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Retired NBME Step 2 CK Form 7 Answers

step2ck_form7/Block 4/Question#43 (reveal difficulty score)
A 51-year-old woman had a 15-minute episode ...
Observation ๐Ÿ” / ๐Ÿ“บ / ๐ŸŒณ / ๐Ÿ“–
tags: surgery pulm

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submitted by โˆ—step_prep5(246)
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  • Middle-aged woman who had a right subclavian catheter placed (which is common NBME risk factor for pneumothorax) and then developed right-sided chest pain and dyspnea with normal O2 saturation and a small (10%) apical pneumothorax who should be managed with observation
  • Key idea: If patient had a tension pneumothorax (medical emergency requiring immediate needle decompression or chest tube placement), they would have hemodynamic instability and tracheal deviation away from the affected side
  • Key idea: Patients with a small, largely asymptomatic pneumothorax can be conservatively managed with observation and repeat chest x-ray hours later
  • https://www.mrinz.ac.nz/2020/01/30/psp-nejm/

https://step-prep.org/tutoring/

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submitted by โˆ—hayayah(1212)
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Initial management for a small (< 2 cm), spontaneous pneumothorax: observation and supplemental O2

Initial management for a large pneumothorax in a hemodynamically stable patient: Needle decompression

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Whoops. This is for the question regarding the 51 yo and the 10% apical pneumothorax. Not the 60 yo with the sliding hiatal hernia.

+1/- hayayah(1212)


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submitted by โˆ—thomasalterman(181)
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The PTX is sufficiently small to be managed with observation. The criteria vary. FA says โ‰ค 2 cm, which doesn't help for this question.

The following article has advice regarding an asymptomatic apical PTX but the advice don't apply to this patient who is symptomatic.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4203987/

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