinine is 156 μmol/L (baseline 98 μmol/L two months ago). She is treated with IV fluids and antibiotics. On day 3, her creatinine rises to 298 μmol/L. Urinalysis shows: protein 2+, blood negative, leucocytes negative. Urine microscopy reveals muddy brown casts. Renal ultrasound shows normal-sized kidneys with no obstruction. What is the most likely diagnosis?

Q5

A 48-year-old woman with no significant past medical history presents to the emergency department with a 6-hour history of severe right loin pain. CT KUB confirms a 5 mm stone at the right pelviureteric junction with mild hydronephrosis. She is afebrile. Blood tests show: white cells 9.2 × 10^9/L, CRP 8 mg/L, creatinine 78 μmol/L. Urinalysis shows blood 3+, leucocytes 1+, nitrites negative. She has been given adequate analgesia with diclofenac and morphine. What is the most appropriate next step in her management?

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