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COMLEX Level 1 COMBANK CARDS Verified Answers!!

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  • Course
  • COMLEX
  • Institution
  • COMLEX

The COMLEX-USA (Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Licensing Examination of the United States) is a series of standardized medical board exams designed for osteopathic medical students and physicians. Administered by the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners (NBOME), it evaluates candidate...

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  • January 23, 2025
  • 67
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • COMLEX
  • COMLEX
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Q&A


COMLEX LEVEL 1 COMBANK CARDS
VERIFIED ANSWERS!!



What causes Whipple Disease and what is its presentation? - Answers
Tropheryma whipplei (intracellular gram positive bacilli), arthralgias,
endoscopy shown pale yellow shaggy mucosa that alternates with
erythematous or friable mucosa. men > female bc possibly HLA B27



What is the presentation and diagnostic tests used for Small Intestinal
bacterial overgrowth (SIBO)? - Answers nonspecific increased
villous blunting, bloating, flatulence, abdominal pain. Hydrogen breath test
measures exhaled hydrogen, xylose breath test measures exhaled carbon
after ingested D-xylose.



What are the macroscopic findings of Celiac Disease? - Answers
scalloping of duodenal folds, decreased number of folds, submucosal
vascular pattern



Draw out the sensitivity/specificity table calculation - Answers PPV:
positive predictive value

NPV: Negative predictive value

TP: True Positive

FP: False Positive

, Q&A

TN: True Negative

FN: False Negative

Sensitivity: ability to detect the disease. High sensitivity means most people
have the disease test positive for it.

Specificity: tests ability to detect the absence of the disease. High
specificity means most people without the disease will test negative.

PPV: probability of positive test being true positive is great

NPV: probability of negative test result being true negative is great



What are mallory bodies and when/where can they be found? - Answers
accumulation of fat and cytokeratin intermediate filaments. Alcoholic
hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, Wilson disease, chronic cholestatic
syndromes, hepatocellular tumors.



What are councilman bodies? - Answers form due to apoptosis of
hepatocytes infected with a virus.



What are Ferruginous bodies? - Answers hemosiderin-stained
bodies seen in asbestosis. Commonly found in the lungs, but not the liver.



What is lipofuscin and when/where can it be found? - Answers
pigment of undigested lipids derived from lipid peroxidation of cell
membranes. It is common in aging and usually asymptomatic.



What is toxic granulation and when/where can it be found? - Answers
associated with inclusions seen in neutrophils during a severe bacterial
infection.

, Q&A



What are some reasons for edema of the lower extremities? (Unilateral vs.
bilateral) - Answers Unilateral: lymphatic blockage leading to
increased interstitial colloid oncotic pressure -->non-pitting edema. Prior
surgery, radiation, tumors, parasites (lymphatic filariasis). Anything
obstructing the lymphatic system.

Bilateral: Cirrhosis of the liver due to decreased albumin production -->
decreased plasma colloid oncotic pressure



What will you find on biopsy for Crohn's disease and Ulcerative colitis? -
Answers Crohn's: noncaseating or non-necrotizing granulomas



Ulcerative Colitis: crypt abscesses/collections of neutrophils within crypts of
Leiberkuhn



A key feature of Crohn's disease is noncaseating granulomas, but what is
the key characteristic defining a granuloma? - Answers Epithelioid
histiocytes



Where does pain from the gallbladder and pancreas radiate? - Answers
Gallbladder: shoulder or scapula

Pancreas: back



Where is Virchow's node and what does it indicate? - Answers
Location: left supraclavicular fossa.

, Q&A

Supplied from lymph vessels in the abdominal cavity. A hard node is
Troisier's sign and is indicative of cancer in the abdomen



What is Courvoisier's sign? What is Murphy's sign? How do they differ? -
Answers Courvoisier's Sign: signals an enlarged, palpable painless
gallbladder. In the presence of jaundice is most commonly associated with
pancreatic cancer.



Murphy's sign: severe pain and inspiratory arrest with palpation of RUQ
during inspiration. Commonly associated with acute cholecystitis



What is Battle sign and what is it associated with? - Answers
Eccymosis behind the ear that is associated with basilar skull fracture.



What is Homan's sign and what is it associated with? - Answers Calf
pain on forcible dorsiflexion of the foot.



Associated with DVT



What is CA-19-9 and what is it used for? What about CA-125? - Answers
CA-19-9: It is a laboratory marker to monitor:



Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma



CA-125: associated with ovarian cancers

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