A curated medical QBank for University of Sharjah clinical students. Tutor-mode solving, explanations that teach, and your batch's notes under every question.
UoS emails are approved automatically after verification.
Surgery · 14 / 40Tutor mode
A 23-year-old man presents with 12 hours of periumbilical pain that has migrated to the right lower quadrant. He reports anorexia and nausea. Temperature is 38.1 °C. Examination shows tenderness at McBurney point with guarding. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Acute appendicitis
B. Acute mesenteric adenitis
C. Right-sided ureteric colic
Migration of periumbilical visceral pain to somatic right lower quadrant pain, anorexia, low-grade fever, and McBurney point tenderness is the classic presentation of acute appendicitis.
Anorexia is the most sensitive early symptom — if the patient is genuinely hungry, question the diagnosis.
Curated, not crowdsourced
An official library kept honest by editors, moderators, and an open correction trail.
Built for tutor mode
Solve, reveal, read, continue. MCQs and EMQs with immediate feedback and progress that follows you.
Learn from your batch
Comments and community notes turn every question into a small, useful discussion.