Surgery & Specialties
Learn surgical principles and specialty-specific conditions
Surgery & Specialties for Step 2 CK
Master surgical principles and specialty management with free flashcards and spaced repetition practice. This lesson covers acute abdomen evaluation, perioperative care, trauma management, and subspecialty conditionsβessential concepts for USMLE Step 2 CK clinical decision-making.
Welcome to Surgery & Specialties
π₯ Surgery rotations and Step 2 CK questions test your ability to recognize surgical emergencies, understand perioperative management, and know when to consult specialists. Unlike Step 1's focus on mechanisms, Step 2 emphasizes clinical presentation, diagnostic approach, and management decisions. You'll need to differentiate surgical from medical abdomen, recognize complications, understand trauma protocols, and know the basics of major subspecialties including orthopedics, urology, ENT, and ophthalmology.
This comprehensive guide provides a systematic approach to surgical thinking, common presentations, and high-yield specialty topics frequently tested on clinical rotations and Step 2 CK.
Core Concepts in General Surgery
πͺ The Acute Abdomen
The acute abdomen represents a surgical emergency requiring rapid assessment. Your primary task: surgical vs. medical abdomen.
Clinical Approach Framework:
| Component | Key Features | Red Flags |
|---|---|---|
| History | Onset, location, character, radiation, timing | Sudden onset, severe intensity, syncope |
| Exam | Inspection, auscultation before palpation | Peritoneal signs, rigidity, rebound |
| Labs | CBC, CMP, lipase, lactate, pregnancy test | Elevated lactate, leukocytosis with left shift |
| Imaging | Upright CXR (free air), CT abdomen/pelvis | Pneumoperitoneum, portal venous gas |
π‘ Key Principle: Peritoneal signs (guarding, rigidity, rebound tenderness) indicate peritonitis until proven otherwiseβthis mandates surgical consultation.
Common Surgical Emergencies by Quadrant:
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
β ABDOMINAL PAIN LOCALIZATION β
ββββββββββββββββββ¬ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€
β β β
β RUQ β LUQ β
β β’ Cholecyst β β’ Splenic rupture β
β β’ Hepatitis β β’ Gastric ulcer β
β β’ Biliary β β’ Pancreatitis β
β β β
ββββββββββββββββββΌββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€
β β β
β RLQ β LLQ β
β β’ Appendix β β’ Diverticulitis β
β β’ Ectopic β β’ Colon CA β
β β’ Ovary β β’ Ectopic/ovary β
β β β
ββββββββββββββββββ΄ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
Epigastric: PUD, pancreatitis, MI
Periumbilical β RLQ: Appendicitis
Diffuse: Peritonitis, obstruction, ischemia
π§ Mnemonic for Acute Abdomen Ddx: "CRAVE HITS"
- Cholecystitis/Cholangitis
- Ruptured AAA/viscus
- Appendicitis
- Volvulus
- Ectopic pregnancy
- Hernia (incarcerated)
- Ischemic bowel
- Torsion (ovarian/testicular)
- Small bowel obstruction
π Appendicitis: The Classic RLQ Emergency
Presentation:
- Periumbilical pain migrating to McBurney's point (RLQ)
- Anorexia (almost always present)
- Nausea/vomiting AFTER pain onset
- Low-grade fever (>38.5Β°C suggests perforation)
Physical Exam Findings:
- Rovsing sign: RLQ pain with LLQ palpation
- Psoas sign: Pain with right hip extension (retrocecal appendix)
- Obturator sign: Pain with internal rotation of flexed right hip (pelvic appendix)
Diagnosis & Management:
- Clinical diagnosis supported by CT (gold standard) or ultrasound (pregnancy/children)
- Alvarado score can help, but high clinical suspicion β surgery
- Treatment: Appendectomy (laparoscopic preferred) + antibiotics
- Perforated: Broader antibiotics, possible drainage if abscess present
β οΈ Common Mistake: Ordering CT in obvious appendicitis delays surgery. If peritoneal signs present with classic history, proceed to OR.
π©Έ Small Bowel Obstruction (SBO)
Etiology:
- Adhesions (60-70%) - most common, from prior surgery
- Hernias (15-20%) - incarcerated inguinal/femoral
- Malignancy (10-15%)
- Inflammatory (Crohn's strictures)
Classic Presentation: "The 4 Cardinal Symptoms"
- Colicky abdominal pain (cramping, intermittent)
- Nausea and vomiting (bilious early, feculent late)
- Abdominal distension
- Obstipation (no passage of gas or stool)
Diagnosis:
- Upright abdominal X-ray: Multiple air-fluid levels, dilated loops
- CT abdomen/pelvis with IV contrast: Gold standard, identifies transition point
Management Algorithm:
SBO Suspected
β
β
NPO + NGT + IVF + Labs
β
ββββββ΄βββββ
β β
Partial Complete
β β
β β
Trial of Surgical?
Conservative β
β βββββ΄ββββ
β β β
β Signs No signs
β of of
β strang strang
β β β
β β β
β Urgent Continue
β OR Conservative
β 24-48h
βββββββ¬ββββββ
β
Resolution?
β
ββββββ΄βββββ
β β
Yes No
β β
β β
Resume Surgery
Diet
β οΈ STRANGULATION SIGNS (surgical emergency!):
- Fever, tachycardia, peritoneal signs
- Constant (not colicky) pain
- Elevated lactate, leukocytosis
- CT: Bowel wall thickening, pneumatosis, closed-loop obstruction
π‘ Tip: "Water-soluble contrast challenge" (Gastrografin) is both diagnostic and therapeutic for partial SBOβif contrast reaches colon in 24h, likely to resolve.
π₯ Cholecystitis & Biliary Disease
Spectrum of Disease:
| Condition | Presentation | Murphy's Sign | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biliary Colic | RUQ pain 30min-6h after fatty meal, no fever | Negative | Elective cholecystectomy |
| Acute Cholecystitis | RUQ pain >6h, fever, nausea | Positive | Cholecystectomy within 72h |
| Choledocholithiasis | Jaundice, RUQ pain, elevated bilirubin/ALP | Variable | ERCP + sphincterotomy, then cholecystectomy |
| Cholangitis | Charcot triad or Reynolds pentad | Often positive | Urgent ERCP + antibiotics |
π§ Charcot Triad (Cholangitis):
- Fever (with rigors)
- Jaundice
- RUQ pain
Reynolds Pentad = Charcot + sepsis: 4. Altered mental status 5. Hypotension
Diagnostic Approach:
- First test: RUQ ultrasound (stones, wall thickening, pericholecystic fluid)
- If US equivocal: HIDA scan (non-filling GB = cholecystitis)
- For CBD evaluation: MRCP (non-invasive) or EUS
π‘ Clinical Pearl: Elevated alkaline phosphatase out of proportion to transaminases suggests biliary obstruction. If CBD dilated on US (>6mm, or >10mm post-cholecystectomy), think choledocholithiasis.
π Bowel Ischemia
Types & Causes:
| Type | Etiology | Presentation | Key Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute Mesenteric Ischemia | Embolism (afib), thrombosis | "Pain out of proportion to exam" | Elevated lactate |
| Chronic Mesenteric Ischemia | Atherosclerosis (β₯2 vessels) | Postprandial pain, food fear, weight loss | Abdominal bruit |
| Colonic Ischemia | Low flow states, watershed areas | Left-sided cramping, bloody diarrhea | Thumbprinting on X-ray |
π¨ Acute Mesenteric Ischemia - HIGH MORTALITY (60-80%)
Classic Scenario: Elderly patient with atrial fibrillation, sudden severe abdominal pain, minimal exam findings initially, then develops peritonitis.
Diagnosis:
- CT angiography: Gold standard (occlusion, pneumatosis intestinalis)
- Labs: Metabolic acidosis, elevated lactate, elevated WBC
- Late findings: Bloody diarrhea, peritoneal signs (indicate transmural infarction)
Management:
- Emergent laparotomy with resection of necrotic bowel
- Revascularization if viable tissue present
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics
π‘ Remember: "Pain out of proportion to exam" + atrial fibrillation = mesenteric ischemia until proven otherwise. Don't wait for peritoneal signsβby then, bowel is dead.
Perioperative Care
π Preoperative Risk Assessment
Cardiac Risk Stratification (Revised Cardiac Risk Index - RCRI):
1 point each for:
- High-risk surgery (vascular, intrathoracic, intraperitoneal)
- History of ischemic heart disease
- History of heart failure
- History of cerebrovascular disease
- Insulin-dependent diabetes
- Creatinine >2 mg/dL
Risk of major cardiac event:
- 0 factors: 0.4%
- 1 factor: 1%
- 2 factors: 2.4%
- β₯3 factors: 5.4%
π‘ Preoperative Testing Strategy:
- Low risk (<1%): No testing
- Elevated risk + good functional capacity (β₯4 METs): Proceed to surgery
- Elevated risk + poor/unknown capacity: Consider stress testing
- Active cardiac conditions: Optimize before elective surgery
π§ Mnemonic for 4 METs activities: "CLimb 2 FLIGHTS, WALK 4 blocks"
- Can you climb 2 flights of stairs?
- Can you walk 4 blocks?
If yes β good functional capacity, proceed to surgery.
π Perioperative Medication Management
| Medication | Continue? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Beta-blockers | β Continue | Never stop abruptly (rebound risk) |
| Statins | β Continue | Cardioprotective effects |
| ACE-I/ARBs | β οΈ Hold day of surgery | Risk of refractory hypotension |
| Aspirin | β Continue (usually) | Exception: intracranial, spinal surgery |
| Clopidogrel | β Hold 5-7 days | If recent stent: discuss with cardiology |
| Warfarin | β Hold 5 days | Bridge if high thrombosis risk |
| DOACs | β Hold 24-48h | Based on renal function |
| Metformin | β οΈ Hold day of | Risk of lactic acidosis with contrast |
| Insulin | β οΈ Adjust dose | Continue basal, hold short-acting |
β οΈ Critical Exception: Patients with drug-eluting stents require dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin + P2Y12 inhibitor). Premature discontinuation β stent thrombosis β MI/death. If surgery is elective, wait:
- Bare metal stent: 30 days
- Drug-eluting stent: 6-12 months
π©Ή Postoperative Complications
Timeline Approach to Post-Op Fever: "The 5 W's"
βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ β POST-OP FEVER TIMELINE (5 W's) β ββββββββββββ¬βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€ β Day 1 β Wind (atelectasis) β β POD 0-2 β π¨ Most common cause β β β Prevention: incentive spirometryβ ββββββββββββΌβββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€ β Day 3 β Water (UTI) β β POD 3-5 β π° Especially if catheterized β ββββββββββββΌβββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€ β Day 5 β Walking (DVT/PE) β β POD 5-7 β πΆ Check for calf tenderness β ββββββββββββΌβββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€ β Day 7 β Wound (surgical site infection) β β POD 7+ β πͺ Erythema, drainage, warmth β ββββββββββββΌβββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€ β Day 10 β Wonder drugs (drug fever) β β POD 10+ β π Diagnosis of exclusion β ββββββββββββ΄βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
π‘ Pearl: POD 3-5 fever in post-abdominal surgery patient β think intra-abdominal abscess if patient appears toxic or has peritoneal signs.
Anastomotic Leak
High-risk surgeries: Esophagectomy, low anterior resection (colorectal)
Presentation (POD 5-7):
- Fever, tachycardia, abdominal pain
- Elevated WBC, increased drain output
- May present subtly with persistent ileus
Diagnosis: CT with water-soluble contrast (Gastrografin)
Management:
- Small contained leak: NPO, antibiotics, drainage
- Large/free perforation: Return to OR
Trauma Surgery
π ATLS Primary Survey: "ABCDE"
The first 60 seconds ("Golden Minute") determines survival.
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ β PRIMARY SURVEY - ATLS β ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€ β β β π °οΈ AIRWAY (with C-spine protection) β β β β β β’ GCS β€8 β intubate β β β’ Maintain inline stabilization β β β β π ±οΈ BREATHING (ventilation & oxygenation) β β β β β β’ Inspect, auscultate both sides β β β’ Tension PTX? β needle decompression β β β β Β©οΈ CIRCULATION (hemorrhage control) β β β β β β’ 2 large-bore IVs β β β’ FAST exam for bleeding β β β’ Hypotension = blood loss until proven β β β β π ³ DISABILITY (neurologic status) β β β β β β’ GCS, pupil exam β β β’ AVPU scale β β β β π ΄ EXPOSURE (full body exam + prevent β β hypothermia) β β β ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
π©Έ Hemorrhagic Shock Classification
| Class | Blood Loss | HR | BP | RR | Mental Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | <15% (<750mL) | <100 | Normal | 14-20 | Normal/Anxious |
| II | 15-30% (750-1500mL) | 100-120 | Normal | 20-30 | Anxious |
| III | 30-40% (1500-2000mL) | 120-140 | Decreased | 30-40 | Confused |
| IV | >40% (>2000mL) | >140 | Decreased | >35 | Lethargic |
π‘ Key Concept: Class III-IV shock requires blood transfusion. In massive transfusion, use 1:1:1 ratio (RBC:FFP:Platelets) to prevent coagulopathy.
π« Thoracic Trauma: Life-Threatening "Big 6"
Immediate Recognition Required:
1. Tension Pneumothorax
- Absent breath sounds, tracheal deviation AWAY from affected side
- Hypotension, distended neck veins
- Treatment: Needle decompression (2nd intercostal space, midclavicular line) BEFORE chest X-ray
2. Massive Hemothorax
-
1500mL blood or 200mL/hr for 4 hours
- Treatment: Chest tube β thoracotomy if persistent bleeding
3. Cardiac Tamponade (Beck's Triad)
- Hypotension, muffled heart sounds, distended neck veins
- Treatment: Pericardiocentesis or pericardial window
4. Open Pneumothorax ("Sucking Chest Wound")
- Treatment: Occlusive dressing taped on 3 sides (flutter valve)
5. Flail Chest
- β₯2 ribs broken in β₯2 places β paradoxical chest movement
- Treatment: Pain control, pulmonary toilet, possible mechanical ventilation
6. Aortic Disruption
- Widened mediastinum on CXR (>8cm)
- Diagnosis: CT angiography
- Treatment: Urgent TEVAR or open repair
π₯ FAST Exam (Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma)
4 windows examined:
- Perihepatic (Morrison's pouch) - most sensitive
- Perisplenic (splenorenal recess)
- Pelvic (pouch of Douglas)
- Pericardial
Positive FAST in unstable patient = immediate laparotomy
π‘ Limitations: Poor sensitivity for hollow viscus injury, retroperitoneal injury, diaphragm injury.
Orthopedic Emergencies
𦴠Fractures Requiring Urgent Management
1. Open Fractures (Gustilo Classification)
- Type I: Wound <1cm, minimal soft tissue damage
- Type II: Wound 1-10cm, moderate contamination
- Type III: Wound >10cm, extensive damage, vascular injury
Management:
- Immediate IV antibiotics (cefazolin + gentamicin for Type III)
- Tetanus prophylaxis
- Surgical debridement and stabilization within 6-8 hours
2. Compartment Syndrome
Clinical Features ("The 5 P's"):
- Pain out of proportion (earliest sign)
- Pressure (compartment firm/tense)
- Pallor
- Paresthesias
- Pulselessness (late finding - irreversible damage)
- Paralysis (late finding)
β οΈ Critical Error: Waiting for "late" signs (pulselessness, paralysis). Severe pain with passive stretch = compartment syndrome until proven otherwise.
Diagnosis:
- Clinical diagnosis primarily
- Compartment pressure >30mmHg or within 30mmHg of diastolic BP
Treatment: Emergency fasciotomy - do NOT delay!
3. Hip Fracture in Elderly
- Surgery within 24-48 hours improves outcomes
- Femoral neck: Risk of avascular necrosis β hemiarthroplasty vs. ORIF
- Intertrochanteric: ORIF with sliding hip screw
Urology
π΄ Testicular Torsion
π¨ "Time is testicle" - surgical emergency!
Presentation:
- Sudden onset severe testicular pain
- Nausea/vomiting common
- Absent cremasteric reflex (most sensitive physical finding)
- High-riding testis with abnormal lie
Diagnosis:
- Clinical diagnosis - do NOT delay for imaging if high suspicion
- Doppler ultrasound: Decreased/absent blood flow (but can be falsely reassuring)
Management:
- Manual detorsion: "Open the book" - rotate lateral to medial
- Surgical exploration within 6 hours for viable testis
- Bilateral orchiopexy (contralateral testis at risk)
π‘ Pearl: Testicular torsion is most common in neonates and adolescents (12-18 years). If history + exam suggestive, go straight to OR.
π©Έ Hematuria Workup
Gross Hematuria Approach:
Gross Hematuria
β
β
Hemodynamically
stable?
β
ββββββ΄βββββ
β β
No Yes
β β
β β
Resuscitate History/Exam
CBI if β
clots β
Trauma?
β
ββββββ΄βββββ
β β
Yes No
β β
β β
CT urogram CT abdomen/pelvis
Grade +
injury Cystoscopy
β
β
>40yo or
Risk factors?
β
β
Rule out
malignancy
Renal Trauma Grading (AAST):
- Grade I-II: Contusion, subcapsular hematoma β observation
- Grade III: Cortical laceration <1cm depth β observation
- Grade IV-V: Major laceration, vascular injury β may require intervention
π‘ Management: Most blunt renal trauma managed conservatively. Indications for surgery: hemodynamic instability despite resuscitation, expanding/pulsatile hematoma, renal pedicle avulsion.
π Nephrolithiasis
Presentation: Colicky flank pain radiating to groin, hematuria
Diagnostic Test: Non-contrast CT abdomen/pelvis (gold standard)
Management Based on Stone Size:
- <5mm: 90% pass spontaneously - hydration, NSAIDs, alpha-blocker (tamsulosin)
- 5-10mm: 50% pass - trial of medical expulsive therapy
- >10mm: Unlikely to pass - intervention needed
Intervention Options:
- Shock wave lithotripsy (SWL): <2cm stones
- Ureteroscopy: Mid/distal ureter stones
- Percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL): Large/staghorn calculi
π¨ Indications for Urgent Intervention:
- Infected hydronephrosis (obstructive pyelonephritis) β sepsis risk
- Bilateral obstruction or solitary kidney
- Intractable pain/vomiting
- Acute kidney injury
Otolaryngology (ENT)
π Epistaxis Management
Initial Management (Anterior Bleed - 90%):
- Upright position, lean forward
- Pinch nasal ala for 10-15 minutes
- If continues β anterior nasal packing or cautery
Posterior Bleed (10%):
- Bleeding continues despite anterior packing
- Blood in oropharynx
- Requires posterior packing or balloon tamponade
- Admit for monitoring (risk of hypoxia, aspiration)
β οΈ Severe/Recurrent: Consider sphenopalatine artery ligation or embolization
π¬οΈ Acute Epiglottitis
Classic Triad:
- Drooling
- Dysphagia
- Distress (respiratory)
Additional findings:
- High fever, toxic appearance
- Tripod position (sitting, leaning forward)
- Muffled "hot potato" voice
- Thumb sign on lateral neck X-ray (swollen epiglottis)
β οΈ CRITICAL Management:
- DO NOT examine throat - may precipitate complete airway obstruction
- Secure airway in OR with ENT/anesthesia present
- IV antibiotics (ceftriaxone)
π‘ Etiology: Haemophilus influenzae type B (now rare due to vaccination), Streptococcus, Staphylococcus
π΄ Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)
Diagnostic Criteria (Polysomnography):
- Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) = events per hour
- Mild: 5-15
- Moderate: 15-30
- Severe: >30
Complications:
- Pulmonary hypertension, right heart failure
- Increased cardiovascular risk
- Daytime somnolence β motor vehicle accidents
Management:
- First-line: CPAP
- Weight loss if obese
- Surgical options: Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP), maxillomandibular advancement
Ophthalmology Emergencies
ποΈ Acute Angle-Closure Glaucoma
Presentation:
- Sudden onset severe eye pain
- Decreased vision, halos around lights
- Nausea/vomiting
- Mid-dilated, non-reactive pupil
- Firm globe on palpation
- Corneal edema ("steamy" appearance)
Diagnosis: Intraocular pressure (IOP) >21 mmHg (often >40-50 in acute attack)
Immediate Treatment (lower IOP):
| Medication | Mechanism | Route |
|---|---|---|
| Timolol | Decrease aqueous production | Topical |
| Pilocarpine | Pupillary constriction (opens angle) | Topical |
| Acetazolamide | Decrease aqueous production | PO/IV |
| Mannitol | Osmotic agent | IV |
Definitive: Laser peripheral iridotomy (create hole in iris)
π‘ Risk Factors: Hyperopia (farsightedness), Asian ethnicity, family history, medications (anticholinergics, topiramate)
π΄ Central Retinal Artery Occlusion (CRAO)
"Eye stroke" - ophthalmologic emergency!
Presentation:
- Sudden, painless, unilateral vision loss
- Afferent pupillary defect (Marcus Gunn pupil)
- Cherry-red spot on macula (fundoscopy)
- Pale retina with "boxcar" segmentation of vessels
Etiology: Embolism (carotid atherosclerosis, cardiac source)
Management:
- Ocular massage (attempt to dislodge embolus)
- Lower IOP: Acetazolamide, anterior chamber paracentesis
- Hyperbaric oxygen (controversial)
- Workup for embolic source: Carotid ultrasound, echocardiogram
Prognosis: Poor - permanent vision loss common. Window for treatment <90 minutes.
π Retinal Detachment
Presentation:
- Floaters ("spots")
- Photopsia (flashing lights)
- "Curtain" or shadow across visual field
- Painless
Risk Factors: Myopia, trauma, prior cataract surgery, family history
Diagnosis: Dilated fundoscopic exam
Management: Urgent ophthalmology referral for surgical repair (pneumatic retinopexy, scleral buckle, vitrectomy)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
β οΈ Surgery Decision-Making Errors
1. Delaying surgery for "more tests" in obvious surgical abdomen
- Peritoneal signs = surgical consultation NOW
- CT won't change management if perforation/peritonitis obvious
2. Missing compartment syndrome
- Don't wait for "5 P's" - pain out of proportion is enough
- Pulses can be present with compartment syndrome
3. Assuming negative FAST = no injury
- FAST only detects free fluid (blood)
- Can miss hollow viscus, diaphragm, retroperitoneal injuries
- Unstable patient with negative FAST β DPL or exploratory laparotomy
4. Ordering unnecessary preoperative testing
- Healthy patient <40 years for low-risk surgery: No tests needed
- Order tests only if they will change management
5. Stopping aspirin before all surgeries
- Continue aspirin for most surgeries (cardioprotective benefit outweighs bleeding risk)
- Exception: neurosurgery, ophthalmologic surgery
β οΈ Trauma Management Errors
6. Assuming hypotension is "neurogenic shock" without excluding hemorrhage
- Neurogenic shock: Bradycardia + hypotension (loss of sympathetic tone)
- Hemorrhagic shock: Tachycardia + hypotension
- Rule out bleeding first!
7. Performing needle decompression on wrong side
- Trachea deviates AWAY from tension pneumothorax
- Decreased breath sounds on affected side
8. Waiting for imaging in testicular torsion
- High clinical suspicion = take to OR
- Every hour delay decreases salvage rate
β οΈ Specialty-Specific Errors
9. Examining throat in suspected epiglottitis
- Can precipitate complete airway obstruction
- Visualize only in OR with airway equipment ready
10. Using pilocarpine before steroids in acute angle-closure
- Inflamed eye won't respond to pilocarpine
- Can worsen closure through paradoxical lens thickening
Key Takeaways
π― Essential Surgical Principles
Recognition:
- Peritoneal signs (rigidity, rebound, guarding) = surgical abdomen
- Pain out of proportion to exam = ischemia or compartment syndrome
- Sudden onset + severe pain = vascular event or perforation
Acute Abdomen Top 3:
- Appendicitis - periumbilical β RLQ, anorexia
- Cholecystitis - RUQ pain >6h, Murphy's sign, fever
- Small bowel obstruction - colicky pain, distension, obstipation
"Can't Miss" Diagnoses:
- Ruptured AAA (elderly, abdominal/back pain, hypotension)
- Ectopic pregnancy (reproductive-age female, abdominal pain, positive Ξ²hCG)
- Mesenteric ischemia (atrial fibrillation, pain out of proportion)
- Testicular torsion (acute testicular pain, absent cremasteric reflex)
Perioperative Care:
- Cardiac risk: RCRI score, functional capacity assessment
- Continue: Beta-blockers, statins, aspirin (usually)
- Hold: ACE-I (day of), anticoagulants (days before)
- Post-op fever: Timeline approach (5 W's)
Trauma ABC:
- Airway (C-spine), Breathing (tension PTX), Circulation (hemorrhage control)
- Hypotension in trauma = blood loss until proven otherwise
- Tension pneumothorax: Needle decompression BEFORE X-ray
Orthopedic Emergencies:
- Compartment syndrome: Pain with passive stretch β fasciotomy
- Open fracture: Antibiotics + urgent debridement
Specialty Emergencies:
- Testicular torsion: Detorsion within 6 hours
- Angle-closure glaucoma: Lower IOP, laser iridotomy
- Epiglottitis: Secure airway in OR, don't examine throat
- CRAO: Ocular massage, lower IOP (poor prognosis)
π Further Study
American College of Surgeons - ATLS Student Course Manual (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/atls/) - Gold standard for trauma management protocols and systematic approach to injured patients
UpToDate - Acute Abdomen in Adults (https://www.uptodate.com) - Comprehensive, evidence-based review of surgical emergencies with diagnostic algorithms and management strategies
Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST) Practice Management Guidelines (https://www.east.org/education-resources/practice-management-guidelines) - Evidence-based guidelines for trauma and acute care surgery scenarios
π Quick Reference Card: Surgery & Specialties
| Condition | Key Feature | First Step |
|---|---|---|
| Appendicitis | Periumbilical β RLQ pain | Appendectomy |
| Cholecystitis | Murphy's sign positive | Cholecystectomy <72h |
| SBO | Colicky pain, air-fluid levels | NPO, NGT, IVF |
| Mesenteric Ischemia | Pain >> exam + Afib | CTA β laparotomy |
| Tension PTX | Trachea away, absent BS | Needle decompression |
| Compartment Syndrome | Pain with passive stretch | Fasciotomy |
| Testicular Torsion | Absent cremasteric reflex | Surgical detorsion |
| Angle-Closure | Mid-dilated pupil, firm globe | Lower IOP β iridotomy |
| Epiglottitis | 3 D's: Drooling, Dysphagia, Distress | Secure airway in OR |
| Open Fracture | Bone exposed | Antibiotics + debridement |
π§ Universal Surgical Mnemonic - "SURGICAL ABC"
- Signs of peritonitis β consult surgery
- Unstable vitals β resuscitate first
- Rule out pregnancy (all reproductive-age females)
- Guarding/rigidity = peritonitis
- Imaging: CT for stable, OR for unstable
- Can't miss: AAA, ectopic, ischemia, torsion
- Airway, Breathing, Circulation (trauma)
- Blood loss = hypotension in trauma
- Compartments: Pain with stretch = fasciotomy
π Final Exam Tip: Step 2 CK surgery questions focus on recognition and initial management. Know when to consult surgery (peritoneal signs), when surgery is urgent (6-hour window for torsion/compartment syndrome), and basic trauma protocols (ATLS). You don't need to know surgical techniquesβfocus on diagnosis and appropriate referral.