Posts with category
OB/GYN
The Rosh Review blog provides study and exam prep tips, interviews, and deep dives for physicians, NPs, PAs, residents, and students. Below you’ll find a list of the blog posts that highlight our OB/GYN content. Take a look and learn something new—we’re here every step of your career.
Image of the Week: “Erythema” Rashes
Rapid Review: Virchow’s Triad
Rapid Review: Ectopic Pregnancy
Ectopic Pregnancy Patient will be a woman With a history of prior ectopic, PID, tubal surgery, IUD Complaining of vaginal bleeding, abdominal pain, amenorrhea PE will show adnexal tenderness or unexplained hypotension Labs will show positive pregnancy test and lower than expected serum beta-hCG levels Diagnosis is made by ultrasound Most commonly located in a fallopian tube Treatment is MTX or surgery Sample question: A 44-year-old woman with read more…
Rapid Review: Fundal Height
Rapid Review: Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) Patient will be an obese female Complaining of amenorrhea, obesity, hirsutism PE will show bilateral ovarian enlargement, acanthosis nigricans Labs will show high LH:FSH, androgen excess Most commonly caused by insulin resistance Treatment is combination OCPs, lifestyle changes, metformin Sample question: A 26-year-old obese woman with a 2-year history of increased acne, abnormal hair growth, and menstrual abnormalities presents to her obstetrician for read more…
Rapid Review: Events in 1st Trimester of Pregnancy
How To Earn and Obtain Your Rosh Review CME or CE Certificate
Rosh Review offers 100 credits of continuing medical education education (CME) and continuing education (CE). If you are a subscriber who signed up for an account linked to CME or CE and you want to know how to obtain your credit and certificate or both…this is how you do it:
Unlocking the Data Behind Rosh Review to Improve Educational Outcomes: Pt. 2
Many of our savvy customers realize intuitively that there is a treasure trove of performance data accumulating in the background with each new question answered by each of our users (40,933,037 total questions answered, as of today).
Rapid Review: Chlamydia Cervicitis
Chlamydia Cervicitis Diagnosis is made by nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT) Most commonly caused by Chlamydia trachomatis Treatment is azithromycin Comments: Most commonly reported sexually transmitted disease in the United States Empirically treat for concomitant gonorrhea The United States Preventive Services Task Force recommends routine screening for sexually active women < 24 years of age, and in women > read more…
Rapid Review: Cushing’s Syndrome
Cushing’s Syndrome Patient will be complaining of amenorrhea, central obesity, depressive symptoms, and easy bruising PE will show purple striae, “moon face” (facial adiposity), “buffalo hump” (increased adipose tissue in the neck and upper back), and hypertension Diagnosis is made by 24-hr urine cortisol and testing ACTH levels Most commonly caused by hypercortisolism from ACTH-secreting pituitary tumor Comments: If cause is pituitary tumor, then read more…
Rapid Review: von Willebrand Disease
von Willebrand Disease Patient with a history of a parent with similar symptoms Mucosal hemorrhage or bleeding that is difficult to control Labs will show decreased factor VIII, prolonged bleeding time Treatment is desmopressin (DDAVP) Comments: Most common inherited bleeding disorder, autosomal dominant Sample question: A 9-year-old child is being evaluated for frequent epistaxis and easy bruising tendencies. Bleeding time is prolonged, PT, PTT, read more…
Rapid Review: Hypothyroidism
Hypothyroidism Patient will be complaining of generalized weakness, fatigue, facial swelling, constipation, cold intolerance, and weight gain PE will show periorbital edema, dry skin, and coarse brittle hair Labs will show high TSH and low free T4, antithyroid peroxidase, and antithyroglobulin autoantibodies Most commonly caused by Hashimoto’s thyroiditis Treatment is levothyroxine Comments: Takes about 6 weeks to see treatment effects. Monitor TSH Hashimoto’s: Risk factor for non-Hodgkin lymphoma Sample Question: A 55-year-old woman presents to your office with complaints of fatigue, read more…