CLINICAL/DISEASE RELATED QUESTIONS Flashcards

1
Q

In what circumstance would 30 year old woman present with fibrinoid necrosis?

A

pre-eclampsia (3rd trimester) elevated bp (protinuria)

fibrinoid necrosis of placenta (of placental blood vessels)

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2
Q

If someone was exposed to dry cleaning industry presents with fatty liver change, describe the mechanism of what has occurred.

A

CCl4 (carbon tetrachloride) gets into blood and converted into CCl3 in p450 system of liver, once converted to CCl3 its a free radical and damages hepatocytes

key sign of reversible damage is cellular swelling (RER will swell and ribosomes pop off and protein synthesis is reduced
-key function of liver is to repackage fat and send it back out, repackaging of fat occurs by binding up molecules of chol. and lipids via apolipoproteins, lack of apo proteins, so fat gets into liver but can’t get out …so classical finding is FATTY CHANGE OF LIVER.

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3
Q

Patient with MI, cardiac enzymes going up, taken to cardiac cath lab, artery opened, then cardiac enzymes continue to rise. Why?

A

free radical injury
reperfusion injury
when cut blood supply to an organ, coronary artery occluded, MI, tissue begins to die, once tissue dies, cell membrane damaged (hallmark of irreversible damage) enzymes leak into blood, troponins will leak out, as they leak they indicate that there has been irreversible injury to cell, if blood returned to the organ, artery opened and blood back to organ, now oxygen also returned to organ with inflammatory cells…combo of inflammatory cells with dead tissue and oxygen can generate free radicals and can further damage cardiac myocytes

enzymes continue to rise bc blood returned and contains oxygen and inflammatory cells, free radicals produced, continued injury to myocardium.

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4
Q

A patient presents w fever and acute serosal inflammation (serosal surface of heart = pericardium ..would present as mimicking MI, serosal surface of abdomen= mimick acute appendicitis).

Describe the disease and mechanism.

A

Familial Mediterranean fever. ex: secondary amyloidosis

Dysfunction of neutrophils (AR); persons of Med. origin (neutrophils activated and create attack of acute inflammation that is not drive by infection but driven by misfunction of neutrophils)

presents w fever and acute serosal inflammation (serosal surface of heart = pericardium ..would present as mimicking MI, serosal surface of abdomen= mimick acute appendicitis)

during attack acute phase reactants prod; high SAA during attacks deposits as AA amyloid

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5
Q

Patient has thyroid mass, fine needle aspiration is performed (needle in thyroid, cells pulled away to biospsy), pathologist sees tumor cells in amyloid background.

What disease? Describe mechanism.

A

medullary carcinoma of thyroid- tumor of thryroid and that is derived from C cells

C cells - neuroendocrine derived cells present in thyroid that produce protein called calcitonin

if tumor of C cells there is overproduction of calcitonin which can deposit in tumor which can create amyloid in association with medullary carcinoma of thyroid

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6
Q

After an MI a patient may have an increase in white count. What type of cell has increased?

A

neutrophils bc they are generated and pushed up into dead tissue

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7
Q

Patient has mast cells which activate the acute inflammatory response and several hours later the acute inflammatory response continues, what is major mechanism by which mast cells will allow for progression of acute inflammatory response?

A

production of arachidonic acid metabolites, particularly leukotrienes

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8
Q

What might delayed separation of umbilical cord indicate? Describe disease and mechanism.

A

Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency

Delayed separation of umbilical cord (when baby born, umbilical cord which had blood flowing through it is sealed when no longer connected to placenta, so undergoes necrosis, then acute inflammation so tissue can be destoryed so it can be healed, when blood supply of umbilical cord is cut off, tissue will tie, and cord will fall off…neutrophils coming in to destroy tissue help it fall off

if neutrophils cannot come in, that separation of umbilical cord from baby skin will be delayed

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9
Q

What do increased circulating neutrophils indicate?

Describe.

A

Leukocyte Adhesion deficiency

Normally:
neutrophils circulating in the blood (50 percent)
neutrophils hanging out in blood vessels of lung (50 percent) =marginated pool (adhesion necessary)

if adhesion defected marginal pool can’t hang out, those neutrophils will be released into blood so patients have increased circulating neutrophils

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10
Q

What do recurrent bacterial infections that lack pus formation indicate?

A

Leukocyte Adhesion deficiency

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11
Q

What might giant granules in leukocytes indicate?

A

Chediak-Higashi Syndrome

Giant granules in leukocytes (granules produced in golgi go along railroad system to get distributed across neutrophils, if defect in trafficking and granules cannot be sent to periphery and distribute to cell, they pile up around golgi and appear as giant granules around leukocyte)

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12
Q

What might neutropenia indicate?

A

Chediak-Higashi Syndrome

(neutrophils in bone marrow when dividing ..moving DNA and cellular components, but if cannot move things around properly, cannot divide properly, so defect in generation of neutorphils)

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13
Q

If a patient presents with albinism and peripheral neuropathy, what genetic disorder may be present? Explain.

A

Chediak-Higashi Syndrome

Albinism (pigment of skin occurs via melanocytes… multiple keratinocytes make up skin, 1 melanocyte prod. pigment for 25 keratinocytes, prod pigment then hands off to keratinocytes, melanocytes can prod. pigment but cannot pass along rail system to keratinocytes so can’t get proper pigment of skin)

Peripheral neuropathy (if we have nerve at periphery… cell body for nerve of toe is near spinal cord, so the actual nerve can be up to 2 feet or longer, nucleus and key proteins prod by cord, need railroad system to keep the bottom of nerve or distal nerve healthy and alive, if patients have protein trafficking defect they can’t keep alive peripheral nerves)

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14
Q

Process has been going on for 8 weeks but patient is still coughing up pus, what is actually happening?

A

it is still ex of acute inflammation bc of the fact still have neutrophilic response

(neutrophils define acute inflammation)

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15
Q

Patient has history of breast cancer and breast is removed, she gets implants, she feels lymph nodes in axilla. What is the differential diagnosis?

A

reaction of foreign material: implants leak and release foreign material in lymphatics and go into axillary lymph node and produce enlarged lymph nodes within axilla (which then is creating granulomas)

or recurrence of breast cancer or spread and now involves axilla

so biopsy could show noncaseating granuloma or cancer

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16
Q

What is histological mark of Crohn’s disease?

Ulcerative colitis?

A

Crohn’s - noncaseating granulomas

ulcerative colitis- crypt abscesses (at bottom of crypt you get neutrophils..)

17
Q

What does Cat scratch disease give you?

A

a stellate formed granuloma (noncaseating)

18
Q

What is key differential diagnosis for caseating granuloma?

A

TB and fungal infections

can do AFB stain to look for TB

can do GMS (silver) stain to look for fungus

19
Q

What might immune deficiency syndrome might periorbital edema suggest?

A

C1 inhibitor deficiency

hereditary angioedema; classical clinical finding is edema esp periorbital

20
Q

What is athrosclerosis of the renal artery or fibromuscular dysplasia of the renal artery indicative of?

A

slowly cutting blood supply to kidney, reducing nutrients, like in these conditions, will lead to atrophy of kidney (reversible cell damage)

21
Q

Describe the mechanism of Budd-Chiari Syndrome. What type of cellular injury occurs? Describe two causes; which is most common?

A

Budd-Chiari Syndrome =thrombosis of hepatic vein, blood can’t flow through liver, and infarction in liver parenchyma (ex of ischemia being cause of hypoxia)

most common cause: polycythemiavera (disorder in which patients have high RBC count due to over production of RBC, increased viscosity and thickness of blood, leads to clotting, thrombosis occurs in hepatic vein.

patient with Lupus who has Lupus anti-coagulant which creates hypercoagulable state in that patient.

22
Q

What is classic finding of patient with CO poisoning? Describe mechanism why.

What are early signs of exposure? (Significant exposure?)

A

cherry red appearance of skin (Hb so tightly bound, reflects red light and creates red appearance of skin..deceptive bc patient is hypoxic bc not carrying oxygen to tissues)

early sign of exposure is headache; significant exposure can lead to coma and death

23
Q

In what clinical context would we see methemoglobinemia?

A

seen with oxidant stress (can oxidize the iron) (sulfa and nitrate drugs) or in newborns

always oxidizing iron within Hb, blood carries O2, oxidant stress always present in blood, we have enzymes to create mediators necessary to reduce iron back to 2+ state, newborns machinery to do this is immature so they are more susceptible to development of methemoglobinemia

24
Q

What is the classical clinical finding of patients with methemoglobinemia?

How is it treated?

A

classic finding is cyanosis with chocolate-colored blood

Treatment is IV methylene blue (generates necessary mediators to reduce iron back to 2+ state)
-helps reduce Fe3+ to Fe2+ state

25
Q

Describe Familial Mediterranean Fever.

A

ex: secondary amyloidosis

Dysfunction of neutrophils (AR); persons of Med. origin (neutrophils activated and create attack of acute inflammation that is not drive by infection but driven by misfunction of neutrophils)

presents w fever and acute serosal inflammation (serosal surface of heart = pericardium ..would present as mimicking MI, serosal surface of abdomen= mimick acute appendicitis)

during attack acute phase reactants prod; high SAA during attacks deposits as AA amyloid

26
Q

A 54-year-old man with a chronic cough has a squamous cell carcinoma diagnosed in his right lung. While performing a pneumonectomy, the thoracic surgeon notes that the hilar lymph nodes are small, 0.5 to 1.0 cm in size, and jet black in colour throughout. What is the most likely cause for this appearance to the hilar nodes?

A

Anthracotic pigment

The black colour comes from carbon pigments in dust particles inhaled over the years, engulfed by macrophages, and sent via lymphatics to the lymph nodes. It looks bad but does not compromise lung function. Smokers will have more anthracosis.

27
Q

A 60-year-old woman with breast cancer
and widespread bony metastases is found
to have calcification of multiple organs. Are the
calcifications best described as metastatic or dystrophic? Are Ca levels increased, decreased, or normal?

A

Metastatic calcification, or deposition of calcium in previously normal
tissue, is caused by hypercalcemia.

In this patient, tumor metastases to the bone with increased osteolytic activity caused mobilization of calcium and phosphate, resulting in hypercalcemia. Metastatic calcification should be contrasted with dystrophic calcification, in which the serum calcium concentration is normal and previously damaged tissues are the sites of deposition

28
Q

What kind of cancer is a nevus (mole)?

A

benign cancer of melanocyte

29
Q

Patient has enlarged lymph node; what is differential diagnosis?

Biopsy shows proliferation of lymphocytes with light chain ratio of 20:1.

A
  • metastatic cancer (spreads to lymph node)
  • reactive hyperplasia (from infection)
  • lymphoma

proliferation of lymphocytes= lymphoma or hyperplasia (20:1 ratio tells you monoclonal proliferation and must be lymphoma)

30
Q

What is responsible for the high rate of stomach cancer in Japan?

A

Nitrosamines

stomach carcinoma

found in smoked foods; responsible for high rate of stomach carcinoma in Japan

(intestinal type of stomach carcincoma or diffuse type… nitrosamines are related to intestinal type of stomach carcinoma and intestinal type is more common)

31
Q

What is the most common carcinogen worldwide?

A

polycyclic hydrocarbons (in cigarette smoke)

32
Q

A patient comes to the ER after a skateboarding accident concerned he may have fractured his tibia. You enter the room and see he is sitting forward in bed exhibiting dysnea. Upon closer inspection you notice small red dots on his chest. What could be wrong?

A

Fat embolus from bone fracture;

Characterized by dyspnea (fat, often with bone marrow elements, is seen in pulmonary vessels) and petechiae on the skin overlying the chest.

33
Q

What is Caisson disease?

A

chronic form of gas embolus usually seen in decompression sickness; characterized by multifocal ischemic necrosis of bone

34
Q

Biopsy of lymph node is performed and shows expansion of the region next to the follicle. What genetic abnormality could cause this condition?

A

mantle next to follicle

mantle cell lymphoma caused by 11,14 translocation

B cells normally over-expressing Ig heavy chain which sits on C14, if CD gets translocated to Ig(H) spot then you get overexpression of cyclin D which allows cell to go from G1 to S

35
Q

Histologically what would a “starry sky” appearance indicate?

A

Burkitt lymphoma

tumor cells represent sky (very blue) but stars (white areas) represent areas of macrophages eating cells that are dying

cells growing so rapidly that grow and die, macrophages consume as they’re dying

36
Q

You place a tuning fork on the patient’s forehead; you realize she has conductive hearing loss on the right side? Did she hear the sound louder on the affected or unaffected side

A

conductive hearing loss hear it louder on affected side

sensory loss hear it louder on unaffected side