UK MLA · AKTAligned to the MLA content map

UKMLA questions, written from your own notes.

Upload your revision notes and QuizMed writes Applied Knowledge Test-style SBAs — UK drug names, NHS settings, NICE-first answers, and FY2-level clinical reasoning, all on the MLA content map shared by PLAB 1.

Free for your first 5 quizzes — no credit card required.

Acute Care — Sepsis & AKI.pdf
Generated
Acute medicine / ManagementQuestion 1 of 5

A 72-year-old man presents to the ED with fever, confusion, and a heart rate of 116. BP is 92/58, lactate 3.4, and he has not passed urine for 8 hours. What is the most appropriate immediate management?

Start the Sepsis Six within one hour, including IV fluids and broad-spectrum antibiotics
BArrange an urgent CT abdomen before any treatment
CGive oral antibiotics and review in 24 hours
This is septic shock with AKI. UK practice (UK Sepsis Trust) expects the Sepsis Six within one hour — not delaying treatment for imaging.
Generated in 47s
The exam

What the UKMLA AKT actually tests

Applied clinical reasoning at FY2 level, the UK way. Here's the shape of the exam QuizMed mirrors.

The MLA content map

430+ core conditions, 212 clinical presentations, and six domains of practice — the single blueprint behind every AKT question.

Single best answer, FY2 level

Clinical vignettes with 5-option SBAs that ask you to apply knowledge to real patients — not recall isolated facts.

Sat by UK grads and IMGs

The shared licensing assessment for UK medical students and international graduates, replacing the old finals/PLAB split.

The match

Engineered to the MLA content map

Every SBA QuizMed writes follows the same UK rules the AKT does.

UK drug names throughout

Paracetamol, adrenaline, salbutamol, co-amoxiclav — BNF generic names, never US equivalents.

NICE-first guidelines

Answers follow NICE, BNF, UK Sepsis Trust, and BTS/SIGN — the guidance the AKT expects.

NHS clinical settings

ED, GP surgery, AMU, and ward — vignettes set in NHS environments with UK terminology.

GMC ethics & professionalism

Capacity, consent, confidentiality, safeguarding, and GMC Good Medical Practice — a full MLA domain.

Applied clinical reasoning

Multi-constraint vignettes — comorbidities, allergies, renal function — at the FY2 decision-making level.

British English & spelling

Oedema, anaemia, haemorrhage, paediatrics — consistent British medical spelling throughout.

How it works

Three steps to UKMLA practice

1

Upload your notes

PDF, images, or pasted text from any revision source.

2

Pick the UK exam mode

QuizMed's MLA-aligned skill tunes every SBA to UK conventions.

3

Practice & export

Take the quiz in-app or export to Anki for spaced repetition.

FAQ

UK MLA · AKT questions, answered

Is the UKMLA the same as PLAB 1?

They share the same MLA content map. PLAB 1 has followed the MLA content map since August 2024, and the UKMLA Applied Knowledge Test is built on it too, so the clinical content and UK conventions overlap heavily. QuizMed's UK exam mode targets that shared content map, which is why it works for both.

Can QuizMed generate UKMLA AKT-style questions from my notes?

Yes. Upload your lecture slides, revision notes, or pasted text and QuizMed writes single-best-answer questions in the AKT style — UK drug names (BNF), NHS settings, NICE-first answers, and FY2-level clinical reasoning aligned to the MLA content map.

Does it use UK guidelines and drug names?

Yes. Answers follow NICE, the BNF, the UK Sepsis Trust, and BTS/SIGN, with British generic drug names and British spelling throughout — never US guidelines or drug names.

Is it free to try?

Your first five quizzes are free with no credit card required. You can upload your own notes and generate AKT-style practice immediately.

Can I export UKMLA questions to Anki?

Yes. QuizMed exports your generated questions to Anki (.apkg) in one click, so you can fold them into a spaced-repetition schedule alongside the rest of your revision.

Start practising the AKT from your own material.

Upload your revision notes and have UKMLA-style SBAs ready in under a minute — UK drug names, NICE guidelines, NHS settings. Free for your first five quizzes.

No credit card required.