Scenario 34 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the symptoms of psoriasis?

A

Itchiness, cracked skin, pain, pitted nails, arthritis, social isolation

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2
Q

What are the triggers of psoriasis?

A

Infection, skin trauma, psychological stress, drugs, sunburn, metabolic factors (calcium deficiency), hormonal factors (pregnancy), skin antigens leading to impaired differentiation and proliferation of keratinocytes

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3
Q

What are the two types of IBD?

A

Ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease

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4
Q

What are the symptoms of UC?

A

continuous Inflammation and ulcers but only in the colon. Superficial inflammation, risk of cancer

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5
Q

What are the symptoms of crohns disease?

A

Patchy inflammation of all layers of the whole GI tract, fistulas and strictures, risk of cancer

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6
Q

What other inflammatory conditions are there?

A

Joints- arthritis, skin-erythema nodosum, eye-iridocyclitis, liver–cholostatic liver diseases

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7
Q

What are the symptoms of SLE?

A

malar rash, sicoid lesions, oral ucers, photosensitivity, non deforming arthritis, proteinuria, seizures, psychosis

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8
Q

What are the risk factors for SLE?

A

oestrogen, pregnancy, infections, UV light, stress, drug induced

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9
Q

What are the risk factors for Crohns?

A

smokers, low fibre, high refined sugar, diet, bacterial

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10
Q

What are the risk factors for UC?

A

non smokers, appendicectomy

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11
Q

What is the process of immune dysregulation in AIDs?

A

Breakdown tolerance and self antigen attacked by auto reactive lymphocytes, defects in lymphocyte activation (innate immune system), increased leukocyte infiltration, increased cytokine production, production of autoantibodies

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12
Q

What treatments are available?

A

Non selective immunosuppression, cytotoxic drugs, biologicals (expensive, some patients dont respond, severe side effects)

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13
Q

What is GWAS?

A

Examination of many common genetic variants in different individuals to see if any variant is associated with a trait

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14
Q

What % of the genome codes for proteins?

A

1.5%

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15
Q

What is a polymorphism?

A

a change in instructions not associated with the disease (may have a minor affect on protein function)

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16
Q

Why could somatic mutations cause cancer?

A

May cause cell death, damage non coding or inactive DNA, damage gene causing cell death (limited consequences), could inactivate a tumour suppressor gene, activate oncogenes or create a new fusion gene

17
Q

What is bevacizumab?

A

A monoclonal antibody used in glioblastoma which binds to VEGF, reduces blood vessel formation starving the tumour of oxygen and nutrients

18
Q

What is imantinib?

A

CML, blocks tyrosine kinase activity

19
Q

What are DNA damage response/repair genes

A

Constantly repairing DNA, cancer arrives due to the accumulations of mutations across the genome eg BRCA 1/2

20
Q

What are the main features in a DNA repair mechanism defect?

A

young age of onset, multiple primary cancers in same person, same type of cancer in several relatives or recognisable pattern of cancers in family

21
Q

What is lynch syndrome?

A

When 2 bases dotn match the MSH2 and 1 proteins recognise this and separate the strands for a new one to be made. Lots of proteins involved that can be mutated

22
Q

What cancers are caused by lynch syndrome?

A

Colorectal, endometrial, ovarian , renal. brain, gastri

23
Q

What is the Amsterdam criteria?

A

Used to identify families likely to have lynch syndrome

3 or more relatives with lynch related cancer, 2 generations, 1

24
Q

What is the Bethesda criteria?

A

Used to trigger further investigation

25
Q

What is the management of lynch syndrome?

A

colonoscopy from 25 yr at 2 year intervals, discussion of hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy from 45 years, daily asprin and symptom awareness

26
Q

What are the risks for a women with a BRCA mutation?

A

High risk of breast and ovarian cancer (60%) need screening and consider removal and may take prophylactic tamoxifen

27
Q

What are the risks for a man with a BRCA mutation?

A

Increased risk of breast and prostate cancer (10-20%), children and siblings 50% risk of mutation

28
Q

What are pharmacogenetics?

A

The study of how a patients drug response depends on their genetic make up

29
Q

How many drugs in the UK currently require genetic testing?

A

8

30
Q

What is Abacavir and why is genetic testing essential?

A

Reverse transcriptase inhibitor used to treat HIV and AIDS but in 5% of patients sever ADR associated with HLA-B*5701 and now cheap to do a test

31
Q

What is azathioprine and should genetic testing be essential?

A

Induces T cell apoptosis, used in various conditions that require a reduction in immune response. In homozygotes of TMPT enzyme can cause the drug to not be metabolised- fatal toxicity.

32
Q

Should there be genetic testing for warfarin?

A

Therapeutic dose is highly variable and can trigger hemorrhage if too high and stroke if too low. Polymorphisms in VKORC1 and CYP2C9 influence dose