This Gastroenterology Practice Test helps you check your knowledge of common digestive diseases and clinical scenarios. The quiz uses multiple-choice questions and provides clear scoring so you can track progress over time.
Available tests
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Test 1
20 questions
Esophagus
Easy Level
Test 2
20 questions
Stomach & Duodenum
Easy Level
Test 3
20 questions
Liver
Intermediate Level
Test 4
20 questions
Biliary Tract
Hard Level
Test 5
20 questions
Pancreas
Hard Level
Gastroenterology Online Practice test
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Tracking progress
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Various questions
Tests on various tasks
Description of tests
20 easy multiple-choice questions on common esophageal problems: GERD symptoms and alarm features, dysphagia vs odynophagia, mechanical obstruction vs motility disorders (e.g., achalasia/spasm), esophagitis types (pill, infectious, eosinophilic), typical complications (strictures, Barrett’s), and when to consider endoscopic evaluation.
20 easy questions covering dyspepsia basics, peptic ulcer disease (H. pylori vs NSAIDs), gastritis, classic symptom patterns, major complications (bleeding, perforation, obstruction), and upper GI bleeding fundamentals (recognition, first steps in stabilization, timing of endoscopy, and H. pylori test-and-treat concepts).
20 easy questions on hepatitis and cirrhosis fundamentals: hepatocellular vs cholestatic LFT patterns, bilirubin (conjugated vs unconjugated) and the initial approach to jaundice, key decompensation features, and core complications such as ascites, varices/portal hypertension, and hepatic encephalopathy (including first-line therapy concepts).
20 easy questions on gallstones and biliary infections: biliary colic vs acute cholecystitis vs acute cholangitis (Charcot triad/Reynolds pentad), biliary obstruction clues, RUQ pain differentials, and the initial workup (typical labs, RUQ ultrasound first-line, and when additional studies may be considered).
20 easy questions on acute vs chronic pancreatitis: diagnostic criteria and key labs (lipase), when imaging helps, common etiologies (gallstones, alcohol, hypertriglyceridemia), important complications (necrosis, pseudocyst, organ failure), and pancreatic exocrine insufficiency (steatorrhea, fecal elastase testing, and enzyme replacement basics).