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NBME 20 Answers

nbme20/Block 1/Question#48 (reveal difficulty score)
An otherwise healthy 4-month-old girl is ...
Spontaneous involution ๐Ÿ” / ๐Ÿ“บ / ๐ŸŒณ / ๐Ÿ“–
tags: derm

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 +5  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—kernicterusthefrog(139)
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I also had difficulties with this, especially w/FA being so abbreviated. There is one word in FA that helps, and then I have a link for more info: "grows rapidly and regresses spontaneously by 5-8 years old." Which means it's done with its involution phase by then. This NCBI article helps: The Lessons I Learned from a Hemangioma Clinic TLDR: rapid growth occurs for the first few month, followed by a few months of rest, and then years of involution. Since the question is asking what happens over 5 years, the majority of that time is spent in involution phase. Hope this helps.

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whossayin  totally not NBME related, but I think you username is brilliant lol +7



 +4  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—strugglebus(189)
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The strawberry hemangiomas tend to grow and then randomly involute.

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medschul  My problem with this question is that a strawberry hemangioma should continue to grow until 5-8 yrs old so I did not see the answer choice "Continued enlargement as the child grows" would not be an acceptable answer as well. +12
merpaperple  I still don't get that. Over the course of the next 5 years, it will 1. continue to enlarge as the child grows, and also 2. spontaneously involute. Both answers are literally correct. +
fatboyslim  "Continued enlargement as the child grows" implies that the strawberry hemangioma will continue to grow and will not regress with time. That's why it's wrong I think +3



 +3  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—usmleboy(19)
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I just want to add that I hate this question and I am not sure why the NBME loves to use the worst grammar imaginable.

We all know strawberry hemangiomas spontaneously involute after 5-8 years... why don't they just ask this? Why do they insist on ambiguity of phrases? Why are my board exams trying to trick me with poor english?

Rant over.

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 +2  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—humble_station(85)
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In 2019 FA Strawberry hemangioma -- it appears early in life, grows rapidly and regresses spontaneously by 5-8 years old

So in 5 years this hemangioma will spontaneously involute

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 +0  upvote downvote
submitted by emh(11)
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"..expected over the next 5 years" = it will grow just like it's doing now! It will spontaneously involute but not over the next 5 years - maybe in 5 years.

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