Boards Flashcards

0
Q

Bacteria with unusual cell walls

A

Mycoplasma - Sterols & no cell wall

Mycobacteria - Mycolic acid & high lipid content

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1
Q

Polypeptide capsule

A

B. anthracis

All other are polysaccharide

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2
Q

What are the spirochetes?

A

Borrelia
Leptospira
Treponema

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3
Q

Giemsa stained bugs

A

“Certain Bugs Really Try my Patience”

Chlamydia
Borrelia
Rickettsiae
Trypanosomes
Plasmodium
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4
Q

PAS Stain bugs

A

Stains glycogen

Tropheryma whipplei (whipple’s disease)

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5
Q

Zeihl-Neelsen bugs

A

Acid-fast organisms

Nocardia
Mycobacterium

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6
Q

India ink bugs

A

Cryptococcus neoformans

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7
Q

Silver stain bugs

A

Fungi
Legionella
H. pylori

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8
Q

H. flu culture requirements

A

Chocolate agar (Factor V & X)

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9
Q

Neisseria (both) culture requirements

A

Thayer-Martin (VPN: Vanc, Polymixin, Nystatin) media

To inhibit all others

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10
Q

Bordetella pertussis culture requirements

A

Bordet-Gengou (potato) agar

Bordet for Bordetella

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11
Q

Corynebacterium diphtheriae culture requirements

A

Tellurite Plate, Loffler’s media

Teller she’s right, laugh at her after

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12
Q

MTB culture requirements

A

Lowenstein-Jensen agar

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13
Q

Mycoplasma pneumoniae culture requirements

A

Eaton’s agar

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14
Q

Lactose+ enterics culture requirements

A

MacConkey’s agar

shows pink colonies

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15
Q

Legionella culture requirements

A

Charcoal yeast extract with cysteine & iron

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16
Q

Fungi culture requirements

A

Sabouraud’s Agar

“Sab’s a fun-guy”

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17
Q

Obligate aerobes

A

“Nagging Pests Must Breathe”

Nocardia
Pseudomonas
MTB
Bacillus

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18
Q

Obligate anaerobes

A

Clostridium
Bacteroides

Generally foul-smelling, produce gas in tissue, and resistant to amin(O2)glycosides

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19
Q

Obligate intracellular bacteria

A

Stay inside when it’s Really Cold:
Rickettsia
Chlamydia

They can’t make their own ATP.

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20
Q

Facultative intracellular bacteria

A

“Some Nasty Bugs May Live FacultativeLY”

Salmonella
Neisseria
Brucella
Mycobacterium
Listeria
Francisella
Legionella
Yersinia pestis
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21
Q

Test for encapsulated bacteria

A

Quellung reaction (anti-capsule antisera)

If serum is added –> qapsular swellung (quellung)

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22
Q

Encapsulated bacteria

A

SHiNE SKiS

Strep pneumo
H. flu
Neisseria meningitidis
E. coli
Salmonella
Klebsiella
Strep B (GBS)
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23
Q

Catalase positive organisms

A

“You need PLACESS for your cats”

Pseudomonas
Listeria
Aspergillus
Candida
E. coli
Staph aureus
Serratia
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24
Q

Protein-conjugated vaccines

A

Prevnar (pneumococcal)
H. flu type B
Meningococcal

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25
Q

Urease positive organisms

A

K PUNCHES

Klebsiella
Proteus
Ureaplasma
Nocardia
Cryptococcus (fungi)
H. pylori
Epidermidis
Saprophyticus
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26
Q

Pigment producing bacteria:
Red
Green/Blue
Yellow

A
Red = Serratia
Green/Blue = Pseudomonas
Yellow = either Actinomyces israelii or Staph aureus
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27
Q

IgA protease containing bacteria

A

SHiN

Strep pneumo
H. influenza (Type B)
Neisseria

They can all transform DNA and all have an IgA protease (to colonize respiratory epithelium)

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28
Q

Transforming bacteria

A

SHiN

Strep pneumo
H. influenza (Type B)
Neisseria

They also have IgA protease

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29
Q

Group A Strep virulence factor

A

M protein

Prevents phagocytosis

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30
Q

Staph aureus virulence factor

A

Protein A

Binds Fc region of Ig to prevent opsonization & phagocytosis

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31
Q

C. diphtheriae toxin

A

Diphtheria toxin - inactivates elongation factor (EF-2)

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32
Q

Pseudomonas toxin

A

Exotoxin A - inactivates elongation factor (EF-2)

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33
Q

Shigella toxin

A

Shiga toxin:

inactivates 60S ribosome by removing adenine from rRNA

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34
Q

EHEC toxin

A

*Includes O157:H7

Shiga-like toxin:
inactivates 60S ribosome by removing adenine from rRNA

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35
Q

ETEC toxin

A

Two toxins:
Heat-labile - ^ adenylate cyclase activity –> Cl- excretion
Heat-stable - ^ guanylate cyclase activity –> decreased NaCl absorption

“Labile in the Air, Stable on the Ground”

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36
Q

Anthrax toxin

A

Edema factor - mimics adenylate cyclase activity

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37
Q

Vibrio toxin

A

Cholera toxin:

Permanently activates Gs subunit –> ^ adenylate cyclase activity –> ^ Cl- secretion in gut

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38
Q

Pertussis toxin

A

Pertussis toxin:

Disables Gi –> ^ adenylate cyclase activity –> impaired phagocytosis

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39
Q

Clostridium tetani toxin

A

Tetanospasmin - cleaves GABA and Glycine SNARE proteins

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40
Q

Clostridium botulinum toxin

A

Botulinum toxin - Cleaves Ach SNARE proteins

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41
Q

Clostridium perfringens toxin

A

Alpha toxin/Phospholipase C/Lecithinase:

Phospholipase that degrades tissue and membranes. Causes gas gangrene and hemolysis.

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42
Q

Group A Strep toxin

A

Streptolysin O:

Degrades cell membranes –> hemolysis

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43
Q

What do TLR-2 and TLR-4 bind?

A

TLR-2 = gram+ peptidoglycan

TLR-4 = gram- LPS

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44
Q

Staph aureus superantigenic toxin

A

Toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (TSST-1):

Connect MHCII and TCR –> activate all T cells –> ^ IFNg & IL-2

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45
Q

Group A Strep superantigenic toxin

A

Exotoxin A:

Connect MHCII and TCR –> activate all T cells –> ^ IFNg & IL-2

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46
Q

Bacterial toxins that are encoded in lysogenic phage

A

ABCDE

shigA-like toxin (EHEC)
Botulinum toxin
Cholera toxin
Diphtheria toxin
Erythrogenic toxin (GAS)
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47
Q

Streptococcal spp. hemolysis patterns

A

Alpha (partial):
Strep pneumo
Viridans strep

Beta (complete):
GAS
GBS

Gamma (absent):
Enterococcus (Group D)
Strep bovis

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48
Q

Novobiocin resistant/sensitive

A

Staph:

Saprophyticus is resistant
Epidermidis is sensitive

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49
Q

Streptococcus:
Optochin sensitive/resistant
Bactitracin sensitive/resistant

A

Optochin: Strep pneumo is afraid of-the-chin, viridans are not

Bacitracin BRAS –> B Resistant, A sensitive

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50
Q

Gram+ rods

A
Clostridium
Corynebacterium
Listeria
Bacillus
Mycobacterium
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51
Q

What bacterial vaccines are live-attenuated?

A

Only Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG for Tuberculosis) & F. tularensis.

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52
Q

Lactose fermenting enterics

A

test with maconCKEE’S agar

Citrobacter
Klebsiella
E. coli
Enterobacter
Serratia
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53
Q

Gram- rod lactose nonfermenters
Oxidase+?
Oxidase-?

A

Oxidase+:
Pseudomonas
H. pylori

Oxidase-:
Salmonella
Shigella
Proteus

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54
Q

EMB agar

A

Eosin-Methylene blue agar

Lactose fermenters grow as purple/black colonies. E. coli grows as a purple colony with a green shine.

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55
Q

Neisseria spp.
Glucose?
Maltose?

A
Meningococci = Maltose & glucose
Gonococci = just Glucose
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56
Q

VDRL false positives

A

Viruses (mono, hepatitis)
Drugs
Rheumatic fever
Lupus & Leprosy

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57
Q

Rash on palms & soles DDx

A

Syphilis (secondary & congenital)
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Coxsackie A (hand, foot, & mouth dz)
Kawasaki dz

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58
Q

Intestinal nematode routes of infection

A

Ingested - EAT
Enterobius
Ascaris
Trichinella

Cutaneous - SANd
Strongyloides
Ancylostoma
Necator

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59
Q

Treatment for intestinal nematodes

A

Bendazoles

“Roundworms are bendy”

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60
Q

Treatment for Cestodes & Trematodes

A

Cestodes (tapeworms) & Trematodes (flukes) = Praziquantel

The exceptions are those that have a cyst form:
Taenia solium (cysticercosis --> bendazoles)
Echinococcus granulosus (liver cysts --> bendazoles)
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61
Q

Which viral vaccines are live-attenuated?

A
Smallpox
Yellow fever
Chicken Pox
Polio (Sabin)
MMR
Influenza (intranasal one)
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62
Q

Which viral vaccines are killed?

A

“RIP, eh”

Rabies
Influenza (IM)
Polio (Salk)
HAV

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63
Q

Which viral vaccines are recombinant?

A

HBV (HBsAg)
&
HPV (6, 11, 16, 18)

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64
Q

What are the DNA viruses?

A

HHAPPPPy

Hepadena
Herpes
Adeno
Pox
Parvo
Papilloma
Polyoma
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65
Q

What are the exceptions to the rule that viruses are either dsDNA or ssRNA?

A

ssDNA = Parvovirus (Par 1)

dsRNA = Reovirus

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66
Q

What viruses are associated with intussusception of the small bowl in children?

A

Adenovirus
&
Rotavirus

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67
Q

Are viruses haploid or diploid?

A

All are haploid except retroviruses (2 identical ssRNA copies)

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68
Q

Which viruses replicate in the nucleus?

The cytoplasm?

A

All DNA replicate in nucleus (except poxvirus)

All RNA replicate in cytoplasm (except influenza & retroviruses)

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69
Q

Which viruses are naked/enveloped?

A

“Naked CPR & PAPP

Calcivirus
Picornavirus
Reovirus

Papillomavirus
Adenovirus
Parvovirus
Polyomavirus

All others are enveloped

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70
Q

Which viruses are negative stranded?

A

“Always Bring Polymerase Or Fail Replication”

Arenavirus
Bunyavirus
Paramyxovirus
Orthomyxovirus
Filovirus
Rhabdovirus
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71
Q

Which viruses can undergo reassortment?

A

Segmented genomes = BOAR

Bunyavirus
Orthomyxovirus
Arenavirus
Reovirus

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72
Q

C. difficile toxins

A

Toxin A - enterotoxin; PMN chemoattractant & secretory diarrhea

Toxin B - cytotoxin; actin depolymerization & mucosal necrosis

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73
Q
HIV genes, what do they encode?
gag
pol
env
rev
nef
A
gag = p24, p7 (capsid and matrix proteins, respectively)
pol = Reverse transcriptase, integrase, protease
env = gp120, gp41 (gp160 is cleaved into them)
rev = protein that transports viral transcripts out of nucleus
nef = proteins to downregulate CD4 and MHCI
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74
Q

What receptor does HIV bind?

A

Macrophage tropic = CCR5 & CD4
T-cell tropic = CXCR4 & CD4

Early disease is macrophage tropic & late disease is T-cell tropic.

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75
Q
What do these indicate in the serum?
HBsAg
HBeAg
Anti-HBs
Anti-HBc
Anti-HBe
A
HBsAg = hepatitis B infection
HBeAg = active viral replication (high transmissibility)
Anti-HBs = immunity to HBV
Anti-HBc = window period
Anti-HBe = low transmissibility
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76
Q

What is the order of serum markers in HBV infection?

A

SECES

HBsAg
HBeAg
Anti-HBc
Anti-HBe
Anti-HBs
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77
Q

What cohort of people are immune to HIV?

A

Homozygous delta32 mutation. These patients have mutant CCR5. Heterozygotes have a slower progression of HIV disease.

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78
Q

What dermatologic diseases can infect HIV patients?

A
Candida infection (thrush)
Bartonella henselae (bacillary angiomatosis)
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79
Q

AIDS patient, GI symptoms

A

Cryptosporidium

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80
Q

What neuro diseases can infect HIV patients?

A
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (JC virus)
Toxoplasma abscesses
Cryptococcal meningitis
CMV retinitis
HIV dementia
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81
Q

What oncologic conditions are found in HIV patients?

A
Kaposi's Sarcoma (HHV-8)
Hairy Leukoplakia (EBV)
Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (Waldeyer's Ring)
SCC (cervix or anus if MSM)
CNS Lymphoma
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82
Q

What respiratory infections are seen in HIV patients?

A

Pneumocystis jirovecii
CMV pneumonia
Invasive aspergillosis
Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (TB-like illness)

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83
Q

What bugs are associated with food poisoning?

A
Vibrio parahaemolyticus & vulnificus
Bacillus cereus
S. aureus
Clostridium perfringens
Clostridium botulinum
E. coli O157:H7
Salmonella
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84
Q

What bugs are associated with dysentary?

A
Campylobacter
Salmonella
Shigella
EHEC
EIEC
Yersinia enterocolitica
Entamoeba histolytica
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85
Q

What bugs are associated with watery diarrhea?

A
ETEC
Vibrio cholerae
C. difficile (can also cause dysentery)
C. perfringens
Cryptosporidium (AIDS)
Rotavirus (children)
Norovirus (adults)
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86
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in neonates?

A

GBS

E. coli

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87
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in children?

A

“Runts May Cough Chunky Sputum”

RSV
Mycoplasma
Chlamydia trachomatis
Chlamydia pneumoniae
Strep pneumo
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88
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in young adults (18-40)?

A

Strep pneumo
Mycoplasma
Chlamydia pneumoniae

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89
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in older adults (40-65)?

A
Strep pneumo
H. influenza
Mycoplasma
Anaerobes
Viruses
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90
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in the elderly (>65)?

A
Step pneumo
Influenza
H. flu
Anaerobes
Gram negative rods
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91
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in nosocomial infections?

A

Staph

Enteric gram negative rods

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92
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in aspiration?

A

Anaerobes

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93
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in Alcoholics/IVDA?

A

Strep pneumo
Klebsiella
Staph

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94
Q

What are the common causes of pneumonia in CF patients?

A

Pseudomonas
Staph aureus
Strep pneumo
Burkholderia cepacia

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95
Q

What are the common causes of atypical pneumonia?

A

Mycoplasma
Legionella
Chlamydia

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96
Q

What are the common causes of meningitis in newborns (0-6 mo.)?

A

GBS
E. coli
Listeria

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97
Q

What are the common causes of meningitis in children (6m-6y)?

A

Strep pneumo
Neisseria meningitidis
H. flu (Type B)
Enteroviruses

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98
Q

What are the common causes of meningitis in most people (6-60y)?

A

Strep pneumo
Neisseria meningitidis (#1 in teens)
Enteroviruses
HSV

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99
Q

What are the common causes of meningitis in the elderly?

A

Strep pneumo
Gram negative rods
Listeria

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100
Q

What is the empiric therapy for bacterial meningitis?

A

Cefriaxone + Vancomycin
+ Ampicillin if < 6m or > 60y
(Listeria)

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101
Q
Osteomyelitis bugs:
Diabetics
IVDA
Sickle Cell
Prosthetic replacement
Vertebral osteomyelitis
Cat/Dog bite
Everyone else
A
Diabetics - Pseudomonas
IVDA - Pseudomonas
Sickle Cell - Salmonella
Prosthetic replacement - S. epidermidis
Vertebral osteomyelitis - MTB
Cat/Dog bite - Pasteurella multocida
Everyone else - S. aureus
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102
Q

What does a positive nitrite test indicate?

Positive leukocyte esterase test?

A

Nitrite = Gram negative bacteria UTI

Leukocyte esterase = Bacterial UTI

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103
Q

What are the most common causes of UTI?

A

1) E. coli
2) Staph saprophyticus
3) Klebsiella
Others:
Proteus
Serratia (nosocomial)
Pseudomonas (nosocomial)
Enterobacter (nosocomial)

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104
Q

Congenital Toxoplasma presentation

A

Triad:
Chorioretinitis
Hydrocephalus
Intracranial calcifications

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105
Q

Congenital Rubella presentation

A
Triad:
PDA
Cataracts
Deafness
\+/- rash
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106
Q

Congenital CMV presentation

A

Convulsions (seizures)
Mute (deafness)
Violaceous rash (petechiae)

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107
Q

Congenital HIV presentation

A

Recurrent infections

Chronic diarrhea

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108
Q

Congenital HSV-2 presentation

A

Encephalitis

Herpes lesions

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109
Q

Congenital syphilis presentation

A

Stillbirth/hydrops fetalis
Syphilis facies: notched teeth, saddle nose
Saber shins
CNVIII deafness

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110
Q

Red rashes of childhood

A

Rubella (descending)
Measles (descending)
VZV (begins on trunk)
Roseola (HHV-6; follows several days high fever)
Parvovirus (slapped cheek rash)
Streptococcus pyogenes (sandpaper-like rash)
Coxsackie A (vesicular on palms, soles, oral mucosa)

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111
Q

What organism causes a painful genital ulcer?

A

Haemophilus ducreyi

“It’s so painful that you do-cry”

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112
Q

What is the main cause of bacterial vaginosis? What are its characteristics? Treatment?

A

Gardnerella vaginalis

“I don’t have a Clue why I smell Fish in the Vagina Garden”
Clue cells
Fishy smell
Gardnerella vaginalis

Treatment = Metronidazole

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113
Q

What is the most common bacterial STI in the United States?

A

Chlamydia trachomatis

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114
Q

What pathogen should you think of for nosocomial:
Mechanical ventilation?
Urinary catheterization?
Open wounds?

A

Mechanical ventilation = Pseudomonas
Urinary catheterization = E. coli, Proteus
Open wounds = S. aureus

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115
Q

What microbes are more common in asplenic patients?

A

Encapsulated organisms, especially SHiN

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116
Q

What is the mechanism of beta-Lactams?

A

Bind to PBP’s (transpeptidases) to block cross-linking of peptidoglycan.

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117
Q

What is the use of nafcillin?

A

Naf for staph

Cannot use for MRSA.

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118
Q

What is the spectrum of Ampicillin/Amoxicillin?

A

Aminopenicillins = “HELPS kill Enterococci”

H. flu
E. coli
Listeria
Proteus
Salmonella/Shigella
Enterococci
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119
Q

What is the spectrum of Piperacillin?

A

Gram- rods
Group & viridans strep
Anaerobes

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120
Q

What are the beta-lactamase inhibitors?

A

Clavulonic acid
Sulbactam
Tazobactam

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121
Q

What is the mechanism of cephalosporins?

A

They are beta-lactams that inhibit cell wall synthesis

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122
Q

What is the spectrum of 1st generation cephalosporins?

A

PEcK:

gram+ cocci
Proteus
E. coli
Klebsiella

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123
Q

What is the spectrum of 2nd generation cephalosporins?

A

HEN PEcKS:

gram+ cocci
H. flu
Enterobacter
Neisseria spp.
Proteus
E. coli
Klebsiella
Serratia
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124
Q

What are 3rd generation cephalosporins used for?

A

Ceftriaxone:
Meningitis empiric therapy
Gonorrhea

Ceftazidime/Cefoperazone:
Pseudomonas

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125
Q

What is the spectrum of 4th generation cephalosporins?

A

Everything except LAME:

Listeria
Atypicals
MRSA
Enterococci

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126
Q

What is the spectrum of Aztreonam?

A

Gram- rods only (including pseudomonas)

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127
Q

What is the spectrum of the Carbapenems?

A

Cover pretty much anything. Limited to life-threatening infections due to side effects.

“We have a positive ID on a negative MD”
Imipenem, Doripenem = gram+
Meropenem, Doripenem = gram-

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128
Q

What is the mechanism of Vancomycin?

A

Inhibits peptidoglycan formation by binding up D-ala D-ala portion of cell wall precursors.

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129
Q

What is the spectrum of Vancomycin?

A

Gram+ only

Saved for use in serious multidrug resistant organisms:
MRSA
Enterococci
C. diff

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130
Q

Where do each of the protein synthesis inhibitor abx work?

A

“Buy AT 30, CCEL at 50”

30S inhibitors:
Aminoglycosides
Tetracyclines

50S inhibitors:
Chloramphenicol
Clindamycin
Erythromycin
Linezolid
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131
Q

What are the common aminoglycosides?

A
Gentamycin
Neomycin
Amikacin
Tobramycin
Streptomycin
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132
Q

What is the spectrum of aminoglycosides?

A

Gram- rod infections

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133
Q

What are the toxicities of aminoglycosides?

A

AminO2glycosides do NNOT kill anaerobes

Nephrotoxic
Neuromuscular blockade
Ototoxic
Teratogenic

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134
Q

What toxicities are associated with macrolides?

A

MACRO:

Motility issues
Arrhythmia (prolonged QT)
Cholestatic hepatitis
Rash
eOsinophilia
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135
Q

What two drugs are classically used for anaerobes?

A
Clindamycin = anaerobes above the diaphragm
Metronidazole = anaerobes below the diaphragm
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136
Q

What is the mechanism of Bactrim?

A

Bactrim = Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX)

Trimethoprim - inhibits Dihydrofolate reductase
Sulfamethoxazole - inhibits Dihydropteroate synthase

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137
Q

What is the mechanism of Fluoroquinolones?

A

Inhibitis DNA Topoisomerase II (gyrase) & Topoisomerase IV

-oxacin

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138
Q

What is the spectrum of Fluoroquinolones?

A

Gram- rods of urinary and GI tracts

Neisseria

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139
Q

What are the clinical uses of metronidazole?

A

“GET GAP on the metro”

Giardia
Entamoeba histolytica
Trichomonas
Garderella vaginalis
Anaerobes
Pylori (H. pylori; requires triple therapy PPI+MAC)
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140
Q

What is the mechanism of Metronidazole?

A

Forms free radicals in the bacterial cell –> cell damage & death

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141
Q

What distinguishes Ertapenem?

A

It has a longer half life (4h) but does not cover Pseudomonas.

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142
Q

What toxicities are associated with doxycyline?

A

Discoloration of teeth in children under 8y (contraindicated in pregnancy & children)

Photosensitivity

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143
Q

What is used for prophylaxis for MTB?

MAC?

A
MTB = Isoniazid
MAC = Azithromycin
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144
Q

What is the treatment for MTB?

A

RIPE

Rifampin
Isoniazid
Pyrazinamide
Ethambutol

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145
Q

Which anti-MTB drugs are hepatotoxic?

A

RIP

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146
Q

What toxicities are found with Isoniazid?

A

Neurotoxic
Hepatotoxic
Drug-induced lupus

INH = Injures Neurons & Hepatocytes

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147
Q

What toxicities are found with Rifampin?

A

Hepatotoxic
Many drug interactions (^CYP450 activity)
Orange body fluids

4 R's:
RNA polymerase inhibitor
Revs up CYP450
Red/orange body fluids
Rapid resistance if used alone
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148
Q

What toxicities are found with Ethambutol?

A

Optic side effects:
Retrobulbar neuritis
Central scotoma
Red/green color blindness

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149
Q

What is used as prophylaxis for gonococcal or chlamydial conjunctivitis in newborns?

A

Erythromycin drops

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150
Q

What is used as prophylaxis for pregnant women carrying GBS?

A

Ampicillin

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151
Q

What is used as prophylaxis for surgical infections?

A

Cefazolin (to prevent S. aureus infection)

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152
Q

What is used as prophylaxis for recurrent UTI’s?

A

TMP-SMX

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153
Q

What are the guidelines for prophylaxis in AIDS patients?

A

< 200 = TMP-SMX (PCP)
< 100 = TMP-SMX (PCP & Toxoplasmosis)
< 50 = Azithromycin (MAC)

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154
Q

What treatment is recommended for MRSA?

VRE?

A
MRSA = Vancomycin; Daptomycin; Linezolid; Tigecycline; Ceftaroline
VRE = Linezolid + Streptogramins
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155
Q

What infections can H. influenzae cause?

A

haEMOPhilus

Epiglottitis
Meningitis
Otitis media
Pneumonia

Incidence has gone way down due to vaccination against Type B. Other nontypeable strains only cause mucosal infections (otitis media, conjunctivitis, bronchitis).

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156
Q

What do Th1 cells secrete?

A

gamma-Interferon

IL-2

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157
Q

What are the major cytokines secreted by Th2 cells?

A

IL-4
IL-5
IL-10
IL-13

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158
Q

What cytokines stimulate class switching to IgE?

A

IL-4 –> IgG & IgE

IL-4 + IL-13 –> IgE

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159
Q

What does IL-5 do?

A

Th2 cells

Promotes class switching to IgA and proliferation of eosinophils.

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160
Q

Which streptococci can be cultured in bile?

In 6.5% NaCl and bile?

A

Bile = both Enterococci & other Group D Strep (S. bovis)

6.5% NaCl = Just enterococci

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161
Q

What is the mechanism of Oseltamivir?

A

Oseltmivir = NA inhibitor (inhibits virion release from cells)

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162
Q

What are the most common pathogens in an intra-abdominal infection?

A

Bacteroides fragilis > E. coli > everything else (polymicrobial)

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163
Q

What are the clinical uses for Amphotericin B?

A
Pregnancy (the only antifungal)
Serious systemic mycoses
Cryptococcus
Blasto/Histo/Coccidio
Mucormycoses
Invasive candida
Fungal meningitis (intrathecal)
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164
Q

What are the adverse effects of Amphotericin B?

A

Fever/Chills (“Ampho-terrible”)
Hypotension
Anemia
Thrombophlebitis

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165
Q

What is the treatment for systemic mycoses?

A

Histo/Blasto/Coccidio

Itraconazole/Fluconazole for local infection
Amphotericin B for systemic infection

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166
Q

Cryptococcal meningitis treatment

A

Amphotericin B

+/- Flucytosine

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167
Q

What is the typical treatment for candida infection?

A

Fluconazole

If invasive –> Echinocandin (Caspofungin, Micafungin)

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168
Q

What is the mechanism of Ribavirin?

A

Inhibits IMP dehydrogenase –> no guanine synthesis

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169
Q

When is Ribavirin indicated?

A

RSV

Chronic Hepatitis C

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170
Q

When is Acyclovir indicated?

A

HSV and VZV infections

Does NOT work against CMV (Ganciclovir)

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171
Q

What are the oral forms of Acyclovir and Gancyclovir?

A

Valacyclovir & Valganciclovir

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172
Q

When is Foscarnet indicated?

A

CMV retinitis when Ganciclovir has failed

Acyclovir-resistant HSV

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173
Q

When is Cidofovir indicated?

A

CMV retinitis

Acyclovir-resistant HSV

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174
Q

What are possible regimens for HAART?

A

2 NRTI’s + either:
1 NNRTI
1 PI
1 Integrase inhibitor

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175
Q

What drug boosts other protease inhibitors in HAART?

A

Ritonavir

**All PI’s end in -navir

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176
Q

What antiretroviral is used during pregnancy?

A

Zidovudine (ZDV/AZT)

To reduce risk of fetal transmission.

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177
Q

What are the adverse effects of Protease inhibitors?

A

Metabolic syndrome

GI intolerance

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178
Q

What NRTI’s can cause lactic acidosis?

A

Didanosine > Stavudine > Zidovudine

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179
Q

What antiretroviral should be avoided in pregnancy?

A

Efavirenz

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180
Q

When is IFN-alpha indicated?

A

Chronic Hepatitis B & C

Kaposi’s Sarcoma

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181
Q

When is IFN-beta indicated?

A

Multiple Sclerosis

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182
Q

When is IFN-gamma indicated?

A

NADPH oxidase deficiency

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183
Q

Which anti-infectious agents should be avoided in pregnancy?

A

“SAFe Children Take Really Good Care”

Sulfonamides (Kernicterus)
Aminoglycosides (Ototoxicity)
Fluoroquinolones (Cartilage damage)
Clarithromycin (Embryotoxic)
Tetracyclines (Discolored teeth)
Ribavirin (Teratogen)
Griseofulvin (Teratogen)
Chloramphenicol (Gray baby syndrome)
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184
Q

What is used to treat MAC infection?

A

ARES protocol:

Azithromycin
Rifampin
Ethambutol
Streptomycin

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185
Q

What is used to treat Hansen’s disease?

A

M. leprae

Long term tx
Tuberculoid form = Dapsone & Rifampin
Lepromatous form = Dapsone, Rifampin, Clofazimine

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186
Q

What are the respiratory fluoroquinolones?

A

Gemifloxacin
Levofloxacin
Moxifloxacin

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187
Q

What are the anti-pseudomonal fluoroquinolones?

A

Ciprofloxacin

Levofloxacin

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188
Q

Rusty colored sputum

A

Strep pneumo pneumonia

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189
Q

What are the two possible outcomes of Bacillus cereus food poisoning?

A

Heat stable toxin –> Emetic form (1-5h after ingestion)

Heat labile toxin –> diarrheal form (15-20h after ingestion)

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190
Q

What types of cells are found in a lymph node?

Where are they found?

A
Cortex = Follicles of B cells
Paracortex = T cells (location of high endothelial venules)
Medulla = Medullary cords & sinuses contain macrophages
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191
Q

Lymph drainage:

Upper limb

A

Axillary

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192
Q

Lymph drainage:

Breast

A

Axillary

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193
Q

Lymph drainage:

Stomach

A

Celiac

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194
Q

Lymph drainage:

Duodenum & Jejunum

A

Superior mesenteric

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195
Q

Lymph drainage:

Sigmoid colon

A

Colic –> inferior mesenteric

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196
Q

Lymph drainage:

Rectum & anus (above pectinate line)

A

Internal iliac

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197
Q
Lymph drainage:
Anal canal (below pectinate line)
A

Superficial inguinal

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198
Q

Lymph drainage:

Testes

A

Superficial & deep plexuses –> para-aortic

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199
Q

Lymph drainage:

Scrotum

A

Superficial inguinal

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200
Q

Lymph drainage:

Superficial thigh

A

Superficial inguinal

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201
Q

Lymph drainage:

Dorsolateral foot

A

Popliteal

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202
Q

What are the two main lymphatic ducts and what do they drain?
Where do they empty into the circulation?

A

Right lymphatic duct = Right arm, Right chest, Right 1/2 of head
Thoracic duct = everything else

They both empty into their respective subclavian veins.

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203
Q

What infections are seen in asplenic patients?

A

Encapsulated organisms

Strep pneumo
H. flu
i
Neisseria meningitidis
E. coli
Salmonella
Klebsiella
i
Strep agalactiae (GBS)
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204
Q

What hematologic changes are seen in asplenic patients?

A

Howell-Jolly bodies (nuclear remnants)
Target cells
Thrombocytosis

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205
Q

Which way do T cells move as they mature in the thymus?

A

From cortex (positive selection) to medulla (negative selection).

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206
Q

What are the findings in Down Syndrome?

A
Mental retardation
Flat facies
Prominent epicanthal folds
Oblique palpebral fissures
Simian crease
Gap between first 2 toes
Duodenal atresia
Ostium primum-type ASD (cushion defect)
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207
Q

What are Down syndrome patients at increased risk of?

A

ALL

Alzheimers (young onset)

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208
Q

What are the possible etiologies of Down Syndrome?

A

1) Meiotic nondisjunction (95% of cases; advanced maternal age)
2) Robertsonian translocation (4% of cases)
3) Mosaicism (1% of cases)

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209
Q

What organisms are capable of producing biofilms?

A
Staph epidermidis
Strep mutans & sanguinis
Pseudomonas
Viridans strep
Nontypable H. flu
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210
Q

What are the uses of Rifampin?

A

MTB & Leprosy = combination therapy

H. flu & N. meningitidis = monotherapy prophylaxis

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211
Q

What is Sucrose composed of?
Lactose?
Maltose?

A
Maltose = Glucose + Glucose
Lactose = Glucose + Galactose
Sucrose = Glucose + Fructose
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212
Q

What possible effects does uncontrolled maternal diabetes have on a fetus?

A
Prematurity
Fetal macrosomia
Neural tube defects
Hypoglycemia
Hypocalcemia
Polycythemia
NRDS
Transient HOCM
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213
Q

What is produced through cleavage of POMC?

A

beta-endorphins
ACTH
MSH

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214
Q

What are the commonest complications of prematurity?

A
NRDS
PDA
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
Intraventricular hemorrhage (germinal matrix)
Necrotizing enterocolitis
Retinopathy of prematurity
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215
Q

What passes through the optic canal?

A

CNII
Ophthalmic artery
Central retinal vein

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216
Q

What passes through the superior orbital fissure?

A

CNIII, CNIV, CNV1, CNVI
Ophthalmic vein
Sympathetic fibers

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217
Q

What foramina do the divisions of the trigeminal nerve pass through?

A

Standing Room Only

V1 = Superior orbital fissure
V2 = Foramen rotundum
V3 = Foramen ovale
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218
Q

What passes through the foramen spinosum?

A

Middle meningeal artery & vein

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219
Q

What passes through the internal acoustic meatus?

A

CNVII, CNVIII

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220
Q

What passes through the jugular foramen?

A

CNIX, X, XI
Jugular vein

“Nine, ten, eleven, jugular foramen”

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221
Q

What are “Mongoloid features” associated with?

A

Down Syndrome

Beta-thalassemia

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222
Q

What HLA’s are associated with each MHC type?

A
MHCI = HLA-A,B,C
MHCII = HLA-DR,DP,DQ
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223
Q

What do each MHC class bind?

A

MHCI –> TCR & CD8 (CTL activation)

MHCII –> TCR & CD4 (Th activation)

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224
Q

Where are MHCI and MHCII expressed?

A
MHCI = all cells except RBC's
MHCII = only on APC's
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225
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

A3

A

Hemochromatosis

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226
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

B27

A

PAIR

Psoriasis
Ankylosing spondylitis
IBD
Reiter’s syndrome

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227
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

DQ2/DQ8

A

“DQ2, Celiac sprue”

Also DQ8

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228
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

DR2

A

Multiple sclerosis
Hay fever
SLE
Goodpastures

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229
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

DR3

A

T1DM

Graves’ Disease

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230
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

DR4

A

Rheumatoid arthritis

T1DM

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231
Q

What disease is this HLA subtype associated with?

DR5

A

Pernicious anemia

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

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232
Q

What HLA’s are associated with T1DM?

A

DR3 & DR4

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233
Q

What do NK cells respond to?

A

Activity increased by IL-2, IL-12, IFN-alpha, IFN-beta

Activated to kill by absence of MHCI on target cell surface or nonspecific activation signals on target cell surface.

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234
Q

What is positive and negative selection of T cells?

A

Positive selection = TCR cell can bind self
Negative selection = TCR does not bind self with high affinity

These occur in the thymus.

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235
Q

What interactions are required for T cell activation?

A

CD4:
TCR/CD4-MHCII
CD28-B7 (dendritic cell)

CD8:
TCR/CD8-MHCI
CD28-B7 (dendritic cell)

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236
Q

What interactions are required for B cell activation?

A

1) BCR-mediated endocytosis

(B cell) MHCII-TCR (CD4 T cell)
(B cell) CD40-CD40L (T cell)

This causes activation of B cell & release of cytokines from T cell –> class switching, affinity maturation, Ab production

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237
Q

What cytokines are secreted by Th1 cells?

A

IFN-gamma

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238
Q

What cytokine induces a T cell to go the Th1 route?

A

IL-12

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239
Q

What cytokines do Th2 cells release?

A

IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, IL-13

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240
Q

What do CTL’s use to kill cells?

A

Perforin - holes in membrane
Granzyme - serine protease –> apoptosis inside target cell
Granulysin - induces apoptosis

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241
Q

What is the main purpose of a Th1 & a Th2 response?

A

Th1: Activates macrophages (inflammation) & intracellular immunity

Th2: Recruits eosinophils (parasites) & promotes Ig production (extracellular immunity)

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242
Q

What cell surface markers are found on T-regs?

A

CD3
CD4
CD25

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243
Q

What do T-regs secrete?

A

IL-10

TGF-beta

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244
Q

What are the 3 ways that Ab’s combat infection?

A

1) Opsonization (promotes phagocytosis)
2) Neutralization (prevents binding)
3) Complement activation (MAC)

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245
Q

What portion of an antibody activates complement?

A

CH2 portion (Fc portion close to the neck)

This only occurs with IgM & IgG

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246
Q

What enzyme adds additional nucleotides during V(D)J recombination?

A

TdT = Terminal deoxynucleotidyl Transferase

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247
Q

What type of Ig’s are expressed on mature B cells?

A

IgM & IgD

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248
Q

Most produced Ig subtype?
Highest serum titer?
Lowest serum titer?

A

Most produced = IgA
Highest titer = IgG
Lowest titer = IgE

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249
Q

What does IgE do?

A

Binds to and sensitizes mast cells & basophils
Activates eosinophils against worms
Type I hypersensitivity

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250
Q

What is a Thymus Independent Antigen?

A

Activation of B cells is T-cell independent, either by:

1) Crosslinking of BCR’s due to repeating epitopes
2) TLR activation in an innate cell –> signaling

This type of response occurs in response to non-peptide antigens, such as a polysaccharide capsule. It generates NO IMMUNOLOGIC MEMORY. This is why we have to conjugate Strep pneumo, H. flu, Neisseria vaccines to a peptide. Then there can be an immunologic memory and a thymus-dependent response.

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251
Q

What is the function of the membrane attack complex?

A

Lysis GRAM- cells by punching holes in it

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252
Q

What are the specific functions of the complement proteins?

A

C3b - opsonization
C3a, C5a - anaphylaxis
C5a - PMN chemotaxis
C5b-C9 - MAC

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253
Q

What are the inhibitors of complement?

A

Decay Accelerating Factor (DAF)
C1 Esterase Inhibitor

They help to prevent activation on self

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254
Q

What initiates the Classical pathway?
Alternative pathway?
Lectin pathway?

A
Classical = Ab bound to microbial surface
Alternative = C3 spontaneously hydrolyzed to C3b
Lectin = Mannose-Binding Lectin (MLB) binds mannose, glucose, etc. (polysaccharide)
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255
Q

How does a C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency manifest?

A

Hereditary angioedema, especially periorbital.

ACE inhibitors contraindicated

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256
Q

How does a C3 deficiency manifest?

A

Recurrent pyogenic sinus & respiratory tract infections
Also ^ susceptibility to Type III (immune complex) hypersensitivity because C3 is involved in clearing of immune complexes.

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257
Q

How do C5-C9 deficiencies manifest?

A

Recurrent Neisseria infections

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258
Q

How does DAF deficiency manifest?

A

Decay Accelerating Factor (GPI anchored enzyme; normally inhibits complement)

Complement mediated hemolysis & PNH

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259
Q

What amino acid(s) are pyrimidines synthesized from?

A

Glutamate + Aspartate

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260
Q

What amino acid(s) are purines synthesized from?

A

Glutamate + Aspartate + Glycine

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261
Q

What amino acid(s) is Niacin synthesized from?

A

Trpytophan

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262
Q

What amino acid(s) is Thyroxine synthesized from?

A

Tyrosine

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263
Q

What are the intraluminal stimuli for vasodilation?

A
Ach
Bradykinin
Serotonin
Substance P
Shear forces
NO
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264
Q

What is the mechanism of Daptomycin?

A

Depolarization of the microbial cell membrane

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265
Q

What toxicity is seen with Daptomycin?

A

Myopathy & increased CPK

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266
Q

What bacteria are most commonly involved in pneumonia that is secondary to a viral infection?

A

In order:

1) Strep pneumo
2) Staph aureus
3) H. flu

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267
Q

How is mesothelioma diagnosed?

A

Definitive diagnosis is with EM.
Mesothelioma = long slender microvilli
Adenocarcinoma = short, plump microvilli

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268
Q

What is the effect of sympathetic stimulation on insulin secretion by pancreatic beta cells?

A

It depends:
Alpha receptor stimulation –> decreased insulin release
Beta receptor stimulation –> increased insulin release

As a whole, sympathetic stimulation generally decreases insulin release while parasympathetic stimulation increases it.

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269
Q

How is hemophilia inherited?

A

Both are usually X-linked

Hemophilia A is spontaneous in 30% of cases

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270
Q

How is Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome inherited?

A

X-linked recessive

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271
Q

What cancers are typically osteolytic in nature?

A

BLT w/ Ketchup & Mustard

Breast
Lung
Thyroid
Kidney
Multiple myeloma
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272
Q

What do IL-1 through IL-5 do?

A

Hot T-Bone stEAk

IL-1 = pyrogen
IL-2 = stimulates T cells
IL-3 = stimulates bone marrow
IL-4 = class switch to IgE
IL-5 = class switch to IgA
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273
Q

What does IL-6 do?

A

Fever & acute-phase reactants

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274
Q

What does IL-8 do?

A

The major chemoattractant for neutrophils

“Clean up on aisle 8”

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275
Q

What amino acid(s) is NO synthesized from?

A

Arginine

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277
Q

What cytokines are secreted by Th2 cells?

A

IL-4,5,10

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278
Q

What does IL-10 do?

A

Inhibits inflammation and Th1

Secreted by Th2 cells & T-regs

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279
Q

What occurs in cells exposed to IFN-alpha & beta?

A

Protein Kinase R (PKR) is produced. In the presence of dsRNA, it phosphorylates two proteins:

1) RNAse L –> degrades RNA
2) eIF2 –> inhibits translation

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280
Q

What cell surface markers are found on T cells?

A
TCR
CD3
CD28
If Th - CD4, CD40L
If CTL - CD8
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281
Q

What cell surface markers are found on B cells?

A

BCR (Ig)
CD19,20,21,40
MHCII
B7

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282
Q

What cell surface markers are found on macrophages?

A

CD14,40
MHCII
B7
Fc & C3b receptors (for enhanced phagocytosis)

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283
Q

What cell surface markers are found on NK cells?

A

CD16 (binds Fc of IgG)

CD56 (unique to NK)

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284
Q

What receptors bind LPS?

A

CD14 & TLR-4

macrophages

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285
Q

What is the half life of passive immunity?

A

3 weeks

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286
Q

What exposures require administration of passive immunity?

A

if you want “To Be Healed Rapidly”

Tetanus toxin
Botulinum toxin
HBV
Rabies virus

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287
Q

What types of responses are induced with a live-attenuated vaccine vs an inactivated one?

A
Live-attenuated = cellular response
Killed = humoral response

Killed are safer but often requires boosters.

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288
Q

What does IL-12 do?

A

Induces differentiation of T cells into Th1 cells

Activates NK cells

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289
Q

What does TNF-alpha do?

A

Responsible for septic shock
Activates endothelium
Leukocyte recruitment
Vascular permeability

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290
Q

What cytokines are secreted by macrophages?

A

IL-1,6,8,12, TNF-alpha

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291
Q

When does serum sickness occur?

A

5-10 days post-exposure

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292
Q

What are serum sickness & arthus reaction?

A

Both are type III hypersensitivity

Serum sickness is systemic - fever, urticaria, proteinuria, LAD
Arthus reaction is localized - edema, necrosis

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293
Q

What are the types of blood transfusion reactions?

A

Allergic (Type I)
Anaphylactic
Febrile nonhemolytic transfusion reaction (FNHTR; Type II)
Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction (HTR; Type II)

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294
Q

Anti-dsDNA, anti-Smith

A

SLE

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295
Q

Antihistone Ab’s

A

Drug-induced lupus

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296
Q

Rheumatoid factor

anti-CCP

A

Rheumatoid arthritis

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297
Q

Anticentromere Ab’s

A

CREST syndrome

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298
Q

anti-DNA topoisomerase I

A

aka anti-Scl-70

Scleroderma

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299
Q

Anti-mitochondrial Ab’s

A

Primary biliary cirrhosis

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300
Q

IgA anti-endomysial

IgA anti-tissue transglutaminase

A

Celiac disease

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301
Q

Anti-basement membrane

A

Goodpasture’s

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302
Q

Anti-desmoglein Ab’s

A

Pemphigus vulgaris

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303
Q

Antimicrosomal

Antithyroglobulin

A

Hashimoto’s

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304
Q

Anti-Jo-1
anti-SRP
anti-Mi-2

A

Polymyositis/Dermatomyositis

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305
Q

Anti-Ro

Anti-La

A

aka Anti-SSA/Anti-SSB

Sjogren’s syndrome

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306
Q

Anti-U1 RNP

A

Mixed connective tissue disease

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307
Q

Anti-smooth muscle Ab’s

A

Autoimmune hepatitis

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308
Q

Anti-glutamate decarboxylase Ab’s

A

T1DM

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309
Q

PR3-ANCA

A

AKA c-ANCA

Granulomatosis with polyangiitis

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310
Q

MPO-ANCA

A

AKA p-ANCA

Microscopic polyangiitis
Churg-Strauss syndrome

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311
Q

What infections are seen in granulocyte deficiency?

A

Staphylococcus
Burkholderia cepacia
Serratia
Nocardia

Candida
Aspergillus

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312
Q

What infections are seen in complement deficiency?

A

Neisseria

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313
Q

What type of infections are typically seen in T vs. B cell deficiency?

A

T-cell deficiency = fungal & viral infections

B-cell deficiency = encapsulated bacteria, enteroviral, and giardia infection

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314
Q

What are the characteristics of axonal reaction?

A

Rounded cell body
Nucleus displaced to periphery
Central chromatolysis (dispersion of Nissl substance)

These changes are secondary to Wallerian degeneration. They represent increased protein synthesis in order to regenerate a severed axon.

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315
Q

What cofactors are required for:
alpha-Ketoacid Dehydrogenase
Pyruvate Dehydrogenase
alpha-Ketoglutarate Dehydrogenase

A

“Tender Loving Care For Nancy”

Thiamine pyrophosphate
Lipoate
Coenzyme A
FAD
NAD
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316
Q

What is the Ddx for pulsus paradoxis?

A

Pulsus paradoxis = pulses decrease with inspiration

Ddx:
Cardiac tamponade
Constrictive pericarditis
Severe obstructive lung disease
Restrictive cardiomyopathy
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317
Q

How do the endemic fungi appear microscopically?

A
Histo = small, within macrophages (Histo hides)
Blasto = Blasto Buds Broadly; same size as RBC
Coccidio = Large spherule filled with endospores (Coccidio crowds)
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318
Q

What other receptors can hCG bind to?

A

hCG is an LH analog & can also bind to TSH receptor if in high enough concentrations.

Thus, patients with choriocarcinoma/teratoma can exhibit hyperthyroidism and men can sometimes show gynecomastia.

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319
Q

What can be used to detect colon cancer recurrence?

A

Serume carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)

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320
Q

What is seen hematalogically with CVID?

A

Normal number of B cells, reduced plasma cells & Ig titers

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321
Q

What is seen in DiGeorge syndrome?

A

CATCH-22

22q11 deletion syndromes:
Cleft palate
Abnormal facies
Thymic aplasia
Cardiac defects
Hypocalcemia (parathyroid aplasia)
22q11 deletion
DiGeorge = TCH
VeloCARDIOFACIAL = the cardiac and facial (including cleft palate) defects
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322
Q

What does a 22q11 deletion cause embryologically?

A

Malformation of:
3rd branchial pouch (inf. parathyroids & thymus)
4th branchial pouch (sup. parathyroids)

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323
Q

What infections are seen in IL-12 receptor deficiency?

A

Disseminated MTB infections

No Th1 response; no IFN-gamma

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324
Q

What are the symptoms of Job syndrome?

A

Hyper-IgE Syndrome = FATED

Facies (course)
Abscesses (noninflammatory; Staph)
Teeth (keep baby teeth)
IgE
Dermatologic problems (eczema)
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325
Q

What causes Job Syndrome?

A

Hyper-IgE Syndrome

Caused by a failure of Th1 cells to release IFN-gamma –> no neutrophil chemotaxis

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326
Q

What causes chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis?

A

Various forms of T cell dysfunction

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327
Q

What are the most common causes of SCID?

A

Severe Combine Immunodeficiency:

1) IL-2 receptor mutation (X-linked)
2) Adenosine Deaminase deficiency (ADA)

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328
Q

How does SCID present?

A

Failure to thrive
Recurrent infections (bact, viral, fungal, protozoa)
Chronic diarrhea, thrush
Absence of thymic shadow, germinal centers, and T cells
Decreased T-cell Recombinant Excision Circles (TRECs)

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329
Q

What is the treatment for SCID?

A

Bubble baby then BMT

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330
Q

What is the mutation seen in IgAtaxia-telangiectasia?

A

ATM gene mutation

Normally involved in NHEJ

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331
Q

What is seen in IgAtaxia-Telangiectasia?

A

IgA deficiency
Cerebellar defects
Spider angiomas

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332
Q

What serum marker is seen in IgAtaxia-telangiectasia?

A

^AFP

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333
Q

What mutation causes Hyper-IgM Syndrome?

A

Defective CD40L on Th cells –> B cells cannot class switch

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334
Q

How does Hyper-IgM syndrome present?

A

Sever pyogenic infections early in life

^ IgM, very low titers of all other classes

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335
Q

What mutation causes Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome?

A

WASP gene (X-linked)

Makes T cells unable to reorganize actin cytoskeleton

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336
Q

What abnormal labs are seen in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome?

A

Thrombocytopenia

^IgE & IgA, decreased IgM

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337
Q

How does Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome present?

A

Wiskott-Aldrich’s TIE

Thrombocytopenic purpura
Infections
Eczema

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338
Q

What is mutated in Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency?

A

CD18 (LFA-1 integrin on phagocytes)

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339
Q

What is the presentation of Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency?

A

Delayed umbilical cord separation (usually caused by PMN’s)
Neutrophilia
Recurrent bacterial infections
No pus formation

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340
Q

What mutation causes Chediak-Higashi syndrome?

A

Lysosomal Trafficking Regulator gene (LYST):

Causes microtubule dysfunction in phagosome-lysosome fusion

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341
Q

What is seen in Chediak-Higashi Syndrome?

A
Recurrent staph & strep pyogenic infections
Albinism
Giant granules in neutrophils
Peripheral neuropathy
Defective primary hemostasis
Neutropenia
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342
Q

What is defective in Chronic Granulomatous Disease?

A

Lack of NADPH oxidase –> no ROS –> no respiratory burst in neutrophils

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343
Q

What is seen in Chronic Granulomatous Disease?

A

Infection with catalase+ organisms (PLACESS)

Dx by either:
Dihydrorhodamine (DHR) flow cytometry
Nitroblue tetrazolium dye reduction test (no blue color –> CGD)

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344
Q

What causes hyperacute transplant rejection?

A

Preformed anti-donor Ab’s –> vessel occlusion –> ischemia/necrosis

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345
Q

What causes acute transplant rejection?

Is it reversible?

A

Recipient CTL’s reacting against donor MHC’s –> vasculitis of graft vessels with dense lymphocytic infiltrate

Reversible with immunosuppressants

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346
Q

What causes chronic transplant rejection?

Is it reversible?

A

Non-self MHCI is perceived as self MHCI with non-self antigen by recipient CTL’s –> T-cell & Ab-mediated vascular damage –> fibrosis of graft vessels & tissue

Irreversible

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347
Q

What organ transplants typically cause GvH disease?

A

Bone marrow & liver transplant

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348
Q

What is Hydroxychloroquine?

What toxicity is seen with it?

A

It’s a weak lipophilic base used to treat malaria, RA, and lupus

Can cause retinal damage or hemolysis

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349
Q

What is the mechanism of cyclosporine?

A

Binds cyclophilins –> inhibits calcineurin –> reduced production of IL-2 and IL-2R –> impaired T cell differentiation and activation

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350
Q

What drugs are often used as immunosuppressants in transplant recipients?

A
Cyclosporine
Tacrolimus
Sirolimus
Azathioprine
Muromonab-CD3
Corticosteroids
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351
Q

What toxicities are seen with cyclosporine?

A
Nephrotoxic
Metabolic syndrome
Tremor
Gingival hyperplasia
Hirsutism
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352
Q

What is the mechanism of Tacrolimus?

A

Binds FK-binding protein –> inhibits calcineurin –> decreased IL-2 secretion –> T cell suppression

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353
Q

What toxicities are seen with Tacrolimus?

A

Nephrotoxic
Metabolic syndrome
Tremor

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354
Q

What is the mechanism of Sirolimus (rapamycin)?

A

Inhibits mTOR –> T-cells unresponsive to IL-2

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355
Q

What toxicities are seen with Sirolimus?

A

Hyperlipidemia
Thrombocytopenia
Leukopenia

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356
Q

What is the mechanism of Azathioprine?

A

It’s the precursor to 6-mercaptopurine –> inhibits purine synthesis

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357
Q

What toxicities are seen with Azathioprine?

A

Bone marrow suppression

Toxic effects are increased by xanthine oxidase inhibitors (metabolized by XO normally)

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358
Q

What is the mechanism of Muromonab (OKT3)?

A

mAb against CD3 –> blocks CD3 –> no T cell activation

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359
Q

What toxicities are seen with Muromonab?

A

Cytokine release syndrome (cytokine storm)

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360
Q

What is recombinant G-CSF called?

GM-CSF?

A
rG-CSF = Filgrastim
rGM-CSF = Sargrastim
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361
Q

What is Omalizumab used for?

A

Severe asthma. It is an Ab against IgE.

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362
Q

What measurement is determined by using a case-control study?
Cohort study?

A

Case control –> Odds ratio (Casino odds)

Cohort –> Relative risk

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363
Q

Phase I trials:
Who is enrolled?
What is the purpose?

A

Small number of healthy volunteers

Meant to assess safety, toxicity, pharmacokinetics

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364
Q

Phase II trials:
Who is enrolled?
What is the purpose?

A

Small number of diseased patients

Assesses efficacy, optimal dosing, and adverse effects

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365
Q

Phase III trials:
Who is enrolled?
What is the purpose?

A

Large number of diseased patients randomly assigned (RCT) to treatment of interest or standard of care/placebo.

Used to compare the new treatment to the standard of care

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366
Q

Phase IV trials:
Who is enrolled?
What is the purpose?

A

Postmarketing surveillance following FDA approval

Detects rare or long-term effects

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367
Q

What is the value of a sensitive test vs a specific test?

A

SNOUT –> Sensitive test rules out

SPIN –> Specific test rules in

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368
Q

What is the equation for sensitivity?

A

Sn = True Positive/All disease

= 1- false negative

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369
Q

What is the equation for PPV?

A

PPV = TP/(TP + FP)

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370
Q

What is the equation for NPV?

A

NPV = TN/(FN + TN)

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371
Q

What test descriptors vary with prevalence?

A

PPV –> Increases with higher prevalence (pretest probability)
NPV –> Decreases with higher prevalence (pretest probability)

Sensitivity and Specificity are fixed properties of a test.

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372
Q

What are the equations for incidence & prevalence?

A

Incidence = (# new cases over a time period)/(Population at risk)

Prevalence = (# of existing cases)/(Population at risk)

Thus Prevalence ~ (Incidence rate)*(duration of disease)

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373
Q

Odds ratio formula

A

OR = AD/BC

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374
Q

What is the formula for relative risk?

A

RR = (A/A+B)/(C/C+D)

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375
Q

What is the formula for Attributable Risk?

A

AR = (A/A+B) - (C/C+D)

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376
Q

What is the formula for Absolute Risk Reduction?

A

ARR = risk following treatment - control risk

Determines how much reduction in risk is due to a treatment.

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377
Q

What is the formula for number needed to treat?

A

NNT = 1 / Absolute Risk Reduction

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378
Q

What is the formula for number needed to harm?

A

NNH = 1 / Attributable risk

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379
Q

What types of error affect precision vs. accuracy?

A

Accuracy is affected by systematic error

Precision is affected by random error

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380
Q

Using only hospital inpatients as subjects.

What type of bias is this?

A

Berkson’s bias (a type of selection bias)

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381
Q

What is Hawthorne Effect?

A

The group knows it is being watched and changes its behavior. It’s a form of measurement bias.

“Dr. Hawthorne is watching you”

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382
Q

The researcher’s belief in the efficacy of a treatment changes the outcome of that treatment.
What type of bias is this?

A

Observer-expectancy bias

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383
Q

Subjects in different groups are not treated the same.

What type of bias is this?

A

Procedure bias

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384
Q

What can be done to avoid confounding bias?

A

Crossover studies

Goo matching of groups

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385
Q

Earlier detection by a new diagnostic test appears as increased survival.
What type of bias is this?

A

Lead-time bias

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386
Q

Information gathered at wrong time (i.e. after half of the patients are dead)
What kind of bias is this

A

Late-look bias

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387
Q

What % is contained in +/-1 Standard Deviation?
2?
3?

A

For a Gaussian distribution:
1 SD = 68%
2 SD = 95%
3 SD = 99.7%

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388
Q

What is the formula for for Standard Error of the Mean?

A

SEM = SD/(square root of n)

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389
Q

What is Type I & Type II error?

A

Type I error:
Seeing something there when it’s not (alpha accepts alternate)
alpha is the probability of making Type I error
We set significance at 0.05 to account for alpha error

Type II error:
Missing a difference that does actually exist
beta is the probability of Type II error (beta blind to difference)

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390
Q

What is statistical power?

A

The probability of correctly rejecting the null hypothesis when there is a difference. ***Increases with larger sample (there is power in numbers)

Power = 1 - beta

“Alpha accepts, Beta blinds, Power perceives”

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391
Q

What is Z for a 95% confidence interval?

99%?

A

95% CI –> Z = 1.96

99% CI –> Z = 2.58

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392
Q

What is the formula for confidence intervals?

A

It’s a range from:

[mean - Z(SEM)] to [mean + Z(SEM)]

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393
Q

What does Pearson’s correlation coefficient indicate?

A

Ranges from -1 to +1

Closer that it is to either -1 or +1 –> stronger the linear correlation of 2 variables

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394
Q

What is primary, secondary, and tertiary disease prevention?

A

Primary prevents
Secondary screens
Tertiary treats

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395
Q

With minors, when is parental consent not required?

A

Drugs, sex, and emergencies

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396
Q

What is assessed in Apgar scores?

A

Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, Respiration

Assessed at 1 minute & 5 minutes.
>7 = good
>3 = assist and stimulate
3 or less = resuscitate

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397
Q

What is the cutoff for low birth weight?

A

Less than 2500g

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398
Q

When should children walk & talk?

Be potty trained?

A

Walk/talk at 1
200 words and 2 word phrases at 2
Pee at 3 (toilet training)

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399
Q

What are the sleep stages and associated waveforms?

A

EEG waveforms: “at night BATS Drink Blood”

Awake (eyes open) = Beta
Awake (eyes closed) = Alpha
Stage N1 = Theta
Stage N2 = Sleep spindles & K complexes
Stage N3 = Delta
REM = Beta

Most of time spent in N2. Sleepwalking, night terrors, bedwetting is in N3.

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400
Q

How often does a REM cycle occur?

What is the predominant neurotransmitter?

A

REM occurs every 90 minutes
ACh –> REM
NE –> inhibits REM

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401
Q

How does the suprachiasmatic nucleus regulate melatonin release?

A

SCN –> NE release –> Pineal gland –> Melatonin release

SCN is regulated by the environment (light)

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402
Q

What bases can be methylated?

A

Cytosine and Adenine

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403
Q

What amino acid may be methylated in histones?

Acetylated?

A

Methylation occurs at lysines & arginines –> histone more + –> heterochromatin

Acetylation occurs at lysines –> euchromatin –> histone less + –> euchromatin

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404
Q

What base pairing is the strongest?

A
G-C = 3 H-bonds
A-T = 2 H-bonds
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405
Q

What is the mechanism of Hydroxyurea?

A

Inhibits Ribonucleotide Reductase:
UDP cannot –> dUDP

Ultimately deprives cell of Thymidine

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406
Q

What is the mechanism of 5-Fluorouracil?

A

Inhibits Thymidylate Synthase (FU, TS):
No dUMP –> dTMP

Ultimately deprives cell of Thymidine (purine)

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407
Q

What are the Dihydrofolate Reductase inhibitors?

A

Methotrexate
Trimethoprim (bacterial DHFR)

Decrease availability of THF.
N5,N10 THF required for dUMP –> dTMP (via thymidylate synthase)

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408
Q

What is the mechanism of 6-mercaptopurine?

A

Inhibits PRPP Amidotransferase (first step in dedicated purine synthesis)

It is activated by HGPRT.
Azathioprine is its prodrug.

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409
Q

What are the symptoms of orotic aciduria?

A
Megaloblastic anemia (not responsive to folate/B12)
Orotic acid in the urine
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410
Q

What is the treatment for orotic aciduria?

A

Oral uridine supplementation

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411
Q

What does Adenosine Deaminase catalyze?

A

Adenosine –> Inosine

This is part of the purine salvage pathway:
Adenine –> AMP –> Adenosine –> Inosine –> Hypoxanthine –> IMP

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412
Q

How does ADA deficiency cause SCID?

A

1) Excess dATP feedback inhibits ribonucleotide reductase –> imbalance of nucleotide pool –> impaired DNA synthesis –> lymphocyte depletion
2) Toxic metabolites build up in lymphocytes

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413
Q

What defect is seen in Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome?

A

HGPRT deficiency. Normally it catalyzes:
Hypoxanthine –> IMP
Guanine –> GMP

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414
Q

What are the symptoms of Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome?

A

Mental retardation
Self-mutilation
Agression
Hyperuricemia/gout

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415
Q

What are the common X-linked recessive disorders?

A

GOLD FOB Holds His Watch

G6PD deficiency
OTC deficiency
Lesch-Nyhan
Duchenne's (& Becker's) muscular dystrophy
Fabry's disease
Ocular albinism
Bruton's agammaglobulinemia
Hemophilia A & B
Hunter's syndrome
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
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416
Q

What is seen in Purine Nucleoside Phosphorylase deficiency?

A

T cells are killed by buildup of dGTP (vs ADA deficiency which kills both B & T cells)

Normal reactions:
Guanosine –> Hypoxanthine
Inosine –> Hypoxanthine

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417
Q

What are the types of mutations?

A

Silent –> same amino acid
Missense –> different amino acid (conservative if similar AA)
Nonsense –> early stop codon (UGA, UAA, UAG)
Frameshift –> usually truncated & nonfunctional

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418
Q

What is the purpose of Nucleotide Excision repair?

A

Removes pyrimidine dimers & 6-4 photoproducts

bulky lesions that distort helix

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419
Q

What disease is caused by mutated nucleotide excision repair?

A

Xeroderma pigmentosum

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420
Q

What is the sequence in Base Excision Repair?

A

Glycosylases recognize damaged base –> create apurinic/apyrimidinic site –> endonuclease cuts 3’ end –> lyase cuts 5’ end –> DNAP-beta fills it in –> ligase seals it

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421
Q

What is Base Excision Repair used for?

A
Removes damaged bases:
Deamination products (via nitrates or spontaneous)
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422
Q

What disease is associated with a mutation in Miscmatch Repair?

A

HNPCC

MLH1 = MutL
MSH2 = MutS

**They find a mismatch, then find the nearest nick and recruit an endonuclease to degrade from the nick all the way to the mismatch and it is all replaced

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423
Q

What do the different RNAP synthesize?

A

RNAP I –> rRNA
RNAP II –> mRNA
RNAP III –> tRNA

rampant, massive, tiny

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424
Q

What are the mRNA start and stop codons?

A
Start = AUG (met or f-met; inAUGural codon)
Stop = UGA, UAA, UAG (U Go Away, U Are Away, U Are Gone)
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425
Q

How are “death cap mushrooms” toxic?

A

They contain alpha-amanitin –> hepatotoxic via inhibition of RNAP II

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426
Q

What is the signal for polyadenylation?

A

AAUAAA

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427
Q

How does anticodon sense relate to the codon?

A

An anticodon is reversed and complementary

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428
Q

Where do amino acids bind to the tRNA?

A

3’ CCA

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429
Q

What ribosomes pertain to eukaryotes vs prokaryotes?

A
Eukaryotes = 40S + 60S --> 80S
Prokaryotes = 30S + 50S --> 70S
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430
Q

What cell types are permanent cells?

A

Neurons
skeletal muscle
cardiac muscle

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431
Q

What cell types are stable (quiescent) cells?

A

Hepatocytes
Lymphocytes

Can be stimulated to enter G1 but normally reside in G0

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432
Q

What cell types are labile cells?

A
Bone marrow
Gut epithelium
Skin
Hair follicles
Germ cells
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433
Q

What signals proteins to traffic to lysosomes from the golgi?

A

Mannose-6-Phosphate

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434
Q

What causes I-cell disease?

A

Cells cannot add Mann-6-P to proteins intended for lysosomes. Instead the proteins are secreted into the plasma.

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435
Q

What is seen in I-cell disease?

A

Course facial features
Clouded corneas
Restricted joints
High plasma levels of lysosomal enzymes

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436
Q

What are the various vesicular trafficking proteins and their purposed?

A

COPI = golgi –> ER (retrograde)

COPII = ER –> goldi (anterograde

Clathrin = trans-golgi –> lysosomes; PM –> endosomes
(responsible for receptor-mediated endocytosis)

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437
Q

What are the functions of the peroxisome?

A

Catabolism of very long chain fatty acids (beta oxidation)

Catabolism of amino acids

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438
Q

What is the cause of Kartagener’s Syndrome?

A

Dynein arm defect –> cilia dysfunction

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439
Q

What is seen in Kartagener’s Syndrome?

A

Infertility (females have some but reduced)
Bronchiectasis
Recurrent sinusitis
Often associated with situs inversus

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440
Q

What is Vimentin a stain for?

A

Connective tissue intermediate filaments

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441
Q

What is GFAP a stain for?

A

Neuroglial intermediate filaments

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442
Q

What is exchanged by the Na+/K+ ATPase?

A

Each ATP:
3 Na+ out
2 K+ in

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443
Q

What are the types of collagen & their location?

A

Type I = bONE, skin, tendon (90% of total)
Type II = car-two-lage
Type III = Reticulin (skin, blood vessels, uterus, fetal tissue)
Type IV = Basement membrane (Type IV is the floor)

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444
Q

What causes osteogenesis imperfecta?

A

Autosomal dominant deficiency in Type I collagen

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445
Q

What is seen in Osteogenesis Imperfecta?

A

Multiple easy fractures
Blue sclerae (choroidal veins seen through them)
Early hearing loss
Dental problems

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446
Q

What is seen in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?

A

Hyperextensible skin
Hypermobile joints
Easy bruising
Associated with joint dislocation, berry aneurysms, aortic dissection

Caused by faulty COLLAGEN synthesis (vs. fibrillin for Marfan’s)

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447
Q

What is seen in Alport syndrome?

A

Split renal basement membrane –> hereditary nephritis
Deafness
Ocular disturbances

Due to abnormal Type IV collagen

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448
Q

What inhibits elastase?

A

alpha-1-Antitrypsin (A1AT)

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449
Q

What is the difference between direct & indirect ELISA?

A

Direct = tests for an Antigen in a patient’s blood

Indirect = tests for an Antibody in the patients blood

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450
Q

What is the Cre-lox system used for?

A

Targeted recombination or deletion of genes. Can be controlled by outside stimuli and targeted to cell types, etc. Useful if a global knockout mouse would die in-utero, etc.

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451
Q

What is variable expressivity?

A

Phenotype varies among individuals with the same genotype (i.e. 2 NF1 pts have varying severity)

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452
Q

What is pleiotropy?

A

One gene contributes to multiple (often seemingly unrelated) effects

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453
Q

What is loss of heteroygosity?

A

The two-hit hypothesis of tumor suppressor genes

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454
Q

What is linkage disequilibrium?

A

When 2 alleles occur together more often in a population that would be expected by chance

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455
Q

What is locus heterogeneity?

A

Mutations at different loci can produce the same phenotype

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456
Q

What is heteroplasmy?

A

Presence of both normal and mutated mitochondrial DNA –> variable expression of mitochondrial inherited disease

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457
Q

What is uniparental disomy?

A

Offspring gets 2 copies of a chromosome from 1 parent

Heterodisomy = meiosis 1 error
Isodisomy = meiosis 2 error

Consider if a patient has an aut. recessive disease but only 1 parent is a carrier

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458
Q

What are the equations for Hardy-Weinberg?

A

p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1
and
p + q = 1

Also 2pq = carrier frequency

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459
Q

What is the genetic basis for Prader-Willi & Angelman’s Syndromes?

A

Prader-Willi: The deleted allele comes from the father or uniparental disomy of the maternal (imprinted) chromosome.
Angelman’s: The deleted allele comes from the mother or uniparental disomy of the paternal (imprinted) chromosome.

They are the same genetic deletion (15q11-15) but are normally imprinted differently based on which parent they came from. This causes differing symptoms.

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460
Q

What is seen in Prader-Willi syndrome?

A

Mental retardation
Hyperphagia/obesity
Hypogonadism
Hypotonia

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461
Q

What is seen in Angelman’s syndrome?

A

Mental retardation
Inappropriate laughter
Seizures
Ataxia

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462
Q

What is the pattern of X-linked recessive transmission on a pedigree?

A

Sons of carrier mothers have a 50% chance of showing disease.

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463
Q

How does an X-linked dominant disorder present on pedigree?

A

If mother carries the allele: 50% chance of all offspring getting it

If father carries the allele: all daughters & no sons get it

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464
Q

What disorder is X-linked dominant?

A

Hypophosphatemic Rickets:

phosphate wasting at the proximal tubule –> rickets-like presentation that is resistant to Vit. D supplementation

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465
Q

What diseases are inherited via mitochondria?

A

Mitochondrial myopathies:
Present with myopathy & CNS disease
“Ragged red fibers” on muscle biopsy

All children of affected mothers will be affected (heteroplasmy seen)

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466
Q

What is seen in Familial hypercholesterolemia?

A
Hyperlipidemia Type IIa:
Autosomal dominant inheritance
Homozygotes LDL = 700+
CVD early in life (often MI before 20)
Tendon xanthomas

Heterozygotes LDL ~300

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467
Q

What is seen in Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome?

A

(aka) Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia:

Autosomal dominant inheritance
Telangiectasia
Recurrent epistaxis
Skin discolorations
AVM's
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468
Q

What chromosome is the huntingtin gene found on?

A

CAG repeats on chromosome 4

“Hunting 4 CAG’s

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469
Q

What is seen in Marfan’s syndrome?

A
Autosomal dominant fibrillin defect 
Affects skeleton, heart, eyes:
Marfanoid habitus
Hyperflexible joints
Arachnodactyly
Pectus excavatum
Cystic medial necrosis of aorta --> aortic regurgitation &
aortic dissection
Mitral valve prolapse
Subluxation of lens (ectopia lentis)
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470
Q

What chromosome is NF1 on?

A

Chromosome 17

von Recklinghausen = 17 letters

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471
Q

What is seen in Neurofibromatosis type 2?

What chromosome carries the NF2 gene?

A

Bilateral acoustic shwannomas
juvenile cataracts

On chromosome 22.
Type 2, NF2 –> 22

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472
Q

What is the most common mutation in cystic fibrosis?

A

Deletion of Phe508

All CF stems from mutation of CFTR gene on chromosome 7

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473
Q

What is seen in cystic fibrosis?

A

Recurrent pneumonia (S. aureus, H. flu, & Pseudomonas)
Pancreatic insuficiency (malabsorption & steatorrhea)
Meconium ileus in newborns
Bronchiectasis, chronic bronchitis
Male infertility (absence of vas deferens)
Cirrhosis (late)
Nasal polyps
Salty sweat

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474
Q

What is the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis?

A

CFTR channel misfolded & degraded before getting to cell surface

CFTR normally:

  • Secretes Cl- in lung, small intestine, & pancreas
  • Reabsorbs Cl- from sweat
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475
Q

What causes Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy?

A

X-linked frameshift mutation –> deletion of dystrophin gene

Accelerated muscle breakdown is seen

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476
Q

What is seen in Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy?

How is the diagnosis made?

A
Weakness beginning with pelvic girdle muscles
(Progresses superiorly)
Use of Gowers' maneuver
Calf pseudohypertrophy
Onset before 5y

Dx: ^ CPK & muscle biopsy

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477
Q

What is seen in Fragile X syndrome?

A

X-tra large testes, ears, jaw
Autism
Mitral valve prolapse

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478
Q

What causes Fragile X syndrome?

A

^CGG repeats in FMR1 gene

It is X-linked & can be found in females but rarer

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479
Q

What is seen with fragile X premutation?

A

Females –> premature ovarian failure

Males –> tremor-ataxia in 40’s-50’s

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480
Q

What is seen in myotonic dystrophy?

A

Inability to release volitional contraction (aka unable to release handshake)
Progressive weakness

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481
Q

What are the trinucleotide repeat disorders?

A

“Try Hunting for My Fried Eggs”

Trinucleotide disorders:
Huntington's (CAG)
Myotonic dystrophy (CTG)
Friedrich's ataxia (GAA)
Fragile X (CGG)
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482
Q

What is capable of inducing ARDS?

A
Trauma
Sepsis
Shock
Aspiration
Uremia
DIC
Hypersensitivity reactions
Acute pancreatitis
Amniotic fluid embolism
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483
Q

Rank the conduction speed of the various cardiac tissues

A

His-Purkinje > Atria > Ventricles > AV node

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484
Q

What disease are Auer rods seen in?

A

Acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3)
t(15;17)

“Hey (A)! 15 miles per Auer”

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485
Q

What occurs following ligand binding to a tyrosine kinase receptor?

A

Dimerization –> Cross-phosphorylation –> Intracellular active sites exposed –> phosphorylation of tyrosine residues on target proteins

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486
Q

What malignancies are seen with a germline mutated Rb gene?

A

Retinoblastoma
Osteosarcoma

*Requires knockout of other copy (2 hit hypothesis/loss of heterozygosity)

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487
Q

What are the mediators of the early-phase of an asthma attack?

A

Histamine

Leukotrienes C4, D4, E4

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488
Q

What is seen in Albright’s Hereditary Osteodystrophy?

A

(aka) Pseudohypoparathyroidism:
Autosomal dominant kidney unresponsiveness to PTH

Symptoms:
Hypocalcemia
Short 4th/5th digits (knuckle, knuckle, dimple, dimple)
Short stature

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489
Q

What is allelic heterogeneity?

A

Different mutations at the same locus cause similar variant phenotypes

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490
Q

What is seen in hemochromatosis?

A
"Bronze diabetes"
Hepatomegaly --> Cirrhosis
Diabetes
Skin hyperpigmentation
Testicular atrophy
CHF
^ risk of hepatocellular carcinoma
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491
Q

What is the mutation in achondroplasia?

A

Activating mutation of FGFR-3

chromosome 4

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492
Q

What type of signal sequence targets an mRNA to be translated bound to the ER?

A

Hydrophobic N-terminal signal sequences are recognized by signal recognition particles, which halt translation and carry the ribosome over to the RER to continue translation.

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493
Q

What are the CYP450 inhibitors?

A

MAGIC RACKS in GQ

Macrolides
Amiodarone
Grapefruit juice
Isoniazid
Cimetidine
Ritonavir
Acute alcohol
Ciprofloxacin
Ketoconazole
Sulfonamides
Gemfibrozil
Quinidine
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494
Q

What are the CYP450 inducers?

A

“Carbemazepine By Pill Really Speeds Cyp450 Metabolism Greatly”

Carbemazipine
Barbiturates
Phenytoin
Rifampin
St. John's Wort
Chronic alcohol
Modafinil
Griseofulvin
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495
Q

What part of the bone is generally affected in osteomalacia?

A

Unmineralized osteoid matrix surrounding the normally mineralized trabeculae

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496
Q

What causes Li-Fraumeni syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Germline p53 mutation

2nd hit causes:
Early onset breast cancer
Soft tissue sarcomas

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497
Q

Where do the recurrent laryngeal nerves loop around?

A

R. side loops around the R. subclavian

L. side loops around the aortic arch

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498
Q

Are efferent nerves myelinated or unmyelinated?

A

All are myelinated except for postganglionic autonomic neurons

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499
Q

Are afferent nerves myelinated or unmyelinated?

A

They are myelinated, with the exception of slow C fibers (heat & pain from free nerve endings).

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500
Q

What is the most common cause of aseptic meningitis?

A

Enteroviruses

poliovirus, coxsackie, echovirus, HepA

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501
Q

What occupies MHC molecules during their synthesis & processing?

A

MHCI –> beta-2-microglobulin

MHCII –> invariant chain

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502
Q

Who commonly gets molluscum contagiosum?

A

Children, sexually active adults, & immunodeficiency patients.
It is a poxvirus

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503
Q

What is seen in the first trimester pregnancy screen for:
Down syndrome?
Edwards’ syndrome?

A

Order goes alpha-fetoprotein, beta-hCG, estriol, inhibin-A

Down: down-up-down-up
Edwards: down-down-down-normal

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504
Q

What is seen on the FIRST-trimester pregnancy screen for Patau syndrome?

A

Decreased hCG
Decreased PAPP-A
Nuchal translucency

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505
Q

What is seen in Edwards’ syndrome?

A
Trisomy 18:
Severe mental retardation
Rocker-bottom feet
Low set ears
Micrognothia (small jaw)
Prominent occiput
Clenched hands
Congenital heart disease

Death usually occurs in <1y

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506
Q

What is seen in Patau syndrome?

A
Trisomy 13:
Severe mental retardation
Cleft lip/palate
Microcephaly
Holoprosencephaly
Polydactyly
Congenital heart disease

Death occurs in <1y
Rocker-bottom feet

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507
Q

What chromosomes are at risk for Robertsonian translocations?

A

13, 14, 15, 21, 22

They are acrocentric chromosomes (1 large q arm and a tiny p arm) –> q arm is duplicated & p arm is lost –> normal if balanced, deletions/duplications if unbalanced

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508
Q

What causes cri-du-chat syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Microdeletion on 5p (short arm)

Symptoms:
Mental retardation
Crying/meowing (Cri-du-chat = cry of the cat)
Epicanthal folds
VSD
Microcephaly
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509
Q

What causes Williams syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Microdeletion on long arm of chromosome 7

Symptoms:
Elfin facies
Intellectual disability
Vit. D sensitivity --> Hypercalcemia
Extreme friendliness with strangers
Cardiovascular problems (elastin is deleted)
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510
Q

What is seen in Reiter’s syndrome?

A
aka Reactive arthritis
Triad of:
Conjunctivitis
Urethritis
Seronegative arthritis
"Can't see, can't pee, can't climb a tree"

Associated with GU infection by: Chlamydia, Campylobacter, Salmonella, Shigella, or Yersinia
HLA-B27

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511
Q

How does dermatitis herpetiformis present?

What is the cause?

A

Presents as pruritic lesions on the extensor surfaces

Celiac sprue –> IgA/IgG cross-react with reticulin in dermal papillary tips

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512
Q

What conditions are associated with acanthosis nigricans?

A

Insulin resistance

GI or lung malignancy

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513
Q

Where is eukaryotic DNA methylated?

Why?

A

At CpG islands. This causes genetic silencing of this region & is associated with imprinting, etc.

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514
Q

What sinuses are most commonly affected by URI?

A

Maxillary sinuses

Because their drainage is superior, so gravity doesn’t favor it.

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515
Q

What cancers can show mets to the left supraclavicular node?

A

Virchow’s node drains the thoracic duct. Abdominal (GI) malignancies typically can show lymphatic dissemination to Virchow’s node.

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516
Q

What lung pathogen is associated with blood clots?

A

Aspergillus

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517
Q

What does retinol do?

A

Antioxidant
Constituent of visual pigments (retinal)
Differentiates epithelial cells (ATRA for APL)
Prevents SCC

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518
Q

What is seen in retinol deficiency?

A

Vitamin A deficiency –> Night blindness & dry skin

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519
Q

What is seen with hypervitaminosis A?

A
Teratogenic (cleft palate, cardiac abnormalities)
Arthralgias
Headache (cerebral edema)
Alopecia
Sore throat
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520
Q

What is B1 used for?

A
Thiamine --> TPP
Used for decarboxylation reactions:
Pyruvate dehydrogenase
alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
Transketolase
Branched-chain amino acid dehydrogenase
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521
Q

What is seen in Thiamine deficiency?

A

1) Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome - eyes, lies, capsize
2) Dry Ber1Ber1 - polyneuritis, symmetrical muscle wasting
3) Wet Ber1Ber1 - dilated cardiomyopathy, edema

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522
Q

What should be administered to an alcoholic with low glucose?

A

B1 FIRST, then glucose.

Giving glucose in the setting of thiamine deficiency can worsen symptoms.

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523
Q

What is Vitamin B3 used for?

A

Niacin - part of NAD+ & NADP+ (B3 –> 3 ATP)

Synthesized from tryptophan & requires B6

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524
Q

What is seen with B3 deficiency?

Excess?

A

Niacin deficiency –> Pellegra

Pellegra (3 D’s):
Diarrhea
Dermatitis (Casal’s necklace)
Dementia

Excess –> facial flushing

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525
Q

What can result in B3 deficiency?

A
Niacin deficiency can result from:
Hartnup disease
Carcinoid syndrome (^ tryptophan metabolism)
INH (can cause B6 deficiency)
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526
Q

What is Vit. B2 used for?

A

Riboflavin –> FAD & FMN (B2 –> 2 ATP)

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527
Q

What is seen in B2 deficiency?

A

Riboflavin deficiency (2 C’s):
Cheilosis (inflamed lips, fissures at the corners)
Corneal vascularizaiton

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528
Q

What is Vit. B5 used for?

A

Pantothenate - a component of CoA & fatty acid synthase

“Pentothenate” = B5

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529
Q

What is seen with B5 deficiency?

A
Pantothenate deficiency:
Dermatitis
Adrenal insufficiency
Enteritis
Alopecia
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530
Q

What is Vit. B6 used for?

A

Pyridoxine - converted to pyridoxal phosphate
Used in:
Transamination (ALT/AST)
Decarboxylation
Glycogen phosphorylase
Synthesis of cystathionine, heme, niacin, histamine, serotonin, epinephrine, NE, GABA

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531
Q

What are the common causes of B6 deficiency?

What is seen?

A
Pyridoxine deficiency caused by - INH & OCP use
Symptoms:
Convulsions
Hyper-irritability
Peripheral neuropathy
Sideroblastic anemia
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532
Q

What is Vit. B7 used for?

A

Biotin - cofactor for carboxylation enzymes:
Pyruvate carboxylase
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase
Propionyl-CoA carboxylase

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533
Q

What is seen in B7 deficiency?

A
Biotin deficiency is rare (abx use or egg white over-ingestion)
Symptoms:
Dermatitis
Enteritis
Alopecia
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534
Q

What is the Vit. B9 used for?

A

Folic acid - converted to THF for methylation rxns in DNA/RNA synthesis

Found in leafy green vegetables

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535
Q

What is seen in Vit. B9 deficiency?

A

Folic acid deficiency - seen in pregnancy & alcoholism
Megaloblastic anemia
Neural tube defects in pregnancy

*Most common vitamin deficiency in the U.S.

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536
Q

What is B12 used for?

A
Cobalamin used for:
Homocysteine methyltransferase (Homocysteine --> Methionine; also regenerates THF for thymidylate synthase)

Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (Methylmalonyl-CoA (from odd-chain FA’s) –> Succinyl-CoA)

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537
Q

What is seen in B12 deficiency?

What causes it?

A

Cobalamin deficiency:
Megaloblastic anemia
Hypersegmented PMN’s
Subacute combined degeneration (abnormal myelin)

Caused by:
Malabsorption
Diphyllabothrium latum
Lack of IF (pernicious anemia, gastric bypass)
Lack of terminal ileum (Crohn’s)
Alcoholics
Use Schilling test (radiolabeled B12) to determine cause

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538
Q

What is S-adenosyl methionine used for?

A

SAM (ATP + methionine) is used for conversion of NE –> EPI

Requires Folic acid & B12 to regenerate Methionine (& thus SAM)

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539
Q

What is Vit. C used for?

A

Ascorbic acid:
Antioxidant
Aids in Fe2+ absorption
Hydroxylation of proline & lysine in collagen synthesis
Used in dopamine beta-hydroxylase (Dop –> NE)

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540
Q

What is seen in Vit. C deficiency?

A
Scurvy:
Swollen gums
Bruising
Hemarthrosis
Anemia
Poor wound healing
Weakened immune response
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541
Q

What is seen with Vit. C excess?

A

N/V
Diarrhea
Fatigue
Iron toxicity

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542
Q

What are the forms of Vit. D and their uses?

A

D2 - ergocalciferol; ingested form plants
D3 - cholecalciferol; ingested in milk & synthesized in skin
25-OH-D3 - storage form
1,25-OH-D3 - Calcitriol; active form

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543
Q

What is the function of Vit. E?

What is seen in deficiency?

A

Antioxidant for erythrocytes

Deficiency –> hemolytic anemia & subacute combined degeration

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544
Q

What is the use of Vit. K?

A

K is for Koagulation

Catalyzes gamma-carboxylation of glutamic acid residues on clotting proteins (II, VII, IX, X, C, S)

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545
Q

What is seen in Vit. K deficiency?

A

Hemorrhagic disease of the newborn (given shot @ birth)
^ PT & aPTT but normal bleeding time
Can also be seen following prolonged use of broad-spectrum antibiotics (only acquired through intestinal flora synthesis)

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546
Q

What is seen in Zn deficiency?

A

Delayed wound healing
Hypogonadism
Anosmia/Dysgeusia

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547
Q

What is Fomepizole used for?

A

Fomepizole inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase - it is the antidote for methanol or ethylene glycol poisoning.

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548
Q

How does ethanol cause hypoglycemia?

A

It increases the NADH/NAD+ ratio in the liver –> inhibition of gluconeogenesis & ^ fatty acid synthesis (fatty liver).

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549
Q

What is Kwashiorkor?

Marasmus?

A

Kwashiorkor - lack of protein –> skin lesions, edema, fatty liver, anemia, protruberant abdomen, change in hair color

Marasmus - lack of calories –> loss of subQ fat, loss of muscle, edema

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550
Q

What is the net ATP production by 1 molecule of glucose?

A

Aerobic (muscle; glycerol-3-P shuttle) - 30 ATP
Aerobic (heart/liver; malate-aspartate shuttle) - 32 ATP
Anaerobic glycolysis - 2 ATP

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551
Q

How are hexokinase & glucokinase different?

A

Hexokinase - ubiquitous, high affinity, low Vmax, inhibited by Glu-6-P

Glucokinase - liver & pancreatic beta cells, low affinity, high Vmax, inhibited by Fru-6-P

So at low [glu], sequestration in the tissues, and at high [glu], sequestration in the liver.

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552
Q

What is the net equation for glycolysis?

A

Glu + 2ADP + 2NAD+ –> 2pyruvate + 2ATP + 2NADH + 2H+ + 2H20

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553
Q

How do hormones affect Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphate levels?

A

Glucagon –> ^ cAMP –> ^ PKA –> phosphorylates to activate Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphatase –> less Fructose-2,6-BP –> inhibited PFK-1 –> inhibited glycolysis

Insulin does the opposite, by decreasing cAMP –> eventual ^ in PFK-2 activity –> ^ Fru-2,6-BP –> ^ PFK-1 activity –> glycolysis

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554
Q

How does arsenic act as a poison?

What are the symptoms?

A

Arsenic inhibits lipoic acid –> inhibited functioning of pyruvate dehydrogenase

Symptoms:
Vomiting
Rice water stools
Garlic breath

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555
Q

What is the antidote to arsenic poisoning?

A

Dimercaprol

It competes with pyruvate dehydrogenase thiols and binds up arsenic, which can then be excreted in the urine.

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556
Q

What is the treatment for pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency?

A

Most mutations are X-linked –> neurologic defects from birth

Treatment = ketogenic diet (fats, Lysine & Leucine)

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557
Q

What is the rate-limiting step in glycolysis?

How is it regulated?

A

Fructose-6-P –> Fructose-1,6-Bisphosphate
(PFK-1)

PFK-1 ^ by AMP & Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphate
PFK-1 inhibited by ATP & Citrate

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558
Q

What steps in glycolysis require ATP?

A

Glucose –> Glucose-6-Phosphate
(Hexokinase/Glucokinase)

Fructose-6-Phosphate –> Fructose-1,6-Bisphosphate
(PFK-1)

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559
Q

What steps in glycolysis liberate ATP?

A

1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate –> 3-Phosphoglycerate (2 ATP total)
(Phosphoglycerate kinase)

Phosphoenolpyruvate –> Pyruvate (2 ATP total)
(Pyruvate kinase)

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560
Q

What are the possible fates of Pyruvate produced by glycolysis?

A

1) Pyruvate –> Alanine
(ALT; Used to carry NH3 to the liver via the Alanine cycle)

2) Pyruvate + Co2 + ATP –> Oxaloacetate
(Pyruvate carboxylase; Produces Oxaloacetate to replenish it in the TCA cycle or for gluconeogenesis)

3) Pyruvate –> Acetyl-CoA + NADH + CO2
(Pyruvate dehydrogenase; Transition from glycolysis to TCA cycle)

4) Pyruvate –> Lactate + NAD+
(LDH; The end of anaerobic glycolysis, regenerates NAD+; Lactate enters Cori cycle)

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561
Q

What tissues undergo anaerobic glycolysis as their major pathway?

A
RBC's
Leukocytes
Kidney medulla
Lens
Cornea
Testes
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562
Q

What is produced by the TCA cycle?

A
Per 1 Acetyl-CoA:
3 NADH
1 FADH2
2 CO2
1 GTP

So 10 ATP total per Acetyl-CoA (x2 per glucose)

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563
Q

What are the intermediates of the TCA cycle?

A

Citrate Is Krebs’ Starting Substrate For Making Oxaloacetate

Citrate
Isocitrate
alpha-Ketoglutarate
Succinyl-CoA
Succinate
Fumarate
Malate
Oxaloacetate
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564
Q

What is cortisol’s effect regarding vascular & bronchial smooth muscle?

A

Cortisol is permissive because it increases vascular & bronchial smooth muscle reactivity to catecholamines.

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565
Q

How can you identify the class of antiretroviral drug?

A
-navir = protease inhibitor
Raltegravir = integrase inhibitor
Enfuvertide = fusion inhibitor
Nevirapine, Efavirenz, Delaverdine = NNRTI
All others = NRTI
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566
Q

What is the mechanism of Triptan drugs?

A

Sumatriptan:
Presynaptic 5-HT(1B/1D) agonist

It inhibits functioning of trigeminal nerve & release of vasoactive peptide –> reduces neurogenic inflammation & causes vasoconstriction

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567
Q

Where is airway resistance the greatest?

A

Half of airway resistance comes from the upper airways (nose, pharynx)

In the lower airways, resistance increases between the 2-5th bronchial generations due to turbulent flowbut then decreases due to ^ in cross-sectional area & laminar flow.

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568
Q

Describe the innervation of the larynx

A

Vagus nerve –> Superior laryngeal n. & recurrent laryngeal n.

Superior laryngeal nerve:
External branch –> motor to cricothyroid muscle
Internal branch –> sensory above the vocal cords

Recurrent laryngeal nerve –> motor to all other laryngeal muscles; sensory below the vocal cords

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569
Q

Describe the events of oxidative phosphorylation

A

Complex I: NADH is oxidized, 1 H+ is pumped (into intermembranous space)
Complex II: FADH2 is oxidized, no H+ is pumped
Complex III: 1 H+ is pumped
Complex IV: 1 H+ is pumped
Complex V: ATP synthase –> each proton allowed back into mitochondrial matrix = 1 ATP

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570
Q

What is the mechanism of Rotenone?

A

Inhibits ETC complex 1 (RotenONE)

Decreased proton gradient

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571
Q

What is the mechanism of cyanide?

A

Cyanide & CO inhibit Complex IV of the ETC

Decreased proton gradient

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572
Q

What is the mechanism of Antimycin A?

A

Inhibits complex III of the ETC

decreased proton gradient

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573
Q

What is the mechanism of Oligomycin?

A

Directly inhibits ATP synthase

^ proton gradient

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574
Q

What are the irreversible enzymes in gluconeogenesis?

A

“Pathway Produces Fresh Glucose”

Pyruvate carboxylase
(mitochondria; Pyruvate –> Oxaloacetate)

PEP Carboxykinase
(cytosol; Oxaloacetate –> Phosphoenolpyruvate)

Fructose-1,6-Bisphosphatase
(cytosol)

Glucose-6-Phosphatase
(ER)

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575
Q

What are the primary gluconeogenic precursors?

A
Lactate
Glycerol
Alanine
Glutamine
(account for 90% of gluconeogenesis)
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576
Q

Where does gluconeogenesis occur?

A

Liver&raquo_space; Kidney, Intestinal epithelium

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577
Q

What is the purpose of HMP shunt pathway?

A

The pentose phosphate pathway (HMP shunt) provides:
Ribose-5-P for nucleotide synthesis (pentose)
NADPH for reductive reactions (Phosphate)
(used to reduce Glutathione, produces ROI for resp. burst)

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578
Q

What are the steps of the HMP shunt pathway?

A

Oxidative:
Glu-6-P –> 2 NADPH + Ribulose-5-P
(G6PD; Irreversible; Rate-limiting)

Non-oxidative:
Ribulose-5-P –> Ribose-5-P or Glycerol-3-P or Fructose-6-P
(Phosphopentose isomerase transketolases; Reversible; Requires B1)

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579
Q

What are the steps involved in the synthesis of ROI’s for respiratory burst?

A

1) O2 –> Superoxide (O2-)
(NADPH Oxidase; Requires NADPH; Def. in CGD)

2) O2- –> H2O2
(Superoxide dismutase)

3) H2O2 + Cl- –> HOCl-
(Myeloperoxidase; Produces hypochlorite/bleach)

H202 can be inactivated by bacterial catalase or endogenous glutathione peroxidase

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580
Q

What are the common precipitants of hemolysis in a G6PD patient?

A
Infection
Fava beans
Sulfa drugs
Primaquine
Dapsone
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581
Q

What is seen on a blood smear in G6PD deficiency?

A

Heinz Bodies - Oxidized Hb

Bite cells - splenic macrophages take a bite out of RBC’s to remove heinz bodies

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582
Q

What is the process of fructose metabolism to enter glycolysis?

A

Fructose –> Fructose-1-P
(Fructokinase)

Fructose-1-P –> DHAP + Glyceraldehyde
(Aldolase B)

Glyceraldehyde –> Glyceraldehyde-3-P
(Triose kinase)

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583
Q

What is deficient in Essential fructosuria?

What is seen?

A

Aut. recessive defect in Fructokinase

Fructose appears in blood & urine
(Benign disease, as are both fructose disorders when compared to their galactose counterparts)

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584
Q

What causes Fructose intolerance?

What is seen?

A

Aut. recessive deficiency of Aldolase B

Fructose-1-P accumulates, taking away phosphate groups from glycogenolysis & gluconeogenesis

Symptoms:
Hypoglycemia, jaundice, cirrhosis, vomiting

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585
Q

What is the treatment for fructose/galactose metabolism disorders?

A

Exclude from diet.
Fructose –> exclude fructose & sucrose
Galactose –> exclude galactose & lactose

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586
Q

What are the steps in the metabolism of galactose to glucose?

A

Galactose –> Gal-1-P
(Galactokinase)

Gal-1-P –> Glucose-1-P
(Gal-1-P Uridyltransferase/GALT; Requires UDP-Glu from 4-epimerase)

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587
Q

What are the galactose metabolic disorders?

What is seen?

A
Galactokinase deficiency:
Galactose in blood/urine
Infantile cataracts (Galactose --> Galactitol shunt)
Classic Galactosemia (GALT deficiency):
Failure to thrive
Jaundice
E. coli sepsis
Infantile cataracts
Mental retardation
Hepatomegaly
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588
Q

What is the polyol pathway?

What are its components?

A

It’s an alternative method for trapping glucose within a cell (vs. hexokinase/glucokinase).

Steps:
Glucose –> Sorbitol
(Aldose reductase)

Sorbitol –> Fructose
(Sorbitol dehydrogenase; Not present in Schwann, retina, kidney)

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589
Q

What tissues have Aldose reductase?

What tissues have insufficient Sorbitol dehydrogenase?

A

Both enzymes:
Liver, lens, ovaries, seminal vesicles

Insufficient Aldose Reductase:
Retina, Schwann cells, kidneys

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590
Q

What does Aldose reductase catalyze?

A

Glucose –> Sorbitol

Galactose –> Galactitol

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591
Q

What are the essential amino acids?

A

PVT. TIM HALL

Phe
Val
Thr
Trp
Ile
Met
His
Arg
Leu
Lys

Always Argues, never Tyres

**His & Arg are semi-essential (required during growth)

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592
Q

What is the purpose of the cori cycle?

Alanine cycle?

A

Cori cycle: Converts lactate & pyruvate to glucose for export to tissues

Alanine cycle: Alanine carries amino groups to liver

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593
Q

What is the function of ALT

AST?

A

ALT:
Alanine + alpha-Ketoglutarate –> Pyruvate + Glutamate
(Part of alanine cyle; Glutamate enters urea cycle; Pyruvate enters gluconeogenesis)

AST:
Glutamate + Oxaloacetate –> alpha-Ketoglutarate + Aspartate
(alpha-Ketoglutarate can then be used in alanine or TCA cycle; Aspartate can enter urea cycle; Glutamate can also enter urea cycle directly through deamination)

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594
Q

What is the rate-limiting step in the urea cycle?

A

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I
CO2 + NH4+ (+2ATP) –> Carbamoyl phosphate

It’s the first step

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595
Q

What are the intermediates in the urea cycle?

A

“Ordinarily, Careless Crappers Are Also Frivolous About Urination”

Ornithine
\+Carbamoyl phosphate
Citrulline
\+Aspartate
Arginosuccinate
-Fumarate
Arginine
Urea
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596
Q

What is seen with ammonia intoxication?

What is the treatment?

A

Symptoms: Asterixis, slurred speech, somnolence, vomiting, cerebral edema, blurred vision

Treament:
Lactulose - acidifies GI lumen –> ^ excretion of NH4+
Limit dietary protein
Benzoate/Phenylbutyrate –> bind AA’s –> ^ excretion

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597
Q
What amino acids are these derived from?
Dopamine/NE/EPI
Serotonin/Melatonin
Heme
Histamine
Creatine
Urea
NO
GABA
Glutathione
A
Dopamine/NE/EPI = Phenylalanine (converted to Tyr first)
Serotonin/Melatonin = Tryptophan
Heme = Glycine
Histamine = Histidine
Creatine/Urea/NO = Arginine
GABA/Glutathione = Glutamate
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598
Q

What are the steps & enzymes involved in catecholamine synthesis?

A

Phenylalanine –> Tyrosine
(Phenylalanine hydroxylase; requires tetrahydrobiopterin)

Tyrosine –> DOPA (dihydroxyphenylalanine)
(Tyrosine hydroxylase; requires tetrahydrobiopterin)

DOPA –> Dopamine
(Dopa decarboxylase; requires B6)

Dopamine –> NE
(Dopamine beta-hydroxylase; requires Vit. C)

NE –> EPI
(Phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase; requires SAM)

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599
Q

What causes PKU?

What is seen in PKU?

A

Phenylalanine hydroxylase (Phe –> Tyr) deficiency or tetrahydrobiopterin (cofactor; 2% of cases) deficiency.

Symptoms:
Mental retardation
Growth retardation
Fair skin
Eczema
Musty/Mousy body odor
Phenylacetate/Phenyllactate/Phenylpyruvate in urine
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600
Q

What is the treatment for PKU?

A
Avoid phenylalanine (artificial sweeteners)
Increase Tyrosine intake
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601
Q

What is the danger of maternal PKU?

A

If uncontrolled during pregnancy, child will be affected (mental/growth retardation, cardiac abn) despite the child being a heterozygote.

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602
Q

What causes Onchronosis?

What is seen?

A

Alkaptonuria = a congenital deficiency of homogentistic acid oxidase (Tyr –> Fumarate to degrade Tyr).

Symptoms:
Dark connective tissue (ears, nose, cheeks) & sclera
Urine turns black when exposed to air
Severe arthralgias

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603
Q

What causes albinism?

A

Ocular albinism = X-linked
Generalized albinism = varies

Defect is either in tyrosinase (Tyr –> melanin) or in Tyrosine transporters (decreased Tyr available). Can also result from a lack of neural crest cell migration.

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604
Q

What causes homocysteinuria?

What is the treatment?

A

Three forms:
1) Cystathione synthase deficiency
Tx: Decreased Met in diet & ^ Cysteine, B12, Folate

2) Decreased affinity of cystathione synthase for B6
Tx: ^^ dietary B6

3) Homocysteine methyltransferase deficiency

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605
Q

What is seen in Homocystinuria?

A
^^ Homocysteine in urine
Cysteine is essential
Mental retardation
Osteoporosis
Tall stature
Kyphosis
Lens subluxation
Stroke/MI
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606
Q

What causes Cystinuria?
What is seen?
How is it treated?

A

Hereditary defect in renal reabsorption of COAL (Cysteine, Ornithine, Arginine, Lysine) –> Staghorn calculi

Think of this if recurrent kidney stones seen in a young pt.
Tx: Good hydration & urinary alkalinization

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607
Q

What causes Maple Syrup Urine Disease?

What is seen?

A

Congenital deficiency of alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase –> no degradation of branched amino acids.
“I Love Vermont maple syrup” (Ile, Leu, Val)
Symptoms:
CNS defects/Mental retardation
Death
Urine smells like burned sugar

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608
Q

How is Cistinuria diagnosed?

A

1) Hexagonal crystals in urine

2) Sodium Cyanide-Nitroprusside test (detects sulfhydryl groups; purple –> + result)

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609
Q

What causes Hartnup disease?

What is seen?

A

Hereditary disorder preventing neutral amino acid transport in the kidney & intestine –> Tryptophan not absorbed in gut & ^ excretion in urine –> Pellegra (Niacin deficiency).

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610
Q

How is glyogenolysis stimulated/inhibited in muscle?

A

Glucagon (live only) or EPI (liver & muscle –> ^ cAMP –> PKA –> activated Glycogen phosphorylase kinase –> Activated Glycogen phosporylase

Insulin –> Receptor tyrosine kinase –> Protein phosphatase –> inactive Glycogen phosphorylase

**Ca2+/Calmodulin can also activate Glycogen phosphorylase kinase to coordinate glycogenolysis in active muscle

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611
Q

What type of bonding is seen in glycogen?

A

alpha (1,6) = straight

alpha (1,4) = branch

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612
Q

What are the names of the glycogen storage diseases?

A

“Viagra Pills Cause A Massive Hard-on”

Type I = von Gierke's
II = Pompe's
III = Cori's
IV = Anderson's
V = McArdle's
VI = Her's
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613
Q

What causes von Gierke’s disease?

How does it present?

A

Glucose-6-Phosphatase deficiency

Symptoms:
Severe fasting hypoglycemia
^^ Liver glycogen --> Hepatomegaly
^ Blood lactate
Fat cheeks, thin extremities
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614
Q

What causes Pompe’s disease?

A

Lysosomal alpha-1,4-glucosidase deficiency

Symptoms:
Cardiomegaly (Pompe’s trashes the pump)
Systemic findings
Early death

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615
Q

What causes Cori’s disease?

What is seen?

A

Debranching enzyme (alpha-1,6-glucosidase) deficiency

Symptoms:
Milder form of Type I (gluconeogenesis intact)
Hepatomegaly
Fasting hypoglycemia

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616
Q

What causes McArdle’s disease?

What is seen?

A

Skeletal muscle glycogen phosphorylase deficiency

Symptoms:
Painful muscle cramps & myoglobinuria with exercise
Often presents in early 20’s

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617
Q

Which LSD’s are associated with Ashkenazi Jews?

A

Tay-Sachs
Niemann Pick
Gaucher’s

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618
Q

Which LSD’s are X-linked recessive?

A

Fabry’s
Hunter’s

All others are autosomal recessive

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619
Q

What causes Fabry’s disease?

How does it present?

A

alpha-galactosidase A deficiency –> ceramide trihexoside accumulation

Symptoms:
Glove & stocking neuropathy
Angiokeratomas
Cardiovascular/renal disease

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620
Q

What causes Gaucher’s disease?

What is seen?

A

Glucocerebrosidase deficiency –> glucocerebrosidase accum.

Symptoms:
HSM
Aseptic necrosis of femur
Bone crises
Gaucher's cells (crumpled macrophages)
Thrombocytopenia & anemia
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621
Q

What causes Niemann-Pick disease?

What is seen?

A

Sphingomyelinase deficiency –> Spingomyelin accum.

Symptoms:
HSM
Progressive neurodegeneration/Developmental delay
Cherry red spot on macula
Foam cells
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622
Q

What causes Tay-Sach’s disease?

What is seen?

A

Hexosaminidase A deficiency (Tay-SaX) –> GM2 ganglioside accum.

Symptoms:
Progressive degeneration/Developmental delay
Cherry red spot on macula
Lysosomes with onion skin appearance
NO HSM (vs. Niemann-Pick)
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623
Q

What causes Krabbe’s disease?

What is seen?

A

Galactocerebrosidase deficiency

Symptoms:
Peripheral neuropathy
Developmental delay
Optic atrophy
Globoid cells
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624
Q

What causes Metachromatic Leukodystrophy disease?

What is seen?

A

Arylsulfatase A deficiency –> Cerebroside sulfate accum.

Symptoms:
Central & peripheral demyelination
Ataxia
Dementia

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625
Q

What causes Hurler’s syndrome?

What is seen?

A

alpha-L-iduronidase deficiency –> Heparin & Dermatin sulfat accum.

Symptoms:
Developmental delay
Gargoylism
Airway obstruction
Corneal clouding
HSM
Gibbus deformity
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626
Q

What causes Hunter’s syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Iduronate sulfase deficiency –> Heparin & Dermatin sulfate accum.

Symptoms:
Mild Hurler’s dz but aggressive behavior & no corneal clouding

Hunters are aggressive men & must see clearly

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627
Q

What intermediate is used to synthesize fatty acids?

A

Citrate –> Acetyl-CoA –> Malonyl-CoA –> Fatty acid

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628
Q

How does Carnitine deficiency present?

A

Inability to transport long chain FA’s into the mitochondria for beta oxidation –> Weakness, hypoketotic hypoglycemia

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629
Q

What are the ketone bodies?

What are they formed from?

A

Acetoacetate
Acetone
beta-Hydroxybutyrate

They are formed from the oxidation of FA’s –> Acetyl-CoA. When TCA intermediates are depleted (Oxaloacetate) –> Ketogenesis instead

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630
Q

When are ketone bodies seen?

A

Prolonged starvation
Alcoholics (Oxaloacetate is depleted due to –> to malate)
DKA (Oxaloacetate is depleted from gluconeogenesis)

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631
Q

What is the progression of metabolic fuel usage during exercise?

A

ATP
Creatinine (seconds)
Anaerobic glycolysis (minutes-1h)
Aerobic metabolism & FA oxidation (surpasses anaerobic glycolysis @ 1h)

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632
Q

How does Aspirin overdose cause fever?

A

Uncouples ETC –> electron transport continues but no ATP is produced –> Heat

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633
Q
What is the function of the following apolipoproteins?
E
A-I
C-II
B-48
B-100
A
E --> mediates remnant uptake
A-I --> Activates LCAT
C-II --> Lipoprotein lipase cofactor
B-48 --> Mediates chylomicron secretion
B-100 --> Binds LDL receptor
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634
Q

What are the functions of the various Lipoproteins?

A

Chylomicron - Delivers dietary TG’s to peripheral tissue & cholesterol to the liver.

VLDL - Secreted by liver to deliver hepatic TG’s to peripheral tissue

IDL - Degradation product of VLDL; returns to liver

LDL - Delivers hepatic cholesterol to peripheral tissues; taken up into target tissues via LDLR; formed via hepatic lipase modification of IDL

HDL - Reverse cholesterol transport from periphery to liver; acts as repository for ApoC & ApoE; secreted by liver & intestine

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635
Q

What causes Type I familial dyslipidemia?

What is seen?

A

Lipoprotein lipase deficiency or altered C-II –> ^ chylomicrons, TG, cholesterol

Symptoms/Risks:
Pancreatitis
HSM
Xanthomas
No ^ risk for atherosclerosis
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636
Q

What causes Type IIa familial dyslipidemia?

What is seen?

A

Autosomal dominant. Absent or reduced LDLR –> ^^LDL, cholesterol

Symptoms:
Early atherosclerosis
Achilles xanthomas
Corneal arcus (blue ring @ outside of iris)

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637
Q

What causes Type IV familial dyslipidemia?

What is seen?

A

Autosomal dominant. Hepatic overproduction of VLDL.

Causes pancreatitis

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638
Q

What causes Abetalipoproteinemia?

A

Aut recessive mutation in Microsomal TRG Transfer Protein (MTP) gene –> reduced B-48 & B-100 –> reduced chylomicron & VLDL synthesis

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639
Q

What are the symptoms of abetalipoproteinemia?

A
Seen in the first few months of life
Failure to thrive
Steatorrhea
Acanthocytosis (spur cells; Vit. E)
Ataxia
Night blindness (Vit. A)

Intestinal biopsy - Lipid accumulation within enterocytes

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640
Q

What is seen with TCA overdose?

A

TCCAA

Temperature (hyperpyrexia)
Convulsions
Coma
Arrhythmia
Apnea
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641
Q

What type of foods often contain S. aureus food poisoning (pre-formed toxin)?

A

Picnic foods, especially containing mayonnaise.

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642
Q

How do eosinophils function in parasitic infections?

A

Their IgE-specific Fc receptors bind IgE on opsonized parasites & they degranulate (antibody-dependent cytotoxicity)

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643
Q

What types of drugs are typically hepatically eliminated?

A

Lipophilic drugs

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644
Q

Anti-CCP Antibodies

A

Anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide Ab’s –> Rheumatoid arthritis

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645
Q

What signaling molecules use the JAK/STAT pathway?

A

Colony-simulating factors
Prolactin
Growth hormone

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646
Q

What is the most rapidly metabolized sugar via glycolysis?

A

Fructose

This is because it enters the glycolytic pathway after the rate-limiting step of glycolysis (PFK-1)

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647
Q

Which penicillins are anti-pseudomonal?
Cephalosporins?
Aminoglycosides?
Fluoroquinolones?

A
Pen = Ticarcillin, Piperacillin
Ceph = Ceftazidime, Cefepime
Aminogly = Tobramycin, Gentamycin, Amikacin
FQ = Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin

Also Aztreonam, Imipenem, Meropenem

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648
Q

What is provided in chocolate agar?

A

Chocolate agar is required for H. influenzae culture. It provides:
Factor V = hematin
Factor X = NAD+

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649
Q

What is the urinary metabolite for serotonin?

A

5-HIAA

5-Hydroxyindoleaceticacid

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650
Q

What anti-mycobacterial agents work on intracellular bacteria?

A

Pyrazinamide - it works best at acidic environments like within a phagosome

The others (RIES) work on extracellular bacteria best.

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651
Q

What other abnormalities are commonly seen alongside imperforate anus?

A

Genitourinary abnormalities

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652
Q

What is seen in myeloperoxidase deficiency?

A

Candida infections

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653
Q

What is observed with apoptosis?

A
Pyknosis (shrinkage)
Karyorrhexis (fragmentation) --> DNA laddering (180 bp intervals)
Karyolysis (destruction of chromatin)
Cell shrinkage
Apoptotic body formation
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654
Q

What induces intrinsic apoptosis?

Extrinsic?

A

Intrinsic:
Withdrawal of growth factor
Injury (radiation, hypoxia)

Extrinsic:
FasL binding to Fas receptor
Granzyme B (enters via perforin; CTL’s)

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655
Q

Where does liquefactive necrosis occur?
Fat necrosis?
Fibrinoid necrosis?
Gangrenous necrosis?

A

Liquefactive = brain, bacterial abscesses, pancreas
Fat necrosis = peripancreatic fat, breast
Fibrinoid necrosis = blood vessels (malignant HTN, vasculitis)
Gangrenous necrosis = extremities & GI
(Can be dry (mummy) or wet (bacterial infection)

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656
Q

What type of calcification is seen with normal Ca2+ levels?

A

Dystrophic calcification = normal serum [Ca2+]

Metastatic calcification = ^^ [Ca2+]

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657
Q

What is seen with irreversible cell damage?

Reversible?

A
Irreversible:
Disruption of 3 membranes
-Plasma membrane
-Mitochondrial membrane (Cyt. C)
- Lysosomal membrane

Reversible:
Cell swelling (due to reduced ATP –> reduced pump action)
Ribosomal detachment
Fatty change

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658
Q

What cells are affected in Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy?

A

HIE affects:

  • Pyramidal cells of hippocampus
  • Purkinje cells of cerebellum
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659
Q

What are the cell-mediators of the cardinal signs of inflammation?

A
Calor/Rubor = Histamine, Prostaglandins, Bradykinin
Tumor = Histamine, Tissue damage
Dolor = Bradykinin & PGE2
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660
Q

Where does leukocyte extravasation occur?

A

The post-capillary venules

This is the site of vascular permeability

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661
Q

What are the steps of leukocyte extravasation & their mediators?

A

1) Margination (occurs due to vasodilation)
2) Rolling (P/E-selectin binds Sialyl-Lewis)
3) Adhesion (ICAM-1 binds LFA-1 = integrin)
4) Diapedesis (PECAM-1 binds itself)
5) Migration (CILK: C5a, IL-8, LTB4, Kallikrein)

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662
Q

What is released from Weibel-Palade bodies?

A

von Willebrand Factor

P-selectin

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663
Q

What are the stages of wound healing?

A

1) Inflammatory (immediate)
2) Proliferative (2 days; granulation tissue, collagen (III), contraction by myofibroblasts)
3) Remodeling (1 week; Type III collagen –> Type I)

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664
Q

What dietary deficiencies can slow wound healing?

A

Ascorbic acid - required for collagen hydroxylation –> crosslinks

Copper - crosslinking enzyme requires it

Zinc - collagenase requires it

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665
Q

What diseases cause granuloma formation?

A
MTB
Fungal infections
Syphilis
Leprosy
Bartonella hensalae (cat scratch disease)
Sarcoidosis
Crohn's disease
Wegener's
Churg-Strauss
Berylliosis/silicosis
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666
Q

What causes exudative fluid?

A

Either inflammation or lymphatic obstruction

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667
Q

What is the specific gravity of transudate vs. exudate?

A

Transudate < 1.012

Exudate > 1.020

668
Q

What conditions can lower ESR?

A

Sickle cell
Polycythemia
CHF

669
Q

What stain is used to detect amyloidosis?

A

Congo red stain

Lights up with “apple green birefringence” under polarized light

670
Q

What are the systemic amyloidoses and their causes

A

AL (primary) amyloisosis:
Plasma cell dyscrasia or Multiple myeloma –> Ig light chain deposition

AA (secondary) amyloisosis:
Chronic inflammatory dz (RA, IBD, chronic infx), cancer, Familial Mediterranean fever –> Amyloid A (acute phase reactant)

671
Q

What is seen with systemic amyloidosis?

A
Nephrotic syndrome
Restrictive cardiomyopathy
Easy bruising
Hepatomegaly
Neuropathy
672
Q

What causes dialysis-related amyloidosis?

What is seen?

A

Beta-2-microglobulin deposits in joints –> carpal tunnel & joint issues

673
Q

What causes Heritable amyloidosis?

What is seen?

A

MUTATED Transthyretin deposition in heart & brain

674
Q

What causes Alzheimer’s disease?

A

Deposition of beta-amyloid (from amyloid precursor protein) in the brain

*APP is located on chromosome 21 (why Down’s causes early-onset Alzheimer’s)

675
Q

By what means do cancers tend to metastasize?

A
Carcinomas = lymphatics
Exceptions:
-Renal cell carcinoma
-HCC
-Follicular thyroid carcinoma
-Choriocarcinoma

Sarcomas = hematogenous

676
Q

How can clonality of a possible neoplasia be determined?

A

Females - G6PD expression (alleles should be 1:1)

B-cell tumors = Ig light chain (normal k:L = 3:1)

677
Q

What -plasia’s are reversible & irreversible?

A

Reversible = Hyperplasia, Metaplasia, Dysplasia

Irreversible = Anaplasia, Neoplasia, Desmoplasia

678
Q

What cancers is ionizing radiation associated with?

A

Leukemias
Papillary thyroid cancer
Breast cancer

679
Q
What are the characteristic intermediate filaments in the following tissues?
Mesenchyme
Neuroglia
Muscle
Neurons
Epithelium
A
Mesenchyme = Vimentin
Neuroglia = GFAP
Muscle = Desmin
Neurons = Neurofilaments
Epithelium = Keratin
680
Q

What is chromogranin a tumor marker for?

A

Neuroendocrine tumors

681
Q

What cancers stem from myc dysfunction?

A

myc = a transcription factor

c-myc –> Burkitt’s lymphoma
L-myc –> small cell Lung carcinoma
N-myc –> Neuroblastoma

682
Q

What cancer is c-kit found in?

A

GIST

683
Q

What tumor is BRAF mutated in?

A

Melanoma

684
Q

What do the Rb and p53 genes do?

A

Rb:
Inhibits E2F
G1–>S tumor suppressor

p53:
Transcription factor for p21
G1–>S tumor suppressor

685
Q

What is CEA a tumor marker for?

A

Colorectal & Pancreatic carcinoma

*Very nonspecific

686
Q

What is AFP a tumor marker for?

A

Hepatocellular carcinoma

Yolk sac tumors

687
Q

What is CA-125 a tumor marker for?

A

Ovarian cancer

688
Q

What is S-100 a tumor marker for?

A

Melanoma
Neural tumors
Schwannoma

689
Q

What is Alkaline phosphatase a tumor marker for?

A

Mets to bone

Paget’s dz of the bone

690
Q

What is Bombesin a tumor marker for?

A

Neuroblastoma

Lung/gastric cancer

691
Q

What is TRAP a tumor marker for?

A

Tartrate-Resistant Acid Phosphatase

Hairy cell leukemia
TRAP the hairy animal

692
Q

What is CA-19-9 a tumor marker for?

A
Pancreatic adenocarcinoma
(19-9 = 10 = the # of letters in "pancreatic")
693
Q

What types of neoplasms can EBV cause?

A

Burkitt’s lymphoma
Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma
CNS lymphoma (immunocompromised pts)

694
Q

What type of cancer can aflatoxins cause?

A

HCC

695
Q

What type of cancer can vinyl chloride cause?

A

Liver angiosarcoma

696
Q

What type of cancer can nitrosamines cause?

A

(smoked foods) –> gastric adenocarcinoma (intestinal type)

697
Q

What type of cancers can cigarette use cause?

A
Mouth/Esophageal/larynx
Lung
Pancreas
Kidney
Bladder
698
Q

What type of cancer(s) can arsenic cause?

A

SCC (skin; like the women who used it to lighten their skin)

Liver angiosarcoma

699
Q

What type of cancer(s) can naphthalene cause?

A

Aniline dyes –> Transitional cell carcinoma (bladder)

700
Q

What types of cancers are associated with alcohol?

A

SCC of the mouth & esophagus
HCC (via cirrhosis)
Pancreatic (not a risk factor; but chronic pancreatitis is)

701
Q

What type of cancer is associated with the following paraneoplastic syndrome?
ACTH

A

Clinically –> Cushing’s syndrome

Small cell lung carcinoma

702
Q

What type of cancer is associated with the following paraneoplastic syndrome?
ADH

A

SIADH

Small cell lung carcinoma
Intracranial neoplasms

703
Q

What type of cancer is associated with the following paraneoplastic syndrome?
PTHrp

A

Clinically –> Hypercalcemia

Squamous cell lung cancer
Renal cell cancer
Breast cancer

*The most common cause of clinically apparent hypercalcemia = cancer

704
Q

What type of cancer is associated with the following paraneoplastic syndrome?
Calcitriol

A

Clinically –> Hypercalcemia

Lymphoma

705
Q

What type of cancer is associated with the following paraneoplastic syndrome?
EPO

A

Clinically –> Polycythemia

Renal cell carcinoma
Hemangioblastoma
HCC
Pheochromocytoma

706
Q

What cancers are psamomma bodies seen in?

A
PSaMMoma:
Papillary thyroid
Serous cystadenocarcinoma
Meningioma
Mesothelioma
707
Q

What are the leading cancers in incidence?

Deaths?

A
Incidence = Breast/Prostate, Lung, CRC
Deaths = Lung, Breast/Prostate, CRC

Cancer is the 2nd leading cause of death in the U.S.

708
Q

What mets go to brain?

A

Lung > Breast > GU > Osteosarcoma > Melanoma > GI

50% of brain cancer is mets (usually at gray/white junction)

709
Q

What metastasizes to the liver?

A

CRC&raquo_space; stomach > pancreas

710
Q

What metastasized to the bone?

A

Prostate = Breast > lung > thyroid = testes

711
Q

What families do each of the viral hepatitides belong to?

A
HAV = Picornavirus
HBV = Hepadnavirus
HCV = Flavivirus
HDV = Deltavirus
HEV = Hepevirus
712
Q

What is the cause of propionic acidemia?

A

Propionyl-CoA carboxylase deficiency

Normally Valine or Isoleucine –> Propionyl-CoA
(branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase)
then Propionyl-CoA –> Methylmalonyl-CoA
(propionyl-CoA carboxylase)
then Methylmalonyl-CoA –> Succinyl-CoA
(methylmalonyl-CoA isomerase)
–> TCA cycle.

713
Q

What are the endoscopic & microscopic findings for Candida, HSV-1, & CMV esophagitis?

A

Candida:
grey/white pseudomembrane patches
Yeast & pseudohyphae

HSV-1:
Punched out ulcers
Molding, marginated, multinuclear w/ intranuclear inclusions

CMV:
Linear ulceration
Both intranuclear & cytoplasmic inclusions

714
Q

What does the Prussian blue stain detect?

A

Intracellular iron

715
Q

What causes hemosiderin-laden macrophages in the alveoli?

A

These are heart failure cells

Caused by left CHF –> ^ hydrostatic pressure in pulmonary capillaries –> RBC/heme leakage –> ingestion by macs

716
Q

What is the first line drug for absence seizures?

What is the mechanism?

A

Ethosuximide

It blocks T-type Ca2+ channels in the thalamus

717
Q

What anticonvulsants prolong Na+ channel recovery?

A

Phenytoin
Carbamazepine
Valproic acid

718
Q

How does botulism commonly present?

A

Diplopia, dysphagia, dysphonia within 12-46h of ingestion.

Can be caused by:

  • Improperly canned food
  • Wound infection
  • Honey (infantile botulism)
719
Q

What is seen in normal cardiac aging?

A
Decreased apex-to-base dimensions
Sigmoid shaped interventricular septum
Myocyte atrophy with interstitial fibrosis
Lipofuscin accumulation (byproducts of lipid metabolism)
720
Q

What cell surface markers are absent in PNH?

A

CD55 & CD59

721
Q

What is recommended regarding GBS and pregnancy?

A

Vaginal/rectal culture at 35-37 weeks. If positive –> intrapartum ampicillin (or penicillin)

722
Q

What anti-herpesvirus drugs require activation by viral enzymes?

A

Acyclovir- requires activation by HSV/VZV viral thymidine kinase

Gancyclovir - requires activation by CMV viral kinase

Cidofovir - does not require any activation

*All are viral DNA polymerase inhibitors

723
Q

How does Ondansetron work?

A

It’s a 5-HT3 antagonist:

1) Blocks vagal nerve stimulation of the medulla oblongata
2) Blocks central chemoreceptor trigger zone

724
Q

What is Km?

What determines Vmax?

A

Km = the concentration needed for 50% enzyme saturation
(inversely related to affinity)

Vmax is directly related to enzyme concentration

725
Q

Lineweaver-Burk plots:
What determines the X intercept?
Y intercept?
Slope?

A

X intercept = 1/(-Km)
Y intercept = 1/Vmax
Slope = Km/Vmax

726
Q

What kinetics variable do competitive inhibitors affect?

Noncompetitive inhibitors?

A

Competitive inhibitors increase Km –> decrease potency

Noncompetitive inhibitors decrease Vmax –> decrease efficacy

727
Q

What is the equation for bioavailability?

A

F = (AUCoral)/(AUCiv)*100

728
Q

What is the equation for volume of distribution?

A

Vd = Amount of drug in the body/plasma drug concentration

It is the theoretical volume of fluid needed to maintain a constant dose at a constant plasma concentration.

729
Q

What types of drugs have low vs high volumes of distribution?

A

Low Vd:
Large/charged molecules
Plasma protein bound

High Vd:
Lipophilic molecules
Tissue protein bound

730
Q

What is the equation for half life?

A

HL = (0.7*Vd)/CL

*A property specific to first-order kinetics (constant % of drug eliminated)

731
Q

What is the equation for drug clearance?

A
CL = (rate of elimination of the drug)/(plasma drug concentration)
CL = Vd*Ke  --------where Ke is the elimination constant

It’s given in units of flow

732
Q

How quickly do constant infusions of drugs reach steady state?

A

Takes 4-5 half lives

Steady state is a function of half-life, therefore dosing frequency, size, loading doses, etc. have no effect on the time it takes to reach steady state

733
Q

What is the equation for drug loading dose?

Maintenance dose?

A

LD = Target plasma concentration*(Vd/F)

MD = Target plasma concentration*(CL/F)

Renal or liver disease –> lower maintenance dose (only)

734
Q

What drugs have zero-order elimination?

A

PEA (round like 0):
Phenytoin
Ethanol
Aspirin

735
Q

How can urine pH affect renal elimination of a drug?

A

Ionized form cannot traverse membranes:

Weak acids are trapped in alkaline urine
(give IV HCO3)

Weak bases are trapped in acidic urine
(give IV NH4Cl)

736
Q

What occurs during Phase I & Phase II drug metabolism?

A

Phase I:
REDOX, CYP450 –> slightly polar metabolites (often still active)

Phase II:
GAGS: Glucuronidation, Acetylation, Glutathione, Sulfation
Usually yields inactive, very polar metabolites for urine excretion

737
Q

What phase of drug metabolism decreases first with age?

A

Phase I is affected first

738
Q

What is the equation for therapeutic index?

Therapeutic window?

A

TI = LD50/ED50

TW = min. effective dose - min. toxic dose

739
Q

What sympathetic structures are innervated by ACh?

A

Sweat glands
Adrenal medulla

All others are preganglionic ACh & postganglionic NE or Dop.

740
Q

What autonomic drugs act on what G-proteins & second messengers?

A

HAV 1 M&M = H1, a1, V1, M1, M3 –> Gq

MAD 2’s = M2, a2, D2 –> Gi

All others = Gs

741
Q

What are the sequences of the autonomic second messenger systems?

A

Gq –> Phospholipase C (cleaves PIP2) –> DAG & IP3
DAG –> PKC
IP3 –> Ca2+ influx –> smooth muscle contraction

Gi -/-> Adenylyl cyclase
Gs –> Adenylyl cyclase –> ^ cAMP –> PKA –>
–> ^Ca2+ (in heart) or ^MLCK activity

742
Q

What do alpha adrenergic receptors control?

A

Alpha1:
Vascular smooth muscle contraction
Mydriasis
Intestinal & bladder sphincter contraction

Alpha2:
Lowers central sympathetic outflow
Lowers insulin release
Lowers lipolysis
Causes platelet aggregation
743
Q

Where do muscarinic receptors act?

A
M1 = CNS, enteric nervous system
M2 = decreases HR & contractility of atria
M3 = exocrine glad secretions, gut peristalsis, bladder contraction, bronchoconstriction, miosis, accommodation
744
Q

Where do dopamine receptors act?

A

D1 = relaxes renal vascular smooth muscle

D2 modulates NT release in the brain

745
Q

Where do histamine receptors act in the body?

A

H1 = nasal & bronchial mucus production, bronchiolar constriction, pruritis, pain

H2 = gastric acid secretion

746
Q

Where does vasopressin act in the body?

A
V1 = vascular smooth muscle contraction
V2 = water reabsorption in the kidney
747
Q

What is the mechanism of Bethanechol?

What is it used for?

A

Cholinomimetic used to activate bladder & bowels.

postop ileus, neurogenic ileus, urinary retention

748
Q

What is the mechanism of Carbachol?

What is it used for?

A

Cholinomimetic used for glaucoma, pupillary contraction.

749
Q

What is the mechanism of Pilocarpine?

What is it used for?

A

Cholinomimetic that stimulates sweat, tears, saliva. Used for open-angle and closed-angle glaucoma.

“You cry, drool, and sweat on your pilo (pillow)”

750
Q

What is the mechanism of Methacholine?

What is it used for?

A

It is a cholinomimetic used in the challenge test to diagnose asthma.

751
Q

What is the mechanism of Neostigmine?

What is it used for?

A

It is an anticholinesterase inhibitor used for:
Postop/neurogenic ileus & urinary retention
Myasthenia gravis
Postop reversal of neuromuscular junction blockade

*Neo (no) CNS penetration

752
Q

What is the mechanism of Pyridostigmine?

What is it used for?

A

It is a long acting anticholinesterase inhibitor used for myasthenia gravis treatment

*It does not cross the BBB

753
Q

What is the mechanism of Edrophonium?

What is it used for?

A

It is a short-acting acetylcholinesterase inhibitor used to diagnose myasthenia gravis.

754
Q

What is the mechanism of Physostigmine?

What is it used for?

A

It is a acetylcholineesterase inhibitor used to treat anticholinergic overdose (crosses the BBB).

“Physostigmine phyxes atropine overdose”

755
Q

What is the mechanism of Donepezil?

What is it used for?

A

It is an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor used to treat Alzheimer’s disease.

756
Q

What is seen with cholinesterase inhibitor poisoning?

A

Due to compounds that irreversible bind AChE (organophosphates)

DUMBBELSS:
Diarrhea
Urination
Miosis
Bronchospasm
Bradycardia
Excitation of skeletal muscle & CNS
Lacrimation
Sweating
Salivation
757
Q

What is the mechanism of Benztropine?

What is it used for?

A

Muscarinic antagonist used for Parkinson’s disease.

“Park my Benz”

758
Q

What is the mechanism of Scopalamine?

What is it used for?

A

Anti-muscarinic used for motion sickness.

759
Q

What is the mechanism of Ipratropium?

What is it used for?

A

Ipratropium/Tiotropium are antimuscarinic drugs used in COPD & asthma.

760
Q

What is the mechanism of Oxybutynin?

What is it used for?

A

It is an antimuscarinic drug used to reduce bladder spasms & alleviate urgency seen with mild cystitis

761
Q

What is the mechanism of Glycopyrrolate?

What is it used for?

A

It is an antimuscarinic used preoperatively to reduce airway secretions

762
Q

What is atropine used for?

What is seen with overdose?

A

Atropine is used to treat bradycardia & in ophthalmology.

Overdose:
“Hot as a hare, dry as a bone, red as a beet, blind as a bad, mad as a hatter”

763
Q

What receptors does epinephrine act at?

What are its uses?

A

A1, A2, B1, B2

Used in anaphylaxis, open angle glaucoma, asthma, hypotension

764
Q

What receptors does norepinephrine act at?

What are its uses?

A

A1, A2 > B1

Used for hypotension (but decreases renal perfusion)

765
Q

What do beta adrenergic receptors control?

A

B1:
^ HR and contractility
^ renin release
^ lipolysis

B2:
Vasodilation
Bronchodilation
^ HR & contractility
^ lipolysis
^ insulin release
Tocolysis
Ciliary muscle relaxation
^ aqueous humor production
766
Q

What are the effects of NE and Isopreterenol on heart rate?

A

NE –> alpha-adrenergic stimulation –> ^ BP –> reflex bradycardia

Isopreterenol –> beta-adrenergic stimulation –>B2 causes decreased BP –> reflex tacycardia (plus B1 stimulation ^ HR)

767
Q

What receptors does isopreterenol act at?

What are its uses?

A

B1, B2

It is used in Torsades & bradyarrhythmias
Don’t use if ischemia is suspected (lowers BP and ^ HR)

768
Q

What receptors does Dopamine act at?

What are its uses?

A

D1 > B1, B2, > A1, A2

Used for shock (helps renal perfusion), heart failure

Low dose = ^ RPF
Medium dose = ^ CO
High dose = lowered CO

769
Q

What receptors does dobutamine act at?

What are its uses?

A

B1&raquo_space; B2, A1, A2

Used for heart failure, cardiac stress testing.

770
Q

What receptors does phenylephrine act at?

What are its uses?

A

A1, A2

Used for hypotension, ocular procedures (mydriasis), rhinitis (decongestant)

771
Q

What receptors does albuterol act at?

What are its uses?

A

B2&raquo_space; B1

Albuterol is used for acute asthma.
Salmeterol is used for long-term asthma or COPD control.
Terbutaline is used to reduce premature uterine contractions.

772
Q

What receptors does Ritodrine act at?

What are its uses?

A

B2

Reduces premature contractions

773
Q

What are the indirect sympathomimetics?

A

Amphetamine - releases stored catecholamines
Ephedrine - same as amphetamine
Cocaine - catecholamine reuptake inhibitor
(never give beta blockers to cocaine abuser, can cause unopposed alpha stimulation –> malignant HTN)

774
Q

What receptors does clonidine act at?

What are its uses?

A

It is a centrally acting A2 agonist –> reduces central sympathetic outflow. It’s useful in HTN comorbid with renal disease because it does not reduce kidney perfusion.

775
Q

What drug is used preoperatively for pheochromocytoma?

What is its mechanism?

A

Phenoxybenzamine is an irreversible alpha-adrenergic antagonist.

776
Q

What is Phentolamine?

What is its use?

A

It is a reversible nonselective alpha-adrenergic antagonist. It is used to treat patients who are on MAOi’s and eat Tyramine.

777
Q

What is Terazosin?

What is it used for?

A

Prazosin, Terazosin, Doxazosin, Tamsulosin

They are A1-selective adrenergic antagonists. They are used to treat HTN & urinary retention from BPH.

They can cause 1st dose orthostatic hypotension, dizziness, headache.

778
Q

What is Mirtazapine?

What is it used for?

A

It is an alpha-2 blocker used to treat depression.

779
Q

What are the uses for beta blockers?

A
Angina
MI
SVT (AV node)
HTN (acts on heart and juxtaglomerular app. cells)
CHF
Glaucoma
780
Q

What are the side effects of beta blockers?

A

Impotence
Asthma exacerbation
Bradycardia or AV block
CNS - seizures, sedation, sleep alteration
Use with caution in diabetics (mask hypoglycemia) & asthmatics

781
Q

What are the B1-selectinve beta blockers?

A
BEAM:
Betaxolol (partial agonist)
Esmolol (short-acting)\
Atenolol
Metoprolol
782
Q

What are the nonselective beta blockers?

A
"Please Try Not Being Picky"
Propranolol
Timolol
Nadolol
Beta blockers yo
Pindolol
783
Q

What are the nonselective alpha & beta blockers?

A

Carvedilol

Labetalol

784
Q

What are the beta-adrenergic partial agonists?

A

Partial Agonist:
Pindolol
Acebutolol

785
Q

What is the treatment for a beta blocker overdose?

A

Glucagon

786
Q

What is the treatment for a digitalis overdose?

A
KLAM treatment
K+ normalization
Lidocaine
Anti-dig Fab fragments
Mg2+
787
Q

What is the treatment for a lead overdose?

A

EDTA
Dimercaprol
Penicillamine

788
Q

What is the treatment for an iron overdose?

A

DeFeroxamine

789
Q

What is the treatment for a Mercury overdose?

A

Dimercaprol

Succimer

790
Q

What is the treatment for a copper overdose?

A

Penicillamine

791
Q

What is the treatment for an arsenic/gold overdose?

A

Penicillamine
Dimercaprol
Succimer

792
Q

What is the treatment for methemoglobin?

A

Methylene blue

793
Q

What is the treatment for a benzodiazepine overdose?

A

Flumazenil

794
Q

What is the treatment for a TCA overdose?

A

Alkalinize urine (NaHCO3)

795
Q

What is the treatment for a heparin overdose?

A

Protamine sulfate

796
Q

What is the treatment for a warfarin overdose?

A

Fresh frozen plasma

Vitamin K

797
Q

What is the treatment for a tPA/streptokinas/urokinase overdose?

A

Aminocaproic acid

798
Q

What is the treatment for a Theophylline overdose?

A

Beta blocker

799
Q

What drugs cause flushing?

A
VANC:
Vancomycin
Adenosine
Niacin
Calcium channel blockers
800
Q

What drugs can cause hemolysis in G6PD deficient patients?

A
"Hemolysis IS PAIN"
INH
Sulfa drugs
Primaquine
Aspirin
Ibuprofen
Nitrofurantoin
801
Q

What drug can cause acute cholestatic hepatitis?

A

Erythromycin

802
Q

What drugs can cause gynecomastia?

A

“Some Drugs Create Awkward Knockers”

Spironolactone
Digitalis
Cimetidine
Alcohol (chronic)
Ketoconazole
803
Q

What drugs can cause hypothyroidism?

A

Lithium
Amiodarone
Sulfa drugs

804
Q

What drugs can cause pulmonary fibrosis?

A

hard to BLAB when you have pulmonary fibrosis

BLeomycin
Amiodarone
Busulfan

805
Q

What drugs can cause gingival hyperplasia?

A

Phenytoin
Verapamil
Cyclosporine

806
Q

What drugs can cause myopathies?

A

Fish N CHIPS Give myopathies

Fibrates
Niacin
Colchicine
Hydroxychloroquine
Interferon-alpha
Penicillamine
Statins
Glucocorticoids
807
Q

What drugs can cause photosensitivity?

A

SAT for a photo

Sulfa drugs
Amiodarone
Tetracycline

808
Q

What drugs can cause drug-induced lupus?

A

HIPP

Hydralazine
INH
Procainamide
Phenytoin

809
Q

What drugs can cause seizures?

A

BITE MI tongue

Bupropion
Imipenem
Tramadol
Enflurane
Metaclopramide
INH
810
Q

What drugs are both nephrotoxic and ototoxic?

A

Aminoglycosides
Vancomycin
Loop diuretics
Cisplatin

811
Q

What are the sulfa drugs?

A

Popular FACTSSS

Probenecid
Furosemide
Acetazolamide
Celecoxib
Thiazides
Sulfa antibiotics
Sulfasalazine
Sulfonylureas
812
Q

Match the suffix with the drug class:

  • iptan
  • caine
  • azine
  • etine
  • ipramine/-triptyline
  • tidine
  • nib
  • cept
A
  • iptan = 5-HT1B/1D agonist
  • caine = local anesthetic
  • azine = neuroleptic, antiemetic
  • etine = SSRI
  • ipramine/-triptyline = TCA
  • tidine = H2 antagonist
  • nib = kinase inhibitor
  • cept = receptor molecule
813
Q

What is the upper limit of a normal ESR?

A

Men: age/2
Women: (age+10)/2

814
Q

What causes senile systemic amyloidosis?

A

Deposition of normal TTR (Transthyretin)

815
Q

What cancers is ret associated with?

A

MEN2A & MEN2B

816
Q

Why is CVID unique?

A

Can be acquired in 20’s-30’s

817
Q

What causes cauda equina syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Rupture of intervertebral disk –> compresses 2+ spinal nerves

Symptoms:
Low back pain that radiates to legs
Asymmetrical saddle anesthesia
Loss of anocutaneous reflex
Loss of knee & ankle jerk reflex
(Generally unilateral) paraplegia
818
Q

What causes conus medullaris syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Disk herniation, tumor, spinal fracture –> L2 lesion –> conus medullaris syndrome

Symptoms:
Acute onset severe low back pain
Urinary & fecal incontinence 
Impotence
Saddle anesthesia (S3-S5)
Generally spares legs (might see mild weakness)
819
Q

What drugs can cause Torsades de pointes

A
Class III (Sotolol) & Class Ia (Quinidine) antiarrhythmics
TCA's
820
Q

What structures cease at the lung bronchi?

What cease at the terminal bronchioles?

A

Bronchi - Cartilage, goblet cells

Terminal bronchioles -
Pseudostratified ciliated columnar cells (mucociliary escalator)
Smooth muscle of the airways

821
Q

What type of epithelia are found in the lung?

A

Bronchi & terminal bronchioles = Pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium

Respiratory bronchioles = cuboidal cells

Alveolar ducts & alveoli = simple squamous

822
Q

What is the equation for collapsing pressure of alveoli?

A

P = 2(surface tension)/radius

823
Q

What test shows lung maturity in a fetus?

A

Lecithin:Spingomyelin ratio > 2.0

<1.5 increases risk for NRDS

824
Q

What are lamellar bodies?

A

Intracellular type 2 pneumocte inclusions. They contain phospholipids for production of surfactant.

825
Q

What are club cells?

A

They are nonciliated columnar cells found in the small airways. They can degrade inhaled toxins (via CYP450) & act as reserve cells. They can also secrete substances to protect the bronchiolar lining.

826
Q

Where do aspirates go in the lung?

A

Upright –> bottom of RLL

Supine –> top of RLL

827
Q

How are the pulmonary artery & bronchus organized in the lungs?

A

Pulmonary artery is RALS to the bronchus:
Right anterior
Left superior

828
Q

At what level do the main structures penetrate the diaphragm?

A

“I ate ten eggs at noon”

IVC = T8
Esophagus/Vagus = T10
Aorta/Azygous vein/Thoracic duct = T12

829
Q

What are the accessory muscles of breathing?

A

Inspiration - External intercostals, SCM, scalenes

Expiration - Rectus abdominus, obliques, internal intercostals

830
Q

What is the equation for total lung volume?

A

LITER:

tLc = IRV + TV + ERV + RV

831
Q
What are typical pulmonary values for:
TV
FRC
RV
TLC
A
TV = 500 mL
FRC = 2200 mL
RV = 1200 mL
TLC = 6000 mL
832
Q

What are the two forms of HbA & their affinity for oxygen?

A
T = taut = low affinity for O2
R = relaxed = 300x higher affinity for O2

This is the basis for the positive cooperativity seen with Hb. Binding of O2 induces the relaxed form in the other Hb molecules.

833
Q

What factors cause Hb to bind O2 less avidly in the tissues?

A
Increase in C-BEAT:
CO2, Cl-
BPG
Exercise
Acid/Altitude
Temperature

“Taut in tissues, Relaxed in respiratory”

834
Q

What causes HbF to have a higher affinity for O2 than HbA?

A

It does not efficiently bind 2,3-BPG

835
Q

What causes Methemoglobinema?

How is it treated?

A

Nitrites oxidize Fe2+–>Fe3+ (cannot bind oxygen)

Use METhyline blue for METhemoglobinemia

836
Q

What is the main problem with CO poisoning?

A

O2 cannot be unloaded in tissues because CO (higher affinity than O2 for Hb) holds Hb in the relaxed form. Causes left shift in the Hb dissociation curve.

837
Q

How does myoglobin differ from hemoglobin?

A

It is found within muscle cells & is monomeric (Hb is tetrameric).

838
Q

What gases are perfusion limited in the lung?

Diffusion limited?

A

Perfusion limited = O2 (health), N2O, CO2

Diffusion limited = CO

839
Q

What is the equation for diffusion capacity?

A

V(gas) = (Area/Thickness)Diff. constant(P1-P2)

Emphysema –> decreased area
Fibrosis –> increased thickness

840
Q

What is the cause of primary pulmonary hypertension?

A

Inactivating mutation in BMPR2 (normally inhibits vascular smooth muscle proliferation)

Seen in young women.

841
Q

What defines pulmonary hypertension?

What can cause secondary pulmonary hypertension?

A

Pulmonary artery pressure > 25 mmHg

Causes of secondary PHTN:
COPD
Mitral stenosis
Recurrent PE's
Autoimmune disease
Left-to-right shunt
Sleep apnea
Living at high altitude
842
Q

What is the equation for pulmonary vascular resistance?

A

PVR = (Pulm art. Pressure - Wedge pressure)/Cardiac output

843
Q

What is a normal O2 binding capacity?

A

15g/dL of Hb * (1.34 mlO2/gHb) = ~20 mLO2/dL

Cyanosis is seen when > 5g/dL of Hb is deoxygenated

844
Q

What is the alveolar gas equation?

A

PAO2 = PIO2 - (PaCO2/R)

PIO2 = PO2 of inspired air = 150 mmHg
R = respiratory quotient = CO2 produced/O2 consumed = 0.8
845
Q

What is a normal A-a gradient?

What can cause an increased A-a gradient?

A

Normal = 10-15 mmHg

Increased in:
Right-to-left shunt
Diffusion limitation
V/Q mismatch

846
Q

What are the causes of hypoxemia?

Which show an increased A-a gradient?

A

Normal A-a gradient:
High altitude
Hypoventilation

Increased A-a gradient:
Right-to-left shunt
Diffusion limitation
V/Q mismatch

847
Q

What type of V/Q mismatch improves with supplemental O2?

A

High V/Q (dead space) should improve with O2

V/Q of 0 (shunt) will not improve with O2

848
Q

What are the alveolar, arterial, and venous pressures like throughout the lung?

A
Zone 1 (apex) = A > a > v
Zone 2 = a > A > v
Zone 3 (base) = a > v > A
849
Q

What part of the lung has a high vs. low V/Q

A

High V/Q in apex (dead space)
V/Q = 1 in the middle of the lung
Low V/Q in base (shunt)

*Note that the base is actually better ventilated than the apex, but it is much much better perfused –> low V/Q

850
Q

How is CO2 carried in the blood?

A

1) Bicarbonate (90%)
2) HbCO2 (5%)
3) Dissolved CO2 (5%)

851
Q

How does CO2 from the tissues cause O2 unloading?

A

CO2 –(carbonic anhydrase)–> H2CO3 H+ & HCo3- –> H+ binds Hb –> taut Hb –> O2 release.

The opposite happens in the lung due to high amount of O2. CO2 is released.

852
Q

What changes occur at high altitude?

A

Acute ^ in ventilation –> decreased O2 & CO2
Chronic:
^ EPO
^ 2,3-BPG
^ renal excretion of bicarb (compensates for resp. alk.)
Chronic hypoxic vasoconstriction –> RVH

853
Q

What changes in vascular O2 & CO2 are seen during exercise?

A

PaO2 & PaCO2 are unchanged

Venous O2 is decreased & venous CO2 is increased

854
Q

What are the components of Virchow’s triad of hemostasis?

A

1) Stasis
2) Hypercoagulability
3) Endothelial damage

These predispose to coagulation.

855
Q

What are the types of pulmonary emboli?

A
Fat (long bone fractures; hypoxemia + petechial rash)
Gas (the bends, the chokes)
Thrombus (95%)
Bacteria
Amniotic fluid (can cause DIC)
Tumor
856
Q

What defines chronic bronchitis?

A

Chronic productive cough lasting > 3 months total over the past 2 years

857
Q

What is seen on spirometry in obstructive lung disease?

Restrictive lung disease?

A

Obstructive = LOW FEV1, low FVC –> lower FEV1/FVC

Restrictive = low FEV1, LOW FVC –> FEV1/FVC > 80%

858
Q

Who are blue bloaters & pink puffers?

Why?

A

Chronic bronchitis = blue bloaters
They are constantly hypoxemic
RHF –> edema

Emphysema = pink puffers
They must work hard to breath
Puff their lips out when they exhale (PEEP)

859
Q

What is the Reid index?

A

Thickness of the mucus gland layer in relation to the whole bronchial wall. It is > 50% in chronic bronchitis.

860
Q

What causes centriacinar emphysema?
Panacinar emphysema?
Where are they seen?

A

Smoking –> centriacinar emphysema in upper lobes (more smoke)

A1AT deficiency –> panacinar emphysema in lower lobes (more blood)

861
Q

What chromosome is asthma associated with?

A

Chromosome 5

862
Q

What is seen histologically with asthma?

A

Curschmann’s spirals (shed epithelium plugs)

Charcot-Leyden crystals (from eosinophils)

863
Q

What are the mediators of an asthma attack?

A

Early phase: Histamine, LTC4,D4,E4

Late phase: Inflammation; Major basic protein

864
Q

What can cause bronchiectasis?

A
Cystic fibrosis
Kartagener's
Bronchial obstruction
Smoking (poor ciliary motility)
Bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
865
Q

What are the causes of restrictive lung disease?

A
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
Pneumoconioses
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
Sarcoidosis
Drug toxicity (bleomycin, busulfan)
Recurrent PE
Also poor breathing mechanics (obesity, MG)
866
Q

What lobes are affected in the pneumoconioses?

A

Anthracosis & silicosis –> upper lobes

Asbestosis –> lower lobes

867
Q

What are the risks of the pneumoconioses?

A

Anthracosis - fibrosis
Silicosis - fibrosis, TB infection, bronchogenic carcinoma
Asbestosis - fibrosis, bronchogenic carcinoma, mesothelioma

868
Q

When are adequate levels of surfactant produced in-utero?

A

Production begins at 28 weeks & is sufficient at 34 weeks

869
Q

What are the risk factors for NRDS?

The treatment?

A

Risk factors:
Prematurity
Maternal diabetes (insulin decreases production)
C-section (glucocoricoids ^ production)

Treatment:
Intrapartum dexamethasone
Surfactant at birth

870
Q

What complications are seen with NRDS?

A

Hypoxemia –> Necrotizing enterocolitis & PDA

Supplemental O2 –> Bronchopulmonary dysplasia & Retinopathy of the newborn

871
Q

What can cause ARDS?

A
Trauma
Sepsis
Shock
DIC
Aspiration
Uremia
Acute pancreatitis
Amniotic fluid embolism
Hypersensitivity
872
Q

What is seen histologically with pulmonary hypertension?

A

Plexiform lesions
Arteriosclerosis
Hypertrophy of the media
Intimal fibrosis

873
Q

How does sleep apnea cause hypertension?

A

1) ^ release of catecholamines during night

2) Hypoxia –> ^ EPO –> ^ erythropoiesis

874
Q

What are the complications of lung cancer?

A
SPHERE of complications:
SVC syndrome
Pancoast tumor
Horner's syndrome
Endocrine (paraneoplastic)
Recurrent laryngeal (hoarseness)
Effusions
875
Q

What lung cancers are most vs. least common?

A
Metastases (breast, colon, prostate, bladder)
Adenocarcinoma
Squamous cell carcinoma
Small cell carcinoma
Large cell carcinoma
Bronchial carcinoid tumor
876
Q

Where does lung cancer metastasize?

A

Adrenals
Brain
Bone
Liver

877
Q

What lung tumors are located centrally?

Peripherally?

A

Peripheral = adenocarcinoma, Large cell carcinoma

Central = Small cell carcinoma, Squamous cell carcinoma

878
Q

What is the most common lung cancer in nonsmokers and female smokers?

A

Adenocarcinoma

879
Q

What mutation is commonly seen in lung adenocarcinoma?

A

k-ras mutation

880
Q

What defines the Bronchioloalveolar subtype of lung cancer?

A

It is a subtype of adenocarcinoma. CXR resembles interstitial pneumonia because it grows along the alveolar septa.

Seen in nonsmokers & Eastern Asian women.

881
Q

What paraneoplastic syndromes are seen with lung cancers?

A

Hypercalcemia (PTHrP) –> Squamous
ACTH; ADH –> Small cell
Lambert-Eaton –> Small cell

882
Q

How does bronchial carcinoid appear grossly?

Histologically?

A

Grossly they are a polyp within the bronchus.

Histologically they are nests of neuroendocrine cells
chromogranin positive

883
Q

Which lung cancers are neuroendocrine in origin?

A
Small cell (Kulchitsky cells)
Carcinoid
884
Q

What is a pancoast tumor?

A

Carcinoma in the apex of the lung:
Horner’s syndrome (cervical chain)
+/- Arm weakness (brachial plexus)

885
Q

What is SVC syndrome?

A

Compression of the SVC seen sometimes with lung cancer. Impairs blood drainage from the head, neck, & arms:
Facial plethora (redness)
JVD
Upper extremity edema

Is a medical emergency because it can raise ICP.

886
Q

What antiplatelet factors are secreted by the endothelium?

A

PGI2 (prostacyclin)

NO

887
Q

What is the treatment for status epilepticus?

A

1) IV lorazepam + load with phenytoin
2) (if still seizing) Phenobarbital
3) (if still seizing) Intubate & give general anesthesia

888
Q

How are the right and left renal veins different?

A

The left renal vein drains the kidney, left testicle, and left adrenal. The Right testicular vein drains directly to the IVC. And the Right suprarenal vein also drains directly to the IVC.

889
Q

How is menopause confirmed?

A

Serum FSH (>30 U/L)

890
Q

What is the treatment for thrush in immunocompetent patients?

A

Nystatin swish & swallow

891
Q

How many half lives does it take for a drug to be largely gone from the plasma?

A

5 half lives = ~97% cleared

892
Q

What are the 3 types of pneumonia?

A

Lobar
Bronchopneumonia
Interstitial (atypical) pneumonia

893
Q

What are the organisms that cause atypical pneumonia?

A

Mycoplasma
Chlamydia
Viruses (CMV, influenza)
Coxiella (Q fever)

894
Q

What are the common causes of lung abscess?

A
S. aureus
Anaerobes:
-Bacteroides
-Fusobacterium
-Peptostreptococcus
895
Q

What are the common causes of hypersensitivity pneumonitis?

A
Moldy hay (farmers)
Bird droppings (pigeon breeder's lung)
896
Q

What is seen in hypersensitivity pneumonitis?

A

Mixed Type III/IV hypersensitivity reaction –> granulomatous reaction –> can lead to interstitial fibrosis

897
Q

What is characteristic of transudate effusion?
Exudate?
Chylothorax?

A
Transudate = low protein content
Exudate = high protein content
Chylothorax = High TRG content
898
Q

What causes chylothorax?

A

Thoracic duct injury from trauma or malignancy.

899
Q

What causes spontaneous pneumothorax?

A

Rupture of apical blebs. Usually seen in tall, thin, young males.

900
Q

What are 1st generation H1 blockers for?

A

Allergy, motion sickness, sleep aid.

Some examples:
Diphenhydramine
Dimenhydrinate
Chlorpheniramine

901
Q

What are 2nd generation H1 blockers used for?

A

Allergy meds. Far less sedating than 1st gen due to less CNS penetration.

Some examples:
Loratadine
Fexofenadine
Desloratadine
Cetirizine
902
Q

What is Theophylline used for?

What is its mechanism?

A

It is used to cause bronchodilation in asthmatics. It inhibits phosphodiesterase –> ^ cAMP in smooth muscle cells.

It also blocks adenosine’s action (bronchoconstriction) in the lung.

903
Q

What muscarinic antagonist is first line in COPD?

A

Tiotropium

long-acting version of Ipratropium

904
Q

What are the inhaled corticosteroids used in asthma?

A

Beclomethasone

Futicasone

905
Q

What is Montelukast?

What is its use?

A

Montelukast & Zafirlukast are leukotriene receptor antagonists. They are used to treat asthma, especially aspirin-induced asthma.

906
Q

What is Zileuton?

What is its use?

A

It is a 5-lipoxygenase pathway inhibitor (blocks conversion of arachidonic acid to leukotrienes). It is used to treat asthma.

907
Q

What is N-acetylcysteine used for?

A

1) Mucolytic - loosens mucous plugs in CF patients

2) Donates sulfhydryl groups to treat acetaminophen OD

908
Q

What is Bosentan?

What is it used for?

A

It is an endothelin-1 receptor antagonist used to treat pulmonary hypertension.

909
Q

What is Dextromethorphan?

What is it used for?

A

It is a synthetic codeine analog used as an antitussive.

910
Q

What is phenylephrine?

What is it used for?

A

Phenylephrine & pseudoephedrine are alpha-agonists used as OTC nasal decongestants.

They are stimulants & can cause anxiety or hypertension with toxicity.

911
Q

What antiplatelet factors are secreted by the endothelium?

A

PGI2 (prostacyclin)

NO

912
Q

What is the treatment for status epilepticus?

A

1) IV lorazepam + load with phenytoin
2) (if still seizing) Phenobarbital
3) (if still seizing) Intubate & give general anesthesia

913
Q

How are the right and left renal veins different?

A

The left renal vein drains the kidney, left testicle, and left adrenal. The Right testicular vein drains directly to the IVC. And the Right suprarenal vein also drains directly to the IVC.

914
Q

How is menopause confirmed?

A

Serum FSH (>30 U/L)

915
Q

What is the treatment for thrush in immunocompetent patients?

A

Nystatin swish & swallow

916
Q

How many half lives does it take for a drug to be largely gone from the plasma?

A

5 half lives = ~97% cleared

917
Q

What are the 3 types of pneumonia?

A

Lobar
Bronchopneumonia
Interstitial (atypical) pneumonia

918
Q

What are the organisms that cause atypical pneumonia?

A

Mycoplasma
Chlamydia
Viruses (CMV, influenza)
Coxiella (Q fever)

919
Q

What are the common causes of lung abscess?

A
S. aureus
Anaerobes:
-Bacteroides
-Fusobacterium
-Peptostreptococcus
920
Q

What are the common causes of hypersensitivity pneumonitis?

A
Moldy hay (farmers)
Bird droppings (pigeon breeder's lung)
921
Q

What is seen in hypersensitivity pneumonitis?

A

Mixed Type III/IV hypersensitivity reaction –> granulomatous reaction –> can lead to interstitial fibrosis

922
Q

What is characteristic of transudate effusion?
Exudate?
Chylothorax?

A
Transudate = low protein content
Exudate = high protein content
Chylothorax = High TRG content
923
Q

What causes chylothorax?

A

Thoracic duct injury from trauma or malignancy.

924
Q

What causes spontaneous pneumothorax?

A

Rupture of apical blebs. Usually seen in tall, thin, young males.

925
Q

What are 1st generation H1 blockers for?

A

Allergy, motion sickness, sleep aid.

Some examples:
Diphenhydramine
Dimenhydrinate
Chlorpheniramine

926
Q

What are 2nd generation H1 blockers used for?

A

Allergy meds. Far less sedating than 1st gen due to less CNS penetration.

Some examples:
Loratadine
Fexofenadine
Desloratadine
Cetirizine
927
Q

What is Theophylline used for?

What is its mechanism?

A

It is used to cause bronchodilation in asthmatics. It inhibits phosphodiesterase –> ^ cAMP in smooth muscle cells.

It also blocks adenosine’s action (bronchoconstriction) in the lung.

928
Q

What muscarinic antagonist is first line in COPD?

A

Tiotropium

long-acting version of Ipratropium

929
Q

What are the inhaled corticosteroids used in asthma?

A

Beclomethasone

Futicasone

930
Q

What is Montelukast?

What is its use?

A

Montelukast & Zafirlukast are leukotriene receptor antagonists. They are used to treat asthma, especially aspirin-induced asthma.

931
Q

What is Zileuton?

What is its use?

A

It is a 5-lipoxygenase pathway inhibitor (blocks conversion of arachidonic acid to leukotrienes). It is used to treat asthma.

932
Q

What is N-acetylcysteine used for?

A

1) Mucolytic - loosens mucous plugs in CF patients

2) Donates sulfhydryl groups to treat acetaminophen OD

933
Q

What is Bosentan?

What is it used for?

A

It is an endothelin-1 receptor antagonist used to treat pulmonary hypertension.

934
Q

What is Dextromethorphan?

What is it used for?

A

It is a synthetic codeine analog used as an antitussive.

935
Q

What is phenylephrine?

What is it used for?

A

Phenylephrine & pseudoephedrine are alpha-agonists used as OTC nasal decongestants.

They are stimulants & can cause anxiety or hypertension with toxicity.

936
Q

What are the stages of fetal kidney development?

A

Pronephros = week 4; degenerates

Mesonephros = interim kidney during 1st trimester; forms Wolffian ducts in male

Metanephros = Permanent; nephrogenesis runs from 5th week to 32-36 weeks.

937
Q

What are the components of the metanephros?

What do they give rise to?

A

1) Ureteric bud: forms collecting system (collecting ducts, calyces, pelvises, ureters
2) Metanephric mesenchyme: forms glomerulus through DCT. Induced by interaction with the ureteric bud.

938
Q

What is the last portion of the fetal kidney to canalize?

A

The ureteropelvic junction. This is why it is the most common site of obstruction (hydronephrosis) in the fetus.

939
Q

What is Potter’s syndrome?

A

Oligohydramnios –> limb/facial deformities, pulmonary hypoplasia, death in-utero

Caused by: Bilateral renal agenesis, ARPKD

940
Q

What is seen with horseshoe kidney?

A

Inferior poles are fused –> get caught on IMA & remain low in abdomen.

It is associated with Turner syndrome.

941
Q

What causes dysplastic kidney?

A

Abnormal interaction between ureteric bud and metanephric mesenchyme –> nonfunctional kidney composed of cysts and connective tissue. Usually unilateral, NON-inherited.

942
Q

What is the course of the ureters?

A

“Water under the bridge”

They pass under the uterine artery, ductus deferens, & gonadal artery/vein.

943
Q

What is the body composition of water?

A

60-40-20 rule:
60% water
40% is intracellular
20% is extracellular

1/4 of that extracellular fluid is plasma, 3/4 is interstitial.

944
Q

What is the glomerular filtration barrier composed of?

A

Fenestrated capillary endothelium
Basement membrane with heparan sulfate (neg. charge)
Epithelial barrier of podocyte foot processes

945
Q

What is the equation for renal clearance of a substance?

A

CL = UV/P

U = Urine concentration of the solute
V = Urine flow rate
P = Plasma concentration of the solute

If CL > GFR –> net tubular secretion of the solute
If CL < GFR –> net tubular reabsorption of the solute

946
Q

What substance can be used to calculate GFR?

RPF?

A

Inulin = freely filtered, not reabsorbed/secreted –> GFR
(Creatinine clearance approximates it but slightly overestimates)

PAH = filtered & secreted completeley –> effective RPF (ERPF)
(Underestimates true RPF by ~10%)

By calculating the clearance of these substances (CL = UV/P), you can get the GFR & RPF.

947
Q

What is the equation for renal blood flow?

A

RBF = RPF/(1 - HCT)

948
Q

What is the equation for filtration fraction?

What is a normal FF?

A

FF = GFR/RPF

Normal = 20%

949
Q

What are the relative bloodflows to organs under resting conditions?

A

“Having Sex Brings Many Kids Later”

Heart = 250 mL/min = 5%
Skin = 500 mL/min = 10%
Brain = 750 mL/min = 15%
Muscle = 1000 mL/min = 20%
Kidney = 1250 mL/min = 25%
Liver = 1500 mL/min = 30%
950
Q

What are the effects of NSAIDs on the kidney?

ACE inhibitors?

A

NSAIDs constrict afferent arteriole (inhibit prostaglandins that normally dilate it)

ACE inhibitors dilate efferent arteriole (AT-II preferentially constricts efferent arteriole)

951
Q

How is the reabsorption/secretion of a substance (x) calculated?

A

Filtered load = GFRP[x]
Excreted load = V
U[x]

Reabsorption rate = filtered - excreted
Secretion rate = excreted - filtered

952
Q

At what serum glucose does glucose appear in the urine?

A

> 160 mg/dL –> glucosuria begins

>350 mg/dL –> all transporters saturated

953
Q

What is the effect of PTH on the nephron?

A

Proximal tubule:
PTH inhibits Na+/phosphate cotransport –> phosphate excretion

Distal tubule:
PTH increases Ca2+/Na+ exchange –> Ca2+ reabsorption

954
Q

What is the effect of Angiotensin II in the nephron?

A

Proximal tubule:
Stimulates Na+/H+ exchange –> ^ Na+/H2O/HCO3- reabsorption

Also causes efferent arteriole constriction –> ^ FF

955
Q

What is reabsorbed in the Proximal tubule?

A
In order of reabsorption rate:
Glucose
Amino acids
HCO3-
Phosphate
Na+ (65-80%)
K+
Cl-
Urea
956
Q

Why does silicosis increase susceptibility to MTB infection?

A

Macrophage phagolysosomes are disrupted.

957
Q

What occurs in SMA syndrome?

A

The angle of the superior mesenteric artery and the aorta decreases, compressing & obstructing the transverse portion of the duodenum. This will cause symptoms of small bowel obstruction.

958
Q

What causes SMA syndrome?

A

Any very catabolic state (weight loss, burns, long bedrest) leading to diminished mesenteric fat
Low body weight
Severe lordosis
Surgical correction of scoliosis

959
Q

What are the two types of MG exacerbation?

A

Myasthenic crisis:
Too low of AChE inhibitor dose
Responds to edrophonium (short-acting AChE inhibitor)

Cholinergic crisis:
Too high of AChE inhibitor dose (muscle cells depolarized too often & can’t recover)
Does not respond to edrophonium

960
Q

What steps in collagen synthesis occur extracellularly?

A

Cleavage of N & C terminal peptides
Spontaneous assembly of fibrils
Covalent crosslinking by lysyl oxidase

961
Q

What does glycerol kinase do?

Where is it located?

A

It catalyzes Glycerol (from beta oxidation) –> DHAP
This allows glycerol to enter glycolysis or gluconeogenesis.
It is specific to the liver.

962
Q

What are the symptoms of lead poisoning?

A

Colicky abdominal pain (lead colic), constipation, headaches
Lead line (blue pigment) at the gum-tooth line
Wrist/foot drop due to peripheral neuropathy
Microcytic hypochromic anemia with basophilic stippling

963
Q

What is used to determine the proliferation rate of cancer cells?

A

Ki-67 fraction

Ki-67 is an antigen that is only present on actively dividing cells. The closer to 100%, the more cells are actively dividing.

964
Q

What is Cromylin sodium?

What is it used for?

A

It inhibits mast cell degranulation.

It is used for asthma prophylaxis.

965
Q

What are the initiator caspases?

Executioner caspases?

A

Initiator caspases = 8 & 10

Executioner caspases = 3 & 6

966
Q

What is reabsorbed in the thick ascending limb?

A

Na+/K+/2Cl- (via symporter)

Mg2+/Ca2+ (paracellular, pushed electrically by K+ backleak into tubule)

967
Q

What is reabsorbed in the DCT?

A

Na+/Cl- (symporter)

Ca2+ (antiporter with Na+ is at basolateral membrane & channels are at apical membrane)

968
Q

What is reabsorbed in the Collecting tubules?

A

Reabsorb Na+ in exchange for K+ & H+ (Aldosterone)

Water is reabsorbed via aquaporins (ADH)

969
Q

How is total body water measured?
Extracellular fluid?
Plasma volume?

A

TBW - tritiated water
ECF - inulin
Plasma - radiolabeled albumin

970
Q

What cell types are found in the nephron’s collecting duct?

What are their purposes?

A

Principal cells:
Reabsorb Na+ (Ald –> ENaC synthesis)
Reabsorb H2O (ADH –> aquaporin insertion)
Secrete K+

Intercalated cells:
Secrete H+ (aldosterone stimulated ATPase)

971
Q

What are the stimulators of renin?

A

Decreased BP
Decreased NaCl delivery to DCT (sensed by macula densa cells)
B1 adrenergic receptor simulation

Secreted by JG cells

972
Q

What are the effects of Angiotensin II?

A

AT-1 receptors –> systemic vasoconstriction
Constricts efferent arteriole (^ FF)
Aldosterone & ADH secretion
Increases activity of PCT Na+/H+ antiporter
Stimulates thirst in hypothalamus

973
Q

Where is EPO synthesized?

A

EPO is made in the peritubular capillary cells of the renal cortex in response to hypoxia.

974
Q

Where exactly is 25-OH-Vitamin D activated to Calcitriol?

A

Proximal tubule cells

975
Q

What can cause potassium to shift out of cells?

A

DO LAB:

Digitalis
Osmolarity ^
Lysis
Acidosis
Beta blockers

Whereas INsulin shifts K+ INto cells

976
Q

What is seen with hypomagnesemia?

A

Decreased DTR’s
Lethargy
Bradycardia & hypotension
Hypocalcemia

977
Q

How can a simple vs. mixed metabolic acidosis be determined?

A

Calculate the expected PCO2 & see if the true PCO2 is adequately compensating (+/- 2).

Expected PCO2 = 1.5*(HCO3-) + 8
If the true PCO2 is within 2 either way –> simple
If it is not within 2 –> mixed acid-base disorder

978
Q

What causes contraction alkalosis?

A

Loss of blood volume –> Renin, AT, Ald system

ATII:
^Na+/H+ exchange in PCT
^HCO3- reabsorption (due to ^H+ available in the lumen)

Ald:
^ H+ ATPase activity –> H+ secretion

979
Q

How is an anion gap calculated?

A

Na - (Cl + HCO3)

Normal = 8-12

980
Q

What can cause an increased anion gap metabolic acidosis?

A

MUDPILES:

Methanol
Uremia
DKA
Propylene glycol
INH or Iron tablets
Lactic acidosis
Ethylene glycol
Salicylates (late)
981
Q

What can cause a non-anion gap metabolic acidosis?

A

HARDASS:

Hyperalimentation (overeating, too much TPN)
Addison's
Renal tubular acidosis
Diarrhea
Acetazolamide
Spironolactone
Saline infusion
982
Q

What can cause a metabolic alkalosis?

A

Loop diuretics
Vomiting
Antacids
Hyperaldosteronism

983
Q

What are the causes of the renal tubular acidoses?

A

Type 1 = Collecting duct cannot excrete H+ (distal)

Type 2 = PCT cannot reabsorb HCO3 (proximal)

Type 3 = Hypoaldosteronism or collecting duct not responsive to it –> hyperkalemia –> impaired ammoniagenesis –> urine cannot buffer titratable acids

984
Q

What are the risks of the renal tubular acidoses?

A

“Stones, bones, and low aldosterones”

Type 1 –> Nephrolithiasis
Type 2 –> Hypophosphatemic rickets
Type 3 –> hyperkalemic metabolic acidosis

985
Q

What are the casts & their significance?

A
RBC casts
WBC casts
Fatty casts (oval fat bodies) = nephrotic syndrome
Granular (muddy brown) casts = ATN
Waxy casts = Chronic/advanced disease
Hyaline casts = nonspecific
986
Q

What is seen with nephrotic syndrome?

A

PALE:

Proteinuria (> 3.5g/day)
Albumin low
Lipidemia/lipiduria
Edema

ATIII loss –> thromboembolism
Ig loss –> infection

987
Q

What is seen on microscopy with FSGS?

A

LM - focal (< half) & segmental sclerosis & hyalinosis

EM - effacement of foot processes

988
Q

What is seen on microscopy with Membranous nephropathy?

A

LM - diffuse GMB thickening (“membranous”)

EM - “spike & dome” appearance with subepithelial deposits

989
Q

What is seen on microscopy with Minimal Change Disease?

A

LM - normal glomeruli

EM - effacement of foot processes

990
Q

What is seen on microscopy with Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis?

A

Type I - subendothelial immune complex deposits with “tram track” appearance; granular IF pattern

Type II - intramembranous immune complex “dense deposits”

991
Q

What is seen on microscopy with diabetic nephropathy?

A

LM - mesangial expansion, GBM thickening; Kimmelstiel-Wilson nodules`

992
Q

What is seen on microscopy with Post-infectious glomerulonephritis?

A

LM - PMN’s, lump-bumpy appearance

EM - subepithelial humps of immune complexes

IF - granular deposits along GBM

993
Q

What is seen on microscopy with RPGN?

A

Crescents

Composed of:
Fibrin
Plasma proteins
Macrophages

IF - can be linear (type 1), granular (type 2), or pauci-immune (type 3)

994
Q

What is seen on microscopy with diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis?

A

LM - “wire looping” of capillaries

EM - subedothelial & sometimes intramembranous immune complexes

IF - granular

995
Q

What is seen on microscopy with Berger’s disease?

A

LM - mesangial proliferation

EM - mesangial immune complex deposits

IF - IgA-based immune complex deposits in mesangium

996
Q

What is associated with FSGS?

A
Most common nephrotic syndrome in Hispanic & Blacks
HIV --> wall collapse variant
Heroin
Sickle cell
Interferon treatment
997
Q

What is associated with minimal change disease?

A

Most common nephrotic syndrome in children
Selective loss of albumin (loss of GBM polyanions)
Responds to corticosteroids
Hodgkin’s lymphoma

998
Q

What is associated with membranoproliferative GM?

A

Type I - HBV, HCV

Type II - C3 nephritic factor (Ig that stabilizes C3 convertase leading to overactivation of complement)

999
Q

Which nephrotic syndrome causes are due to immune complex deposits?

A

Anything with “membrano-“ in the name:

Membranous = subepithelial IC deposits
MPGN Type I = subendothelial IC deposits
MPGN Type II = intramembranous IC deposits

1000
Q

What is membranous nephropathy associated with?

A

Found in white adults
SLE’s nephrotic presentation
Drugs, infections, solid tumors (caused by in-situ IC deposition)

1001
Q

What is seen with nephritic syndrome?

A

PHAROH:

Proteinuria (<3.5 g/day)
Hematuria & RBC casts
Azotemia
RBC casts
Oliguria
Hypertension
1002
Q

What are the causes of RPGN?

A

Type I = Goodpasture’s syndrome (Ig’s against kidney & lung BM)

Type II = Any of the other nephritic syndromes but worse

Type III = pauci-immune (GPA, Churg-Strauss, MP)

1003
Q

What is associated with Diffuse Proliferative GM?

A

It is the nephritic presentation of SLE or MPGN. It is the most common cause of death in SLE.

1004
Q

How does Berger’s disease present?

A

aka IgA nephropathy
Associated with Henoch-Schonlein purpura
It is the most common nephropathy.

It presents in childhood with intermittent gross or microscopic hematuria (following URI or gastroenteritis).

1005
Q

What causes Alport syndrome?

A

An X-linked mutation in Type-IV collagen –> triad of:
Nephritic syndrome
Deafness
Ocular problems

1006
Q

What are the 4 types of kidney stones?

A

Calcium (oxalate/phosphate)
Ammonium-magnesium-phosphate (struvite)
Uric acid
Cystine

1007
Q

Which kidney stones precipitate in acidic urine?
Alkaline urine?

Which stone is radiolucent?

A
Acidic = Cystine, Uric acid & Calcium oxalate
Basic = Calcium phosphate & Struvite

Uric acid stones are radiolucent. All others are radiopaque.

1008
Q

What causes struvite stones?

A

aka ammonium-magnesium-phosphate stones

Caused by urease positive UTI’s (Proteus, Klebsiella, Staph)

1009
Q

What kidney stones for staghorn calculi?

A

Struvite & Cystine stones

1010
Q

How does renal (clear) cell carcinoma present clinically?

A
Often silent for a long time. Symptoms:
Triad - hematuria, flank pain, palpable mass
Paraneoplastic syndromes (EPO, ACTH, PTHrp)
Left-sided varicocele
1011
Q

What mutation is present in Von Hippel-Lindau disease?

What is seen?

A

VHL gene deletion (chrom. 3) –> Constitutive HIF (angiogenic TF)

Presentation:
Bilateral renal cell carcinoma
Hemangioblastomas of retina/cerebellum/medulla

1012
Q

What is Wilms’ tumor associated with?

A

aka nephroblastoma
Most common renal cancer in children:
Deletion of WT2 tumor suppressor gene on chromosome 11

May be part of:
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
WAGR complex (Wilms’, Aniridia, GU malformation, Retardation)

1013
Q

What are the risk factors for transitional cell carcinoma?

A

cancer in your P SAC:

Phenacetin
Smoking
Aniline dyes
Cyclophosphamide

1014
Q

What are the risk factos for squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder?

A

Must have squamous metaplasia first.

  • Schistosoma hematobium (Middle-Eastern male)
  • Chronic cystitis (older woman)
  • Longstanding nephrolithiasis
1015
Q

What are the common causes of drug-induced interstitial nephritis?

A
Diuretics
Penicillins
Sulfa drugs
Rifampin
NSAIDs
1016
Q

What is seen with acute interstitial nephritis?

A
AKI
Fever
Rash
Hematuria
Pyuria (eosinophils)
1017
Q

What can cause renal papillary necrosis?

A
Diabetes
Severe acute pyelonephritis
Chronic phenacetin/Aspirin/Acetaminophen use
Sickle cell anemia & trait
Severe interstitial nephritis
1018
Q

What are the phases of ATN & their risks?

A

1) Inciting event (ischemic or nephrotoxic)
2) Maintenance phase - 1-3 weeks; oliguria; risk of hyperkalemia
3) Recovery phase - polyuria; BUN & Cr return to baseline; risk of hypokalemia

1019
Q

What is the BUN/Cr ratio in the various forms of AKI?

A

Prerenal: >20

Intrinsic renal: 15, chronic <15

1020
Q

What are the most common causes of ATN?

A
Aminoglycosides
Heavy metals
Myoglobinuria
Ethylene glycol
Radiocontrast dye
Urate (tumor lysis syndrome)
1021
Q

What is seen with chronic renal failure?

A
Uremia
Na+/H2O retention --> HTN
Hyperkalemic metabolic acidosis
Anemia
Renal osteodystrophy
Dyslipidemia
1022
Q

What is seen with uremia?

A
Nausea & anorexia
Pericarditis
Asterixis
Encephalopathy
Platelet dysfunction
1023
Q

What causes renal osteodystrophy?

A

CKD –> hyperphosphatemia alongside reduced Vit. D activation –> Secondary hyperparathyroidism –> subperiosteal thinning of bones & metastatic calcification

1024
Q

What causes ADPKD?

What is it associated with?

A

Autosomal Dominant mutation in PKD1 or PKD2

Associated with:
CKD
HTN (^ renin production)
Berry aneurysms
Mitral valve prolapse
Benign hepatic cysts
1025
Q

What is seen in ARPKD?

A
Potter's syndrome
Congenital hepatic fibrosis
HTN
Portal HTN
Progressive renal insufficiency
1026
Q

What toxicities are seen with loop diuretics?

A

OH DANG

Ototoxicity
Hypokalemia/Hypocalcemia
Dehydration
Allergy (sulfa)
Nephritis (interstitial)
Gout
1027
Q
What is the mechanism of the diuretic classes?
Acetazolamide 
Loop diuretics
Thiazides
Spironolactone
Triamterine/Amiloride
A
Acetazolamide = carbonic anhydrase inhibitor
Loop diuretics (furosemide, ethacrynic acid) = Na+/K+/2Cl- inhib.
Thiazides = DCT NaCl transporter inhibitor
Spironolactone = Aldosterone antagonists
Triamterine/Amiloride = block cortical collecting duct ENaC's
1028
Q

What toxicities are seen with thiazide diuretics?

A
Hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis
Sulfa reaction
hyperGLUC:
Glycemia
Lipidemia
Uricemia
Calcemia
1029
Q

What are the potassium sparing diuretics?

A

Spironolactone
Eplerenone
Triamterine
Amiloride

1030
Q

What toxicities are seen with ACE Inhibitors?

A

Captopril’s CATCHH

Cough (bradykinin; not seen with ARB)
Angioedema (bradykinin; not seen with ARB)
Teratogen (fetal renal malformations)
Creatinine ^ (decreased GFR due to efferent art. dilation)
Hyperkalemia
Hypotension

1031
Q

What do integrins bind in the ECM?

A

Collagen
Fibronectin
Laminin

1032
Q

How is fructose dealt with in patients that have essential fructosuria?

A

Fructose is converted to Fructose-6-P by hexokinase. This can then participate in glycolysis or glycogenesis. This is a minor pathway in normal individuals but becomes important in the setting of fructokinase deficiency.

1033
Q

Where should thoracentesis be performed?

A
Midclavicular = 5th-7th rib
Midaxillary = 7th-9th rib
Paravertebral = 9th-11th rib

This is the location where there is pleura but no lung. It should always be performed above a rib so as not to damage the van driving under the rib.

1034
Q

What are found in the granules of platelets?

A

Dense granules: ADP, Ca2+

alpha-granules: vWF, fibrinogen

1035
Q

What are the relative abundancies of the various leukocytes?

A
Neutrophils
Lymphocytes
Monocytes
Eosinophils
Basophils
1036
Q

What coagulation factors require Vitamin K?

A

II, VII, IX, X, C, S

1037
Q

What is the mechanism of warfarin?

A

Inhibits epoxide reductase.

Normall reduces Vit. K so that it can act as a cofactor in factors II, VII, IX, X, C, S

1038
Q

What can cause decrease in the ESR?

A
Polycythemia
Sickle cell
CHF
Microcytosis
Hypofibrinogenemia
1039
Q

What can cause spherocytes on a peripheral blood smear?

A

Hereditary spherocytosis

Autoimmune hemolysis

1040
Q

What can cause target cells on a peripheral blood smear?

A

HALT

HbC disease
Asplenia
Liver disease
Thalassemia

1041
Q

What can cause Howell-Jolly bodies on peripheral blood smear?

A

Asplenia
Functional asplenia
Naphthalene ingestion (mothballs)

1042
Q

What are the microcytic hypochromic anemias?

A
MCV < 80
Iron deficiency
Anemia of chronic disease (late)
Thalassemias
Lead poisoning
Sideroblastic anemias
1043
Q

What is seen with Plummer-Vinson syndrome?

A

Plummer-Vinson triad:

Iron-deficiency anemia
Esophageal webs
Atrophic glossitis

1044
Q

What is seen in alpha-thalassemia?

A

4 gene deletion –> Hb Barts –> hydrops fetalis (death in-utero)

3 gene deletion –> HbH disease anemia

1-2 gene deletion –> asymptomatic

1045
Q

What causes alpha-thalassemia?

A

Deletion of the alpha-globin genes.
cis-deletion in Asians
trans-deletion in Africans

cis-deletion is associated with higher rates of hydrops fetalis in offspring.

1046
Q

What is seen in beta-thalassemia?

A

Thalassemia minor (heterozygote):
Asymptomatic
Dx confirmed by HbA2 > 3.5%

Thalassemia major (homozygote):
Severe anemia requiring transfusions (hemochromatosis)
Marrow expansion –> HSM, crew cut x-ray, chipmunk facies
^HbF & HbA2
Parvovirus infection –> aplastic crisis

1047
Q

What is affected by lead poisoning?

What are the symptoms?

A

ALA dehydratase & Ferrochelatase are inhibited (heme synth)

Symptoms:
LEEAADD:
Lead lines on gingiva & metaphyses of long bones
Encephalopathy
Erythrocyte stippling
Anemia (sideroblastic)
Abdominal colic
Drops (wrist & foot)
Dimercaprol & EDTA first line
1048
Q

What causes Sideroblastic anemia?

A

Defects in heme synthesis:
Hereditary - X-linked defect in ALA Synthase
Acquired - EtOH, lead poisoning, INH (B6 def.)

1049
Q

How can Folate vs. B12 deficient megaloblastic anemia be differentiated?

A

B12 deficiency:
^Methylmalonic acid
Subacute combined degeneration

1050
Q

What are the causes of macrocytic anemia?

A

Megaloblastic:
B12 def.
Folate def.
Orotic aciduria

Non-megaloblastic:
Alcoholism
Liver disease
Reticulocytosis

1051
Q

What are the lab findings in extravascular vs. intravascular hemolysis?

A

Intravascular: ^LDH, depleted haptoglobin, Hb in urine

Extravascular: ^LDH, ^unconjugated bilirubin

1052
Q

What causes anemia of chronic disease?

What do iron studies show?

A

Chronic inflammation –> ^Hepcidin –> sequestration of iron in intestinal mucosa & macrophages –> normocytic anemia that progresses to microcytic.

Decreased iron, decreased TIBC, increased ferritin

1053
Q

What can cause aplastic anemia?

A

Drugs (chloramphenicol, alkylating agents, antimetabolites)
Viruses (Parvovirus, EBV, HIV, HCV)
Fanconi’s anemia

1054
Q

What is the formula for corrected reticulocyte count?

A

Corrected reticulocytes = (Absolute reticulocytes)*(HCT/45)

If corrected > 3% –> adequate response
If < 3% –> issue with the bone marrow

1055
Q

What are the intravascular hemolytic anemias?

A
G6PD deficiency
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
Cold agglutinins
Microangiopathic anemia
Macroangiopathic anemia
Infections (malaria, Babesia)
1056
Q

What are the extravascular hemolytic anemias?

A
Hereditary spherocytosis
G6PD deficiency
Pyruvate kinase deficiency
Sickle cell anemia
Warm agglutinins
1057
Q

What causes hereditary spherocytosis?

What is seen?

A

Defect in RBC cytoskeletal anchoring proteins (ankyrin, spectrin) –> small pieces of membrane removed by splenic macs

Symptoms:
Splenomegaly
Aplastic crisis (Parvovirus)
Small, round RBC's with no central pallor
^MCHC, ^ RDW
Positive osmotic fragility test
1058
Q

What is seen on a blood smear of a G6PD patient?

A

Heinz bodies

Bite cells

1059
Q

How does pyruvate kinase deficiency present?

A

(AR) Hemolytic anemia in a newborn.

Decreased ATP causes rigid RBC’s

1060
Q

What causes HbC disease?

What is seen?

A

AR mutation of beta chain. Glutamic acid –> LyCine at residue 6.

Symptoms:
Mild extravascular hemolytic anemia
HbC crystals on blood smear (rectangular)

1061
Q

What causes PNH?

What is seen?

A

Impaired formation of GPI anchors or DAF deficiency. It is an ACQUIRED mutation in a HSC line.

Symptoms:
Pancytopenia
Numerous DVT's; hepatic/portal/cerebral vein thromboses
Hemolytic anemia
Flow cytometry - CD55/59 negative RBC's
10% develop AML
1062
Q

What is the treatment for PNH?

A

Eculizumab - C5 complement inhibitor

1063
Q

What causes sickle cell anemia?

A

HbS point mutation in beta chain
Glutamic acid –> Valine at position 6.

Low O2, dehydration, or acidosis –> polymerization of deoxygenated HbS –> Sickling

1064
Q

What is seen in sickle cell trait?

A

Resistance to malaria

Microinfarctions in kidney medulla –> eventual inability to concentrate urine

1065
Q

What complications are seen with sickle cell anemia?

A
Salmonella osteomyelitis
Autosplenectomy --> Infection with SHiNE SKiS (death in kids)
Painful crises:
--Dactylitis
--Acute chest syndrome (death in adults)
--Avascular necrosis
Aplastic crisis (Parvovirus)
Renal papillary necrosis
1066
Q

What is the treatment for sickle cell anemia?

A

Hydroxyurea –> HbF

Bone marrow transplant

1067
Q

What can trigger candida vaginitis?

A
Antibiotic use!
Contraceptives
Systemic corticosteroids
Diabetes
Immunosuppression
1068
Q

What are the important glucose transporters and their locations?

A
GLUT-1 = insulin-independent; RBC's, brain
GLUT-2 = bidirectional; Beta cells, liver, kidney small intestine
GLUT-4 = insulin-dependent; Adipocytes, muscle cells
1069
Q

What cancers are seen in Li-Fraumeni syndrome?

A
Early-onset cancers:
Breast
Brain
Adrenal cortex
Sarcomas
Leukemias
1070
Q

What is the epithelial cell type along the female reproductive tract?

A

Vagina = nonkeratinized stratified squamous
Ectocervix = stratified squamous
Endocervix = simple columnar
Uterus = simple columnar; pseudostratified glands
Fallopian tube = ciliated columnar
Ovary = simple cuboidal

1071
Q

How can tumor lysis syndrome be avoided?

A

It is due to ^^uric acid following rapid killing of tumor cells.

Methods:
Hydration
Urine alkalinization
Allopurinol

1072
Q

What are the adverse effects of methotrexate?

A

Stomatitis
Hepatotoxicity (hepatitis, fibrosis, cirrhosis)
Myelosuppression

1073
Q

What can cause autoimmune hemolytic anemia?

A

Warm agglutinins (IgG):
SLE
CLL
Drugs (methyldopa)

Cold agglutinins (IgM):
CLL
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Mononucleosis

1074
Q

What normal process can increase TIBC?

A

Pregnancy or OCP use

1075
Q

What substrates are used to produce heme?

A

Glycine
Succinyl-CoA
Iron (Fe2+)

**B6 is required for the first step

1076
Q

Where in the cell does heme synthesis occur?

A

First & last step in the mitochondria. The middle is in the cytosol.

1077
Q

What accumulates in the blood following lead poisoning?

A

ALA (aminolevulonic acid)

Protoporphyrin

1078
Q

What are the symptoms of Acute Intermittent Porphyria?

A

5 P’s:
Painful abdomen
Port-wine colored urine (after it stands a while)
Polyneuropathy
Psychological disturbances
Precipitated by drugs (CYP450 inducers –> ^Heme production)

1079
Q

What causes Acute Intermittent Porphyria?

What accumulates?

A

Caused by Porphobilinogen deaminase deficiency

Porphobilinogen, ALA, & uroporphyrin accumulate

1080
Q

What is the treatment for acute intermittent porphyria?

A

Heme & Glucose –> both inhibit ALA synthase

1081
Q

What causes Porphyria cutanea tarda?
What accumulates?
What is seen?

A

Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase deficiency

Uroporphyrin builds up

Symptoms:
Blistering cutaneous photosensitivity later on in life (cutanea tarda)
Tea colored urine

*The most common porphyria

1082
Q

What are the qualitative platelet disorders & their causes?

A

Bernard-Soulier syndrome = GPIb defect (adhesion)

Glanzmann’s thrombasthenia = GP IIb/IIIa defect (aggregation)

*BS = big suckers (PLT’s turned over faster –> low PLT count & larger platelets)

1083
Q

What is the cause of ITP?

A

Autoimmune Ab’s against GPIIb/IIIa –> splenic consumption of platelets

Tx: Steroids, IVIg, splenectomy (refractory)

1084
Q

What is the cause of TTP & HUS?

A

TTP:
ADAMTS13 deficiency (acquired via autoimmunity or congenital)
–> circulating ^vWF multimers –> ^PLT aggregation & thrombosis

HUS:
Verotoxin damage of endothelium –> PLT aggregation & thrombosis

1085
Q

What is seen with TTP-HUS?

A
Altered mental status
Acute kidney injury
Thrombocytopenia
Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
Fever
1086
Q

What is seen in von Willebrand’s disease?

What is the treatment?

A

Autosomal dominant deficiency in vWF:
^bleeding time & ^PTT
Abnormal ristocetin assay

Tx: Desmopressin (DDAVP) –> ^vWF release from W-P bodies

1087
Q

What are the causes of DIC?

A

“STOP Making New Thrombi Stupid”

Sepsis (gram-)
Trauma
Obstetric complications (tissue thromboplastin in amniotic fluid)
Pancreatitis (acute)
Malignancy
Nephrotic syndrome
Transfusion
Snakebites (rattlesnake)
1088
Q

What is the most common inherited bleeding disorder?

Hypercoagulable disorder?

A

Bleeding - vWD

Hypercoagulable - Factor V Leiden (especially whites)

1089
Q

What are the inherited thrombotic syndromes?

A
Factor V Leiden
Prothrombin mutation (3' UTR mut. --> ^^production)
Antithrombin deficiency (normalizes with heparin)
Protein C or S deficiency (^coumadin-induced-necrosis)
1090
Q

How can CML be differentiated from a leukemoid reaction?

A
CML:
Myeloid:Erythroid > 10:1
Alkaline phosphatase negative
^Basophils
t[9;22]
1091
Q

What are the symptoms of Hodgkin’s Lymphoma?

A

Localized group of LAD

“B” symptoms (fever, night sweats, weight loss)

1092
Q

Reed-Sternberg cells

Diagnosis?

A

“Owl’s eye” nuclei = mirror image bi-lobed or bi-nucleated with nucleolus. CD15+ & CD30+
Usually surrounded by reactive lymphocytes.

Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

1093
Q

What types of Hodgkin’s lymphoma have a better/worse prognosis?

A

Lymphocyte rich –> better prognosis

Lymphocyte depleted –> worse prognosis

1094
Q

Popcorn cells

Diagnosis?

A

Nodular lymphocyte predominant hodgkin’s lymphoma (NLPHL)

Different from nodular sclerosing type (most commen; women = men)

1095
Q

What type of lymphoma has a bimodal age distribution?

A

Hodgkin’s = young adulthood & then > 55y

Non-hodgkin’s = 20-40y

1096
Q

Lacunar cells

Diagnosis?

A

Reid-Sternberg cells that appear to be in a lake because there is a space around them.

Nodular sclerosing hodgkin’s lymphoma

1097
Q

How can bands be distinguished by flow cytometry?

A

They have decreased CD16 (FcR) on their surface.

1098
Q

What are the non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas?

A
B-cell:
Burkitt's
Diffuse large B-cell
Mantle cell
Follicular

T-cell:
Adult T-cell
Mycosis fungoides/Sezary syndrome

1099
Q

t(8;14)

Diagnosis?

A

Burkitt’s lymphoma

c-myc activation

1100
Q

“Starry sky” appearance

A

Burkitt’s lymphoma

Sheets of basophilic B-cells with interspersed macrophages.

1101
Q

What mutation is seen in mantle cell lymphoma?

What cell-marker is seen?

A

t(11;14) - Cyclin D1 translocated to Ig heavy chain location

CD5+

1102
Q

t(14;18)

Diagnosis?

A

Follicular lymphoma & DLCL

Translocation of Ig heavy chain and bcl-2.

1103
Q

How does adult T-cell lymphoma present?

A

Rash & lytic bone lesions

Caused by HTLV-1 (seen in Japan, Africa, Caribbean)

1104
Q

What can cause marginal zone lymphoma?

A

Marginal zone only seen in chronic inflammatory conditions:
MALToma
Hashimoto’s
Sjogren’s

1105
Q

T-cells with Cerebriform nuclei

Diagnosis?

A

Sezary syndrome (systemic mycosis fungoides)

Mycosis fungoides –> Pautrier microabscesses in skin

1106
Q

What are the symptoms of multiple myeloma?

A
CRAB:
hyperCalcemia
Renal insufficiency
Anemia
Bone lytic lesions --> back pain
1107
Q

What is seen on labs with multiple myeloma?

What are the risks?

A

Punched out lytic bone lesions on x-ray
M-spike on electrophoresis (IgG > IgA)
Bence-Jones protein in urine (Ig light chain)
Rouleaux formation
Many plasma cells with “clock face” chromatin

Risks:
Susceptibility to infection (most common COD)
Primary amyloidosis (AL)

1108
Q

What is seen with Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia?

A

M spike of IgM (macro) –> hyperviscosity symptoms only

1109
Q

What is asymptomatic multiple myeloma?

A

Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance (MGUS)

1% chance per year of –> MM

1110
Q

What are the symptoms of leukemia in general?

A

Marrow failure:

Anemia (RBC’s)
Infection (WBC’s)
Hemorrhage (PLT’s)

1111
Q

What type of leukemia is seen in kids?

A

ALL

1112
Q

What is the cell marker of ALL?

A

Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia/Lymphoma
All ALL are TdT+

Pre-B = CD10/19/20+
Pre-T = CD1/2/5+
1113
Q

What is seen on a CLL/SLL peripheral blood smear?

How does it present?

A

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia/Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma

Smudge cells on peripheral smear
Asymptomatic or autoimmune hemolytic anemia

1114
Q

What cell marker is used for hair cell leukemia?

A

TRAP (tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase)

“TRAP the hairy animal”
It remains TRAPPED in red pulp (spleen) & bone marrow –> no LAD

1115
Q

What is the treatment for hairy cell leukemia?

A

Cladribine

It is a purine analog that inhibits ADA.

1116
Q

How does APL present?

What is seen on peripheral smear?

A

APL (M3 subtype of AML) often presents with DIC because Auer rods (present on peripheral smear; crystallized MPO) can induce DIC.

1117
Q

t(15;17)

Diagnosis?

A

M3 subtype of AML = APL

Treat with ATRA

1118
Q

t(9;22)

Diagnosis?

A

Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML)

t(9;22) = bcr-abl fusion

1119
Q

How does CML present?

How is it treated?

A

^Basophils, neutrophils, metamyelocytes
Splenomegaly
May transform into AML > ALL

Responds to Imatinib

1120
Q

What leukemias are seen at increased rates in Down syndrome?

A

Before 5y –> Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia

After 5y –> ALL

1121
Q

What is seen in Langerhans histiocytosis?

A

Proliferation of dendritic cells –> lytic bone lesions & skin rash
Birbeck granules (tennis rackets)
S-100+ & CD1a+

1122
Q

How does polycythemia vera present?

A

^RBC’s, ^WBC’s, ^PLT’s
DVT’s
#1 cause of bud-chiari
Itching after a hot shower (^mast cells)

1123
Q

Dacrocyte

Diagnosis?

A

Dacrocyte = teardrop cell –> Myelofibrosis
“The marrow is crying because it’s fibrosed”

It is its own chronic myeloproliferative disorder and can also be seen late in polycythemia vera.

1124
Q

What can cause inappropriate production of EPO?

A
Renal cell carcinoma
Wilms' tumor
Renal cysts
HCC
Hydronephrosis
1125
Q

What is the mechanism of heparin?

A

Cofactor for Antithrombin –> inactivates Xa & IIa

1126
Q

What is the mechanism of HIT?

A

Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia

IgG Ab’s against Hepatin-Platelet factor 4 –> Ab-Heparin-PF4 complex activates platelets –> thrombosis & thrombocytopenia

1127
Q

What is Lepirudin?

A

Lepirudin & Bivalirudin are thrombin inhibitors used as an alternative to heparin following HIT

1128
Q

What is the treatment for thrombolytic overdose?

A

Aminocaproic acid

1129
Q

What are the thrombolytic drugs?
What is their mechanism
When are they contraindicated?

A

Alteplase (tPA), reteplase (rPA), tenecteplase (TNK-tPA)

They cause activation of plasminogen –> plasmin –> cleaves thrombin & fibrin clots & fibrinogen

Contraindicated in active bleeding, Hx of intracranial bleeding, severe HTN.

1130
Q

What is the mechanism of aspirin?

What are its toxicities?

A

Irreversible COX-1 & COX-2 inhibitor. Endothelial cells can resynthesize COX-2 –> PGI2. Platelets cannot resynthesize COX-1 –> decreased TXA2.

Toxicity:
Gastric ulcers
Chronic use - AKI, interstitial nephritis, UGI bleeds
Reye’s syndrome in post-viral children
Overdose –> Resp. alkalosis –> eventual metabolic acidosis

1131
Q

What are the ADP receptor inhibitors?

What are their toxicities?

A

Clopidogrel, Ticlopidine, Pasugrel, Ticagrelor

Irreversibly bind ADP receptors –> PLT’s don’t activate or display GPIIb/IIIa –> cannot aggregate

Ticlopidine –> neutropenia (Presents w/ fever & stomatitis)

1132
Q

What are the Xa inhibitors?

IIa inhibitors?

A

Xa inhibitors have X in the name:
Apixaban
Rivaroxaban
Idraparinux

IIa inhibitors have a G in the name:
Argatroban
Dabigatran

1133
Q

What are the phosphodiesterase III inhibitors?

What is their mechanism?

A

PDEIII inhibitors = Cilostazol, Dipyridamole

PDE III inhibition –> ^cAMP –> PLT aggregation inhibited & vasodilation

Used for intermittent claudication, angina prophylaxis

1134
Q

What are the GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors?

A

GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors = Abciximab, Eptifbatide, Tirofiban

Used for angioplasty & ACS

1135
Q

What is the mechanism of Cytarabine?

A

Pyrimidine analog –> inhibitor of DNAP

Can cause pancytopenia

1136
Q

What is the mechanism of Dactinomycin?

What is its toxicity?

A

Dactinomycin intercalates into DNA

Used for childhood tumors! (Wilms’, Ewing’s sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma)

Can cause myelosuppression

1137
Q

What is the mechanism of Doxorubicin?

What are its toxicities?

A

Doxorubin/Daunomycin intercalate into the DNA & inhibit TopoII

Toxicities:
Cardiotoxic (prevented with Dexrazoxane)
Vesicant
Myelosuppression

1138
Q

What is the mechanism of Bleomycin?

What are its toxicities?

A

Bleomycin induces free-radical formation –> dsDNA breaks

Toxicities:
Pulmonary fibrosis
Skin hyperpigmentation

1139
Q

What is the mechanism of Cyclophosphamide?

What are its toxicities?

A

Cyclophosphamide/Ifosphamide are alkylating agents
–> Crosslink DNA at guanine N-7 position

Toxicities:
Hemorrhagic cystitis (Mesna prevents)
Myelosuppression
Sterility

1140
Q

What are the nitrosureas?

What is their use?

A

Carmustine, Lomustine, Semustine, Streptozocin

They are alkylating agents that can cross the BBB –> used for brain tumors. They can cause CNS toxicities (ataxia, dizziness)

1141
Q

What is the mechanism of Busulfan?

What are its toxicities?

A

Busulfan is an alkylating agent used for CML & ablation of bone marrow prior to BMT

Toxicities:
Pulmonary fibrosis
Skin hyperpigmentation

1142
Q

What is the mechanism of Vincristine?

What are its toxicities?

A

Vincristine & Vinblastine block polymerization of microtubules –> inhibit mitotic spindle formation.

Toxicities:
Vincristine - peripheral neuropathy
Vinblastine - bone marrow suppression (blasts bone marrow)

1143
Q

What is the mechanism of Cisplatin?

What are its toxicities?

A

Cisplatin, Carboplatin, & Oxaliplatin –> crosslink DNA

Cisplatin - Nephrotoxic & ototoxic
Carboplatin - Myelosuppression
Oxaliplatin - Paresthesias & cold sensitivity

1144
Q

What is the mechanism of Hydroxyurea?

What are its toxicities?

A

Hydroxyurea inhibits ribonucleotide reductase (UDP –> dUDP)

Toxicities:
Bone marrow suppression

1145
Q

What is the mechanism of Imatinib?

What are its toxicities?

A

Imatinib is a bcr-able tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Used in CML & GIST

Toxicity:
Fluid retention

1146
Q

What is the mechanism of Rituximab?

What is it used for?

A

mAb against CD20

Used in Non-hodgkin’s lymphoma, RA

1147
Q

What is the mechanism of Vemurafenib?

What is its use?

A

Small molecule inhibitor of B-raf kinase with V600E mutation

Used to treat metastatic melanoma

1148
Q

What is the mechanism of Bevacizumab?

A

mAb against VEGF –> inhibits angiogenesis

1149
Q

What bugscause bacteremia in a sickle cell patient?

A

Strep pneumo > H. flu

They are functionally asplenic –> encapsulated organisms
Also don’t forget that they get Salmonella osteomyelitis

1150
Q

What types of collagen are defective/deficient in inherited diseases?

A

Type I –> Osteogenesis imperfecta
Type II
Type III –> Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome
Type IV –> Alport Syndrome

1151
Q
How many calories are present in 1 gram of:
Protein
Fat
Carbohydrate
Ethanol
A

Protein & Carbs = 4 cal
Fat = 9 cal
Ethanol = 7 cal

1152
Q

What is Clozapine used for?

What toxicities are seen with it?

A

It is an atypical antipsychotic used when other antipsychotics have all failed (it’s the big gun).

Toxicities:
Agranulocytosis!
Significant weight gain
Seizures

1153
Q

When are ACE inhibitors contraindicated?

A

Bilateral renal artery stenosis (these pts are dependent on ACE-mediated constriction of efferent arteriole to maintain GFR) –> ARF if administered

Also Pregnancy (teratogen)

1154
Q

What are the layers of the epidermis?

A

“Cancel Lab, Get Some Beer”

Corneum
Lucidum (only present on thick skin)
Granulosum
Spinosum
Basale
1155
Q

Where are apocrine glands found?

A

Armpits, genitals, and nipples

Secrete milky viscous fluid. Stinks because of bacteria.

1156
Q

What are the epithelial cell junction types & their compositions?

A

Tight junctions = Claudins & Occludens
Adherens junctions = Cadherins (link to actin)
Desmosomes = Desmogleins (link to keratin)
Gap junctions = Connexins form Connexons
Hemidesmosomes (bind basement membrane)
Integrins (bind laminin in BM)

1157
Q

What landmark is used for a pudendal nerve block?

A lumbar puncture?

A

Pudendal n. block (childbirth) –> Ischial spine

Lumbar puncture –> Iliac crest

1158
Q

What are the rotator cuff muscles & their functions?

A

SITS:

Supraspinatus –> initial abduction (most common RC injury)
Infraspinatus –> laterally rotates arm (pitching injury)
Teres minor –> adducts & laterally rotates
Subscapularis –> adducts & medially rotates

1159
Q

What nerve is affected by this injury?

Humerus surgical neck fracture or dislocation

A

Axillary nerve –> deltoid atrophy & numbness over deltoid

1160
Q

What nerve is affected by this injury?

Subluxation of radius

A

Radial nerve (deep branch) –> wrist drop & numb dorsal hand/snuffbox

1161
Q

What nerve is affected by this injury?

Midshaft humerus fracture

A

Radial nerve –> wrist drop & numb posterior hand/snuffbox

1162
Q

What nerve is affected by this injury?

Supracondylar humerus fracture

A

Proximal Median nerve –> Pope’s blessing & lateral hand numbness

1163
Q

What nerves contribute to the branches of the brachial plexus?

A

C5, C6, C7, C8, T1

“The 3 Musketeers Assasinated 5 Rats, 5 Mice, & 2 Unicorns”

Musculocutaneous - C5,6,7
Axillary - C5,6
Radial - C5,6,7,8,T1
Median - C5,6,7,8,T1
Ulnar - C8,T1
1164
Q

What nerve is affected by this injury?

Lunate dislocation

A

Distal median nerve –> median claw (can’t extend 2 & 3)

1165
Q

What can cause distal ulnar injury?

What is seen?

A

Fractured hook of the hamate –> distal ulnar claw (cannot extent 4th & 5th digits)

1166
Q

What causes Erb-Duchenne palsy?

A

Waiter’s tip - caused by torn upper trunk of brachial plexus (C5,6) seen in infants following delivery

1167
Q

What causes a Klumpke claw?

A

Torn lower trunk of brachial plexus (C8, T1). This can occur by pulling a baby out by its arms, falling and catching oneself on a tree branch, or thoracic outlet syndrome.

1168
Q

What causes thoracic outlet syndrome?

What is seen?

A

Compression of the brachial plexus & subclavian vessels between the anterior & middle scalene (superior thoracic outlet).

Symptoms:
Atrophy of intrinsic hand muscles
Pain/paresthesias
Decreased pulses in the arm
Edema
1169
Q

What carpal injuries can occur by falling on an outstretched hand?
What are the complications?

A

Fractured scaphoid –> avascular necrosis

Dislocated lunate –> acute carpal tunnel syndrome (median n.)

Fractured hook of hamate –> ulnar n. injury

1170
Q

When does clawing of the hand occur?

A

Clawing occurs with more distal lesions, because the deficit is pronounced even at rest. More proximal lesions present with deficits only when the muscle is used.

1171
Q

What common drugs have antimuscarinic effects?

A
Atropine
TCA's
H1 blockers (diphenhydramine, etc.)
Neuroleptics
Antiparkinsonian drugs
1172
Q

What are the contraindications of metformin?

A
Renal failure
Liver failure
CHF
Alcoholism
Sepsis

Anything that could predispose to lactic acidosis

1173
Q

What is cataplexy?

A

Sudden loss of motor tone triggered by emotion. This is seen in narcolepsy.

1174
Q

What substance is deficient in the CSF in narcolepsy?

A

Hypocretin-1 & Hypocretin-2
(Orexin-A & Orexin-B)

Produced in the lateral hypothalamus, they promote wakefulness.

1175
Q

What side effects are seen with low potency first generation antipsychotics?
High potency?

A

Low potency –> blockade of:
Cholinergic receptors –> anticholinergic
Histamine receptors –> sedation
Noradrenergic receptors –> orthostatic hypotension

High potency:
Extrapyramidal symptoms

1176
Q

What receptors are antagonized by TCA’s?

A

Histamine –> sedation
Alpha adrenergic –> orthostatic hypotension
Cholinergic –> anticholinergic effects

1177
Q

What must be monitored in a pt on thiazolidinediones?

A

A pt on TZD’s (Rosiglitazone, etc.) must have their LFT’s monitored.

1178
Q

What adverse effects are seen with Foscarnet?

A

Foscarnet binds the pyrophosphate binding site on viral RNA polymerase. Second line for CMV retinitis & HSV.

Adverse effects:
Nephrotoxicity
Hypocalcemia
Hypomagnesemia

1179
Q

What are the long, intermediate, & short acting insulins?

A

Short:
Lispro, Aspart, Glulisine

Intermediate:
NPH > Regular insulin

Long:
Glargine
Detemir

1180
Q

What is the equation for physiologic dead space?

A

Physiologic DS = anatomic DS + V/Q mismatch

DS = TV*(PaCO2-PeCO2)/PaCO2

1181
Q

What risks are associated with Common Variable Immunodeficiency?

A

Increased risk of autoimmune disease & lymphoma

1182
Q

What is the outcome of vertical transmission of HBV?

A

Immature infant immune system:
Mild initial illness
High chance of chronic infection

1183
Q

What is the treatment for toxoplasmosis?

A

Sulfadiazine & Pyrimethamine

1184
Q

What are the most common causes of focal brain lesions in HIV patients?

A

Toxoplasma

Primary CNS lymphoma

1185
Q

What is used to treat hypertension in pregnant women?

A

Methyldopa

1186
Q

What is the adenoma-to-carcinoma progression of CRC?

A

Normal colon –> APC mutation –> Proliferation –> K-RAS mutation –> Adenoma –> p53 mutation –> Carcinoma

Order is AK-53

1187
Q

What is considered fever?
What is dangerous to brain tissue?
What causes death?

A

Fever > 101.0 (38.3)
Neurological sequelae = 42 degrees
Death = 43 degrees

1188
Q

What is hyperpyrexia?

What is the treatment for hyperpyrexia?

A

Hyperpyrexia is a temperature > 40 degrees

Treatment is NSAIDs/Acetaminophen & physical cooling of the body.

1189
Q

What are the risk factors for cervical cancer?

A

Multiple sexual partners
Cigarette smoking
Early coitarche
Low socioeconomic status

1190
Q

What drugs improve mortality in CHF patients?

A

ACE inhibitors
Beta blockers (unless decompensated)
ARB’s
Spironolactone

1191
Q

What is seen with left-sided CHF?

A

Pulmonary edema
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
Orthopnea

Hemosiderin-laden macrophages

1192
Q

What is seen with right-sided CHF?

A

Chronic passive congestion –> hepatosplenomegaly
(nutmeg liver)
Peripheral dependent pitting edema
JVD

1193
Q

What causes acute bacterial endocarditis?

Subacute?

A

Acute = S. aureus –> large vegetations on a normal valve

Subacute = Viridans strep –> small vegetations on congenitally abnormal or diseased valves

1194
Q

What can cause culture-negative endocarditis?

A
Malignancy
Hypercoagulability
Lupus (Marantic/Libman-Sacks)
HACEK organisms:
-Hemophilus
-Actinobacillus
-Cardiobacterium
-Eikenella
-Kingella
1195
Q

What are the signs/symptoms of bacterial endocarditis?

A

bacteria FROM JANE

Fever
Roth's spots (IC mediated)
Osler's nodes (Painful; IC mediated)
Murmur
Janeway lesions (Painless; septic emboli)
Anemia (of chronic disease)
Nail bed hemorrhage
Emboli
1196
Q

What complications can result from bacterial endocarditis?

A

Chordae rupture
Glomerulonephritis
Suppurative pericarditis
Emboli

1197
Q

How is diagnosis of rheumatic fever made?

A

JONES criteria

Joints (migratory polyarthritis)
s chorea

Minor criteria: Fever, ^ESR

1198
Q

What is seen early in chronic rheumatic heart disease?

Late?

A

Early death = myocarditis
Rheumatic heart disease affects Mitral > Aortic&raquo_space; Tricuspid
Early lesion - mitral regurgitation
Late lesion - mitral stenosis

1199
Q

What is seen histologically with rheumatic heart disease?

A
Aschoff bodies (granulomas)
Anitschkow's cells (activated histiocytes)

Caused by a Type II hypersensitivity reaction from Ab’s against M protein.

1200
Q

What is seen with acute pericarditis?

A

Sharp pain (worse w/ inspiration, better w/ leaning forward)
Friction rub
ST elevation in all leads

1201
Q

What are the types of pericarditis & their causes?

A

Fibrinous - Dressler’s syndrome, uremia, radiation

Serous - viral pericarditis, inflammatory diseases (SLE, RA, etc.)

Suppurative - bacterial pericarditis (rare due to abx)

1202
Q

What is seen with cardiac tamponade?

A
Beck's triad:
-Hypotension
-JVD
-Distant heart sounds
Pulsus paradoxus
Electrical alternans

Pulsus paradoxus - systolic BP decreases by at least 10 mmHg upon inspiration

1203
Q

What can cause pulsus paradoxus?

A

Pulsus paradoxus - systolic BP decreases by at least 10 mmHg upon inspiration

Caused by:
Cardiac tamponade
Pericarditis
Asthma
Obstructive sleep apnea
Croup
1204
Q

What cardiac tumors are seen?

A

Myxoma - Adults; ball-valve obstruction in the LA (syncope)

Rhabdomyoma - Kids; associated with tuberous sclerosis

Metastasis - Often to pericardium (effusion). Melanoma, lymphoma

1205
Q

What is Kussmaul’s sign?

What is it seen in?

A

^ in JVP upon inspiration rather than a decrease

Seen in:
Constrictive pericarditis
Restrictive cardiomyopathy
RA or RV tumors
Cardiac tamponade
1206
Q

Who is classically affected by Takayasu’s arteritis?

A

Asian females under 40

1207
Q

What is seen in Takayasu’s arteritis?

A

“Pulseless disease” (weak UE pulses)
Visual & neurologic symptoms
^ESR

Basically the same disease as Giant Cell arteritis but occurs at the aortic arch & proximal great vessels.

1208
Q

What is seen with Polyarteritis Nodosa?

A
HBV seropositivity
Fever, weight loss,
Abdominal pain w/ melena
Hypertension
Renal damage
Neurologic symptoms (wrist/foot drop)
"String of pearls" on arteriogram
Fatal if untreated

SPARES THE LUNGS

1209
Q

Who is classically affected by polyarteritis nodosa?

What is seen histologically?

A

Young adults

Transmural inflammation with fibrinoid necrosis

1210
Q

What is seen in Kawasaki disease?

A
Fever
Cervial LAD
Conjunctivitis
Strawberry tongue (mucocutaneous LN syndrome)
Desquamating rash on palms & soles

Can lead to coronary MI or aneurysm/rupture

1211
Q

What is the treatment for Kawasaki disease?

A

IVIg & high-dose aspirin

1212
Q

What autoAb’s are seen in Kawasaki disease?

A

Anti-endothelial or anti-smooth muscle Ab’s

1213
Q

What is seen with microscopic polyangiitis?

A

Hemoptysis
RPGN
Palpable purpura
p-ANCA’s

NO granulomas, NO eosinophilia

1214
Q

What is seen with Granulomatosis & Polyangiitis?

A

Wegener’s

Granulomas
Sinusitis/Nasopharyngeal ulceration
Hemoptysis (CXR shows large nodular densities)
RPGN
c-ANCA's
1215
Q

What is seen with Churg-Strauss syndrome?

A
Asthma, sinusitis
Palpable purpura
Peripheral neuropathy
Granulomas with eosinophilia
RPGN
p-ANCA
^IgE
1216
Q

What is seen with Henoch-Shonlein purpura?

A
Most common systemic childhoos vasculitis
Follows an URI
Palpable purpura on buttocks/legs
Arthralgia
Abdominal pain w/ melena
IgA nephropathy
1217
Q

What are c-ANCA’s & p-ANCA’s against?

A

c-ANCA = PR3-ANCA

p-ANCA = MPO-ANCA

1218
Q

What is seen with a strawberry hemangioma?

A

Benign capillary hemangioma of infancy.

Grows rapidly and regresses spontaneously by 5-8y

1219
Q

What is seen with a cherry hemangioma?

A

Benign capillary hemangioma of the elderly

Does not regress

1220
Q

What is a pyogenic granuloma?

A

Polypoid capillary hemangioma that can ulcerate & bleed.

Associated with trauma & pregnancy

1221
Q

What is a cystic hygroma?

A

Cavernous lymphangioma of the neck

Associated with Turner syndrome

1222
Q

What is a Glomus tumor?

A

Benign, painful red/blue tumor under the fingernail

Arises from glomus body

1223
Q

What is a bacillary angiomatosis?

A

Benign capillary lesion found in AIDS patients
Caused by Bartonella henselae infection
Looks like Kaposi’s sarcoma

1224
Q

Where are angiosarcomas typically found?

A

Head, neck, & breast following radiation

Liver due to PVC, arsenic, & Thorotrast exposure

1225
Q

What causes Kaposi’s sarcoma?

A

Endothelial malignancy of skin, mouth, GI, & respiratory tract
Caused by HHV-8 & HIV together
Seen in old Eastern European males, HIV pts, & transplant pts

1226
Q

What is seen with Sturge-Weber disease?

A

Port wine stain on face (trigeminal distribution)
Ipsilateral (to port wine stain) leptomeningeal angioma
Seizures
Early-onset glaucoma

It is a vascular disorder that affects the small vessels.

1227
Q

What mutation causes Von Hippel-Lindau disease?

What neoplasms are seen in Von Hippel-Lindau disease?

A

Autosomal dominant deletion of VHL gene on chromosome 3p

Cerebellar hemangioblastomas
Clear cell renal carcinoma
Pheochromocytomas

1228
Q

What causes “housemaid’s knee?”

A

Prepatellar bursitis. Seen in patients who do a lot of kneeling.

1229
Q

How many organisms are required to establish cholera?

A

Usually 10^10

Anything that decreases gastric acid can cause susceptibility (PPI’s, food ingestion, achlorhydria)

1230
Q

What is the most common cause of aortic stenosis?

A

Senile calcific aortic stenosis

Presents in 70’s or earlier if bicuspid aortic valve is present.

1231
Q

What are the triggers for Gilbert hyperbilirubinemia?

A
Fasting
Stress
Hemolysis
Physical exertion
Febrile illness
Fatigue
1232
Q

From where do the bronchial arteries arise?

Where do they empty?

A

Arise from the descending thoracic aorta.

Most of the venous blood is returned via the pulmonary veins. This accounts for part of the A-a gradient.

1233
Q

What type of glucose are the GLUT transporters selective for?

A

They are somewhat selective for D-glucose

1234
Q

What are the insertion points of the SCM?

A

Sterno –> Sternum
Cleido –> Clavicle (medial portion)
Mastoid –> Mastoid process

1235
Q

What drug is used to prevent cisplatin nephrotoxicity?

What is its mechanism?

A
Amifostine scavenges free radicals.
Chloride diuresis (IV NaCl) is also used to keep cisplatin in a nonreactive state while in the kidney.
1236
Q

What drug is given to prevent Doxorubicin/Daunomycin cardiotoxicity?

A

Dexrazoxane (iron chelating agent)

1237
Q

What is the “female athlete triad”?

A

Eating disorder
Amenorrhea
Osteoporosis

1238
Q

What is caused by rat poison?

What is the antidote?

A

Rat poison is like a long-acting warfarin.

Thus, the treatment to prevent bleeding is fresh frozen plasma.

1239
Q

What drug is used to treat bradycardia secondary to RCA infarction?
What is a possible acute side effect?

A

Atropine can be used to block vagal outflow to the SA & AV nodes.

This can cause acute closed-angle glaucoma in susceptible patients. It is absolutely contraindicated in a patient with preexisting glaucoma.

1240
Q

How is congenital adrenal hyperplasia treated?

A

Low dose corticosteroids —> inhibition of ACTH –> suppression of HPA axis

1241
Q

Where do Cushing ulcers arise?

Curling ulcers?

A

Cushing ulcers can be in the esophagus, stomach, or duodenum. They arise due to ^ICP.

Curling ulcers are found in the proximal duodenum only.
They arise due to severe trauma/burns –> decreased oxygenation

1242
Q

What can cause gallbladder hypomotility?

A

Pregnancy
Rapid weight loss
Long-term TPN or octreotide
High spinal cord injuries

1243
Q

Why is spironolactone beneficial in CHF patients?

A

It is likely due to inhibition of ventricular remodeling & cardiac fibrosis (normally facilitated by aldosterone).

1244
Q

What are the effects of nitroprusside?

A

It is a balanced arterial & venodilator. This causes decreased preload and afterload.

1245
Q

What are the eukaryotic promoters?

A

CAAT (-75) & TATA (-25)

1246
Q

What are the advantages of COX 2 inhibitors?

A

Less risk of bleeding
Less GI ulceration

They have a higher risk of clotting though.

1247
Q

What nerve injury is seen with subluxation of the radial head?

A

Damage to the deep branch of the radial nerve –> wrist drop without sensory deficit

1248
Q

What is the function of P-glycoprotein?

A

It is an ATP-driven efflux pump that is often upregulated in tumor cells & can cause resistance to chemotherapy.

1249
Q

What is the mechanism of shiga toxin?

A

Alter the 60S ribosomal subunit to prevent tRNA binding to the ribosome –> inhibit translation

1250
Q

What is the most common risk factor for native valve endocarditis in the US?

A

Mitral valve prolapse

1251
Q

What are the sizes of petechiae, purpura, & ecchymoses?

A

Petechiae < 5mm

5 mm < Purpura < 1 cm

Ecchymoses >1cm

1252
Q

What is the mechanism of diabetic neuropathy?

A

1) Aldose reductase conversion of intracellular glucose to sorbitol –> osmotic damage to axons & schwann cells
2) Hyaline arteriolosclerosis of endoneural arterioles –> ischemic nerve damage

1253
Q

What bugs typically cause reactive arthritis?

A
Reider's syndrome is typically caused by:
Chlamydia
Campylobacter
Salmonella
Shigella
Yersinia
1254
Q

What signaling molecules work through increases in cGMP?

A

Atrial natriuretic peptide

Nitric oxide

1255
Q

What hormones exert their effects through an increase in cAMP?

A

Glucagon
TSH
PTH

1256
Q

What is seen in Diffuse Esophageal Spasm?

A

Painful, disorganized, sustained esophageal contractions
“Corkscrew esophagus” on barium swallow
Intermittent dysphagia & chest pain

1257
Q

What is used as a serum marker of anaphylaxis?

A

Tryptase

It is released (with histamine) from mast cells & is relatively specific to them.

1258
Q

What is the intrapleural pressure at rest?

A

Intrapleural pressure at FRC = -5 cm H20

1259
Q

What does Parvovirus interact with on host cells?

A

P antigen on immature erythroid cells

Can also infect mature ones but has tropism for immature

1260
Q

What is the major determinant of E. coli virulence in neonatal meningitis?

A

K-1 capsular antigen

1261
Q

What receptor is responsible for nicotine addiction?

A

alpha-4-beta-2 nicotinic ACh receptor –> downstream dopamine release

1262
Q

What is the mechanism of Verenicline?

A

It is an alpha-4-beta-2 nicotinic receptor partial agonist used to reduce nicotine cravings & attenuating the reward pathway of nicotine

1263
Q

What medications cause fat redistribution from the extremities to the abdomen?

A
Protease inhibitors (lipodystrophy)
Corticosteroids (Cushing's)
1264
Q

What vessels can cause compression of CNIII?

A

Posterior cerebral artery
Superior cerebellar artery

CNIII runs between these vessels & aneurysm in either one can cause compression of it.

1265
Q

With CNIII palsy, what type of injury causes GVE symptoms?

GSE symptoms?

A

Compression tends to cause GVE symptoms –> pupillary reflexes

Ischemia tends to cause GSE symptoms –> motor palsy

1266
Q

What can cause autoimmune degeneration of the cerebellum?

A

Paraneoplastic syndromes from:
Breast/ovary (anti-Yo)
Lung (Anti-P/Q; Anti-Hu)

1267
Q

Which pneumoconiosis is associated with eggshell calcification of hilar LN’s?

A

Silicosis

1268
Q

What causes bronchiolitis obliterans?

What is seen?

A

Chronic rejection of a transplanted lung –> lymphocytic inflammation & necrosis of bronchiolar walls –> granulation tissue & exudate in the lumen of the bronchioli –> fibrous tissue obliteration of small airways

1269
Q

What can cause clubbing of the fingers?

A

Lung diseases - cancer, TB, CF, bronchiectasis, pulmonary HTN, any with hypoxia. This is the most common cause.

Heart diseases - cyanotic (5 T’s), bacterial endocarditis

Other - IBD, hyperthyroidism, malabsorption

1270
Q

What is the germ tube test?

A

Inoculate Candida albicans into serum at 37 degress for 3h –> true hyphae will sprout from the yeast (often look like little J’s)

1271
Q

What is the histology of a lung hamartoma?

A

Hyaline cartilage
Fat, smooth muscle, clefts
Lined by respiratory epithelium

Generally present as a peripheral “coin lesion”

1272
Q

What is derived from the foregut?

A
Everything coming off of the celiac trunk:
Esophagus
Stomach
Liver
Gallbladder
Pancreas
Upper duodenum
1273
Q

What is derived from the midgut?

A
Everything supplied by the SMA:
Lower duodenum
Small intestine
Ascending colon
Proximal 2/3 of the transverse colon
1274
Q

What is derived from the hindgut?

A

Everything supplied by the IMA:
Distal 1/3 of the transverse colon
Descending colon
Sigmoid colon

1275
Q

What can be seen with intestinal malrotation?

A

Intestinal obstruction –> bilious vomiting in first week of life
Cecum in RUQ, fixed by Ladd’s fibrous bands
Midgut volvulus –> gangrene or perforation

1276
Q

What is the equation for attributable risk percentage?

A

ARP = (RR-1)/RR

1277
Q

What is Cheyne-Stokes breathing?

What is it seen in?

A

Repeating episodes of breathing followed by an apneic period

Seen in advanced heart disease & neurologic disease. It is caused by a delayed response to increases in PaCO2.

1278
Q

What is seen clinically with cerebral amyloid angiopathy?

A

Recurrent small hemorrhagic strokes in multiple brain locations, especially outside of the basal ganglia & in the hemispheres.

1279
Q

What is the treatment for insomnia associated with jet lag?

A

Melatonin

1280
Q

What are the portacaval anastomoses?

A

They link the portal vein to the systemic venous circulation

1) Left gastric vein –> Esophageal vein
(Esophageal varices)

2) Superior rectal vein –> Middle & inferior rectal veins
(Hemorrhoids)

3) Paraumbilical veins –> Superficial & inferior epigastric veins
(Caput medusae)

1281
Q

What species cause mucormycosis?

A

Mucor
Rhizopus
Absidia

1282
Q

What bacterium requires media with cholesterol?

A

Ureaplasma urealyticum requires special media rich in urea & cholesterol to grow. It can cause urethritis.

1283
Q

What can be caused by use of appetite suppressants?

A

Fenfluramine
Phentermine
(Fen-Phen)

If ingested for >3 months, they can cause pulmonary hypertension. Classic presentation is dyspnea on exertion –> cor pulmonale (RVH) –> sudden cardiac death.

1284
Q

When are MAOI’s desirable?

A

Atypical depression

1285
Q

What are the fever cycle lengths of the various species of Plasmodium?

A

vivax/ovale - 48h
malariae - 72h
falciparum - severe & disorganized

1286
Q

What is the PMN count in a gouty joint?

A

Normally < 20,000

If the PMN count is much greater than this, indicates a septic arthritis.

1287
Q
What molecule (contained in food) should be avoided in patients taking MAOI's?
What is seen if it is ingested?
A

Tyramine should be avoided. It is a sympathomimetic usually degraded in the GI tract.

If ingested, it can cause hypertensive crisis.

This is the most commonly tested side effect on boards.

1288
Q

What are the long acting benzodiazepines?

A

Diazepam
Flurazepam
Chlordiazepoxide
Clorazepate

1289
Q

What are the short-acting benzodiazepines?

A

Alprazolam
Triazolam
Oxazepam

1290
Q

What should be considered if jejunal ulcers are present?

A

Gastrinoma

Jejunal ulcers are almost never caused by your everyday PUD. Also consider if the gastrinoma is part of MEN1

1291
Q

What are the possible sequelae of GAS impetigo?

Strep throat?

A

Impetigo –> only Acute post-strep GN only
Strep throat –> Acute post strep GN or Rhematic fever

Rheumatic fever can only follow strep pharyngitis.

1292
Q

What breathing rates are adopted by patients with COPD?

A

Restrictive –> higher breathing rates of low tidal volume

Obstructive –> lower breathing rates of high tidal volume

This minimizes the work of breathing for them.

1293
Q

Why are gallstones formed during pregnancy?

A

Estrogen –> ^HMG-CoA reductase activity –> ^Cholesterol

Progesterone –> Gallbladder hypomotility & reduced bile acids

Also seen with OCP use.

1294
Q

What antiarrhythmic should be used in post-MI arrhythmia?

A

Lidocaine
Mexiletine
Tocainide

They are selective for depolarized cells (ischemic myocardium). Amiodarone is the DOC for V-tach.

1295
Q

What drug is the best treatment for AChE inhibitors?

A

Pralidoxime

It can only be used early on. Atropine is an alternative, though it will only combat the muscarinic effects. The patient will still be at risk for muscle paralysis.

1296
Q

What causes a Zenker’s diverticulum?

A

Cricopharyngeal muscle dysfunction –> increased oropharyngeal pressure during swallowing –> herniation through the muscular wall

1297
Q

What does a relative afferent pupillary defect indicate?

A

A positive swinging flashlight test indicates pathology involving the retina, optic nerve, optic chiasm, or optic tract. If the pathology was after this, the pupillary light reflex would be intact.

1298
Q

What side effects are seen with Niacin?

A
High dose niacin (to treat dyslipidemia) can cause:
Flushing
Gout
Hyperglycemia
Hepatitis
1299
Q

What step in the TCA cycle produces GTP?

A

Succinate thiokinase

Succinyl-CoA Synthetase

1300
Q

Where is cryptococcus found in the environment?

A

Soil & bird (pigeon) droppings

1301
Q

Who is at risk for being lactose intolerant?

A

Asian & African descent

Can also be secondary to viral gastroenteritis or any disease that damages the intestinal epithelium

1302
Q

What is the mechanism of Niacin’s effects on dyslipidemia?

A

Decreases the synthesis of hepatic TG’s & VLDL.

Also increases HDL (drug of choice)

1303
Q

How are patients screened if fat malabsorption is suspected?

A

Sudan III stain on a stool sample reveals presence of fat

1304
Q

What coagulopathy is seen with uremic patients?

A

^bleeding time, normal PLT count, PT & aPTT

It is a qualitative platelet defect due to under-excretion of platelet inhibitory factors. Resolves with dialysis.

1305
Q

Where is a hydrocele located?

A

Within the tunica vaginalis of the testicle

It is derived from the peritoneum and can remain in communication to the peritoneal cavity, leading to hydrocele.

1306
Q

What is the basis for chloride shift seen in RBC’s?

A

CO2 (tissues) –> H+ & HCO3- –> HCO3- diffuses out –> Cl- diffuses in to maintain charge

The reverse happens in the lungs. Thus, RBC [Cl-] is high in venous blood and low in arterial blood.

1307
Q

What drug is used in acute closed-angle glaucoma?

What drug is contraindicated?

A

Use Pilocarpine (cholinomimetic –> opens meshwork)

Do NOT use epinephrine (effective at vasoconstricting to reduce production of aqueous humor but causes mydriasis –> blocks off canal of Schlemm)

1308
Q

What is the mechanism of opioids?

A

Agonists at mu opioid receptors –> opens K+ channels & closes Ca2+ channels –> inhibition of synaptic transmission

Inhibits release of ACh, NE, 5-HT, glutamate, substance P

1309
Q

What toxicities are seen with opioids?

A
Addiction
Respiratory depression
Constipation
Miosis
Additive CNS depression with other drugs

OD treated with naloxone

1310
Q

What is Butorphanol?

What is it used for?

A

It is a mu opioid receptor partial agonist used for severe pain. It has less respiratory depression than other opioids.

If given to a pt who is dependent on a normal opioid, can cause withdrawal.

1311
Q

What is the mechanism of Tramadol?

What toxicities are seen?

A

It is a weak opioid agonist that also inhibits NE & 5-HT reuptake. It is used for chronic pain.

It has toxicities similar to opioids & can lower the seizure threshold.

1312
Q

What is the drug of choice for partial seizures?

A

Carbamazepine

Both simple & complex partial seizures.

1313
Q

What is used to prevent status epilepticus?

A

Phenytoin

1314
Q

What toxicities are seen with Carbemazepine?

A
Agranulocytosis
Aplastic anemia
SIADH
Ataxia
CYP450 induction
Teratogenesis
1315
Q

What toxicities are seen with Phenytoin?

A
Nystagmus
Drug-induced Lupus
Gingival hyperplasia
Hirsutism
Megaloblastic anemia
LAD
Ataxia
CYP450 induction
Teratogenic (fetal hydantoin syndrome)
1316
Q

What toxicities are seen with valproic acid?

A

Tremor
Weight gain
Fatal hepatotoxicity (measure LFT’s)
Neural tube defects (don’t give in pregnancy)

1317
Q

What is the mechanism of barbiturates?

A

^DURATION of Cl- channel (GABAa) opening –> hyperpolarizes membrane –> decreases neuronal firing

1318
Q

What is the mechanism of benzodiazepines?

A

Increase FREQENCY of GABAa channel opening –> influx of Cl- –> hyperpolarization of neurons

1319
Q

What toxicities are seen with bezodiazepines?

What is the treatment for overdose?

A
CNS depression (seen in elderly; additive)
Dependence (Triazolam, Oxazepam, Midazolam)

OD Tx: Flumazenil (antagonist)

1320
Q

What are the common CNS depressants?

A
EtOH
Benzodiazepines
Barbiturates
1st generation antihistamines
Neuroleptics
1321
Q

What is the mechanism of Zolpidem?

A

Zolpidem, Zaleplon, & Eszopiclone

They are selective GABA agonists at the BZ1 receptor subtype. Used for insomnia.

1322
Q

What determines potency of an inhaled anesthetic?

A

^lipid solubulity

Potency = 1/MAC

1323
Q

What factors influence MAC?

A

Minimum alveolar concentration to anesthetize 50% of population

Affected ONLY by:
Age
Body temperature

1324
Q

What toxicity is seen with Halothane?

A

Hepatotoxicity:

A few days after exposure: Eosinophilia, ^ALT, ^PT

1325
Q

What toxicity is common to all inhaled anesthetics?

A

Malignant hyperthermia

not seen in N2O actually

1326
Q

What inhaled anesthetic is pro-convulsant?

A

Enflurane

1327
Q

What are the IV anesthetics?

A
Barbiturates
Benzos
Arylcyclohexamines (Ketamine)
Opioids
Propofol
1328
Q

What barbiturate is used for anesthetic induction?

A

Thiopental

It is highly lipid soluble (rapid onset) & redistributes rapidly (effects are short-lived)

1329
Q

What is propofol used for?

What is its mechanism?

A

Sedation for mechanically ventilated patients
Anesthesia induction
Short procedures

Potentiates GABAa

1330
Q

What are the ester local anesthetics?

The amides?

A

Ester = Procaine, Cocaine, Tetracaine

Amide = Lidocaine, Mepivacaine, Bupivacaine
Amide’s have 2 I’s in the name

1331
Q

What can be coadministered to increase effectiveness of local anesthetics?

A

Epinephrine can be given to vasoconstrict –> ^local action & decrease systemic concentration

1332
Q

What fibers are affected more by local anesthetics?

What sensations are lost first due to this?

A

Small myelinated > Small unmyelinated > Large myelinated > Large unmyelinated

Loss of sensation:

1) Pain
2) Temperature
3) Touch
4) Pressure

1333
Q

What is the mechanism of Dantrolene?

What is its use?

A

Blocks release of Ca2+ from the SR of skeletal muscle

Used to treat:
Malignant hyperthermia (inhaled anesthetics except N2O)
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome

1334
Q

What drugs are used to treat Parkinson’s disease?

A
BALSA:
Bromocriptine
Amantadine
Levodopa
Selegiline (and COMT inhibitors)
Antimuscarinics
1335
Q

What is the mechanism of Bromocriptine?

What is it used for?

A

It is a D2 agonist used for Parkinson’s disease & Prolactinomas

1336
Q

What toxicities are seen with Levodopa/Carbidopa?

A

Anxiety, agitation, insomnia, confusion, hallucinations
Arrhythmias
Dyskinesia

1337
Q

What is the mechanism of Selegiline?

A

Selective MAO-B inhibitor –> inhibits metabolism of Dopamine

1338
Q

What drugs are used to treat Alzheimer’s?

A

Memantine (NMDA antagonist)
Donepezil, Ganatamine, Rivastigmine (AChE inhibitors)
alpha-Tocopherol (Vit. E; Antioxidant)

1339
Q

What drugs are used to treat Huntington’s disease?

A

Tetrabenazine, Reserpine (inhibit VMAT -> dop not packaged)

Haloperidol (Dopamine antagonist)

1340
Q

What toxicities are seen with Sumatriptan?

A

Coronary vasospasm (contraindicated in Prinzmetal’s angina)

1341
Q

What is significant about Selective IgA Deficiency?

A

1) They have anaphylactic reactions to IgA-containing blood products
2) Can have false-positive hCG testing (heterophile Ab)

1342
Q

Mutation in X-linked agammaglobulinemia

A

BTK (Bruton’s Tyrosine Kinase)

No B cell maturation seen –> less B cells & way less Ig’s of all classes

1343
Q

What is seen histologically with Dubin-Johnson syndrome?

A

Epinephrine metabolites are seen within the lysosomes

Grossly, liver is black

1344
Q

What immune cell predominance is seen in bronchoalveolar lavage of a sarcodosis patient?

A

Very high CD4:CD8 ratio

1345
Q

What prokaryotic rRNA binds the Shine-Dalgarno sequence?

A

16S rRNA is complementary to the Shine-Dalgarno sequence (10 bp upstream from AUG)

1346
Q

What is the mechanism of Aminoglycosides?

A

Bind 30S and inhibit formation of initiation complex

1347
Q

What is the mechanism of Tetracyclines?

A

Bind 30S and prevent tRNA from entering acceptor site

1348
Q

What is the mechanism of Chloramphenicol?

A

Binds 50S and inhibits peptidyl transferase

1349
Q

What is the mechanism of Macrolides?

A

Bind 50S and prevent release of tRNA from the E site

1350
Q

What illness is caused by B. pertussis?

A

Whooping cough

3 stages:

1) Catarrhal stage - flu-like; highly contagious
2) Paroxysmal stage - many coughs then large whooping inspiration
3) Recovery stage - coughing slowly subsides

Whole process lasts ~3 months

1351
Q

What is the mechanism of diphtheria toxin?

A

AB exotoxin ribosylates EF-2 –> inhibits protein synthesis leading to cell death

1352
Q

What step is NAD+ needed for in glycolysis that is the basis for why it is regenerated in anaerobic glycolysis?

A

Glyceraldehyde-3-P –> 1-3-BPG

1353
Q

What organism causes tinea versicolor?

A

aka pityriasis versicolor

Caused by Malassezia furfur

Symptoms:
Light patches on skin
Otherwise asymptomatic

1354
Q

What is seen on KOH prep of Malassezia furfur?

A

Spaghetti & meatballs appearance

Causes tinea versicolor

1355
Q

What nutrients are not present in breast milk?

A

Vitamins D & K

D levels will be adequate if the infant gets enough sunlight. Dark skinned children are at higher risk.
K is administered at birth

1356
Q

What are the possible complications of Diphtheria?

A

Suffocation due to pseudomembranes
Heart pathology - myocarditis, arrhythmia, CHF
CNS pathology - neuropathy, paralysis, coma

1357
Q

What is the Diphtheria vaccine against?

A

The B portion of the AB exotoxin

A = active (ribosylates EF-2)
B = binding
1358
Q

What resting membrane potential do nerves typically sit at?

A

-70 mV

1359
Q

What organisms cause nongonococcal urethritis?

A

Chlamydia trachomatis > Ureaplasma urealyticum&raquo_space; Mycoplasma & Trichomonas

Azithromycin is the treatment

1360
Q

What is the drug of choice for the management of hypertensive pts who also have bradycardia?

A

Nifedipine

It is a vascular-selective CCB that causes vasodilation and can cause compensatory tachycardia.

1361
Q

What is the cause of hereditary pancreatitis?

A

Abnormal trypsin cannot be cleaved and thus inactivated by other trypsin. Patients suffer recurrent attacks of acute pancreatitis.

1362
Q

What electrolyte disturbances can be caused by loop diuretics?

A

Hypokalemia
Hypomagnesemia
Hypocalcemia

1363
Q

What is seen with fibromyalgia?

A

Diffuse musculoskeletal pain
Insomnia
Emotional disturbances

Often seen in women 20-50

1364
Q

What are the 3 dopaminergic pathways within the brain?

A

Mesolimbic-Mesocortical –> regulates behavior

Nigrostriatal –> coordination of movement

Tuberoinfundibular –> controls prolactin secretion

1365
Q

What can persistent lymphedema lead to?

A

Lymphangiosarcoma

Often seen after radical mastectomy

1366
Q

What are the effects of AV shunts on the pressure-volume curve?

A

Increased preload and decreased afterload

1367
Q

What effects do loop diuretics have on the renal arterioles?

A

In addition to their effects at the thick ascending limb, loop diuretics stimulate prostaglandin release, causing vasodilation of the afferent arteriole.

This can be blocked by concurrent use of NSAIDs

1368
Q

What antiarrhythmics demonstrate use-dependence?

A

Use-dependence = prolong the QRS more at high HR’s

Class Ic (Na+ channel blockers) --> use-dependence
Class III (K+ channel blockers --> reverse use-dependence
1369
Q

What are the opioid partial agonists?

A

Pentazocine & Butorphanol

They can cause withdrawal if full agonist opioids have been used.

1370
Q

What beta blockers are safer to use in diabetics?

A

B1 selective

The nonselective ones blunt the adrenergic symptoms normally seen with hypoglycemia. They also inhibit hepatic gluconeogenesis and peripheral glycogenolysis & lipolysis.

1371
Q

What molecule are bisphosphonates analogs of?

A

Pyrophosphate (a component of hydroxyapatite)

1372
Q

What is the cause of supine hypotension syndrome?

A

aka aortocaval compression syndrome

Caused by the gravid (>20 weeks) uterus compressing the IVC upon lying down. This reduces venous return, which lowers CO –> hypotension & possible syncope

1373
Q

How can the cause of a metabolic alkalosis be determined?

What are the causes?

A

Measurement of urinary [Cl-] & volume status

Vomiting –> low urinary Cl- (saline responsive)
Loop diuretics –> high urinary Cl- (saline responsive)
Conn syndrome –> high urinary Cl- (saline unresponsive)

1374
Q

What is defective in Hepatitis D virus?

A

It must be coated by the external coat antigen of HBV in order to survive & infect.

1375
Q

What drugs are typically coadministered with direct arterial vasodilators?

A

Sympatholytics (to counteract compensatory tachycardia)

Diuretics (to counteract sympathetic renin release –> edema)

1376
Q

What antiarrhythmics cause prolongation of the QT interval?

A

Class Ia & Class III

Amiodarone is the only drug of these classes that does not predispose to torsades.

1377
Q

What nerve is at risk when food is caught in the piriform recess?

A

Internal branch of the superior laryngeal nerve

Damage to it leave the patient with no sensation to the pharynx above the vocal cords –> no cough reflex

1378
Q

What is Terbinafine used for?
What is its mechanism?
What toxicities are seen?

A

Terbinafine is used for dermatophyte infections. It inhibits fungal squalene epoxidase –> impaired synthesis of ergosterol.

Toxicities:
Abnormal LFT’s
Visual disturbances
Not seen if used topically

1379
Q

What is the drug of choice in treating hairy cell leukemia?

A

Cladribine

It is an adenosine analog that is resistant to Adenosine Deaminase (usually a problem with treating HCL).

1380
Q

What toxicities are seen with carbamazepine?

A

Bone marrow suppression
Hepatotoxicity
SIADH

1381
Q

What drug is used to treat carcinoid syndrome?

A

Octreotide

It is a synthetic somatostatin analog

1382
Q

What is the treatment for cryptococcal meningitis?

A

Amphotericin B & flucytosine

1383
Q

What is the main toxicity of antithyroid drugs?

A

PTU & Methimazole both cause agranulocytosis

Typically presents with fever & a sore throat

1384
Q

Where are the leads placed for biventricular pacemakers?

A

Right atrium
Right ventricle
Left AV groove, within a vein of the coronary sinus

1385
Q

When do the neural pores close?

A

Anterior - 25th day
Posterior - 27th day

Failure in either of these leads to neural tube defects.

1386
Q

What is epidermal spongiosis?

A

Accumulation of edema in the epidermis –> intercellular bridges are stretched.

If the bridges tear –> vesicle

1387
Q

What can cause communicating hydrocephalus?

A

Meningitis
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Intraventricular hemorrhage

1388
Q

What PO2 corresponds to 50% saturation of Hb?

Myoglobin?

A

Hemoglobin - 26 mmHg

Myoglobin - 1 mmHg

Therefore myoglobin has much higher affinity for O2 than does hemoglobin. It also has no cooperativity, leading to a steep, non-sigmoidal dissociation curve. Monomeric Hb acts very similarly to Mb.

1389
Q

What are neurofibromas composed of?

A

Schwann cell tumors

They are rubbery and exhibit “buttonholing”

1390
Q

What is released from the ventricles in response to volume overload?

A

BNP and even ANP can be released from the ventricles in severe volume overload/hypertrophy.

1391
Q

What changes occur in the skin in response to chronic topical corticosteroid application?

A

Dermal atrophy

Can present as loss of collagen, drying, cracking, tightening of the skin, telangiectasias & ecchymoses.

1392
Q

What is seen on water deprivation testing in primary polydipsia?

A

Primary (psychogenic) polydipsia

Strong increase in urine osmolarity due to water deprivation, then a weak increase following vasopressin injection.

1393
Q

What are penicillins structural analogs of?

A

D-Ala-D-Ala

1394
Q

What drugs can accumulate in slow-acetylators?

A

INH
Dapsone
Hydralazine
Procainamide

1395
Q

What is the mechanism of abciximab?

What is its use?

A

Anti-GPIIb/IIIa –> blocks platelet aggregation

Used during angioplasty

1396
Q

What are the effects of ANP?

A

1) Dilates afferent & constricts renal arterioles. Inhibits sodium reabsorption (PCT & CCD). Inhibits renin release.
2) Inhibits aldosterone secretion.
3) Peripheral vasodilation

1397
Q

What is the mechanism of Ethambutol?

A

Inhibits arabinosyltransferase –> impaired carbohydrate polymerization –> impaired cell wall synthesis

1398
Q

What can be coadministered to decrease the flushing seen with Niacin?

A

Aspirin

This is because the side effect is mediated by prostaglandins.

1399
Q

What is damaged in central diabetes insipidus?

A

Pituitary damage –> transient DI

Hypothalamus damage –> permanent DI

1400
Q

What is seen on liver biopsy of a patient with chronic HBV?

A

Ballooning degeneration
Hepatocyte necrosis
Portal inflammation
“Ground glass” appearance (intracellular HBsAg proteins)

1401
Q

What is seen on liver biopsy of a patient with chronic HCV?

A

Lymphoid aggregates in the portal tracts

Focal macrovesicular steatosis

1402
Q

What is the mechanism of ammonia intoxication in the brain?

A

Astrocytes take up NH4+ and combine it with glutamate to make glutamine –> accumulation & astrocyte damage. Also the glutamate content in the brain is then decreased.

Additionally, neurons can detoxify ammonia by combining it with alpha-Ketoglutarate –> glutamate. This depletes stores of alpha-Ketoglutarate –> impaired Krebs cycle within neurons.

1403
Q

What is the glutamate-glutamine cycle?

A

Neurons convert glutamine –> glutamate (Glutaminase) –> release it into synaptic cleft as a NT

Astrocytes take up glutamate and –> glutamine (Glutamine synthase) and release it for use by neurons.

1404
Q

How long is it before an infarcted myocyte ceases contracting?
How long until injury is irreversible?

A

Affected myocytes cease contracting within ~1 minute.

Irreversible cell injury occurs at ~30 minutes.

As ATP is depleted, it is degraded to ADP –> AMP –> adenosine. Adenosine can diffuse out of the cell and cause vasodilation. Following 30 minutes of ischemia, half of cellular adenine stores are gone and thus the cell cannot recover.

1405
Q

What are the inhibitors of dihydrofolate reductase?

A

Methotrexate - cancer
Trimethoprim - bacteria
Pyrimethamine - malaria & toxoplasmosis

1406
Q

What are the toxicities seen with statins?

A

Hepatotoxicity (check LFT’s before prescribing)

Rhabdomyolysis

1407
Q

What are the serum/urinary markers of osteoblastic activity?

Osteoclastic?

A

Osteoblasts - Alkaline phosphatase

Osteoclasts - TRAP, Urinary hydroxyproline, urinary deoxypyridinoline

1408
Q

What organisms show a positive Tzank smear?

A
Tzanck test = scrapinf of an ulcer base to look for Tzanck cells (multinucleate giant cells) seen in:
HSV
VZV
CMV
Pemphigus vulgaris
1409
Q

What are the mechanisms by which combination OCP’s function?

A

1) Feedback inhibition on the pituitary –> no LH spike
2) Thickened cervical mucus
3) No growth of endometrium –> not suitable for implantation

1410
Q

What is the drug of choice for hypertensive crisis?

A

Nitroprusside

1411
Q

What is the antidote for nitroprusside overdose?

A

Sodium thiosulfate

It acts as a sulfur donor to enhance conversion of cyanide –> thiocyanate

1412
Q

How do infantile & adult botulism differ?

A

Adults ingest preformed toxin, whereas infants ingest spores (honey) that germinate in the gut. Also, infantile is usually less severe.

1413
Q

What is the psoas sign?

What is it indicative of?

A

Lying on their side, passive hyperextension of the hip causes pain.

A positive psoas sign can be indicative of a psoas abscess or appendicitis (if on the right).

1414
Q

What is the mechanism of INH?

A

It is a pyridoxine analog that inhibits mycolic acid synthesis in MTB.

1415
Q

What occurs in tissues when a patient has CREST or systemic scleroderma?

A

Monoclonal T cell proliferation –> cytokine release (especially TGF-beta) –> excessive deposition of collagen by fibroblasts

1416
Q

What vitamin can be used to treat measles?

A

Vitamin A

They don’t know why, the measles virus may induce a deficiency.

1417
Q

What is the full name of PCP?

What is seen in pts who are on it?

A

Phencyclidine

Vertical or horizontal nystagmus
Violent behavior

1418
Q

What is the mechanism of Phencyclidine?

A

PCP is an NMDA antagonist –> ^excitatory NT’s –> hallucinations

1419
Q

How does a glucagonoma present?

A

Migratory skin necrolysis
Erythematous groin rash
Diabetes
Anemia

1420
Q

What changes are seen in the adrenals in a pt with Cushing disease?

A

Cushing disease - ACTH must be coming from pituitary adenoma

HyperPLASIA of both the zona fasciculata & reticularis

1421
Q

What is seen with thalamic syndrome?

A

Thalamic stroke in the VPL/VPM area –> pure sensory stroke causing total sensory loss of the contralateral side of the body.

No motor deficits but impaired proprioception can cause falls.

1422
Q

What is used to create cystathionine?

What cofactor is needed?

A

Homocysteine + Serine –> Cystathionine –> Cysteine

Both of these steps require Vit. B6

1423
Q

What is the cycle for how THF is regenerated from 5-methyl-THF?

A

1) Homocysteine + 5-M-THF –> Methionine + THF
(Methionine synthase/Homocysteine methyltransferase)
(Requires Methylcobalamin)

2) Methionine + ATP –> S-adenosyl methionine (SAM)

3) SAM –> S-adenosyl homocysteine
(Methyltransferase)

4) S-adenosyl homocysteine –> Homocysteine

1424
Q

What is the mechanism of echinocandins?

A

Caspofungin & Micafungin (echinocandins) inhibit polysaccharide (glucan) synthesis –> inhibit fungal cell wall synthesis

1425
Q

What is the mechanism of Griseofulvin?

A

It enters fungal cells, binds MT’s & inhibits mitosis.

1426
Q

What is seen on liver biopsy in halothane-associated hepatitis?

A

Massive centrilobular hepatic necrosis

Mortality ~80%

1427
Q

How does Crohn’s disease lead to kidney stones?

A

Terminal ileum damage –> Bile acids not reabsorbed –> Steatorrhea –> loss of Ca2+ as soaps in stool –> Ca2+ not available to bind up oxalate in the gut –> ^Oxalate absorption –> kidney stones

1428
Q

What is seen on liver biopsy of a patient with Reye’s syndrome?

A

Microvesicular steatosis

No necrosis or inflammation

1429
Q

What are the effects of Sotalol?

A

It has properties of a beta blocker & a Class III antiarrhythmic (K+ channel blocker) –> ^PR & ^QT

1430
Q

What groups are at risk for Pellegra?

A
Populations that subsist on corn
Alcoholics
Carcinoid syndrome
INH
Hartnup disease
1431
Q

What is B3 synthesized from endogenously?

A

Niacin is synthesized from Tryptophan

1432
Q

What causes the outflow obstruction seen in HOCM?

A

Hypertrophied septum is too close to anterior mitral valve leaflet –> (paradoxical) systolic anterior motion of the anterior mitral valve leaflet –> leaflet moves closer to septum –> outflow obstruction

1433
Q

What drugs display tachyphylaxis?

A
Topical antihistamines (endogenous NE is downregulated)
Nitroglycerine (less NO release)

Both of these drugs require time off in order to maintain their efficacy.

1434
Q

What is the reaction catalyzed by G6PD?

A

G6P + NADP –> 6-Phosphogluconate + NADPH

1435
Q

What is used to treat TCA overdose?

A

Sodium bicarbonate

1436
Q

What is the most common toxicity of aspirin?

A

GI bleeding

This is seen even with low dose aspirin, but especially with high dose.

1437
Q

What is the use of Fomepizole?

A

Inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase. It is used for ingestion of methanol, ethylene glycol, propylene glycol.

1438
Q

What is seen on esophageal manometry in CREST syndrome?

A

Decreased peristalsis

Decreased LES tone

1439
Q

What is the mechanism of macrolides?

Tetracyclines?

A

Macroslides –> elongation

Tetris –> blocks tRNA binding

1440
Q

What causes a Bartholin cyst?

A

Obstruction of the Bartholin gland with subsequent infection. Seen in women of reproductive age.

Unilateral painful cystic lesion just below the & adjacent to the vaginal vestibule.

1441
Q

What causes condylomas?

A

HPV 6 & 11 infection

1442
Q

What is seen with Lichen sclerosis?

What is the complication seen with it?

A

Leukoplakia with parchment-like vulvar skin in postmenopausal women.

Slightly increased risk for SCC.

1443
Q

What is seen with lichen simplex chronicus?

A

Chronic irritation & scratching –> leukoplakia w/ thick leathery skin

No increased risk of SCC (only lichen sclerosis has ^risk)

1444
Q

What are the causes of vulvar leukoplakia?

A

Lichen sclerosis
Lichen simplex chronicus
Squamous cell carcinoma

1445
Q

What causes SCC of the vulva?

A

Two possible etiologies:

1) VIN due to HPV infection
2) Longstanding lichen sclerosis

1446
Q

What causes hemolytic disease of the newborn?

A

Rh+ infant born to a (sensitized) Rh- mother

ABO type is mild
Rh type is severe but preventable

1447
Q

What is used to prevent hemolytic disease of the newborn?

How does it work?

A

RhoGAM

They are IgG against the Rh antigen that bind up & eliminate any fetal RBC’s that are passed to mom. This prevents mom from mounting an immune response against the Rh antigen (fetal RBC’s)

1448
Q

What does the posterior descending coronary artery supply?

A

The posterior walls of the ventricles & posterior 1/3 of septum

1449
Q

What is seen with congenital neutropenia?

A

Low neutrophil counts at birth or shortly afterward. Severe recurrent infections seen later w/ no pus.

1450
Q

What ventricle is anterior & which is posterior?

A

The RV is anterior & right border

The LV is posterior & left lateral

1451
Q

What gives cephalosporins their expanded spectrum?

A

They are less susceptible to beta-lactamases

1452
Q

What are irradiated blood products used for?

A

To prevent Transfusion-Associated Graft vs. Host Disease
(TA-GVHD)

Blood that is given to immunodeficient patients should be irradiated prior to transfusion.

1453
Q

What cranial nerve innervates the pharyngeal constrictor muscles?

A

CNX

1454
Q

How does beta thalassemia minor present?

A

Usually asymptomatic
Diagnosis is incidental by microcytic anemia on CBC
Confirmation is via >3.5% of HbA2 on electrophoresis

1455
Q

How is acetylcholinesterase poisoning treated?

A

Atropine - reverses central respiratory depression & other symptoms

Pralidoxime - Reverses AChE poisoning

Give both at once

1456
Q

What is the equation for specificity?

A

Sp = TN /(TN + FP)

Sp = 1 - false positive

1457
Q

What is the equation for sensitivity?

A

Sn = TP/ (TP + FN)

Sn = 1 - FN

1458
Q

What is a wound contracture?

A

Excessive activity of metalloproteinases & myofibroblasts can cause a wound contracture, which can lead to deformity or limit the mobility of a joint.

1459
Q

How are cirrhotic patients screened for HCC?

A

Serum AFP levels are monitored regularly

1460
Q

What causes neonatal tetanus?

A

Colonization of the umbilical stump

A common occurrence in developing countries.

1461
Q

How does Parvovirus infection manifest in adults?

A

Arthritis in adults

Erythema infectiosum in children

1462
Q

Describe the mTOR pathway following growth factor binding.

A

Binding of growth factor –> Autophosphorylation of tyrosine kinase –> Activation of phosphoinositide-3 kinase –> Phosphorylation of PIP2 –> Activation of Protein kinase B –> Acivation of mTOR –> Translocation to nucleus to activity genes

This pathway is active in many cancers. Sirolimus is an mTOR inhibitor.

1463
Q

What causes cardiovascular dysphagia?

A

Enlargement of the left atrium –> compression of the esophagus

1464
Q

What is the progression of CD4/8 expression of T cells in the thymus?

A

Double negative –> Double positive –> single positive

1465
Q

How is resistance to INH developed?

A

Either decreased expression of catalase-peroxidase (required for INH activation) or modification of the mycolic acid synthesis enzyme.

1466
Q

Why is the infectious dose of vibrio so high?

A

They prefer alkaline environments & are killed easily by acid.

1467
Q

What is the best prognostic factor in meningococcemia?

A

Blood levels of lipooligosaccharide (LOS)

1468
Q

What is the mechanism of Nystatin?

A

Binds ergosterol in the cell membrane and creates pores in the membrane –> leakage of ions from the cells –> cell lysis

Same as Amphotericin B

1469
Q

How are enterococci resistant to aminoglycosides?

A

They transfer chemical groups onto the drug (acetyl, adenyl, phosphate) that impair its binding to ribosomes.

1470
Q

What is Trousseau’s syndrome?

What causes it?

A

Migratory superficial thrombophlebitis seen with pancreatic, colon, or lung adenocarcinoma.

These tumors can produce a thromboplastin-like (Tissue factor-like) substance.

1471
Q

How is hereditary spherocytosis inherited?

A

Autosomal dominant

1472
Q

What vitamin deficiency is commonly seen in patients with hemolytic anemia?

A

Folic acid deficiency

This is because they have increased turnover of cells

1473
Q

Why do Crohn’s disease patients get gallstones?

A

Bile acids not absorbed in terminal ileum –> Decreased concentration of them in the bile –> Gallstones

1474
Q

What is ANOVA used for?

A

It is like a T-test for more than 2 populations. It compares the numerical means of multiple populations.

1475
Q

What is the effect of Tetrodotoxin?

A

Binds to Na+ channels on neurons & prevents them from opening. It is found in puffer fish.

1476
Q

What causes Lymphogranuloma venereum?

What is seen?

A

Chlamydia trachomatis (L1-L3 serotypes)

1) Initial painless ulcer on genitals
2) Swollen painful inguinal nodes –> rupture (buboes)

Treat with doxycycline

1477
Q

What are the macrolides?

A

ACE

Azithromycin
Clarithromycin
Erythromycin

1478
Q

What injury is seen following humerus dislocation?

A

(Anterior) humerus dislocation –> axillary nerve injury

It is the most commonly dislocated joint in the body.

1479
Q

What is the mechanism of Enfuvertide?

A

Binds gp41 on HIV cell membrane –> prevents gp41 from undergoing conformational change & causing membrane fusion

1480
Q

What are the effects of PPAR-gamma?

A
Increased synthesis of:
Adiponectin
Fatty acid transport protein
Insulin receptor substrate
GLUT4
1481
Q

Where are thyroid hormone receptors located?

A

In the nucleus. The other steroid hormone receptors are found in the cytosol & translocate to the nucleus upon binding.

1482
Q

What stains can be used to detect cryptococcus neoformans?

A

Mucicarmine –> red stained polysaccharide capsule

India ink stain –> Clearing around the cell (polysaccharide capsule)

1483
Q

What would the approximate Vd be for these drugs?
Large/Plasma protein bound/Highly charged
Small & hydrophilic
Small & hydrophobic

A

Large/Plasma protein bound/Highly charged –> ~4L (plasma)
Small & hydrophilic –> ~15L (extracellular fluid & plasma)
Small & hydrophobic –> ~41L (everywhere)

1484
Q

What skin findings can be seen with Pseudomonas?

A

Ecthyma gangrenosum

Cutaneous necrotic lesions caused by hematologic dissemination & subsequent local release of exotoxins.

1485
Q

What does myelination do to the time constant & space constant?

A

Space (length) constant is increased (further transmission)

Time constant is decreased (faster transmission)

1486
Q

What is the DOC for combined absence & tonic-clonic seizures?

A

Valproic acid

1487
Q

What can cause lithium toxicity?

A

Drugs that affect Na+ handling in the kidney (thiazides)
Drugs that affect GFR (ACEi, NSAIDs)
Volume contraction (CHF, GI bleed, Cirrhosis)

Li+ is handled just like Na+ is handled in the kidney. Thus, anything that could cause Na+ retention can cause Lithium toxicity. Treatment is cessation & hemodialysis.

1488
Q

What embryologic layer do the branchial arches arise from?

A

Neural crest ectoderm

1489
Q

What are the macrolides?

A

ACE

Azithromycin
Clarithromycin
Erythromycin

1490
Q

What injury is seen following humerus dislocation?

A

(Anterior) humerus dislocation –> axillary nerve injury

It is the most commonly dislocated joint in the body.

1491
Q

What is the mechanism of Enfuvertide?

A

Binds gp41 on HIV cell membrane –> prevents gp41 from undergoing conformational change & causing membrane fusion

1492
Q

What are the effects of PPAR-gamma?

A
Increased synthesis of:
Adiponectin
Fatty acid transport protein
Insulin receptor substrate
GLUT4
1493
Q

What embryologic layer do the branchial arches arise from?

A

Neural crest ectoderm

1494
Q

What can cause lithium toxicity?

A

Drugs that affect Na+ handling in the kidney (thiazides)
Drugs that affect GFR (ACEi, NSAIDs)
Volume contraction (CHF, GI bleed, Cirrhosis)

Li+ is handled just like Na+ is handled in the kidney. Thus, anything that could cause Na+ retention can cause Lithium toxicity. Treatment is cessation & hemodialysis.

1495
Q

What is the DOC for combined absence & tonic-clonic seizures?

A

Valproic acid

1496
Q

What does myelination do to the time constant & space constant?

A

Space (length) constant is increased (further transmission)

Time constant is decreased (faster transmission)

1497
Q

What skin findings can be seen with Pseudomonas?

A

Ecthyma gangrenosum

Cutaneous necrotic lesions caused by hematologic dissemination & subsequent local release of exotoxins.

1498
Q

What would the approximate Vd be for these drugs?
Large/Plasma protein bound/Highly charged
Small & hydrophilic
Small & hydrophobic

A

Large/Plasma protein bound/Highly charged –> ~4L (plasma)
Small & hydrophilic –> ~15L (extracellular fluid & plasma)
Small & hydrophobic –> ~41L (everywhere)

1499
Q

What stains can be used to detect cryptococcus neoformans?

A

Mucicarmine –> red stained polysaccharide capsule

India ink stain –> Clearing around the cell (polysaccharide capsule)

1500
Q

Where are thyroid hormone receptors located?

A

In the nucleus. The other steroid hormone receptors are found in the cytosol & translocate to the nucleus upon binding.

1501
Q

What is torticollis?

What causes it?

A

It is congenital fibrosis of the SCM that causes tilting of the head & contralateral head turn, presenting at 2-4 weeks of age. It is caused by birth trauma or malposition of the head in utero.

It can be treated with conservative therapy & stretching exercises.

1502
Q

What is characteristic of CSF proteins in SSPE?

A

Oligoclonal bands of Ab’s are found

None are against the M component of measles virus

1503
Q

If patients are loss to follow up, what kind of bias is this?

A

Attrition bias (a type of selection bias)

1504
Q

What portion of the aorta is most vulnerable to traumatic rupture (i.e. a car accident)?

A

The aortic isthmus

Just distal to the branch point of the left subclavian, where the ascending & descending aorta meet.

1505
Q

What causes Ménière’s disease?

What is seen?

A

An increased volume of endolymph –> damage to vestibular & cochlear organs

Triad of:
Tinnitus
Vertigo
Hearing loss (sensorineural)

1506
Q

What is seen on ECG in Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome?

A

Recurrent paroxysmal SVT

Baseline ECG:
Shortened PR
Delta wave before QRS
Widened QRS

1507
Q

What type of glands are found in the dermis of skin?

A

Eccrine (merocrine) - sweat glands
Apocrine - genitals, axilla, areola; secrete onto hair follicles
Sebaceous glands - holocrine secretion of sebum onto hair follicles

1508
Q

What organism causes cat scratch disease?

What is seen?

A

Bartonella henselae

Self-limited low fever, LAD
Can cause bacillary angiomatosis in immunocompromised patients

1509
Q

What is a test’s reliability?

A

The same thing as precision. The ability to produce consistent results (whether or not they are accurate)

1510
Q

What are P bodies?

A

They lie in the cytoplasm & play a role in mRNA translation regulation & degradation.

1511
Q

What are the MAOi’s?

A

Tranylcypromine
Phenelzine
Selegiline

1512
Q

What type of renal damage is seen with prolonged NSAID use?

A

Papillary necrosis

Chronic interstitial nephritis

1513
Q

What mutations cause HOCM?

What mutations cause hereditary dilated cardiomyopathy?

A

HOCM - Autosomal dominant mutations in myosin heavy chain

Dilated CM - Autosomal dominant mutations in cytoskeleton (dystrophin) or mitochondrial enzymes

1514
Q

What is the treatment of diphtheria?

A

1) Diphtheria antitoxin (passive immunity)
2) Penicillin or erythromycin
3) DPT vaccine

Important to give antitoxin early since it cannot affect toxin that has reached the CNS or heart. Most common cause of death is cardiomyopathy (5-10% mortality).

1515
Q

How can complete vs partial central diabetes insipidus be differentiated?

A

Response to vasopressin administration:
>50% increase in urine osmolarity –> complete central DI
partial central DI

Partial central DI = some ADH is produced but not enough for normal kidney function.

1516
Q

What antiarrhythmic classes affect PR & what affect QT?

A

1 and 3 –> long QT

2 and 4 –> long PR

1517
Q

What are the Class I antiarrhythmics?

A

“Double Quarter Pounder w/ Mayo Lettuce Tomato, and Fries Please”

Ia: Disopyramide, Quinidine, Procainamide
Ib: Mexiletine, Lidocaine, Tocainide
Ic: Flecainide, Propafenone

1518
Q

What causes the chronic myeloproliferative disorders?

A

CML = t(9;22) –> BCR-ABL fusion protein

Essential thrombocytosis, Polycythemia vera, Primary myelofibrosis = JAK2 mutation –> constitutive tyrosine kinase activity

1519
Q

What anticonvulsant is metabolized to other active anticonvulsants?

A

Primidone –> Phenobarbital & Phenylethylmalonamide

Primidone can cause lethargy

1520
Q

Anti-histone Ab’s

A

Drug-induced lupus

1521
Q

What is the most common cause of HCC?

A

Hepatitis B

Vaccination is important

1522
Q

What do Auer rods stain positive for?

A

Myeloperoxidase

Seen in myelogenous leukemias

1523
Q

What complications of Herpes Zoster are possible?

A

Herpes zoster ophthalmicus (if in V1 ganglion) –> visual probs

Post-herpetic neuralgia:
Persistent pain for months after resolution
Increases with ^age

1524
Q

What is the most common cause of death in diabetes?

A

Coronary heart disease

1525
Q

What is the treatment for malignant hyperthermia?

What is its mechanism?

A

Malignant hyperthermia is caused by inhaled anesthetics & succinylcholine. Ryanodine receptors release large amounts of Ca2+ into the cytoplasm, exhausting ATP stores in an attempt to pump it back in to the SR.

The treatment is Dantrolene - inhibits Ryanodine receptors to act as a muscle relaxant.

1526
Q

Why is primary hyperaldosteronism not associated with edema?

A

Aldosterone escape:

1) Pressure natriuresis
2) Increased delivery of sodium to distal nephron overrides aldosterone’s action there
3) ANP

1527
Q

What are the causes of renal artery stenosis?

A

Atherosclerosis - older person with other atherosclerotic dz

Fibromuscular dysplasia - young woman of childbearing age

Both can cause HTN due to renal artery stenosis. Fibromuscular dysplasia shows a “beads on a string” appearance on angiography.

1528
Q

What is the DDx for malabsorption?

A

“These Will Cause Lasting Absorption Problems”

Tropical sprue
Whipple's disease
Celiac sprue
Lactose intolerance
Abetalipoproteinemia
Pancreatic insufficiency

Also infectious causes (giardia, etc.)

1529
Q

What is seen in Whipple’s disease?

A

“Foamy Whipped cream in a CAN”

Foamy (PAS+) macrophages in SI lamina propria
Cardiac symptoms, Arthralgias, Neurologic symptoms

Most commonly occurs in older men.

1530
Q

What changes are seen in the bowel from celiac disease?

A

Blunting of villi & crypt hypertrophy in the distal duodenum & proximal jejunum

1531
Q

What complications are seen with celiac disease?

A

1) Vitamin deficiencies
2) Small bowel carcinoma
3) Enteropathy-Associated T-cell Lymphoma (EATL)

1532
Q

What are the types of chronic gastritis?

A

Type A - autoimmune (Type IV) against parietal cells

Type B - H. pylori infection

1533
Q

What is seen with Menetrier’s disease?

A

Gastric hypertrophy (look like brain gyri)
Protein-losing gastropathy
Parietal cell atrophy
^Mucous cells

1534
Q

What cancers are associated with H. pylori infection?

A

Gastric adenocarcinoma
MALT lymphoma
Esophageal SCC (protective against esophageal adenocarcinoma)

1535
Q

What risk factors are associated with gastric adenocarcinoma?

A
H. pylori infection (intestinal type only)
Smoked foods (nitrosamines)
Achlorhydria
Chronic gastritis
Type A blood
1536
Q

What immune deficiency is seen in celiac patients?

A

IgA deficiency

If present, must test for IgG against gliadin, endomysium, tTG

1537
Q

What vessel bleeds in a duodenal ulcer hemorrhage?

What is the additional risk?

A

Posterior wall ulcer –> gastroduodenal artery bleed

This can cause acute pancreatitis!

1538
Q

What diseases are associated with p-ANCA?

A

Ulcerative colitis
Microscopic polyangiitis
Churg-Strauss disease

1539
Q

What is seen grossly with Crohn’s disease?

A
Transmural inflammation
Cobblestone mucosa
Creeping fat
Linear ulceration
Stricture (string sign on barium x-ray)
1540
Q

What is seen grossly in Ulcerative Colitis?

A

Mucosal & submucosal inflammation only
Pseudopolyps
Loss of haustra –> lead pipe appearance on x-ray

1541
Q

What is seen microscopically in Crohn’s disease?

UC?

A

Crohn’s:
Noncaseating granulomas
Lymphoid aggregates

UC:
Crypt abscesses

1542
Q

What conditions are associated with ulcerative colitis?

A
PSC
Toxic megacolon
CRC
Pyoderma gangrenosum
Ankylosing spondulitis
Uveitis
1543
Q

What conditions are associated with Crohn’s disease?

A
CRC
Migratory polyarthritis
Erythema nodosum
Ankylosing spondylitis
Uveitis
Kidney stones (malabsorption --> Ca2+ excreted in feces)
1544
Q

What is the association between smoking and IBD?

A

Smoking ^ risk of Crohns

Smoking protects against UC

1545
Q

What is the treatment for Crohn’s disease?

A

The same as for RA

Steroids
Azathioprine
MTX
Infliximab
Adalimumab
1546
Q

What is the treatment for ulcerative colitis?

A

Sulfasalazine (ASA prep)
6-MP
Infliximab
Colectomy

1547
Q

What can be seen with diverticulosis?

What are the complications?

A

Usually asymptomatic
Hematochezia
Diverticulitis
Fistulas

1548
Q

What causes pneumaturia?

A

Diverticulitis –> colovesical fistula

1549
Q

What is seen with a Meckel’s diverticulum?

A

Persistence of the Vitelline duct, leading to:
Melena
RLQ pain
Intussusception, volvulus, obstruction

Dx: Pertechnate study for ectopic gastric tissue

1550
Q

What causes intussusception?

A

Children: Viral infection (adenovirus & rotavirus) –> LAD –> leading edge

Adults: Tumor is leading edge

1551
Q

Where do intussusception & volvulus occur?

A

Intussusception: Ileocecal valve

Volvulus: Children = cecum, Adults = sigmoid colon

1552
Q

How can the RTA’s be distinguished on UA/Labs?

A

Type 1 (distal) –> hypokalemia, urine pH > 5.5

Type 2 (proximal) –> hypokalemia, urine pH < 5.5

Type 4 (aldosterone) –> hyperkalemic

1553
Q

What is seen in chronic lung transplant rejection?

A

Bronchiolitis obliterans

The small airways are inflamed & then fibrosed, rather than the vascular beds as in other organ transplants.

1554
Q

How does H. pylori lead to gastric ulceration?

Duodenal ulceration?

A

Gastric = local inflammation

Duodenal = impaired somatostatin release –> ^gastrin –> ^acid

1555
Q

What cells mediate the fibrosis seen in atherosclerosis?

A

Smooth muscle cells respond to endothelial injury signals (PDGF). These reactive smooth muscle cells are responsible for intimal hyperplasia & fibrosis.

1556
Q

What signaling molecules mediate atheroma formation?

A

PDGF (from platelets, endothelial cells, & macrophages)

TGF-beta (from platelets)

1557
Q

What general medical conditions are associated with carpal tunnel syndrome?

A

Hypothyroidism
Diabetes
Rhematoid arthritis
Dialysis-associated amyloidosis (beta-2 microglobulin)

1558
Q

How does T-ALL present?

A

Mediastinal mass

It can compress local structures leading to SVC syndrome, dysphagia, or respiratory symptoms. Also the standard symptoms of lymphoma will be present.

1559
Q

What is carnitine used for?

A

To shuttle fatty acids into the mitochondria for beta oxidation.

1560
Q

What is the capsule of H. flu type B composed of?

A

Polyribosyl-ribitol-phosphate (PRP)

Antibodies against this protein are associated with immunity against HiB. The vaccine is composed of PRP conjugated to diphtheria or tetanus toxoid.

1561
Q

What are the common dystonias?

A

Spadmodic torticollis (cervical dystonia)
Blepharospasm (eyes held closed)
Writer’s cramp

1562
Q

What are the Class I antiarrhythmics?

A

“Double Quarter Pounder w/ Lettuce, Tomato, Mayo & More Fries Please”

Ia:
Disopyramide
Quinidine
Procainide

Ib:
Lidocaine
Tocainide
Mexiletine

Ic:
MORicizine
Flecainide
Propafenone

1563
Q

What patients are at risk for succinylcholine-induced hyperkalemia?
How does this occur?

A

Burns
Myopathies
Crush injuries
Denervating injuries

Succinylcholine constantly stimulates the AChR (a nonselective cation channel), allowing both Na+ influx and K+ efflux. When open for a long time, this can cause a lot of K+ efflux from muscle cells –> hyperkalemia

1564
Q

What, within the brain, is the cause of the extrapyramidal side effects seen with antipsychotics?

A

D2 blockade in the nigrostriatal pathway

1565
Q

What causes thigh claudication?

A

Atherosclerosis of the external iliac or femoral arteries.

1566
Q

What is the most common cause of death by drug overdose?

A

Opioids

1567
Q

What is the most common elbow injury in young children?

What causes it?

A

Radial head subluxation (Nursemaid’s elbow)

Caused by a sudden pull on an extended arm that is pronated. The annular ligament slips over the radial head & into the radiohumeral joint. The child will hold his arm in a pronated & extended position close to the body & not want to move it. Reduction occurs by full supination & flexion of the elbow.

1568
Q

What is seen with Theophylline overdose?

A

Theophylline = a PDE inhibitor & stimulant used for asthma

Overdose:
Seizures
Tachyarrhythmia

1569
Q

What protein is used to secrete conjugated bilirubin into the bile canaliculi?

A

MRP2

It is an organic anion transporter & is energy-dependent. Uptake of unconjugated bilirubin at the basolateral membrane is passive.

1570
Q

What is Tommy John surgery?

A

Ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction

This is an injury commonly seen in pitchers due to intense valgus stress on the elbow.

1571
Q

What is seen with Salicylate overdose?

A

1) Early respiratory alkalosis

2) Late metabolic acidosis superimposed on the early alkalosis, resulting in a mixed acid-base disturbance.

1572
Q

How can E. coli O157:H7 be distinguished from other strains in culture?

A

Does not ferment sorbitol

Does not produce glucuronidase

1573
Q

How does hyperparathyroidism present histologically in bone?

A

Subperiosteal thinning

1574
Q

What is seen with Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome?

A

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia

Autosomal dominant disease
Telangiectasias on all mucous membranes
Recurrent mucosal bleeding (epistaxis, GI, hematuria)

1575
Q

What ligaments form the lesser omentum?

A

Hepatogastric & Hepatoduodenal ligaments

1576
Q

Where does Inhibin B feedback?

Testosterone?

A

Inhibin B –> pituitary (only)

Tesosterone –> pituitary & hypothalamus

1577
Q

What bacteria is pyrrolidonyl arylamidase positive?

A

Strep pyogenes is PYR+

It was used before bacitracin to determine if it was GAS or GBS

1578
Q

What is the treatment for hemophilia A?

A

Desmopressin –> vWF release –> ^Factor VIII levels

1579
Q

What cell type does renal cell carcinoma arise from?

A

PCT tubular cells

1580
Q

How do benzodiazepines affect the GABA receptor?

Barbiturates?

A

Benzos - increase frequency of GABA opening

Barbs - increase duration of GABA opening

1581
Q

What are the stages of a lobar pneumonia?

A

Congestion (24h)
Red hepatization (days 2-3)
Gray hepatization (days 4-6)
Resolution

1582
Q

What is the most common cause of death in TCA overdose?

A

Refractory hypotension & cardiac arrhythmia due to inhibition of Na+ channels in the heart.

Use NaHCO3 to resuscitate.

1583
Q

What causes unilateral SVC syndrome?

A

Obstruction of the brachiocephalic vein on one side.

Can be caused by thrombosis or by external compression (tumor, etc.)

1584
Q

What is the function of cord factor?

A

It is a virulence factor found on mycobacteria

Causes:
Neutrophil inhibition
Mitochondrial destruction
TNF release
Also causes linear growth pattern of mycobacteria
1585
Q

What cosmetic side effects are seen with Phenytoin?

A
Hirsutism
Coarse facial features
Acneiform skin rash
Gingival hypertrophy
LAD (pseudolymphoma)
1586
Q

What substances can cause Serine phosphorylation leading to insulin resistance?

A

TNF-alpha
Glucagon
Fatty acids
Glucocorticoids

1587
Q

What portions of the nephron are most susceptible to ischemic injury?

A

Proximal tubule & thick ascending limb

1588
Q

What toxicities are seen with NRTI’s?

A
Bone marrow suppression
Peripheral neuropathy
Lactic acidosis (Zidovudine, Didanosine, Stavudine)
Rash
Anemia (Zidovudine)
1589
Q

What drug is used to test for Prinzmetal angina?

A

Ergonovine

It stimulates both alpha-adrenergic & 5-HT receptors –> spasm

1590
Q

What substances can inhibit iodide uptake at the thyroid gland?

A

Competitive anion inhibitors:
Perchlorate
Pertechnetate

Also iodide can

1591
Q

What does the stapes transmit vibration to?

A

The oval window

The round window is the one that just relieves pressure.

1592
Q

What is the helicotrema?

A

The apex of the cochlea

1593
Q

What processes use NADPH?

A

Fatty acid, cholesterol, steroid synthesis
Drug metabolism
Antioxidant in RBC’s

1594
Q

What CN’s can be compressed by an acoustic neuroma?

A

CNV –> paralysis of muscles of mastication & loss of corneal rflx
CNVII –> facial paralysis & hyperacusis
CNVIII —> tinnitus, vertigo

1595
Q

What infections are caused by Pseudomonas?

A
PSEUDO:
Pneumonia (CF)
Sepsis (ecthyma gangrenosum)
External otitis (diabetics, severe)
UTI
Drug users
Osteomyelitis in diabetics
1596
Q

Sudden vision loss & a pale retina & cherry red macula

A

Central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO)

1597
Q

At what lung volume is PVR the least?

Why?

A

At FRC

At high lung volumes, alveolar vessels are stretched longitudinally & narrowed. At low lung volumes, extra-alveolar vessels are not pulled open.

1598
Q

How is Strongyloides infection diagnosed?

Why must it be treated?

A

Larvae in the stool is diagnostic

Must be treated because it can autoinfect the same host over and over, leading to superinfection.

1599
Q

What step in the TCA cycle requires thiamine?

A

Alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase

1600
Q

What drugs can niacin interact with?

A
Potentiates vasodilators (decrease meds)
Increases insulin resistance (^meds)
1601
Q

What is the most prominent side effect of Amphotericin B?

A

Renal toxicity

Patients often require daily supplementation of potassium and magnesium.

1602
Q

What physical exam finding can be used to rule out aplastic anemia?

A

Splenomegaly

1603
Q

What can cause unilateral nasal hemianopia?

A

Aneurysm or calcification of the internal carotid. It can compress the lateral side of the optic chiasm.

1604
Q

What drugs (aside from antidepressants) can cause serotonin syndrome when taken with SSRI’s?

A

Tramadol
Ondansetron
Linezolid

1605
Q

What are the most common causes of primary amenorrhea with normal gonadotropin & hormone levels?

A

Imperforate hymen

Müllerian duct abnormalities (back of vagina, uterus, fallopian)

1606
Q

What substances require tetrahydrobiopterin as a cofactor for their synthesis?

A
Serotonin (from tryptophan)
NO (from Arg)
Tyrosine (from Phe)
Dopamine
NE/EPI
1607
Q

What antibodies cause idiopathic membranous nephropathy?

A

Anti-Phospholipase A2 (PLA2)

1608
Q

How is the lac operon regaulated?

A

^cAMP –> ^transcription (elevated in the absence of glucose)

^lactose –> ^transcription

1609
Q

What enteric pathogens can cause disease with a low inoculum?

A

Shigella (10)
Campylobacter (500)
Entaoeba histolytic (1)
Giardia (1)

1610
Q

Where does the pentose phosphate pathway occur?

A

Exclusively in the cytoplasm

1611
Q

What portions of the urea cycle take place in the mitochondria?

A

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I

OTC

1612
Q

What toxicities are seen with mannitol?

A

Pulmonary edema
Dehydration

Contraindicated in CHF & anuria

1613
Q

How are serotonin syndrome & neuroleptic malignant syndrome different?

A

NMS - rigidity
5-HT - myoclonus

Otherwise they are pretty similar (hyperthermia, autonomic dysfunction, altered mental status)

1614
Q

What patients is Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillus (ABPA) seen in?

A

Asthmatics that take steroids

1615
Q

What is seen in neonates who’s mothers had poor glycemic control during pregnancy?

A

Macrosomia

Hypoglycemia (beta cell hyperplasia)

1616
Q

What are the 3 types of responses that can be seen after frontal lobe injury?

A

1) Disorganized
2) Disinhibited
3) Apathetic

1617
Q

What is seen with scarlet fever?

A

Fever
Pharyngitis
Sandpaper-like rash
Strawberry tongue

1618
Q

What artery can be damaged by a broken hip?

A

Broken hip = fractured femoral head

The medial femoral circumflex artery provides the majority of blood to the femoral head & neck. Injury can cause avascular necrosis of the femoral head.

1619
Q

What is seen histologically with herpes zoster reactivation?

A

Intranuclear inclusions in keratinocytes

Multinucleate giant cells

1620
Q

What is seen on CXR in acute LV failure?

A

Cardiomegaly
Pleural effusions
Kerley C lines
Vascular shadowing

1621
Q

What amino acids are the repeats in collagen?

A

Gly-X-Y

X & Y can be lysine or proline but glycine must be present every 3rd amino acid. Thus, it is the most prevalent.

1622
Q

What drug is used to treat trigeminal neuralgia?

A

Carbamazepine

1623
Q

What causes methylmalonic acid in the urine?

A

1) Deficiency in Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase

2) B12 deficiency

1624
Q

When does calcific aortic stenosis become symptomatic?

A

Normal patient = 70’s

Bicuspid aorta = 60’s

1625
Q

What is seen with shaken baby syndrome?

A

Bilateral retinal hemorrhages

Subdural hematoma

1626
Q

Where are the hormones produced that are released by the neurohypophysis?

A

“OPAS”

Oxytocin = Paraventricular
ADH = Supraoptic
1627
Q

What are neurophysins?

A

Proteins that modify ADH & OXY as they are being transported to the posterior pituitary within vesicles. They are released along with the hormones into the hypophysial vein –> systemic circulation.

1628
Q

What deficiencies result specifically in disseminated MTB?

A

IL-12 receptor deficiency
IFN-gamma receptor deficiency

Patients require lifelong treatment with antimycobacterial agents.

1629
Q

What occurs with heme’s affinity for oxygen when methemoglobin is present?

A

Methemoglobin cannot bind O2

The remaining ferrous iron in the Hb molecule has a higher affinity for O2, causing a left shift.

1630
Q

What types of cancer can cause nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis?

A

Mucinous adenocarcinoma of the pancreas
Adenocarcinoma of the lung

These cancers produce mucin & are associated with a hypercoagulable state. This is the same pathogenesis as Trousseau’s sign.

1631
Q

What are the class III antiarrhythmics?

A

“AIDS”

Amiodarone
Ibutilide
Dofetilide
Sotalol

1632
Q

What classes of antiarrhythmics can cause torsades?

A

Class Ia & Class III

1633
Q

What toxicities are seen with Daptomycin?

A

^CPK levels

Myopathy

1634
Q

What bacteria are beta hemolytic?

A

Listeria
Staph aureus
GAS
GBS

1635
Q

What cardiac defect is seen in normal adults?

A

Patent foramen ovale seen in 20-30% of normal adults

Normally held closed by LA&raquo_space; RA pressures

1636
Q

How does multiple myeloma present?

A

Fatigue (anemia)
Constipation (hypercalcemia)
Bone pain
Renal failure

1637
Q

Where can viridans strep adhere to?

A

Fibrin

They produce dextrans from sucrose. These aid their adherence to fibrin at sites of endothelial damage.

1638
Q

What sites are affected in GvH disease?

A

Skin, liver, & intestine

1639
Q

What drugs can be used to prevent tumor lysis syndrome?

A

IV Fluids
Allopurinol
Rasburicase - recombinant urate oxidase (converts urate to allantoin, which is 10x more soluble)

1640
Q

What gives elastin its elasticity?

A

Inter-chain crosslinking of lysine residues

This is performed by extracellular lysyl hydroxylase

1641
Q

What is the mechanism of Miravaroc?

A

It is a CCR5 receptor inhibitor

Prevents viral attachment of HIV

1642
Q

What is Modafinil used for?

A

As a non-amphetamine daytime stimulant in narcolepsy

It is a CYP450 inducer

1643
Q

What shape are calcium-based kidney stones?

A

Tetrahedral

envelope

1644
Q

What shape are struvite renal stones?

A

Coffin lid

1645
Q

What shape are cystine renal stones?

A

Hexagonal

1646
Q

What shape are urate renal stones?

A

Rhomboid

1647
Q

What is used to treat bedwetting?

A

1) Desmopressin

2) Imipramine

1648
Q

What cell surface markers are found on Reed-Sternberg cells?

A

CD15, CD30

1649
Q

What are the lymphoma translocations?

A

8urkitt’s = t(8;14)

Mantle ce11 = t(11;14)

Follicular = Fourteen eighteen = t(14;18)

1650
Q

What distinguishes acute leukemia vs chronic leukemia on a bone marrow smear?

A

> 20% blasts = acute

1651
Q

What translocations in ALL are indicative of prognosis?

A

t(12;21) –> Good prognosis; seen in children

t(9;22) –> Philadelphia+ ALL; Poor prognosis; seen in adults

1652
Q

What leukemia can present with DIC?

A

APL
(M3 form of AML)

Auer rods can cause DIC. Thus, it can also occur following treatment.

1653
Q

t(15;17)

A

APL

Give ATRA

1654
Q

What leukemia infiltrates the gums?

A

Acute monocytic leukemia

1655
Q

What is “blast crisis?”

A

When CML accelerates and transforms into AML or ALL.

1656
Q

What causes increased basophils?

A

CML

1657
Q

What is seen on coagulopathy labs in uremic patients?

A

Uremic patients (dialysis, etc.) show normal PT, PTT, & platelet counts but an increased bleeding time.

There are dialyzable platelet inhibitory factors responsible for this, thus it will improve following dialysis.

1658
Q

Where are the lung markings?

A

Anteriorly the 4th rib = horizontal fissure (Right side only)
The 6th rib = oblique fissure

1659
Q

Where is the abdominal neurovascular plane?

A

Between the internal oblique & transversus abdominus muscles.

All of the deep abdominal wall arteries & nerves lie here.

1660
Q

What artery travels with the recurrent laryngeal nerve?

A

Inferior thyroid artery

RLN can be damaged during thyroidectomy

1661
Q

What are the K+ sparing diuretics?

A

Amiloride
Triamterene
Spironolactone
Eplerenone

1662
Q

What drugs lower TG’s best?

A

Fibrates > Niacin

1663
Q

What drugs lower LDL the best?

A

Statins > Ezetimibe

1664
Q

What is Diphenoxylate?

What is its use?

A

It is an opiate anti-diarrheal

It is combine with atropine to prevent abuse (unpleasant anti-cholinergic effects)

1665
Q

What is the treatment for lice (pediculosis capitis/pubis)?

A

Permethrin
or
Pyrethrin

1665
Q

What coronary artery supplies the pacemaker nodes?

Bundle of his?

A

The RCA supplies BOTH the SA node & AV node.

The LAD supplies the bundle of his (supplies anterior 2/3 of the interventricular septum)