Q29: September 2020 PLAB 1 Recall

 
F977C751-3210-4AAD-8DBB-232FE44F5AEB.PNG

A. Noonan syndrome

B. William’s syndrome

C. Fragile X

D. Turner’s syndrome

E. Down syndrome

This Topic was tested in the September 2020 exam . Try to answer this question in 50 seconds. Comment your answer below. The answer to this question is given below.

We have new questions derived from the June 2020 exam and updated several existing questions to match the current standard (exam question structure).

Read what past PLAB part 1 candidates say about MedRevisions: Click here

Find out more about June 2020 PLAB 1 recalls ( part 1) : click here

Find out more about June 2020 PLAB 1 recalls ( part 2): Click here

Find out more about March 2020 PLAB 1 recalls: click here

Free 20 Sample PLAB 1 Questions: Click here

Click here to check out all our recent updates

The correct answer is D.

  • The diagnosis here is Turner’s syndrome. primary amenorrhea, webbed neck, short stature along with a nonspecific systolic murmur and aortic coarctation(difference in blood pressure in the arm and leg) points toward this diagnosis. Patients with Turner’s syndrome are prone to have a bicuspid aortic valve, aortic valve stenosis and/or aortic coarctation

At MedRevisions we provide:

  • Over 4000 PLAB 1 Exam Style Questions with Complete Answer Explanations

  • Complete Study Notes

  • 23+ Full Customisable Mocks and you can reset and repeat for free

  • Spaced Repetition Learning Tool

Is PLAB 1 getting tougher?

  • Yes!. Hence the reason why at medrevisions we provide complete study notes along with tough twisted questions to test your knowledge . We constantly update our study notes and questions to align with the recent guidelines AND to match the current difficulty of the PLAB 1 exam

 
Previous
Previous

Q30: High Yield PLAB 1 Recall

Next
Next

Q28: March 2020 PLAB 1 Recall