Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine FOP Total 100 MCQs. Click ‘Start’ to begin or resume. Save progress if needed. 0% Report a question What's wrong with this question? You cannot submit an empty report. Please add some details. FOP Practice 1 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-year-old boy is referred to the paediatric metabolic team for investigation. His clinical picture is complex, featuring progressive developmental regression, marked hepatosplenomegaly, and radiological findings of dysostosis multiplex. The referring paediatrician strongly suspects an underlying Lysosomal Storage Disorder. Which of the following clinical signs would be the least specific indicator of a Lysosomal Storage Disorder in this child? A) Progressive developmental regression. B) Skeletal dysplasia (dysostosis multiplex). C) Bilateral clouding of the cornea. D) Unexplained Hepatosplenomegaly. E) Recurrent vomiting and Hyperammonaemia. CORRECT ANSWER: Recurrent vomiting and hyperammonaemia are classic manifestations of an acute metabolic crisis in Urea Cycle Defects (UCDs) or certain Organic Acidaemias. The pathophysiology involves a failure to metabolise nitrogenous waste products, leading to the accumulation of toxic ammonia. This presentation is distinct from Lysosomal Storage Disorders (LSDs), where the primary pathology is the accumulation of undigested macromolecules within lysosomes, leading to cellular dysfunction over time. While some LSDs can present with vomiting, the combination with significant hyperammonaemia strongly points towards a UCD as the primary diagnosis. Therefore, it is the least reliable indicator of an LSD. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Progressive developmental regression) is incorrect as it is a hallmark of many neuronopathic LSDs, such as Metachromatic Leukodystrophy or Tay-Sachs disease, due to substrate accumulation in the central nervous system. Option B (Skeletal dysplasia) is incorrect because dysostosis multiplex is a characteristic radiological finding in several Mucopolysaccharidoses, a major subgroup of LSDs. Option C (Bilateral clouding of the cornea) is incorrect as it is a classic sign of specific LSDs, notably Hurler Syndrome (MPS I-H), caused by glycosaminoglycan deposition. Option D (Unexplained Hepatosplenomegaly) is incorrect because the infiltration of storage-laden macrophages in the reticuloendothelial system is a common and prominent feature of LSDs like Gaucher and Niemann-Pick disease. 2 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 15-year-old boy is referred to the paediatric outpatient clinic with a history of recurrent, severe burning pain in his hands and feet. On examination, there are clusters of small, non-blanching, dark red papules across his lower back and thighs. Urinalysis confirms the presence of mild proteinuria. What is the most likely diagnosis? A) Gaucher Disease B) Hunter Syndrome (MPS II) C) MCADD D) Fabry Disease E) Niemann-Pick Disease CORRECT ANSWER: Fabry disease is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder resulting from deficient activity of the enzyme alpha-galactosidase A. This deficiency leads to the progressive accumulation of glycosphingolipids, particularly globotriaosylceramide (Gb3), within the lysosomes of various cells. The deposition of Gb3 in vascular endothelium, smooth muscle cells, renal glomerular and tubular cells, and neurons is responsible for the characteristic clinical manifestations. In adolescent males, this pathophysiology classically presents with painful peripheral neuropathy (acroparesthesias), cutaneous angiokeratomas, and evidence of early kidney damage such as proteinuria. The combination of these specific neurological, dermatological, and renal signs is highly indicative of Fabry disease. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Gaucher Disease) is incorrect because its primary features include hepatosplenomegaly, bone pain, and haematological abnormalities like anaemia and thrombocytopenia, not the specific triad seen in this patient. Option B (Hunter Syndrome) is incorrect as this mucopolysaccharidosis typically presents with coarse facial features, skeletal deformities, joint stiffness, and intellectual disability, which are absent in this case. Option C (MCADD) is incorrect because Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency is a fatty acid oxidation disorder that manifests as episodes of hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, lethargy, and vomiting, usually triggered by fasting or illness. Option E (Niemann-Pick Disease) is incorrect as it typically presents with hepatosplenomegaly, progressive neurodegeneration, and often a characteristic cherry-red spot on retinal examination, a different clinical picture from the one described. 3 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 9-month-old infant, known to have Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD), is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a 12-hour history of fever and poor feeding. He is noted to be increasingly drowsy. To prevent a metabolic crisis, which of the following is the most important immediate dietary component to provide? A) Protein. B) Fat. C) MCT Oil. D) Carnitine. E) Glucose (or other complex carbohydrates). CORRECT ANSWER: In Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD), a defect in fatty acid oxidation, the body cannot effectively utilise fat for energy. During periods of catabolic stress, such as intercurrent illness, this leads to a dangerous combination of hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and the accumulation of toxic medium-chain fatty acid metabolites. The absolute priority in the emergency regimen is to provide a high-energy source that bypasses this defective pathway to halt catabolism. Administering glucose, or other complex carbohydrates, stimulates insulin secretion which suppresses lipolysis (the breakdown of fat), thereby preventing both the profound hypoglycaemia and the build-up of toxic intermediates that cause encephalopathy and liver dysfunction. This is the cornerstone of emergency management for all fatty acid oxidation defects. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Protein) is incorrect because providing a primary, high-energy carbohydrate source to prevent catabolism is the immediate life-saving priority, not protein. Option B (Fat) is incorrect as the patient cannot metabolise fats, and providing them would directly exacerbate the accumulation of toxic metabolic intermediates. Option C (MCT Oil) is incorrect because medium-chain triglycerides are the specific substrate that the deficient enzyme cannot process, so their administration is strictly contraindicated. Option D (Carnitine) is incorrect because while its deficiency can be a secondary phenomenon, supplementation is not the acute intervention; providing glucose to stop the catabolic spiral is the primary goal. 4 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-month-old infant is referred to the general paediatric clinic for evaluation of developmental regression and a history of failing to thrive. The paediatric registrar is formulating a differential diagnosis which includes several inborn errors of metabolism. Which of the following clinical findings is most commonly associated with an early presentation of a lysosomal storage disorder? A) Recurrent Hyperammonaemia. B) Hypoketotic Hypoglycaemia. C) Severe Metabolic Acidosis. D) High Lactate/Pyruvate ratio. E) Hepatosplenomegaly without clear infectious cause. CORRECT ANSWER: Hepatosplenomegaly is a frequent and early presenting feature in many lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs), including Gaucher disease and Niemann-Pick disease. The underlying pathophysiology involves deficient activity of specific lysosomal enzymes, leading to the progressive accumulation of undigested macromolecules within the lysosomes of various cells. The macrophages of the reticuloendothelial system, which are abundant in the liver and spleen, become engorged with this substrate material. This cellular swelling, or storage phenomenon, leads directly to the palpable enlargement of these organs. While other signs exist, the insidious and progressive nature of hepatosplenomegaly in a child without a clear infectious or haematological cause should raise a high index of suspicion for an LSD. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Recurrent Hyperammonaemia) is incorrect as it is a hallmark of urea cycle defects or organic acidaemias, not typically LSDs. Option B (Hypoketotic Hypoglycaemia) is incorrect because this finding strongly points towards a fatty acid oxidation defect, where fat metabolism is impaired during periods of fasting. Option C (Severe Metabolic Acidosis) is incorrect as a high anion gap metabolic acidosis is the characteristic presentation for organic acidaemias. Option D (High Lactate/Pyruvate ratio) is incorrect because this is a key indicator of mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders or defects in pyruvate metabolism. 5 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-year-old boy is referred to the paediatric neurology clinic with a one-year history of progressive unsteadiness. His parents also report concerns about his hearing. Clinical examination reveals a broad-based, ataxic gait. Further investigations confirm the presence of bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and pigmentary retinopathy. An initial metabolic screen was unremarkable. Which of the following provides the most likely unifying diagnosis? A) Lysosomal Storage Disorder (LSD). B) Organic Acidaemia (OA). C) Urea Cycle Defect (UCD). D) Mitochondrial Disorder. E) Peroxisomal Disorder (e.g., Zellweger syndrome). CORRECT ANSWER: The triad of retinitis pigmentosa (a progressive retinopathy), sensorineural hearing loss, and cerebellar ataxia points strongly towards a mitochondrial disorder. These three systems—the retina, the cochlea, and the cerebellum—have exceptionally high metabolic rates and are therefore exquisitely vulnerable to defects in oxidative phosphorylation. The impaired ATP production from dysfunctional mitochondria fails to meet their energy demands, leading to progressive cellular damage and clinical signs. This pattern is characteristic of several mitochondrial syndromes, such as Kearns-Sayre syndrome or specific POLG-related disorders, where multi-system involvement is a classical feature. The presentation reflects a systemic failure of cellular energy metabolism. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Lysosomal Storage Disorder) is less likely as these conditions typically present with organomegaly, coarse facial features, and progressive neurodegeneration rather than this specific triad. Option B (Organic Acidaemia) is incorrect because these disorders usually manifest with acute, severe metabolic acidosis, hypoglycaemia, and hyperammonaemia, often in the neonatal period or during intercurrent illness. Option C (Urea Cycle Defect) is not the best fit as its primary presentation is hyperammonaemic encephalopathy, which is not described in this chronic, multi-system scenario. Option E (Peroxisomal Disorder) is less probable; although some peroxisomal disorders cause retinopathy and hearing loss, a classic example like Zellweger syndrome presents neonatally with profound hypotonia and distinct dysmorphic features. 6 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 16-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric A&E with severe muscle pain and dark, tea-coloured urine. His symptoms developed following a prolonged and intense session of exercise. Initial investigations reveal a normal blood glucose concentration and trace ketones on urinalysis. What is the most likely underlying metabolic diagnosis? A) Glycogen Storage Disease (GSD) Type I. B) Carnitine Palmitoyltransferase I (CPT I) Deficiency. C) Lactic Acidaemia due to Respiratory Chain Defect. D) Carnitine Palmitoyltransferase II (CPT II) Deficiency. E) Non-ketotic Hyperglycinaemia. CORRECT ANSWER: D: Carnitine Palmitoyltransferase II (CPT II) Deficiency. This is a disorder of long-chain fatty acid oxidation. During prolonged, intense exercise, skeletal muscle switches from using glycogen to fatty acids as its primary energy source. In CPT II deficiency, this metabolic switch is impaired. The inability to utilise long-chain fatty acids for ATP production leads to energy deficiency within the muscle cells, resulting in membrane instability and breakdown (rhabdomyolysis). The presentation in an adolescent with exercise-induced myoglobinuria, normal blood glucose, and minimal ketosis is the classic myopathic form of CPT II deficiency. The body's inability to effectively oxidise fats for energy explains the muscle crisis, while other metabolic pathways maintain euglycaemia. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glycogen Storage Disease Type I) is incorrect as it typically presents with severe fasting hypoglycaemia and lactic acidosis, neither of which are features in this case. Option B (Carnitine Palmitoyltransferase I Deficiency) is incorrect because this is the hepatic form, which presents in infancy with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and liver dysfunction, not isolated rhabdomyolysis in adolescence. Option C (Lactic Acidaemia due to Respiratory Chain Defect) is less likely as a primary mitochondrial myopathy would typically be associated with a significant lactic acidosis, which is not a prominent feature here. Option E (Non-ketotic Hyperglycinaemia) is incorrect as it is a severe neonatal-onset encephalopathy with seizures and profound developmental issues. 7 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-year-old girl with a known diagnosis of Long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCHAD) deficiency is reviewed in the metabolic outpatient clinic. Her management includes a specialised diet restricting long-chain fatty acids, supplemented with medium-chain triglyceride oil. What is the primary therapeutic purpose of this supplementation? A) To provide essential fatty acids that are missing. B) To provide a fat-based energy source that bypasses the metabolic block. C) To increase ketone body production during fasting. D) To reduce the toxic acylcarnitine accumulation. E) To stimulate insulin secretion and prevent hypoglycaemia. CORRECT ANSWER: In Long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCHAD) deficiency, there is a specific enzymatic block in the mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathway for long-chain fatty acids. This prevents the body from utilising these fats for energy, leading to profound hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and energy failure during fasting or illness. Medium Chain Triglycerides (MCTs) are composed of fatty acids with a shorter carbon chain length. These are metabolised differently; they can enter the mitochondria without the need for the carnitine transport system and are broken down by a separate set of enzymes, thus bypassing the specific LCHAD defect. This provides a vital, safe, alternative fat-based substrate for cellular energy production, which is the primary therapeutic goal. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (To provide essential fatty acids that are missing) is incorrect because MCT oil lacks the essential long-chain fatty acids, which must be supplied separately in carefully controlled amounts. Option C (To increase ketone body production during fasting) is incorrect because while ketogenesis is a result of MCT metabolism, the primary purpose is to supply the upstream energy substrate, not just to force ketone production. Option D (To reduce the toxic acylcarnitine accumulation) is incorrect as the main strategy to reduce toxic long-chain acylcarnitines is the strict restriction of dietary long-chain fat intake. Option E (To stimulate Insulin secretion and prevent hypoglycaemia) is incorrect because MCTs do not stimulate insulin and are intended to provide an energy source when insulin levels are appropriately low during fasting. 8 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-year-old girl is reviewed in the paediatric outpatient clinic. Her past medical history is notable for an umbilical hernia repair during early childhood. Her parents describe a history of progressive joint stiffness. On examination, bilateral corneal clouding is noted. A recent echocardiogram, performed to investigate a murmur, has confirmed the presence of mild aortic valve disease. Which of the following groups of inborn errors of metabolism is the most likely underlying diagnosis? A) Peroxisomal Disorders. B) Lysosomal Storage Disorders (LSDs). C) Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation (CDG). D) Mitochondrial Disorders. E) Purine and Pyrimidine Defects. CORRECT ANSWER: The patient's constellation of signs points towards a mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS), which is a subgroup of Lysosomal Storage Disorders (LSDs). The underlying pathophysiology involves a deficiency in a specific lysosomal enzyme responsible for degrading glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). This defect leads to the progressive accumulation of undigested GAGs within lysosomes in various tissues. This widespread storage explains the multi-systemic nature of the disease: GAG deposition in the cornea causes clouding, accumulation in cartilage and connective tissue leads to joint stiffness and hernias, and infiltration of cardiac valves results in valvulopathy. The progressive nature of the symptoms is a key feature, reflecting the gradual build-up of storage material over time. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Peroxisomal Disorders) is incorrect as conditions like Zellweger syndrome typically present in the neonatal period with severe neurological dysfunction, hypotonia, and liver disease. Option C (Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation) is less likely because, while multi-systemic, they usually feature prominent neurological impairment, failure to thrive, and distinct biochemical abnormalities. Option D (Mitochondrial Disorders) is incorrect as these classically affect tissues with high energy requirements, presenting with myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes. Option E (Purine and Pyrimidine Defects) is unlikely as these disorders typically manifest with severe neurological features, renal stones, and haematological abnormalities. 9 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-year-old boy is reviewed by the paediatric registrar prior to elective surgery. He has been fasted as per standard pre-operative protocol. A routine capillary blood glucose measurement is unexpectedly low at 1.8 mmol/L. A subsequent urine dipstick analysis shows no evidence of ketones. A defect in which of the following metabolic pathways best explains this presentation? A) Glycogenolysis B) Gluconeogenesis C) Amino Acid Metabolism D) Urea Synthesis E) Fatty Acid Oxidation (FAO) CORRECT ANSWER: E: Fatty Acid Oxidation (FAO). The clinical presentation of hypoketotic hypoglycaemia following a fasting stress is the classic hallmark of a fatty acid oxidation defect. During fasting, once glycogen stores are depleted, the body relies on two main processes: gluconeogenesis for glucose production and fatty acid oxidation to produce ketones as an alternative energy source for the brain and other tissues. In a child with an FAO defect, the pathway for converting fatty acids into acetyl-CoA, and subsequently into ketone bodies, is impaired. This leads to a dangerous combination of low blood glucose (hypoglycaemia) from depleted glycogen and an inability to generate ketones (hypoketosis), starving the brain of essential fuel. This specific metabolic signature makes an FAO defect the most likely diagnosis. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glycogenolysis) is incorrect because defects in this pathway, such as glycogen storage disorders, cause fasting hypoglycaemia but with a robust and appropriate ketotic response. Option B (Gluconeogenesis) is incorrect as, similar to glycogenolysis defects, an impairment in this pathway would lead to hypoglycaemia with significant ketosis. Option C (Amino Acid Metabolism) is incorrect because while certain aminoacidopathies can cause hypoglycaemia, they do not typically present with this primary picture of hypoketosis. Option D (Urea Synthesis) is incorrect as urea cycle defects primarily manifest with hyperammonaemia and associated neurological symptoms, not hypoketotic hypoglycaemia. 10 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-year-old boy is referred to the paediatrics outpatient clinic with global developmental delay. His parents note he has not yet started walking and has limited speech. On examination, he is observed to have coarse facial features, including thickened lips and eyebrows. Abdominal assessment reveals hepatosplenomegaly. Initial haematology and biochemistry blood tests are unremarkable. What is the most likely underlying diagnosis? A) Non-ketotic Hyperglycinaemia. B) Chronic Fatty Acid Oxidation Defect (FAO Defect). C) Galactosaemia. D) Urea Cycle Defect (UCD). E) Lysosomal Storage Disorder (e.g., Mucopolysaccharidosis). CORRECT ANSWER: E: Lysosomal Storage Disorder (e.g., Mucopolysaccharidosis). The pathophysiology of Mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) involves deficient activity of specific lysosomal enzymes responsible for the degradation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). This deficiency leads to the progressive accumulation of GAGs within lysosomes in various tissues, including the liver, spleen, bone, and central nervous system. This widespread storage accounts for the characteristic clinical triad: coarse facial features (due to dermal and soft tissue infiltration), hepatosplenomegaly (due to GAG accumulation in reticuloendothelial cells), and progressive neurocognitive decline or developmental delay. The gradual onset and multi-systemic nature of these findings in a toddler are highly indicative of an underlying lysosomal storage disorder. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Non-ketotic Hyperglycinaemia) is incorrect as it typically presents in the neonatal period with severe encephalopathy, intractable seizures, and hypotonia, not the dysmorphism and organomegaly seen here. Option B (Chronic Fatty Acid Oxidation Defect) is less likely because its primary manifestations involve recurrent episodes of hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, lethargy, and cardiomyopathy, without the characteristic coarse facies. Option C (Galactosaemia) is incorrect as it classically presents in early infancy following milk ingestion with acute liver failure, cataracts, and Escherichia coli sepsis. Option D (Urea Cycle Defect) is incorrect because it presents with hyperammonaemic encephalopathy, characterised by vomiting, lethargy, and coma, lacking the specific physical features of this case. 11 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-day-old term infant is urgently reviewed on the postnatal ward for progressive lethargy and poor feeding. On examination, she is drowsy and hypotonic. An urgent blood gas analysis reveals a significant respiratory alkalosis, and a laboratory blood sample confirms a plasma ammonia concentration of 250 micromol/L. Which of the following is the most critical next step to guide immediate management? A) Start IV Carnitine infusion. B) Prepare for immediate Liver Biopsy. C) Simultaneously send Plasma Amino Acids and Urine Organic Acids. D) Start IV Sodium Bicarbonate to correct acidosis. E) Administer empiric IV Hydrocortisone. CORRECT ANSWER: Severe neonatal hyperammonaemia is a neurological emergency requiring urgent investigation to guide management. The priority is to differentiate between the two main groups of inborn errors of metabolism that present this way: Urea Cycle Defects (UCDs) and Organic Acidaemias (OAs). This distinction is critical as their management pathways differ significantly. According to UK guidelines, plasma amino acids and urine organic acids are the key initial diagnostic tests. Plasma amino acids will reveal characteristic abnormalities in UCDs (e.g., elevated citrulline), while urine organic acids will identify the metabolites characteristic of OAs (e.g., methylmalonic acid). Sending these samples simultaneously and early is the most crucial step because the results will directly inform the specific, targeted therapy required to lower the ammonia and prevent irreversible brain injury. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start IV Carnitine infusion) is incorrect as carnitine is a specific treatment for certain OAs and fatty acid oxidation defects, and its use is guided by the diagnosis, not given empirically. Option B (Prepare for immediate Liver Biopsy) is incorrect because a liver biopsy is an invasive procedure that is not indicated for the acute investigation of hyperammonaemia and would cause a critical delay. Option D (Start IV Sodium Bicarbonate to correct acidosis) is less appropriate because while OAs can cause acidosis, UCDs may present with respiratory alkalosis, so bicarbonate could be harmful without a blood gas result and a clearer diagnosis. Option E (Administer empiric IV Hydrocortisone) is incorrect as steroids are not a primary treatment for hyperammonaemia and would be used for conditions like congenital adrenal hyperplasia, which presents differently. 12 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old boy is reviewed on the postnatal ward for progressive lethargy and poor feeding. His blood gas analysis confirms a significant metabolic acidosis with a raised anion gap, and a urine sample is strongly positive for ketones. The metabolic team advises sending a urine sample for organic acid analysis. What is the primary advantage of using urine over blood for this specific investigation? A) Urine is easier to collect than blood in a sick neonate. B) Urine samples do not need special handling instructions. C) The toxic organic acids are highly concentrated in urine for easier detection. D) Urine analysis can detect proteins that blood tests cannot. E) Blood analysis is only reliable in the acute phase. CORRECT ANSWER: The primary advantage of using urine for organic acid analysis lies in the pathophysiology of these metabolic disorders. In organic acidaemias, inherited enzyme deficiencies cause a block in a metabolic pathway. This leads to the accumulation of upstream organic acid intermediates in the blood. These toxic, water-soluble metabolites are rapidly cleared from the plasma by the kidneys. Consequently, they become highly concentrated in the urine, often by a factor of 100-fold or more compared to blood levels. This concentration effect is crucial for the analytical method used, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS), as it significantly increases the sensitivity and reliability of detecting the specific diagnostic compounds, making identification and quantification far more straightforward than in a blood sample. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Urine is easier to collect than blood in a sick neonate) is incorrect because obtaining a timely and uncontaminated urine sample from an acutely unwell infant can be very challenging. Option B (Urine samples do not need special handling instructions) is incorrect as these samples must be frozen promptly after collection to prevent the degradation of volatile organic acids. Option D (Urine analysis can detect proteins that blood tests cannot) is incorrect because this test is for specific metabolites, not proteins, and blood tests are superior for protein quantification. Option E (Blood analysis is only reliable in the acute phase) is incorrect as blood tests, such as plasma acylcarnitines, are complementary and remain useful for both acute diagnosis and chronic management. 13 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old boy is reviewed on the postnatal ward due to poor feeding and lethargy. The paediatric registrar suspects an inborn error of metabolism and requests a number of investigations, including a plasma lactate level. After the sample is collected, the nurse telephones the laboratory for advice on sample handling. What is the primary reason for placing the sample on ice immediately after collection? A) Chilling preserves the Pyruvate for ratio calculation. B) Chilling prevents Ammonia from contaminating the Lactate assay. C) Chilling halts cell metabolism which would otherwise cause falsely high Lactate. D) Chilling is required to crystallise the Lactate for analysis. E) Lactate is unstable at room temperature due to evaporation. CORRECT ANSWER: After a blood sample is taken, viable cells, particularly erythrocytes and leukocytes, continue to metabolise glucose via anaerobic glycolysis. This in vitro metabolic process produces lactate as a byproduct. If the sample is left at room temperature, this cellular activity leads to a continuous, non-physiological rise in the lactate concentration, which can cause a falsely high result and misinform clinical judgement. Chilling the sample by placing it on ice effectively halts these enzymatic reactions. This preserves the integrity of the sample, ensuring that the measured lactate level accurately reflects the patient's in vivo metabolic state at the moment of collection, which is critical in the investigation of a suspected inherited metabolic disease. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Chilling preserves the Pyruvate for ratio calculation) is incorrect because pyruvate is exceptionally unstable and requires immediate stabilisation with a chemical preservative, typically by collection into a perchloric acid tube, rather than just chilling. Option B (Chilling prevents Ammonia from contaminating the Lactate assay) is incorrect because ammonia is a separate analyte with its own specific handling requirements to prevent false elevations, and it does not chemically interfere with standard lactate measurement. Option D (Chilling is required to crystallise the Lactate for analysis) is incorrect as laboratory analysis measures lactate concentration in its soluble state within plasma or whole blood; crystallisation is not a step in the analytical process. Option E (Lactate is unstable at room temperature due to evaporation) is incorrect because lactate is not volatile, and its concentration in a sealed blood tube is not affected by evaporation at room temperature. 14 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old, term male infant is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with poor feeding and increasing lethargy. He was born at term via a normal vaginal delivery and was discharged home on day two. Over the last 24 hours, his parents report he has become progressively drowsy and difficult to rouse for feeds. On examination, he is floppy with a reduced Moro reflex. The Paediatric Registrar is concerned about a potential Inborn Error of Metabolism and sends a panel of urgent investigations. Which of the following conditions would most likely be identified by a markedly abnormal plasma amino acid profile? A) Glutaric Acidaemia Type 1 (GA1) B) Lactic Acidaemia due to PDC deficiency C) Urea Cycle Defects (e.g., OTC Deficiency) D) Hypoglycaemia due to MCADD E) Galactosaemia CORRECT ANSWER: Urea Cycle Defects (UCDs) are disorders of nitrogen metabolism where the pathway for converting toxic ammonia into excretable urea is impaired due to a specific enzyme deficiency. During periods of catabolic stress, protein breakdown releases large amounts of nitrogen, which cannot be processed effectively. This results in hyperammonaemia and the accumulation of the specific amino acid precursor immediately upstream of the enzymatic block. For example, in Citrullinaemia Type 1, a deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase leads to markedly elevated plasma citrulline levels. Therefore, plasma amino acid analysis is the key initial diagnostic investigation in an acutely unwell infant with suspected UCD, as it can pinpoint the likely defect by identifying the specific elevated amino acid. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glutaric Acidaemia Type 1) is incorrect as the primary diagnostic investigation is urine organic acid analysis, which detects elevated glutaric and 3-hydroxyglutaric acids. Option B (Lactic Acidaemia due to PDC deficiency) is incorrect because the key biochemical marker is a significantly raised plasma and CSF lactate, not a specific amino acid. Option D (Hypoglycaemia due to MCADD) is incorrect as this fatty acid oxidation disorder is diagnosed by a characteristic acylcarnitine profile, typically showing elevated C8 species. Option E (Galactosaemia) is incorrect because it is a disorder of carbohydrate metabolism diagnosed by detecting reducing substances in urine and confirmed by measuring GALT enzyme activity. 15 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-day-old neonate is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a 24-hour history of vomiting and increasing lethargy. An initial workup for potential sepsis is commenced, which includes a urine sample. The standard urine multistix test is negative for glucose. What is the primary utility of performing a specific test for reducing substances on this urine sample? A) To diagnose Type 1 Diabetes. B) To detect proximal renal tubular damage. C) To screen for Galactosaemia and Fructose Intolerance. D) To assess for inappropriate ADH secretion. E) To confirm the presence of Ketones. CORRECT ANSWER: The urine test for reducing substances, commonly performed using a Clinitest tablet, is a critical initial investigation in an unwell neonate. It detects the presence of reducing sugars such as galactose, fructose, and lactose, in addition to glucose. In a 7-day-old presenting with vomiting and lethargy, an inborn error of metabolism is a key differential diagnosis. A positive test for reducing substances, when the standard urine dipstick is negative for glucose, strongly suggests the presence of a non-glucose sugar. This is a hallmark of conditions like Galactosaemia or Hereditary Fructose Intolerance, where a specific enzyme deficiency leads to the accumulation of galactose or fructose, respectively, which are then excreted in the urine. Early detection is vital as these conditions can rapidly lead to sepsis, liver failure, and death if untreated. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (To diagnose Type 1 Diabetes) is incorrect as neonatal diabetes is rare and would present with glucosuria, which is identifiable on a standard urine dipstick. Option B (To detect proximal renal tubular damage) is less appropriate because while Fanconi syndrome can cause generalised aminoaciduria and glycosuria, the primary utility of this test in this specific presentation is screening for metabolic disease. Option D (To assess for inappropriate ADH secretion) is incorrect as SIADH relates to sodium and water homoeostasis and does not cause reducing sugars to appear in the urine. Option E (To confirm the presence of Ketones) is incorrect because ketones are detected by a separate, specific test on the urine multistix, not by the test for reducing substances. 16 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-month-old infant is referred to the paediatric team for investigation of developmental regression and ataxia. Initial blood tests show a significant metabolic acidosis with a markedly elevated plasma lactate level. Which of the following investigations, requested on the same sample, is most important for the specific evaluation of a Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex deficiency? A) Plasma Urine Acids B) Plasma Amino Acids C) Urine Ketones D) Plasma Pyruvate to calculate the Lactate:Pyruvate ratio E) Plasma Acylcarnitines CORRECT ANSWER: In Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex (PDC) deficiency, the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA is impaired, leading to an accumulation of pyruvate in the blood. This excess pyruvate is then converted to lactate by lactate dehydrogenase, causing a secondary lactic acidosis. Therefore, both plasma lactate and pyruvate levels are elevated. Measuring plasma pyruvate simultaneously with lactate is essential to calculate the lactate-to-pyruvate (L:P) ratio. A key diagnostic feature of PDC deficiency is a significantly raised lactate but a normal or near-normal L:P ratio (typically <20), as both substrates are elevated proportionally. This contrasts sharply with primary respiratory chain disorders, where impaired oxidative phosphorylation leads to a much higher L:P ratio due to poor pyruvate utilisation and excess lactate production. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Plasma Urine Acids) is incorrect because while it may show a lactic acidosis, it is not the primary test to differentiate the cause based on the L:P ratio. Option B (Plasma Amino Acids) is incorrect as, although alanine may be elevated due to the transamination of excess pyruvate, this is a secondary finding and less specific than the L:P ratio. Option C (Urine Ketones) is incorrect because ketosis is often absent or minimal in PDC deficiency, as the condition impairs the production of acetyl-CoA, a necessary precursor for ketone body formation. Option E (Plasma Acylcarnitines) is incorrect as this investigation is primarily used for diagnosing fatty acid oxidation defects, which present differently and are not the primary concern here. 17 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-day-old term infant is brought to A&E with a 24-hour history of vomiting and progressive lethargy. On examination, the infant is tachypnoeic and poorly responsive. Initial blood tests reveal a severe high anion gap metabolic acidosis and significantly raised plasma ammonia levels. Which additional laboratory finding would most strongly suggest a diagnosis of an organic acidaemia? A) Profound Hypoglycaemia. B) Respiratory Alkalosis. C) Ketonuria and Ketonemia with high Anion Gap. D) Bilateral Cataracts. E) Plasma Lactate and Pyruvate Ratio >20:1. CORRECT ANSWER: The presence of significant ketonuria and ketonemia, alongside a high anion gap metabolic acidosis, is the most definitive initial finding for an Organic Acidaemia (OA). In OAs, the defective metabolism of specific amino acids or fatty acids leads to the accumulation of non-metabolisable organic acid intermediates in the blood. These acids dissociate, releasing hydrogen ions and consuming bicarbonate, which results in a high anion gap metabolic acidosis. The profound metabolic block also shunts acetyl-CoA towards ketone body production, leading to significant ketosis. This combination is a key pathophysiological hallmark distinguishing OAs from other causes of neonatal hyperammonaemia, such as Urea Cycle Defects, where ketosis is typically absent or minimal. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Profound Hypoglycaemia) is less specific as it can be present but is not as universally characteristic of all OAs as ketosis. Option B (Respiratory Alkalosis) is incorrect because it is a classic feature of Urea Cycle Defects, where hyperammonaemia directly stimulates the respiratory centre. Option D (Bilateral Cataracts) is suggestive of galactosaemia, a carbohydrate metabolism disorder, not an Organic Acidaemia. Option E (Plasma Lactate and Pyruvate Ratio >20:1) is incorrect as this finding is highly indicative of a primary mitochondrial respiratory chain disorder. 18 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 12-month-old girl is reviewed by the paediatric registrar following an episode of profound lethargy. Her parents describe several similar episodes, particularly during intercurrent viral illnesses when her feeding has been poor. Initial investigations during this admission confirm a significant hypoglycaemia, but a urine dipstick is negative for ketones. Which of the following investigations is most specific for diagnosing the suspected underlying group of metabolic disorders? A) Urine Organic Acids B) Blood Lactate and Pyruvate Ratio C) Plasma Acylcarnitines D) Plasma Amino Acids E) Serum Ferritin CORRECT ANSWER: Plasma Acylcarnitines. Fatty acid oxidation disorders (FAODs) are inborn errors of metabolism where the pathway for breaking down fatty acids for energy is defective. This process occurs within the mitochondria. Long-chain fatty acids require carnitine to be transported across the mitochondrial membrane. When a specific enzyme in the beta-oxidation spiral is deficient, partially metabolised fatty acid intermediates accumulate. These intermediates are conjugated to carnitine, forming specific acylcarnitine esters which then spill into the plasma. Therefore, plasma acylcarnitine analysis using tandem mass spectrometry is the primary, most specific, and sensitive diagnostic test for this group of conditions, as it directly detects this pathognomonic accumulation. The pattern of acylcarnitine elevation can often pinpoint the specific enzyme defect. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Urine Organic Acids) is less appropriate because whilst it may show supportive findings like dicarboxylic aciduria, it is not the primary specific diagnostic test for FAODs. Option B (Blood Lactate and Pyruvate Ratio) is incorrect as this investigation is primarily used for assessing suspected mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders, not fatty acid oxidation defects. Option D (Plasma Amino Acids) is incorrect because this test is used to diagnose aminoacidopathies or urea cycle defects, which present with different biochemical derangements. Option E (Serum Ferritin) is incorrect as it is a marker of iron stores and has no role in the investigation of suspected inborn errors of metabolism. 19 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old neonate is admitted to the paediatric assessment unit with poor feeding and lethargy. The paediatric registrar is concerned about a potential inborn error of metabolism and requests a plasma ammonia level as part of the initial investigations. Which of the following sample handling instructions is the most critical to ensure the accuracy of the result? A) The sample must be collected using a yellow top serum tube. B) The sample must be placed on ice and transported to the lab immediately. C) The sample must be taken before any feeding occurs. D) The sample must be taken from an arterial line. E) The sample must be centrifuged within two hours of collection. CORRECT ANSWER: Ammonia is highly unstable in vitro and its concentration increases rapidly in a whole blood sample at room temperature. This artefactual rise is primarily due to the continued metabolism of nitrogen-containing compounds, such as amino acids, by red blood cells. Placing the sample on ice and ensuring immediate transport to the laboratory is the most critical step because it halts this enzymatic activity, preventing a falsely elevated result which could lead to misdiagnosis and inappropriate clinical intervention. National guidelines consistently emphasise that samples must be sent on ice immediately to the laboratory to ensure the result accurately reflects the patient's physiological state. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (The sample must be collected using a yellow top serum tube) is incorrect as ammonia samples should be collected in an EDTA (purple/pink top) or lithium heparin tube, not a serum tube. Option C (The sample must be taken before any feeding occurs) is incorrect because while a fasting sample is ideal to avoid post-prandial rises, in an emergency situation this is secondary to the critical need for rapid and correctly chilled sample handling. Option D (The sample must be taken from an arterial line) is incorrect as a free-flowing venous sample is the standard and preferred specimen for routine plasma ammonia analysis. Option E (The sample must be centrifuged within two hours of collection) is incorrect because immediate chilling is the priority; while prompt separation is vital, waiting up to two hours without the sample being on ice would render the result unreliable. 20 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old term infant is reviewed on the postnatal ward for increasing lethargy and poor feeding. On examination, he is profoundly hypotonic. A comprehensive septic screen is negative. An underlying inborn error of metabolism is suspected. Which two of the following biochemical tests are most crucial to request for immediate analysis? A) C-Peptide and Thyroid Function Tests. B) Plasma Amino Acids and Urine Organic Acids. C) Full Blood Count and C-Reactive Protein. D) Plasma Lactate and Pyruvate Ratio. E) Blood Gas and Plasma Ammonia. CORRECT ANSWER: In a neonate with suspected metabolic collapse, the immediate priority is to identify life-threatening but potentially reversible conditions. A blood gas is the single most useful rapid investigation; it reveals the acid-base status (e.g., metabolic acidosis, respiratory alkalosis), which helps to categorise the potential Inborn Error of Metabolism (IEM). Crucially, it also allows calculation of the anion gap. Plasma ammonia must be sent simultaneously, as hyperammonaemia is a neurological emergency requiring immediate treatment to prevent severe brain injury. National guidelines and expert consensus support these two tests as the essential first-line investigations in any infant with unexplained encephalopathy or collapse where an IEM is considered. They provide critical information to guide emergency management while awaiting more specialist test results. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (C-Peptide and Thyroid Function Tests) is incorrect as these investigate congenital hypothyroidism or hyperinsulinism, which are not the primary diagnoses in a suspected IEM crisis. Option B (Plasma Amino Acids and Urine Organic Acids) is incorrect because these are definitive, specialised tests that take days to process and are therefore not suitable for initial emergency triage. Option C (Full Blood Count and C-Reactive Protein) is incorrect as these are investigations for sepsis, which the clinical scenario states has been excluded by a negative septic screen. Option D (Plasma Lactate and Pyruvate Ratio) is incorrect because while lactate is a useful component of the blood gas analysis, the specific ratio is a more specialised test for mitochondrial disease and is not the priority over ammonia. 21 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-day-old infant is reviewed on the postnatal ward due to increasing lethargy and poor feeding. Over the past 24 hours, he has developed vomiting and hypotonia. During the assessment, the paediatric registrar notes a distinctive smell from the wet nappy, which is similar to burnt sugar. What is the most likely diagnosis? A) Isovaleric Acidaemia (Sweaty feet) B) Trimethylaminuria (Fishy smell) C) Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) D) Phenylketonuria (Mousy smell) E) Tyrosinaemia (Cabbage smell) CORRECT ANSWER: Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) is an autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism affecting the breakdown of branched-chain amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, and valine). A deficiency in the branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase complex leads to the accumulation of these amino acids and their corresponding ketoacids in bodily fluids. This accumulation is neurotoxic, causing symptoms like poor feeding, vomiting, lethargy, and neurological signs within the first week of life. The pathognomonic feature is the urinary excretion of sotolone, a compound that gives a distinctive odour of burnt sugar or maple syrup. This smell, combined with the acute neonatal presentation of encephalopathy, makes MSUD the most probable diagnosis. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Isovaleric Acidaemia) is incorrect as it is characterised by a distinct odour of sweaty feet, caused by the accumulation of isovaleric acid. Option B (Trimethylaminuria) is incorrect because it results in a fishy body odour due to the excessive excretion of trimethylamine. Option D (Phenylketonuria) is incorrect as the accumulation of phenylalanine and its metabolites produces a characteristic mousy or musty odour. Option E (Tyrosinaemia) is incorrect because this condition, particularly Type I, is associated with a smell of boiled cabbage. 22 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-day-old term infant is admitted to the neonatal unit with poor feeding and lethargy. On assessment, the infant is found to be peripherally shut down, with a capillary refill time of four seconds. An urgent blood gas analysis confirms a severe metabolic acidosis. While awaiting further laboratory results for a suspected inborn error of metabolism, intravenous fluid resuscitation is initiated. Which of the following must be excluded from the initial fluid prescription? A) Sodium Chloride B) Dextrose C) Potassium Chloride (KCl) D) Water E) Ringer's Lactate CORRECT ANSWER: In an infant presenting with shock and suspected Inborn Error of Metabolism (IEM), a severe metabolic acidosis is a common finding. Pathophysiologically, profound acidaemia causes an extracellular shift of potassium from the intracellular compartment in exchange for hydrogen ions. This protective buffering mechanism can lead to significant, life-threatening hyperkalaemia, even with normal total body potassium stores. Administering intravenous fluids containing Potassium Chloride (KCl) before confirming the serum potassium level would dangerously exacerbate this, increasing the risk of cardiac arrhythmias and cardiac arrest. Therefore, as per standard paediatric resuscitation principles, potassium must be omitted from all initial resuscitation and subsequent maintenance fluids until the metabolic acidosis is correcting and a safe serum potassium level has been established through laboratory investigation. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Sodium Chloride) is incorrect because an isotonic, sodium-containing fluid like 0.9% sodium chloride is the recommended first-line choice for intravascular volume expansion in paediatric shock. Option B (Dextrose) is incorrect as providing a glucose source is vital to prevent hypoglycaemia and to suppress the catabolism that often drives the metabolic crisis in many IEMs. Option D (Water) is incorrect because administering water alone would lead to dangerous hyponatraemia and is not effective for correcting hypovolaemic shock. Option E (Ringer's Lactate) is less appropriate because its lactate content could worsen the existing lactic acidosis and it contains a small amount of potassium, which should be avoided. 23 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-day-old male infant is reviewed on the neonatal intensive care unit for a deteriorating level of consciousness. He was admitted with poor feeding and lethargy, and investigations revealed a plasma ammonia level of 600 µmol/L. Despite treatment with intravenous fluids, a high-glucose infusion, and nitrogen-scavenging agents, he is now comatose. What is the most critical next step in his management? A) Start IV Carnitine and Biotin. B) Continue maximal IV fluid resuscitation. C) Initiate Haemodialysis or Haemofiltration (CRRT). D) Administer a second bolus of nitrogen scavengers. E) Start oral Lactulose and Neomycin. CORRECT ANSWER: In severe neonatal hyperammonaemia, particularly with levels exceeding 400-500 micromol/L and associated encephalopathy, extracorporeal ammonia removal is the definitive and most effective intervention. The neurotoxicity of ammonia is both concentration and duration-dependent; therefore, rapid reduction is critical to prevent irreversible brain injury. Medical management, including nitrogen scavengers (sodium benzoate, sodium phenylbutyrate) and optimising caloric intake to halt catabolism, is essential but has limited efficacy at such high ammonia concentrations. Haemodialysis or continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) can clear ammonia far more rapidly and efficiently than endogenous pathways or medical therapy, making it the priority intervention in a critically ill neonate unresponsive to initial stabilisation. UK guidelines emphasise that if ammonia is >400 µmol/L and resistant to treatment, haemofiltration should be established within 6 hours for the best outcome. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start IV Carnitine and Biotin) is incorrect because while these cofactors are used for specific organic acidaemias, they are not a primary or rapid treatment for life-threatening hyperammonaemia itself. Option B (Continue maximal IV fluid resuscitation) is insufficient as high-volume fluids alone do not effectively clear ammonia and risk causing fluid overload and exacerbating cerebral oedema. Option D (Administer a second bolus of nitrogen scavengers) is less appropriate because the infant is already failing to respond to this line of therapy, indicating the metabolic pathway is overwhelmed and further doses will not achieve the rapid clearance required. Option E (Start oral Lactulose and Neomycin) is incorrect as this regimen is used for chronic hyperammonaemia secondary to liver disease by reducing gut production of ammonia, which is not the pathophysiology in neonatal metabolic crises and is too slow for this emergency. 24 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine An 18-month-old boy is brought to the A&E with lethargy. He has had a 24-hour history of a febrile illness with poor oral intake. On examination, he is drowsy and a point-of-care blood glucose measurement is 1.8 mmol/L. Which of the following findings on a urine sample would be most consistent with a diagnosis of a fatty acid oxidation disorder? A) Glucose B) Ammonia C) Ketones D) Organic Acids E) Lactate CORRECT ANSWER: C (Ketones). Fatty acid oxidation is the metabolic process that breaks down fatty acids to produce acetyl-CoA, which then enters the Krebs cycle or is used for ketogenesis. In a fasting state, the body relies on this pathway for energy once glycogen stores are depleted. In children with a fatty acid oxidation disorder, a genetic defect impairs this process. Consequently, during periods of catabolic stress such as fasting or illness, they cannot produce ketone bodies as an alternative energy source for the brain and other tissues. This leads to the classic biochemical picture of hypoketotic (or non-ketotic) hypoglycaemia. The absence or inappropriately low level of urine ketones in the presence of significant hypoglycaemia is the hallmark of this group of disorders. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glucose) is incorrect because glucosuria would only occur with hyperglycaemia exceeding the renal threshold, whereas these children typically present with profound hypoglycaemia. Option B (Ammonia) is incorrect as hyperammonaemia is often a feature of a fatty acid oxidation disorder crisis due to the disruption of the urea cycle. Option D (Organic Acids) is incorrect because alternative, inefficient metabolic pathways are activated, leading to an accumulation and excretion of specific dicarboxylic acids, hence their presence in urine. Option E (Lactate) is incorrect because while a lactic acidosis can occur in various metabolic emergencies, it is not characteristically absent; its level is often variable or mildly elevated in these cases. 25 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-day-old term infant, who was well at birth, is reviewed for escalating jaundice and vomiting after feeds. On examination, the infant has hepatomegaly. A urine sample tests positive for reducing substances, but a urine dipstick is negative for glucose. A septic screen has been performed and the blood culture is pending. What is the most appropriate immediate step in management? A) Start IV Antibiotics and wait for culture. B) Stop all feeds and start IV Dextrose. C) Switch from breastmilk/standard formula to a lactose-free formula. D) Start oral Carnitine supplementation. E) Prepare for exchange transfusion for jaundice. CORRECT ANSWER: The clinical triad of vomiting, jaundice, and hepatomegaly in a neonate who was well at birth is a classical presentation of galactosaemia. The positive test for reducing substances in the urine, in the absence of glycosuria on a standard dipstick, indicates the presence of galactose and is a key diagnostic pointer. The pathophysiology involves a deficiency of galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase (GALT), leading to the accumulation of toxic galactose-1-phosphate. This causes severe liver dysfunction, renal tubular acidosis, and a markedly increased susceptibility to E. coli sepsis. The most critical immediate action is the complete removal of the offending substrate, galactose, from the diet. As lactose in breastmilk and standard formula is the primary source of galactose, switching to a lactose-free feed, such as a soy-based formula, is a life-saving intervention that must be initiated empirically while awaiting confirmatory tests. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start IV Antibiotics and wait for culture) is incorrect because while antibiotics are vital due to the high risk of E. coli sepsis, delaying the essential dietary modification is harmful. Option B (Stop all feeds and start IV Dextrose) is inappropriate as the infant requires suitable nutrition, and this action only partially manages hypoglycaemia without addressing the core toxic accumulation. Option D (Start oral Carnitine supplementation) is incorrect as carnitine is used for managing organic acidaemias and fatty acid oxidation defects, not galactosaemia. Option E (Prepare for exchange transfusion for jaundice) is incorrect because the jaundice is primarily conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia from liver dysfunction, not unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia from haemolysis requiring transfusion. 26 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old boy is reviewed in the metabolic unit following an abnormal newborn blood spot screen that has confirmed a diagnosis of an organic acidaemia. After a period of initial stabilisation, a long-term management plan is being formulated. Which of the following nutrient groups is the primary target for dietary restriction to prevent future metabolic decompensation? A) Fatty Acids B) Simple Sugars (Carbohydrates) C) Vitamins and Co-factors D) Specific Amino Acids E) Water and Salt CORRECT ANSWER: Organic Acidaemias (OAs) are a group of inborn errors of metabolism characterised by the deficient activity of specific enzymes involved in amino acid catabolism. This enzymatic block leads to the accumulation of toxic organic acid metabolites. The primary precursors for these toxic compounds are specific amino acids, most commonly the branched-chain amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, valine) as well as methionine and threonine. Therefore, the cornerstone of long-term management is a highly specialised and carefully controlled diet that restricts the intake of these specific precursor amino acids. This strategy aims to minimise the production of toxic metabolites, thereby preventing acute metabolic decompensation and promoting normal growth and neurodevelopment. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Fatty Acids) is incorrect because the primary metabolic defect in Organic Acidaemias relates to amino acid breakdown, not disorders of fatty acid oxidation. Option B (Simple Sugars) is incorrect as carbohydrates are essential to prevent catabolism, especially during illness, and are not the source of the toxic metabolites. Option C (Vitamins and Co-factors) is incorrect because certain Organic Acidaemias are vitamin-responsive, requiring supplementation (e.g., biotin, B12), not restriction. Option E (Water and Salt) is incorrect as managing fluid and electrolytes is vital during acute illness but is not the primary long-term dietary therapy for the underlying metabolic disorder. 27 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-year-old boy is brought to the Accident and Emergency department with increasing lethargy. He has been unwell for three days with a febrile viral illness. On examination, he has significant hepatomegaly. Initial laboratory investigations confirm profound hypoglycaemia, a marked lactic acidosis and hyperuricaemia. What is the most likely underlying diagnosis? A) MCADD Deficiency B) Propionic Acidaemia C) Urea Cycle Defect (UCD) D) Glycogen Storage Disease (GSD) Type I E) Galactosaemia CORRECT ANSWER: The pathophysiology of Glycogen Storage Disease (GSD) Type I (Von Gierke's disease) directly explains this clinical picture. A deficiency in the glucose-6-phosphatase enzyme prevents the final step of both gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis. This inability to convert glucose-6-phosphate to free glucose results in severe fasting hypoglycaemia, as the liver cannot maintain blood glucose levels. The accumulation of glucose-6-phosphate within hepatocytes forces it down alternative metabolic pathways. This leads to increased glycogen synthesis, causing the characteristic massive hepatomegaly. Shunting through the glycolytic pathway results in excess pyruvate, which is converted to lactate, causing hyperlactataemia. Finally, increased activity of the pentose phosphate pathway leads to overproduction of purines and their subsequent breakdown, causing hyperuricaemia. The viral illness acts as a metabolic stressor, precipitating this presentation. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (MCADD Deficiency) is incorrect because this fatty acid oxidation defect typically presents with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia during fasting, not the profound hepatomegaly and hyperlactataemia seen here. Option B (Propionic Acidaemia) is incorrect as this organic acidaemia usually presents in early infancy with overwhelming metabolic acidosis, ketosis, and hyperammonaemia. Option C (Urea Cycle Defect) is incorrect because its primary biochemical hallmark is hyperammonaemia, and it does not classically present with this degree of hypoglycaemia and lactic acidosis. Option E (Galactosaemia) is incorrect as it manifests in neonates following the introduction of lactose, with jaundice, vomiting, and cataracts, and would not present for the first time at age 10. 28 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-day-old male infant is admitted to the neonatal unit with progressive lethargy and poor feeding. On examination, he appears unwell with poor peripheral perfusion. An initial sepsis screen is performed. His blood gas analysis shows a respiratory alkalosis, and a subsequent laboratory investigation reveals a plasma ammonia level greater than 100 micromol/L. Which of the following is the most likely underlying diagnosis? A) Organic Acidaemia (OA) B) Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder (FAOD) C) Urea Cycle Defect (UCD) D) Mitochondrial Disorder E) Galactosaemia CORRECT ANSWER: C: Urea Cycle Defect (UCD). This is a classic presentation. The pathophysiology involves a defect in the pathway that converts ammonia, a neurotoxic byproduct of protein metabolism, into urea for excretion. The resultant severe hyperammonaemia directly stimulates the medullary respiratory centre in the brainstem. This stimulation leads to hyperventilation, causing excessive blowing off of carbon dioxide (CO2). The subsequent low partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) results in a primary respiratory alkalosis. This is a key distinguishing feature, as many other severe neonatal metabolic collapses present with a metabolic acidosis. The poor perfusion is a non-specific sign of severe illness in this context. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Organic Acidaemia) is incorrect because these disorders are characterised by the accumulation of organic acids, leading to a high anion gap metabolic acidosis. Option B (Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder) is incorrect as these conditions typically present with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and a metabolic acidosis, particularly during periods of fasting stress. Option D (Mitochondrial Disorder) is incorrect because, while the presentation can be variable, a lactic acidosis is a more common finding due to impaired oxidative phosphorylation. Option E (Galactosaemia) is incorrect as its classic neonatal presentation includes liver dysfunction, jaundice, and susceptibility to E. coli sepsis, not primary respiratory alkalosis with significant hyperammonaemia. 29 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old boy is admitted to the neonatal unit with poor feeding and progressive lethargy. Initial laboratory investigations reveal a severe metabolic acidosis with a high anion gap, hyperammonaemia, and ketonuria. An organic acidaemia is strongly suspected, and emergency management is commenced with cessation of protein intake and administration of intravenous dextrose. In addition to these measures, which two vitamin co-factors should be administered empirically? A) Folic Acid and Riboflavin. B) Biotin and Cobalamin (B12). C) Thiamine and Pyridoxine. D) Vitamin C and Vitamin D. E) Carnitine and Creatine. CORRECT ANSWER: In an acute metabolic crisis where an Organic Acidaemia (OA) is suspected, emergency management includes treating the most common and potentially responsive forms. Propionic Acidaemia (PA) and Methylmalonic Acidaemia (MMA) are the most frequent OAs. The pathophysiology involves defects in key enzymes: propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC) in PA, and methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MCM) in MMA. PCC is a biotin-dependent enzyme, and some forms of PA are biotin-responsive. MCM requires adenosylcobalamin, a metabolite of vitamin B12, as its cofactor, making some forms of MMA responsive to hydroxocobalamin. As it is impossible to distinguish these conditions clinically in an emergency, national guidelines mandate the empirical administration of both biotin and cobalamin (B12) to treat any potentially responsive variant without delay, which can be life-saving. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Folic Acid and Riboflavin) is incorrect as these are not the primary cofactors for the enzymes deficient in propionic or methylmalonic acidaemia. Option C (Thiamine and Pyridoxine) is incorrect because thiamine is a cofactor used in Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD), and pyridoxine is used for other specific inborn errors of metabolism, not typically OAs. Option D (Vitamin C and Vitamin D) is incorrect as these vitamins do not function as cofactors in the specific metabolic pathways affected in this group of disorders. Option E (Carnitine and Creatine) is incorrect because although L-carnitine is a crucial adjunctive therapy used to detoxify by binding toxic organic acyl-CoA esters, it is not a primary enzyme cofactor. 30 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-day-old neonate is reviewed on the postnatal ward for poor feeding and lethargy. An urgent blood test reveals a plasma ammonia concentration of 400 µmol/L. Which of the following investigations is most critical to differentiate between a urea cycle disorder and an organic acidaemia? A) Urine pH B) Blood Gas and Anion Gap C) Urine Ketones D) Plasma Amino Acids and Urine Organic Acids E) Plasma Lactate and Pyruvate CORRECT ANSWER: The definitive differentiation between a Urea Cycle Defect (UCD) and an Organic Acidaemia (OA) in a neonate with hyperammonaemia requires analysis of specific metabolic pathways. In UCDs, a primary enzyme deficiency in the urea cycle leads to the accumulation of precursor substrates, which are specific amino acids (e.g., citrulline, ornithine), hence the critical need for plasma amino acid analysis. Conversely, OAs result from defects in the catabolism of amino acids, leading to the build-up of specific organic acids detectable in the urine. While OAs also cause secondary hyperammonaemia by inhibiting the urea cycle, identifying the characteristic organic acid profile is the key to their diagnosis. Therefore, sending both plasma amino acids and urine organic acids is the most critical and direct diagnostic step to distinguish between these two major groups of inborn errors of metabolism. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Urine pH) is incorrect because it is a non-specific finding and does not provide a definitive diagnosis for either condition. Option B (Blood Gas and Anion Gap) is less appropriate because while a high anion gap metabolic acidosis is typical in OAs, it is not universally present and some UCDs can present with a respiratory alkalosis, making it an unreliable differentiator. Option C (Urine Ketones) is incorrect as ketosis is a common finding in OAs but can be variable and is not specific enough to reliably distinguish from a UCD, especially in a poorly feeding neonate. Option E (Plasma Lactate and Pyruvate) is less critical because although lactate may be elevated in some OAs, it is not the primary diagnostic marker and can be raised due to other causes of neonatal illness like sepsis. 31 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-month-old infant is admitted from A&E with progressive lethargy and vomiting. An initial venous blood gas analysis confirms a severe metabolic acidosis. The paediatric registrar suspects an underlying organic acidaemia precipitating a metabolic crisis. What is the most important emergency measure to enhance the excretion of toxic acids? A) Stop all feeds and restrict IV fluids. B) Start IV Sodium Bicarbonate to normalise pH rapidly. C) Administer IV L-Arginine. D) Start Oral L-Carnitine supplementation. E) Start IV hydrocortisone. CORRECT ANSWER: In Organic Acidaemias (OAs), specific enzyme deficiencies lead to the accumulation of toxic organic acyl-CoA compounds. This process depletes intramitochondrial Coenzyme A (CoA), which is vital for the Krebs cycle and energy metabolism. L-Carnitine is the cornerstone of emergency management because it acts as a scavenger for these toxic acyl groups. It conjugates with them to form acylcarnitines, which are water-soluble and can be efficiently excreted by the kidneys. This action serves a dual purpose: it directly removes the toxic metabolites causing the metabolic acidosis and it regenerates free CoA, helping to restore mitochondrial function. Therefore, providing L-Carnitine is the most critical step to enhance the excretion of the toxic acids and mitigate their harmful effects. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Stop all feeds and restrict IV fluids) is incorrect because while protein intake is stopped, aggressive IV fluid therapy with dextrose is essential to correct dehydration, promote renal clearance of toxins, and suppress catabolism. Option B (Start IV Sodium Bicarbonate) is incorrect because rapid correction of acidosis with bicarbonate is hazardous, carrying risks of paradoxical intracellular acidosis and cerebral oedema; its use is reserved for severe, life-threatening acidosis and does not remove the underlying toxins. Option C (Administer IV L-Arginine) is incorrect as L-Arginine is a primary treatment for Urea Cycle Defects to facilitate ammonia removal, not for the pathophysiology of Organic Acidaemias. Option E (Start IV hydrocortisone) is incorrect because while stress-dose steroids are important supportive care to manage the acute illness and reduce catabolism, they do not have a direct role in enhancing the excretion of toxic organic acids. 32 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-day-old term neonate presents with poor feeding and increasing lethargy. An urgent metabolic screen reveals a markedly elevated plasma ammonia level. A urea cycle defect is suspected, and immediate treatment is required to prevent neurological injury. Which of the following medications provides an alternative pathway for nitrogen excretion? A) Oral Lactulose. B) IV Dextrose 50%. C) IV Sodium Bicarbonate. D) IV Sodium Phenylacetate and Sodium Benzoate. E) IM Carnitine. CORRECT ANSWER: In urea cycle defects, the metabolic pathway for converting neurotoxic ammonia into urea for excretion is impaired. The priority is to rapidly lower plasma ammonia levels to prevent irreversible neurological damage. IV Sodium Phenylacetate and Sodium Benzoate act as nitrogen scavengers, providing an essential alternative pathway for nitrogen disposal. Sodium Benzoate combines with glycine to form hippurate, which is then renally excreted. Sodium Phenylacetate conjugates with glutamine to form phenylacetylglutamine, also excreted by the kidneys. This pharmacological detoxification directly addresses the pathophysiology by removing the nitrogenous waste precursors, thereby bypassing the defective urea cycle and reducing the hyperammonaemic load. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Oral Lactulose) is incorrect because its primary mechanism is in treating hepatic encephalopathy by acidifying the gut, which is too slow and inappropriate for an acute metabolic crisis in a neonate with a primary urea cycle defect. Option B (IV Dextrose 50%) is incorrect because while providing high-caloric, protein-free fluids is crucial to reverse catabolism, it does not provide a direct alternative route for nitrogen excretion. Option C (IV Sodium Bicarbonate) is incorrect as it is used to correct metabolic acidosis, which can be a feature, but it does not address the primary problem of nitrogen removal. Option E (IM Carnitine) is incorrect because its role is primarily in treating organic acidaemias, where it helps to remove toxic organic acid metabolites, not as a primary nitrogen scavenger in urea cycle defects. 33 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-day-old term infant is reviewed on the postnatal ward for increasing lethargy. He has been feeding poorly and has had several vomits over the past 12 hours. An urgent venous blood gas analysis reveals a pH of 7.15 and a bicarbonate of 10 mmol/L, with a significantly raised anion gap. What is the most likely diagnosis? A) Urea Cycle Defect (UCD) B) Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder (FAOD) C) Congenital Hypothyroidism D) Organic Acidaemia (OA e.g., Propionic Acidaemia) E) Galactosaemia CORRECT ANSWER: Organic Acidaemias (OAs) are a group of inborn errors of metabolism where the catabolism of specific amino acids is blocked. This leads to the accumulation of toxic organic acid intermediates in the blood and urine. In the neonatal period, this manifests as a severe, acute illness with non-specific signs such as lethargy, poor feeding, and vomiting. The key diagnostic clue is the profound high anion gap metabolic acidosis, a direct consequence of these unmeasured organic anions accumulating in the blood. The anion gap is calculated as (Na+) - (Cl- + HCO3-), and a value significantly above the normal range (8-12 mmol/L) points towards an underlying metabolic cause like OA. While hyperammonaemia can also be present, the primary metabolic derangement is acidosis. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Urea Cycle Defect) is incorrect because UCDs typically present with significant hyperammonaemia and a primary respiratory alkalosis due to hyperventilation, not a primary metabolic acidosis. Option B (Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder) is less likely as the classic presentation is hypoketotic hypoglycaemia during periods of fasting stress, although a secondary metabolic acidosis can occur. Option C (Congenital Hypothyroidism) is incorrect as it presents subacutely with features like prolonged jaundice, constipation, and developmental delay, not with acute metabolic collapse and acidosis. Option E (Galactosaemia) is incorrect because while it causes vomiting and lethargy, it is primarily associated with liver dysfunction, cataracts, and a normal anion gap metabolic acidosis secondary to renal tubular damage. 34 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old neonate is admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit with a decreased level of consciousness. An urgent metabolic screen reveals a markedly elevated plasma ammonia level, leading to a presumptive diagnosis of a urea cycle defect. Which of the following is the most critical initial step in management to halt the production of toxic metabolites? A) Start oral Protein free formula immediately. B) Administer IV Sodium Phenylacetate and Benzoate. C) Prepare for immediate haemodialysis. D) Stop all protein intake and start high-caloric IV Glucose 10%. E) Administer IM Glucagon. CORRECT ANSWER: In a neonate with suspected UCD, the primary pathophysiological process driving hyperammonaemia is catabolism. The body breaks down endogenous protein, releasing amino acids which cannot be metabolised through the defective urea cycle, causing toxic ammonia accumulation. The immediate priority is to halt this catabolic state and promote anabolism. This is achieved by stopping all protein intake and providing a high-calorie energy source intravenously with 10% glucose. This non-protein energy supply signals the body to stop breaking down its own tissues for fuel, thereby ceasing the production of ammonia. This intervention is the crucial first step to stabilise the patient while preparing for definitive treatments to remove existing ammonia. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start oral Protein free formula immediately) is incorrect as the neonate is comatose and cannot safely take oral feeds; intravenous access is essential for stabilisation. Option B (Administer IV Sodium Phenylacetate and Benzoate) is incorrect because while these ammonia scavengers are a vital next step, they do not stop the ongoing production of ammonia from catabolism, which is the priority. Option C (Prepare for immediate haemodialysis) is incorrect because although it is the most effective method for removing ammonia, it is not the initial step and requires time to arrange; metabolic stabilisation must begin immediately. Option E (Administer IM Glucagon) is incorrect because glucagon is catabolic, promoting glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis, which would worsen protein breakdown and increase ammonia levels. 35 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-day-old term male infant is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a 24-hour history of progressive lethargy and poor feeding. He was initially well after birth, but has since developed vomiting. Initial investigations show a normal capillary blood glucose. A venous blood gas demonstrates a normal pH and bicarbonate. What is the most likely single biochemical abnormality to be found on initial blood tests? A) Profound Hypoglycaemia B) Severe Hyperammonaemia C) High Lactate and Profound Acidosis D) Severe Hyponatraemia E) Significant Ketosis and Acidosis CORRECT ANSWER: The clinical presentation is classic for a Urea Cycle Defect (UCD). The timing of symptom onset on day three coincides with the establishment of protein feeding, leading to the breakdown of amino acids and the production of ammonia. In UCDs, a genetic enzyme deficiency prevents the detoxification of ammonia into urea. This results in a rapid accumulation of ammonia, a potent neurotoxin, causing progressive encephalopathy with symptoms of lethargy, poor feeding, and vomiting. A crucial diagnostic clue in UCDs is the absence of significant metabolic acidosis, as reflected by the normal pH and bicarbonate. The primary pathology is isolated hyperammonaemia, which may even cause a respiratory alkalosis due to central hyperventilation. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Profound Hypoglycaemia) is incorrect because the blood glucose was explicitly stated to be normal in the clinical vignette. Option C (High Lactate and Profound Acidosis) is incorrect as the provided blood gas shows a normal pH and bicarbonate, directly contradicting this finding. Option D (Severe Hyponatraemia) is incorrect because while it can cause lethargy, it is not the primary expected biochemical abnormality in this classic presentation of an inborn error of metabolism. Option E (Significant Ketosis and Acidosis) is incorrect as this is the characteristic biochemical picture of an organic acidaemia, which would present with a low bicarbonate and pH. 36 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-month-old infant is reviewed in the metabolic clinic following a diagnosis of Maple Syrup Urine Disease, which was identified on newborn screening. Subsequent genetic and biochemical analyses have confirmed a thiamine-responsive variant of the condition. He has been commenced on high-dose thiamine supplementation. What is the primary mechanism of action of thiamine in this disorder? A) Increase Ketogenesis in the liver. B) Increase the residual activity of the deficient enzyme. C) Inhibit the absorption of Branched Chain Amino Acids. D) Promote the renal excretion of toxic metabolites. E) Bypass the metabolic block entirely via an alternative pathway. CORRECT ANSWER: Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) is an inborn error of metabolism caused by deficiency of the branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKDH) enzyme complex. This complex is crucial for the breakdown of branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs): leucine, isoleucine, and valine. The BCKDH complex requires thiamine pyrophosphate (the active form of vitamin B1) as a co-factor to function correctly. In thiamine-responsive MSUD, the specific genetic mutation does not eliminate the enzyme but alters its structure, reducing its affinity for this co-factor. By administering pharmacological (high) doses of thiamine, the intracellular concentration of the co-factor is significantly increased. This helps to overcome the reduced binding affinity, thereby saturating the enzyme and increasing its residual catalytic activity. This improves the metabolism of BCAAs and reduces the accumulation of toxic metabolites like alpha-ketoacids. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Increase Ketogenesis in the liver) is incorrect because ketogenesis is a process related to fatty acid metabolism, whereas MSUD is a disorder of amino acid catabolism. Option C (Inhibit the absorption of Branched Chain Amino Acids) is incorrect as thiamine supplementation works at a cellular metabolic level, not by blocking the intestinal absorption of nutrients. Option D (Promote the renal excretion of toxic metabolites) is incorrect because thiamine's role is to improve the deficient enzyme's function, not to act on the kidneys to increase the clearance of toxic by-products. Option E (Bypass the metabolic block entirely via an alternative pathway) is incorrect as this treatment enhances the function of the existing, defective metabolic pathway rather than activating a separate, alternative route. 37 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old term infant undergoes a routine newborn blood spot test as part of the national screening programme. The test for congenital hypothyroidism is designed to detect primary thyroid gland dysfunction. Which hormones are assayed on the blood spot card to screen for this condition? A) Thyroxine (T4) and Triiodothyronine (T3) B) TSH and Free T4 C) Thyroxine (T4) and Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH) D) T3 and TSH E) Free T3 and Total T4 CORRECT ANSWER: The UK Newborn Blood Spot Screening Programme for Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH) measures TSH as the primary marker. An initial high TSH level prompts a secondary measurement of Total Thyroxine (T4) from the same blood spot. This two-step process is highly effective. In primary CH, the most common form, the thyroid gland fails to produce sufficient T4. The anterior pituitary detects this low T4 level and, via a negative feedback loop, significantly increases TSH secretion. Therefore, the characteristic pattern for primary CH is a low T4 and a markedly high TSH. This strategy effectively detects thyroid dysgenesis or dyshormonogenesis, allowing for early treatment to prevent neurodevelopmental impairment. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Thyroxine (T4) and Triiodothyronine (T3)) is incorrect because T3 is primarily formed by peripheral conversion from T4 and is not the initial hormone measured in screening for CH. Option B (TSH and Free T4) is incorrect as the blood spot screening assay measures total T4 for stability and cost-effectiveness, while free T4 is typically reserved for subsequent diagnostic venous sampling. Option D (T3 and TSH) is incorrect because T4, not T3, is the main hormone produced by the thyroid gland and the key indicator of thyroid function in this context. Option E (Free T3 and Total T4) is incorrect as screening does not involve measuring T3 in any form, focusing instead on the TSH and T4 relationship. 38 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old neonate, born at 30 weeks gestation, is being cared for on the neonatal unit. The infant is receiving total parenteral nutrition. A routine newborn blood spot screening test is performed. The results are returned with a markedly elevated thiamine level, prompting a review by the metabolic team. What is the most likely explanation for this isolated laboratory finding? A) Maternal infection. B) Sampling too early (less than 48 hours). C) Inadequate drying of the blood spot. D) Contamination with total parenteral nutrition (TPN) fluids. E) The infant was fed too much protein. CORRECT ANSWER: Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is a concentrated solution containing amino acids, lipids, glucose, and a comprehensive range of vitamins, including high levels of thiamine (Vitamin B1). When collecting a newborn blood spot sample, contamination of the heel with TPN fluid, or more commonly, drawing the sample from an intravenous line without first clearing it of TPN infusate, is a significant pre-analytical error. This directly transfers the exogenous thiamine from the TPN solution onto the filter paper, resulting in a supraphysiological and therefore falsely elevated level. This finding does not reflect the infant's true metabolic state and is a well-recognised cause of artifactual results in newborn screening, mandating a carefully collected repeat sample. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Maternal infection) is incorrect because maternal infection does not directly cause a significant elevation of thiamine in the neonate's blood. Option B (Sampling too early) is incorrect as, while this can affect the accuracy of screening for certain conditions like phenylketonuria, it is not associated with causing falsely high thiamine levels. Option C (Inadequate drying of the blood spot) is incorrect because this technical error typically leads to sample degradation and diffuse, unreliable results, not a specific, marked elevation of one analyte. Option E (The infant was fed too much protein) is incorrect as a high protein feed would primarily cause elevations in amino acids, not in thiamine concentration. 39 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-day-old infant is reviewed on the postnatal ward due to being irritable and generally unwell. The Newborn Blood Spot Programme result has just become available and shows a high isovalerylcarnitine level, suggestive of Isovaleric Acidaemia. What is the most appropriate initial pharmacological treatment to directly facilitate the removal of toxic metabolites? A) Start IV Biotin. B) Start IV Pyridoxine. C) Start oral Carnitine supplementation. D) Start IV Dextrose 10% and Insulin. E) Start IV Hydrocortisone. CORRECT ANSWER: Isovaleric Acidaemia (IVA) is an inborn error of leucine metabolism, leading to the accumulation of toxic isovaleric acid. Carnitine supplementation is a primary therapeutic intervention for detoxification. It acts by conjugating with toxic isovaleryl-CoA to form non-toxic isovalerylcarnitine. This compound is water-soluble and can be efficiently excreted by the kidneys, providing a crucial pathway for removing harmful metabolites during an acute metabolic decompensation. National guidelines and metabolic treatment protocols identify carnitine as a key agent in the management of an acute crisis in organic acidaemias, alongside measures to reverse catabolism. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start IV Biotin) is incorrect because biotin is a cofactor for carboxylase enzymes and is the treatment for biotinidase deficiency or holocarboxylase synthetase deficiency, not IVA. Option B (Start IV Pyridoxine) is incorrect as pyridoxine (vitamin B6) has no therapeutic role in organic acidaemias and is used for conditions like pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy. Option D (Start IV Dextrose 10% and Insulin) is less appropriate because while intravenous dextrose is vital to provide calories and reverse catabolism, carnitine is the specific pharmacological agent that directly detoxifies the toxic metabolites. Option E (Start IV Hydrocortisone) is incorrect as glucocorticoids are used to manage adrenal crises, such as in congenital adrenal hyperplasia, but do not treat the underlying pathophysiology of IVA. 40 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A community midwife collects a blood spot sample from a 5-day-old asymptomatic infant as part of the routine UK Newborn Blood Spot Screening Programme. The sample is sent to a centralised laboratory for analysis of several inherited metabolic and haematological disorders. Which of the following is the primary analytical method used for the detection of Sickle Cell Disease and Beta-Thalassaemia Major? A) DNA sequencing for the beta-globin gene. B) Assessment of red blood cell morphology. C) Measurement of Serum Ferritin levels. D) Haemoglobin Electrophoresis (or HPLC) on blood spot. E) Full blood count and reticulocyte count. CORRECT ANSWER: The UK Newborn Blood Spot Screening Programme mandates the analysis of haemoglobin variants to detect clinically significant conditions like Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) and Beta-Thalassaemia Major. Haemoglobin Electrophoresis or High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) are the primary laboratory methods used. These techniques are crucial as they directly separate and quantify the different haemoglobin types present in the infant's blood (e.g., HbF, HbA, HbS, HbC). Identifying an abnormal variant like HbS, or the absence of HbA in the context of high HbF, is the fundamental first step for diagnosis. Early identification through this method allows for the prompt initiation of prophylactic penicillin and parental education, significantly reducing morbidity and mortality from pneumococcal sepsis in infants with SCD. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (DNA sequencing for the beta-globin gene) is incorrect because it is a second-line or confirmatory test, not a primary population screening tool due to its complexity and cost. Option B (Assessment of red blood cell morphology) is incorrect as morphological changes, such as sickle cells, are often not present in the neonatal period due to high levels of foetal haemoglobin (HbF). Option C (Measurement of Serum Ferritin levels) is incorrect because ferritin is a marker of iron stores and is not relevant to the diagnosis of haemoglobinopathies, although it is important in managing transfusion-dependent thalassaemia later in life. Option E (Full blood count and reticulocyte count) is incorrect because newborns with SCD are not typically anaemic at birth, making the FBC an unreliable screening method for this purpose. 41 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A foundation doctor is reviewing a 12-hour-old term neonate on the postnatal ward. The infant is clinically well, and the parents report that breastfeeding is establishing successfully. They request that the Newborn Blood Spot test be performed prior to their planned discharge later that day. What is the crucial physiological reason for delaying this screening until at least 48 hours of age? A) To allow the baby to establish a sleep pattern. B) To minimise pain response in the neonate. C) To allow sufficient feeding and metabolic stress to elicit abnormal metabolite levels. D) To prevent contamination of the blood spot with maternal blood. E) To ensure the card is not processed too quickly. CORRECT ANSWER: The timing of the Newborn Blood Spot Programme (NBSP) is critically linked to the infant's metabolic state. For many inborn errors of metabolism (IEMs), such as Phenylketonuria (PKU) and Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD), the detection of abnormal metabolites is dependent on the infant having commenced enteral feeding. The metabolic pathways that are defective in these conditions are only stressed once the infant begins to metabolise proteins and fats from milk. Screening before 48 hours, particularly before 24 hours, risks a false-negative result because the tell-tale abnormal metabolites may not have accumulated to a detectable level. Delaying the test until at least day 5, after feeding is established, ensures sufficient metabolic stress has occurred, thereby maximising the sensitivity of the screening test for these serious conditions. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (To allow the baby to establish a sleep pattern) is incorrect as neonatal sleep patterns are irrelevant to the biochemical basis of the screening test. Option B (To minimise pain response in the neonate) is incorrect because while pain mitigation is crucial in neonatology, it does not dictate the specific timing of this metabolic screen. Option D (To prevent contamination of the blood spot with maternal blood) is incorrect as this is not a significant concern for the specific metabolites being measured in the NBSP. Option E (To ensure the card is not processed too quickly) is incorrect as the timing of sample collection is determined by clinical and physiological factors, not laboratory logistics. 42 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-month-old infant is under investigation for intractable seizures. The seizures commenced during the neonatal period and have proven unresponsive to standard anticonvulsant therapy. On clinical examination, there is evidence of microcephaly and generalised hypotonia. Which of the following vitamin-responsive inborn errors of metabolism is the most likely diagnosis? A) Organic Acidaemia B) Homocystinuria C) Glutaric Acidaemia Type 1 (GA1) D) Pyridoxine-dependent Epilepsy (PDE) E) Lesch-Nyhan syndrome CORRECT ANSWER: Pyridoxine-dependent Epilepsy (PDE) is a classic cause of intractable neonatal seizures. It is caused by a deficiency of α-aminoadipic semialdehyde dehydrogenase, encoded by the ALDH7A1 gene. This enzyme defect leads to an accumulation of α-aminoadipic semialdehyde, which inactivates pyridoxal-5-phosphate (PLP), the active form of vitamin B6. PLP is a crucial cofactor for neurotransmitter synthesis, including GABA. The resulting GABA deficiency leads to neuronal hyperexcitability and seizures that are characteristically resistant to standard anticonvulsants but respond dramatically to high doses of pyridoxine. The presence of microcephaly and hypotonia are also recognised features of the condition. Given the potential for irreversible neurological damage, empirical treatment with pyridoxine is warranted in any infant with refractory seizures. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Organic Acidaemia) is incorrect because these disorders typically present with overwhelming illness, including severe metabolic acidosis, vomiting, and lethargy after the introduction of protein feeds. Option B (Homocystinuria) is less likely as infants are usually normal at birth, with features like skeletal abnormalities and lens dislocation developing later in childhood. Option C (Glutaric Acidaemia Type 1) is incorrect as, while it can present with hypotonia and microcephaly, it typically manifests with an acute encephalopathic crisis and movement disorder between 3 and 36 months, not usually with refractory seizures in the first month. Option E (Lesch-Nyhan syndrome) is incorrect because the prominent features of hypotonia and developmental delay typically appear at 3-6 months, and the characteristic self-injurious behaviour begins later in the first few years of life. 43 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-day-old infant is reviewed in the metabolic clinic following a positive newborn blood spot screening result. Confirmatory tests have diagnosed classic Phenylketonuria. The infant remains clinically well and asymptomatic. A long-term management plan involving strict dietary protein restriction is being commenced. To optimise neurocognitive development, what is the target therapeutic range for plasma phenylalanine concentration throughout early childhood? A) 0 - 100 µmol/L B) 120 - 360 µmol/L C) 360 - 600 µmol/L D) 600 - 1000 µmol/L E) Above 1200 µmol/L CORRECT ANSWER: The management of classic Phenylketonuria (PKU) aims to prevent irreversible neurodevelopmental damage by maintaining plasma Phenylalanine (Phe) concentrations within a strict therapeutic range. The UK recommendation for children is to keep Phe levels between 120 and 360 µmol/L. This range is a critical balance. It is low enough to prevent the toxic accumulation of Phe in the brain, which would otherwise impair myelination and neurotransmitter synthesis, leading to severe learning difficulties. At the same time, it is high enough to provide the necessary amount of this essential amino acid for normal growth and protein synthesis. Early and consistent dietary management is crucial for optimising neurocognitive outcomes. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (0 - 100 µmol/L) is incorrect because Phenylalanine is an essential amino acid, and over-restriction would lead to deficiency, causing poor growth, lethargy, and skin rashes. Option C (360 - 600 µmol/L) is incorrect as this higher range, while sometimes acceptable for older children, carries a greater risk of subtle neurocognitive deficits in early childhood when the brain is most vulnerable. Option D (600 - 1000 µmol/L) is incorrect because levels consistently above 600 µmol/L are associated with a significant risk of intellectual disability and other neurological problems. Option E (Above 1200 µmol/L) is incorrect as this represents untreated or very poorly controlled classic PKU, which would lead to severe and profound neurological impairment. 44 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-day-old infant is reviewed following a positive newborn blood spot screening result for Medium-Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD). The infant is otherwise well, asymptomatic, and feeding normally. The parents are counselled on the diagnosis and long-term management. What is the most important advice to give the parents to prevent a life-threatening metabolic crisis? A) Excessive sugar intake. B) All formula feeding. C) Vaccination delay. D) Periods of prolonged fasting. E) Breastfeeding. CORRECT ANSWER: Medium Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency (MCADD) is an inherited metabolic disorder preventing the breakdown of medium-chain fatty acids for energy. The body's primary energy source is glucose, stored as glycogen. During periods of fasting or metabolic stress, such as illness, glycogen stores are depleted within hours. A healthy individual then metabolises fat to produce ketone bodies for energy. In MCADD, this pathway is blocked, leading to a rapid onset of severe hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and an accumulation of toxic metabolites. This can cause lethargy, seizures, coma, and death. Therefore, the cornerstone of management is the strict avoidance of prolonged fasting by ensuring regular carbohydrate intake, especially during the night and intercurrent illnesses, to prevent the switch to fat metabolism. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Excessive sugar intake) is incorrect because regular, not excessive, carbohydrate intake is crucial to prevent hypoglycaemia, and overfeeding can lead to obesity. Option B (All formula feeding) is incorrect as standard infant formula and breastmilk are both considered safe and appropriate for infants with MCADD. Option C (Vaccination delay) is incorrect because timely vaccinations are strongly recommended to prevent common childhood illnesses which can trigger a metabolic crisis. Option E (Breastfeeding) is incorrect as breastfeeding is encouraged and provides a suitable source of regular nutrition for infants with MCADD. 45 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-day-old male infant is reviewed in the postnatal clinic following a call from the newborn screening laboratory. The results of his routine newborn blood spot test, taken at 5 days of age, show a significantly elevated level of immunoreactive trypsinogen. This result is the primary screening marker for which of the following inheritable conditions? A) Phenylketonuria (PKU). B) Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH). C) Cystic Fibrosis (CF). D) Sickle Cell Disease (SCD). E) Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD). CORRECT ANSWER: Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is the correct answer. The UK Newborn Blood Spot Screening Programme uses the measurement of immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT) as the first-tier screen for CF. In neonates with CF, thick mucus obstructs the pancreatic ducts, leading to back-pressure, acinar damage, and subsequent leakage of trypsinogen into the bloodstream. This results in a raised IRT level. An elevated IRT is not diagnostic but indicates a high risk, prompting second-tier testing, which is typically DNA analysis for common CFTR gene mutations. If one or more mutations are found, or if the IRT level is extremely high, the infant is referred for a definitive diagnostic sweat test. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Phenylketonuria) is incorrect because it is screened for by detecting elevated levels of the amino acid phenylalanine. Option B (Congenital Hypothyroidism) is incorrect as its primary screening marker is an elevated level of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). Option D (Sickle Cell Disease) is incorrect because it is a haemoglobinopathy identified through analysis of different haemoglobin variants, not IRT. Option E (Maple Syrup Urine Disease) is incorrect as it is screened for by identifying high concentrations of branched-chain amino acids, particularly leucine. 46 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old male infant is reviewed following an urgent notification from the newborn screening laboratory. The results are highly suggestive of Maple Syrup Urine Disease. An urgent blood sample confirms markedly elevated plasma concentrations of leucine, isoleucine, and valine. What is the most appropriate immediate dietary intervention? A) Breastfeeding B) Infant formula C) Oral electrolytes D) Cessation of all natural protein intake E) Simple carbohydrate intake CORRECT ANSWER: Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) is an inherited disorder of metabolism affecting the branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) leucine, isoleucine, and valine. The pathophysiology involves a defect in the branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase enzyme complex, leading to the accumulation of these amino acids and their toxic ketoacids. Leucine is particularly neurotoxic, and its rapid accumulation can cause acute encephalopathy and irreversible neurological damage. Therefore, the most urgent management step, as guided by metabolic protocols, is the immediate cessation of all natural protein intake to halt the exogenous supply of BCAAs. This prevents further accumulation of toxic metabolites. Concurrently, a high-calorie, BCAA-free formula is commenced to provide energy, prevent catabolism (the breakdown of the body's own protein stores), and promote anabolism. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Breastfeeding) is incorrect because breast milk is a source of natural protein containing all amino acids, including the toxic BCAAs. Option B (Infant formula) is incorrect as standard infant formulas are also derived from natural protein (cow's milk or soya) and contain BCAAs. Option C (Oral electrolytes) is incorrect because while maintaining hydration and electrolyte balance is important, it does not address the primary metabolic derangement of BCAA accumulation. Option E (Simple carbohydrate intake) is incorrect as providing carbohydrates is a crucial part of management to prevent catabolism, but it must be done alongside, not instead of, stopping protein intake. 47 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-day-old infant is reviewed following a positive Newborn Blood Spot Programme result. The screen indicates a low thyroxine and a high thyroid-stimulating hormone level. The infant is currently asymptomatic with a normal clinical examination. To minimise the risk of permanent neurodevelopmental impairment, what is the ideal timeframe for the initiation of treatment? A) Within 1 month. B) Within 2 weeks. C) Within 7 days. D) Within 48 hours. E) Within 6 months. CORRECT ANSWER: The diagnosis is primary Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH), indicated by a low T4 and a compensatory high TSH. Thyroid hormone is fundamentally critical for central nervous system development, particularly myelination, which is most rapid in the first few weeks of life. The absence of thyroid hormone during this period leads to severe and irreversible neurodevelopmental impairment. National guidelines emphasise extreme urgency. While treatment with levothyroxine must be commenced within two weeks of birth, the ideal therapeutic window to maximise cognitive outcomes is within the first 7-10 days. Therefore, initiating treatment within 7 days is the most crucial and correct action to prevent disability. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Within 1 month) is incorrect because this significant delay extends well beyond the critical window for brain development, risking severe, permanent intellectual disability. Option B (Within 2 weeks) is incorrect as this represents the absolute latest acceptable timeframe for treatment initiation, not the ideal target to prevent any neurocognitive deficit. Option D (Within 48 hours) is incorrect because it is logistically impractical, as the newborn blood spot screening test is performed around day 5 of life, making results unavailable this early. Option E (Within 6 months) is incorrect as such a profound delay would result in catastrophic and irreversible damage to the central nervous system. 48 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-week-old infant is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a recent onset of seizures. There are also concerns from the parents regarding their developmental progress. Initial investigations reveal a significant metabolic acidosis, leading to a strong clinical suspicion of a biotin-responsive multiple carboxylase deficiency. What is the most important co-factor therapy to initiate immediately? A) High-dose Biotin. B) High-dose Thiamine. C) Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6). D) Riboflavin (Vitamin B2). E) Carnitine supplementation. CORRECT ANSWER: Multiple Carboxylase Deficiency (MCD) encompasses a group of autosomal recessive metabolic disorders affecting the activity of biotin-dependent enzymes: pyruvate carboxylase, propionyl-CoA carboxylase, and 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase. These are essential for gluconeogenesis, amino acid metabolism, and fatty acid synthesis. In MCD, either biotin recycling (biotinidase deficiency) or cellular transport (holocarboxylase synthetase deficiency) is impaired. This results in a functional biotin deficiency, leading to severe metabolic acidosis, neurological abnormalities including seizures, and skin manifestations. The immediate administration of high-dose biotin is a critical, life-saving intervention. It acts as a pharmacological chaperone, bypassing the metabolic block by sufficiently increasing intracellular biotin levels to activate the deficient carboxylases. As per national guidance for managing suspected metabolic emergencies, empirical treatment for vitamin-responsive disorders should be initiated immediately upon clinical suspicion, without waiting for confirmatory diagnostic results. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option B (High-dose Thiamine) is incorrect as it is a cofactor for different enzymes, such as pyruvate dehydrogenase, and is used in conditions like Maple Syrup Urine Disease. Option C (Pyridoxine) is incorrect because it is the treatment for pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy, another cause of neonatal seizures, but it does not address the underlying carboxylase defect in MCD. Option D (Riboflavin) is incorrect as it is a precursor for FAD and FMN, cofactors involved in different metabolic pathways, and is not the primary therapy for MCD. Option E (Carnitine supplementation) is incorrect because while it may be used adjunctively in some organic acidaemias to conjugate and excrete toxic metabolites, it is not the primary life-saving cofactor therapy for this condition. 49 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-day-old term infant is reviewed by the health visitor for the routine newborn blood spot test. The infant is feeding well, has passed meconium, and the physical examination is unremarkable. The parents are counselled that the test screens for several rare but serious conditions where early intervention can prevent significant morbidity. Which of the following conditions is a primary target for detection by this screening programme in the UK? A) Galactosaemia B) Biotinidase deficiency C) Medium Chain Acyl CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency (MCADD) D) Homocystinuria E) Glycogen Storage Disease (GSD) Type I CORRECT ANSWER: Medium Chain Acyl CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency (MCADD) is a core condition within the UK Newborn Blood Spot Programme. It is an autosomal recessive inborn error of fatty acid oxidation. The pathophysiology involves the inability to break down medium-chain fatty acids, which are a crucial alternative energy source when glucose is unavailable during periods of fasting or intercurrent illness. This defect leads to an accumulation of toxic metabolites and profound, non-ketotic hypoglycaemia. Without diagnosis, this can present as a sudden metabolic crisis with seizures, encephalopathy, liver dysfunction, or sudden infant death. Early detection through screening is vital as the catastrophic presentations are preventable with simple dietary management, primarily the avoidance of prolonged fasting. This makes it a key target for newborn screening. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Galactosaemia) is incorrect because it is not currently included in the national UK Newborn Blood Spot Programme. Option B (Biotinidase deficiency) is incorrect as it is not one of the conditions screened for in the UK programme. Option D (Homocystinuria) is incorrect because although the pyridoxine-unresponsive form is screened for, MCADD is a more common inherited metabolic disease found by the screen and a classic example of a condition where screening prevents acute life-threatening events in early infancy. Option E (Glycogen Storage Disease Type I) is incorrect as it is not included in the UK newborn screening panel. 50 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine You are the Paediatric Registrar on call when a community midwife telephones you about a 5-day-old infant. She reports that the newborn blood spot screening result has returned, indicating a very high phenylalanine level. The infant is otherwise well, asymptomatic, and feeding effectively. What is the most appropriate and urgent next step in this infant's management? A) Repeat the heel prick test in 7 days. B) Start Phenylalanine-free formula immediately. C) Reassure the parents and arrange an outpatient review in 2 weeks. D) Arrange for urgent venous blood sample to confirm diagnosis. E) Start supplemental Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) co-factor. CORRECT ANSWER: A positive newborn blood spot screening test for Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a time-critical paediatric emergency. The screening test is highly sensitive but not diagnostic. Therefore, the crucial next step, as per national guidelines, is to urgently confirm the diagnosis with a quantitative analysis of plasma amino acids from a venous or capillary blood sample. This allows for definitive confirmation and immediate referral to a specialist metabolic team. Untreated PKU leads to the accumulation of phenylalanine, causing irreversible intellectual disability. Prompt confirmation is essential to allow the metabolic team to initiate a specialised low-phenylalanine diet as soon as possible, which is the cornerstone of preventing severe neurological damage. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Repeat the heel prick test in 7 days) is incorrect because it introduces an unacceptable delay in diagnosis and management for a time-sensitive condition. Option B (Start Phenylalanine-free formula immediately) is incorrect as treatment should only be commenced after a definitive diagnosis is confirmed and under the direct supervision of a specialist metabolic team. Option C (Reassure the parents and arrange an outpatient review in 2 weeks) is incorrect as it dangerously underestimates the urgency of a suspected PKU diagnosis. Option E (Start supplemental Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) co-factor) is incorrect because BH4 is a treatment for a specific and less common variant of PKU, which would only be considered after the primary diagnosis is confirmed. 51 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6 kg infant is being managed on the paediatric ward for persistent hypoglycaemia. An intravenous infusion of 10% Dextrose is administered at a rate of 4 ml/kg/hr. Despite this management, blood glucose levels remain below the target range. What is the most appropriate next step in managing the dextrose infusion? A) Switch to oral Glucose solution B) Increase the Dextrose concentration to 12.5% or 15% C) Decrease the infusion rate to 2 ml/kg/hr D) Add Hydrocortisone without taking a critical sample E) Switch to a hypertonic 25% Dextrose infusion CORRECT ANSWER: The infant is receiving a glucose infusion rate (GIR) of approximately 6.7 mg/kg/min. If this is insufficient to correct hypoglycaemia, the priority is to increase the glucose delivery. According to national guidelines, this should be achieved by increasing the dextrose concentration rather than the fluid volume, to avoid iatrogenic fluid overload, which is a significant risk in infants. Increasing the concentration to 12.5% or 15% allows for a higher GIR at the same fluid rate. It is critical to note that dextrose solutions with a concentration of 12.5% or greater are hyperosmolar and require administration via a central venous line to prevent phlebitis and potential extravasation injury. This approach follows a safe, stepwise escalation of treatment for persistent hypoglycaemia. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Switch to oral Glucose solution) is incorrect as the failure of an intravenous infusion to correct hypoglycaemia suggests a significant underlying issue or high glucose requirement, making a switch to less reliable oral intake inappropriate. Option C (Decrease the infusion rate to 2 ml/kg/hr) is incorrect because this would reduce the total glucose delivery, thereby worsening the hypoglycaemia. Option D (Add Hydrocortisone without taking a critical sample) is incorrect as empirical steroid administration is inappropriate without first obtaining a critical blood sample during hypoglycaemia to investigate the underlying cause. Option E (Switch to a hypertonic 25% Dextrose infusion) is incorrect as this is an exceptionally high concentration that carries a major risk of thrombophlebitis and is not the standard next step after 10% dextrose proves insufficient. 52 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-year-old child is brought to the Emergency Department following a seizure. Initial investigations reveal a profound hypoglycaemia, which is corrected. During the clinical history, it is revealed that their twin sibling died at 2 years of age. The sibling's death was preceded by a short, flu-like illness that progressed to a coma. What is the most likely underlying diagnosis? A) Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. B) Transient Neonatal Hypoglycaemia. C) Ketotic Hypoglycaemia. D) Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder (FAOD). E) Adrenal Insufficiency. CORRECT ANSWER: D: Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder (FAOD). The history of a sibling death following a minor illness, associated with coma, is a significant red flag for an underlying inherited metabolic disorder. FAODs, such as Medium-Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency (MCADD), are autosomal recessive conditions. During periods of catabolic stress, like fasting or intercurrent illness, the body's glycogen stores are depleted. In FAODs, the subsequent inability to utilise fatty acids for energy leads to profound hypoketotic hypoglycaemia. This energy deficit particularly affects the brain and heart, leading to encephalopathy, seizures, coma, and potentially death, which aligns perfectly with the clinical picture and family history provided. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus) is incorrect as it classically presents with hyperglycaemia and ketosis, not hypoglycaemia. Option B (Transient Neonatal Hypoglycaemia) is incorrect because this is a condition of the newborn period and would not present at four years of age. Option C (Ketotic Hypoglycaemia) is incorrect as it is a diagnosis of exclusion, and while common, the severe family history makes an underlying FAOD, which typically causes hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, far more probable. Option E (Adrenal Insufficiency) is less likely because the specific trigger of a minor illness leading to coma and death in a sibling strongly points towards an inborn error of metabolism rather than a primary endocrinopathy. 53 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 9-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric A&E with a generalised seizure. A point-of-care test reveals severe hypoglycaemia. After initial resuscitation with an intravenous dextrose bolus, the seizure has stopped, but she remains comatose. A 10% Dextrose infusion is currently running. What is the most appropriate interval for subsequent point-of-care glucose monitoring? A) Every 4 hours. B) Every hour. C) Every 30 minutes. D) Every 10 to 15 minutes. E) Only when clinical signs worsen. CORRECT ANSWER: Option D is correct. Following a bolus of intravenous dextrose for severe hypoglycaemia, a potent reactive insulin surge is provoked. This physiological overshoot creates a high risk of rapid and profound rebound hypoglycaemia. In a comatose child, the brain is exquisitely vulnerable to secondary neurological injury from repeated hypoglycaemic insults. Therefore, the absolute priority is very frequent Point-of-Care Glucose monitoring, every 10 to 15 minutes, to detect and pre-empt this drop. This frequency allows for timely adjustment of the glucose infusion rate to maintain normoglycaemia (above 4.0 mmol/L) and protect the brain until the child's metabolic state stabilises and consciousness improves. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Every 4 hours) is incorrect as this dangerously infrequent interval would fail to detect the rapid glucose fluctuations expected after a dextrose bolus, risking prolonged and unrecognised hypoglycaemia. Option B (Every hour) is incorrect because a 60-minute gap is too long, leaving the vulnerable, comatose child exposed to potential unrecognised hypoglycaemia and further neurological injury. Option C (Every 30 minutes) is incorrect because, while better, it is still an insufficient frequency to safely manage the risk of a rapid, insulin-driven drop in blood glucose in the immediate post-resuscitation phase. Option E (Only when clinical signs worsen) is incorrect because it is unsafe to rely on clinical signs in a comatose child whose neurological status is already compromised; monitoring must be proactive, not reactive to deterioration. 54 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department following a seizure. He has had a 24-hour history of vomiting and poor oral intake. On arrival, his capillary blood glucose is 2.1 mmol/L and a critical blood sample is taken. Which of the following findings in this sample would be most consistent with a diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency or growth hormone deficiency? A) Low Ketones and high Fatty Acids. B) High Insulin and high C-Peptide. C) Ketotic hypoglycaemia with low Cortisol and/or GH. D) Low Glucose and high Lactate. E) High Insulin and low C-Peptide. CORRECT ANSWER: Growth hormone (GH) and cortisol are crucial counter-regulatory hormones. During periods of physiological stress, such as fasting or illness, they are released to stimulate gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis, thereby maintaining blood glucose levels. In a child with GH or cortisol deficiency, the normal physiological response to falling glucose is impaired. The presence of ketones indicates that the pathways for ketogenesis are intact, which is an appropriate response to hypoglycaemia. However, the defining feature of adrenal insufficiency or GH deficiency is the failure of cortisol and/or GH levels to rise adequately during this hypoglycaemic stress. Therefore, finding ketotic hypoglycaemia with inappropriately low cortisol and/or GH levels in the critical sample is the hallmark of this diagnosis. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Low Ketones and high Fatty Acids) is incorrect as this pattern of hypoketotic hypoglycaemia points towards a fatty acid oxidation defect. Option B (High Insulin and high C-Peptide) is incorrect because this combination is characteristic of endogenous hyperinsulinism, such as from an insulinoma or nesidioblastosis. Option D (Low Glucose and high Lactate) is incorrect as significant lactic acidosis with hypoglycaemia typically suggests a disorder of gluconeogenesis or a glycogen storage disease. Option E (High Insulin and low C-Peptide) is incorrect because this finding indicates the administration of exogenous insulin, as C-peptide is co-secreted with endogenous insulin. 55 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-year-old boy weighing 15 kg is brought to the Paediatric A&E with a history of vomiting and reduced oral intake. He is found to be hypoglycaemic and is treated with an intravenous dextrose bolus. He is subsequently commenced on an infusion of 10% Dextrose at a rate of 4 ml/kg/hr. What is the approximate glucose infusion rate this maintenance fluid provides in mg/kg/min? A) 3.3 mg/kg/min B) 6.7 mg/kg/min C) 8.0 mg/kg/min D) 10.0 mg/kg/min E) 13.3 mg/kg/min CORRECT ANSWER: The Glucose Infusion Rate (GIR) is a critical calculation in paediatrics, especially in the management of hypoglycaemia. It quantifies the amount of glucose a child receives per kilogram of body weight per minute. The formula is: GIR (mg/kg/min) = [Rate (ml/hr) x Dextrose concentration (%)] / [60 (min/hr)]. In this scenario, the rate is given in ml/kg/hr, which simplifies the calculation by removing the need for the patient's weight. Therefore, the calculation is: [4 (ml/kg/hr) x 10 (%)] / 60. This equals 40 / 60, which simplifies to 0.667. As the dextrose concentration is a percentage (grams per 100ml), we multiply by 10 to convert to mg/ml, resulting in 6.67 mg/kg/min. This is a standard GIR for maintaining normoglycaemia. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (3.3 mg/kg/min) is incorrect as this would be the approximate GIR if 5% Dextrose were used instead of 10% Dextrose. Option C (8.0 mg/kg/min) is incorrect; while it represents a common therapeutic GIR target, it is not the correct calculation for the infusion rate provided in the question. Option D (10.0 mg/kg/min) is incorrect and represents a significant miscalculation, possibly by omitting the division by 60 and misplacing a decimal. Option E (13.3 mg/kg/min) is incorrect as this would be the approximate GIR if the fluid rate were doubled to 8 ml/kg/hr. 56 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 48-hour-old term neonate, weighing 3.5 kg, is reviewed on the postnatal ward due to jaundice. He is clinically well, with normal observations. His mother reports that breastfeeding is yet to be fully established. A point-of-care blood glucose measurement is 2.0 mmol/L. What is the most likely cause of his hypoglycaemia? A) Congenital Hyperinsulinism (CHI) B) Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder (FAOD) C) Sepsis D) Delayed Establishment of Feeds E) Panhypopituitarism CORRECT ANSWER: Transient neonatal hypoglycaemia is a common metabolic issue in the first 48-72 hours of life. After birth, the neonate must transition from a constant maternal glucose supply to intermittent enteral feeding. This requires mobilisation of hepatic glycogen stores. In a healthy term infant, these stores can become depleted if the establishment of effective feeding is delayed or milk intake is suboptimal. This creates a calorific deficit and an imbalance between glucose utilisation and production, leading to a temporary drop in blood glucose. The co-existing jaundice is also frequently physiological and can be exacerbated by poor enteral intake, which slows gut transit and increases the enterohepatic circulation of bilirubin. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Congenital Hyperinsulinism) is incorrect as it typically causes persistent and often severe hypoglycaemia requiring high glucose infusion rates, rather than transient hypoglycaemia in an otherwise well baby. Option B (Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder) is less likely as this is a rare inborn error of metabolism that would typically present with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia precipitated by fasting stress. Option C (Sepsis) is an important differential but is less probable as the most common cause in a well-appearing neonate without other systemic signs such as temperature instability or respiratory distress. Option E (Panhypopituitarism) is incorrect because this rare condition would usually be associated with other clinical signs like midline facial defects, micropenis, or a conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia. 57 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-year-old boy weighing 20 kg is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a decreased level of consciousness. Following an immediate assessment, the registrar prescribes an intravenous bolus of 2 ml/kg of 10% Dextrose. What is the total mass of glucose in grams that will be administered? A) 1 g B) 2 g C) 4 g D) 5 g E) 10 g CORRECT ANSWER: This question assesses a core competency in paediatric emergency medicine: the accurate calculation of fluid and drug dosages. The first step is to determine the total volume of 10% Dextrose to be administered. The prescribed dose is 2 ml/kg for a 20 kg child, resulting in a total volume of 2 ml/kg × 20 kg = 40 ml. The second step is to calculate the mass of glucose within this volume. A 10% solution means there are 10 grams of the solute (glucose) per 100 ml of the solvent. Therefore, the mass of glucose in 40 ml is calculated as (10 g / 100 ml) × 40 ml = 4 g. Accurate calculation is critical for the safe and effective management of hypoglycaemia, a key principle mandated by RCPCH and NICE guidelines. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (1 g) is incorrect as this would be the glucose mass in only 10 ml of 10% Dextrose, representing a significant under-dosing. Option B (2 g) is incorrect; this would be the correct dose for a 10 kg child, indicating a potential error in using the patient's weight. Option D (5 g) is incorrect and would be the amount of glucose in 50 ml of the solution, likely resulting from an arithmetic error. Option E (10 g) is incorrect as this represents the total amount of glucose in 100 ml of 10% Dextrose, failing to account for the specific weight-based volume required for this child. 58 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 15-year-old girl is brought to the A&E by ambulance after being found drowsy and confused at home. On examination, she is bradycardic and hypotensive. Her bedside capillary blood glucose is noted to be profoundly low. An overdose of which of the following substances is the most likely cause of this clinical picture? A) Paracetamol B) Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs) C) Opiates D) Beta-blockers E) Calcium Channel Blockers (CCBs) CORRECT ANSWER: Beta-blocker overdose, particularly with non-selective agents like propranolol, is a well-recognised cause of profound hypoglycaemia in the paediatric population. The primary mechanism is the inhibition of hepatic glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis, processes essential for maintaining glucose homeostasis, especially in children who have lower glycogen reserves than adults. While the question cites insulin release, the dominant and clinically significant pathophysiology is this blockade of glucose production. Furthermore, beta-blockade dangerously masks the adrenergic counter-regulatory response to hypoglycaemia, such as tachycardia and tremors. This prevents the patient from exhibiting the early warning signs, often leading to a delayed diagnosis until severe neuroglycopenic symptoms, such as seizures or coma, develop. This combination of impaired glucose production and masked symptoms makes it a particularly dangerous overdose. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Paracetamol) is incorrect because hypoglycaemia is not a direct effect but rather a late, pre-terminal sign of fulminant hepatic failure resulting from the overdose. Option B (Tricyclic Antidepressants) is incorrect as the classic toxicity profile involves anticholinergic effects, seizures, and significant cardiotoxicity, not hypoglycaemia. Option C (Opiates) is incorrect because their overdose is characterised by the triad of respiratory depression, central nervous system depression, and miosis. Option E (Calcium Channel Blockers) is incorrect as overdose typically causes hyperglycaemia by blocking insulin release from pancreatic beta-cells, alongside bradycardia and hypotension. 59 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine An 8-year-old child is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with lethargy. On examination, generalised hyperpigmentation is noted. A capillary blood glucose is 2.8 mmol/L, for which an intravenous dextrose bolus is administered. What is the most appropriate adjunctive therapy to administer? A) Oral Dexamethasone. B) IV Glucagon. C) IM Somatostatin. D) IV Hydrocortisone. E) IV Levothyroxine. CORRECT ANSWER: The combination of hypoglycaemia and hyperpigmentation is a classical presentation of primary adrenal insufficiency, precipitating an adrenal (Addisonian) crisis. The pathophysiology involves a deficiency of cortisol, which is critical for glucose homeostasis via gluconeogenesis. Hyperpigmentation results from excess Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH) which also stimulates melanocytes. National guidelines state that an adrenal crisis is a life-threatening emergency requiring immediate intervention. Following initial glucose correction with an IV Dextrose bolus, the immediate priority is to administer parenteral hydrocortisone to replace the deficient glucocorticoid, thereby stabilising the patient and treating the underlying cause of the metabolic derangement. For a school-aged child, the recommended emergency dose is 100 mg of IV Hydrocortisone. This intervention is crucial to prevent cardiovascular collapse and further neurological compromise from hypoglycaemia. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Oral Dexamethasone) is incorrect because the intravenous route is essential in a critically unwell child to ensure immediate and reliable bioavailability. Option B (IV Glucagon) is less appropriate as its action requires adequate hepatic glycogen stores, which are typically depleted in adrenal insufficiency due to impaired gluconeogenesis. Option C (IM Somatostatin) is incorrect as it is a hormone inhibitor and has no therapeutic role in the management of an adrenal crisis. Option E (IV Levothyroxine) is incorrect because, while autoimmune adrenalitis may coexist with hypothyroidism, this medication does not address the acute, life-threatening cortisol deficiency. 60 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department following a generalised tonic-clonic seizure. Her initial capillary blood glucose is 2.5 mmol/L, and a critical blood sample is obtained during this period of hypoglycaemia. Which of the following investigations is essential to differentiate between endogenous hyperinsulinism and exogenous insulin administration? A) C-Peptide level B) Plasma Acylcarnitines C) Blood Lactate D) Urine Organic Acids E) Total Bilirubin CORRECT ANSWER: C-peptide is a polypeptide that is cleaved from pro-insulin during the synthesis of endogenous insulin by the pancreatic beta-cells. Therefore, its level in the blood is proportional to the amount of insulin being secreted by the pancreas. When investigating hypoglycaemia, measuring both insulin and C-peptide simultaneously is crucial. If both levels are high, it indicates excessive endogenous insulin secretion, such as in cases of hyperinsulinism or an insulinoma. Conversely, if the insulin level is high but the C-peptide level is low or suppressed, it strongly suggests the administration of exogenous insulin, as commercial insulin preparations do not contain C-peptide. This distinction is fundamental in directing further investigation and management. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option B (Plasma Acylcarnitines) is incorrect as this is primarily used to investigate fatty acid oxidation defects, which are a metabolic cause of hypoglycaemia, not an insulin secretion disorder. Option C (Blood Lactate) is incorrect because while it can be elevated in certain metabolic disorders causing hypoglycaemia, such as glycogen storage diseases or gluconeogenesis defects, it does not help in ruling out an insulin-related cause. Option D (Urine Organic Acids) is incorrect as it is a screen for organic acidurias, another group of inborn errors of metabolism that can present with hypoglycaemia, but it does not assess insulin secretion. Option E (Total Bilirubin) is incorrect because it is a marker of liver function and haemolysis and has no direct role in the investigation of hypoglycaemia or insulin secretion disorders. 61 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-day-old, term male infant is reviewed on the postnatal ward due to persistent hypoglycaemia. He was found to be jittery with a capillary blood glucose of 1.8 mmol/L. Despite appropriate initial management, he requires an escalating intravenous glucose infusion to maintain safe blood glucose levels. Which of the following findings would be the most specific indicator of Congenital Hyperinsulinism in this infant? A) Hypoglycaemia occurring after a prolonged fast. B) Absence of ketones during hypoglycaemia. C) Hypoglycaemia that responds well to Glucagon. D) Persistent need for a high Glucose Infusion Rate (GIR) to maintain normoglycaemia. E) Presence of Hepatomegaly. CORRECT ANSWER: Congenital Hyperinsulinism (CHI) is defined by the inappropriate and excessive secretion of insulin from pancreatic β-cells, which is not suppressed by hypoglycaemia. This pathological oversecretion of insulin drives glucose into peripheral tissues, primarily muscle and adipose tissue, and simultaneously inhibits hepatic glucose production (both glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis). The consequence is severe and persistent hypoglycaemia. To counteract this powerful glucose-lowering effect and maintain normoglycaemia, an unusually high rate of intravenous glucose is required. A Glucose Infusion Rate (GIR) persistently above 8 mg/kg/min is a cardinal sign and a critical red flag for CHI, directly reflecting the degree of hyperinsulinaemia. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Hypoglycaemia occurring after a prolonged fast) is incorrect as this pattern is more typical of ketotic hypoglycaemia or certain metabolic disorders, whereas hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia can occur at any time, including post-prandially. Option B (Absence of ketones during hypoglycaemia) is a key biochemical finding in CHI, but the persistent high GIR is the more immediate and defining clinical management red flag. Option C (Hypoglycaemia that responds well to Glucagon) is incorrect because while a positive glucagon response is expected and used diagnostically, it is a transient finding and not the persistent clinical marker that a high GIR represents. Option E (Presence of Hepatomegaly) is incorrect as it is characteristic of Glycogen Storage Diseases, not CHI. 62 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 16-year-old with Type 1 Diabetes is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department in a state of profound unresponsiveness. A point-of-care capillary blood glucose measurement is 1.0 mmol/L. Following the administration of an intravenous 10% Dextrose bolus, her blood glucose level begins to rise. What is the most appropriate next step in her ongoing management? A) Start IV Hydrocortisone. B) Administer IV Glucagon bolus. C) Restrict further fluid intake. D) Start IV Dextrose 10% infusion and hold insulin. E) Give a second 10% Dextrose bolus if Glucose is rising. CORRECT ANSWER: Following a bolus for severe hypoglycaemia, the priority is to prevent recurrence and provide a stable glucose supply for cerebral metabolism. A single dextrose bolus has a transient effect. According to ISPAD and general paediatric principles, an intravenous 10% dextrose infusion is the required next step to maintain a safe blood glucose level. The underlying cause in this patient is an excess of circulating insulin, therefore withholding all forms of insulin therapy is critical to break the hypoglycaemic cycle. This combined approach ensures a steady substrate is provided while the primary driver of the hypoglycaemia is removed, allowing for gradual stabilisation. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start IV Hydrocortisone) is incorrect as there is no indication of adrenal insufficiency; this is reserved for refractory hypoglycaemia unresponsive to standard treatment. Option B (Administer IV Glucagon bolus) is less appropriate because IV access is established and dextrose provides a more direct and reliable glucose source, whereas glucagon relies on adequate and often depleted hepatic glycogen stores. Option C (Restrict further fluid intake) is incorrect and dangerous as the patient requires intravenous fluids to deliver glucose and maintain hydration. Option E (Give a second 10% Dextrose bolus if Glucose is rising) is incorrect because a second bolus is only warranted if hypoglycaemia persists after the first; it is unnecessary if glucose is already rising and an infusion should be commenced instead. 63 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3 kg term infant on the postnatal ward has persistent hypoglycaemia, which has not responded to an appropriate feeding plan. A decision is made to commence an intravenous dextrose infusion. What is the most appropriate initial Glucose Infusion Rate (GIR)? A) 1-2 mg/kg/min B) 3-4 mg/kg/min C) 5-8 mg/kg/min D) 10-12 mg/kg/min E) 15-20 mg/kg/min CORRECT ANSWER: The physiological glucose requirement for a term neonate is determined by the basal hepatic glucose production rate, which is approximately 5-8 mg/kg/min. The goal of a starting dextrose infusion is to replicate this endogenous production to meet the brain's metabolic demands without causing hyperglycaemia. A Glucose Infusion Rate (GIR) within this range is therefore the most appropriate starting point for intravenous therapy in a neonate with persistent hypoglycaemia. This approach provides essential glucose substrate while avoiding the risks of excessively high or low infusion rates. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (1-2 mg/kg/min) is incorrect because this rate is too low and would be insufficient to meet the neonate's basal metabolic needs, failing to correct the hypoglycaemia. Option B (3-4 mg/kg/min) is incorrect as it falls below the normal neonatal hepatic glucose production rate and may not be adequate to maintain normoglycaemia. Option D (10-12 mg/kg/min) is incorrect because initiating an infusion at such a high rate can lead to hyperglycaemia, osmotic diuresis, and risks stimulating an excessive insulin response, potentially worsening subsequent hypoglycaemia. Option E (15-20 mg/kg/min) is incorrect as these are very high rates, typically reserved for cases of refractory hypoglycaemia or suspected hyperinsulinism, and are not appropriate for an initial infusion. A GIR exceeding 8 mg/kg/min would prompt further investigation for hyperinsulinism. 64 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-year-old child is brought to the A&E department with new-onset generalised tonic-clonic seizures. On arrival, their airway is patent and breathing is spontaneous. A point-of-care capillary blood glucose measurement is critically low at 1.5 mmol/L. After securing intravenous access and sending a critical blood sample, the team administers a bolus of intravenous dextrose. What is the immediate target threshold for blood glucose concentration that this emergency bolus aims to exceed? A) 2.5 mmol/L B) 3.0 mmol/L C) 4.0 mmol/L D) 5.5 mmol/L E) 7.0 mmol/L CORRECT ANSWER: In a child presenting with severe hypoglycaemia causing seizures, the immediate therapeutic objective is to halt neuroglycopenia and prevent irreversible neurological injury. The brain is critically dependent on glucose for metabolism. National guidelines and expert consensus advise that the emergency IV dextrose bolus aims to rapidly raise the blood glucose concentration above the critical symptomatic threshold. For practical purposes in an emergency, a blood glucose of ≤3.0mmol/L is considered the threshold to treat. The primary goal is therefore to exceed 3.0 mmol/L promptly to stop the seizure and protect the central nervous system. Subsequent management with a maintenance infusion will then aim for a safer, higher target within the normal range, but the initial bolus is a rescue intervention focused solely on crossing this critical danger line. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (2.5 mmol/L) is incorrect as this level is still well within the definition of clinically significant hypoglycaemia and would be an insufficient target to resolve severe neuroglycopenic symptoms. Option C (4.0 mmol/L) is incorrect because while it represents a safe blood glucose level, the immediate priority is simply to exit the critical danger zone above 3.0 mmol/L, not achieve a specific normal value with the initial bolus. Option D (5.5 mmol/L) is incorrect as this is a mid-normal range value; aiming for this with a rapid bolus risks over-correction and iatrogenic hyperglycaemia, which is not the goal of the emergency intervention. Option E (7.0 mmol/L) is incorrect because targeting the upper end of the normal range with a bolus is inappropriate, increases the risk of hyperglycaemia and osmotic shifts, and is not the primary emergency aim. 65 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-month-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with increasing lethargy. Her parents report a two-day history of a viral illness and significantly reduced oral intake. Initial investigations confirm profound hypoglycaemia. A subsequent urine sample demonstrates a complete absence of ketones. What is the most likely diagnosis? A) Ketotic Hypoglycaemia. B) Salicylate overdose. C) Sepsis. D) Medium Chain Acyl CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency (MCADD). E) Adrenal Insufficiency. CORRECT ANSWER: Medium Chain Acyl CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency (MCADD) is a fatty acid oxidation disorder. During periods of fasting or metabolic stress, the body relies on breaking down fatty acids to produce energy and ketone bodies. In MCADD, the deficient enzyme prevents the metabolism of medium-chain fatty acids. This blocks the beta-oxidation pathway, leading to two key consequences. Firstly, the block prevents the generation of acetyl-CoA, which is the essential substrate for ketogenesis, hence the absence of ketones (non-ketotic). Secondly, the body becomes entirely dependent on glucose for energy, leading to rapid depletion of glycogen stores and profound hypoglycaemia. This combination of non-ketotic hypoglycaemia during illness or fasting is the classical biochemical presentation of MCADD. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Ketotic Hypoglycaemia) is incorrect as it is a diagnosis of exclusion for children who develop hypoglycaemia with appropriately elevated ketones, the opposite of the scenario described. Option B (Salicylate overdose) is incorrect because while it can cause hypoglycaemia by uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation, it typically results in a ketotic state. Option C (Sepsis) is incorrect because the profound metabolic stress and catabolism associated with sepsis lead to increased glucose utilisation and ketogenesis, resulting in ketotic hypoglycaemia. Option E (Adrenal Insufficiency) is incorrect as the cortisol deficiency impairs gluconeogenesis causing hypoglycaemia, but the pathways for fatty acid oxidation and ketone production remain intact. 66 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-year-old boy is reviewed on the Paediatric Assessment Unit following a hypoglycaemic episode. He has been successfully treated with an appropriate intravenous dextrose bolus and is now clinically stable. He weighs 10 kg. What is the most appropriate initial intravenous dextrose infusion to commence to prevent recurrence? A) Dextrose 10% at 2 ml/kg/hr B) Dextrose 5% at 4 ml/kg/hr C) Dextrose 10% at 4 ml/kg/hr D) Dextrose 25% at 1 ml/kg/hr E) Dextrose 5% at 10 ml/kg/hr CORRECT ANSWER: Following an intravenous bolus for hypoglycaemia, a continuous glucose infusion is essential to prevent recurrence. The aim is to provide a safe and adequate Glucose Infusion Rate (GIR). A standard starting GIR for an infant is between 4-8 mg/kg/min. Option C, Dextrose 10% at 4 ml/kg/hr, provides a GIR of 6.7 mg/kg/min. This is calculated using the formula: GIR = [Rate (ml/hr) x Dextrose concentration (%)] / [6 x Weight (kg)]. For this 10 kg infant, the calculation is [40 ml/hr x 10] / [6 x 10] = 6.7 mg/kg/min. This rate falls comfortably within the recommended range, providing sufficient glucose to maintain normoglycaemia while also delivering appropriate maintenance fluids. The infusion rate must then be titrated according to frequent blood glucose monitoring. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Dextrose 10% at 2 ml/kg/hr) is incorrect as it provides a GIR of only 3.3 mg/kg/min, which is likely insufficient to prevent rebound hypoglycaemia. Option B (Dextrose 5% at 4 ml/kg/hr) is incorrect because it also delivers a suboptimal GIR of 3.3 mg/kg/min. Option D (Dextrose 25% at 1 ml/kg/hr) is less appropriate as the GIR of 4.2 mg/kg/min is at the lower limit of the target range, and high concentration dextrose infusions are hyperosmolar, ideally requiring central venous access. Option E (Dextrose 5% at 10 ml/kg/hr) is incorrect because the fluid rate of 10 ml/kg/hr is excessive for maintenance in a 1-year-old and poses a risk of fluid overload. 67 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-year-old boy is brought to the Accident & Emergency department due to increasing drowsiness. He has had a two-day history of a viral illness with poor oral intake. His medical history is otherwise unremarkable. A point-of-care capillary blood glucose is 2.5 mmol/L and a urine dipstick is strongly positive for ketones. What is the most likely diagnosis? A) Insulinoma B) Congenital Hyperinsulinism C) Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder (FAOD) D) Accidental Ingestion of Insulin E) Ketotic Hypoglycaemia CORRECT ANSWER: The clinical presentation of hypoglycaemia with significant ketonuria following a period of reduced oral intake, typically due to a viral illness, is characteristic of Idiopathic Ketotic Hypoglycaemia. This is the most common cause of hypoglycaemia in children between 18 months and 5 years, although it can occur up to age 9. The pathophysiology involves the rapid depletion of hepatic glycogen stores during the fasting state imposed by the illness. The subsequent metabolic switch to fatty acid oxidation for energy correctly produces ketone bodies. However, the gluconeogenic and ketogenic pathways are not yet mature enough to fully compensate for the prolonged catabolic state, leading to hypoglycaemia despite the presence of ketones. The presence of ketones is a key physiological finding, ruling out hyperinsulinaemic states. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Insulinoma) is incorrect because an insulin-secreting tumour would cause inappropriately high insulin levels that suppress ketogenesis, leading to non-ketotic hypoglycaemia. Option B (Congenital Hyperinsulinism) is incorrect as it typically presents in the neonatal period or early infancy with severe and persistent non-ketotic hypoglycaemia. Option C (Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorder) is incorrect because a defect in this pathway would impair the body's ability to produce ketones, resulting in hypoketotic or non-ketotic hypoglycaemia during fasting. Option D (Accidental Ingestion of Insulin) is incorrect as exogenous insulin would also suppress ketone production, causing a state of non-ketotic hypoglycaemia. 68 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-month-old infant is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with new-onset lethargy. A point-of-care capillary blood glucose is 1.5 mmol/L, and the team prepares to administer an intravenous dextrose bolus. Before the dextrose is given, which of the following is the most critical set of investigations to collect to establish a diagnosis? A) Full blood count and Urea/Electrolytes B) Serum Insulin, Cortisol, Acylcarnitine profile, and Urine ketones C) Lactate and Ammonia levels D) Thyroid function tests E) Plasma Amino Acids CORRECT ANSWER: The critical sample must be obtained during the hypoglycaemic episode and before the administration of a dextrose bolus. Giving glucose will fundamentally alter the biochemical picture by stimulating insulin secretion and suppressing counter-regulatory hormones and ketone body production, thus masking the underlying aetiology. This specific panel of tests is the highest yield. Serum insulin is measured to identify hyperinsulinism, where levels would be inappropriately normal or high for the degree of hypoglycaemia. Cortisol is a key counter-regulatory hormone, and its deficiency can cause hypoglycaemia. An acylcarnitine profile is essential for diagnosing fatty acid oxidation disorders, which present with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia. Urine or blood ketones are vital to differentiate between ketotic and hypoketotic states, a key branch point in the diagnostic algorithm. This comprehensive sample allows for a systematic evaluation of the most common and serious causes of hypoglycaemia in infancy. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Full blood count and Urea/Electrolytes) is incorrect as these are baseline investigations that do not elucidate the specific endocrine or metabolic cause of the hypoglycaemia. Option C (Lactate and Ammonia levels) is less appropriate because while elevated levels are seen in some inborn errors of metabolism, the panel in option B addresses a wider range of more common initial differential diagnoses. Option D (Thyroid function tests) is incorrect as hypothyroidism is an uncommon cause of hypoglycaemia in this age group and not a first-line investigation in the acute setting. Option E (Plasma Amino Acids) is incorrect because this is a more specialised test for conditions like maple syrup urine disease and is not considered part of the essential, time-critical sample for the initial investigation. 69 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-year-old boy is brought to the Accident & Emergency department with a decreased level of consciousness. On examination, he is unresponsive. A capillary blood glucose measurement is 2.2 mmol/L. Attempts to gain immediate intravenous access are unsuccessful. What is the most appropriate next step in management? A) Oral Sucrose gel 2 ml/kg B) Intramuscular Adrenaline 0.01 mg/kg C) Intramuscular Glucagon 0.5 mg for a child <25 kg D) Intraosseous 25% Dextrose 2 ml/kg E) Oral Glucose tablet crushed CORRECT ANSWER: In an unresponsive child with severe hypoglycaemia, the immediate priority is rapid correction of the blood glucose to prevent neurological injury. While intravenous 10% Dextrose is the first-line treatment, this is not an option here. According to UK and international resuscitation guidelines, Intramuscular (IM) Glucagon is the most appropriate alternative when IV access cannot be obtained promptly. Glucagon acts by stimulating hepatic glycogenolysis, releasing stored glucose into the bloodstream. The standard dose is 0.5 mg for children weighing less than 25 kg, which is appropriate for a 3-year-old, and 1.0 mg for those over 25 kg. This intervention is effective, can be administered quickly without vascular access, and is the established standard of care in this emergency scenario. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Oral Sucrose gel) is incorrect because the child is unresponsive, creating a significant risk of aspiration if anything is administered orally. Option B (Intramuscular Adrenaline) is incorrect because, while it can raise blood glucose, it is not a primary treatment for hypoglycaemia and has potent cardiovascular side effects. Option D (Intraosseous 25% Dextrose) is incorrect as highly concentrated dextrose solutions (>12.5%) are hyperosmolar and can cause severe tissue damage and necrosis if extravasation occurs, making them unsuitable for IO administration. Option E (Oral Glucose tablet) is incorrect as the child's unresponsiveness makes oral administration unsafe due to the high risk of choking and aspiration. 70 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-month-old infant is brought to the A&E department following an apparent life-threatening event. On assessment, the infant is unresponsive. A point-of-care blood glucose is critically low at 1.8 mmol/L. Intravenous access has just been secured. What is the most appropriate initial intravenous dextrose bolus to administer? A) 10 ml/kg of 5% Dextrose B) 5 ml/kg of 50% Dextrose C) 2 ml/kg of 10% Dextrose D) 4 ml/kg of 25% Dextrose E) 10 ml/kg of 25% Dextrose CORRECT ANSWER: Severe hypoglycaemia in an unresponsive infant is a neurological emergency requiring immediate correction to prevent brain injury. According to Advanced Paediatric Life Support (APLS) and Resuscitation Council UK guidelines, the standard intravenous bolus is 2 ml/kg of 10% Dextrose. This dose reliably delivers 200 mg/kg of glucose, which is sufficient to rapidly restore blood glucose levels whilst minimising potential complications. The 10% concentration is considered the safest hypertonic solution for peripheral administration in children, balancing efficacy with a lower risk of thrombophlebitis and extravasation injury compared to more concentrated solutions. This intervention is the critical first step in management after securing intravenous access. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (10 ml/kg of 5% Dextrose) is incorrect as this concentration is too dilute for an emergency bolus and would require an excessive fluid volume to deliver a therapeutic glucose dose. Option B (5 ml/kg of 50% Dextrose) is incorrect because 50% Dextrose is dangerously hyperosmolar and should not be used in infants due to the severe risk of chemical phlebitis and tissue necrosis. Option D (4 ml/kg of 25% Dextrose) is incorrect as 25% Dextrose is still highly hyperosmolar, increasing the risk of venous injury, and is not the recommended concentration for a peripheral bolus in infants. Option E (10 ml/kg of 25% Dextrose) is incorrect as it represents a significant overdose of both glucose and fluid volume, risking severe hyperglycaemia, osmotic diuresis, and electrolyte imbalance. 71 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-year-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a 24-hour history of vomiting. On assessment, she is alert and her blood pressure is within the normal range for her age. An urgent blood gas analysis reveals a sodium of 128 mmol/L, potassium of 3.2 mmol/L, and glucose of 2.8 mmol/L. Which of these biochemical abnormalities requires the most immediate correction? A) The Hypokalaemia (Potassium 3.2 mmol/L). B) The Hyponatraemia (Sodium 128 mmol/L). C) The ongoing gastrointestinal losses. D) The Hypoglycaemia (Glucose 2.8 mmol/L). E) The need for IV fluid deficit correction. CORRECT ANSWER: Hypoglycaemia is a time-critical paediatric emergency. The brain has a high metabolic rate and is almost entirely dependent on glucose for energy; a level below 3.0 mmol/L places the child at immediate risk of seizures and irreversible neurological injury. According to Resuscitation Council and RCPCH guidelines, after ensuring cardiorespiratory stability (the 'ABC'), the next priority is 'D' for Disability, which includes checking and correcting the blood glucose. Although the other electrolyte disturbances require management, preventing brain damage from neuroglycopenia is the most urgent intervention in a child who is not in shock. The pathophysiology relates to an inadequate supply of glucose for cerebral metabolism, leading to neuronal dysfunction and cell death if not promptly reversed. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (The Hypokalaemia) is incorrect because a potassium of 3.2 mmol/L represents only mild hypokalaemia and does not pose the same immediate life-threat as critical hypoglycaemia. Option B (The Hyponatraemia) is incorrect as the sodium of 128 mmol/L is a mild abnormality that is not immediately life-threatening and requires controlled correction to avoid neurological complications like central pontine myelinolysis. Option C (The ongoing gastrointestinal losses) is incorrect because managing these losses is part of the overall fluid strategy, not an immediate, life-saving metabolic correction. Option E (The need for IV fluid deficit correction) is incorrect because the child is alert and normotensive, indicating they are not in shock, thus correcting the profound hypoglycaemia takes precedence over addressing the fluid deficit. 72 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-year-old boy, weighing 14 kg, is reviewed on the surgical ward four hours following a routine tonsillectomy. He remains drowsy and is not yet tolerating oral intake. His clinical observations are stable, and he has a satisfactory urine output. The on-call registrar asks you to prescribe appropriate intravenous fluids for maintenance. Which of the following is the most appropriate intravenous fluid prescription? A) Glucose 5% in 0.45% Saline with 20 mmol/L KCl. B) Glucose 10% in 0.9% Saline with KCl. C) 0.9% Sodium Chloride only. D) Glucose 5% in Water. E) Glucose 5% in 0.9% Saline with 20 mmol/L KCl. CORRECT ANSWER: Current NICE and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) guidelines recommend the use of isotonic fluids for intravenous maintenance in children to prevent iatrogenic hyponatraemia. Hospitalised children are at risk of developing hyponatraemia due to the non-osmotic secretion of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) in response to stressors like pain, illness, or surgery. Using hypotonic fluids in this context can lead to a dangerous drop in serum sodium and potentially cerebral oedema. Option E, Glucose 5% in 0.9% Saline, is an isotonic solution. The 5% glucose provides an energy substrate to prevent starvation ketosis, while the 0.9% sodium chloride maintains plasma tonicity. The addition of 20 mmol/L of potassium chloride is appropriate for maintenance requirements, assuming the child has established urine output and normal baseline potassium levels. This combination is therefore the safest and most appropriate choice for routine maintenance fluid therapy. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glucose 5% in 0.45% Saline) is incorrect because this solution is hypotonic and increases the risk of iatrogenic hyponatraemia, particularly in unwell children with high ADH levels. Option B (Glucose 10% in 0.9% Saline) is incorrect as 10% glucose solutions are hypertonic and typically reserved for the management of hypoglycaemia, not for routine maintenance. Option C (0.9% Sodium Chloride only) is inappropriate because it lacks glucose, which would put a nil-by-mouth child at risk of developing starvation ketosis. Option D (Glucose 5% in Water) is incorrect as it is a dangerously hypotonic fluid once the glucose is metabolised, carrying a very high risk of severe hyponatraemia. 73 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-year-old girl is admitted to the paediatric ward due to persistent vomiting. Her parents inform the registrar that her last known healthy weight was 10 kg. On admission, she is weighed at 5 kg. Based on this acute weight loss, what is the estimated percentage of dehydration? A) 0.025 B) 0.05 C) 0.1 D) 0.25 E) 0.5 CORRECT ANSWER: E (50%). In paediatrics, the most accurate method for determining the degree of dehydration is by calculating the percentage of total body weight lost. Acute weight loss is presumed to be entirely due to fluid loss. The formula for this calculation is (Pre-illness Weight - Current Weight) / Pre-illness Weight, multiplied by 100. In this scenario, the child has lost 5 kg from a baseline weight of 10 kg. Therefore, the calculation is (5 kg / 10 kg) × 100, which equals 50%. While a 50% fluid loss is theoretically incompatible with life, for the purposes of a single best answer examination question, the precise mathematical calculation is required. This value represents a state of severe shock. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (2.50%) is incorrect as it represents a significant underestimation of the fluid deficit based on the provided weights. Option B (5%) is incorrect and would correspond to a fluid loss of only 0.5 kg, which is classified as mild dehydration. Option C (10%) is incorrect and would represent a 1 kg weight loss, the threshold for severe dehydration, but not the calculated value here. Option D (25%) is incorrect and would equate to a 2.5 kg weight loss, which is a severe, but mathematically inaccurate, level of dehydration. 74 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-year-old girl is brought to the A&E resuscitation bay due to profound lethargy. She has a four-day history of gastroenteritis. Initial assessment confirms she is in shock with a prolonged capillary refill time and tachycardia. After receiving three intravenous boluses of 20 ml/kg of 0.9% Sodium Chloride, she remains hypotensive. What is the most appropriate next step in management? A) Start a vasoactive drug infusion (e.g., Adrenaline or Noradrenaline). B) Give a fourth bolus of 10 ml/kg of 0.45% Saline. C) Start blood transfusion immediately. D) Restrict further fluid boluses and wait for deficits. E) Give a bolus of 3% Hypertonic Saline. CORRECT ANSWER: This child has received 60 ml/kg of isotonic crystalloid, the standard initial fluid resuscitation for shock. The persistence of hypotension despite this defines fluid-refractory shock, as per UK Advanced Paediatric Life Support (APLS) guidelines. At this stage, the underlying pathophysiology is unlikely to be solely intravascular volume depletion. It often involves evolving myocardial dysfunction or a distributive state with vasodilation, meaning further large-volume fluid boluses will be ineffective and may cause harm through fluid overload and tissue oedema. The priority, therefore, shifts to pharmacological support of the circulation. Commencing a vasoactive infusion, such as adrenaline or noradrenaline, is the critical next step to improve cardiac contractility and vascular tone, restore tissue perfusion, and bridge the child to definitive care in a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option B (Give a fourth bolus of 10 ml/kg of 0.45% Saline) is incorrect because hypotonic fluids are inappropriate for resuscitation as they do not remain in the intravascular space and can cause dangerous hyponatraemia and cerebral oedema. Option C (Start blood transfusion immediately) is incorrect as there is no indication of haemorrhage, and blood is not the primary therapy for hypovolaemic or septic shock unless there is co-existing critical anaemia. Option D (Restrict further fluid boluses and wait for deficits) is incorrect because passively waiting is inappropriate management for a child in persistent shock and would lead to irreversible organ damage. Option E (Give a bolus of 3% Hypertonic Saline) is incorrect as this is a specialised fluid used for managing raised intracranial pressure with hyponatraemia, not for routine resuscitation in shock. 75 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-month-old infant is reviewed on the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a two-day history of watery diarrhoea and vomiting. The infant, who weighs 8 kg, is clinically assessed as having mild dehydration. A trial of oral rehydration therapy is commenced. The parents are diligent but ask the junior doctor why they cannot just use water or diluted fruit juice instead of the prescribed oral rehydration solution. Which of the following statements best explains the physiological principle behind the composition of the oral rehydration solution? A) The ORS solution is already sterile. B) ORS contains Zinc which is an antidiarrhoeal. C) ORS contains Sodium and Glucose in the optimal molar ratio. D) ORS is hypotonic to prevent hypernatraemia. E) ORS tastes better than water to children. CORRECT ANSWER: The therapeutic efficacy of Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS) is fundamentally based on the physiological principle of coupled sodium and glucose transport. The SGLT1 cotransporter, located on the luminal surface of enterocytes, actively transports sodium and glucose from the gut into the cells. This process is highly efficient when sodium and glucose are present in an optimal molar ratio, typically 1:1. Water follows this osmotic gradient created by the absorbed solutes, leading to effective rehydration. Even during secretory diarrhoea, where other transport mechanisms are impaired, the SGLT1 pathway remains intact. Giving plain water or juice disrupts this delicate balance. Water lacks the necessary sodium to facilitate absorption, while juice often has a high glucose concentration and high osmolality, which can worsen osmotic diarrhoea. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (The ORS solution is already sterile) is incorrect because while sterility is a feature, it is not the primary scientific reason for its superiority over water or juice for rehydration. Option B (ORS contains Zinc which is an antidiarrhoeal) is incorrect as although zinc supplementation can reduce the duration of diarrhoea, the core principle of ORS effectiveness is rehydration via SGLT1, not the presence of zinc. Option D (ORS is hypotonic to prevent hypernatraemia) is incorrect because while modern ORS is hypotonic, which is beneficial, the key mechanism of action remains the specific sodium-glucose ratio facilitating maximal water absorption. Option E (ORS tastes better than water to children) is incorrect as palatability is a secondary consideration and highly subjective; the primary benefit is physiological, not sensory. 76 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 13-year-old girl is admitted to the paediatric ward with a severe migraine. She is unable to tolerate oral intake and has been placed nil by mouth. On examination, she is clinically euvolaemic. Her current weight is 40 kg. What is the most appropriate initial hourly rate for intravenous maintenance fluids? A) 83 ml/hr B) 79 ml/hr C) 71 ml/hr D) 62.5 ml/hr E) 90 ml/hr CORRECT ANSWER: The calculation for maintenance intravenous fluids in children is based on the Holliday-Segar formula, which is a weight-based method. For a 40 kg child, the fluid requirement is calculated in tiers. The first 10 kg requires 100 ml/kg, the next 10 kg requires 50 ml/kg, and the remaining weight requires 20 ml/kg. Calculation: (10 kg x 100 ml/kg) = 1,000 ml (10 kg x 50 ml/kg) = 500 ml (20 kg x 20 ml/kg) = 400 ml The total fluid requirement over 24 hours is 1,000 + 500 + 400 = 1,900 ml. To determine the hourly rate, this total is divided by 24 hours. 1,900 ml / 24 hours = 79.17 ml/hr. The closest answer is 79 ml/hr. This method is standard for calculating routine maintenance needs in a euvolaemic child. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (83 ml/hr) is incorrect as it represents an overestimation of the fluid requirement, likely from calculating the total daily fluid as 2,000 ml, which would be appropriate for a 45 kg child. Option C (71 ml/hr) is incorrect because it underestimates the fluid needs, possibly by miscalculating the requirement for the final 20 kg at a lower rate of 10 ml/kg. Option D (62.5 ml/hr) is incorrect as this would be the correct maintenance rate for a 20 kg child (1,500 ml/day), failing to account for the additional 20 kg of body weight. Option E (90 ml/hr) is incorrect as this is a significant overestimation of the required rate, which increases the risk of fluid overload and iatrogenic hyponatraemia. 77 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-month-old infant is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a three-day history of diarrhoea and vomiting. The parents report feeding the infant a homemade oral rehydration solution. On examination, the infant is irritable, has dry mucous membranes, and a heart rate of 170 beats per minute. However, the skin turgor appears surprisingly normal. Given the suspected underlying electrolyte imbalance, which of the following clinical signs is the most unreliable indicator of this child's dehydration status? A) Dry mucous membranes. B) Reduced skin turgor (elasticity). C) Prolonged capillary refill time. D) Sunken eyes. E) Tachycardia. CORRECT ANSWER: In hypernatraemic dehydration, a high serum sodium concentration creates a hypertonic extracellular fluid (ECF) compartment. This high osmotic gradient draws water out of the intracellular fluid (ICF) compartment into the ECF to maintain osmotic equilibrium. This process partially preserves the ECF volume, including the interstitial fluid that determines skin turgor. Consequently, a child can be severely dehydrated, primarily due to intracellular volume depletion, yet exhibit deceptively normal or only slightly reduced skin turgor. This makes skin elasticity a notoriously unreliable and misleading sign in assessing the severity of hypernatraemic dehydration, often masking the true degree of total body water loss. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Dry mucous membranes) is incorrect because this sign reflects ECF volume depletion and remains a reliable indicator of dehydration regardless of the sodium level. Option C (Prolonged capillary refill time) is incorrect as it is a key indicator of circulatory compromise and reduced tissue perfusion, which occurs in all types of severe dehydration. Option D (Sunken eyes) is incorrect because this reflects volume loss from orbital tissues and, like other signs of ECF depletion, is still a useful though less specific indicator. Option E (Tachycardia) is incorrect as it is a vital physiological response to maintain cardiac output in the face of intravascular volume depletion and is a crucial sign in all forms of dehydration. 78 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-year-old girl is admitted from A&E with clinical signs consistent with severe dehydration. She currently weighs 10 kg, and the attending registrar estimates her fluid deficit to be 10%, equating to 1,000 ml. A 24-hour fluid replacement plan is initiated after initial bolus therapy. Excluding maintenance fluids, what volume of this deficit should be administered over the first 8 hours? A) 250 ml B) 500 ml C) 750 ml D) 1,000 ml E) 1,500 ml CORRECT ANSWER: According to RCPCH and NICE guidelines for isotonic dehydration, the fluid deficit is replaced over 24 hours in addition to maintenance fluids. For severe dehydration, it is standard practice to administer the first half (50%) of the total deficit volume over the initial 8 hours. This approach rapidly restores circulating volume during the most critical period. The remaining 50% of the deficit is then administered over the subsequent 16 hours. In this case, the total deficit is 1,000 ml. Therefore, 50% of this volume, which is 500 ml, should be given in the first 8 hours. This calculation is separate from any initial fluid boluses and ongoing maintenance fluid requirements. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (250 ml) is incorrect as this represents only 25% of the deficit, which would be an inadequate rate of replacement for the initial phase of severe dehydration management. Option C (750 ml) is incorrect because administering 75% of the deficit in the first 8 hours would be too rapid and increases the risk of iatrogenic fluid overload and electrolyte imbalance. Option D (1,000 ml) is incorrect as replacing the entire deficit in 8 hours is dangerously fast and could lead to severe complications, including cerebral oedema. Option E (1,500 ml) is incorrect because this volume is greater than the total calculated fluid deficit, indicating a significant miscalculation of the required replacement fluid. 79 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-month-old infant is admitted to the paediatric ward with clinical signs of dehydration. The clinical assessment is consistent with 5% dehydration and initial laboratory investigations show a plasma sodium concentration of 145 mmol/L. What is the most appropriate sodium concentration for the intravenous fluid required to correct this deficit? A) 0 mmol/L (Glucose only) B) 77 mmol/L (0.45% Saline) C) 154 mmol/L (0.9% Saline) D) 100 mmol/L (Dextrose 5%) E) 130 mmol/L (Isotonic Dextrose Solution) CORRECT ANSWER: This infant has isotonic dehydration, with a sodium level at the upper end of the normal range. According to NICE guideline NG29, for children requiring intravenous fluids for deficit replacement, an isotonic crystalloid containing sodium in the range of 131-154 mmol/L should be used. Using 0.9% Saline (154 mmol/L of sodium), typically with 5% dextrose, is the standard choice. This prevents a rapid drop in plasma sodium concentration during rehydration, which could lead to cerebral oedema. The priority is to restore circulating volume and correct the deficit with a fluid that is osmotically similar to the patient's plasma, thereby avoiding iatrogenic hyponatraemia, a significant risk when using hypotonic fluids in children. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glucose only) is incorrect as a fluid devoid of sodium would cause a rapid and dangerous fall in serum sodium, leading to hyponatraemia and potential neurological complications. Option B (0.45% Saline) is incorrect because this hypotonic solution (77 mmol/L of sodium) is associated with a significant risk of iatrogenic hyponatraemia and is not recommended by NICE for deficit replacement. Option D (Dextrose 5%) is incorrect as this is just a description of the glucose content, not the sodium concentration, and using it alone would be inappropriate for the same reasons as option A. Option E (Isotonic Dextrose Solution) is incorrect because while it suggests an isotonic fluid, the specified sodium concentration of 130 mmol/L is at the very lowest end of the acceptable range and less appropriate than 0.9% Saline for initial deficit replacement. 80 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-year-old girl is admitted to the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit with septic shock. During her initial stabilisation in A&E, she received 60 ml/kg of 0.9% sodium chloride. A repeat blood gas is performed upon her arrival to the unit. Which of the following is the most likely acid-base abnormality to be seen as a direct consequence of the fluid administered? A) Ringer's Lactate has a higher Sodium concentration. B) Normal Saline is associated with Hyperkalaemia. C) Normal Saline can cause a Hyperchloraemic Metabolic Acidosis. D) Ringer's Lactate contains Glucose for energy. E) Ringer's Lactate is hypotonic and corrects Hypernatraemia faster. CORRECT ANSWER: Normal Saline (0.9% sodium chloride) contains a supraphysiological concentration of chloride (154 mmol/L) compared to plasma. When administered in large volumes for resuscitation, this high chloride load can overwhelm the kidneys' capacity for excretion, leading to a dilutional acidosis. Specifically, the increase in serum chloride concentration causes a compensatory decrease in serum bicarbonate to maintain electrical neutrality, resulting in a hyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis. Ringer's Lactate is a more "balanced" crystalloid, with a lower chloride concentration (109 mmol/L) and the presence of lactate, which is metabolised by the liver into bicarbonate. This bicarbonate precursor helps to buffer the blood and counteracts the development of acidosis, making it a more physiologically appropriate choice for large-volume resuscitation in critically ill children, particularly in contexts like burns or diabetic ketoacidosis. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Ringer's Lactate has a higher Sodium concentration) is incorrect because Ringer's Lactate has a slightly lower sodium concentration (130 mmol/L) than Normal Saline (154 mmol/L). Option B (Normal Saline is associated with Hyperkalaemia) is incorrect because Normal Saline does not contain potassium, whereas Ringer's Lactate does, although the risk of hyperkalaemia with Ringer's Lactate is minimal in patients with normal renal function. Option D (Ringer's Lactate contains Glucose for energy) is incorrect as standard Ringer's Lactate solution does not contain glucose; specific formulations with dextrose exist but are not the standard resuscitation fluid. Option E (Ringer's Lactate is hypotonic and corrects Hypernatraemia faster) is incorrect because Ringer's Lactate is an isotonic fluid, not hypotonic, and its primary use is for volume replacement, not the rapid correction of hypernatraemia. 81 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-month-old infant is admitted to the paediatric ward with dehydration. The infant is kept nil by mouth and an intravenous fluid infusion is commenced for maintenance requirements, calculated at 40 ml/hr. Due to oliguria, potassium chloride is appropriately withheld from the fluid prescription. What is the most appropriate concentration of glucose to use in the maintenance fluid for this infant? A) Glucose 2.5% B) Glucose 10% C) Glucose 5% D) Glucose 7.5% E) Glucose 20% CORRECT ANSWER: Young infants, particularly those under 6 months of age, have high cerebral metabolic demands and limited hepatic glycogen stores. When nil by mouth, they are unable to maintain adequate blood glucose levels through gluconeogenesis alone, placing them at significant risk of hypoglycaemia. Standard paediatric maintenance fluids must therefore provide a sufficient glucose load. A 10% glucose concentration delivers an appropriate glucose delivery rate to prevent the infant from entering a catabolic state and developing neuroglycopenia. This practice is supported by national guidelines, including those from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), which recommend using isotonic solutions with 10% glucose for maintenance fluids in this age group. Withholding potassium chloride due to oliguria is correct practice to prevent hyperkalaemia, but it does not alter the glucose requirement. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glucose 2.5%) is incorrect as it is a hypotonic solution that provides insufficient calories and would exacerbate the risk of hypoglycaemia. Option C (Glucose 5%) is incorrect because it is generally insufficient to meet the high metabolic needs of a young infant who is nil by mouth, carrying a significant risk of hypoglycaemia. Option D (Glucose 7.5%) is incorrect as it is not a standard concentration for maintenance fluids and may not provide an optimal glucose delivery rate. Option E (Glucose 20%) is incorrect because it is a hypertonic solution that would cause significant thrombophlebitis if administered via a peripheral line and is reserved for central administration or specific protocols like parenteral nutrition. 82 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine An 18-month-old boy is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a three-day history of diarrhoea, vomiting, and poor oral intake. On examination, he is lethargic and clinically dehydrated. His admission blood tests reveal a serum sodium of 160 mmol/L. After initial intravenous fluid resuscitation, his management plan is reviewed. What is the maximum recommended rate for correcting his serum sodium over the subsequent 24 hours? A) No more than 5 mmol/L/day. B) No more than 8 mmol/L/day. C) No more than 12 mmol/L/day. D) No more than 15 mmol/L/day. E) No more than 20 mmol/L/day. CORRECT ANSWER: In chronic hypernatraemia (lasting more than 48 hours), brain cells adapt to the hypertonic state by producing intracellular idiogenic osmoles to maintain cell volume. Rapid correction of serum sodium with hypotonic fluids causes a rapid decrease in extracellular osmolality. This creates an osmotic gradient, leading to a swift influx of water into the brain cells, resulting in cerebral oedema, which can cause seizures, permanent neurological injury, or death. To prevent this, both NICE and Royal Children's Hospital guidelines recommend that the rate of sodium correction should not exceed 0.5 mmol/L/hour, which equates to a maximum of 12 mmol/L over a 24-hour period. This controlled rate allows the brain cells to gradually clear the accumulated idiogenic osmoles, preventing dangerous fluid shifts. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (No more than 5 mmol/L/day) is incorrect because while being a very safe rate, it is overly cautious and may unnecessarily prolong the period of dehydration and hypertonicity. Option B (No more than 8 mmol/L/day) is incorrect as it represents a safe but conservative rate; guidelines permit a slightly faster maximum correction of up to 10-12 mmol/L/day. Option D (No more than 15 mmol/L/day) is incorrect because this rate of correction is too rapid and significantly increases the risk of iatrogenic cerebral oedema. Option E (No more than 20 mmol/L/day) is incorrect as this dangerously fast rate poses a very high risk of severe neurological complications, including seizures and brain herniation. 83 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 15-year-old boy is reviewed on the surgical ward following an appendicectomy. He is currently nil by mouth and requires intravenous maintenance fluids. His weight is 55 kg. What is his total daily maintenance fluid requirement, calculated using the Holliday-Segar method? A) 2,000 ml B) 2,250 ml C) 2,500 ml D) 2,750 ml E) 3,000 ml CORRECT ANSWER: The Holliday-Segar method is a foundational formula for calculating paediatric maintenance fluid requirements. It is based on weight and estimates caloric expenditure. For a 55 kg patient, the calculation is stratified: 100 ml/kg for the first 10 kg of body weight (100 x 10 = 1,000 ml), plus 50 ml/kg for the next 10 kg (50 x 10 = 500 ml), plus 20 ml/kg for the remaining body weight. The remaining weight is 55 kg - 20 kg = 35 kg. Therefore, the final component is 20 x 35 = 700 ml. The total daily maintenance fluid requirement is the sum of these amounts: 1,000 ml + 500 ml + 700 ml = 2,200 ml. In a post-operative patient who is nil by mouth, providing maintenance fluids is essential to prevent dehydration and electrolyte imbalance. Option B (2,250 ml) is the closest available answer to this calculated volume. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (2,000 ml) is incorrect as it underestimates the required fluid, which could occur if the final 35 kg of weight were only multiplied by approximately 14 ml/kg. Option C (2,500 ml) is incorrect because this overestimation might result from erroneously applying the 50 ml/kg rule to the weight segment above 20 kg. Option D (2,750 ml) is incorrect and represents a significant overestimation, potentially from a major calculation error, increasing the risk of iatrogenic fluid overload and oedema. Option E (3,000 ml) is incorrect as this excessive volume would likely result from applying a simplified but inappropriate calculation, such as using 55 ml/kg for the total body weight. 84 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-year-old boy is brought to the Children's Emergency Department with a three-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On examination, he has dry mucous membranes, sunken eyes, and reduced skin turgor. His mother reports that he has become progressively more difficult to wake over the last four hours. Which clinical finding is the most significant indicator of impending circulatory collapse? A) Persistent diarrhoea (more than 8 stools in 24 hours) B) Dry mucous membranes C) Altered level of consciousness (lethargy or unresponsiveness) D) Sunken eyes E) Reduced skin turgor CORRECT ANSWER: An altered level of consciousness, such as lethargy or irritability, is the most significant red flag for severe dehydration and impending circulatory collapse (shock). This sign transcends simple volume depletion and points towards critical systemic effects, including inadequate cerebral perfusion or significant electrolyte disturbances like severe hyponatraemia or hypernatraemia, which can cause cerebral oedema or neuronal dehydration. According to NICE and RCPCH guidelines, this is an immediate indicator of shock, mandating urgent hospital admission for intravenous fluid resuscitation and investigation. It represents a state of physiological decompensation where oral rehydration is no longer appropriate or sufficient, and immediate intervention is required to prevent irreversible neurological injury or death. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Persistent diarrhoea) is a marker of ongoing fluid loss but does not in itself define the severity of existing dehydration or shock. Option B (Dry mucous membranes) is a reliable sign of dehydration but is present in both moderate and severe cases and does not carry the same immediate life-threatening implication as a reduced conscious level. Option D (Sunken eyes) is a useful clinical sign of volume loss but, like other individual signs, is less specific for shock than a change in consciousness. Option E (Reduced skin turgor) indicates significant interstitial fluid loss, typically corresponding to at least 5% dehydration, but is a later sign and less sensitive for impending circulatory collapse than neurological compromise. 85 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-year-old boy is admitted to the paediatric ward and requires intravenous maintenance fluids. The registrar prescribes a solution of 0.9% sodium chloride with 5% glucose, with 20 mmol/L of potassium chloride to be added. What is the concentration of sodium in the prescribed intravenous fluid bag? A) 130 mmol/L B) 140 mmol/L C) 154 mmol/L D) 164 mmol/L E) 174 mmol/L CORRECT ANSWER: The fluid prescribed is 0.9% Sodium Chloride, which is also known as normal saline. By definition, 0.9% Sodium Chloride is an isotonic crystalloid solution that contains 154 mmol/L of sodium and 154 mmol/L of chloride. The addition of 5% Glucose (dextrose) and potassium chloride (KCl) to this pre-prepared solution does not alter the intrinsic concentration of sodium within the 0.9% saline base. Therefore, the standard concentration of sodium in the final fluid bag remains 154 mmol/L. This is a fundamental piece of knowledge for safe prescribing, as understanding the composition of intravenous fluids is critical to avoiding iatrogenic electrolyte disturbances. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (130 mmol/L) is incorrect as this sodium concentration is more typical of hypotonic maintenance solutions, such as 0.45% saline with dextrose, not 0.9% saline. Option B (140 mmol/L) is incorrect because, while it represents the approximate normal physiological plasma sodium concentration, it is not the concentration found in a standard bag of 0.9% saline. Option D (164 mmol/L) is incorrect as this does not correspond to any standard intravenous fluid used for maintenance in UK paediatrics. Option E (174 mmol/L) is incorrect as this level of sodium would be found in hypertonic saline solutions, which are reserved for specific clinical situations like managing cerebral oedema, not for routine fluid maintenance. 86 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 12-month-old girl is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department following a seizure. She has a three-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On examination, she is drowsy with a capillary refill time of four seconds and a sunken anterior fontanelle. An urgent blood gas analysis reveals a serum sodium of 118 mmol/L. During assessment, she has another generalised tonic-clonic seizure. What is the most appropriate immediate intervention to treat her seizure? A) Start a maintenance infusion of Glucose 5% in 0.45% Saline. B) Give a 20 ml/kg bolus of 0.9% Sodium Chloride. C) Administer a slow bolus of 2 ml/kg of 3% Sodium Chloride (Hypertonic Saline). D) Administer IV Diazepam and wait for the hyponatraemia to correct spontaneously. E) Restrict fluid intake to 25% of maintenance. CORRECT ANSWER: This child has hyponatraemic encephalopathy, a neurological emergency. The seizures are caused by cerebral oedema, which results from an osmotic shift of water into brain cells due to the low extracellular sodium concentration. According to national guidelines (including NICE and the British National Formulary for Children), the immediate priority is to halt the seizure by administering a small, slow bolus of 3% hypertonic saline. A 2 ml/kg dose is calculated to raise the serum sodium by approximately 2-3 mmol/L. This small, rapid increase is sufficient to create an osmotic gradient, drawing water out of the brain cells, thereby reducing cerebral oedema and terminating the seizure. The aim is a controlled correction to avoid the risk of osmotic demyelination syndrome. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start a maintenance infusion of Glucose 5% in 0.45% Saline) is incorrect because this is a hypotonic fluid which would worsen the free water excess and exacerbate cerebral oedema. Option B (Give a 20 ml/kg bolus of 0.9% Sodium Chloride) is incorrect because isotonic saline will not raise the serum sodium concentration rapidly enough to treat an active seizure from hyponatraemic encephalopathy. Option D (Administer IV Diazepam and wait for the hyponatraemia to correct spontaneously) is incorrect because while it may temporarily stop the seizure, it fails to treat the underlying cause, cerebral oedema, leading to a high risk of recurrence and further neurological injury. Option E (Restrict fluid intake to 25% of maintenance) is incorrect as this management is for euvolaemic hyponatraemia (e.g., SIADH), and would be dangerous in this child who is already 10% dehydrated. 87 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 12-year-old girl is admitted to the paediatric ward with a two-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On assessment, she is lethargic with dry mucous membranes and a capillary refill time of three seconds. A clinical diagnosis of 5% isotonic dehydration is made based on her examination and a normal initial serum sodium level. The medical registrar prescribes intravenous rehydration with 0.9% Sodium Chloride in 5% Glucose. Which of the following is a critical prerequisite before adding potassium chloride to the intravenous fluid regimen? A) Resolution of vomiting B) Capillary refill time <2 seconds C) Apyrexial for 24 hours D) Urine output is established E) Serum sodium has normalised CORRECT ANSWER: Intravenous potassium chloride is essential to replace losses and prevent hypokalaemia during rehydration. However, its administration is contingent upon established renal function. Dehydration, particularly in cases like gastroenteritis, can lead to a pre-renal acute kidney injury (AKI). In the setting of an AKI, the kidneys are unable to excrete potassium effectively. Administering potassium before confirming adequate urine output (typically at least 1 ml/kg/hour) could precipitate iatrogenic, life-threatening hyperkalaemia, which carries a significant risk of cardiac arrhythmias. Therefore, as per national guidelines, ensuring the child is passing urine is a critical safety step that confirms sufficient renal function to handle the potassium load. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Resolution of vomiting) is incorrect because cessation of vomiting, while a positive sign of recovery, does not provide information about renal perfusion or function. Option B (Capillary refill time <2 seconds) is incorrect as although it indicates improved circulatory status, it is not a direct or reliable measure of adequate glomerular filtration and renal function. Option C (Apyrexial for 24 hours) is incorrect because the presence or absence of fever relates to the underlying inflammatory or infectious process, not the patient's renal excretory capacity. Option E (Serum sodium has normalised) is incorrect because while correcting sodium is a key goal of fluid therapy, normalisation of serum sodium does not guarantee the kidneys have recovered from a potential AKI. 88 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-month-old boy is admitted to the paediatric ward with a 24-hour history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On assessment, he is found to be mildly dehydrated but haemodynamically stable. A decision is made to commence intravenous fluids for maintenance therapy as he is unable to tolerate oral intake. Which of the following is the most appropriate intravenous fluid for initial maintenance? A) Glucose 5% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride. B) 0.9% Sodium Chloride only. C) Glucose 10% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride. D) Glucose 5% in 0.45% Sodium Chloride. E) Glucose 10% in Water only. CORRECT ANSWER: Infants under 6 months have a high metabolic rate and limited glycogen stores, making them particularly vulnerable to hypoglycaemia when unwell and nil by mouth. Standard maintenance intravenous fluids must provide adequate glucose to prevent this, as well as to minimise ketosis and protein breakdown. According to NICE and RCPCH guidelines, an isotonic fluid containing 0.9% sodium chloride is the standard of care to prevent iatrogenic hyponatraemia. Therefore, combining a higher glucose concentration with an isotonic saline solution makes Glucose 10% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride the most appropriate choice for maintenance fluid therapy in this age group. Potassium would typically be added once the infant has passed urine. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Glucose 5% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride) is less appropriate as the 5% glucose concentration may be insufficient to meet the metabolic demands and prevent hypoglycaemia in a young infant. Option B (0.9% Sodium Chloride only) is incorrect because it completely lacks a glucose substrate, posing a significant and immediate risk of profound hypoglycaemia. Option D (Glucose 5% in 0.45% Sodium Chloride) is incorrect as this is a hypotonic solution which is no longer recommended for routine maintenance due to the risk of hyponatraemia and cerebral oedema. Option E (Glucose 10% in Water only) is incorrect as this is a dangerously hypotonic fluid that would lead to rapid and severe hyponatraemia and electrolyte disturbance. 89 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-year-old boy is reviewed on the paediatric ward prior to an elective procedure. He is clinically euvolaemic and has been nil by mouth for the last four hours. His current weight is 20 kg. You are asked to prescribe intravenous maintenance fluids. What is the most appropriate hourly rate of fluid to administer, based on the Holliday-Segar method? A) 40 ml/hr B) 60 ml/hr C) 62.5 ml/hr D) 80 ml/hr E) 100 ml/hr CORRECT ANSWER: The Holliday-Segar method is a widely accepted formula for calculating paediatric maintenance fluid requirements. It is based on weight and estimates caloric expenditure. The calculation is tiered: 100 ml/kg for the first 10 kg of body weight, 50 ml/kg for the next 10 kg, and 20 ml/kg for any subsequent weight. For a 20 kg child, this is calculated as (10 kg x 100 ml) + (10 kg x 50 ml), which equals 1,000 ml + 500 ml = 1,500 ml over 24 hours. To determine the hourly rate, the total daily volume is divided by 24 hours (1,500 ml / 24 hours), which equals 62.5 ml/hr. This rate provides the necessary water to meet the child's basal metabolic needs while preventing dehydration or fluid overload. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (40 ml/hr) is incorrect as this rate would only account for the fluid requirement of the first 10 kg of the child's weight. Option B (60 ml/hr) is incorrect and likely results from an estimation or rounding error during the division of the total daily fluid volume by 24 hours. Option D (80 ml/hr) is incorrect because this excessive rate would be appropriate for a child weighing approximately 30 kg, leading to a risk of iatrogenic fluid overload. Option E (100 ml/hr) is incorrect as it represents a significant over-prescription of fluid, potentially leading to dangerous complications such as pulmonary oedema and electrolyte imbalance. 90 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 10-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a three-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On examination, he is lethargic. His capillary refill time is 5 seconds and peripheral pulses are weak. Initial venous blood results show a sodium of 140 mmol/L and a potassium of 2.8 mmol/L. What is the most important initial step in his management? A) Start a 100 ml/kg deficit replacement over 48 hours. B) Prescribe oral potassium supplements immediately. C) Give a 20 ml/kg bolus of 0.9% Sodium Chloride over 10 minutes. D) Calculate the full maintenance requirement and start a slow IV infusion. E) Obtain a full infectious disease screen. CORRECT ANSWER: This child presents with decompensated shock, a time-critical medical emergency. The clinical signs of lethargy, a capillary refill time of 5 seconds, and weak peripheral pulses indicate severe circulatory compromise. According to current Resuscitation Council and NICE guidelines, the immediate priority is the rapid restoration of intravascular volume to improve tissue perfusion. This is achieved with an intravenous bolus of a 20 ml/kg isotonic crystalloid, such as 0.9% Sodium Chloride, given over 5-10 minutes. This intervention directly addresses the life-threatening circulatory failure (the 'C' in ABC). Pathophysiologically, this rapid volume expansion increases cardiac preload, thereby improving stroke volume and cardiac output, which is essential to reverse the shock state. All other metabolic corrections and fluid calculations are secondary to initial haemodynamic stabilisation. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Start a 100 ml/kg deficit replacement over 48 hours) is incorrect because managing the overall fluid deficit is the subsequent phase of treatment, addressed only after the patient is no longer in shock. Option B (Prescribe oral potassium supplements immediately) is incorrect as correcting the hypokalaemia, while important, is not the first priority during circulatory collapse, and the oral route is inappropriate in a lethargic child. Option D (Calculate the full maintenance requirement and start a slow IV infusion) is incorrect because providing only maintenance fluids is wholly insufficient to correct the profound intravascular volume depletion seen in shock. Option E (Obtain a full infectious disease screen) is incorrect because diagnostic screening, while useful for ongoing management, is not a therapeutic intervention and must wait until after life-saving resuscitation is complete. 91 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 7-year-old girl is admitted to the Paediatric High Dependency Unit with diabetic ketoacidosis. She is assessed as being moderately dehydrated and is commenced on a fixed-rate intravenous insulin infusion and intravenous fluids with 0.9% sodium chloride, following an initial fluid bolus. Her capillary blood glucose level subsequently falls to 13.5 mmol/L. What concentration of glucose should now be added to her intravenous fluid prescription? A) 2.5% Glucose B) 5% Glucose C) 10% Glucose D) 15% Glucose E) 20% Glucose CORRECT ANSWER: The addition of glucose to the intravenous fluids is a critical step in DKA management. According to UK national guidelines, once the plasma glucose level falls to approximately 14 mmol/L, 5% glucose should be added to the 0.9% sodium chloride infusion. The primary reason for this is to prevent iatrogenic hypoglycaemia. Crucially, it allows the fixed-rate insulin infusion to continue, which is essential for suppressing ketone production and resolving the underlying metabolic acidosis. This dual-fluid approach also prevents a rapid decrease in plasma osmolality. A sudden drop in osmolality can increase the risk of cerebral oedema, the most feared complication of paediatric DKA, by causing a fluid shift into the brain cells. Therefore, introducing 5% glucose provides a safe and controlled method to continue treating the ketosis while maintaining glycaemic stability. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (2.5% Glucose) is incorrect because this concentration is typically insufficient to counteract the effect of the ongoing insulin infusion, creating a significant risk of hypoglycaemia. Option C (10% Glucose) is incorrect as it is generally reserved for treating established or imminent hypoglycaemia, and its routine use at this stage could lead to persistent hyperglycaemia. Option D (15% Glucose) is incorrect because this high concentration would deliver an excessive glucose load, making glycaemic control difficult and is not part of standard DKA protocols. Option E (20% Glucose) is incorrect as this is a highly concentrated solution used for central venous administration in specific circumstances like severe, refractory hypoglycaemia, not for routine DKA fluid management. 92 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 1-year-old infant is admitted to the paediatric ward with gastroenteritis. On examination, he has clinical signs consistent with a 5% dehydration. He is commenced on an oral rehydration solution, which he is tolerating. Which component of this solution is primarily responsible for facilitating the coupled absorption of sodium and water across the intestinal mucosa? A) Potassium Chloride B) Citrate C) Sodium Chloride D) Glucose E) Zinc CORRECT ANSWER: The fundamental principle of oral rehydration therapy is the coupled transport of sodium and glucose across the enterocyte membrane in the small intestine. This process is mediated by the Sodium-Glucose Cotransporter 1 (SGLT1). Even during infective diarrhoea, this transporter remains functional. Glucose enhances the absorption of sodium from the intestinal lumen into the cell. This movement of solutes creates an osmotic gradient, which in turn drives the passive absorption of water from the gut into the circulation, effectively reversing dehydration. Therefore, glucose is the essential ingredient that facilitates the entire rehydration process. Without glucose, sodium and water absorption would be significantly less efficient. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Potassium Chloride) is incorrect because it is included to replenish potassium losses from diarrhoea and prevent hypokalaemia, not to promote primary water and sodium absorption. Option B (Citrate) is incorrect as its role is to correct the metabolic acidosis that often accompanies dehydration and diarrhoeal illness. Option C (Sodium Chloride) is incorrect because while it provides the sodium for the co-transport system, its absorption is actively facilitated by glucose, not the other way around. Option E (Zinc) is incorrect as it is a supplementary therapy recommended to reduce the duration and severity of diarrhoea but is not a component of the ORS that drives water absorption. 93 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-year-old boy is reviewed on the paediatric ward where he is being kept nil by mouth for a planned procedure. He weighs 22 kg, and the on-call registrar has prescribed a total of 1,500 ml of intravenous maintenance fluid for the next 24-hour period. What is the correct hourly rate to administer this fluid? A) 45 ml/hr B) 50 ml/hr C) 62.5 ml/hr D) 75 ml/hr E) 80 ml/hr CORRECT ANSWER: The calculation of the hourly rate for intravenous maintenance fluids is a critical step in safe prescribing for children. Once the total fluid requirement for a 24-hour period has been determined, this volume must be translated into an hourly rate for administration by an infusion pump. This ensures a constant and appropriate delivery of fluid and electrolytes, preventing periods of dehydration or fluid overload. The procedure is to divide the total daily volume by 24 hours. In this case, the prescribed daily volume is 1,500 ml. Therefore, the calculation is 1,500 ml divided by 24 hours, which equals 62.5 ml/hr. This rate accurately delivers the intended daily fluid total. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (45 ml/hr) is incorrect as this rate would only provide 1,080 ml over 24 hours, leading to significant under-hydration and potential electrolyte imbalance. Option B (50 ml/hr) is incorrect because this would deliver a total of 1,200 ml per day, which is insufficient to meet the child's calculated maintenance fluid requirements. Option D (75 ml/hr) is incorrect as it would result in the administration of 1,800 ml daily, creating a risk of iatrogenic fluid overload and dilutional hyponatraemia. Option E (80 ml/hr) is incorrect because this rate provides 1,920 ml per day, a significant fluid excess that increases the risk of complications such as pulmonary oedema. 94 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 5-month-old infant is admitted to the paediatric ward with severe diarrhoea. Following initial intravenous fluid boluses, they are now haemodynamically stable. Admission blood results show a serum sodium level of 158 mmol/L. Which of the following is the most significant iatrogenic complication to avoid during the subsequent fluid management? A) Hypoglycaemia B) Refeeding syndrome C) Central Pontine Myelinolysis D) Metabolic alkalosis E) Cerebral Oedema CORRECT ANSWER: In a state of established hypernatraemia, the brain tissue adapts to the hyperosmolar extracellular environment by producing intracellular idiogenic osmoles to prevent cellular dehydration. Rapid correction of serum sodium with hypotonic fluids lowers the extracellular osmolality much faster than the brain cells can clear these accumulated osmoles. This creates a significant osmotic gradient, causing a rapid shift of free water into the brain cells. This influx of water leads to cerebral oedema, which can manifest as seizures, raised intracranial pressure, and potentially irreversible neurological injury or death. National guidelines emphasise a slow and controlled rate of correction, typically not exceeding 0.5 mmol/L/hour or 10-12 mmol/L over 24 hours, to prevent this complication. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Hypoglycaemia) is incorrect because it is not a direct metabolic consequence of correcting hypernatraemia, although it can coexist in a sick infant with poor intake. Option B (Refeeding syndrome) is incorrect as this is a metabolic disturbance caused by the reintroduction of nutrition after a period of starvation, not by fluid resuscitation. Option C (Central Pontine Myelinolysis) is incorrect because this demyelinating condition is classically associated with the rapid correction of chronic hyponatraemia, not hypernatraemia. Option D (Metabolic alkalosis) is incorrect as it is not the primary or most significant risk; while fluid therapy can cause acid-base shifts, cerebral oedema is the most life-threatening concern. 95 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 3-year-old boy is brought to the Paediatric Assessment Unit with a history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On examination, his weight is 15 kg, and the registrar clinically estimates his degree of dehydration to be 10%. What is the total fluid volume, in ml, required to correct this deficit? A) 500 ml B) 1,000 ml C) 1,500 ml D) 2,000 ml E) 2,500 ml CORRECT ANSWER: The calculation of the fluid deficit is a core competency in paediatrics, guided by national principles. The standard formula to quantify the volume of fluid lost in millilitres is: Body Weight (kg) × Percentage Dehydration × 10. Applying this to the case, the calculation is 15 kg × 10% × 10, which equals 1,500 ml. This volume represents the total fluid deficit that has been lost from the intravascular, interstitial, and intracellular compartments. According to NICE and RCPCH principles, accurately calculating and replacing this deficit, in addition to maintenance fluids, is the priority to restore circulating volume, correct electrolyte imbalances, and prevent complications such as acute kidney injury. For dehydration greater than 5%, this replacement is typically planned over 24-48 hours alongside maintenance fluids. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (500 ml) is incorrect as this volume grossly underestimates the deficit and would result from either miscalculating with a weight of 5 kg or omitting the multiplication by 10. Option B (1,000 ml) is incorrect because it represents the fluid deficit for a 10 kg child, not a 15 kg child, leading to inadequate fluid replacement. Option D (2,000 ml) is incorrect as this overestimates the deficit, which could occur if the child's weight was mistakenly calculated as 20 kg, increasing the risk of iatrogenic fluid overload. Option E (2,500 ml) is incorrect because this volume is closer to the total fluid requirement for 24 hours (deficit plus maintenance) rather than the deficit volume alone. 96 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine An 8-month-old boy is brought to the Paediatric A&E with a three-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. His parents report he has had fewer wet nappies than usual. On examination, he is lethargic with a heart rate of 170 beats per minute. A junior doctor is assessing him for signs of significant volume depletion. Which of the following clinical signs is the most reliable single indicator of at least 5% dehydration in this infant? A) Sunken fontanelle. B) Dry mucous membranes. C) Absence of tears. D) Prolonged capillary refill time (CRT) ≥ 3 seconds. E) Reduced skin turgor (pinching the abdomen). CORRECT ANSWER: A prolonged capillary refill time (CRT) of 3 seconds or more is the most reliable clinical sign for assessing significant (≥5%) dehydration in infants and is the best single indicator of true volume depletion. Both NICE and RCPCH guidelines highlight CRT as a key marker of circulatory status. Pathophysiologically, a reduction in intravascular volume leads to compensatory peripheral vasoconstriction to preserve perfusion to vital organs. This physiological response is directly and objectively measured by CRT, making it a more accurate indicator of haemodynamic compromise compared to other clinical signs which are often more subjective or appear later. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Sunken fontanelle) is incorrect because its assessment is subjective, varies between examiners, and is only present in infants with an open anterior fontanelle. Option B (Dry mucous membranes) is incorrect as it is a non-specific sign that can be influenced by other factors like mouth breathing or medications, and it does not reliably correlate with the degree of dehydration. Option C (Absence of tears) is incorrect because tear production is variable in young infants and its absence is not a precise measure of the percentage of volume depletion. Option E (Reduced skin turgor) is incorrect as it is a late and often unreliable sign, particularly in well-nourished infants, and its interpretation can be highly subjective. 97 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 2-year-old girl is admitted to the paediatric ward with a three-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On examination, she is lethargic and has clinical signs consistent with a 5% dehydration. Her initial blood tests show a serum sodium of 125 mmol/L. A plan is made for intravenous rehydration to correct her fluid deficit over 24 hours, in addition to providing maintenance requirements. Which of the following is the most appropriate intravenous fluid? A) Glucose 5% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride. B) Glucose 5% in 0.45% Sodium Chloride with 20 mmol/L KCl. C) Glucose 10% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride. D) 0.9% Sodium Chloride (Normal Saline) only. E) Glucose 5% in Water only. CORRECT ANSWER: The patient presents with hyponatraemic dehydration. According to NICE guideline CG84, isotonic fluids are recommended for both fluid resuscitation and subsequent deficit replacement plus maintenance to prevent iatrogenic hyponatraemia. The chosen fluid, 5% Glucose in 0.9% Sodium Chloride, is an isotonic solution that safely corrects the water and sodium deficit without causing a rapid drop in serum sodium, which could precipitate cerebral oedema. The 0.9% sodium chloride component provides the necessary sodium to gradually correct the hyponatraemia, while the 5% glucose provides calories to prevent starvation ketosis in a child who is likely nil by mouth. This combination is the standard of care in the UK for managing dehydration, particularly when hyponatraemia is present. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option B (Glucose 5% in 0.45% Sodium Chloride with 20 mmol/L KCl) is incorrect as this hypotonic solution would provide excess free water, worsening the hyponatraemia and increasing the risk of neurological complications. Option C (Glucose 10% in 0.9% Sodium Chloride) is incorrect because a higher glucose concentration is not indicated as a standard fluid for rehydration and may increase the risk of hyperglycaemia. Option D (0.9% Sodium Chloride only) is incorrect as it lacks glucose, which is essential to prevent ketosis and provide calories for a child who is unwell and not feeding. Option E (Glucose 5% in Water only) is incorrect because it is a highly hypotonic solution once the glucose is metabolised, which would dangerously exacerbate the existing hyponatraemia. 98 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 6-month-old boy is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a three-day history of profuse watery diarrhoea. On examination, he is lethargic with a heart rate of 180 bpm, a capillary refill time of four seconds, and sunken eyes. His peripheries are cool to the touch. An initial blood gas analysis reveals a serum sodium concentration of 155 mmol/L. Which of the following is the most appropriate intravenous fluid for initial bolus resuscitation? A) 0.45% Sodium Chloride (Half Saline) B) 0.9% Sodium Chloride (Normal Saline) C) Glucose 5% D) Glucose 10% E) Sodium Chloride 3% (Hypertonic Saline) CORRECT ANSWER: The immediate priority in any child presenting with shock, irrespective of the type of dehydration, is the rapid restoration of circulating intravascular volume. UK Resuscitation Council and NICE guidelines state that an isotonic crystalloid is the fluid of choice for initial resuscitation. 0.9% Sodium Chloride is an isotonic fluid that rapidly expands the extracellular fluid compartment, effectively treating shock and improving tissue perfusion. While the infant has hypernatraemic dehydration, correcting the shock takes precedence over addressing the sodium imbalance. The hypernatraemia itself must be corrected slowly over a 48-hour period after the initial emergency resuscitation to prevent cerebral oedema. Therefore, the initial bolus therapy remains the same for isotonic, hypotonic, or hypertonic dehydration. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (0.45% Sodium Chloride) is incorrect because this hypotonic solution would cause a rapid fall in serum osmolality, creating a significant risk of cerebral oedema. Option C (Glucose 5%) is incorrect as it is functionally hypotonic once the glucose is metabolised and is a poor volume expander for resuscitation. Option D (Glucose 10%) is incorrect as it is a hypertonic solution used for hypoglycaemia management, not volume replacement, and would cause an osmotic diuresis, worsening dehydration. Option E (Sodium Chloride 3%) is incorrect because administering a hypertonic saline to a patient who is already significantly hypernatraemic is dangerous and would severely worsen the hyperosmolar state, increasing the risk of neurological injury. 99 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 4-year-old child weighing 16 kg is admitted to the paediatric ward from the Emergency Department. They have been successfully resuscitated with intravenous fluid boluses for severe dehydration and are now haemodynamically stable. A prescription for ongoing intravenous fluids is now required. According to the Holliday-Segar method, what is this child's total daily maintenance fluid requirement? A) 1,000 ml B) 1,300 ml C) 1,600 ml D) 1,800 ml E) 2,000 ml CORRECT ANSWER: The Holliday-Segar method is a weight-based formula used to calculate paediatric maintenance fluid requirements, endorsed by NICE guidelines. It is crucial to apply this after initial resuscitation for shock is complete. The calculation is stratified by weight: 100 ml/kg for the first 10 kg, 50 ml/kg for the next 10 kg, and 20 ml/kg for any weight above 20 kg. For a 16 kg child, this is calculated as (10 kg x 100 ml/kg) + (6 kg x 50 ml/kg). This equals 1,000 ml + 300 ml, giving a total daily maintenance requirement of 1,300 ml. This structured approach ensures physiological fluid needs are met without risking iatrogenic fluid overload or electrolyte disturbance in a child who is unable to maintain their own hydration. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (1,000 ml) is incorrect because it only accounts for the fluid requirement for the first 10 kg of the child's weight, neglecting the remaining 6 kg. Option C (1,600 ml) is incorrect and represents a common calculation error, likely from multiplying the entire 16 kg weight by 100 ml/kg. Option D (1,800 ml) is incorrect as it significantly overestimates the required volume and does not correspond to a correct application of the Holliday-Segar formula. Option E (2,000 ml) is incorrect as this would be the appropriate maintenance fluid volume for a 20 kg child, not one weighing 16 kg. 100 / 100 Category: Metabolism and Metabolic Medicine A 9-month-old infant is brought to the Paediatric Emergency Department with a two-day history of vomiting and diarrhoea. On examination, he is alert. His mucous membranes are dry and his eyes appear slightly sunken. His capillary refill time is three seconds, and skin turgor is noted to be normal. What is the most likely estimated percentage of dehydration? A) Less than 3% B) 3-5% C) 5-10% D) 10-15% E) Greater than 15% CORRECT ANSWER: The clinical presentation aligns with moderate dehydration, estimated at 5-10% volume loss. According to NICE guidelines, the combination of several indicators points to this assessment. Key signs in this infant are dry mucous membranes and slightly sunken eyes. The capillary refill time (CRT) of 3 seconds is a particularly important sign of clinical dehydration moving beyond the mild category. While skin turgor is normal, this can be an unreliable sign in infants. The infant's alertness suggests that they are not yet in shock, which would be expected with more severe dehydration. Therefore, the constellation of signs strongly supports a diagnosis of moderate, or 5-10%, dehydration. WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS: Option A (Less than 3%) is incorrect because the presence of multiple clinical signs, such as sunken eyes and a prolonged CRT, excludes a diagnosis of mild or no dehydration. Option B (3-5%) is incorrect as this level of mild dehydration would not typically present with a CRT of 3 seconds, which indicates a more significant deficit. Option D (10-15%) is incorrect because this degree of severe dehydration would be accompanied by signs of cardiovascular compromise or shock, such as tachycardia, hypotension, and a decreased level of consciousness, none of which are described. Option E (Greater than 15%) is incorrect as this represents profound, life-threatening shock with cardiovascular collapse and significantly impaired consciousness, which is inconsistent with an alert infant. Your score isThe average score is 0% 0% Restart quiz Anonymous feedback Send feedback