Path Questions (USMLE)
Path Questions (USMLE)
Path Questions (USMLE)
Autopsy of a 70-year-old woman reveals a papillary growth within the left ventricular chamber. The
growth consists of a small mass of finger-like projections attached to the mitral valve,
without associated valvular or other cardiac abnormalities. Histologically, each papillary
structure is composed of a core of fibrous tissue lined by thickened endothelium. The patient
did not have any history of cardiac disease or evidence of thromboembolism. Which of the
following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Acute mural thrombus
B. Cardiac myxoma
C. Infective endocarditis
D. Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis
E. Papillary fibroelastoma
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. Gross and microscopic features of this small mass in the left
ventricle are entirely consistent with papillary fibroelastoma. This lesion is not neoplastic,
despite the sound of the name. It probably results from organized thrombi forming on the
endocardial surfaces of the mitral valve or left ventricular cavity. Papillary fibroelastomas
are usually clinically silent and are discovered at autopsy as an incidental finding.
An acute mural thrombus (choice A) would not have a core of fibrous tissue. Acute mural
thrombosis usually develops as a result of stasis in the ventricular cavities, in association
with ventricular enlargement, myocardial infarction, or ventricular aneurysm, for example.
Thrombosis often develops in the atria when there is atrial fibrillation.
Cardiac myxoma (choice B) is the most frequent primary cardiac neoplasm. It is benign and
consists of stellate mesenchymal cells within a myxoid background. Since the left atrium is the
most frequent location, this tumor can produce mitral stenosis by a ball-valve effect.
Both forms of endocarditis are associated with formation of vegetations attached to the surface
of the atrioventricular valves. Vegetations of infective endocarditis (choice C) are bulky and
composed of fibrin, bacteria, and inflammatory cells. Since nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis (choice D) is caused by hypercoagulable states, the vegetations consist of
aggregates of fibrin but few inflammatory cells and no bacteria.
Note that all of the above conditions may lead to systemic embolization. Fragments of
vegetations, thrombi, myxoma, and papillary fibroelastoma may detach and be released into the
bloodstream, causing infarcts.
A 45-year-old man presents to his physician with hematuria. Renal biopsy demonstrates a focal
necrotizing glomerulitis with crescent formation. The patient has a history of intermittent
hemoptysis and intermittent chest pain of moderate intensity. A previous chest x-ray had
demonstrated multiple opacities, some of which were cavitated. The patient also has chronic
cold-like nasal symptoms. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Aspergillosis
B. Polyarteritis nodosa
C. Renal carcinoma metastatic to the lung
D. Tuberculosis
E. Wegener's granulomatosis
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. While in real life, other diseases (or combinations of diseases) may
occasionally cause concurrent pulmonary, sinus, and renal involvement, if you see this pattern
on a test question, you should immediately think of Wegener's granulomatosis. This is a rare
focal necrotizing vasculitis of still unclear etiology, which also features prominent
granulomas, some of which are centered on the vascular lesions. The vasculitis and granulomas
can involve the entire respiratory tract, and an easily obtained nasal biopsy may sometimes
yield the diagnosis. The renal involvement is usually in the form of a necrotizing
glomerulonephritis. The disease typically affects middle aged men, and its formerly poor
prognosis has been improved by corticosteroid and cyclophosphamide therapy.
Aspergillosis (choice A) can cause prominent lung disease, but does not usually have renal
involvement.
Polyarteritis nodosa (choice B) is a possibility, but usually spares the lungs.
Renal cell carcinoma (choice C) might cause lung nodules, but there is no evidence of tumor in
the kidney.
Tuberculosis (choice D) can cause prominent lung disease, but does not usually have renal
involvement.
A 55-year-old man presents to a physician with jaundice. Ultrasonography demonstrates a 5 cm mass in
the
head of the pancreas. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with cytologic sampling
demonstrates cells with large hyperchromatic nuclei and a high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio. A few
small glands composed of these cells are also seen in the cytologic preparation. The overall
prognosis for this man will be most similar to that of a patient with which of the following
malignancies?
A. Adenocarcinoma of the breast
B. Adenocarcinoma of the colon
C. Adenocarcinoma of the esophagus
D. Adenocarcinoma of the prostate
E. Primary gastric lymphoma
Explanation:
The correct answer is C. The patient probably has pancreatic adenocarcinoma. This cancer
carries one of the worst prognoses, with a 3.5% overall 5 year survival rate despite all
attempts at aggressive management. The prognosis is also bleak with adenocarcinoma of the
esophagus, with a 10% overall 5 year survival rate.
Adenocarcinoma of the breast (choice A) now has an overall 5 year survival rate of 60-70%.
Adenocarcinoma of the colon (choice B) now has an overall 5 year survival rate of 50-60%.
Adenocarcinoma of the prostate (choice D) now has an overall 5 year survival rate of 50-70%.
Primary gastric lymphoma (choice E) has an overall survival 5 year survival rate of 75-85%.
Biopsy of a persistent exophytic area on the vulva of a 60-year-old woman demonstrates a squamous
epithelial lesion. No koilocytes are seen. The lesions show papillary projections composed of
disordered, squamous epithelium with well-differentiated cells. The basement membrane at the
dermal-epidermal junction is focally disrupted by squamous cell groups extending deep into the
dermis. Which of the following diagnoses is most accurate?
A. Condyloma acuminatum
B. Extramammary Paget's disease
C. Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia
D. Vulvar melanoma
E. Vulvar squamous cell carcinoma
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. The disruption of the basement membrane with cell groups extending
deep into the dermis indicates that this is invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva,
which may arise in vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia, in condyloma, or spontaneously. The latter
type (which is likely here) tends to be well differentiated, while the former two are often
poorly differentiated.
Condyloma acuminatum (choice A) would contain koilocytes and would not cross the basement
membrane.
Extramammary Paget's disease (choice B) would probably contain individual tumor cells that
stain for mucin.
The lesion of vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (choice C) does not cross the basement membrane.
Vulvar melanoma (choice D) is composed of melanocytes that would mark with S100 or HMB-45.
Which of the following conditions is associated with overexpression of bcl-2?
A. Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
B. Burkitt lymphoma
C. Follicular lymphoma
D. Multiple myeloma
E. Small lymphocytic lymphoma
Explanation:
Explanation:
The correct answer is B. An increased number of eosinophils (AKA eosinophilia) occurs in
association with several conditions, the most frequent of which are immune-mediated diseases
(e.g., asthma, hay fever, and pemphigus vulgaris) and parasitic infestations. This is due to an
absolute increase in the number of circulating eosinophils, brought about by IL-5, which
stimulates differentiation of eosinophilic precursor cells in the bone marrow.
Basophilic leukocytosis (choice A) is a rare event that is sometimes observed in association
with chronic myelogenous leukemia. It is not seen in patients with asthma.
Lymphocytosis (choice C) may result from a vast array of conditions, but it is not typical of
asthma or other allergic diseases. Lymphocytosis may develop in response to a number of
infections (e.g., brucellosis, whooping cough, hepatitis, infectious mononucleosis, and
tuberculosis) or manifest as part of chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
Monocytosis (choice D) refers to an increase in number of monocytes, which are circulating
macrophages. Chronic infections (e.g., tuberculosis, rickettsiosis, and malaria) and chronic
inflammatory conditions (e.g., collagen vascular diseases and inflammatory bowel disease) are
the most common underlying causes.
Neutrophilic leukocytosis (choice E) is a typical systemic reaction to acute and chronic
infections, especially those due to bacteria. The increase in neutrophil number is mediated by
IL-1 and TNF, which induce a rapid release of neutrophils from the bone marrow in acute
infections and stimulate proliferation of bone marrow precursors in chronic infections.
A patient with long term severe hypertension develops progressive dementia. CT scan of the head
demonstrates a diffuse loss of deep hemispheric white matter. Which of the following terms best
describes the pathological process that is occurring?
A. Anemic infarcts
B. Hemorrhagic infarcts
C. Hypertensive encephalopathy
D. Lacunae
E. Subcortical leukoencephalopathy
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. This patient has subcortical leukoencephalopathy (Binswanger's
disease), which is one of the neurologic syndromes associated with hypertension. It is
uncommon, but obviously devastating. The histologic findings are diffuse, irregular loss of
axons and myelin accompanied by widespread gliosis. Small infarcts may be seen in the frontal
lobes. The pathologic mechanism may be damage caused by severe arteriolosclerosis. None of the
other choices would produce diffuse subcortical white matter involvement.
Anemic infarcts (choice A) can be seen in hypertensive patients as a consequence of
atherosclerotic thromboembolic events.
Hemorrhagic infarcts (choice B) can also be seen in hypertensive patients as a consequence of
atherosclerotic thromboembolic events followed by reperfusion. They tend to occur in gray
matter or at the gray-white junction.
Horseshoe kidney (choice B) involves fusion of the upper or lower (most common) pole of the
kidney. It is fairly common (as high as 1:500), and is typically an incidental finding at
autopsy.
Infantile polycystic kidney (choice C) produces a small kidney with round medullary cysts and
"radiating" linear cortical cysts.
Renal dysplasia (choice E) can also cause cystic change in a kidney, but typically involves
only the medulla and cortex of part of the kidney.
A 75-year-old female presents to the doctor with a chief complaint of vaginal spotting. She has been
post-menopausal for 25 years and does not take hormones. An ultrasound is performed, and shows a
mass in the uterine fundus. A hysterectomy is performed, and pathologic examination of the
removed uterus reveals a malignant tumor of the endometrial glands and stroma. Which of the
following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Endolymphatic stromal myosis
B. Endometrial carcinoma
C. Endometrial stromal sarcoma
D. Leiomyosarcoma
E. Malignant mixed mllerian tumor
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. Malignant mixed mllerian tumor is a tumor with 2 components, stromal
and epithelial (endometrial glands), both of which are malignant. This is a rare and highly
aggressive tumor that has a 25% 5-year survival rate. It usually affects older patients and
presents with post-menopausal bleeding. The stromal component can contain metaplastic
components such as cartilage and bone. Interestingly, usually only the epithelial component
metastasizes.
Endolymphatic stromal myosis (choice A) is a type of endometrial stromal tumor of intermediate
malignancy. It appears as small pieces of stroma between myometrial bundles that infiltrate
lymph channels. Patients may have pain or bleeding, or may be asymptomatic. Recurrences happen
late in the course of the disease (years) in half of patients and metastasis occurs in 15%.
There is no epithelial component, so this is an incorrect choice.
Endometrial carcinoma (choice B) is a malignancy of the epithelial glandular component of the
endometrium. Abnormal bleeding is the usual presentation. High estrogen states cause this
tissue to proliferate. There is no stromal component of this tumor, so this is an incorrect
choice.
Endometrial stromal sarcoma (choice C) is a true sarcoma arising from the endometrial stroma
that infiltrates the myometrium and invades vessels. There is no epithelial component.
Leiomyosarcoma (choice D) is a true sarcoma arising from the uterine smooth muscle. It commonly
has satellite lesions within the uterus. Leiomyosarcomas usually recur after removal; survival
is greater with well differentiated lesions. Poorly differentiated lesions have a 10 to 15% 5year survival rate. Distant metastasis is via blood vessels. There is no epithelial component.
An 80-year-old man has low back pain. An x-ray of the lower back and pelvis shows sclerotic changes in
the lower vertebrae and in focal areas throughout the pelvis. The radiologist's report states
that the sclerotic changes may represent osteoarthritis; however, metastatic prostate cancer
cannot be excluded. Which of the following is most cost-effective in the initial work-up of this
patient?
A. Bone marrow aspirate and biopsy
B. Digital rectal exam
C. Prostate-specific antigen
D. Radionuclide bone scan
E. Serum alkaline phosphatase
Explanation:
The correct answer is B. Osteoarthritis is the most common rheumatologic disease, the
prevalence of which increases with age. It primarily involves weight-bearing joints, hence its
distribution in the lower vertebrae, pelvic bones, and proximal femur. Sclerotic bone,
representing reactive bone formation, develops as a reaction to injury and is responsible for
the slightly elevated serum alkaline phosphatase levels that normally occur in much of the
elderly population. If prostate cancer with osteoblastic (bone-forming) metastases to the
vertebral column and pelvis were present in this patient (stage D disease), a digital rectal
exam would be the most cost-effective initial step in the work-up. With advanced prostate
cancer, the gland would very likely be enlarged and hard ("stony").
A bone marrow aspirate and biopsy (choice A) is not usually part of the normal work-up of
possible metastatic prostate cancer and has no place in the evaluation of osteoarthritis.
A prostate-specific antigen (PSA; choice C) level should be ordered in this patient, but not as
the initial step in the work-up, since it does not distinguish hyperplasia from cancer and is
fairly expensive. In known cases of prostate cancer, the PSA is a measure of tumor burden and
is used to monitor recurrences when following patients who have been treated for prostate
cancer.
A radionuclide bone scan (choice D) is commonly used to rule out metastasis in patients with
prostate cancer. It is expensive and is not used as a screening test for prostate cancer.
The serum alkaline phosphatase (choice E) is typically elevated in metastatic prostate cancer
due to osteoblastic activity in the metastatic foci. However, an elevated serum alkaline
phosphatase is non-specific, since it may be slightly increased in osteoarthritis (reactive
bone formation) as well as in liver disease.
Which of the following conditions is the most frequent cause of spontaneous abortion in the first
trimester of pregnancy?
A. Abruptio placentae
B. Chorioamnionitis
C. Chromosomal abnormalities
D. Placenta previa
E. Trauma
Explanation:
The correct answer is C. At least 10% to 15% of normally fertilized and implanted ova are lost
in the first trimester of pregnancy because of spontaneous abortion. Studies using immunoassay
of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) for early diagnosis of pregnancy suggest that the
percentage of fertilized ova lost in the first trimester might be even higher. The great
majority of these cases are attributable to chromosomal abnormalities. Chromosomal studies are
not routinely performed in such cases, but they are recommended when a malformed fetus has been
identified or when habitual or recurrent abortions occur.
Abruptio placentae (choice A), a complication of the third trimester, occurs when the placenta
detaches prematurely from its implantation site. Retroplacental hemorrhage develops within the
space between placenta and uterine wall, leading to interruption or severe reduction in the
blood supply to the fetus.
Chorioamnionitis (choice B), a complication of the second and third trimesters, results from
ascending infections through the vaginal canal. Infection of chorioamnionic membranes may lead
to premature rupture of membranes and abortion or premature labor.
Placenta previa (choice D) is a placenta implanted in the lower segment of the uterus. When
dilatation of this segment begins in late pregnancy, a placenta previa may cause severe
bleeding and lead to premature labor.
Surprisingly, trauma (choice E) is a rare cause of spontaneous abortion.
A 65-year-old woman has a long-standing dementing disorder characterized by deterioration in
personality, neglect of personal hygiene, impaired judgment, and disinhibited behavior. MRI
demonstrates severe cortical atrophy limited to the frontal lobes and anterior two thirds of the
temporal lobes, while the remaining cortex is preserved. No evidence of recent or remote
infarcts is found. Which of the following diagnoses is most consistent with these pathologic and
clinical features?
A. Alzheimer disease
B. Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease
C. Dementia with Lewy bodies
D. Frontotemporal dementia
E. Vascular dementia
Explanation:
The correct answer is D. Not all dementing disorders manifest with the same clinical features.
Although there is considerable overlap in clinical symptomatology among different types of
dementias, making clinical diagnosis somewhat problematic, there are classic presentations that
allow identification of a specific form of dementia with a high degree of confidence. In this
case, the patient has symptoms due to frontal lobe damage, eg, disinhibition, impaired
judgment, and personality changes. Furthermore, MRI demonstrates a specific pattern of cortical
atrophy, restricted to the frontal lobes and anterior portion of the temporal lobes. This
combination points toward a group of dementias called frontotemporal dementia, the most
frequent form of which is Pick disease. Other forms of frontotemporal dementia are very
infrequent. Remember: frontal symptoms in conjunction with frontotemporal atrophy =
frontotemporal dementia/Pick disease.
Alzheimer disease (choice A) is the most frequent form of dementia in industrialized countries.
Although symptoms due to frontal damage may be present in Alzheimer disease, they are usually
associated with a more generalized impairment of higher neurologic functions, eg, language,
memory, and learned movements. In addition, cortical atrophy in Alzheimer disease is widespread
and not limited to the frontal and anterior temporal lobes.
Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (choice B) represents the prototype of prion diseases. Cortical
atrophy is not a prominent feature of Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease, which manifests with
personality changes, memory loss, and seizures, leading to death after a rapid clinical course
(a few months to 1 year).
Dementia with Lewy bodies, also known as diffuse Lewy body disease (choice C), is one of the
most common forms of dementia in Western countries, possibly more common than vascular
dementia. It is characterized by widespread formation of Lewy bodies in the substantia nigra,
limbic cortex, and subcortical nuclei, such as the basal nucleus of Meynert. Extrapyramidal
symptoms similar to Parkinson disease manifest in this form of dementia as a result of
degeneration of dopaminergic pathways.
Vascular dementia (choice E) is an umbrella term encompassing dementing conditions that arise
from pathology of large or small cerebral vessels. It manifests with memory loss associated
with focal neurologic symptoms depending on the location of damage. MRI would identify old or
recent infarcts, as well as white matter disease. Conditions associated with vascular dementia
include the following: Multi-infarct dementia, which is caused by multiple, scattered brain
infarcts secondary to atherosclerosis of large arteries of the circle of Willis and/or carotid
arteries. Binswanger disease, which involves rarefaction of cerebral white matter and is caused
by hypertension-related arteriolosclerosis. Lacunar infarcts, which consist of small (< 1 cm)
infarcts in the striatum and thalamus; this condition is related to arteriolosclerosis.
Biopsy of a reasonably well-demarcated mass of the nasopharynx demonstrates a plasma cell
proliferation.
Serum electrophoresis shows a small monoclonal IgG spike. Bone marrow evaluation fails to
demonstrate plasma cell proliferation and no lesions are seen on extensive skeletal x-rays.
Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Heavy chain disease
B. Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance
C. Multiple myeloma
D. Plasmacytoma
E. Waldenstrm's macroglobulinemia
Explanation:
The correct answer is D. Plasmacytoma (solitary myeloma) involving soft tissue (lungs,
nasopharynx, nasal sinuses) is a plasma cell proliferation resembling multiple myeloma but
without significant metastatic potential. In contrast, some plasmocytomas involving bone
eventually (up to 10 to 20 years) develop into frank multiple myeloma.
Heavy chain diseases (choice A) constitute a group of rare lymphoplasmacytic malignancies in
which excessive amounts of a defective heavy immunoglobulin chain are produced. They may take
the form of gamma heavy-chain disease (from IgG), alpha heavy-chain disease (from IgA) or mu
heavy-chain disease (from IgM); malignant cells are usually present in marrow in all of these
conditions.
Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (choice B) is a disease of elderly patients
with a monoclonal spike on serum or urine electrophoresis, but no identifiable mass or bone
marrow lesion; 20% of these patients eventually develop one of the other diseases listed in the
answer choices.
Multiple myeloma (choice C) is a malignancy derived from a single plasma cell clone with
significant metastatic potential. Multiple lytic bone lesions are usually seen.
Waldenstrm's macroglobulinemia (choice E) is a malignancy of lymphoplasmacytic cells that
secrete IgM. In this disorder, the bone marrow is diffusely rather than focally infiltrated by
lymphocytes, plasma cells, and hybrid forms.
A 65-year-old woman presents with a 30-lb weight loss and malaise. Cancer is suspected. Which of the
following is the correct list, starting with the most prevalent, of the three most common
causes of cancer in women?
A. Breast, lung, colon and rectum
B. Breast, uterus, lung
C. Colon and rectum, lung, ovary
D. Lung, breast, ovary
E. Ovary, uterus, lung
Explanation:
The correct answer is A. The correct female incidence sequence is breast (32%), lung (13%),
and colon and rectum (13%). The two major causes of cancer death in women are lung (23%) and
breast (18%). In men, the incidence sequence is prostate (32%), lung (16%), and colon and
rectum (12%). The two leading causes of male cancer deaths are lung (33%) and prostate (13%).
The uterus and ovary (choices B, C, D, and E) are not among the three organs most frequently
affected by cancer in women.
A 50-year-old woman presents with a 5-year history of headaches, generalized tonic-clonic seizures, and
bilateral leg weakness. Skull films reveal hyperostosis of the calvarium. Biopsy of the
responsible lesion shows a whorling pattern of the cells. Which of the following is the most
likely diagnosis?
A. Arachnoid cyst
B. Glioblastoma multiforme
C. Meningioma
D. Metastatic breast cancer
E. Oligodendroglioma
Explanation:
The correct answer is C. The most likely diagnosis is an intracranial meningioma. Meningiomas
are slow-growing, benign tumors comprising 15% of intracranial tumors; they are most common in
the elderly. They originate from either dura mater or arachnoid and are sharply demarcated from
brain tissue. Meningiomas often incite an osteoblastic reaction in the overlying cranial bones.
Microscopically, the meningioma cells have a tendency to encircle one another, forming whorls
and psammoma bodies. Clinically, they present as mass lesions; seizures may occur. The superior
parasagittal surface of the frontal lobes is a favorite site of origin. This can often produce
leg weakness, since the leg motor fibers that pass down through the internal capsule originate
in parasagittal cortical regions. Treatment of meningiomas is usually surgical.
Arachnoid cysts (choice A) are formed by splitting of the arachnoid membrane; most arachnoid
cysts arise near the Sylvian fissure. They may present with mass effect, but would be unlikely
to produce seizures, prominent focal signs, or reactive hyperostosis.
Glioblastoma multiforme (choice B) is an aggressive malignant astrocytoma that would likely
have killed the patient long before 5 years had elapsed.
Metastatic breast cancer (choice D) would generally look different microscopically (the
whorling cell pattern is characteristic of meningioma). It would be unlikely for metastatic
cancer to cause a reaction in the overlying bone, or to be present long enough to cause
symptoms for 5 years.
Oligodendrogliomas (choice E) are glial tumors that could produce the described clinical
picture, but usually do not cause hyperostosis of the calvarium or exhibit the characteristic
whorling cell pattern microscopically.
When a histologic section is taken of an abscess, many of the observed neutrophils show a degenerative
change in which the nucleus has undergone fragmentation. This process is known as
A. caseous necrosis
B. coagulative necrosis
C. karyolysis
D. karyorrhexis
E. pyknosis
Explanation:
The correct answer is D. Karyorrhexis refers to a pattern of nuclear degradation in which a
pyknotic or partially pyknotic nucleus undergoes fragmentation followed by complete lysis. This
pattern is common in the neutrophils present in acute inflammation.
The type of necrosis seen in an abscess is liquefactive necrosis. Caseous necrosis (choice A)
is seen in tuberculosis and some other granulomatous diseases; coagulative necrosis (choice B)
is seen following infarctions of many organs (other than the brain).
Karyolysis (choice C) is also a degenerative change affecting nuclei. In this case, however, it
is seen as a decrease in nuclear basophilia, which is presumably the result of DNAse activity.
Pyknosis (choice E) is characterized by nuclear shrinking and basophilia, apparently as a
result of DNA condensation.
A 52-year-old woman has recently undergone a breast resection for carcinoma. Based on the statistics for
breast cancer incidence, which of the following types of carcinoma does this patient most
likely have?
A. Colloid (mucinous)
B. Invasive ductal
C. Invasive lobular
D. Medullary
E. Metastatic bronchogenic
Explanation:
The correct answer is B. Invasive ductal carcinoma is the most likely candidate. Of the various
types of breast adenocarcinoma, invasive ductal carcinoma is by far the most common variant,
accounting for approximately 75% to 80% of all invasive breast carcinomas. Invasive ductal
carcinoma develops from epithelial cells of the terminal duct. Histologically, it is composed
of small, glandular, ductlike structures, lined by variably anaplastic cells. The most common
mode of presentation is a palpable mass in the breast. Its prognosis depends mostly on staging
(spread of cancer) rather than grading (degree of differentiation).
The colloid (mucinous) variant (choice A) is relatively rare (about 1% to 2%) and occurs more
frequently in older women. Histologically, this carcinoma is characterized by abundant mucin
secretion. It is associated with a better prognosis than the ductal type.
Invasive lobular carcinoma (choice C) is the second most frequent histologic type of breast
adenocarcinoma, accounting for approximately 10% of all cases. Its presumed cell of origin is
the lobular cell. The most typical histologic characteristic is the presence of cancer cells
lined up in orderly rows ("single-file").
Medullary carcinoma (choice D) tends to occur in younger women and is associated with a
slightly better prognosis. Although a malignant tumor, medullary carcinoma is well
circumscribed and surrounded by a florid lymphoplasmacytic reaction. The name is due to its
soft consistency.
Metastatic cancer may involve the breast like any other organ. Bronchogenic carcinoma (choice
E) may also spread to the breast by lymphatic route or by contiguity, but this would be less
likely than primary breast cancer.
A 55-year-old man is brought to his physician's office with a 3-month history of progressive mental
deterioration in the form of memory loss, mood changes, and errors in judgment. His gait is
unsteady, and he requires assistance to prevent falling. He has no history of seizures, head
trauma, or incontinence. Computed tomography (CT) scan and lumbar puncture are unremarkable.
Physical examination reveals hypertonicity of all extremities, bilateral equivocal plantar
response, ataxic gait, and myoclonic jerks in the lower extremities. What is the mechanism by
which this infectious agent causes its pathology?
A. Amyloid deposition
B. Autoimmune destruction
C. Chronic inflammation
D. Embolization and infarction
E. Toxin production
Explanation:
The correct answer is A. This is the classic presentation of Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (CJD).
Although the pathogenesis is incompletely understood, these patients develop extracellular
deposition of abnormal fibrillar proteins in the brain, ie, amyloid.
Autoimmune destruction (choice B) is not indicated because there is no immunologic response to
the deposition of these extracellular proteins; thus there is no chronic inflammation (choice
C)
Although embolization and infarction (choice D) could complicate the presentation in the age
group typically afflicted with CJD, these processes are not believed to have any direct role in
this pathology.
No toxin is produced (choice E) to account for the presentation in CJD.
A patient consults a dermatologist about a skin lesion on her neck. Examination reveals a 1-cm diameter,
red, scaly plaque with a rough texture and irregular margins. Biopsy demonstrates epidermal and
dermal cells with large, pleomorphic, hyperchromatic nuclei. Which of the following conditions
would most likely predispose this patient to the development of this lesion?
A. Actinic keratosis
B. Compound nevus
C. Dermal nevus
D. Junctional nevus
E. Melanoma
Explanation:
The correct answer is A. The lesion is a squamous cell carcinoma of the skin. Actinic
keratosis, which is a hyperplastic lesion of sun-damaged skin, predisposes for squamous cell
carcinoma. Another predisposing condition to remember is xeroderma pigmentosum, which
predisposes for both squamous cell and basal cell carcinomas of skin.
A nevus is a mole, containing characteristic cells called nevocellular cells. If the
nevocellular cells are located at the dermal-epidermal junction (junctional nevus, choice D),
in the dermis (dermal nevus, choice C), or both (compound nevus, choice B), they do not
predispose for squamous cell carcinomas of the skin. Malignant melanoma (choice E), however,
can arise in pre-existing nevi.
A 24-year-old woman gives birth to an apparently normal infant. The neonate begins feeding well by the
second day, then at ten days, suddenly develops gastrointestinal obstruction. Which of the
following is the most likely cause of this presentation?
A. Adhesions
B. Congenital pyloric stenosis
C. Hirschsprung's disease
D. Intussusception
E. Volvulus
Explanation:
The correct answer is D. All of the conditions listed can cause gastrointestinal obstruction,
A 70-year-old woman dies in a nursing home after a heart attack. The time of onset of her clinical
symptomatology and the cause of death are uncertain; furthermore, the possibility of neglect is
being considered. Therefore, an autopsy investigation is arranged. The forensic pathologist
discovers acute thrombosis involving the posterior descending branch of the right coronary
artery with resultant myocardial infarction (MI) in the posterior third of the interventricular
septum. Histologically, there is coagulation necrosis with associated abundant neutrophilic
infiltration. Histiocytes and lymphocytes are scanty. Which of the following is the approximate
period between the onset of pain (ie, beginning of ischemic injury) and death?
A. 1 hour
B. 12 hours
C. 2 days
D. 5 days
E. 10 days
Explanation:
The correct answer is C. Following irreversible ischemic injury, the heart (and any other
organ) displays an orderly sequence of events that progresses from necrosis of parenchymal
cells to inflammatory reaction, granulation tissue, and scar healing.
Although ischemic injury manifests with pain almost immediately following vascular occlusion,
histologic evidence of necrosis lags behind the clinical symptoms. At 1 hour (choice A) after
ischemia, there is no morphologic change indicative of necrosis. The first signs of necrosis
appear 12 hours (choice B) after irreversible ischemia: myocytes appear intensely eosinophilic
and wavy, but there is no inflammatory reaction yet. Acute inflammatory cells (neutrophils)
infiltrate the infarcted area beginning 1 day and peaking at approximately 2-3 days after
injury. This acute inflammatory response partially overlaps with the subsequent influx of
lymphocytes and histiocytes. Reabsorption of necrotic myofibers by histiocytes, as well as
proliferation of small blood vessels, marks early formation of granulation tissue at around 5
days (choice D). Granulation tissue is advanced at 10 days (choice E) and consists of
fibroblasts, small blood vessels, and residual chronic inflammatory cells within a matrix of
young collagen matrix.
A 54-year-old man presents with a chief complaint of "burning" abdominal pain in the epigastric region.
Endoscopy demonstrates a well-defined, regular gastroesophageal junction located 3 cm above the
esophageal hiatus in the diaphragm. Biopsy of the distal side of the junction demonstrates
normal gastric mucosa. This lesion is best classified as which of the following?
A. Achalasia
B. Esophageal ring
C. Esophageal web
D. Paraesophageal hernia
E. Sliding hernia
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. This patient has a sliding hiatal hernia, which is the most common
(90%) form of hiatal hernia. This condition is frequently associated with gastric reflux.
Achalasia (choice A) is actually a physiologic, rather than an anatomic variation. In this
disorder, the lower esophageal sphincter fails to relax adequately, and esophageal peristalsis
is often abnormal.
Esophageal rings (choice B) are mucosal folds in the esophagus. They are called esophageal webs
(choice C) in the upper esophagus. Schatzki rings are mucosal rings in the lower esophagus, at
the gastroesophageal junction.
In a paraesophageal hernia (choice D), an area of gastric cardia rolls along with the esophagus
through an incompetent hiatus into the thorax. In a paraesophageal hernia, the gastroesophageal
junction would not be displaced.
Which of the following pulmonary conditions is associated with widespread formation of hyaline
membranes
in the alveolar cavities?
A. Asthma
B. Bacterial pneumonia
C. Desquamative interstitial pneumonitis
D. Diffuse alveolar damage
E. Hemodynamic pulmonary edema
Explanation:
The correct answer is D. Diffuse alveolar damage, clinically referred to as adult respiratory
distress syndrome (ARDS), is characterized by diffuse damage to the alveolar/capillary barrier,
which may result from diverse acute conditions. The four most frequent causes are trauma,
sepsis, shock, and gastric aspiration. The pathogenesis is not entirely clear, but influx of
neutrophils and release of cytokines, eicosanoids, and free radicals seem to be crucial in
promoting alveolar damage. The most characteristic histopathologic hallmark of diffuse alveolar
damage is formation of hyaline membranes within the alveolar cavities. These consist of
proteinaceous material of plasma origin and necrotic debris from desquamated epithelium. The
condition has a 60% mortality and manifests with acute respiratory failure.
The pathologic features of asthma (choice A) are relatively nonspecific and are similar, for
example, to those of chronic bronchitis, including chronic inflammatory infiltration,
hyperplasia of mucous glands, and hypertrophy of smooth muscle. The presence of numerous
eosinophils, however, is more characteristic of asthma.
Explanation:
The correct answer is D. All of the conditions listed can cause infertility due to a low or
absent sperm count. Only in Sertoli-only syndrome is there a complete absence of sperm
precursors in an undamaged tubule. There is no known method to correct Sertoli-only syndrome
(or maturation arrest) that is not due to a treatable chronic disease.
Chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus (choice A) or tuberculosis (choice E) can arrest the
maturation of sperm, but do not usually show a complete absence of sperm precursors.
In maturation arrest (choice B), mature sperm are absent, but precursors are found.
Tumors such as seminomas (choice C) cause infertility by occluding the flow of semen or by
replacing the seminiferous tubules. Sampling of a seminiferous tubule not replaced by tumor
would probably still demonstrate sperm.
A 50-year-old woman who works as a paralegal in a law firm comes to her local doctor because of
problems
with sleep. The patient says that over the past several weeks, she hasn't slept well, feels
tired, and has had headaches. She does not smoke or drink alcohol, except on special occasions,
and does not take any medications. The patient's pupils are 5 mm in size, equal and reactive,
with both the direct and consensual light reflexes intact. Accommodation is unimpaired.
Examination of the visual fields and funduscopy are unremarkable. Extraocular movements
reveal
normal conjugate, oblique, and downward movement, but she is unable to look upwards. No
other
abnormalities are found on the neurological examination. Which of the following is the most
likely diagnosis?
A. Acoustic neuroma
B. Astrocytoma in the cerebellum
C. Craniopharyngioma
D. Parasagittal meningioma
E. Pinealoma
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. This patient has a pinealoma. Tumors of the pineal gland compress the
vertical gaze center in the tectum of the midbrain. The pineal gland manufactures melatonin
from its precursor serotonin; an inadequate supply of melatonin results in insomnia. Tumors of
the pineal gland will not compress the cerebral cortex or the rest of the brainstem.
Frequently, the only physical sign noted is failure of upward gaze.
An acoustic neuroma (choice A) is a schwannoma of the eighth cranial nerve. It results in
deafness, ataxia, and dysarthria. Nystagmus may be present. The gaze centers are not affected.
Astrocytomas of the cerebellum (choice B) are usually seen in children. These tumors present
with headache, nausea, vomiting, papilledema, and cerebellar signs such as ataxia, dysarthria,
nystagmus, and intention tremor. The gaze centers are not affected.
Craniopharyngiomas (choice C) are usually seen in children. There is failure of growth,
E. Serous cystadenocarcinoma
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. Similar to testicular tumors, ovarian tumors can be classified
according to cell of origin. There are three main categories: tumors of surface epithelium,
tumors of germ cell origin, and tumors of sex cord-stromal origin. Ovarian surface epithelium
(coelomic mesothelium) may differentiate along tubal (serous), cervical (mucinous), or
endometrial lines, giving origin to serous cystadenoma/cystadenocarcinoma, mucinous
cystadenoma/cystadenocarcinoma and endometrioid tumors, respectively. Serous tumors
represent
40% of all ovarian tumors, and serous cystadenocarcinoma is the most frequent serous tumor.
Serous cystadenocarcinomas occur primarily in women aged 40 to 65 years. About two thirds of
these tumors are bilateral. As the name suggests, it is a cystic tumor containing clear fluid.
The cystic wall is lined by malignant epithelial cells forming papillary fronds.
Less frequent than serous cystadenocarcinoma, endometrioid adenocarcinoma (choice A) and
mucinous cystadenocarcinoma (choice D) also derive from surface epithelium. Endometrioid
carcinoma is histologically similar to endometrial adenocarcinoma, whereas mucinous
cystadenocarcinoma is composed of mucin-producing cells similar to cervical epithelium. Both
these neoplasms have solid and cystic areas (mucinous cystadenocarcinoma more so than
endometrioid carcinoma) and may be bilateral (endometrioid carcinoma more frequently than
mucinous cystadenocarcinoma).
Granulosa cell tumors (choice B) originate from ovarian stroma and consist of variable mixtures
of granulosa cells and theca cells. Since they frequently produce large amounts of estrogens,
these tumors manifest with precocious puberty in preadolescent girls. On the contrary, mature
women with granulosa cell tumors develop endometrial hyperplasia and fibrocystic change of
breast. Histologically, these neoplasms are composed of uniform cuboidal cells, forming
structures reminiscent of ovarian follicles (Call-Exner bodies).
Mature cystic teratoma (choice C) is the most frequent neoplasm derived from germ cells.
Teratomas can be further classified into mature cystic, immature, and monodermal teratomas.
The
great majority of teratomas are mature cystic. Since they originate from more than one germ
layer, these neoplasms contain an amazing mixture of mature tissue components, often including
skin, teeth, neural epithelium, thyroid, cartilage, and intestinal tissue, for example.
A 24-year-old woman is seen by her family practitioner. Her urine sample has a stable, frothy
white foam
on top. Which of the following substances is likely to be present in her urine in significant
amounts?
A. Bilirubin
B. Blood
C. Glucose
D. Ketones
E. Protein
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. Reagent strips of various types are commonly used both in physicians'
offices and in hospital laboratories for rapid semiquantitative urinalysis. The Multistix
strip, which is one of the more commonly used strips, contains reagent squares for glucose,
bilirubin, ketones, specific gravity, blood, pH, protein, urobilinogen, nitrite, and
leukocytes. Each of these squares undergoes a chemical change when dipped in urine, causing the
color of the square to change. The result is "read" by comparing the new color to reference
colors on the bottle. In this case, you need to know that a stable froth on urine is usually
due to proteinuria (more than several grams per 24 hr); therefore, the protein indicator would
be positive on the dipstick.
High levels of bilirubin (choice A) in urine can cause an unusual yellow foam.
Blood in the urine (choice B) might be present in some forms of renal disease, but would not
explain the stable foam.
High levels of glucose (choice C) in urine can cause it to develop a sweet smell and taste;
smelling and tasting urine was an ancient method of diagnosing diabetes mellitus, but is no
longer recommended for obvious reasons.
Ketones (choice D) may give urine an acetone-like odor, but testing for ketones in this manner
is no longer recommended for obvious reasons.
A patient with a long-standing intrauterine contraceptive device develops chronic pelvic pain. The
device is removed, and a biopsy of the endometrium is performed. The biopsy specimen shows a
prominent infiltrate composed of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and histocytes. Which of the
following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Acute endometritis
B. Adenomyosis
C. Chronic endometritis
D. Endometriosis
E. Simple hyperplasia of endometrium
Explanation:
The correct answer is C. This is chronic endometritis, evidenced by the chronic inflammatory
infiltrate of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and histiocytes. This disorder may be idiopathic but
is more often associated with an obvious predisposing factor, such as chronic pelvic
inflammatory disease, tuberculosis, retained gestational tissue, or, as in this case, an
intrauterine contraceptive device. Chronic endometritis can cause abnormal bleeding, pain, and
infertility.
Acute endometritis (choice A) is characterized by a prominent neutrophilic infiltrate and
usually occurs after delivery or miscarriage.
Adenomyosis (choice B) refers to endometrium abnormally located in myometrium.
Endometriosis (choice D) refers to abnormally located patches of endometrium (except in the
myometrium, where it would be called adenomyosis).