Anatomy
Anatomy
Anatomy
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Question 1
A 56-year-old has not received any medical care nor seen a physician for years. He reports reduced
exercise tolerance over the past 5 years. On occasion in the past year he has noted chest pain after
ascending a flight of stairs. He smokes 2 packs of cigarettes per day. He is found to have a blood
pressure of 155/95 mm Hg. His body mass index is 30. Laboratory findings include a total serum
cholesterol of 245 mg/dL with an HDL cholesterol that is 22 mg/dL. Which of the following vascular
abnormalities is most likely to be his most serious health risk?
A Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis
B Lymphedema
C Medial calcific sclerosis
D Atherosclerosis
E Deep venous thrombosis
F Plexiform arteriopathy
(D) CORRECT. He has multiple risk factors for atherosclerosis, including his weight, smoking,
hypertension, and high total cholesterol with low 'good' HDL cholesterol. His findings suggest coronary
artery disease.
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Question 2
A 55-year-old previously healthy woman is hospitalized for pneumonia. On the 10th hospital day she is
found to have swelling and tenderness of her right leg, which apparently has developed over the past 48
hours. Raising the leg elicits pain. An ultrasound examination reveals findings suggestive of femoral vein
thrombosis. Which of the following conditions is most likely to have contributed the most to the
appearance of these findings?
A Trousseau syndrome
B Protein C deficiency
C Prolonged immobilization
D Pregnancy
E Chronic alcoholism
F Hypertension
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(C) CORRECT. The immobilization would predispose to thrombosis of leg veins. This is the most common
cause for deep venous thrombosis.
Question 3
A 63-year-old man has had insulin dependent diabetes mellitus for over two decades. The degree of
control of his disease is characterized by the laboratory finding of a hemoglobin A1C of 10.1%. He has
noted episodes of abdominal pain following meals. These episodes have worsened over the past year.
On physical examination, there are no masses and no organomegaly of the abdomen, and he has no
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tenderness to palpation. Which of the following pathologic findings is most likely to be present in this
man?
A Ruptured aortic aneurysm
B Hepatic infarction
C Mesenteric artery occlusion
D Acute pancreatitis
E Chronic renal failure
(C) CORRECT. He has 'abdominal angina' from diminished blood flow to the bowel as a consequence of
severe atherosclerosis. Persons with diabetes mellitus may have this finding, because all branches of
major arteries to the bowel are affected by atherosclerosis.
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Question 4
A 62-year-old man has experienced substernal chest pain upon exertion with increasing frequency over
the past 6 months. An electrocardiogram shows features consistent with ischemic heart disease. He has
a total serum cholesterol of 262 mg/dL. By angiography, there is 75% narrowing of the left anterior
descending artery. Which of the following vascular complications is most likely to occur in this patient?
A A systemic artery embolus from thrombosis in a peripheral vein.
B A systemic artery embolus from a left atrial mural thrombus.
C Pulmonary embolism from a left ventricular mural thrombus.
D A systemic artery embolus from a left ventricular mural thrombus.
E Pulmonary embolism from thrombosis in a peripheral vein.
(D) CORRECT. Left ventricular mural thrombi are prone to embolize to the systemic arterial circulation.
Such mural thrombi are likely to result from damage to the left ventricle from ischemic heart disease,
either acutely with an underlying myocardial infarction, or with a left ventricular aneurysm formed
following resolution of a large myocardial infarction.
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Question 5
On sectioning of an organ from a 60-year-old man at the time of autopsy, a focal, wedge-shaped area
that is firm is accompanied by extensive hemorrhage, giving it a red appearance. The lesion has a base
on the surface of the organ. In which of the following situations will this lesion most likely occur?
A Lung with pulmonary thromboembolism
B Heart with coronary thrombosis
C Liver with hypovolemic shock
D Kidney with septic embolus
E Spleen with embolized mural thrombus
F Brain with cerebral arterial aneurysm
(A) CORRECT. The bronchial arterial supply to the lung does not provide enough oxygenation to prevent
infarction, but does provide blood to make the infarct hemorrhagic.
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Question 6
A 44-year-old woman has a family history of heart disease. Her father and mother both developed
congestive heart failure and myocardial infarction as a result of extensive coronary atherosclerosis. A
dietary modification to include consumption of which of the following is most likely to reduce her risk
for ischemic heart disease?
A 40% of total caloric intake as fat
B A diet high in saturated fat
C Foods with cholesterol
D Fish oil
E Fat found in beef products
F Trans-fats
(D) CORRECT. Fish oils diminish arachidonic acid metabolites and reduce platelet aggregation.
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Question 7
An 81-year-old woman has the sudden onset of dyspnea and palpitations with chest pain. A pulmonary
ventilation-perfusion scan is performed and indicates a high probability for a perfusion defect involving
right segmental pulmonary arterial branch. Of the following findings or conditions, which is the most
important factor favoring development of these findings?
A An increased white blood cell count
B Cirrhosis of the liver
C Altered blood flow with stasis
D An increased platelet count
E Generalized atherosclerosis
(C) CORRECT. She has a pulmonary thromboembolus. Stasis predisposes to thrombosis, as is evidenced
by the danger for thromboembolism in hospitalized patients.
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Question 8
A 66-year-old woman has the sudden loss of movement on part of the left side of her body. She has
smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for the past 45 years. She has vital signs including T 37.1 C, P
80/minute, RR 16/minute, and BP 160/100 mm Hg. A cerebral angiogram reveals occlusion of a branch
of her middle cerebral artery. Laboratory findings include a hemoglobin A1C of 9%. Which of the
following components of blood lipids is most important in contributing to her disease?
A
B
C
D
E
Chylomicrons
Lipoprotein lipase
Oxidized LDL
VLDL
HDL cholesterol
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(C) CORRECT. She has had a 'stroke' which is most often a consequence of cerebral atherosclerosis or
embolic disease from the heart as a consequence of ischemic heart disease from atherosclerosis. LDL
brings cholesterol to arterial walls, and when increased LDL is present or when there is hypertension,
smoking, and diabetes, there is more degradation of LDL to oxidized LDL which is taken up into arterial
walls via scavenger receptors in macrophages to help form atheromas.
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Question 9
An autopsy study reveals that evidence for atheroma formation can begin even in children. The gross
appearances of the aortas are recorded and compared with microscopic findings of atheroma formation.
Which of the following is most likely to be the first visible gross evidence for the formation of an
atheroma?
A Thrombus
B Fatty streak
C Calcification
D Hemorrhage
E Exudate
F Ulceration
(B) CORRECT. This is the first sign. It is benign and reversible, but it may be the precursor to more severe
plaques.
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Question 10
A 63-year-old man has had increasing exercise intolerance for the past 5 years so that he now becomes
short of breath upon climbing a single flight of stairs. Laboratory studies have shown fasting blood
glucose measurements from 145 to 210 mg/dL for the past 25 years, but he has not sought medical
treatment. If he dies suddenly, which of the following is most likely to be the immediate cause of death?
A Myocardial infarction
B Nodular glomerulosclerosis
C Cerebral hemorrhage
D Hyperosmolar coma
E Right lower leg gangrene
(A) CORRECT. This is the most common cause of death in persons with diabetes mellitus, because of
the high prevalence of coronary atherosclerosis.
Question 11
A 45-year-old man dies suddenly and unexpectedly. The immediate cause of death is found to be a
hemorrhage in the right basal ganglia region. On microscopic examination his renal artery branches have
concentric endothelial cell proliferation which markedly narrows the lumen, resulting in focal ischemia
and hemorrhage of the renal parenchyma. An elevation in which of the following substances in his blood
is most likely to be associated with these findings?
A Ammonia
B Calcium
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C Cholesterol
D Renin
E Troponin I
F Triglyceride
G C-reactive protein
(D) CORRECT. The findings suggest hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis, which accompanies malignant
hypertension.
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Question 12
A 10-year-old previously healthy child has been noted by her parents to be constantly thirsty. She is
consuming large amounts of soft drinks. She is urinating often. Her diet and exercise patterns have not
changed, except for an increased appetite, yet she appears cachectic and has lost 7 kg over the past 4
months. On physical examination there are no abnormal findings, other than peripheral muscle wasting
and weakness. Which of the following laboratory findings would you most strongly suspect is present in
this girl?
A Increased blood insulin
B Decreased blood glucagon
C Ketonuria
D Markedly increased serum osmolality
E Decreased plasma hydrogen ion (alkalosis)
F Decreased plasma cortisol
(B) CORRECT. Ketonuria is typical for type I diabetes mellitus.
Question 13
A 73-year-old woman who exercises regularly falls down the stairs and injures her right hip. A
radiograph is taken of the pelvis. There is no fracture but the radiograph reveals calcification of the small
muscular arteries lateral to her uterus. What is the probable vascular lesion which accounts for this
calcification?
Ulcerative atherosclerosis
Calcific medial sclerosis
Metastatic calcification
Trauma
Dystrophic calcification
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A
B
C
D
E
(B) CORRECT. Monckeberg calcific medial sclerosis is a benign, incidental finding most often seen in the
elderly. Small arteries in pelvis and extremities are typically involved. The vascular lumen is not
compromised.
Question 14
A 55-year-old woman has been treated in the hospital for pancreatitis for the past three weeks. She is
examined one morning on rounds and found to have a swollen right leg. It is tender to palpation
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posteriorly but is not warm. This condition is most likely to be the result of which of the following
vascular complications?
A Venous thrombosis
B Septic embolization
C Congestive heart failure
D Cellulitis
E Infarction
(A) CORRECT. The signs point to thrombophlebitis.
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Question 15
A 29-year-old woman is involved in a motor vehicle accident that results in severe lacerations to her
lower extremities, along with blunt abdominal trauma. In the emergency room she is noted to have
cool, pallid skin. She has vital signs showing T 36.9 C, P 103/minute, RR 18/minute, and BP 70/30 mm Hg.
She has decreased urine output. Which of the following laboratory findings on a blood sample from this
patient is most likely to be present?
A Hematocrit of 54%
B Glucose of 181 mg/dL
C PaO2 of 20 mm Hg
D Lactic acid of 4.8 mmol/L
E Troponin I of 4 ng/mL
(D) CORRECT. She has marked blood loss with shock. There will be vasoconstriction in skin in response to
the hypovolemia. Decreased renal blood flow from shock can lead to acute tubular necrosis. The lack of
tissue perfusion with shock leads to increased anaerobic glycolysis and lactic acidosis.
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Question 16
A 61-year-old man has the sudden onset of severe chest pain. Vital signs include T 37 C, P 101/minute,
RR 20/minute, and BP 80/40 mm Hg. An electrocardiogram demonstrates changes that are consistent
with myocardial ischemia involving the left lateral ventricular free wall. He is given thrombolytic therapy
with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). However his serum creatinine kinase is found to be 450 U/L 3
hours after this therapy. Which of the following cellular events has most likely occurred?
A Cellular regeneration
B Drug-induced necrosis
C Reperfusion injury
D Increased synthesis of creatine kinase
E Myofiber atrophy
(C) CORRECT. The restoration of blood flow is helpful if the existing cell damage is not great, so further
damage can be prevented. However, the reperfusion of damaged cells results in generation of oxygen
free radicals to produce a reperfusion injury.
Question 17
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A 52-year-old woman has experienced marked substernal, crushing chest pain for the past 6 hours. Her
vital signs show T 36.9 C, P 80/minute, RR 16/minute, and BP 100/60 mm Hg. Laboratory studies include
a serum creatine kinase MB fraction of 10 microgm/L as well as a serum troponin I of 4.5 ng/mL. Which
of the following findings is the best evidence for the presence of a coronary arterial thrombus as the
etiology for her chest pain?
A Total serum cholesterol of 300 mg/dL
B Large size of the infarction by scintigraphic scanning
C 80% coronary occlusion by angiography
D Response to thrombolytic therapy
E Hemoglobin A1C of 10.1%
(D) CORRECT. The purpose of thrombolytic therapy is to lyse the thrombus and restore blood flow.
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Question 18
In an experiment, a glass bead is embolized to a branch of the renal artery. A day later there is a focal
area in which the renal parenchymal cells in the distribution of the occluded artery show karyolysis and
karyorrhexis. The outlines of the cells are still visible, but the nuclei have lost basophilic staining and the
cytoplasm is eosinophilic but pale. Which of the following types of cellular necrosis is most likely
present?
A Caseous
B Coagulative
C Fatty
D Gangrenous
E Liquefactive
(B) CORRECT. A typical ischemic infarction with coagulative necrosis is described.
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Question 19
A 52-year-old man has the sudden onset of chest pain. He is found to have a serum troponin I of 5
ng/mL. A year later he has reduced exercise tolerance. An echocardiogram reveals an akinetic segment
of left ventricle, and he has reduced cardiac output, with an ejection fraction of 25%. He then
experiences a transient ischemic attack (TIA). His serum troponin I is now <0.5 ng/mL. Thrombus
formation involving which of the following locations is most likely to have put him at greatest risk for the
TIA?
A Cerebral vein
B Vertebral artery
C Superior vena cava
D Left ventricle
E Coronary artery
F Saphenous vein
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(D) CORRECT. Mural thrombi can form over the damaged area of ventricular wall following myocardial
infarction. Portions of the mural thrombus can break off and embolize via the systemic arterial
circulation to places such as the cerebral circulation.
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Question 20
A 25-year-old previously healthy primigravida is in the first trimester of pregnancy. During two
successive prenatal visits, she has fasting serum glucose levels of 127 and 131 mg/dL. Prior to this
pregnancy, her fasting serum glucose was 80 mg/dL. A hemoglobin A1C level is 8.1% at the last visit, at
18 weeks gestation. She feels well and has no major health problems. Which of the following problems
is most likely to become apparent in the latter part of her pregnancy?
A Intrauterine fetal growth retardation
B Ketoacidosis
C Hyperosmolar coma
D Congenital anomalies
E Placental insufficiency
(E) CORRECT. The big problem in gestational diabetes is eventual placental malfunction in later
pregnancy (third trimester) with potential fetal demise.
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Question 21
A 54-year-old man with diabetes mellitus has had 3 urinary tract infections during the past year. He now
sees the physician for an ulceration on his right big toe which has not healed in 2 months. Laboratory
studies on each of his doctor visits over the past year show blood glucose levels below 110 mg/dl. This
situation could be best explained by which of the following laboratory findings?
A Elevated hemoglobin A1C level
B Increased urine ketones
C Elevated serum osmolarity
D Decreased plasma insulin
E Elevated titer of anti-insulin antibodies
(A) CORRECT. Out-of-control diabetes over time can be better detected because the glycosylated RBCs
will persist for months and the Hgb A1C increased.
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Question 22
A 25-year-old man experiences chest pain on exercise when he attempts to climb three flights of stairs.
This pain is relieved by sublingual nitroglycerin. He is 178 cm tall and weighs 101 kg. Laboratory studies
show a total serum cholesterol of 550 mg/dL with an HDL cholesterol component of 25 mg/dL. He is
worried about these findings because his brother died of a myocardial infarction at age 34. Which of the
following conditions is this man most likely to have?
A Diabetes mellitus, type II
B Malignant hypertension
C Familial hypercholesterolemia
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D Cushing syndrome
E Morbid obesity
(C) CORRECT. The very high cholesterol with symptoms of coronary artery disease at such a young age,
coupled with the family history, are all consistent with familial hypercholesterolemia. In most persons
with hypercholessterolemia from multifactorial causes, including diet and exercise patterns, the
cholesterol rarely exceeds 400 mg/dL.
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Question 23
In a clinical study of patients with diabetes mellitus, a group of patients is found who had blood glucose
measurements ranging from 140 to 180 mg/dL for at least 10 years. Rectal biopsies from these patients
now show that there is a form of osmotic cellular injury present in arterioles. This form of injury is most
likely to be manifested by which of the following complications?
A Cerebral infarction
B Colonic adenocarcinoma
C Congestive heart failure
D Impotence
E Pyelonephritis
(C) Incorrect. However, the major damage to the heart with diabetes mellitus is done via atherosclerotic
coronary artery disease. Atherosclerosis affects muscular arteries by formation of intimal atheromatous
plaques which occlude the lumen and lead to ischemic injury.
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Question 24
A 49-year-old woman has experienced marked pain in her lower extremities on ambulation more than
300 meters for the past 5 months. On physical examination, her lower extremities are cool and pale,
without swelling or erythema. No dorsalis pedis or posterior tibial pulses are palpable. Her body mass
index is 32. She is a smoker. Which of the following abnormalities of the vasculature is most likely to
account for these findings?
A Lymphatic obstruction
B Arteriolosclerosis
C Atherosclerosis
D Medial calcific sclerosis
E Venous thrombosis
(C) CORRECT. She has claudication from severe peripheral arterial atherosclerosis, most likely from the
iliac arteries down. She has risk factors for atherosclerosis.
Question 25
An autopsy study is conducted involving the gross appearance of the aorta of adults ranging in age from
60 to 90. In some of these patients, the aorta demonstrates atheromatous plaques covering from 70 to
95% of the intimal surface area, mainly in the abdominal portion, with ulceration and calcification.
Which of the following contributing causes of death are these patients most likely to have?
A Hyperparathyroidism
B Hypertension
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C Marfan syndrome
D Thrombophlebitis
E Vasculitis
F Colonic adenocarcinoma
G Systemic lupus erythematosus
(B) CORRECT. Hypertension is a risk factor that accelerates atheromatous plaque formation.
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Question 26
A 59-year-old woman has the sudden onset of severe dyspnea and goes into cardiac arrest, from which
she cannot be resuscitated. At autopsy, she has the gross finding of a saddle pulmonary embolus. This
event is most likely to be present as a consequence of which of the following?
A Placement of a hip prosthesis
B Marked thrombocytopenia
C Chronic alcoholism
D Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus
E An autoimmune disease
(A) CORRECT. Immobilization is a major risk for the development of venous thrombosis and subsequent
pulmonary embolization.
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Question 27
At autopsy, the kidneys of a 44-year-old woman who died suddenly are found to be of normal size. Their
surfaces appear finely granular. There are small hemorrhages noted. The cortices appear pale.
Microscopically, many small renal arteries and arterioles demonstrate concentric intimal thickening with
marked luminal narrowing. These findings are most likely to be present as a result of which of the
following underlying diseases?
A Amyloidosis
B Systemic lupus erythematosus
C Scleroderma
D Rheumatoid arthritis
E Viral hepatitis
F Diabetes mellitus
(C) CORRECT. Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis is typically seen with severe hypertension, which can occur
with progressive systemic sclerosis (scleroderma).
Question 28
A 35-year-old previously healthy woman notes that she has bruises form on her arms and legs with just
minor trauma. Physical examination reveals areas of purpura from 1 to 3 cm in size over her trunk and
extremities, but no swelling, warmth, or erythema. Peripheral pulses are all palpable and full. Her blood
pressure is 110/70 mm Hg. An ultrasound examination of her lower extremities with Doppler flow
measurement reveals no evidence for thrombosis. Laboratory findings include serum urea nitrogen of
20 mg/dL, LDH 300 U/L, total protein 6.9 g/dL, albumin 5.3 g/dL, alkaline phosphatase 50 U/L, AST 40
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U/L, and ALT 20 U/L. Which of the following additional laboratory findings is most likely to be present in
this patient?
A Hyperglycemia
B Hypercholesterolemia
C Lactic acidosis
D Thrombocytopenia
E Hypoprothrombinemia
F Anemia
(D) CORRECT. The platelets are responsible for dealing with small leaks in vessels. Thrombocytopenia is
marked by petechiae and purpura. She does not have evidence for peripheral vascular disease, since her
circulation is good. Venous thrombosis should lead to swelling and tenderness.
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Question 29
Grandma falls down the steps leading to the entrance of the house of a relative hosting a family reunion,
who is heard to remark, "I've been meaning to get that loose step fixed." Grandma is hospitalized for
surgery to replace the broken hip she sustains and is then moved to a nursing home, but she is unable to
ambulate until about a month later, when she dies suddenly. Which of the following is most likely to be
the immediate cause of death found at autopsy?
A Squamous cell carcinoma of lung
B Tuberculosis
C Pulmonary embolism
D Pneumonia with pneumococcus
E Congestive heart failure
(C) CORRECT. Immobilization following fracture, particularly in the elderly, is a significant risk for
development of deep venous thrombosis, followed by pulmonary embolism.
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Question 30
A 53-year-old woman is found on a routine physical examination to have vital signs with T 36.9 C, P
77/minute, R 15/minute, and BP 165/110 mm Hg. There are no other significant findings. She has an
abdominal ultrasound examination that shows the right kidney to be atrophic. Angiography reveals
markedly reduced blood flow to the right renal artery from an occlusion at the orifice in the abdominal
aorta. Which of the following laboratory findings is she most likely to have?
A Serum sodium of 161 mmol/L
B Serologic evidence of anti-cardiolipin antibody
C Prothrombin time of 25 seconds
D Plasma renin activity of 4.8 ng/mL/hr supine
E Serum lactic acid of 5.5 mmol/L
(D) CORRECT. She has renal artery stenosis that is reducing renal blood flow on the right and simulating
the JG cells to secrete renin to try and raise blood pressure to increase renal blood flow.
Question 31
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A study of pathologic findings in the islets of Langerhans is performed. It is observed that insulitis may
occur in the islets. The inflammatory infiltrate is predominantly composed of T lymphocytes. Which of
the following is most likely to occur as a consequence of insulitis?
A Neoplasia
B Malabsorption
C Ketoacidosis
D Obesity
E Sepsis
(C) CORRECT. An insulitis is seen with type I diabetes mellitus. Actually, it is rare to see it because by the
time the patients present with overt diabetes mellitus, the islets are long gone.
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Question 32
A 20-year-old man incurs blunt trauma to his upper outer arm. On physical examination, there is a 2 x 3
cm contusion. The initial soft tissue bleeding stops in a few minutes and the size of the bruise does not
increase. Which of the following chemical mediators is most important in this episode of hemostasis?
A Leukotriene
B Prostaglandin
C Prostacyclin
D Plasminogen
E Thromboxane
(E) CORRECT. Thromboxane is released by platelets to promote formation of a stable 'secondary plug' to
achieve hemostasis.
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Question 33
A 45-year-old man feels some crushing chest pain along with numbness in his left arm after shoveling 15
cm of snow off his driveway. Three hours later he collapses and is taken to the emergency room. Which
of the following laboratory tests run on a blood specimen is most useful in this situation?
A Total white blood cell count
B Glucose
C Platelet count
D Creatine kinase
E Amylase
(D) CORRECT. Elevations in CK enzymes are going to be seen acutely with myocardial infarction
beginning within hours and remaining for days.
Question 34
A 68-year-old woman has survived multiple episodes of pulmonary thromboembolism during the past
three months. Which of the following is the most likely underlying condition leading to this patient's
recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism?
A Micronodular cirrhosis of the liver
B Adenocarcinoma of the pancreas
C Thrombocytopenia
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D Familial hypercholesterolemia
E Mitral valve endocarditis
F Type II diabetes mellitus
(B) CORRECT. The recurrent episodes suggest a hypercoagulable state, and carcinomas can do this
(Trousseau syndrome).
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A
B
C
D
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Question 35
A 77-year-old woman has experienced abdominal pain for the past month. On physical examination, she
has a pulsatile lower abdominal mass. An abdominal CT scan reveals an abdominal aorta dilated to 7 cm
in diameter, with calcification of the aortic wall. While awaiting surgery, she has an episode of severe
abdominal pain and a repeat CT scan shows marked retroperitoneal hemorrhage. Which of the following
laboratory test findings is she most likely to have?
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(D) CORRECT. An elevated plasma homocysteine is a risk for atherosclerosis as well as thrombosis. Her
findings point to an abdominal aortic aneurysm which ruptured. Such aneurysms are invariably the
result of atherosclerosis.
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Question 36
A 70-year-old man has noted coldness and numbness of his lower left leg, increasing over the past 4
months. He also experiences pain in this extremity when he tries walking more than the distance of half
a city block. On physical examination, his dorsalis pedis, posterior tibial, and popliteal artery pulses are
not palpable. Which of the following laboratory test findings is he most likely to have?
A Protein S deficiency
B Blood culture with Staphylococcus aureus
C Decreased arterial oxygen saturation
D Hyperglycemia
E Hypercalcemia
(D) CORRECT. This is peripheral arterial vascular disease from severe atherosclerosis, which is promoted
by diabetes mellitus. The absence of pulses defines this as an arterial process, as does the claudication
(pain with exercise). Thrombophlebitis is a venous process and leads to swelling and pain in the leg, but
not loss of pulses..
Question 37
A 72-year-old man suffered a myocardial infarction involving half the left ventricular free wall 3 months
ago. He now has increasing dyspnea and orthopnea. On echocardiography his ejection fraction is 29%.
On examination he has poor capillary filling in hands and feet. A chest x-ray shows pulmonary edema.
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Which of the following laboratory test analytes is most likely to be increased in this man at this point in
time?
A Sodium
B Creatine kinase
C Lactic acid
D Hematocrit
E Sedimentation rate
(C) CORRECT. Under conditions of poor tissue perfusion, there will be more anaerobic glycolysis and
more acidosis. The blood lactate rises in this condition.
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Question 38
A 44-year-old African-American man has had elevated blood pressure for years which has not been
treated. He now has severe headaches. On physical examination his blood pressure is 275/150 mm Hg.
Laboratory studies show Hgb 13.8 g/dL, serum glucose 76 mg/dL, and creatinine 3.5 mg/dL. These
findings are most likely to be associated with which of the following pathologic lesions involving his
kidneys?
A Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis
B Hyaline arteriolosclerosis
C Monckeberg medial calcific sclerosis
D Atherosclerosis
E Thrombophlebitis
(A) CORRECT. Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis is seen in the setting of malignant hypertension, and renal
failure is common.
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Question 39
A 60-year-old woman has become increasingly obtunded over the past day. She was found by her
daughter in a stuporous condition and brought to the emergency department. On physical examination,
she has poor skin turgor. She is afebrile. Her vital signs reveal a blood pressure of 90/40 mm Hg,
respirations 15 and shallow, pulse 95, and temperature 36 C. Laboratory studies show a hemoglobin A1C
of 10%. Her serum electrolytes show sodium 144 mmol/L, potassium 5 mmol/L, chloride 95 mmol/L,
CO2 22 mmol/L, and glucose 940 mg/dL. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
A Insulin overdose
B Hyperosmolar coma
C Hyperlipidemia
D Ketoacidosis
E Overeating
(B) CORRECT. This is an extremely elevated serum glucose that would increase the serum osmolality
markedly.
Question 40
A study is performed involving persons who have a history of diabetes mellitus type 1 or type 2. These
patients are found to have cellular injury that results from glycosylation end products and from sorbitol
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accumulation within cells. The same patients are also shown to have ischemic tissue damage from
accelerated and advanced atherosclerosis. Which of the following complications is most likely to result
from atherosclerosis in these patients?
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Question 41
A 30-year-old man goes to his physician for a routine health checkup. On physical examination there are
no abnormal findings. Laboratory test findings include serum glucose 80 mg/dL, hemoglobin A1C 4%,
total cholesterol 240 mg/dL, LDL cholesterol 180 mg/dL, and HDL cholesterol 20 mg/dL. Through which
of the following mechanisms is endothelial vascular injury in this patient most likely to occur?
A Accumulation of sorbitol
B Insudation of lipid in foam cells
C Inflammation with neutrophils
D Genetic mutation
E Activation of complement
(B) CORRECT. He has hypercholesterolemia with more of the 'bad' LDL cholesterol that can become
oxidized and taken up by modified arterial wall LDL receptors. The lipid collects in macrophages and
becomes a lipid lesion--the precursor to more serious atheromatous plaques.
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Question 42
A 65-year-old man has had increasing lower leg swelling along with reduced exercise tolerance for the
past 5 years. He sometimes has chest pain on exertion. He has not experienced dyspnea. He has
experienced 4 episodes of transient ischemic attacks in the past year. He has experienced abdominal
pain in the past 2 months. Vital signs show T 36.9 C, P 82/min, RR 15/min, and BP 130/85 mm Hg. He has
pitting edema to the knees bilaterally. The lower extremities have palpable pulses, no tenderness, and
no erythema. An abdominal CT scan shows dilation of the abdominal aorta to 5 cm, filled with mural
thrombus. Other family members have had similar problems. Which of the following underlying
conditions is most likely to produce these findings:
A
B
C
D
E
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(E) CORRECT. He has findings associated with atherosclerosis, including coronary and aortic disease at
least, with congestive heart failure and evidence for an aortic aneurysm. Diabetes mellitus causes
advanced atherosclerosis. There is a genetic component, with a family history often present, particularly
for type II diabetes mellitus.
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Question 43
A 45-year-old woman who has been bedridden for several weeks has the onset of left sided chest pain
along with dyspnea. She has some tenderness in her left leg, which has a slightly greater circumference
in the thigh than the right. A ventilation/perfusion scan shows evidence for a left lower lobe perfusion
defect. Which of the following vascular diseases is most likely to cause these findings:
A Hyaline arteriolosclerosis
B Monckeberg's medial calcific sclerosis
C Complex calcified coronary atherosclerosis
D Arterial mural thrombosis
E Phlebothrombosis
(E) CORRECT. A pulmonary infarction is due to a thromboembolus that arose in a vein (usually legs or
pelvic region) and travelled to the lungs. Immobilization with vascular stasis predisposes to
phlebothrombosis to form thrombi that can then dislodge and become thromboemboli.
A
B
C
D
E
4a
Question 44
A 27-year-old woman had a hemoglobin A1C of 7.9% noted during a prenatal visit. She gives birth to a
4350 gm baby at 37 weeks gestation. Just after the delivery, the baby becomes irritable and displays
seizure activity. Which of the following laboratory findings is most likely to be found in the baby:
Ai
Question 45
Which of the following chemical components of the blood is mainly responsible for transporting
exogenous (dietary) triglyceride from the intestine following a meal.
A Apoprotein (apolipoprotein)
B Chylomicron
C Lipoprotein lipase
D Oxidized low density lipoprotein
E High density lipoprotein
(B) CORRECT. Chylomicrons formed in intestinal epithelial cells contain apoproteins, triglyceride and
cholesterol.
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Question 46
Some cells demonstrate glucose uptake regardless of the plasma insulin level. In a person who has had
persistent hyperglycemia for years, cellular injury can occur. Which of the following cell types is most
likely to show injury from hyperglycemia:
A Cardiac muscle cells
B Fibroblasts
C Steatocytes
D Neurons
E Smooth muscle cells.
(D) CORRECT. Neurons do not require insulin for glucose uptake. The excess glucose diffusing into the
cells is shunted into the sorbitol pathway and can lead to osmotic injury, resulting in neuropathy.
4a
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Question 47
During hospitalization, a 40-year-old woman develops thrombophlebitis. She recovers and is discharged.
She returns to her job as an electrician. A couple of months later, which of the following terms would
best describe the process seen in a femoral vein after recovery from her thrombophlebitis:
A Acute inflammation
B Rupture
C Embolization
D Organization
E Propagation
(D) CORRECT. Thrombi will organize over time, with much of the clot eventually removed and the
vascular lumen restored.
Ai
Question 48
A 52-year-old man has an ulcerated area on the sole of his foot that has not healed for 2 months. He is
180 cm tall, weighs 126 kg, and has continued to gain weight gradually. He has not had any major
illnesses. His blood pressure is normal. Which of the following laboratory tests performed on serum
from a blood sample would be most useful in elucidating the underlying cause for his problem:
A Antithrombin III
B Cortisol
C Creatine kinase
D Glucose
E Carcinoembryonic antigen
(D) CORRECT. The history suggests diabetes mellitus, most likely type II, and persistent hyperglycemia
would confirm the diagnosis.
Question 49
A 57-year-old man has had blood pressure measurements in the range of 160/95 to 180/110 mm Hg for
many years. He has taken no medications. A renal scan reveals kidneys of normal size for age. These
findings with benign nephrosclerosis are most likely to occur with which of the following vascular
changes:
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A Hyaline arteriolosclerosis
B Monckeberg's medial calcific sclerosis
C Complex calcified atherosclerosis
D Arterial mural thrombosis
E Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis
(A) CORRECT. Hyaline arteriolosclerosis is a feature of long-standing hypertension and is part of benign
nephrosclerosis which may go on for many years with no complications. The small arterioles are
thickened.
4a
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Question 50
A 70-year-old woman with a history of type II diabetes mellitus is found comatose at her home. There
are no external signs of trauma. When seen a week ago she was depressed, but in no apparent distress.
She had not been ingesting much food or drinking much water for several days. Vital signs show T 35.8
C, P 85, R 16, and BP 100/65 mm Hg. Which of the following laboratory test findings is most likely to be
present:
A Decreased hemoglobin A1C
B Markedly increased serum osmolality
C Lactic acidosis
D Blood glucose of 20 mg/dl
E Ketoacidosis
(B) CORRECT. There is insulin production in type II diabetes mellitus, but not enough to prevent
hyperglycemia, either from abnormal secretion patterns or from peripheral resistance. When
dehydration occurs, the glucose can rise significantly.
Ai
Question 51
A 20-year-old woman was diagnosed last year with pulmonary thromboembolism. In her 6th month of
her first pregnancy, she delivered a stillborn baby. Laboratory testing revealed the presence of a normal
prothrombin time, normal partial thromboplastin time, platelet count of 250,000/microliter, and
presence of lupus anticoagulant. These findings are most characteristic for which of the following
hypercoagulable states:
A Antiphospholipid syndrome
B Factor V Leiden mutation
C Paraneoplastic syndrome
D Elevated factor VIII
E Protein C deficiency
(A) CORRECT. There are circulating antibodies that bind plasma proteins with an affinity for phospholipid
surfaces, and this can cause thrombosis and in women stillbirth. This syndrome is most often acquired in
adulthood, either from an underlying disease or as an idiopathic condition. The two subsets of this
syndrome, as defined by laboratory testing, are: lupus anticoagulant (which may or may not be seen
with SLE), and anti-cardiolipin antibody.
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Question 52
A 52-year-old woman has a history of urinary tract infections. Recently, one of these episodes was
complicated by acute pyelonephritis involving her kidneys. She became septic, and a blood culture grew
Escherichia coli. She developed severe hypotension. She had purpuric areas on her skin. A stool for
occult blood was positive. She had a prothrombin time of 50 sec (control 12), partial thromboplastin
time of 100 sec (control 25), platelet count of 20,000/microliter, and D-dimer of 4 microgm/mL. These
findings are most characteristic for which of the following conditions:
A Hemophilia A
B Von Willebrand disease
C Disseminated intravascular coagulation
D Antiphospholipid syndrome
E Acute fulminant hepatitis
(C) CORRECT. She has a coagulopathy in which there is consumption of coagulation factors leading to
hemorrhage. Conditions such as sepsis, severe trauma, neoplasia, and obstetric complications can set
off the coagulation system in a generalized fashion, resulting in DIC.
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Cellular Injury
4a
Question 1
A 48-year-old woman has a malignant lymphoma involving lymph nodes in the para-aortic region. She is
treated with a chemotherapeutic agent which results in the loss of individual neoplastic cells through
fragmentation of individual cell nuclei and cytoplasm. Over the next 2 months, the lymphoma decreases
in size, as documented on abdominal CT scans. By which of the following mechanisms has her neoplasm
primarily responded to therapy?
A Coagulative necrosis
B Mitochondrial poisoning
C Phagocytosis
D Acute inflammation
E Apoptosis
(E) CORRECT. The induction of individual cell death occurs in the process of apoptosis. The drug effect is
targeted primarily at neoplastic cells, not normal cells.
Ai
Question 2
A 53-year-old man has experienced severe chest pain for the past 6 hours. On physical examination he is
afebrile, but has tachycardia. Laboratory studies show a serum troponin I of 10 ng/mL. A coronary
angiogram is performed emergently and reveals >90% occlusion of the left anterior descending artery. In
this setting, an irreversible injury to myocardial fibers will have occurred when which of the following
cellular changes occurs?
A Glycogen stores are depleted
20
B Cytoplasmic sodium increases
C Nuclei undergo karyorrhexis
D Intracellular pH diminishes
Ai
4a
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21
Ai
4a
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4a
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cystic area in her left parietal lobe cortex. This CT finding is most likely the consequence of resolution
from which of the following cellular events?
A Liquefactive necrosis
B Atrophy
C Coagulative necrosis
D Caseous necrosis
E Apoptosis
(A) CORRECT. She had a 'stroke' with loss of brain tissue. The brain undergoes liquefactive necrosis with
infarction. As it resolves, macrophaes remove the dead cells and debria, leaving a cystic area that forms
in the region of infarction.
Question 9
A 19-year-old woman gives birth to her first child. She begins breast feeding the infant. She continues
breast feeding for almost a year with no difficulties and no complications. Which of the following cellular
processes that began in the breast during pregnancy allowed her to nurse the infant for this period of
time?
A Stromal hypertrophy
B Epithelial dysplasia
C Steatocyte atrophy
D Ductal epithelial metaplasia
E Lobular hyperplasia
(E) CORRECT. There is an increase in the breast lobules under hormonal influence with pregnancy to
provide for lactation.
Question 10
An 80-year-old man dies from complications of Alzheimer disease. At autopsy, his heart is small (250 gm)
and dark brown on sectioning. Microscopically, there is light brown perinuclear pigment with H&E
staining of the cardiac muscle fibers. Which of the following substances is most likely increased in the
myocardial fibers to produce this appearance of his heart?
A Hemosiderin from iron overload
B Lipochrome from 'wear and tear'
Ai
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Question 11
In an experiment, a series of immunohistochemical stains are employed to identify different cellular
components. One particular stain identifies the presence of intermediate filaments within cells. This
cytokeratin stain is most likely to be useful for which of the following diagnostic purposes?
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Question 12
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(B) CORRECT. Carcinomas are derived from epithelium and contain cytokeratins, while sarcomas derived
from mesenchymal cells contain vimentin.
4a
A 20-year-old woman had Goodpasture syndrome which progressed to chronic renal failure. She was
165 cm tall and weighed 55 kg. She had blood pressure measurements in the range of 150/90 to
180/110 mm Hg, but she did not regularly take medications. Laboratory studies showed her blood urea
nitrogen was over 100 mg/dL. She required chronic dialysis. She died from heart failure. At autopsy, her
heart weighed 540 gm. The size of her heart is most likely to be the result of which of the following
processes involving the myocardial fibers?
A Hypertrophy
B Fatty infiltration
C Hyperplasia
D Fatty degeneration
E Edema
Ai
(A) CORRECT. The ongoing pressure load of the systemic hypertension led to myocardial fiber
hypertrophy and a heart that increased to twice normal size.
Question 13
A 29-year-old man goes on a snorkeling trip to Looe Key Marine Sanctuary and later spends time on the
beach at Bahia Honda State Park. The next day he has a darker complexion. His skin does not show
warmth, erythema, or tenderness. His skin tone fades to its original appearance within a month. Which
of the following substances contributes the most to the biochemical process leading to these skin
changes?
24
A Iron oxide
B Lipofuscin
C Tyrosine
D Homogentisic acid
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E Glycogen
(C) CORRECT. The tanning process in skin is stimulated by ultraviolet light exposure. Melanocytes have
the enzyme tyrosinase to oxidize tyrosine to dihydroxyphenylalanine in the pathway for melanin
production.
Question 14
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A study is performed to identify predisposing risks for tissue changes. In some persons epithelial
metaplasia occurs. In which of the following situations is the process of epithelial metaplasia most likely
to take place?
A Tanning of the skin following sunlight exposure
B Lactation following pregnancy
C Vitamin A deficiency
4a
(C) CORRECT. Vitamin A is necessary to maintain epithelia, and squamous metaplasia of the respiratory
tract may occur if there is a deficiency. The stratified squamous epithelium does not function as well as
the normal pseudostratified columnar respiratory epithelium, and there is an increased risk for
respiratory infections.
Question 15
Ai
In an experiment, a disease process is found which leads to scattered loss of individual cells, with the
microscopic appearance of karyorrhexis and cell fragmentation. The overall tissue structure remains
intact. This process is most typical for which of the following diseases?
A Viral hepatitis
25
E Barbiturate overdose
(A) CORRECT. Viral infection leads to apoptosis with individual hepatocyte necrosis, either from effects
of viral replication or from the body's immune response..
Question 16
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A 60-year-old woman has noted a dark red-black appearance to her great toe and second and third toes
of her left foot for the past month. On physical examination, the toes are cold to touch and have no
sensation to touch. The dorsalis pedis and posterior tibial pulses are not palpable on the left. A
transmetatarsal amputation is performed. These findings are most typical for a patient with which of the
following conditions?
A Diabetes mellitus
B Monckeberg arteriosclerosis
D AIDS
E Autoimmunity
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(A) CORRECT. This is gangrenous necrosis. Occlusive peripheral atherosclerotic vascular disease is typical
for diabetes mellitus. Many arteries are involved, reducing collateral flow.
4a
Question 17
A study is performed involving the microscopic analysis of tissues obtained from surgical procedures.
Some of these tissues have the microscopic appearance of an increased cell size of multiple cells within
the tissue, due to an increase in the amount of cytoplasm, with nuclei remaining uniform in size. Which
of the following conditions is most likely to have resulted in this finding?
Ai
26
A 17-year-old adolescent receives whole body radiation as part of a preparatory regimen for bone
marrow transplantation to treat acute lymphocytic leukemia. Which of the following cells and tissues in
the body is most likely to remain unaltered by the effects of this therapeutic radiation?
A Ovarian follicles
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Question 19
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(E) CORRECT. Neurons are terminally differentiated cells that do not actively divide or proliferate.
However, at higher radiation doses, cerebral injury does occur from damage mainly to white matter and
to the vasculature.
4a
A 79-year-old man has a large myocardial infarction involving much of the left ventricular free wall. He
develops congestive heart failure (CHF) with decreased cardiac output. Now, a year later, his CHF is
worsening. By echocardiography there is a large, bulging akinetic area typical for a left ventricular
aneurysm. Which of the following laboratory tests on serum would best indicate poor peripheral tissue
perfusion in this patient?
A Elevated troponin I
B Increased sodium
C Elevated lactate
D Increased hematocrit
Ai
(C) CORRECT. Under conditions of poor tissue perfusion, there will be more anaerobic glycolysis and
more acidosis in cells throughout the body. The blood lactate rises in this condition.
Question 20
A 22-year-old woman has a congenital anemia. She has required multiple transfusions of red blood cells
for many years. She now has no significant findings on physical examination. Laboratory studies now
show a serum AST of 74 U/L and ALT 75 U/L with albumin 3.6 g/dL. Which of the following microscopic
findings would most likely appear in a liver biopsy?
27
A Steatosis in hepatocytes
B Bilirubin in canaliculi
D Glycogen in hepatocytes
E Amyloid in portal triads
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C Hemosiderin in hepatocytes
Question 21
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(C) CORRECT. There is 250 mg of iron in each unit of blood. The body has no mechanism for getting rid of
excess iron. A small amount of iron is lost with normal desquamation of epithelia, and menstruating
women will lose a bit more. The excess iron becomes storage iron, or hemosiderin. Over time,
hemosiderosis involves more and more tissues of the body, particularly the liver.
A 20-year-old man is involved in a motor vehicle accident which results in multiple blunt trauma and
lacerations to his lower extremities. The left femoral artery is lacerated, and he incurs extensive blood
loss and remains hypotensive for hours during transport to the emergency department. On admission,
his hematocrit is 12%. Which of the following tissues is most likely to withstand the impact of these
events with the least damage?
4a
A Skeletal muscle
B Small intestinal epithelium
C Retina
D Myocardium
E Hippocampus
(A) CORRECT. The skeletal muscle tissue is the least metabolically active of the ones listed, and is also
able to function with anaerobic glycolysis.
Ai
Question 22
A 40-year-old woman has the sudden onset of severe abdominal pain. On physical examination she has
diffuse tenderness in all abdominal quadrants, with marked guarding and muscular rigidity. She has
laboratory findings that include serum AST of 43 U/L, ALT of 30 U/L, LDH 630 U/L, and lipase 415 U/L. An
abdominal CT scan reveals peritoneal fluid collections and decreased attenuation along with
enlargement of the pancreas. Which of the following cellular changes is most likely to accompany these
findings?
28
A Coagulative necrosis
B Dry gangrene
C Fat necrosis
E Liquefactive necrosis
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D Apoptosis
(C) CORRECT. The enzymes released from the pancreas with acute pancreatitis damage the surrounding
fat and form soaps -- localized soft tan to yellow areas of fat necrosis. The damaged pancreatic exocrine
cells release lipase and amylase as markers for their injury.
Question 23
A Coagulative necrosis
4a
B Abscess formation
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A 26-year-old man died from complications of destruction of the aortic valve by large, irregular
vegetations from which Staphylococcus aureus was cultured. At autopsy, the spleen on sectioning
grossly reveals the presence of a tan to white, wedge-shaped 1.5 x 3 cm lesion with base on the capsule.
The splenic findings are most likely to result from which of the following cellular abnormalities?
C Metaplasia
D Caseous necrosis
E Liquefactive necrosis
(A) CORRECT. The description is that of a typical infarct with vascular occlusion following embolization
from vegetations of infective endocarditis.
Ai
Question 24
A 35-year-old woman developed increasing icterus over the last week of life. Laboratory studies had
shown hyperammonemia. She is found at autopsy to have a 3500 gm liver with a uniform, yellow, greasy
cut surface. No necrosis of hepatocytes is noted microscopically. This pathologic appearance of the liver
most likely resulted from which of the following conditions?
A Galactosemia
29
B Hemochromatosis
C Tuberculosis
D Alcoholism
E Hypoxemia
Question 25
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(D) CORRECT. The marked fatty change of the liver with hepatomegaly is a typical sequel of chronic
alcohol abuse.
A Coronary artery
B Renal cortex
C Mitral valve
D Pulmonary parenchyma
4a
E Aortic arch
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A clinical study is performed in which the conditions leading to the appearance of calcification on chest
and abdominal CT scans are analyzed in patients from 60 to 90 years of age. One set of patients has the
finding of incidental calcification, with no serious health problems. In which of the following tissue
locations was this incidental calcification most likely to be noted?
(E) CORRECT. Such calcification is commonly seen in adults, and though part of atherosclerosis, would
not have major consequences if mild to moderate because the function of the aorta in carrying blood
would not be seriously compromised.
Question 26
Ai
A 55-year-old man has a 30-year history of poorly controlled diabetes mellitus. He has had extensive
black discoloration of skin and soft tissue of his right foot, with areas of yellowish exudate, for the past 2
months. Staphylococcus aureus is cultured from this exudate. A below-the-knee amputation is
performed. The amputation specimen received in the surgical pathology laboratory is most likely to
demonstrate which of the following pathologic abnormalities?
A Neoplasia
B Gangrene
C Coagulopathy
D Hemosiderosis
30
E Caseation
(B) CORRECT. Gangrenous necrosis is a typical complication of diabetes mellitus with marked peripheral
vascular disease. Gangrene is a form of coagulative necrosis that involves a body part, including several
tissues. The infection adds an element of liquefactive necrosis, best described as 'wet gangrene.'
Question 27
D Hypertrophy of steatocytes
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The lifestyle patterns of healthy persons from 20 to 30 years of age are studied. A subset of these
persons have a lifestyle characterized by consumption of a lot of pizza and very little physical exercise.
Which of the following tissue changes is most likely to develop in this subset of persons as a
consequence of this lifestyle?
(D) CORRECT. The fat cells (adipocytes) increase in size (hypertrophy) with obesity in adults, and this is
the predominant effect of weight gain.
4a
Question 28
In an experiment, a tissue preparation is subjected to oxidant stress. There are increased numbers of
free radicals generated within the cells. Generation of which of the following substances within these
cells is the most likely protective mechanism to reduce the number of free radicals?
A Glutathione peroxidase
B Catalase
C Hydrogen peroxide
Ai
D NADPH oxidase
E Myeloperoxidase
(A) CORRECT. The glutathione peroxidase system is designed to help break down free radicals generated
from various forms of cell injury. This system works in the background with small numbers of free
radicals. Disease processes with greater amounts of cell injury can overwhelm this system.
31
Question 29
A 38-year-old man incurs a traumatic blow to his upper left arm. He continues to have pain and
tenderness even after 3 months have passed. A plain film radiograph reveals a 4 cm circumscribed mass
in the soft tissue adjacent to the humerus. The mass contains areas of brightness on the x-ray. Over the
next year this process gradually resolves. Which of the following terms best describes this process?
B Hyperplasia
C Hypertrophy
D Metaplasi
E Neoplasia
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A Dysplasia
Question 30
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(D) CORRECT. The brightness on x-ray suggests calcification from osseous metaplasia of connective
tissues that developed in the healing process. This condition is known as myositis ossificans, because
there is bone formation in the injured muscle.
4a
A 31-year-old primigravida has a difficult delivery of a term infant, with loss of 1500 cc of blood. She has
hypotension for 6 hours. Over the next month, her ACTH level decreases. Within the next 3 months, her
adrenal glands become only about 2 grams each (normal 4 to 6 grams). This alteration of the adrenals is
primarily due to which of the following cellular processes?
A Metaplasia
B Lipid depletion
C Apoptosis
D Autophagocytosis
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E Coagulative necrosis
(D) CORRECT. The loss of ACTH leads to cortical atrophy from cellular downsizing, with the consequence
of decreased glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid production.
Question 31
A 48-year-old man has a history of chronic alcohol abuse. He is still able to perform work at his job. He
has had no major illnesses. On physical examination, there are no significant findings. Laboratory studies
32
show a serum albumin of 4.1 g/dL, ALT 40 U/L, AST 40 U/L, and total bilirubin 1.1 mg/dL. Which of the
following microscopic findings in his liver is most likely to be present?
A Cholestasis
B Fatty change
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C Hemochromatosis
(B) CORRECT. The toxic effects of the alcohol culminate in large lipid droplet accumulation within
hepatocytes. Over time, more hepatocytes are affected and the liver is less able to compensate.
Question 32
A Hemosiderosis
4a
B Calcification
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A 44-year-old woman has had episodes of right upper quadrant pain during the past 2 weeks. Her stools
have become pale in color over the past 3 days. Laboratory studies show a serum total bilirubin of 9.7
mg/dL. A cholangiogram shows that a gallstone has passed into the common bile duct, resulting in
obstruction of the biliary tract. Which of the following cellular alterations is most likely to be visualized
on her skin surfaces?
C Lipofuscin deposition
D Icterus
E Steatosis
(D) CORRECT. She probably has a 'jaundiced' appearance to her sclerae and skin due to the increased
amount of bilirubin. The bile pigments impart a yellow color to the tissues. She has biliary tract
obstruction from cholelithiasis and choledocholithiasis.
Ai
Question 33
A 45-year-old man has a traumatic injury to his forearm and incurs extensive blood loss. On physical
examination in the emergency department his blood pressure is 70/30 mm Hg. Which of the following
cellular changes is most likely to represent irreversible cellular injury as a result of this injury?
A Epithelial dysplasia
33
C Nuclear pyknosis
D Atrophy
E Anaerobic glycolysis
F Autophagocytosis
Question 34
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(C) CORRECT. The hypotension leads to diminished tissue perfusion with ischemic injury. Nuclear
chromatin clumping is reversible, but nuclear pyknosis is not.
A 73-year-old man suffers a "stroke." On physical examination he cannot move his right arm. A cerebral
angiogram demonstrates occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery. An echocardiogram reveals a
thrombus within a dilated left atrium. Which of the following is the most likely pathologic alteration
from this event that has occurred in his brain?
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4a
(A) CORRECT. Liquefactive necrosis typifies brain infarction. The brain tissue contains abundant lipid.
After the initial softening, tissue macrophages will increase and clear the debris, leaving a cystic space.
Since neurons cannot regenerate, the size of the infarct determines the amount of functional loss. The
brain has some capacity for rewiring, but this diminishes with age.
Question 35
Ai
A 30-year-old woman is claiming in a civil lawsuit that her husband has abused her for the past year. A
workup by her physician reveals a 2 cm left breast mass. There is no lymphadenopathy. No skin lesions
are seen, other than a bruise to her upper arm. An excisional biopsy of the breast mass is performed. On
microscopic examination, the biopsy shows fat necrosis. This biopsy result is most consistent with which
of the following etiologies?
A Physiologic atrophy
B Breast trauma
C Lactation
D Radiation injury
34
E Hypoxic injury
(B) CORRECT. Fat necrosis is seen with trauma to the breast, and her lawyer will make good use of that
documentation. The pattern of multiple injuries of differing ages at different sites suggests abuse.
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Question 36
A 45-year-old man has smoked 2 packs of cigarettes per day for the past 30 years. He has had a chronic
cough for the past 3 years, worsening over the past 2 weeks. A suspicious left pulmonary parenchymal
lesion is seen on a chest x-ray. He has a bronchoscopy performed. A biopsy of a segmental bronchus
shows squamous metaplasia. Which of the following is the most appropriate interpretation of this
finding?
A Ischemic tissue damage
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B Irritant effect
4a
(B) CORRECT. The irritant effect, such as the various chemicals in cigarette smoke, leads to replacement
of the normal epithelium with another (such as squamous epithelium replacing respiratory epithelium).
This metaplastic process is the first step that could lead to dysplasia and then to neoplasia. Note that
histologists call any flattened epithelium a 'squamous' epithelium, but pathologists refer to specific cell
types, and consider a true squamous epithelium to be a stratified squamous epithelium.
Question 37
Ai
A 45-year-old woman has had congestive heart failure for the past 4 years. She develops a fever that
persists for over a week. On physical examination, a heart murmur is present. Her temperature is 38.4 C.
The spleen tip is palpable. On echocardiography she has an abnormally thickened mitral valve.
Laboratory studies show a blood culture positive for Streptococcus, viridans group. Another
echocardiogram reveals a 1 cm vegetation on the superior aspect of her mitral valve. Which of the
following findings would you most expect to appear in the kidney as a consequence of these events?
A Marked passive congestion
B Ischemic infarct
C Extensive edema
D Granulomatous inflammation
35
E Gangrenous necrosis
(B) CORRECT. Friable mitral valvular vegetations from infective endocarditis can embolize into the
systemic circulation. Occlusion of a branch of the arterial supply to an organ can result in an infarction,
which is characterized by the appearance of coagulative necrosis in most visceral organs.
Question 38
B Mutation
C Apoptosis
D Aging
E Oxidation
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A Nutrition
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(D) CORRECT. A number of factors play a role in aging, but the lack of immortality of individual cells is
one feature. The lack of telomerase activity in most cells prevents repeated division. Stem cells have
greater replicative capacity.
Question 39
A 55-year-old man has sudden onset of severe, sharp chest pain with diaphoresis and dyspnea. On
physical examination he has tachycardia with an irregular heart rhythm. Electrocardiographic changes
suggest the possibility of focal myocardial damage involving the left lateral ventricular wall. Which of the
following laboratory tests on the patient's serum is most useful in this situation?
Ai
A Total cholesterol
B Creatine kinase
C Triglyceride
D Amylase
E Sedimentation rate
36
(B) CORRECT. The CK will be elevated with myocardial ischemic injury. The CK-MB isoenzyme fraction is
most specific for cardiac muscle, while CK-MM is most specific for skeletal muscle. Another very specific
analyte for cardiac striated muscle injury is troponin. Myoglobin is a sensitive, but not specific marker
for myocardial injury, because it could also be released from skeletal muscle.
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Question 40
A 42-year-old previously healthy woman notes that over the past week her eyes have developed a
yellowish appearance. She has had mild nausea and vomiting over the past week. On physical
examination she has scleral icterus. She has no other major physical examination findings except for
mild right upper quadrant tenderness. Which of the following underlying conditions is most likely to
contribute to development of her icterus?
B Thrombocytopenia
C Metastatic carcinoma
D Viral hepatitis
E Diabetes mellitus
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A Hypercholesterolemia
4a
(D) CORRECT. Hepatitis, most often an infectious viral hepatitis, leads to liver cell dysfunction with
impaired uptake, conjugation, and excretion of bilirubin. As a result there is an increasing serum
bilirubin that produces the jaundice (icterus).
Question 41
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A 56-year-old woman has smoked 2 packs of cigarettes per day for the past 35 years. She has had a
chronic cough for the past 8 years, but recently has noted increased sputum production. On physical
examination she has a few crackles auscultated best over the lung bases. Bronchoscopy with biopsy is
performed. The biopsy reveals bronchial epithelium with squamous metaplasia. Which of the following
statements represents the best interpretation of these findings?
A This is a physiologic process of aging
B This process is irreversible, even if she stops smoking
C She has metastases to lung from a primary somewhere else
D She has an increased risk for pulmonary infection
E A pulmonary thromboembolus caused pulmonary infarction
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(D) CORRECT. The loss of normal functioning respiratory epithelium means that the normal barrier to
infection has been weakened.
Question 42
A Nuclear pyknosis
C Coagulative necrosis
D Autophagocytosis
E Anaerobic glycolysis
iim
s.
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A 90-year-old woman dies from pneumonia complicating Parkinson disease. At autopsy her heart is
normal in size. On microscopic examination, there is increased lipochrome (lipofuscin) seen adjacent to
the nuclei within the myocardial fibers. This microscopic finding is most likely to result from which of the
following cellular mechanisms?
(D) CORRECT. The lipochrome represents the residual debris of organelles and appears with increased
frequency with aging, particularly in heart and liver.
4a
Question 43
An experiment is conducted to determine if cell membrane injury is lessened by the effects of vitamin E
ingestion. Which of the following cellular components is primarily involved in generation of lipid
peroxides, the formation of which is inhibited by the vitamin E?
A Glutathione
B Ionized calcium
C Lactate
D Ferric iron
Ai
E Lipase
(D) CORRECT. Ferric ion is needed for reduced oxygen species to injure cells. Hydroxyl radicals initiate
lipid peroxidation.
Question 44
A 35-year-old woman has had headaches and abdominal pain worsening for 3 months. There are no
remarkable physical examination findings. On radionucleide scanning of the neck, she is found to have a
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mass involving one of her parathyroid glands. An abdominal CT scan suggests extensive nephrocalcinosis
along with urinary tract calculi. Which of the following laboratory test findings is most likely to
accompany her disease?
A CO2 of 30 mmol/L
s.
in
Question 45
iim
(B) CORRECT. Metastatic calcification occurs as a result of a high serum calcium, which in the case of
hyperparathyroidism is accompanied by a low serum phosphorus.
A 21-year-old woman has a routine Pap smear performed for a health screening examination. The
pathology report indicates that some cells are found cytologically to have larger, more irregular nuclei. A
follow-up cervical biopsy microscopically demonstrates disordered maturation of the squamous
epithelium, with hyperchromatic and pleomorphic nuclei extending nearly the full thickness of the
epithelial surface. No inflammatory cells are present. Which of the following descriptive terms is best
applied to these Pap smear and biopsy findings?
4a
A Dysplasia
B Metaplasia
C Anaplasia
D Hyperplasia
E Aplasia
Ai
(A) CORRECT. Disordered growth of an epithelium is seen in dysplasia, which can be a precursor to
neoplasia. When the term 'dysplasia' is used in pediatric conditions, it refers to disordered development
of a tissue, including cell types that ordinarily are not present. In adults, dysplasia refers to an abnormal
change in an epithelium, beyond physiologic alteration, that is starting down the road to cancer.
Question 46
A 38-year-old man has a health screening examination. He has a routine chest x-ray that shows a 2 cm
nodule in the right lower lobe. The nodule has focal calcifications. A wedge resection of the nodule is
39
done. On microscopic examination the nodule shows caseous necrosis and calcification. Which of the
following processes explains the appearance of the calcium deposition:
A Dystrophic calcification
B Apoptosis
D Metastatic calcification
E Excessive ingestion of calcium
s.
in
C Hypercalcemia
(A) CORRECT. Calcium is deposited in and around the granuloma as a reaction to injury with necrosis.
Most pulmonary granulomas are the result of infection, typically tuberculosis.
Question 47
A Metaplasia
4a
B Dysplasia
iim
A 3-year-old child has been diagnosed with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency and has developed
hepatic failure. The left lobe of an adult donor liver is used as an orthotopic transplant. A year later, the
size of each liver in donor and recipient is greater than at the time of transplantation. Which of the
following cellular alterations is most likely to explain this phenomenon?
C Hyperplasia
D Anaplasia
E Neoplasia
(C) CORRECT. After removal of part of the liver, remaining liver can undergo hyperplasia to compensate.
Hepatocytes are stable cells that are able to re-enter the cell cycle.
Ai
Question 48
A morbidly obese 51-year-old woman dies from complications of heart disease. At autopsy, her heart
weighs 600 gm (normal up to 300 gm) with all the chambers enlarged. Microscopically, there is
increased fibrous connective tissue seen in the interstitium between myocardial fibers. The fibers are
increased in size. Beneath the epicardium can be seen adipocytes interdigitating with the myocardial
fibers. Which of the following terms best describes the presence of the adipocytes in her myocardium?
A Steatosis
40
B Lipid degeneration
C Fatty infiltration
D Cholesterolosis
E Xanthomatosis
s.
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(C) CORRECT. The adipocytes are normal fat cells. Obese persons just have more of them, and the
individual cells are larger, making them more obvious and prominent on examination. Their presence in
the superficial myocardium is more a marker of obesity than a risk for myocardial failure.
Question 49
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A 48-year-old man has an episode of severe substernal chest pain radiating to his left arm. Four months
later he has increasing dyspnea and orthopnea. On physical examination there are rales heard over all
lung fields. An echocardiogram shows a left ventricular aneurysm. He has decreased cardiac output with
an ejection fraction of 29%. Which of the following findings is most likely to be indicative of the original
acute event at the time he presented with chest pain?
A Troponin I release from myofibers
4a
(A) CORRECT. Elevations in troponin I or T and in the creatine kinase (CK) enzymes, particularly CK-MB
fraction, as well as serum myoglobin, are going to be seen acutely with a myocardial infarction.
Question 50
Ai
A 53-year-old man suffers a cardiac arrest and his wife calls emergency services. The paramedics arrive a
few minutes later and begin life support measures. A regular heart rate is established after about 40
minutes of resuscitative efforts as he is being transported to the hospital. A thrombolytic agent (tPA) is
administered. Which of the following cellular processes is most likely to occur in his myocardium
following administration of the tPA?
A Apoptosis
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D Squamous metaplasia
E Accumulation of cytokeratins
Question 51
s.
in
(B) CORRECT. The ischemia during the cardiac arrest followed by reperfusion established following
successful resuscitation will generate activated oxygen species to produce free radical injury.
A 38-year-old woman has severe abdominal pain with hypotension and shock that has developed over
the past 36 hours. On physical examination, her abdominal muscles are rigid and her abdomen is
extremely tender. An abdominal CT scan reveals fluid density in the region of the pancreas, which
appears to be enlarged. Which of the following laboratory test findings in her serum is most likely to be
present?
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4a
(E) CORRECT. There is evidence for acute pancreatitis with edema and necrosis. The necrosis is typically
fat necrosis with grossly visible focal chalky-white deposits representing areas of saponification as a
consequence of release of pancreatic enzymes (lipase and amylase) with acute inflammation.
Question 52
Ai
A 45-year-old man has noted scleral icterus for the past 4 days. He has been feeling tired and "run
down" for about a month. On physical examination, other than mild tachycardia, his vital signs are
normal. No other physical examination findings are of noted other than scleral icterus. Laboratory
studies show a hematocrit of 25%. Which of the following conditions is most likely to account for these
findings?
A Systemic hypertension
42
(D) CORRECT. The increased turnover of red blood cells leads to increased bilirubin production to cause
the icterus, as the amount of bilirubin generated exceeds the capacity of the liver to conjugate and
excrete it into the bile. This also explains his anemia
Question 53
B Cholesterol esters
C Fatty acids
D Fibronectin
E Intermediate filaments
F Microtubules
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A 49-year-old man with a history of alcohol abuse has increasing abdominal girth. On examination his
liver edge is firm. A liver biopsy shows cirrhosis, and individual hepatocytes contain red, globular
inclusions positive for cytokeratin with immunohistochemical staining. Which of the following structural
elements are these intracellular globules most likely to contain?
Ai
4a
(E) CORRECT. Intermediate filaments may collect in the damaged hepatocytes as the globular hyaline
known as Mallory hyaline. It is characteristic for alcoholic liver disease, but not pathognomic for it.