You are an expert Professor of General Surgery, Senior Consultant Surgeon, and MBBS Viva Examiner from Tribhuvan University Institute of Medicine (TU IOM), Nepal. Create a professional, high-quality PDF study guide for Final Year MBBS students of Universal College of Medical Sciences (UCMS), Bhairahawa, Nepal, preparing for Surgery Clinical Examination, Long Case, Short Case, Table Viva, Instrument Viva, Specimen Viva, X-ray Viva, and Oral Examination. The notes must strictly follow standard undergraduate surgery textbooks including: • Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Latest Edition) • Schwartz's Principles of Surgery (Latest Edition) • Sabiston Textbook of Surgery (Latest Edition) • SRB's Manual of Surgery (where appropriate for clinical examination) • ATLS Guidelines for Trauma topics Never use non-standard or unsupported information. The explanations must be simple, clinically oriented, examiner-focused, and easy to remember. ================================================== MOST IMPORTANT REQUIREMENT EVERY topic MUST contain professionally labelled figures. Figures are MANDATORY. Do NOT skip figures. Wherever applicable include: • Anatomical diagrams • Surface anatomy • Clinical photographs • Clinical examination photographs • Flowcharts • Investigation algorithms • Diagnostic algorithms • Surgical instruments • Operative diagrams • Imaging examples (X-ray, CT, USG) • Gross pathology specimens • Histopathology whenever useful • Tables • Classification charts • Line diagrams • Mnemonics • Summary boxes Every figure must be clearly labelled. The figure should appear immediately beside or below the explanation. The figure should directly help in understanding the concept. Avoid decorative or unnecessary images. ================================================== WRITING STYLE Use very simple English. Explain concepts as if teaching an MBBS student during clinical postings. Avoid unnecessarily long paragraphs. Use: • Headings • Bullet points • Tables • Flowcharts • Clinical pearls • Examiner's tips • Viva points • Important differentials • High-yield facts • Memory tricks ================================================== I. SHORT CASE A. Varicose Vein History 1. Take short history. Clinical examination 1. Describe inspection findings. 2. Perforator names. 3. Course of Great Saphenous Vein. 4. CEAP classification. 5. Explain Trendelenburg test. 6. Other clinical tests done. 7. How do you differentiate varicose vein from DVT? 8. How do you differentiate varicose vein from hemangioma? 9. Deep venous system. 10. Duplex scan. 11. Use of Duplex scan in varicose vein. 12. ABPI grading. 13. Critical limb ischemia. 14. Buerger disease vs Atherosclerosis. 15. Assessment of lower limb power. 16. Palpate dorsalis pedis artery. 17. Palpate posterior tibial artery. 18. Palpate anterior tibial artery. 19. Landmark of dorsalis pedis artery. Anatomy 1. Branches of iliac artery. 2. Arteries of lower limb. Investigation 1. Investigation of varicose vein. Management 1. Treatment of varicose vein. 2. What is done in your hospital? ⸻ B. Ulcer / Healing Ulcer / Post-I&D Abscess History 1. Take short history. Clinical examination 1. Describe inspection findings. 2. Describe ulcer based on: * Margin * Edge * Floor * Base Definitions 1. What is ulcer? 2. Why is it a healing ulcer? 3. What is non-healing ulcer? 4. Define granulation tissue. 5. What is sinus? 6. What is abscess? 7. What is cellulitis? 8. What is necrotizing fasciitis (NF)? 9. What is carbuncle? 10. What is sebaceous cyst? 11. Difference between carbuncle and sebaceous cyst. 12. Difference between cellulitis and abscess. 13. Difference between abscess and necrotizing fasciitis. 14. Difference between cellulitis and gangrene. 15. What is putrefaction? 16. What is Fournier gangrene (perineal NF)? 17. Abdominal necrotizing fasciitis. Classification 1. Types of ulcer. 2. Types of malignant ulcer. 3. Four soft tissue infections. 4. Types of wound (clean, contaminated etc.). Microbiology 1. Most common organism causing abscess. 2. Most common organism causing cellulitis. 3. Organisms causing necrotizing fasciitis. 4. What is pus made of? Investigation 1. Investigation of ulcer. Treatment 1. Treatment of ulcer. 2. Treatment of abscess. 3. Hilton’s method. 4. Management of necrotizing fasciitis. 5. Treatment of cellulitis. 6. Treatment of gangrene. 7. Treatment of putrefaction. 8. Management of non-healing ulcer. 9. Debridement. 10. Antibiotics. 11. Regular dressing. Wound healing 1. Local factors affecting wound healing. 2. Systemic factors affecting wound healing. The after above question soved You can also make FOR EVERY TOPIC USE THE SAME FORMAT 1. Definition 2. Relevant Surgical Anatomy (with labelled figure) 3. Etiology / Causes 4. Classification (with flowchart) 5. Pathophysiology (with diagram whenever possible) 6. Clinical Features 7. History Taking (step-by-step) 8. Clinical Examination General Examination Local Examination Relevant Positive Findings Relevant Negative Findings 9. Differential Diagnosis (with comparison table) 10. Investigations Routine Specific Gold Standard Radiological findings Lab findings Include example X-rays, CT scans or USG whenever applicable. 11. Diagnosis 12. Management Conservative Medical Surgical Indications Contraindications Complications 13. Surgical Procedures (with operative diagrams whenever possible) 14. Post-operative Care 15. Complications 16. Important Viva Questions 17. Frequently Asked Examiner Cross Questions 18. Clinical Pearls 19. One-page Quick Revision Summary 20. Memory Tricks ================================================== SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS Whenever discussing anatomy: Insert a labelled anatomy figure. Whenever discussing blood supply: Insert an arterial diagram. Whenever discussing nerves: Insert a nerve diagram. Whenever discussing clinical examination: Insert photographs or diagrams showing the examination technique. Whenever discussing investigations: Insert actual example X-rays, CT scans, MRI, USG, Duplex scans, Doppler images or laboratory interpretation where appropriate. Whenever discussing surgical procedures: Insert operative diagrams showing important steps. Whenever discussing specimens: Insert gross specimen photographs with labels. Whenever discussing instruments: Insert labelled photographs of the instrument from multiple views if possible and explain: • Identification • Parts • Uses • Advantages • Precautions Whenever discussing X-rays: Insert the normal image first followed by the pathological image and clearly label the abnormal findings. ================================================== FOR VIVA PREPARATION After every topic include: Most Frequently Asked Viva Questions Expected Answers Examiner Cross Questions Common Mistakes Clinical Tips Last-minute Revision Box ================================================== IMPORTANT Do NOT skip any figure. Every page should contain visual learning material. The document should be visually rich but academically accurate. The explanations should be concise, high-yield, and based only on standard surgery textbooks. Do not invent information. If evidence differs between textbooks, follow Bailey & Love first. ================================================== Generate only ONE major topic at a time to maintain high quality and avoid software crashes. Wait for the next topic before continuing. Maintain exactly the same format throughout the entire document.

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Medical education diagram: Anatomy of the Great Saphenous Vein (GSV) and Small Saphenous Vein (SSV) in the lower limb. Clean line diagram showing the full course of GSV from medial malleolus up to saphenofemoral junction (SFJ) in the groin, and SSV from lateral malleolus to saphenopopliteal junction (SPJ) in the popliteal fossa. Label: 1) Saphenofemoral junction (SFJ) at 3.5cm below and lateral to pubic tubercle, 2) Great Saphenous Vein (GSV) running on medial aspect of thigh and leg, 3) Small Saphenous Vein (SSV), 4) Saphenopopliteal junction (SPJ), 5) Medial malleolus (GSV begins here), 6) Lateral malleolus (SSV begins here), 7) Perforators (Cockett I, II, III at ankle, Boyd at knee, Dodd/Hunterian in thigh). Include anterior and posterior views. White background, black lines, clear labels, medical textbook quality.

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Medical education diagram: Trendelenburg test for varicose veins, two-part clinical examination diagram. Step 1: Patient lying supine, leg elevated 45 degrees to empty veins, finger or tourniquet applied at saphenofemoral junction in groin. Step 2: Patient stands up - two outcomes shown: (A) Veins remain empty then fill slowly from below = Perforator incompetence (Trendelenburg positive Part 1), (B) Release of tourniquet causes rapid filling from above = SFJ incompetence (Trendelenburg positive Part 2). Label all steps clearly. Arrows showing blood flow direction. White background, clean clinical diagram, medical textbook style.

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Medical education flowchart: CEAP Classification of Chronic Venous Disease. Clean flowchart with colored boxes. C (Clinical): C0=No visible signs, C1=Telangiectasia/reticular veins, C2=Varicose veins, C3=Edema, C4a=Pigmentation/eczema, C4b=Lipodermatosclerosis, C5=Healed ulcer, C6=Active ulcer. E (Etiology): Ec=Congenital, Ep=Primary, Es=Secondary. A (Anatomy): As=Superficial, Ap=Perforator, Ad=Deep. P (Pathophysiology): Pr=Reflux, Po=Obstruction, Pr,o=Both. Color-coded boxes, arrows connecting sections, white background, medical textbook quality.

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Medical education diagram: Anatomy of lower limb arteries. Clean line diagram of right lower limb showing: External iliac artery becoming Common Femoral Artery at inguinal ligament, dividing into Superficial Femoral Artery and Deep Femoral Artery (profunda femoris), SFA continuing to Popliteal Artery in popliteal fossa, dividing into Anterior Tibial Artery and Tibioperoneal trunk, Tibioperoneal trunk dividing into Posterior Tibial Artery and Peroneal Artery. Label Dorsalis Pedis Artery on dorsum of foot (continuation of ATA between extensor hallucis longus and extensor digitorum longus tendons), Posterior Tibial Artery behind medial malleolus. Include palpation landmarks. White background, clear labels, medical textbook quality.

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