Uworld Journal (as of 6/5/19)
autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease vs autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease
"ADPKD: Intracranial berry aneurysms of the circle fo willis are often seen with this. When ruptured, they cause subarachnoid hemorrhage that presents with sudden onset of thunderclap headache. pts age 40-50 with enlarged kidneys, hypertension and renal failure. In newborns, kidneys are of normal size and cysts are too small to be detected. As the cysts enlarge, they compress the renal parenchyma and cause sx.
neprilysin
(i.e. sacubitril) drugs that inhbit neprilysin lead to increased levels of ANP and BNP and promote beneficial effects in heart failure. Neprilysin is also responsible for inactivating angiotensin II. Neprilysin is responsible for the breakdown of natriuretic peptides (BNP and ANP) and angiotensin II.
thyroid peroxidase
(TPO) catalyzes the oxidation of iodide to iodine, the iodination of thryoidglobulin tyrosine residues and the iodotyrosine coupling reaction that forms T3 and T4. Antibodies against TPO are present in >90% of patients with chronic lymphocytic (hashimoto) thyroiditis.
half life
(Vd x 0.7)/ CL - - - -steady state conc in 4-5 half lives
loading dose
(Vd x Cpss)/ [bioavailability fraction]
nystatin
(antifungal) binds ergosterol (same moa as amphotericin B) to form holes in the cell membrane ("Be NYCE to lab animals")
innervation to intrinsic interosseous muscles
(lumbricles, hyponerves) deep branch of ulnar nerve
portal hypertension
(as seen in alcoholic liver disease) produces splenomegaly by causing congestion of blood within the spleen, which produces expansion of the red pulp.
thromboangiitis obliterans
(buerger disease) segmental vasculitis extending into contiguous veins and nerves, raynaud phenomenon, young, smokers, asians, ischemic ulcerations in toes or fingers, histo: inflammatory intraluminal thrombi,
most common site for anal fissures that are painful
(due to hard stool and constipation) posterior midline distal to the dentate line bc there is decreased blood flow in this area.
Chlorpheniramine
(first gen H1 histamine receptor antagonist like diphenhydramine) - it shouldn't be used with benzos bc it causes sedation
smudge cells on peripheral smear
(flattened lymphocytes of B lymphocyte origin) seen commonly on smear of CLL or SLL. (chronic lymphocytic leukemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma). CLL/SLL originate from B cells (which normally produce antibodies in the humoral immune system).
ventral vs dorsal pancreatic bud
(foregut = pancreas); ventral pancreatic bud contributes to uncinate process and main pancreatic duct. The dorsal pancreatic bud alone becomes the body, tail, isthmus and accessory pancreatic duct. Both the ventral and dorsal buds contribute to pancreatic head.
besides hodgkin lymphoma, what else has an owl eye inclusion
(i.e. a clear halo), cytomegalovirus
common side effect of nondihydropyridine CCB's
(i.e. diltiazem and verapamil) constipation, bradycardia, AV conduction block (negative chronotropic effect) and worsening of heart failure in pts with reduced left ventricular function (negative inotropic effect)
Thioamides
(i.e. methimazole, propylthiouracil) decrease the formation of thyroid hormones via inhibition of thyroid peroxidase, the enzyme responsible for both iodine organification and coupling of iodotyrosines. Propylthiouracil also decreases the peripheral conversion of T4 to T3.
probability that a sperm donor is a carrier of an autosomal recessive allele
2pq (for rare autosomal recessive diseases, p=1) so 2q is the probability that the sperm donor is heterozygous.
men 1
3 P's: pituitary, parathyroid, and pancreas (gastrinoma - zollinger ellison) ; (the hyperparathyroidism causes hypercalcemia, constipation, and kidney stones).
phosphatidylcholine made at which week
36th week
how many calories come from protein, carbs and fat
4 calories per gram of protein or carbohydrate; and 9 Cal per gram of fat. i.e. 3000 Cal diet 900 of which is protein means 900/4 = 225 g/day of protein
normal A-a gradient (i.e. alveolar to arterial) in lungs
4-15 mmHg
turner syndrome
45, X; streak ovaries, amenorrhea, and infertility are the gynecological complications of Turner syndrome (TS). Pts with TS usually have short stature, webbed neck, shield chest, and low posterior hairline. Bicuspid aortic valve is the most common cardiac comorbidity. they get cystic hygromas (posterior neck mass)
klinefelter syndrome
47, XXY. Atrophied seminiferous tubules (low inhibin levels bc the seminiferous tubules contain the sertoli cells) and damaged leydig cells (low testosterone levels). They have no feedback inhibition from sertoli cells bc of their atrophy so they have high FSH and LH, which increase estrogen levels. small testes.
tricuspid
4th or 5th intercostal space at the left lower sternal border (where you auscultate for it)
sensation nerves on tongue
5 9 10 (sensation) (in that order from anterior)
which receptors are useful to block (antagonists) to alleviate chemotherapy induced vomiting?
5HT3 serotonergic and neurokinin 1 receptors
medicare covers
65 and older OR younger ppl with disabilities
taste nerves on tongue
7 9 10 (in that order from anterior)
technetium-99
99mTc-pertechnetate scan aka meckel scan. for uptake by herterotopic gastric mucosa.
ApoC II
Apo C II activates LPL to get triglycerides into VLDL (otherwise hyper TGs in blood)
Malabsorption of nutrients: what test to use?
Sudan III stain test for fat in the stool (normal is no fat in stool). Testing for fat is best for checking for malabsorption bc fat is usually first thing to be off.
silicosis
a pneumoconiosis characterized by dry cough, and shortness of breath, which slowly progresses over time. Risk factors: exposure to rock or minerals, such as sand and smoking. Pulmonary function tests are useful in categorizing this lung disease as restrictive rather than obstructive. When silicosis is present, chest x-rays will often reveal notable "eggshell" calcifications (nodular opacities that appear scattered thoruhgout the peripheral lymph nodes of the upper lobes of the lungs) in the upper lobes, a finding that helps to distinguish it from other pneumoconioses.
diffuse axonal injury
accumulation of transport proiteins (amyloid precursor, alpha synuclein) at the site of the injury.
acute angle closure (and open angle) glaucoma tx
acetazolamide (acts at proximal convoluted tubule
the immunity from hep B comes from
antibodies that are formed against the hepB Surface antigen. These antibodies bind the envelope of circulating virus and inhibit the viral entry
cyproheptadine
antidote for serotonin syndrome
reason for gonorrhea ability to evade host immunity
antigenic variability; they modify the pili to adhere to the mucosal epithelium.
Vinchristine
antineoplastic agent that acts by binding tubulin and inhibiting microtubule polymerization. A common adverse side effect is neuropathy (leading to areflexia)
adult T cell leukemia
assoc with HTLV-1, presents with short, aggressive course that includes hypercalcemia from lytic bone lesions, HSM, and cutaneous lesions. INfected T cells demonstrate a characteristic multilobulated nucleus
neurologic paraneoplastic syndromes (i.e. paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration)
autoimmune phenomenon; assoc with small cell lung cancer as well as breast, ovarian, and uterine malignancy. Sx: dizziness, truncal and limb ataxia, dysarthria, and visual disturbances (diplopia). Its due to an immune response against tumor cells that cross reacts with purkinje neuron antigens, leading to acute onset rapid degeneration of the cerebellum. Anti Yo anti P/Q and Anti Hu are the most common antibodies in teh serum. (if you see cerebellar purkinje cell degen and theres a paraneoplastic tumor in the body think autoimmune is the etiology)
hashimoto thyroiditis
autoimmune; HYPOthyroidism; painless; positive TPO antibody; well developed germinal centers; Hurthle cells (eosinophilic epithelial cells)
familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
autosomal dominant disorder caused by germline mutation to the tumor suppressor gene adenomatous polyposis coli (APC gene). Patients with FAP develop hundred or thousands of colonic polyps (these polyps will develop into invasive cancer if not removed); lifetime risk of colon cancer is close to 100%.
essential fructosuria
benign disorder; fructokinase deficiency but hexokinase becomes primary pathway for converting fructose to fructose 6 phosphate
compound nevi
benign proliferations of melanocytes that involve both the dermis and epidermis. The lesions appear as slightly raised papules with uniform pigemntation and symmetrical sharp borders.
renal angiomyolipoma
benign tumor composed of blood vessels smooth muscle and fat. Bilateral ones are assoc with tuberous sclerosis, an autosomal dominant condition
isoproterenol
beta 1 and beta 2 agonist that causes increased myocardial contractility and decreased systemic vascular resistance (because beta 2 relaxes vascular smooth muscle)
Gonorrhea and ectopic pregnancy
beta HCG will be present; primary risk factor for EP is tubal scarring, and gonorrhea/ chlamydia are predisposing factors for this bc of pelvic inflammatory disease.
what do beta blockers do to the release of renin and how
beta blockers inhibit release of renin from renal juxtaglomerular cells through the antagonism of beta 1 receptors on these cells.
tx for essential tremor
beta blockers treat essential tremor. Propranolol, a nonselective beta blocker, is the most commonly used tx and prevents the interaction of epinephrine and NE with beta 1 and 2 to relieve the tremors. Inhibition of beta 2 in pts with airway disease can cause bronchocontriction.
drugs that have been shown to improve long term survival in pts with heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction
beta blockers, ACEI's, ARBs, and aldosterone antagonists.
marginal zone of the spleen
between the red and white pulp; contains macrophages and specialized B cells and is where APCs (antigen presenting cells) capture blood-borne antigens for recognition by lymphocytes.
loss of ciliated respiratory epithelial cells is assoc with which bacteria
bordatella pertussis (tractor cutting the grass in the middle of the road, tracheal toxin damages ciliated cells in the epithelium)
intraventricular hemorrhage with prematurity
born before 32 weeks, happens in first 5 postnatal days, hypotonia, decreased spontaneous movements, bulging anterior fontanelle, decerebrate posturing, seizures, and coma. The hemorrhage originates from the germinal matrix (in the subventricular zone from which neurons and glial cells migrate out during brain development).
presbyopia and skin wrinkles are related how
both age related changes that happen bc of structural proteins denaturing (i.e. loss of lens elasticity and loss of skin elasicity bc of collagen)
HbS and HbC
both from missense mutations. HbC is slower on gel; HbC: asympto, mild hemolytic anemia and splenomegaly
Secondary lactase deficiency
can occur after inflammatory (celiac disease) or infectious (giardiasis) processes damage the microvilli of the small intestines. Clinical presentation includes abdominal distension and cramping, flatulence and diarrhea.
hepatitis D
can only finish its replication cycle in the setting of coinfection with hepatitis B virus.
which STI's have no pain associated with their ulcers on the genitals?
chlamydia trachomatis (buboes), treponema (clean base), klebsiella (gram negative donovan bodies)
pt with fever, headache, and confusion is given penicillin and has reaction. Given a different antibiotic and gets better but has some anemia. What drug?
chloramphenicol
ADR of amphotercin B: it also binds...
cholesterol, causing toxicity to human tissues. The most important ADR's of it are nephrotoxicity, hypokalemia, and hypomagnesemia.
human chorionic gonadotropin
choriocarcinoma, germ cell tumor
wilms tumor aka nephroblastoma is what chromosome and what is the mnemonic
chrom 11, WAGR (wilms tumor, aniridia, GU malformation, and retardation)
causes of dilated cardiomyopathy
chronic alcohol abuse, beriberi (B1, thiamine def), coxsackie B, chronic cocaine use, chagas, doxorubicin toxicity
papillary thyroid carcinoma
cold thryoid nodule, previous radiation exposure (chemo), PTC is the most common form of thyroid cancer with an excellent prognosis. histo: "orphan annie" eye nuclei, nuclear grooves and pasmmoma bodies (extracellular, calcified, spherical bodies)
von willebrand factor normally binds to
collagen
post MI: 2 weeks-2 months
collagen deposition and scar formation
the principal site of uric acid precipitation is (in kidneys)
collecting ducts due to low urine pH
DCC
colon cancer; tumor suppressor gene
pts with diverticulitis should undergo which procedure after being stabilized
colonoscopy to rule out malignancy, especially if there is evidence of iron deficient anemia.
Epidermis layers:
come lets get sun burned (corneum, lucidum, granulosum, spinosum, basale) dorsum of hand does not have lucidum bc lucidum is in palms and soles)
asymptomatic left ventricular systolic dysfunction
common stage in the progression of heart failure. Neurohormonal mechanisms, including the sympathetic nervous system and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, help maintain the asytmptomatic period by increasing volume retention and peripheral resistance to maintain organ perfusion. Although these mechanisms are beneficial in the short term, they are ultimately deleterious, increasing hemodynamic stress and cardiac remodeling that eventually lead to decompensated heart failure.
rickets (kids)/ osteomalacia (adults)
deficiency of vitamin D
mosaicism
defined as the presence of multiple, genetically different cell lines within the body. It can result fom several processes, including chromosomal nondisjunction or a mutation during the first stages of embryonic development. Somatic mosaicism results in a mixture of normal and mutated somatic cells, often leading to a milder form of the disease.
tabes dorsalis
degeneration of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord and the dorsal roots. tertiary syphilis. sx: impaired proprioception and ataxia. caused by endarteritis obliterans of the microvasculature supplying the posterior columns and the dorsal root ganglia.
hypothyroid myopathy
delayed tendon reflexes (when knee reflex is elicited, the quad muscles contracts briskly but relaxation takes longer than normal)
varicose veins put people at high risk for what
edema, stasis dermatitis, skin ulcerations, poor wound healing, and infections.
efficacy vs potency
efficacy is a measure of the maximum pharmacodynamic effect achievable with a drug. Potency refers to the dose of drug that is required to produce a given effect (higher potency = lower ED50)
late onset cyanosis in 11 year old, continuous machine like murmur
eisenmenger syndrome (right to left shunt that started as left to right shunt) from a PDA (patent ductus arteriosis)
vibrio cholerae and enterotoxigenic e coli cause a purely toxin-mediated watery diarrhea. The toxins secreted modify
electrolyte handing by enterocytes but do not cause cell death, therefore no erythrocytes or leukocytes are noted on stool microscopy.
signs of MI
elevated CK, troponins, EKG abnormality, and persistant pain not alleviated with rest.
paranoid personality disorder
exhibits a lifelong pattern of pervasive suspicion and distrust. Unlike patients with psychotic disorders, they do not have fixed delusions and other psychotic sx.
which lipid lowering drug is assoc w gallstones
fibrates (gemfibrozil) bc it reduces cholesterol solubility and bile acid synthesis via inhibition of 7 alpha hydroxylase.
gower sign: what is the histo of the patients calf
fibrofatty muscle repplacement (pseudohypertrophy)
histo of a spleen from a pt with sickle cell disease
fibrosis and atrophy due to autosplenectomy. These pts are predisposed to infections with encapsulated bacterial organisms bc of this
holoprosencephaly mechanism
field defect (developmental field defect is from malformations secondary to embyronic disturbance - this one is incomplete division of the forebrain)
drug that decreases prostate volume
finasteride (5 alpha reductase inhibitor) ; alpha adrenergic antagonists like tamsulosin or terazosin will work acutely to relax and allow bladder outflow but they don't affect the prostate volume
the timeline of ischemic stroke repair in histo of brain
first 24 hours (red neurons); neutrophilis move in during the first 1-2 days; followed by microglia (3-7 days after event); foamy lipids accum from the breakdown of myelin;
edetate calcium disodium
first line treatment for lead poisoning; increases urinary excretion of lead.
deferoxamine
first line tx for iron overdose; it's a chelating agent that binds ferric irone to convert it to ferrioxamine which is excreted in urine
psoriasis tx
first line: topical corticosteroids and vitamin D analogs! Vit D analogs inhibit T cell and keratinocyute proliferation and stim keratinocyte differentiation.
acute gouty arthritis
first metatarsophalangeal joint; tenderness; needle shaped negatively birefringent crystals; 1st line: NSAIDs; 2nd line: colchicine
ulcers with undermining edges
flask shaped ulcers in entameoba histolytica
tx for giant cell arteritis
giant cell arteritis is assoc with IL-6 so tx is IL 6 inhibitor called tocilizumab
gilbert syndrome vs dubin johnson
gilbert: unconjugated, pts only have jaundice; dubin johnson: conjugated, pts only have jaundice
first objective sign of puberty in girls and boys
girls: breast bud development; boys: testicular enlargement
ischemic stroke: >2 weeks
glial scar formation (cystic area surrounded by dense glial fibers (from astrocytes) (>1 month)
pseudopallisading necrosis on histo
glioblastoma multiforme; shows areas of hemorrhage and necrosis on gross exam.
after irreversible neuronal damage (red nuerons; eosinophilic cytoplasm and basophilic nuclei) there is
gliosis/ astrocytosis forming a glial scar
rapidly progressive GN "crescents" consist of what?
glomerular parietal cells, lymphocytes, and macrophages, along with abundant fibrin deposition.
first sign of cellular damage is
hydropic change (cellular swelling) from ATP dependent Na K pump
vitamin C does what
hydroxylation of proline and lysine in procollagen.
aortic dissection
severe retrosternal pain that radiates to the back. From hypertension. Histo: cystic medial degeneration (necrosis), mucoid extracellular matrix with elastic tissue fragmentation and mucopolysaccharide.
proinsulin is cleaved where
in pancreatic beta cell secretory granules
chronic aortic stenosis + atrial fibrillation
in pts with chronic aortic stenosis and concentric left ventricular hypertrophy, atrial contraction contributes significantly to left ventricular filling. Loss of atrial contraction due to atrial fibrillation can reduce left ventricular preload and cardiac output sufficiently to cause systemic hypotension. decreased forward filling of the left ventricle can also result in backup of blood in the left atrium and pulmonary veins, leading to acute pulmonary edema.
parvovirus B19
in pts with sickle cel anemia and other chronic hemolytic disorders, the most common viral cause of an aplastic crisis is infection of ERYTHROID progenitor cells (erythrocytes) with parvovirus B19, a nonenveloped single-stranded DNA virus. It goes to the bone marrow and decreases the erythrocytes at the bone marrow.
varicella zoster virus
in the dorsal root ganglia (sensory neurons). Intranuclear inclusions in keratinocytes and multinucleated giant cells are on LM.
cortical follicles of the lymphnode
in the outer cortex and are a site for B lymphocyte proliferation.
haptan - penicillin
in the process of causing a type 2 HSR, such as penicllin induced autoimmune hemolytic anemia, penicillin is believed to act as a hapten, a molecule that cannot elicit an immune response on its own but can do so when protein is bound to it.
cystic fibrosis: sodium - what happens to it in the skin vs the lungs
in the skin: sodium is NOT reabsorbed so you lose sodium; in the lungs: sodium IS reabsorbed with water so you get dry, thick mucus in the lungs; so you get hyponatremia on hot summer days when you sweat a lot
hyperplastic ateriolosclerosis
in unilateral renal artery stenosis, the affected kidney is protected from high blood pressure by the narrowing of its renal artery and may suffer ischmeic damage. In contrast, the contralateral well-prefused kidney typically shows changes of hypertensive nephropathy (i.e. hyaline or hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis)
opioids can cause biliary colic bc of
smooth muscle contraction at the sphincter of Oddi.
colchicine moa
inhibits CYTOSKELETON; i.e. inhibits tubulin polymerization into microtubules and can be used for acute treatment and prphylaxis of gout. Side effects: nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea.
foscarnet
inhibits dna pol in herpes and reverse transcriptase in HIV
biochem of lead toxicity
inhibtis ferrochelatase and delta aminolevulinic acid (ALA) dehydratase, resulting in anemia, ALA accumulatuon and elevated zinc protoporphyrin levels.
gastric bypass at the cardiac part of the stomach, where does the band pass thru to do this
lesser omentum
antiarrhythmic agent that binds rapidly depolarizing and ischemic ventricular myocardial fibers and has minimal effect on normal ventricular myocardium
lidocaine (binds inactivated Na channels and rapidly dissociates).
dicumarol
like coumadin aka warfarin which prolongs PT time
aldosterone escape
limits the hypernatremia and hypovolemia in hyperaldosteronism bc ANP causes fluid loss via kidneys and sodium excretion
EBV is double stranded DNA (linear or circular) virus
linear
moa of skeletal muscle's resistance to verapamil's effects
little dependence on extracellular calcium influx bc skeletal muscle calcium release by the sarcoplasmic reticulum is triggered by a mechanical interaction between L type and RyR calcium channels.
fulminant liver failure
liver makes all the clotting factors so they would be messed up
polycystic kidney disease will also show cysts in the
liver; mutation is PKD1 or PKD2
wchich pharmakodynamic principle is not affected by clearance
loading dose (=Css x Vd)
macula densa
located where the glomerulus touches the distal convoluted tubule
if mechanical/ prosthetic heart valve and anemia with helmet cells or burr cells think
mechanical trauma to the RBCs causing traumatic hemolysis
meckel's vs colonic diverticulosis
meckel's diverticula present in early childhood and are in the small intestines (and contains all 3 layers - mucosa, submucosa and muscularis layers). Colonic diverticula present in older people and are colon outpouchings (just mucosa and submucosa). Both can present with diverticulitis, pain, hematochezia (blood in the feces).
superior vena cava syndrome
mediastinal mass obstructing flow from SVC to heart causing facial swelling and edema
ventromedial nucleus (hypothalamus)
mediates satiety; destruction leads to hyperphagia
mediolateral episiotomy vs midline episiotomy
mediolateral: cut transverse perineal muscle; midline: cut perineal body
most common childhood tumors found int he cerebellar midline
medulloblastoma
medulloblastoma vs pilocytic astrocytoma
medulloblastoma: second most common brain neoplasms of childhood. Located in the cerebellum, often at the vermis, and has sheets of small, blue cells. Like other PNET tumors, medulobastomas are poorly differentiated and have a bad prognosis. PNETs on histo: (primitive neuroectodermal tumors) sheets of primitive cells, with many mitotic figures, deeply basophilic nuclei and scant cytoplasm (small, round, blue cells). These are aggressive tumors. Pilocytic astrocytomas are similar but have diff histo and good prognosis (rosenthal fibers).
hypersegmented neutrophils
megaloblastic anemia
turner syndrome (i.e. 45,X) occurs via what genetic process?
meiotic nondisjunction
Nevi that are enlarging rapidly
melanoma
BRAF
melanoma; protooncogene
cystic fibrosis:
membrane channel misfolding
korsakoff syndrome: permanent part
memory loss and confabulation
genetics for MEN 1 vs 2:
men 1: men1 gene; men2 A and B: RET gene (codes for tyrosine kinase)
phlegmasia alba dolens
painful white milk leg; acute rise in tissue pressure that impairs arterial inflow; caused by massive iliofemoral thrombosis
CYP450 inducers: most chronic alcoholics steal phen phen and never refuse greasy carbs
modafinil, chronic alcohol use, St john's wort, phenytoin, phenobarbital, nevirapine, rifampin, griseofulvin, carbamazapine
nuclear factor kappa B (NF - KB)
transcription factor with a role in immune response to infection. NF-KB is present in cytoplasm in a latent, inactive state bound to its inhibitor protein, IKB. Extracellular substance such as lipopolysaccharide can intitiate a signal cascade that results in the dstruction of IKB and translocation of free NF-KB to the nucleus.
TATA box
transcription initiation; promoter region that binds transcription factors and RNA polymerase II during the initiation of transcription. It is located approx 25 bases upstream from the beginning of the coding region.
amaurosis fugax
transient (<30 min) monocular loss of vision due to embolic occlusion of the ophthalmic artery.
CN IX sensory distribution
pain during swallowing and radiating toward the ear. it innervates stylopharyngeus muscle (derived from pharyngeal arch 3), which elevates the pharynx and larynx during swallowing and speaking.
pathogenesis of alcohol-induced hepatic steatosis
related to decrease in free fatty acid oxidation secondary to excess NADH production by the 2 major alcohol metabolism enzymes, alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde dehydrogenase
beta 2 agonism
relaxes vascular smooth muscle, leading to decreased vascular resistance and mean arterial blood pressure.
pulmonary artery catheterization: right ventricle pressure readings
right ventricle will go from 25 to 2
right coronary artery gives off marginal branches that supplies most of the right ventricle so therefore inferior wall MI is assoc with
right ventricular infarction
whole body cyanosis
right-to-left shunting in patients with large septal defects and tetralogy of Fallot
right vs left sided colon cancers
right: occult bleeding and sx of iron deficient anemia; left: infiltrate the intestinal wall and cause constipation and sx of intestinal obstruction
aspiration pneumonia
risk factor is dysphagia (sometimes happens in elderly people with dementia or hemiparesis). Dependent lung consolidation is seen in aspiration pneumonia.
focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
risk factor: african american
squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus
risk factors: alcohol, smoking, foods containing N-nitroso; youll see keratin pearls on histo; assoc with mediastinal lymphadenopathy
tx for large B lymphocyte lymphoma
rituximab (recombinant anti-CD20 antibody). side effects: low blood pressure, bronchospasm, chills and decreased blood platelets, lymphocytes and neutrophils.
davenport diagrams DKA
DKA: metabolic acidosis bc DKA but kussmaul breathing = drop in PaCO2.
a fragment of nucleic acid, combined with a polymerase, a primer, and deoxyribonucleotides. the tube theyre in contains four bases that are flourescently labeled. run thru a capillary and laser detects flourescence.
DNA sequencing; determines the order of nitrogenous bases in a given segment of DNA. The process uses tagged dideoxynucleotides to randomly terminate growing strands of DNA and represent the sequence of nucleotides in the DNA fragment.
hep B genome replication process
DS dna -> + sense RNA template -> PARTIALLY DS dna progeny (reverse transcriptase)
subcutanous lipoatrophy or lipodystrophy and central fat deposition
Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for HIV is commonly associated with body fat redistribution. Subcutaneous lipoatrophy involving the face and extremities is associated with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (especially stavudine and zidovudine) and protease inhibitors. Central fat accumulation in the trunk and viscera can occur with any HAART regimen.
how does the IgA protease allow N meningites to colonize the nasopharyngeal region
IgA protease and pili cleave immunoglobulin into Fab and Fc fragments
most important opsonins
IgG and C3b (opsonization is when host proteins bind foreign cell to promote phagocytosis)
what type of antibody is assoc with PSGN
IgG immune complex deposits
which types of Ig antibodies does the baby get from mom
IgG only
Ventral posterior Medial nucleus - M mnemonic
Makeup goes on the face (face sensation and taste from the trigeminal and gustatory pathways)
gamma carboxylation of glutamic acid
vitamin K is a necessary cofactor for the gamma carboxylation of clotting factors (II, VII, IX, and X) by epoxide reductase. Vitamin K is admin at birht to prevent hemorragic disease of the newborn.
chronic liver disease can cause a deficiency in
vitamin K-dependent clotting factors, leading to an increased prothrombin time. later, with disease progression, PTT time will be prolonged as well.
exclusively breast fed infants need supplementation with...
vitamins D (to prevent rickets) and K (to prevent hemorrhagic disease of the newborn)
VHL
von hippel lindau syndrome, renal cell cancer; tumor suppressor gene
mycoplasma pneumoniae
walking pneumonia; nonproductive cough; military recruits <30 y/o; chest x ray shows severe pneumonia even tho pt is relatively well appearing. It requires cholesterol supplementation to grow on artificial media.
VIPoma - causes verner morrison syndrome (WDHA)
watery diarrhea, hypokalemia, achlorhydria (absence of HCl in the gastric secretions)
post MI: 4-12 hours
wavy fibers with narrow myocytes, early coagulation necrosis, edema, hemorrhage
post MI: 10-14 days
well developed granulation tissue with neovascularization
davenport diagram
when acute, look at the pH to be Not compensated for yet.
transformation
when bacteria take up exogenous DNA fragments, integrate the DNA into its genome and express the encoded proteins. Through this method, nonvirulent strains of S penumo that do not have a capsule can make one. (gain virulence). (bacteria that have the innate capacity to do this are haemophilus, streptococcus, bacillus, and neisseria species). Does not alter the genome of the progeny virions however.
IgM can bind how many antigens
when its bound to B cells, its a monomer (binds 2 antigens), but when freely circulating in serum, its a pentamer and can bind 10 antigens
permissiveness
when one hormone allows another to exert its maximal effect (i.e. you give the oroginal hormone and then you give that same hormone with another one and the effect is greater).
lactic acidosis in septic shock
results from tissue hypoxia, which impairs oxidative phosphorylation and causes shunting of pyruvate to lactate following glycolysis. Hepatic hypoperfusion also contributes to the buildup of lactic acid as the liver is the primary site of lactate clearance.
calcitriol
the active form of Vitamin D
C5b-C9 deficiency
these pts have recurrent infections by Neisseria species. They cannot form the membrane attack complex (MAC).
dihydrofolate reductase
trimethoprim, methotrexate and pyrimethamine inhibit this. Trimethoprim restrics bacterial growth through this process and works particularly well in conjunction with solfonamide, which inhibits an earlier step in the bacterial folic acid pathway.
Zollinger Ellison syndrome
"caused by gastrinomas located in the small intestine/ pancreas and presents with peptic ulcers (especially distal duodenal ulcers), heartburn, and diarrhea. Patients typically have elevated gastrin levels that rise in response to exogenous secretin administration. In contrast, secretin inhibits release of gastrin from normal gastric G cells.
cryptococcus neoformans
"common cause of meningoencephalitis (headache, vomiting, confusion, seizure) in pts with untreated AIDS. The yeast can be visualized in the CSF by india ink or silver stain. It is a round/ oval yeast with a thick polysacchariade capsule.
Statins
"common side effect: statin-induced myopathy (i.e. myalgia, elevated creatine kinase) is the most common complication of statin use.
c-anca vs p-anca
C-anca is in the cytoplasm of neutrophils; p-anca is PERINUCLEAR (i.e. right aqround the nucleus) of the neutrophils (theyre both in the cytoplasm)
tx for preventing recurrence of adenomatous polyps
COX2 inhibitors; adenomatous polyps contain dysplastic mucosa and are premalignant. Regular screening with timely excision of pilyps is effective for prevetnion of colon adenocarcinoma. Studyuies have linked increased activity of COX 2 to some forms of colon adenocarcinoma and suggest that regular aspirin use decreases adenomatous polyp formation.
pulsus paradoxus is defined by
a decrease in systolic blood pressure of >10 mmHg with inspiration.
mixed venous oxygen tension
a measure of the oxygen usage of tissues in the body; in cardiogenic shock you have decreased CO->decreased O2 delivery ->decreased SvO2 (mixed venous oxygen tension)
medication induced IgE-independent mast cell activation
a number of meds including opioids, radioconstrast agents and some antibiotics (i.e. vancomycin( can trigger IgE indpendent mast cell degranulation. Common sx include diffuse itching and pain, bronchospasms and localized swelling (urticaria).
what is the ONLY pediatric infectious disease/ illness in which aspirin is used?
Kawasaki's disease (fever of 5+ days).
most common cause of bronchiolitis (rhinorrhea, cough, fever, and decreased appetite) in infants and young children <5 years old is
RSV; patho: surface protein F, which causes nearby cells to merge and induces the characteristic syncytial appearance in pathology.
Ras - MAPK
Ras is active when boudn to GTP and inactive when boudn to GDP
75% of drug cleared is how many half lives
2
men 2A
2 P's: pheochromocytoma, parathyroid hyperplasia, medullary thyroid cancer
schizophreniform
2 or more sx of schizoprehnia for 1-6 months
acute rheumatic fever
2-4 weeks after group A step pharyngitis, molecular mimicry (attacks heart and brain) -> (acute) sydenham chorea (basal ganglia affected) (jerky involuntary movements), pancarditis, migratory arthritis; tx: penicillin
a decrease in which molecule/ substance is known to be associated with decreased sleep duration in elderly?
acetylcholine in the reticular formation induces REM sleep. Natural aging is assoc with lower levels of ACh and decreased sleep (REM and Overall) duration.
toxin B of clostridium difficile causes
actin depolymerization, disruption of the cytoskeleton integrity, leading to apoptosis and cell death.
pulmonary actinomycosis
actinomyces can be aspirated and shows lower lobe consolidation with air bronchograms. Look for dental stuff in addition to lung stuff.
which factor of melanoma is assoc with highest risk of mets
active vertical growth
most important predictor of success in the rehabiliation of surgery patients with fractures
activity level before the fracture
biotin (vitamin B7)
acts as a CO2 carrier on the surface of carboxylase enzymes and is an effential cofactor for numerous reactions, including the conversion of pyruvate to oxaloacetate and fatty acid metabolism. Excess ingestion of avidin, found in egg whites, has been associated with biotin deficiency. This condition presents with mental status changes, myaglias, anorexia, macular dermatitis, and lactic acidosis.
antidiuretic hormone
acts on the medullary segment of the collecting duct to increase urea and water reabsorption, allowing for the production of maximally concentrated urine.
abdominal aorta aneurysm is assoc with (risk factors)
age>60, smoking, HTN, male sex, family history; these lead to chronic transmural inflammation and extracellular matric degradation whithin the wall of the aorta. This leads to weakening and progressive expansion of the aortic wall, resulting in aneurysm formation, typically below the renal arteries.
moa of macrolides causing diarrhea
agonistic activity on motilin receptors
ADR of graves tx (i.e. antithryoid drugs (i.e. methimazole and propylthiouracil))
agranulocytosis (sx: fever, sore throat and throat ulcerations
ADRs to monitor with different SGAs (second gen antipsychotics)
agranulocytosis with clozapine; prolactinemia with risperidone, severe weight gain with olanzapine; hyperlipidemia with quetiapine.
dihydropterin reductase
aka BH4; deficiency in the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase leads to the buildup of phenylalanine and PKU. a more severe form, malignant PKU, occurs when BH4, a cofactor for phenylalanine hydroxylase, is absent.
homocysteine gets converted to
methionine
aminoglycosides - moa of resistance in some bacteria is
methylation of the aminoglycoside binding portion of the ribosome which inhibits the abiliuty of aminoglycoside to interfere with protein translation
vitamin B12 deficiency will have elevated levels of
methylmalonic acid and homocysteine levels
sickle cell anemia (mutation type)
missense mutation in 6th position of the beta chain of hemoglobin
irreversible myocardial cell injury is indicated by what histo/ structural changes
mitochondrial vacuolization
glioblastoma
most common primary cerebral neoplasm of adults that is typically located within the cerebral hemispheres and may cross the midline (butterfly glioma - across the corpus callosum). These tumors are highly malignant and grossly contain areas of necrosis and hemorrhage. sx: seizures, headache, memory loss and weakness
adenocarcinoma
most common primary lung cancer in the general population, women and nonsmokers. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations and ALK gene rearrangement are seen more commonly in nonsmokers and thought to contribute to disease formation in this subgroup. Adenocarcinoma is typically located peripherally and may be assoc with clubbing or hypertrophic osteoarthropathy.
Essential thrombocythemia
myeloproliferative disorder characterized by increased platelets in the pheripheral blood and increased megakaryocytes in the bone marrow. Patients may be asymptomatic, or they may present with signs and sx of increased bleeding and/or thrombosis.
polycythemia vera
myeloproliferative disorder, uncontrolled erythrocyte production. Sx: aquagenic pruritis, facial plethora, (reddish complexion), and splenomegaly. Assoc with ulcers and arthritis bc of RBC turnover. Labs: increased erythrocytes, thrombocytosis, leukocytosis, and low erythropoetin levels. caused by abnormal janus kinase 2 (JAK2) and cytoplasmic (nonreceptor) tyrosine kinase. theres a mutation in JAK2 that causes constitutive activation.
key immune player in the formation of lung abscesses (cell)
neutrophil (releases cytotoxic granules that kill bacteria but also cause liquefication necrosis of tissue)
ischemic stroke: 24 - 72 hours
neutrophilic infiltration
erosive esophagitis
new onset odynophagia in the setting of chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease should raise suspicion for erosive esophagitis with esophageal ulcers. Diagnosis is made by upper endoscopy.
phenotypic mixing
no genetic exchange; coinfection of a host cell by 2 viral strains so it has proteins from one strain and unchanged parental genome of the other strain. Bc there is no change in the underlying viral genomes, the next gen of virions revert to their original unmixed phenotypes
nephrolithiasis
no temp, occasionally writhes in pain, cant get comfortable
shigella
non-motile, non-lactose fermenting organism that does not produce H2S when grown on triple sugar iron agar. Mucosal invasion of the M cells that overlie Peyer's patches is an essential pathogenic mechanism for Shigella infection. Shigella then escapes the phagosome and spreads laterally to other epithelial cells via actin polymerization.
neuromuscular blocking agents (anesthesia-related medications): which ones are myasthenia gravis patients more sensitive to?
nondepolarizing neuromuscular blockers (vecuronium, rocuronium) are the ones that MG pts are more sensitive to bc there are fewer receptors in MG. depolarizing neuromuscular blockers (succinylcholine) need LARGE doses/ amt of receptors bound to be a muscle relaxant so therefore since theres a low amt of receptors in MG, MG pts will be resistant to these effects bc the succinylcholine gets washed away before it can be a 'blocker'.
proliferative vs nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
nonproliferative first: (early disease) thickening of the basement membrane, cotton wool spots and microaneurysms and dot-blot hemorrhages. Proliferative after (advanced disease): neovascularization of retinal vessels due to ischemia,
in the absence of an underlying metabolic disorder, a pt with calcium stones has what calcium levels
normocalcemia (bc of regulatory mechs), hypercalciuria
hemorragic mediastinitis, enlarged area of opacification between the lungs (mediastinal widening), bloody pleural effusions
bacillus anthracis, a gram positive rod with a protein capsule, whose spores are often transmitted from sheep or goat skin
two high risk consequences of coarctation of the aorta
bacterial endocarditis and cerebral hemorrhage
the reason its 2/3s for auto recessive that's not affected
bc if they were affected it would show that they had the auto recessive disease in the pedigree. Therefore the chances of them being a carrier is 2 out of 3 possibilities left.
why does erythroblastosis fetalis and hemolytic disease of the newborn occur in moms with type O blood, but not in moms with type A or B?
bc in type A and B blood, moms have IgM and it cant cross the placenta. In type O moms, they have IgG which does cross the placenta
spider angiomata are related to gynecomastia why?
because their both in alcohilism and both caused by overabundance of estrogen (liver cirrhosis)
fourth heart sound (S4)
before S1; atrial contraction as blood is forced into a stiff ventricle (from long standing hypertensive heart disease)
lentigo
benign linear melanocytic hyperplasia
acid base physio
bicarb and co2 ALWAYS go the same direction when compensation has occurred (in both metbaolic and respiratory)
what is the main way that you transport CO2 in the blood
bicarbonate! (second most common: carbaminohemoglobin)(third most common is CO2 dissolved in blood)
CA-125
biomarker for ovarian cancer
highest osmolarity in the nephron
bottom of the loop of henle (bc it's the most concetrated)
isoniazid (INH)
can be directly hepatotoxic, causing acute, mild hepatic dysfunction in 10%-20% of patients and frank hepatitis (fever, anorexia, and nausea, sometimes progressing to hepatic failure) in a small percentage of patients.
bacterial mRNA
can be polycistronic meaning that one mRNA codes for several proteins. An example of polycistronic mRNA is the bacterial lac operon, which codes for proteins necessary for lactose metabolism by E Col, the transcription and translation of these bacterial proteins is regulated by a single promoter, operater and set of regulatory elements.
gonorrhoeae triad
can be prevented with use of condoms; spreads thru bloodstream after GU infection. Leads to triad: polyarthralgia, tenosynovitis and dermatitis (or purulent arthritis)
mitochondrial inheritance
can have variable expressivity and incomplete penetrance therefore some members of children might not be affected in pedigree
Erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESAs)
can improve anemia sx, avoiding the need for blood transfusions in chronic kidney disease and dialysis pts. However ESAs are assoc w increased risk for HTN and thromboembolic events.
case control vs cohort
case contrOl: odds ratio; cohoRt: relative risk
etanercept (TNFalpha inhibitor)
causes a drug-induced lupus like syndrome
ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)
causes both upper and lower motor neuron lesions. Loss of neurons of the anterior horns of the spinal cord (LMN lesion) causes muscle weakness and atrophy. Demyelination of the lateral corticospinal tract (UMN lesion) leads to spasticity and hyperreflexia.
aspergillus fumigatus
causes eosinophilia, bronchiectasis in ppl with history of asthma
carbon tetrachloride poisoning
causes free radical injury to the liver via the P450 oxidase system. This results in lipid peroxidation (lipid degradation and hydrogen peroxide formation). Causes fatty change and hepatocyte necrosis.
taenia solium
causes neurocysticercosis (cystic brain lesion); it's a pork tapeworm. Get it from eating poop of infected person (bc it has t solium eggs in it). Central and south america. Causes seizures, vignette: immigrant; risk factor: exposure to infected stool.
trazodone
causes priapism (persistent erection)
polymyositis
causes symmetric proximal muscle weakness. Muscle biopsy reveals inflammation, necrosis and regeneration of muscle fibers. Over-expression of MHC-1 class proteins on the sarcolemma leads to infiltration with CD8 T cells and myocyte damage.
mulberry like appearance
cavernous hemangioma
most common benign liver tumor
cavernous hemangioma (blood filled vascular spaces on histo)(don't biopsy bc it doesn't help and it just leads to fatal hemorrhage)
HLA DQ2 and DQ8
celiac disease
anti-gliadin/ anti-tTGA
celiac disease
blunting of intestinal villi and lymphocytic infiltration in the lamina propria on histo; watery diarrhea, erythematous vesicular rash
celiac sprue (celiac disease); autoimmune mediated intolerance to gliadin (wheat); dermatitis herpetiformis is a skin condition seen in 25% of pts with celiacs and appears as pruritic, vesicular rash on extremities.
mycoplasma has no
cell wall. Therefore theyre resistant to agents that target the cell wall (like penicillin and carbapenems). Tx them with tetracyclines or macrolides. (they include ureaplasma urealyticum)
low grade CIN
cells have not invaded past the lower one third of the cervical epithelium, these usually regress spontaneously
cherry red spot at fovea (center of macula) & acute painless monocular vision loss
central retinal artery occlusion
deferoxamine
chelating agent for iron overdoses or overload due to multiple blood transfusions. It facilitates iron's urinary excretion.
endometrioma
chocolate colored fluid inside an ovarian cyst
the duodenum secretes
cholecystokinin
donepazil
cholinesterase inhibitor; for alzheimers disease
markers for neuroendocrine tumors
chromogranin A and synaptophysin
pancreatic pseudocyst
common complication of acute pancreatitis. It is a collection of fluid rich in enzymes and inflammatory debris. Its walls consist of granulation tissue and fibrosis. Unlike true cysts, pseudocysts are not lined by epithelium.
congestive hepatopathy
common complication of right sided heart failure. Patchy hemorrhage and necrosis predominantly affect the centrilobular regions (zone 3) where hepatic congestion is most prominent. The centrilobular necrosis combined with relatively normal appearing periportal regions (zone 1), creates an overall heterogenous appearance sometimes referred to as "nutmeg liver".
hepatocellular carcinoma
common in HCV pts; fibrosis and worse cirrhosis, fatigue, variceal bleeding, jaundice, liver mass will show clusters of cells with pleomorphic, prominent nucleoli features.
postherpetic neuralgia
common with herpes zoster infections in which pt will have neuropathic pain in the affected region later on.
chi square
compares 2 categorical variables (qualitatitive)(i.e. two groups - one group of fibrinogen between 200-400, etc)
paroxysmal noctural hemoglobinuria
complement mediated hemolysis. Classic triad: hemolytic anemia (hemoglobinuria), pancytopenia, and thromobosis at atypical sites. Chronic hemolysis can cause iron deposition in the kidney (hemosiderosis). GPI (glycosylphosphatidylinositol) normally anchors CD55 and CD59 to the RBC membrane, inhibiting complement deposition. Absence of CD55 and CD59 allows MAC to form. all this is from a mutation in the PIGA gene.
compliance
compliance = delta V/ delta P ....volume and pressure
adult type coarctation of the aorta ppl are at increased risk for
congenital berry aneursyms and rupture of those which causes intracranial hemorrhage.
baby has: retinal lesions, hydrocephalus, jaundice and hepatosplenomegaly
congenital toxoplasmosis; this is why pregnant women should avoid raw or undercooked meat and cat poop.
adenovirus
conjunctivitis, sore throat, kids, crowded quarters,
theca externa does what
connective tissue capsule
dysfunction of motor or senosory systems without a physiologic cause, often following an acute stressor; normal DTRs and normal sensation.
conversion disorder
pegloticase or rasburicase moa
converts uric acid into more soluble metabolites (i.e. allantoin)
direct antiglobulin test
coombs test for ABO incompatability
penicillamine
copper chelator, tx for wilson disease
debranching enzyme deficiency
cori disease; hypoglycemia, hepatomegaly, hypotonia, inability to degrade alpha 1,6 glycosidic branch points in glycogen. Ketoacidosis.
left ventricular mural thrombus
dilated cardiomyopathy results from primary mycoardial dysfunction leading to eccentric remodeling of the left ventricle. Pts can develop left ventricular mural thormbus and are at risk for sudden cardiac death due to ventricular arrhthmia. Familial dilated cardiomypathy is tyically inhereited in an autosomal dominant pattern and most commonly results form truncating mutations of the TTN gene that codes for the sarcomere protein titin.
intrinsic acute renal failure
diminished renal reabsorptive capacity (i.e. lower urine osmolarity, higher urinary sodium, normal serum BUN/Cr)
pt has megaloblastic anemia (>100). What is causing this?
diminished synthesis of purines and pyrimidine bases in the synthesis of DNA due to deficiency of B12 of folate
tx for diptheria
diptheria antitoxin (preformed antibody admin to bind bacterial product aka the toxin) AND antibiotics (penicillin, erythromycin - to prevent more bacterial cell growth). The antitoxin will prevent the systemic complications of the infection in the pt
direct vs indirect bili
direct is conjugated and indirect is unconjugated
a single brain abscess (i.e. a solitary ring enhancing lesion) is caused by
direct spread of a contiguous infection. Temporal lobe abscess is usually a result of otitis media that has spread to the mastoid air cells. Frontal lobe abscess is usually due to ethmoid or frontal sinusitis.
heparin induced thrombocytopenia is tx with
direct thombin inhibitors like argatroban
indirect vs direct sympathomimetics
direct: (epinephrine, dopamine, NE) do not enter CNS as readily and are more selective bc they bind directly to postsynaptic receptor indirect: (cocaine, amphetamine, ephedrine) enter CNS, not as predictable
what skin condition is assoc with celiac disease
dermatitis herpetiformis (erythematous pruritic papules, vesicles, and bullae that appear bilaterally and symmetrically on the extensor surfaces. IgA antibodies against gliadin (gluten portion of wheat) or tissue transglutaminase complex in the intestine cross react with epidermal transglutaminase.
anti-Jo-1 autoantibody
dermatomositis manifests with muscle weakness, heliotrope rash (specific for this condition) and elevated muscle enzymes. Assoc w anti Jo1 antibody.
tx for severe bleeding in pts with von willebrand disease
desmopressin is a synthetic analog of ADH.it increases the release of vWF from storage sites and vWF is involved in both platelet aggregation and the utilization of factor VIII.
secondary vs tertiary prevention
detection of a disease at an early stage when a disease is easier to treat or cure. tertiary prevention: aimed at reducing complications or recurrence of or disability from, a pre-existing disease.
Southwestern blot
detects DNA bound proteins
western blotting
detects protein; proteins are seperated by gel elctrophoresis, then transferred to nitrocellulose membrane and probed with primary antibody specific for the protein of interest. The marked antibody goes on that.
ELISA
detects specific antigen or antibody. enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; measures the amt of protein in body fluids. (i.e. insulin levels)
axillary lymphnode dissection is a risk factor for the devel of chronic lymphedema in the ipsi arm and this predisposes to
devel of angiosarcoma (stewart treves syndrome)
hepatic abscess in developed vs undeveoped countries
developed: staph aureus; undeveloped: entamoeba histolytica
xeroderma pigmentosum
develops due to a defect in nucleotide excision repair via a UV specific ENDONUCLEASE (these pts are deficient in this endonuclease). Characterized by increased sensitivity to ultraviolet radiation and a high incidence of cutanous malignancy. Pts present with hyper or hypopigmented skin, telangiectasias, NEVI THAT ARE ENLARGING RAPIDLY = melanomas
hyaline artiolosclerosis is assoc with
diabetes (malignant hypertension causes fibrinoid necrosis and is a more acute thing - shows onion skinning on histo)
an individual with a point mutation affecting the gene responsible for neurophysin synthesis is most likely to suffer from
diabetes insipidus (neurophysins are carrier proteins for oxytocin and vasopressin)(Di is from insufficiency ADH release)
neuropathy in diabetes is caused by
diabetic microangiopathy which leads to nerve ischemia (endoneural arteriole hyalinization). Another pathogenetic factor is the accumulation of sorbitol, which leads to osmotic nerve injury. The symmetric peripheral neuropathy is common.
heroin withdrawal
diarrhea, dilated pupils, yawning, lacrimation
heart failure with preserved ejection fraction
diastolic dysfunction that occurs in the setting of prolonged systemic hypertension due to concentric left ventricular hypertrophy. Patients with longstanding hypertension have increased systemic vascular resistance. Can also be caused by: amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, and hemochromatosis.
low calcium diets - stones
dietary calcium binds oxalate in the gut to form unabsorbable calcium oxalate. Low calcium diets lead to increased absorption of free oxalate, which is then excreted in the urine; the resulting hyperoxaluria promotes the formation of caclium oxalate stones. Low calcium diets are therefore paradoxically assoc with increased risk fo stone formation.
thalassemias genetic
different mutations that encode the globin subunits of hemoglobin, this usually occurs due to a single base substitution that can form an abnormal splice site.
cirrhosis
diffuse hepatic fibrosis with replacement of the normal lobular architecture by fibrous-lined parenchymal nodules. Chronic viral hepatitis (i.e. hepatitis B and C), alcohol, hemochromatosis, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease are the most common causes of cirrhosis in the US.
acute cellular rejection of renal allograft is associated with
diffuse lymphocytic infiltration of the renal vasculature (endotheliitis), tubules, and interstitium.
syphilis
diffuse rash (palms and soles); lymphadenopathy; chancre; histo: proliferative endarteritis with a surrounding plasma cell infiltrate. Most syphilis sx are due to localized tissue ischemia resulting form endarteritis.
membranous glomerulopathy
diffuse thickening of the GBM; grnaular deposits of IgG and C3; spike and dome appearance on EM
arteries in lung segments
each lung segment is supplied by a tertiary bronchus and two arteries (one bronchial and one pulmonary), all of which run together in the center of the segments. Veins and lymphatics drain together along the edges of the segments.
major depressive disorder - sleeping pattern
early morning awakenings, terminal insomnia (once you wake up you can't get back to sleep), increased REM sleep time, decreased N3
cytokeratin positive staining means what
epithelial cell lineage
CIN is confined to what layer of skin
epithelial layer, if it invades past this its invasive carcinoma. cervical intraEPITHELIAL neoplasia...greater than 1/3 = high grade CIN
the presence of acute phase reactants increases the
erythrocyte sedimentation rate (a nonspecific marker for inflammation)
reason why women on birth control or pregnant women get gall stones
estrogen induced choleterol hypersecretion and progesterone induced gallbaldder hypomotility.
most common inherited cause of intellectual disability
fragile X syndrome (CGG trinucleotide repeat) Chin protruding and giant gonads - this geentic defect causes hypermethylation of the FMR1 gene.
what type of mutation is responsible for the CFTR mutaiton in cystic fibrosis
frameshift mutation
acute rejection of transplant
happens in first 6 months, perivascular and interstitial mononuclear cell infiltrates.
HLA DR5
hashimoto thyroiditis (also HLA DR3). DR5 pts are at aincreased risk fo developing pernicous anemia as well.
pes cavus
high plantar arch
heterophile antibody test
highly sens/spec for EBV infection. Sheep/ horse antigens mixed w EBV human blood makes agglutination.
alzheimer's disease: where does the brain atrophy first and most
hippocampus
coal workers pneumoconisosis
histo shows black, carbon laden macrophages (coal macules).
esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
histo: abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and areas of keratinization (keratin pearls) and intercellular bridges. Patients typically present with progressive solid and eventually liquid dysphagia and weight loss. This is a malignancy with a poor prognosis.
berylliosis
histo: noncaseating epitheloid granulomas without obvious associated particles.
mitral regurgitation
holosystolic; radiation to the axilla; can happen bc of rheumatic heart disease
secretin
hormone released from the duodenum in response to acid and fat in the small intestine. The hormone increases pancreatic bicarbonate secretion and inhbits the release of gastrin from normal gastric G cells.
bone marrow biopsy for aplastic anemia/ idiopathic aplastic anemia
hypocellularity and an abundance of fat cells
beta thalassemia
hypochromic, microcytic anemia due to decreased beta globin chain synthesis. Unpaired alpha chains precipitate within red cells and cause membrane damage, leading to ineffective erythropoiesis and extravascular hemolysis.
moa of mallory weiss tears
increased intraluminal gastric pressure due to retching, vomiting, or other abdominal straining. (occur at the esophago gastric junction)
csf in herpes encephalitis
increased lymphocytes and erythrocytes
emphysema, which can present with dyspnea, prolonged expiratory time, pursed lip breathing, and barrel chest is a form of COPD. In pts with emphysema, _ destroys alveoli
increased protease activity in the lungs destroys alveoli, resulting in a decreased surface area for gas exchange.
things that prevent renal stones
increased urinary citrate concentration and high fluid intake
tx's to slow fibrosis
inhibit TGF-beta and other fibrogenic growth factors (PDGF, fibroblastic growth factor and VEGF).
tx for pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
ketogenic diet
parvovirus B19
kids get: slapped cheek that spreads down body; adults get: arthritis, joint pain
hemidesmosomes
link cells to basement membrane via integrins, the transmembrane anchor proteins. Autoantibodies to these proteins cause bullous pemphigoid and pemphigoid gestationis.
linoleic and alpha linoleic
linoleic (omega 6) and alpha linoleic (omega 3). These are the two essential fatty acids
major virulence factor of N meningitides
lipooligosaccharide in the outer membrane
contaminated foods with generalized rash, pregnant, fever, (outbreak)
listeria monocytogenes
proteins (including the acute phase reactants (CRP, IL6, Hepcidin) are made where (and the clotting factors)
liver
lower quadrantanopia vs upper
lower: parietal lesion; upper: occipital lesion
common anaerobic bacteria involved in a lung abscess
lung abscess is usually caused by aspiration of anaerobic oral bacteria such as peptostreptococcus, prevotella, bacteroides, and fusobacterium.
most common site of mets for an osteosarcoma
lung bc its hematogenous spread and its like a DVT going to the lungs first
#1 cause of death for men and women in america
lung cancer (from smoking)
RAS
lung cancer, colon cancer, pancreatic cancer (KRAS), renal cell cancer, bladder cancer (HRAS); protooncogene
right side: lung goes down to which rib and the liver?
lung: 8th; liver: 10th
placenta accreta
placenta is adherent to the myometrium. (instead of the norm of it being on the inner side of the endometrium)
preferred diagnostic imaging study for toxic megacolon from ulcerative colitis
plain abdominal x ray
pityriasis rosea
plaques in christmas tree pattern; herald plaque, resolves in 6-8 weeks
vWF functions in
platelet adhesion and as a protein carriers for factor VIII
pneumonitis vs pneumonia
pneumonitis: inflammation of the lungs, aspriation of gastric acid, presents hours after aspiration, no need for tx. Pneumonia: infection of the lungs, aspiration of microbes, presents days after aspiration, tx: clindamycin, or beta lactam
if you see free air under the diaphragm on CXR
pneumoperitoneum and this is due to perforation of a hollow abdominal viscus. i.e. perforated duodenal ulcer (or it can be from trauma, tumors, etc). Causes shoulder pain, peritonitis which can become sepsis and death.
tall people are at risk for (tall body habitus)
pneumothorax
sickle cell anemia genetics
point mutation that substitutes valine for glutamic acid in the 6th position of the beta globin chain of hemoglobin
polycystin
polycystic kidney
most common cause of hirsutism
polycystic ovary syndrome (tx: OCPs bc they decrease LH secretion which decreases andorgens)
woman with hirsutism, acne and is obese.
polycystic ovary syndrome, and the pathologic finding is the enlarged ovaries.
TE fistula is assoc with esophageal atresia which causes
polyhydramnios
cause of tamoxifen (estrogen receptor modulator for breast cancer tx) ineffectiveness in subset of patients
polymorphism of a cytochrome P450 enzyme
HIV replication cycle
polyprotein precursors encoded by the structural genes gag, pol, and env. Only the env gene polyprotein product (gp160) is glycosylated. Env is then cleaved in the golgi apparatus to form gp120 and gp41
major virulence factor of H influenzae
polyribosylribitol phosphate
acute intermittent porphyria hinders what enzyme in the synthesis of heme?
porphobilinogen deaminase
liver mets come from which circulation
portal circulation (blood from colon)
positive sense RNA viruses and negative sense RNA viruses
positive: infectious bc they can use host machinery to replicate. Negative: not infectious bc they need their own machinery (RNA dependent RNA polymerase) to be brought along to be able to replicate.
RNA i
post-transcriptional gene silencing
AV nodal artery comes off
posterior descending artery
inferior wall MI is what artery
posterior descending artery off of the right coronary artery (supplies the inferior side of the left ventricle which lays on the diaphragm
posterior displacement of the tibia when pressure is applied to the anterior tibua with the knee in the flexed position
posterior drawer test (this means there is a problem with the posterior cruciate ligament)
be careful pairing ACE inhibitors with
potassium sparing diuretics (spironolactone) because they both cause hyperkalemia.
anti-mitochondrial antibodies
primary biliary cholangitis manifests with fatigue, itching, hepatomegaly, late jaundice, and xanthomas. Most patients have elevated levels of antimitochondrial antibodies. Testing for these antibodies is specific and can aid in the diag.
what is increased in urine in pts with multiple myeloma
proteinuria (bence jones light chain proteins)
leser trelat sign
rapid onset of numerous seborrheic keratoses (tan, brown round lesion) is often assoc with internal malignancy (i.e. gastric adenocarcinoma)
mitochondrial myopathy
red ragged fibers
craniopharyngiomas are tumors that arise from
remnants of Rathke's pouch
ADR of cyclosporine
renal toxicity (its a drug used to inhibit IL2 in cancer pts to prevent T cell activation)
mycopbacterium tuburculosis
replicate inside macrophages during the initial infection
acute tx for variceal hemorrhage
requires rapid lowering of portal pressure via somatostatin and octreotide which inhibit the release of hormones that induce splanchnic vasodilation.
you can have metabolic and _ acidosis at the same time
respiratory
new/ immature RBCs are called
reticulocytes
slow waves determine the frequency of contractions of the GI tract. They are
rhythmic depolarizations and repolarizations of the smooth muscle cells within the muscularis propria of the stomach and intestines. They are enhanced in amplitude by parasympathetic nervous system stimulation and decreased by sympathetic nervous system stimulation.
inferior leads (II, III, and aVF) infarction is a block of which artery usually
right coronary artery (RCA) obstruction.
Nissl body
rough endoplasmic reticulum for the neurons
S-100 positive tumors
schwannoma and melanoma
FGAs vs SGAs (anti psychotics
second gen have less risk for extrapyramidal sx like acute dystonia
sudden infant death syndrome risk factor
second hand smoke
uricosuric
second line tx for gout bc they increase uric acid secretion but are therefore CI'd in pts with a hx of renal stones. Allopurinol is first line
which type of viruses are capable of genetic shifts through reassortment
segmented genome containing viruses (orthomyxovirus, rotavirus)
attrition bias is a form of
selection bias
case control study: how do you pick the control
selection of controls is intended to provide an accurate estimation of exposure frequency among the nondisease general population. Cases and controls should be selected based on DISEASE status, not exposure status.
recurrent pneumonia or upper respiratory infections are suggestive of immunodeficiency, of which _ is the most common
selective IgA deficiency; IgA prevents infection of the mucosal surfaces, and so deficiency can lead to GI infections such as giardiasis. Selective IgA deficiency also puts pts at risk for allergic reactions following blood transfusions or admin of IVIG.
osteoid osteoma
small, benign, bone-forming tumor that typically occurs in adolescent boys. Histopathology shows irregular patterns of woven bone lined by a single layer of benign-appearing osteoblasts.
vitamin A deficiency
squamous metaplasia of epithelia to keratinizing epithelium. Night blindness (nyctalopia); xerosis cutis - dry skin; corneal degeneration (keratomalacia); bitot spots (foamy appearance) on conjunctiva; immunosuppression. Can happen bc of cystic fibrosis bc pancreatic insufficiency and fat malabsorption.
cryptococcus staining
stains red on mucicarmine stain. Absence of stain on india ink. Shows yeast form on methanamine silver stain.
galactokinase deficiency (mild galactosemia) (first enzyme)
sx: cataracts, pseudotumor cerebri (galactitol accumulation);
milk alkali syndrome
sx: hypercalcemia (depression, constipation, weakness, fatigue - stones bones groans thrones psych overtones), metabolic alkalosis, and renal insufficiency. patients who overuse calcium carbonate for long periods may develop this syndrome. long term overuse of calcium carbonate can lead to rebound gastric acid hypersecretion as well.
smells burning rubber before seizure
temporal lobe epilepsy
most common form of headache, achy, pressure like pain, bilateral, associated with opericranial muscle tenderness, ppl can usually still do daily functions
tension headache
fibularis tertius vs brevis
tertius goes above/ anterior to the lateral malleolus; brevis is bigger muscle and has tendons posterior to lateral malleolus that affects lateral malleolus
reinke crystals
testicular tumors
inhibin inhibits FSH release while ___ inhibits LH release
testosterone
lowest and highest drug levels
the highest level of drug conc is 1/2 hour after IV or 1 hour after IM dosing. The lowest drug conc (trough) is the last 1/2 hour before the next dose.
uniparental disomy
the inheritance of two copies of a chromosome from one parent through nondisjunction.
if a tRNA is mischarged with an incorrect amino acid (and not corrected) then
the wrong amino acid with bc inserted into the polypeptide chain at the site where the old amino acid would have gone.
metalloproteinase and fibroblasts happen in what part of injury (wound healing)
their activity results in contracture
if the pH and the bicarb matches
then its metabolic
strongest recommendation for patients with alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency is
to avoid second hand smoke bc exposure to some accelerates the deelopement of emphysema.
central diabetes insipidus moa (damage where)
to the hypothalamus bc if damage to posterior pituitary, the posterior pituitary will regenerate. ADH is made in the hypothalamus (paracentricular and supraoptic nuclei)
primaquine is added to chloroquine in tx of malaria bc
to tx infections with P vivax and P ovale to eradicate the intrahepatic stages (hypnozoites) of these malerial species which are responsible for relapses.
kids under 2 years old can get _ from antidiarrheal use
toxic megacolon
hepatitis A
transmission is fecal oral, and common in areas with overcrowding, or poor sanitation. Outbreaks from contaminated water or food and raw/ steamed shellfish is common in US. ; sx: fever, anorexia, vomiting, RUQ pain, jaundice, pruritis, dark colored urine and clay colored stool
drug for breast cancers that express ERBB2
trastuzumab (monoclonal antibody dependent cytotoxicity)
rifaximin
tx for hepatic encephalopathy; moa: decreases intraluminal ammonia production. Another tx is lactulose (increases conversion of ammonia to ammonium)
pancrelipase
tx for pancreatic insufficiency (i.e pancreative insifficiency is due to chornic pancreatitis, cystic fibrosis, obstructing cancer - causes malabsortion of fat and fat-soluble vitamins (ADEK) as well as vitamin B12. theres a decrease in duodenal pH (bicarb) and fecal elastase decrease). pacrelipase is a combo of lipase, protease, and amylase enzymes to correct the malabsorption.
HLA DR3 and DR5
type 1 diabetes mellitus
anaphylaxis and indoor allergen moa
type 1 hypersensitivity in which allergen cross-links antigen-specific IgE on the surface of mast cells and basophils. mast cells release histamine.
hereditary fructose intolerance
vomiting, hypoglycmeia, failure to thrive. Deficient in aldolase B.
hemophilia inheritance pattern
x linked recessive
Fabry disease
x linked recessive, alpha galactosidase A deficiency results in accumulation of globotriaosylceramide, sx: neuropathic pain, angiokeratomas, tenagiectasias, glomerular disease (proteinuria), cerebrovascular disease (TIA, stroke), cardiac disease (left ventricular hypertrophy). lipid storage disorder.
prevent recurrence of herpes
daily valcyclovir
polyethylene glycol
osmotic laxative
heberden nodes (DIP) and Bouchard nodes (PIP)
osteoarthritis
initial phase of Paget's
osteoclast activation
PTH activates osteoblasts which activate
osteoclasts thru RANK-L
BRCA mutations also increase risk for
ovarian cancer
theca cells and granulosa cells are located where
ovarian follicle
CA 125
ovarian tumor
call exner bodies
ovarian tumors
age <2 and they have bronchiolitis; this is most commonly
RSV (respiratory syncytial virus)
pt with fever, chills and muscle aches, was given penicillin for syphilis. What happened?
"Administration of Penicillin for Syphilis may lead to the Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction hours after treatment. Occurs due to lysis of spirochetes (so it can occur with Borrelia and Leptospirosis as well). The reaction is characterized by fever and chills.
indicators of cirrhosis
"increased aspratate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase are indicators of hepatocellular damage, and increased alkaline phosphatase and gamma glutamyl transpeptidase indicates biliary injury.
leukemia: bone marrow blasts: +TdT, + PAS material
"lymphoblast (B or T cell)
rotavirus
#1 cause of severe diarrhea in young children; causes self-limited childhood diarrhea in unvaccinated kids. It infects villous enterocytes in the duodenum and proximal jejunum and results in villous blunting, proliferation of secretory crypt cells and a loss of brush border enzymes; this results in watery diarrhea without fecal leukocytes.
False negatives
(1 - sensitivity) x (# of patients with the disease)
if calculating the probability that 3 different groups do NOT have something and they give u the probability that they do
(1-probability they do) x (1- probability group 2), etc
maintenance dose
(Cpss x CL)/ [bioavailability fraction] ; (Cpss = the steady state plasma concentration) - - the bioavailability fraction is 1 for drugs admin'd IV - - (maintenance dose is decreased in pts with renal or hepatic impairment)
horner syndrome
(PAM is horny); sympathetic denervation of the face; Ptosis, Anhidrosis, (absence of sweating), Miosis; assoc with lesions along the sympathetic chain.
PriVaTe TIM HALL never tyres (all the essential amino acids)
...never tyrosine
Bipolar type 1
1 or more manic episodes with OR WITHOUT a hypomanic or depressive episode. (if they have psychotic features, its bipolar type 1 with psychotic features)
regular insulin peaks in
2-4 hours
filtration fraction (FF)
FF = GFR/ RPF; RPF = renal plasma flow;
Heinz bodies
G6PD deficiency (denatured globin chains)
baclofen
GABA B agonist (decreases glutamate) muscle releaxant for MS, muscle spasticity
kaposi's sarcoma can spread to
GI tract. Usually lesions on skin. Reddish/ violet flat maculopapular lesions. Histo: spindle cells, neovascularization, and extravasated red blood cells.
filgrastim
GMCSF stimulator; for chemo and HIV pts to increase their neutrophil levels
splice sites
GT at 5' and AG at 3'
lateral femoral cutanous
L2-L3, sensory: anterior and lateral thigh
ketorolac
NSAIDs, can cause acute renal failure
factor 5 is
NAD/ nicotinamide (i.e. H influenza needs factor 5 and 10 to grow on chocolate agar)
medication that cuases impairment of ion channel function leading to an incident of syncope
QT prolongation; macrolides, antipsychotics, anti-emetics
acute ureterolithiasis shows what in urine sediment?
RBCs and crystals
uroshiol (poison ivy) causes reaction via what type of cells
T cells (CD8 and CD4); triggers a type IV hypersensitivity (mediated by T cells)
takotsubo cardiomyopathy
aka stress induced cardiomyopathy; characterized by hypokinesis of the mid and apical segments and hyperkinesis of the basal segments of the left ventricle, resulting in systolic dysfunction. The condition is likely caused by a surge of catecholamines in teh setting of physical or emotional stress. It usually affects postmenopausal women and resolves on its own within several weeks.
nonenveloped viruses are less susceptible to _ bc they have no lipid envelope to target
alcohol based disinfectants
good way to prevent intravascular catherter related infection
alcohol based hand scrub prior to beginning the procedure
biogenic amines
all the tyrosine derivatives
urachus is part of the
allantoic duct between the bladder and the umbilicus
peptostreptococcus and fusobacterium
anaerobic bacteria that are part of normal mouth flora. The presence of these organisms in a pt's lung lesion is highly suggestive of a developing lung abscess. Pt will foul smelling sputum (indicating anaerobes)
wide fixed splitting of the second heart sound (S2) is characteristic of
atrial septal defect (ASD)
ABL
chronic myeloid leukemia, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; protooncogene/ tumor promotor
eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis
churg strauss; small to medium vessel vasculitis, characterized by late onset asthma, rhinosinusitis, and eosinophilia. P-ANCA
patients weaning off of mechanical ventilation typically have weakened respiratory muscles and thereofre tend to breath at low tidal volumes to minimize the work of breathing. This caused an increase in
dead space ventilation. They compensate by increasing their respiratory rate so they can maintain their minute ventilation. You want them to breathe slower and deeper to be able to get off of the ventilator.
tx for rabies
inactivated/ killed vaccine
congenital long QT syndrome is
most often caused by genetic mutations in a K+ channel protein that contributes to the outward-rectifying potassium current. A decrease in the outward K+ current leads to prolongation of action potential duration and QT interval. This prolongation predisposes to the development of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias (i.e. torsades de pointes) that can cuase palpitations, syncope, seizures or sudden cardiac death.
syphilis degeneration of vasa vasorum is
obliterative endarteritis with lymphocytes and plasma cells (obliterative in the vasa vasorum - i.e. arteries supplying the large blood vessels throughout the body - and the nerves)
intussusception
obstruction of the bowel most common among children younger than 5 years old. It presents with colicky abdominal pain and vomiting, which can indicate worsening of the obstruction. they also have palpable abdominal mass. nausea, fever, vomiting, tx: air enema (and diag)
c-myc
oncogene
type 1 diabetes mellitus and primary adrenal insufficiency
patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus are prone to developing other autoimmune endocrinopathies including hashimoto thryoiditis, graves' disease and primary adrenal insufficiency (addison's disease). Electrolyte abnormalities in patients with primary adrenal insufficiency include hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, hyperchloremia, and non-anion gap metabolic acidosis. this is due to decreased aldosterone.
number needed to harm (NNH)
...= 1/ absolute risk increase. Absolute risk increase is calculated by the adverse event rate in the control group by the adverse event rate in the experimental group. The NNH is the number of ppl who must be treated before 1 additional adverse event occurs.
calcium sensing receptors
G protein coupled receptors that regulate the secretion of parathyroid hormone in response to changes in circulating calcium levels. Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia is a benign autosomal dominant disorder caused by defective calcium sensing receptors in the parathyroid gland and kidneys.
memantine
NMDA receptor antagonist; for Alzheimers disease
pseudomonas aeruginosa tx
Pseudomonas is a mjor pathogen in burn patients. Only a few specific penicillins (i.e. ticaricillin and piperacillin) and cephalosporins (i.e. ceftazidime, cefepime) have activity against it. Certain aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones (i.e. ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) and carbapenems (i.e. imipenem, meropenem) are also effective.
HBeAg
a marker of viral replication and increased infectivity for hepatitis B.
Zidovudine (ZDT)
a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor used to prevent maternal to fetal transmission of HIV during labor (when the mother is not virally suppressed). It is a thymidine analogue that does not have the normal 3'-hydroxyl group found on thymidine. Because new nucleotides are added to growing DNA chains only at the 3'-hydroxyl group, the addition of ZDT into DNA results in chain termination.
DNA polymerases
all 3 prokaryotic DNA polymerases can remove mismatched nucleotides via their 3' to 5' exonuclease ("poroofreading") activity. Only DNA polymerase I has 5' to 3' exonuclease activity, which is used to remove the RNA primer synthesized by RNA primase.
cellular compartmentalization
allows multiple biochemical processes to occur simultaneously at maximum efficiency. Beta oxidation of fatty acids, the TCA cycle, and the carboxylation of pyruvate (gluconeogenesis) all occur within the mitochondria. The enzymes responsible for glycolysis, fatty acid synthesis and the pentose phosphate pathway (transketolase) reside in the cytosol.
narcolepsy
chronic sleep disorder cahracterized by excessive dauytime sleepiness, cataplexy (sudden loss of muscle tone that occurs in response to intense positive emotions), and REM sleep-related phenomena (i.e. hypnagogic/hypnopompic hallucinations, sleep paralysis).
transketolase
an enzyme of the pentose phosphate pathway that uses thiamine (vitamin B1) as a cofactor to shuttle 2 carbon fragments between sugar molecules.
hepatitis E
an unenveloped single stranded RNA virus spread thru the fecal oral route. The most concerning feature of hep E infection is the high mortality rate observed in infected pregnant women.
pregnant women and gastroesophageal reflux
elevated estrogen and progesterone levels relax the smooth muscle of the LES (lower esophageal sphincter) leading to decreased LES tone and reduced sensitivity to contractile stimuli.
CMV
mononucleosis-like illness
superior mesenteric artery syndrome
occurs when the transverse portion of the duodenum is entrapped between the SMA and aorta, causing sx of partial intestinal obstruction. Occurs when the aortomesenteric angle critically decreases, secondary to diminished mesenteric fat, pronounced lordosis or surgical correction of scoliosis.
#1 cause of gallstones via cholesterol lowering drug
fibrates (gemfibrozil)
drug tx for narcolepsy
modafinil (psychostimulant, amphetamine)
bethanechol
muscarinic agonist that treats urinary retention
measles/ rubeola infection, what vitamin helps/ cures it?
vitamin A
niacin
vitamin B3; elevates HDL, (most effective drug for this)
ascorbic acid is
vitamin C
osteioid is laid down by osteoblasts and _ mineralizes the bone
vitamin D
equation for the Flow of blood
"Flow (Q) = (P1-P2)/R ; but R = (viscosity x L)/ radius^4. So flow = (P1-P2 x r^4)/ (Viscosity x Length); OVERALL: blood flow is directly proportional to the vessel radius raised to the fourth power. Resistance to blood flow is inversely proportional to the vessel radius raised to the fourth power. Example: if flow is decreased by a factor of 16, then the radius of the lumen has been reduced by: (r^4)/16 = r/2 so by 50%
clinical uses of K sparing diuretics
"Hyperaldosteronism
if patient is there with his family and you have bad news to give him and he says he doesn't want to know, what do you do
"I will not inform him of the results if that is his preference"
acute phase reactants
"IL 6, CRP, fibrinogen, ferritin , hepcidin, ceruloplasmin, haptoglobin, von willebrand factor, and complement. (these are all positive APRs - they rise in inflammation). Procalcitonin is a positive and negative APR in that it rises and falls (levels) in inflammation);
spherocytosis
"In spherocytosis, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) is increased due to mild dehydration of the red blood cell. Markers of hemolysis are often evident and include elevated lactate dehydrogenase, reticulocytosis and decreased haptoglobin.
PTT vs PT
"PTT: intrinsic coagulation system; Factors: 12, 11, 9, 8
multiple myeloma
"a plasma cell malignancy associated with purely radiolucent (osteolytic) bone lesions due to the stimulation of osteoclasts and the inhibition of osteoblasts. Myeloma cells stimulate osteoclast development by secreting RANK-ligand and destroying osteoprotegerin, which increases RANK activity and results in osteoclast differentiation.
porcelain gallbladder (thickened gallbladder wall with a rim of patchy calcification) is assoc with increased risk of
"adenocarcinoma of the gallbladder
sarcoidosis
"african americans, bilateral hilar adenopathy, noncaseating granulomas, erythema nodosum (nodules on skin), noncaseating granulomas,
Small cell lung cancer
"aka oat cell carcinoma; strong assoc w smoking, centrally located. Histo: small, round or oval cells with scant cytoplasm and large hyperchromatic (blue) nuclei; abundant mitoses are seen. Immuno stains: positive for neuroendocrine markers (chromogranin, synaptophysin, neural cell adhesion molecule (CD56)). assoc paraneoplastic syndromes: SIADH, Lambert Eaton, Cushing syndrome. pts will lose weight bc its a cancer.
Wilson disease
"associated with copper accumulation in the liver, brain and cornea. It commonly presents in childhood or adolescence with abonral liver function tests and/or neuropsychiatric sx. Psychiatric sx may predate other manifestations and include personality changes, depression, mania and/or psychosis.
immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)
"autoimmune destruction of platelets by anti-platelet antibodies, (IgG against GPIIb/IIIa). Isolated thrombocytopenia (low platelets) and nothing else is usual. Tx: immunosuppression (corticosteroids), IVIG. Platelet level around 9,000.
sjogren syndrome
"autoimmune; inflammation of exocrine glands; labial glands show periductal lymphocytic infiltrates (focal lymphocytic sialadenitis), with germinal centers.
HER2
"breast cancer, ovarian cancer
chronic myelogenous leukemia
"cause is a translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22 (t9;22...philadelphia chromosome). the resulting oncogene is BCR-ABL (codes for constitutive tyrosine kinase activity). They will have dysregulated production of mature and maturing granulocytes (neutrophils, metamyelocytes, myelocytes, basophils) and splenomegaly. tx: imatinib or dasatinib (bcr abl tyrosine kinase inhibitors)
reactive arthritis (classic triad)
"classic triad is nongonococcal urethritis, conjunctivitis and arthritis. It is an HLA B27 assoc arthropathy that occurs within several weeks following a GU or enteric infection. It belongs to the group of seronegative spondyloarthropathies (including ankylosing spondylitis) and can cause sacroiliitis in about 20% of cases.
cyanide poisoning mech and tx
"cyanide inhibits complex IV (cytochrome C oxidase) leading to hypoxia unresponsive to supplemental O2 and increased anaerobic metabolism. Can lead to cherry red skin, seizures and coma. Sx: breath has bitter almond odor and CV collapse.
dihydropterin reductase deficiency
"disorders involving impaired tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) levels, the most common being dihydropterin reducatase deficiency, account for 2% of phenyketonuria cases. BH4 is an important cofactor for both phenylalanine hydroxylase and tyrosine hydroxylase. Although phenylalanine levels can be corrected with dietary restriction, downstream deficiencies of dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, and serotonin lead to progressive neurologic deterioration.
porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT)
"enzyme deficiencies of the early steps in porphyrin synthesis cause neuropsychiatric manifestations without photosensitivity, whereas late step derangments lead to photosensitivity. Photosensitivity manifests as vesicle and blister formation on sun-exposed areas as well as edema, pruritis, pain and erythema.
gauchers disease
"gausch he's such a bro. (crying), glucocerebroside, tissue paper appearance,
if someone has symptomatic coronary artery disease, next step in tx is:
"give them a statin. (regardless of baseline cholesterol levels).
systemic lupus erythematosis
"glomerulonephritis, photosensitive skin rash and arthralgias in a young woman. Antiphospholipid antibodies (these can cause false positive RPR and VDRL tests and aPTT prolongation). 30% of lupus pts have anti phospholipid antibodies and they are at risk for thromboembolism and recurrent pregnancy loss.
hand foot and mouth disease & herpangina
"hand foot mouth disease (oral and extremity ulcerations) and herpangina (oral ulcerations) are the most common manifestations of enteroviral infections. Myocarditis is a rare but serious complication of enterovirus that can lead to heart failure, dysrhythmia or acute circulatory collapse.
scabies (sarcoptes scabiei mite)
"highly contagious disease that presents with an intensely pruritic rash (usually worse at night) in the flexor surfaces of the wrist, lateral surfaces of the fingers and the finger webs. Patients usually have excoriations with small, crusted, red papules scattered around the affected areas. Diagnosis is confirmed by skin scrapings from excoriated lesions that show mites, ova, and feces under light microscopy.
acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
"injury of the pulmonary epithelium and/or endothelium and occurs due to sepsis or pneumonia. Cytokines recruits neutrophils to the lung tissue, which cause capillary damage and leakage of protein-rich fluid into the alveoli (during the exudative phase) - this leads to formation of hyaline membranes. Later cellular proliferation and collagen deposition occurs and in some patients, this leads to irreversible pulmonary fibrosis. (phases: exudative -> proliferative -> fibrotic).
deficiency of CD18
"leukocyte adhesion deficiency"; delayed umbilical cord separation; autosomal recessive, CD18 is necessary for formation of integrins which allow leukocyte adhesion to endothelial surfaces and migration to target tissues. Sx: lack of purulence due to absence of leukocytes in peripheral tissues. persistent leukocytosis (high WBC count)
hereditary hemochromatosis
"missense mutation in HFE gene, resulting in excessive intestinal iron absorption and organ damage (cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, cardiomyopathy, arthropathy) due to iron accumulation within parenchymal tissues (GI doesn't get negative feedback from liver bc HFE is damaged so it keeps absorbing iron from lumen)
(treatment resistant) major depressive disorder with atypical features
"modd reactivity (mood improves in response to positive events), leaden paralysis (i.e. patients arms and legs feel extremely heavy), rejection sensitivity, increased sleep and appetite. Treatment resistant: failure of multople antidepressant agents.
minimal change disease
"most common childhood nephrotic syndrome. Increased glomerular capillary permeability causes massive protein (albumin) loss in urine. Hypoalbuminemia reduces plasma oncotic pressure which causes a fluid shift into the interstitial space, resulting in edema. Low oncotic pressure also triggers increased lipoprotein production in the liver (i.e. hyperlipidemia)
pilocytic astrocytoma
"most common type of brain tumor in children; sx: headaches and gait instability with a cerebellar lesion on MRI (has both cystic and solid components on MRI)
nephritic vs nephrotic:
"nephritic: (Inflammatory process), hematuria, edema, hypertension; RBC casts in urine, proteinuria,
medullary thyroid cancer on histo
"nests of polygonal cells with congo red positive deposits; it arises from parafollicular calcitonin secreting C cells. It has spindle shaped cells with extracellular amyloid deposits derived from calcitonin.
hepatic encephalopathy
"neurologic complciation of cirrhosis due to liver's inability to convert ammonia to urea. Leads to altered mental status, asterixis (rhythmic flapping of hands)
beta blockers and diabetics
"non-selective beta blockers exacerbate hypoglycemia and mask its adrenergic sx mediated by NE and epinephrine. For this reason, they should be used with caution in pts with diabetes mellitus. If beta blocker admin is necessary, give beta 1 antagonist instead. (this is bc epipnephrine stims hepatic glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis in times when body needs glucose)
testicular cancer
"painless, solid scrotal mass is testicular cancer. Exam: solid, firm or fixed module in the tunica albuginea that is avoid in shape an painless to palpation. Testicular tumors do not transilluminate.
postpartum blues vs postpartum depression vs psychosis
"postpartum mood disturbances include postpartum blues, postpartum depression, and rarely postpartum psychosis. The most common disturbance is postpartum blues which is benign, self-limited condition that begins several days postpartum and resolves within 14 days without intervention.
an external stim applied to a cell increases the activity of several enzymes, inclduing dihydrofolate reductase and DNA polymerase. What precedes this effect
"retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation; G1 to S phase transition is whats referred to here bc DNA synthesis happens in the S phase of the cell cycle. Cells with damaged DNA are not allowed to enter the S phase. Retinoblastoma (Rb) protein is a regulator of the G1->S phase transition. Rb is inactivated via hyperphosphorylation via cyclin D, cyclin E and CDK 4,6. Inactivation of Rb allows G1->S phase transition. (hypophosphorylated Rb is active form that inhibits the transition)
ewing sarcoma
"second most common primary bone malignancy in young patients, often arises in long bones and causes progressive pain, swelling, and lytic bone lesions. However, histopathology reveals sheets of small, round cells separated by fibrous septae and patches of necrosis and high N:C ratio. hemorrhage; no osteoid or bone is produced.
rheumatoid arthritis
"small joints (PIP, MCP, MTP), spares distal joints (DIP). Fever weight loss, anemia. Cervical spine involvement: subluxation, cord compression. Anti-CCP antibodies, positive rheumatoid factor.
G6PD deficiency (glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase)
"sx: hemolytic anemia, dark urine (bc of RBC breakdown), weakness, scleral icterus,
half life drug elimination equation
"t1/2 = (0.7 x Vd)/ CL
acute promyelocytic leukemia
"the cytogenic defect t(15;17) is associated with acute promyelocytic leukemia (AMPL). A translocation involving the retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARA) gene from chromosome 17 and the promyelocytic leukemia (PML) gene on chromosome 15 leads to the formation of PML/RARA, a fusion gene whose product inhibits differentiation of myeloblasts and triggers the developement of APML.
severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID)
"the second most common cause of SCID is autosomal recessive deficiency of adenosine deaminase, an enzyme necessary for the elimination of excess adenosine within cells. Tx: retroviral vectors to infect pt stem cells with gene coding for adenosine deaminase.
transudative vs exudative
"transudative effusions are typically caused by alterations in hydrostatic or oncotic pressure (i.e. heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome), whereas exudative effusions typically result from inflammation and consequent increased vascular membrane permeability (i.e. infection, malignancy, rheumatologic disease). Exudative effusions are characterized by a high ratio of pleual fluid to serum total protein (>.5) or lactate dehydrogenase (>.6) or high absolute levels of lactate dehydrogenase.
chronic myeloproliferative disorders
(polycythemia vera, essential thrombocytosis, and primary myelofibrosis) often have a mutation in Janus kinase 2 (JAK2), a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase. This results in constitutive tyrosine kinase activity, and in the cytokine independent activation of signal transducers and actiators of transcription (STAT) proteins (JAK STAT signaling pathway)
prostacyclin
(prostaglandin I2) is made from prostaglandin H2 by prostacyclin synthase in vascular endothelial cells. Once secreted, it inhibtis platelet aggregation and causes vasodilation to oppose the functions of thromboxane A2 and help maintain vascular homeostasis.
true positives
(sensitivity) x (# of patients with the disease)
pharyngeal/ branchial arches: 1 man Fuc*ed 2 strippers In 3 Great Styles (but dont tell) 4 Always remember to say that what happens in Vagus Recurs in Vagus
1 Man: 1st pharyngeal arch; Mandibular branch (V3), mm of mastication, & Meckel cartilage; Maxillary artery - F'd 2 Strippers: 2nd phar arch; facial nerve (CN VII); Stapes, stylohyoid, smiling mm); stapedial artery - In 3 great styles: 3rd phar arch; ICA artery; Glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX), Stylopharyngeus muscle - 4 Always remember to say that what happens in Vagus: 4th phar arch; ARS: Aortic, right Subclavian arteries; That = Thyroid cartilage; Vagus nerve (CN X) - Recurs in Vagus: (6th Arch) recurrent/inferior laryngeal nerve (from vagus); everything else guess pharyngeal arch 6
1 liter is how many centimeters
1000 cm^3
time after injury if there is eosinophils and nuclear fragmentation in the brain histo
12-24 horus
spores can survive temp up to
120 C (248 F)
normal GFR
125
aortic arch derivatives
1: MAXillary artery; 2: Stapedial artery (Second); 3: Common carotid and internal Carotid (C is 3rd letter of alph); 4: aortic arch and right subclavian (4th arch = 4 limbs aka systemic); 6: pulmonary arteries and ductus arteriosus.
cartilage types
1: bONE 2: carTWOlage 3: vascular type of ehlers danloes (threE D) - blood vessels 4: type 4 under the floor (basement membrane)(goodpasture and alport)
diff btw degrees of burn (1-3)
1: epidermis, painful/erythematous NO blisters; 2: blisters, dermis, heals without scarring; 3: hypodermis, blisters, scars
type 1 vs 2 pnuemocytes
1: gas exchange, the majority of the alveoli. 2: secrete surfactant from lamellar bodies and serve as precursors to type 1's
effect on length of action potential (class 1 - sodium channel blocking - antarrhythmics
1A: prolonged; 1B: shortened; 1C: no change
sodium binding strenght for class 1 antiarrhythmics:
1C>1A>1B
men 2B
1P: medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma, marfanoid habitus
promoter regions are located
25 or 75 bases upstream from their assoc genes and function to intitiate transcription
HLA inheritance pattern
25% chance you'll be same as your sibling (mendelian genetics)
major depressive disorder
>2 weeks, has 5 of 9 sx, depressed mood, tx: CBT and SSRI's, (SIG E CAPS)
CD4 vs CD8 in graft rejection
CD8 is acute and CD4 is chronic
mechanism of injury in hep B to the liver
CD8 t cells respinse to viral antigens
most useful measure for assessing the degree of mitral valve stenosis
A2 to opening snap time interval
medicare A B C
A: hospital care, hospice; B: basic medical bills (doctor fees); C: Combo (paid by private Companies); D: drugs
9;22
ABL, philadelphia, BCR-ABL
right shift in hemoglobin O2 binding curve mnemonic
ACE Bats right handed: increased: Acid (i.e. H+) (so decreased pH) pCo2 Exercise 2,3 BPG high Altitude temperature
in addition to antihyperglycemic treatment, what other drug is good for diabetics' kidneys?
ACE inhibitors (bc it slows progression of diabetic nephropathy via decreasing glomerular filtration rate and pressure, which decreases albumin excretion and slows progression of renal failure.
give pts who had MI (who prob have heart failure with reduced ejection fraction):
ACEI, ARB, Beta blocker, neprilysin inhibitor-ARB (sacubitril), mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (spironolactone) - all of these are first line in HRrEF bc they reduce cardiac remodeling which improves mortality.
RAAS activates
ADH (secretion of ADH)
mycobacterium avium complex infection is common in ppl with
AIDS (CD4 count <50)
ALT>AST vs AST>ALT
ALT>AST: acute viral hepatitis; AST>ALT: alcoholic hepatitis
neprilusin inhibitors (i.e. sacubitril) prevent degradation of
ANP and BNP which is helpfil in chronic heart failure bc BNP and ANP inhibit the RAAS system and cause the kidney excrete sodium and water and help decrease the load on the heart. They also vasodilate thru cGMP
protein C
ANTI-coagulant that degrades factors Va and VIIIa
aortic regurgitation
AR: AR due to aortic root dilation is heard at right upper sternal border. AR due to valvular pathology is heard at the left third intercostal space.
Absolute risk reduction
ARR = (event rate in control group) - (event rate in treatment group). However if they give you number of people in the treatment group that had events and the event rate in the treatment group and ask you how many people TOTAL were in the treatment group you will use: ERtx = (# of events in the tx arm)/(# of subjects in the tx arm) to calc the answer
ataxia telangiectasia vs xeroderma pigmentosa
AT: defect in ATM gene = failure to detect DNA damage (AR) -> cerebellar defects; XP: defective nucleotide excision repair -> skin cancer, light sensitivity
when tumor cell lines become resistant after exposure to anticancer drugs, they express a specific cell surface glycoprotein:
ATP-dependent transporter; the human multidrug resistance (MDR1) gene codes for P glycoprotein, a transmembrane ATP dependent efflux pump protein that has a broad specificity for hydrophobic compounds. This protein can btoh reduce the influx of drugs into the cytosol and can increase efflux from the cytosol, thereby preventing the action of chemotherapeutic agents.
a fib: what determines the ventricular contraction rate
AV node refractory period
if elderly pt is having trouble with activities of daily living (paying bills, navigating familiar areas) its
Alzheimers
White pulp of the spleen
B cells are found here. B cells are developed in the bone marrow and undergo antigen binding specificity mechanisms and class switching within lymph nodes.
uniform round, medium sized tumor cells with basophilic cytoplasm with a prolferation fraction > 99%
B cells in burkitts lymphoma (EBV)
familial pulmonary artery hypertension gene
BMPR2 gene; theres 2 steps to this: abnormal bmpr2 gene predisposes to smooth muscle cell proliferation and then an insult (infection, drugs) activates the disease process, resulting in vascular remodeling.
which tumor suppressor genes follow the two hit hypothesis
BRCA and APC (Familial adenomatous polyposis). They have heterozygous for one normal gene and then they get loss of one and over time loss of the other one. so you either: inherit one mutated gene and get a mutation of ther other or you get two mutations over time.
A-M beta blockers
Beta 1> beta 2 antagonist.
hemochromotosis
Bronze diabetes, glucose intolerance, cardiac involvement, ascites
cells most susceptible to ischemia in the brain
CA1 pyramidal neurons of the hippocampus, cerebellar Purkinje cells and the pyramidal neurons of the neocortex.
huntingtons disease
CAG repeats cause build up of huntington protein which damages GABAergic neurons in caudate nuclei (striatum)
stimulation of which T cells allows release of IFN gamma and increases the potency of macrophages to kill TB
CD4 T lymphocytes
IL 12 differentiates
CD4 into Th1 cells; Th1 cells secrete IFN gamma to activate macrophages
CD8 vs CD4 T cells (endogenous vs exogenous)
CD8 MHC I kill endogenous viruses, etc; CD4 MHC II kill exogenous bacteria, etc
CDK 4/6 inhibitors (i.e. palbociclib)
CDKs 4/6 regulate the movement of cells from G1->S phase. Cancers often have mutations that enhance the activity or downstream effects of CDK 4/6, which contribute to unregulated cellular growth. Inhibitors to CDK 4/6 can be used to treat certain forms of cancer. However, they can inhibit cellular replication in other rapidly dividing cells such as the hematologic cells in the bone marrow (i.e. neutropenia, anemia, or thrombocytopenia)
delta F508 mutations
CFTR (cystic fibrosis)
classical complement pathway can be intitiated using IgG or IgM binding to which region of the Fc fragment
CH2 component of the Fc fragment (above the macrophage binding site)
if it looks like mono but its got a negative heterophile antibodiy agglutination test (mono spot test), then its
CMV (can get it thru blood transfusions)
which kind of pneumonia are organ transplant recipients at risk for?
CMV-associated pneumonia
taste to posterior third of tongue
CN 9
cardiac output equation
CO = SV x HR ...or...CO = (rate of O2 consumption)/ (arteriovenous O2 content difference) .(this is called the fick principle)
GI bleeds from aspirin are bc of
COX 1 inhibition which results in impaired prostaglandin- dependent GI mucosal defense and decreased platelet aggregation.
acetaminophen acts on
COX 2 (pain reducer and fever reducer BUT it doesn't do anti inflammatory)
which antiarrythmic causes prolonged QRS duration
Class 1C
confounding
Confounding: when a percieved assoc between an exposure and an outcome is actually explained by a confounding variable assoc with both the exposure and the outcome. Used in Case control studies to pick matching variables that the cases and controls will be picked based on (i.e. race and age).
somatostatin is made in which cells
D cells of the pancreas
bleeding from venous puncture sites is
DIC
chronic pancreatitis
Diarrhea, weight loss, and epigastric calcifications in a patient with chronic alcoholism suggest chronic pancreatitis with resulting pancreatic exocrine insufficiency and malabsorption.
basophilic oval inclusions in mature neutrophils
Dohle bodies; granules in neutrophils (ribosomes bound to thr rough ER). Seen in toxic systemic illness such as during leukemoid reaction (i.e. benign leukocytosis which is >50,000) due to severe infection or tumor or acute hemolysis. Serum alkaline phosphatase will be normal or increased in leukemoid reaction but its usually low in chronic myelogenous leukemia.
E. Coli (and most gram negative) vs Neisseria
E. Coli: has LPS (causes sepsis - lipopolysaccharide); Neisseria: Lipooligosaccaride (LOS)
test to detect antibodies
ELISA
branchial (pharyngeal) pouches
Ear tonsils, bottom to top 1. ear 2 tonsils 3 dorsal (bottom for inferior parathryoids); ventral (to = thymus) 4: (top = superior parahtyroids)
ATP induced closure of the ATP sensitive _ channel in the pancreatic beta cells, leads to membrane depol and insulin release
K channels
bioavailability (F) graph and equation
F = (AUC oral x dose IV)/(AUC IV x dose oral) ....AUC = area under the curve. Bioavailability referes to the fraction of administered drug that reaches the systemic circulation in a chemically unchanged form.
sertoli cells
FSH secretion leads to production of androgen binding protein (maintains local levels of testosterone); secretes inhibin B which inhibits FSH secretion
mnemonic for genetics behind familial adenomatous polyposis (i..e which chromosome)
FiveAP (FAP) - chrom. 5
riboFlavin F's
Fumarate, FAD and FMN. Vit B2 (riboFlavin) is needed for succinate dehydrogenase (complex II) to convert succinate to fumarate. (FAD is a cofactor in that reaction). Without B2, the electron transport chain and the citric acid cycle don't work. B2 deficiency happens in alcoholics and the severely malnourished. sx: glossitis, cheilosis/ angular stomatitis ( inflammatory lesions at corners of mouth), eye changes (corneal neovascularization), and anemia.
giardiasis
GI illness transmitted via the fecal oral route, characterized by chronic and acute diarrhea with bulky, frothy stools as well as nausea and vomiting. Giardiasis is more common in the immunocompromised and those exposed to unfiltered water (and incidence is higher in men who have sex with men), and is considered a global disease. Tinidazole, nitazoxanide, and metronidazole are effective treatments.
streptococcus gallolyticus (formerly S bovis) endocarditis and bacteremia are assoc with
GI lesions (colon cancer) in 25% of cases. When S gallolyticus is cultured in the blood, workup for colonic malignancy with colonoscopy is essential.
endocrine hormones that use IP3 (phosphoinositide hydrolysis) pathway
GOAT HAG (GnRH, Oxytocin, ADH, TRH, Histamine, Angiotensin II, Gastrin
somatostatin, vasopressin, and calcitonin all act thru which type of signaling mechanism (others: adrenergic agonists, glucagons, ADH, LH, FSH, TSH , hCG, & PTH)
GPCRs on cell membranes.
dobutamine mechanism
Gs protein - adenylate cyclase activation
H pylori vs autoimmune gastritis
H pylori: antrum, gastric ulcers, causes MALT lymphoma (but u still have some parietal cells to make instrinsic factor so u don't get pernicious anemia); Autoimmune gastritis: corpus, increased gastrin, destroys ALL the parietal cells so you get pernicious anemia, and at risk for adenocarcinoma.
most common bacterial cause of pneumonia in COPD pts
H. influenza (leading viral cause is rhinovirus)
von hippel lindau disease is
HARP (hemangioblastomas, angiomatosis, renal cell carcinomas, pheochromocytomas
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy - maneuvers
HCM involves interventricular septal hypertrophy that obstructs left ventricular (LV) outlfow and creates a systolic murmur that decreases in intensity with maneuvers that increase LV blood volume (i.e. hand grip, passive leg elevation). HCM is characterized by increased LV muscle mass with a small LV cavity, preserved ejection fraction, and impaired LV relaxation leading to diastolic dysfunction.
staining shows: 185 kD glycoprotein that spans the cell membrane and has tyrosine kinase activity in the intracellular domain.
HER2 oncogene encodes for a transmembrane glycoprotein with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity and is a member of the family of epidermal growth factor receptors. Overexpression is poor prognosis and increased disease recurrence.
most common cause of febrile seizures in infants
HHV 6 (roseola infantum)
baby has oral thrush, interstitial pneumonia and severe lymphopenia during first year of life. Mom had
HIV (vertical transmission of HIV-1). This could have been prevented by the mom taking antiretroviral therapy (ART) meds during the pregnancy.
Abacavir
HIV NRTI (nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhbitor), strongly assoc with the HLA B 51:01 allele causing a type 4 hypersensitivity reaction.
most oropharyngeal carcinomas (tonsil, base of tongue) are caused by
HPV infection; HPV 16 and 18 are the ones that cause cancer. They overexpress the tumor suppressor gene p16.
koilocyte
HPV, "raisonoid" appearance, immature squamous cell. HPV: 1-4 = skin warts (verruca vulgaris); 6,11 = genital warts (condylomata acuminata) ; 16,18 = cervical, vaginal, vulvar & anal neoplasia. HPV is double stranded non-enveloped DNA virus. jHPV can cause intraepithelial neoplasia. koilocytes have dense, irregularyl staining cytoplasm and perinuclear halo like clearing.
pleomorphic gram negative coccobacilli = _ on which agar?
Haemophilus influenzae on chocolate agar
coarse facial features, autosomal recessive disease that affects protein tagging in the golgi complex. excess lysosomal enzyme secretion (which can be detected by blood tests) and the presence of prominent inclusion bodies and vacuoles in mesenchymal cells (i.e. fibroblasts) on EM. They also have elevated serum hydrolase.
I cell disease
when patient asks you to pray for them
I will keep you in my thoughts during your procedure
if friend asks you for prescription
I would like to help, but I am uncomfortable prescribing for someone I am not treating
I cell disease
I-cell disease (inclusion cell disease/mucolipidosis type II)—inherited lysosomal storage disorder; defect in N-acetylglucosaminyl-1-phosphotransferase → failure of the Golgi to phosphorylate mannose residues (forming mannose-6-phosphate) on glycoproteins → proteins are secreted extracellularly rather than delivered to lysosomes. Results in coarse facial features, gingival hyperplasia, clouded corneas, restricted joint movements, claw hand deformities, kyphoscoliosis, and high plasma levels of lysosomal enzymes. Often fatal in childhood.
Hot T-bone stEAK
IL 1 hot, IL 2 T cells, IL3 bone marrow, IL4 IgE, IL5 IgA, IL6 aKute phase proteins
pro inflammatory cytokines:
IL 1, IL 6, TNF alpha ; these stimulate the liver to release acute phase reactants (CRP and fibrinogen).
anti-inflammatory cytokines
IL 10, 4, and TGF beta
inflammatory cytokines
IL 17, 2 and IFN gamma and TNF alpha
which interleukin facilitates isotype switching
IL 4
in asthma, which interluekin is responsible for activating B cells to class swithc to IgE production which leads to mast cell priming?
IL 4 and IL 13
cyclosporin, tacrolimus (FK506), sirolimus (rapamycin) and basiliximab all target
IL-2 (inhibition)
decreased activity of n acetyltrasnferase results in diminished ability to metab which drugs
INH and sulfonamides
initial tx for status epilepticus
IV lorazepam and phenytoin
what type of immunoglobulin is found in breast milk
IgA (peyer patches also have IgA - they are lymphoid tissue found in the lamina propria and the submucosa of the small intestine. they play a role in GI immunity, as stimulated B cells leave them and diff into IgA secreting plasma cells.)
celiac disease is assoc with deficiency of
IgA deficiency (increased infections and anaphylaxis)
henoch schonlein purpura
IgA mediated type 3 hypersensitivity reaction with IgA and C3 deposition, in children that follows an upper respiratory infection. Joint pain, leukocytoclastic (inflammation of small vessels), abdominal pain, hematuria and LE purpura
transpeptidase is
a penicillin binding protein
"I Love Vermont MAPLE SYRUP from maple trees with BRANCHES"
Isoleucine, Leucine and Valine are branched chain amino acids that are present in the blood of maple syrup urine disease infants bc they cant break them down. sx: metabolic acidosis, intellectual disability, physical retardation, feeding difficulty, and urine with sweet odor, seizures, coma, death. tx: eliminate those AA's from diet.
i love vermont maple syrup from maple trees with Branches.
Isoleucine, Leucine, Valine, Maple syrup urine disease, Branched chain amino acids buildup
ETEC has
LT (heat labile) enterotoxin which is a cholera-like enterotoxin (eL agua de San Gabriel - labile is cAMP and stabile is cGMP)
S4 sound
LVH bc decreased left ventricular compliance and assoc w restrictive cardiomyopathy and LVH
coarctation of the aorta leads to what on ECG
Left axis deviation bc it creates increased LV overload that causes LV hypertrophy which causes the left axis deviation
Leukotriene B4
Leukotriene B4 is a potent chemotactic molecule for neutrophils. Selective loss of this would have no effect on platelets, mast cells, or endothelium - these are more responsive to changes in TXA2, complement/arachidonic acid, and PGI2, respectively.
if the upper limbs are affected more than the lower limbs =
MCA occlusion instead of the ACA (bc ACA affects the lower limbs more)
microcytosis/ hypochromia
MCV <80
edrophonium: if admin elicits improvement, means...; if it doesn't improve...
MG patient doesn't have enough so increase the pyridostigmine dosage; if it doesn't improve, it is cholinergic crisis (too much Ach), so temporarily discontinue their AChE inhibitors
structure of MHC class 1 vs 2
MHC class 1: has a heavy chain and a beta 2 microglobulin; MHC class 2: alpha and beta polypeptide chains
phenelzine
MOA inhibitor
NAVEL and SHAVE are mnemonics for the femoral triangle and the femoral sheath respectivily
NAVEL: nerve, artery, vein, empty space containing Lymphatics SHAVE: SHeath contains Artery, Vein and Empty space.
classes of antiarrhythmics
No Bad boy Keeps Clean (Sodium - 1) (Beta blockers - 2) (Potassium - 3) (Calcium - 4)
PAH and inulin
PAH = renal plasma flow (RPF); Inulin = GFR (bc inulin is neither reabsorbed or secreted)
periodic acid schiff stain
PASs the sugar (stains glycogen). Used to diag tropheryma whippelii (Whipple disease - gram pos org, cardiac, arthralgias, neurologic sx)
GTP is used by PEP carboxykinase to make
PEP (phosphoenolpyruvate); GTP is synthesized by succinyl-CoA synthetase during the conversion of succinyl-CoA to succinate in the citric acid cycle. During gluconeogenesis, PEP carboxykinase uses GTP to synthesize PEP from oxaloacetate.
IP3 DAG come after the ligand binds to G protein coupled receptor that activates what
PLC (phospholipase C)
if prevalence increases/decreases, the
PPV increases or the NPV decreases
IgA nephropathy vs PSGN
PSGN is 2-4 weeks after GBS infection (pyogenes); IgA nephropathy is concurrently with the infection or right after
halothane can cause fulminant hepatotoxicity and is used a lot in other countries for surgery. To distinguish this from acute viral hepatitis, check
PT time bc the liver makes clotting factors and 7 is the shortest half life.
PSaMMoma bodies
Papillary carcinoma of thyroid, Serous papillary cystadenocarcinoma of ovary, Meningioma, malignant Mesothelioma
congenital hypothyroidism (cretinism)
Patient has congenital hypothyroidism (cretinism). Findings: pot belly, pale, puffy-faced, umbilical hernia, macroglossia, hypotonia, poor brain development (MC cause of treatable mental retardation), large anterior fontanelles.
acute interstitial nephritis (P's)
Pee (diuretics), Pain free (NSAIDs), Penicillins and cephalosporins, PPI's, rifamPin (sx: fever, rash, acute renal failure, eosinophilia)
sciatica nerve root
S1 nerve root. Pain in posterior thigh and calf, and lateral foot.
Li fraumeni cancers
SBLA (Sarcoma, Breast, Leukemia, Adrenal gland)
raloxifene
SERM; estrogen agonist at bone (inhibits osteoclasts) and estrogen antagonist at the breast and uterus (reduced risk of breast and uterine cancer) - use for postmenopausal osteoporosis and prevention of breast cancer (like tamoxifen)
tamoxifen
SERM; estrogen antagonist at breast used in tx of estrogen recetpro positive breast cancer. Stimulator at endometrial tissue/ estrogenic effect on the uterus (agonist) and can cause ADR of endometrial hyperplasia and cancer.
cyp450 inhibitors
SICKFACES.COM when I Am drinking grapefruit juice (sodium valproate, isonaizid, cimetidine, ketoconazole, fluconozole, acute alcohol abuse, chloramphenicol, erythromycin/ clarithromycin, sulfonamides, ciprofloxacin, omeprazole, metronidazole, amiodarone, Grapefruit juice)
if pt should be compensating with respiratory and they are not its probably a metabolic acid/base disorder with a
SUPERIMPOSED respiratory acid/ base disorder.
type 3 hypersens reaction
antibdy against soluble antigen (floating in the blood)
what does calcitonin do?
TONES DOWN calcium! By opposing the action of PTH
T/F: wilson disease can present with parkinsonism because of copper damaging the basal ganglia (i.e. tremor, cerebellar ataxia)
TRUE
hCG has a structure similar to
TSH, pts with testicular germ cell tumors or gestational trophoblastic disease may develop very high serum hCG conc which can stim TSH receptors and causes paraneoplastic hyperthyroidism.
Th1 vs Th2 response cells
Th1 (IL2, IFN gamma and IL-12)(CD4 mediated); TH2: IL4, IL5, IL-10)
mesoderm vs endoderm vs ectoderm
The mesoderm, which is the middle layer between the other two, is responsible for the development of muscle, bone, and connective tissue (as well as the genitourinary tract). Therefore, any genes or processes involved with limb development will ultimately be controlled by the mesoderm. The ectoderm is responsible for the development of the outer portion of our bodies, including skin and sweat glands, and is further delineated into three portions: surface ectoderm, neural crest, and neuroectoderm.Surface ectoderm eventually becomes the epidermis and the anterior pituitary. Neural crest cells develop into melanocytes, the peripheral nervous system (dorsal root ganglia, etc.) and Schwann cells, among other structures. The neuroectoderm develops into the central nervous system, encompassing the brain, spinal cord, and retina. The endoderm is the embryologic derivative that forms the gut tube epithelium from the esophagus all the way to anal canal above the pectinate line. Other important organs derived from endoderm include the lungs, liver, gallbladder, and pancreas.
cox-2 inhibitors selectivelty decrease PGI2 levels leaving prothrombotic action of
TxA2 unopposed
hyperactive deep tendon reflexes is a
UMN lesion sign
jaw deviates to the side of the lesion of this nerve
V3 (mandibular branch of trigeminal)
key growth factors in tumor angiogenesis
VEGF and fibroblast growth factor. IL 1 and IFN gamma upreg VEGF
pulmonary embolism results in
VQ mismatch which causes hypoxemia and respiratory alkalosis (hypocapnia) due to hyperventilation. (serum bicarb will be normal)
tetralogy of Fallot
VSD, PS (pulmonary stenosis), OA (overriding aorta) and RVH (right ventricular hypertrophy)
marker for mesenchymal tissue (i.e. sarcomas)
Vimentin
cofactor (vitamin) necessary for conversion of glutamate to aspartate
Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine)
Vmax vs Km
Vmax: max enzymatic rate; Km: affinity for substrate (low Km means high affinity bc Km is an INVERSE measure of affinity) hexokinase has higher Km for glucose than glucokinase but a lower Vmax.
fall on outstretched hand
can cause dislocation of the lunate bone
rett syndrome inheritance pattern
X linked dominant (only females bc males die in utero)(neurodegen, hand wringing)
inheritance for G6PD deficicency
X linked recessive
lesch-Nyhan syndrome
X linked recessive; intellectual disability, self-mutilation, gout, disordered movement. lack of HGPRT (purine salvage pathway). results in accumulation of uric acid and poor utiliztion of folate and/or vit B12 which leads to megaloblastic anemia (hypersegmented neutrophils)
another name for acid fast stain
Ziehl Neelson
relative risk formula
[a/(a+b)]/[c/(c+d)]
pleural effusion
a collection of fluid between the visceral pleura that lines the lungs and the parietal pleura that lines the thoracic cavity. The fluid acts to insulate vibrations and sounds that originate in the airways of the lung; therefore, tactile fremitus and breath sounds are decreased over a pleural effusion. Dullness to percussion is also present
ehlers danlos syndrome
a disorder of collagen synthesis, leading to hyperextensible skin, hypermobile joints, and increased bleeding. Vascular EDS is a less common but more severe form of EDS that causes milder skin and joint manifestations and is associated with vascular (aneurysmal) and organ rupture. It is specifically caused by defective type 3 collagen.
nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE)(marantic endocarditis)
a form of noninfectious endocarditis characterized by valvular deposition of sterile platelet-rich thrombi. It likely results from valvular damage due to inflammatory cytokines in the setting of an underlying hypercoagulable state, and it is most commonly seen with advanced malignancy (especially mucinous adenocarcinoma) or systemic lupus erythematosus.
gallstone ileus causes air in the biliary tree because
a gallstone can enter the intestinal tract via a cholecystenteric fistula; this will reach the ileocecal valve and block the intestines, causing air to build up and enter the fistula which will push air into the biliary tree. Pts will present with sx of small bowel obstruction, and abdominal x ray shows gas within the gallbladder and biliary tree (pneumobilia). sx: distended, tympanic abdomen with high-pitched bowel sounds. the gallstone is lodged in the ileum.
tay sachs disease
a gang of 6 small jews will Sach you. GM2 ganglioside, hexosaminidase A (6), small = NO hepatomegaly
Meckel diverticulum and persistent vitelline duct
a meckel diverticulum presents with bloody bowel movements, usually in an otherwise healthy child, and is the result of a persistent omphalomesenteric (vitelline) duct. rule of 2's for meckel's diverticulum: 2 inches long, 2 feet from ileocecal valve, 2 types of ectopic tissue (most common gastric, also pancreatic), prepresenting bfore 2 years of age, 2 times more likely in males and present in 2% of the population.
in constrictive pericarditis, you have restricted ventricular filling, leading to low output and elevated JVP, pericardial knock, pulsus paradoxus, and
a paradoxical rise in JVP with inspiration (kussmaul sign)
precision vs accuracy
a precise tool is one that consistently provides similar or the same value when measuring a fixed quantity. An accurate tool is one that provides a measurement identical or similar to the actual value (as reflected in a gold standard measurement).
procalcitonin
a precursor of calcitonin; its an acute phase reactant that's both positive and negative. Positive bc its levels increase in bacterial toxins and fall with viral infections.
when a medical error occurs,
a root cause analysis should be performed to identify the causes of the medical error. A root cause analysis used medical records and participant interviews to identify the underlying problems that led to the medical error.
phenylephrine
a selective alpha 1 adrenergic reeptor agpnist that causes marked arterial vasoconstriction when administered IV. The result is an increase in systemic vascular resistance and blood pressure. The induced blood pressure increase elicits a baroreceptor mediated increase in vagal tone, which results in decreased stroke volume and a slowed heart rate. The pulse pressure defined as systolic pressure minus the diastolic, is decreased by phenyephrine bc of the reglex decrease in stroke volume and the increased afterload.
swiss cheese model
a single sharp end error is rarely enough to cause harm. Instead, such errors must penetrate through multiple incomplete layers of protection to cause a devastating result. This is best explained by the swiss cheese model (i.e. creating overlapping layers of protection).
conservative mutation
a type of missense mutation that still preserves the protein's function
e coli is indole positive
able to convert tryptophan to indole
cretinism
abnormal fetal brain devel bc of lack of thyroid hormone from mom (Leads to Cretinism. Findings in infant are the 6'P (Pot belly, Pale, Puffy face, Protruding umbilicus, Protuberant tongue, and Poor Brain development.)
aneuploidy
abnormal number of chromosomes as result of chromosomal nondisjunction during mitosis or meiosis
baby born while mom taking anti hypertensives, has oliguria, why?
abnormal renal development bc of ACE inhibitors or ARBs; bc Ang II is required for normal renal development.
pt with liver disease, neuro sx (gait problems, dysarthria, depression, personality changes) will have what other abnormality
abnormal slit lamp exam ( kayser flescher rings) - wilson disease
fibromuscular dysplasia
abnormal tissue growth within arterial walls, resulting in stenotic and tortuous arteries that can cause tissue ischemia and are prone to aneurysm formation. Path typically shows alternating fibromuscular webs and aneurysmal dilation with absent internal elastic lamina (string of beads appearance). Renovascular hypertension occurs due to renal artery stenosis and activation of the RAAS system
pure red cell aplasia
absence of erythroid precursors but preserved myeloid and megakaryocytic elements; marrow failure that has severe hypoplasia of marrow erythroid elements in the setting of normal granulopoeisis and thrombopoesis. Pure red cell aplasia is assoc with thymoma, lymphocytic leukemias, and parvovirus B19 infection.
vitiligo is
absence of melanocytes in the skin (loss of epidermal melanocytes)
side effect of 100% O2 tx for carbon monoxide poisoning
absorptive atelectasis
postoperative hypocalcemia
accidental removal of the parathyroid glands in surgery (so there is calcium excretion in the urine)
fasting pt, maintenance of the pt's blood glucose levels is facillitated by hepatic conversion of pyruvate into glucose. Which substance stimulates the first enzyme in this process
acetyl CoA stimulates pyruvate carboxylase; then PEP carboxylase is used to get pyruvate to PEP.
formation of a atherosclerotic plaque: where do the growth factors come from
activated macrophages, platelets and endothelial cells release growth factors (i.e. platelet derived growth factor) that stimulate recruitment of smooth muscle cells from the arterial wall media and their subsequent proliferation in the intima.
c-myc
activates transcription, overexpressed in burkitt lymphoma (EBV)
KRAS and EGFR
activating mutations of the KRAS gene lead to constitutive activation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway, promoting increased cell proliferation and growth. Tumors harboring these mutations are resistant to treatment with anti-EGFR drugs (cetuximab, panitumumab).
engorged pulmonary capillaries and intraavleolar acellular pink material that is more prominent at the bases
acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema results from increased pulmonary venous pressure from left sided heart failure. (maybe dilated cardiomyopathy). The alveolar capillaries become engorged with blood and there is a transudation of fluid plasma across the alveolar-capillary membrane, appearing as pink, acellular material within the alveoli.
pt with 4F's (i.e. fertile, fat, female, forty) with acute RUQ pain and elevated LFTs is probably
acute cholecystitis due to obstruction of hte biliary duct system at the level of the cystic duct. this causes wall thickening of the gallbladder (the thickening is a sign of inflammation)
over time ppl with hep B acute infection will produce antibodies to the HBeAG antigen, if they don't and the HBeAG persists, then they have an
acute infection that progressed to a highly infectious chronic hepatitis B
acute acalculous cholecystitis
acute inflammation of the gallbladder in the absence of gallstones. Occurs in critically ill patietns (sepsis, severe burns, trauma, immunosuppression) due to gallbladder stasis and ischemia. Sx: fever, RUQ pain and leukocytosis
acute intermittent porphyria
acute intermittent porphyria attacks are due to the accumulation of aminolevulinate (ALA) and porphobilinogen (PBG), resulting from inhereited PBG deaminase deficiency combined with ALA synthase induction (typically due to certain medications, alcohol use or a low-calorie diet). tx: Management with glucose or hemin/heme inhibits ALA synthase activity. reddish urine that darkens on exposure to light and air
elevated Cr with urinary EBC casts and eosinophilia
acute interstitial nephritis
penicillin allergy causes
acute interstitial nephritis. (also: rash, anaphylaxis, hemolytic anemia)
thrombocytopenia, anemia, leukocytosis, DIC =
acute myelogenous leukemia (AMPL - M3) t(15;17)
sudden cardiac death in otherwise healthy person
acute myocarditis from viral infection (coxsackie, adenvirus, influenza)
fat necrosis
acute pancreatitis, trauma (subcutaneous adipose tissue)
pancreatitis with subsequent respiratory failure is
acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) from pancreas releasing large amounts of inflammatory cytokines and enzymes into circulation which leads to neutrophils in the pulmonary interstitium. During the initial phase, fibrin deposition causes the alveoli to become lined with waxy hyaline membranes.
acute stress disorder vs PTSD
acute stress disorder is more than 3 days but <1 month; PTSD is >1 month of sx.
epididymitis
acute testicular pain (posterior testicular tenderness), tenderness and pyuria. Caused by retrograde passage of prganisms from the urethra into the ejaculatory duct and vas deferens. Age determines: <35 = STI (gonorrhea, chlamuydia), >35 = gram negative bacteria from bladder outlet obstruction.
hemorrhage can lead to renal ischemia which causes
acute tubular necrosis
what type of kidney injury happens in rhabdomyolysis?
acute tubular necrosis (so you see brown, granular muddy casts)
the PCT and the thick ascending limb of the loop of henle are most commonly involved in
acute tubular necrosis bc of their high metabolic demand
ethylene glycol ingestion causes
acute tubular necrosis with vacuolar degeneration and ballooning of proximal tubular cells; causes calcium oxalate crystals to form in urine
jaundice, RUQ pain, nausea, elevated AST and ALT (ALT>AST) and total bilirubin
acute viral hepatitis. (ALT>AST)
acute vs chronic lung transplant rejection
acute: affects small blood vessels; chronic: affects small airways
drugs that can cause a crystal induced acute kidney injury
acyclovir, protease inhibitors, methotrexate, sulfonamides
adaptive vs innate immunity
adaptive: CD8 and CD4 T cells, & CD19 (B cells); Innate: NK cells (CD56)
kehr sign
adbominal process irritating phrenic nerve around diaphragm, refers pain to C3-C5 shoulder region (Kehr sign)
how do you make thyroid hormone
add tyrosine to iodine = monoiodotyrosine. need phenylalanine to make tyrosine; therefore a deficiency of phenylalanine will cause hypothyroidism
carboxylase
adds a carboxyl group to a substance
GERD, obesity, and tobacco use (chewing) are risk factors for what type of cancer
adenocarcinoma
barretts esophagus - which cancer
adenocarcinoma
villous adenoma
adenomatous polyps are either tubular, villous or tubulovillous, depending on their histologic appearance. Villous adenomas tend to be larger, sessile, and more severely dysplastic than tubular adenomas. Villous adenomas can cause a secretory diarrhea from increased mucin production; patients may develop hypoproteinemia and hypokalemia.
acyclovir nephrotoxicity
adequate hydration prevents renal side effects (i.e. crystalline nephropathy)
a normal bleeding time indicates
adequate platelet hemostatic function
dysgerminoma
adolescents, increased beta hCG, increased LDH, histo: fried egg cells
PSGN - worse in adult or kids
adults have worse long term recovery
chronic autoimmune gastritis
affects the fundus and body of the stomahc and is mediated by CD45 T cells reactive against gastric parietal cell components. Since these cells release intrinsic factor, vit B12 deficiency (pernicious anemia) often occurs.
prostaglandins constrict the
afferent arteriole
tricuspid regurg leads to
afterload decrease, preload increase, ejection fraction increase
IgA nephopathy
aka berger disease; glomerulonephritis, shortly after or concurrently with an upper respiratory tract infection. pts present with hematuria, RBC casts in the urine and mild proteinuria. IgA immune complex deposits are found in the mesangium on immunoflourescence.
aldosterone and spironolactone
aldosterone is a component of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system that acts on the principal and intercalated cells of the renal collecting tubules to cause resorption of sodium and water and loss of potassium and hydrogen ions. Aldosterone receptor antagonists (i.e. spironolactone, eplerenone) inhibit these effects.
conn syndrome
aldosterone producing adenoma; primary hyperaldosteronism. The hypertension, hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis cause paresthesias and muscle weakness. Tx: K+ sparing diuretic (eplerenone, spironolactone); could also be due to bilateral nodular hyperplasia in the zona glomerulosa.
someone on prednisone for a long time will have what levels of CRH ACTH and cortisol
all low/ decreased (most common cause of adrenal insufficiency - steroid suppression) (in these pts, adrenal crisis can be precipitated by stressful situations (infections, surgery) if the glucocorticoids arent increased appropriately.
umbilical arteries and vein are derived from the
allantois
asthma, sinusitis, eosinophilia
allergic (eosinophilic) granulomatosis and angiitis is a vasculitis with pulmonary involvement. It is a small-vessel vasculitis associated with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA).
to decrease pt's risk for kidney failure when undergoing chemotherapy, which drug do you give them?
allopurinol (it inhibits xanthine oxidase and is used to prevent tumor lysis associated urate nephropathy)
kid with chemotherapy has high uric acid levels, give him
allopurinol bc tumor lysis syndrome makes high uric acid levels and allopurinal prevents formation of uric acid
coronary autoregulation
allows coronary blood flow to be driven primarily by myocardial oxygen demand in spite of blood pressure. It is done thru alterations in vascular resistance via release of adenosine and nitric oxide in response to myocardial hypoxia.
marker to watch for recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (and to a lesser extent chronic hepatitis)
alpha fetoprotein levels will be increased
when a patient asks physician to date
always decline and say if would be unethical; only former patients are allowed to date physicians. It would be unethical to end the physican patient relationship just so they can date.
amniotic fluid embolism
amniotic fluid enters the maternal circulation. Causes hypoxia, shock, and DIC.
trophozoites in CSF =
amoebic encephalitis (naegleria fowleri)
tx for cryptococcus
amphotericin B first (frogs painted on the wall of the crypt) THEN long term fluconazole maintenance therapy
tx for aspiration pneumonia
ampicillin/sulbactam or amoxicillin/clavulinic acid (most aspiration pneumonia is caused by mixed anaerobic and facultatively anaerobic organisms)
kidney biopsy of pt with multiple myeloma shows
amyloidosis (fibrillary deposits in the mesangium and subendothelium that stain positive with Congo red )
calcineurin
an essential protein in the activation of interleukin 2, which promotes growth and differentiation of T cells. Immunosuppressants such as cyclosporin and tacrolimus work by inhibiting calcineurin activation.
estrogen effect on thyroid hormone production
an increase in estrogen activity, as seen in pregnancy or postemnopausal estrogen replacement therapy, increases the level of thyroxine-binding globulin. This leads to an increase in total thyroid hormone levels, but feedback control maintains normal levels of free (biologically active) thyroid hormone.
mannitol
an osmotic diuretic that works by increasing plasma or tubular fluid osmolality. Increased plasma and fluid osmolality causes extraction of water from the interstitial space into the vascular space or tubular lumen with subsequent diuresis. In the brain, water redistribution from the tissues into the plasma helps reduce edema and intracranial pressure in the setting of cerebral edema. One of the more severe toxicities of aggressive osmotic diuretics is pulmonary edema.
types of hypersensitivity reactions - ABCD
anaphylactic and atopic (type 1); antiBody-mediated (type 2); immune complex (type 3); Delayed (cell mediated, type 4); types 1,2,3 are antibody mediated.
what is almost always necessary for the development of acute pyelonephritis?
anatomic or functional vesicoureteral reflux
post MI: 1-3 days
coag necrosis (loss of nuclei) and prominent neutrophiic infiltrate
bleomycin
antineoplastic agent that binds to iron and oxygen molecules to create free radicals that cause DNA strand breaks. ADR: lung toxicity (pulmonary fibrosis). Patients develop dyspnea and nonproductive cough, and pulmonary function testing shows a restrictive pattern with reduced diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO).
female pt on antipsychotics gets amenorrhea
antipsychotics block the release of dopamine which means that prolactin is disinhibited and they get hyperprolactinemia and prolactin inhibits the release of GnRH.
which adverse effect persists with levodopa carbidopa therapy of parkinsons
anxiety and agitation
CT scan of thorax shows line in the middle of the aorta ("septum")
aortic dissection from hypertension (this is the tunica inteima of the aorta). HTN is the most important risk factor of aortic dissection.
bicupsid valve leads to
aortic stenosis in 50's
calcific aortic valve disease
aortic stenosis most commonly results from age related calcific aortic valve disease. The early pathogenesis of CAVD closely mimics that of arterial atherosclerosis. In the later stages, fibroblasts differentiate into osteoblast like cells and deposit bone matrix, leading to progressive valvular calfication and stenosis.
aplastic crisis vs aplastic anemia (pancytopenia)
aplastic crisis: just low RBC precursors (parvovirus in sickle cell disease); aplastic anemia (pancytopenia): platelets, RBC precursors, and WBC's are low
apocrine vs eccrine
apocrine = sweat gland, apoptosis where they release some of their cytoplasm & its responsible for the body odor/ smell of sweat; eccrine: sweat gland but does not release its cytoplasm
DNA fragmentation is
apoptosis
NSAIDs block the prostaglandin synthesis which increases
arachadonic acid and leukotrienes (other side of the chart)
positive amino acids
arginine and lysine (in histones), and histidine
neuroblastoma
arises from neural crest cells of the adrenal medulla and presents with abdominal mass and elevated catecholamine breakdown products. Also sx include opsoclonus (eyes spazzing) and myoclonus which is paraneoplastic syndrome assoc with neuroblastoma
if mom experiences virilization during the pregnancy and the baby comes out with 46,XX but ambiguous genitalia and increased testosterone and androstenedione levels then the baby has a deficiency of
aromatase enzyme (i.e. aromatase deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder) to convert testosterone to estradiol
most likely mechanism of death after person has had an MI
arrhythmia
dimercaprol
arsenic poisoning antidote
bruit over renal arteries
arterial narrowing (stenosis, atherosclerosis in the renal artery)
testicular torsion: vascular compromise: the gonodal arteries come from where? Vs the gonadal veins come from where?
arteries from aorta; LEFT vein from renal vein (right from IVC)
aspergillus fumigatus and TB
aspergillus can be an opportunistic infection in immunosuppressed (invasive pulmonary aspergillosis), can be colonizing (aspergilloma) when it forms a fungus ball within preexisitng lung cavity. Can cause lung hypersensitivity reaction in allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis in ppl with asthma
acute angle branching with septations
aspergillus fumigatus
which one irreversibly binds COX 1 and COX 2
aspirin (NSAIDs are reversible)
membranous nephropathy
assoc with IgG4 antibodies to the phospholipase A2 receptor, which might play a role in the development of the disease. Antibody titers are useful for diagnosis and correlate with disease activity. Also: oval fat bodies on UA, weight gain, edema, proteinuria
clonidine
assoc with drowsiness, lethargy, sedation, fatigue, depressed mood, rebound hypertension, hypotension, headache, and constipation. only prescribed to pts who cant use other meds or who have persistant HTN despite taking other first line meds
hepatic angiocarcinoma
assoc with exposure to carcinogens such as arsenic, thorotrast and polyvinyl chloride. Tumor cells express CD31, an endothelial cell marker part of the PECAM1 (platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule) family of immunoglobulin proteins that are on surfaces of endothelial cells and function in leukocyte migration thru the endothelium.
xanthomas
assoc with hyperlipidemia, or lymphoproliferative malignancies. Lipid laden histiocytes in the dermis. 5 categories: eruptive (papules appear abruptly when plasma TG's and lipids increase); tuberous and tendinous (latter often present on achilles tendons and the extensor tendons of the fingers); plane (linear lesions in skin folds assoc with primary biliary cirrhosis); xanthelasma (soft eyelid or periorbital plaques with no assoc lipid abnorm in 50% of ppl). they have foamy cytoplasm.
schizophrenia moa
assoc with increased dopamine levels; it has been proposed that dysfuinction of the mesolimbic pathway is related to the positive sx (hallucinations, delusions, racing thoughts), whereas dysfunction of the mesocortical pathway is related t the negative sx (apathy, lack of emotion, poor social functioning)
primary biliary cirrhosis
assoc with sjogrens syndrome; severe pruritis (especially at night), elev alkaline phosphatase.
benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)
assoc with stromal and glandular growth in the periurethral and transitional zone of the prostate. The hyperplastic cells are supported by the formation of new blood vessels, which are friable and prone to bleeding. Therefore, BPH is often assoc with microscopic or gross hematuria.
intermittent respiratory sx in a pt with normal CXR, sputum eosinophils, and reduced FEV1 suggest
asthma
most common cause of pulsus paradoxus when its not constrictive pericarditis
asthma and COPD.
TGFA
astrocytoma, hepatocellular carcinoma; protooncogene
SIS
astrocytoma, osteosarcoma; protooncogene
group B strep prevention intrapartum
at 35 weeks gestation, give penicillin or ampicillin
livedo reticularis
atheroembolic disease
needle shaped cholesterol clefts in arterial lumen of kidney (i.e. cholesterol clefts in the arterial lumen)
atheroembolic disease (after surgery atheromas are disrupted/ vascular procedure due to mechanical dislodgement of atherosclerotic plaque and go to kidney - causes acute kidney injury). Other commonly involved organs are: skin (blue toe syndrome, livedo reticularis), GI tract (bleeding, infarction), and CNS (stroke, amaurosis fugax - i.e. a painless, temporary loss of vision)
lupus on renal and CV
atherosclerosis, libman sacks endocarditis (vegetations), renal: prolif GN, thickening of GBM with wire loop structures on light micro
renal infarcts can come from
atrial fibrillation (sx: flank pain, nausea, hypertension due to renin release from hypoxic tissue)
tx of vitamin B12 deficiency with cyanocobalamin aka B12)
atrophic gastritis can result in profound hypochlorhydria, inadequate intrinsic factor production, vitamin B12 deficiency and elevated methylmalonic acid levels. The reticulocyte count increases dramatically once vitamin B12 replacement therapy is initiated in an individual with perninous anemia. Hemoglobin and erythrocyte count levels rise more gradually and take up to 8 weeks to normalize.
tx for bradycardia from inferior wall MI
atropine; conduction impairment is common with acute inferior wall MI. Sinus bradycardia often occurs due to nodal ischemia and an increase in vagal tone triggered by infarction of myocardial tissue; the enhanced vagal tone can be counteracted by the anticholinergic effects of atropine.
myeloblasts have (acute myelogenous leukemia)
auer rods (intracytoplasmic granules) that stain for peroxidase. They replace marrow cells and cause anemia and neutropenia. (acute myelogenous leukemia)
acute myelogenous leukemia
auer rods, median age 65, blasts, pancytopenia, >20% myeloblasts in the bone marrow,
osler weber rendu syndrome (hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia)
auto dominant, telangiectasias to the skin and mucous membranes (pink spider-like lesions). Rupture can cause epistaxis, GI bleeding and hematuria.
myasthenia gravis moa
autoantibodies against the postsynaptic ACHr's cause fatigable skelatal muscle weakness as Ach stores within the presynaptic nerve terminal become progressively depleted with repetitive stimulation. Women in postpartum period are high risk for MG.
myotonic dystrophy
autosomal dominant disorder; muscle wasting, wide stepping gait, and bilateral cataracts. Caused by a CTG trinucleotide repeat and exhibits anticipation, whereby the number of CTG repeats can increase across generations and cause symptoms at younger ages. CTG = cataracts, toupee (early balding in men), gonadal atrophy
huntington disease
autosomal dominant neurodegen; chorea (involuntary, jerky, fidgety movements) and behavioral abnormalities (aggressiveness, depression). Characteristic neuroimaging = atrophy of the caudate nuclei which results in enlargement of the frontal horns of the lateral ventricles.
hypertension, gross hematuria after trauma, and numerous bilateral renal cysts at a young age is classic for
autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
neurofibromatosis type 1
autosomal dominant; cutenous neurofibromas, cafe-au-lait spots, and lisch nodules (pigmented hamartomas of the iris/eye). NF-1 gene stems from a mutation on chromosome 17 in a tumor suppressor gene(NF1) that normally regulates Ras signaling.
classic galactosemia (inheritance pattern)
autosomal recessive
sickle cell anemia inheritance pattern
autosomal recessive
refsum disease
autosomal recessive disorder of alpha oxidation, phytanic acid not metabolized to pristanic acid. Scaly skin, ataxia, cataracts/ night blindness, shortening of 4th toe, epiphyseal dysplasia. Tx: diet, plasmapheresis. - peroxisomes contain enzymes involved in very long chain fatty acid metabolism. Refsum disease is a peroxisomal disorder that affects myelin sheath formation, leading to neuro deficits.
jervell and lange nielsen syndrome
autosomal recessive disorder; profound bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and congenital long QT syndrome, which predisposes to ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. This condition occurs secondary to mutations in genes that encode voltage-gated potassium channels.
inclusion cell (I cell) disease
autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder. Defect in the phosphorylation of mannose residues on lysosome bound proteins (in the golgi apparatus)
crigler najjar syundrome
autosomal recessive, lack of UGT enzyme; kernicterus.
bloom syndrome
autosomal recessive, mutation in BLM gene encoding helicase (unwinds double helix during DNA replication). Sx: growth retardation, facial anomalies, photosensitive skin rash, immunodeficiency
niemann pick disease
autosomal recessive; ashkenazi kews; sphingomyelinase deficiency (build up of sphingomyelin); hepatosplenomegaly, neurologic regression and a cherry red macular spot in infancy. (Pick your nose with your SPHINGER)
primary ciliary dyskinesia
autosomal recessive; half of pts have situs inversus; mutation to flagella and cilia proteins; sx: chronic sinusitis, bronchiectasis and infertility; if pt has triad (situs inversus, chronic sinusitis and bronchiectasis) they have Kartagener syndrome (therefore things like the dynein arms are likely to be dysfunctional)
chediak higashi syndrome
autosomal recssive disorder of neutrophil phagosome lysosome fusion that results in neurologic abnormalities, partial albinism, and an immunodeficiency caused by defective neutrophil function
avoidant
avoidance due to fears of criticism and rejection
neuronal damage: axonal reaction (regeneration)
axon transection; enlargement of the cell body; eccentrically placed nucleus; enlargement of the nucleolus; dispersion of the Nissl bodies
which vascular beds are the most susceptible to atherosclerotic burden/ plaque formation?
bends and branch points that encourage turbulent flow; i.e. the lower abdominal aorta and the coronary arteries.
struvite sontes: urease producing organisms (proteus, klebsiella)
big staghorn calculi, doesn't cause colic bc cant get to ureter. Kidneys excrete the uric acid so this is where it builds up. Hydrolysis of urea makes alkaline ammonia so the urine is alkaline
if pt is cushing syndrome (fat, striae, hypertension, hyperglycemia), they've prob been on glucocorticoids for a while, which means they will prob have
bilateral cortical atrophy of the adrenal glands
bile acid resins vs ezetimibe
bile acid resins: prevent reabsorption of bile acid resins (forcing
medical tx for cholesterol gallstones
bile acid supplement/ hydrophilic bile acids (ursodeoxycholic acid) improves cholesterol solunbility by reducing the amt of cholesterol secreted intot he bile and increasing biliary bile acid concentration
is the setting of gallstones, which two things are decreased?
bile acids and phosphatidylcholine
deficiency in bilirubin glucuronyl transferase
bilirubin glucuronyl transferase is a hepatic enzyme responsible for the conjugation of bilirubin with glucuronide, improving solubility for biliary excretion. A decrease in glucuronyl transferase results in unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia.
sirolimus
binds to immunophilin FK-506 binding proetin (FKBP) in cytoplasm forming complex that binds and inhbits mTOR. This leads to blockage of interleukin 2 signals and prevents cell cycle progression and lymphocyte progression
cyanide moa of toxicity
binds to the iron within cytochrome oxidase, interfering with the electron transport chain, and inhibiting cellular respiration. Cyanide poisoning is seen in household fires (sx: flushing, headache). A bitter almond like odor on the breath is a unique feature.
RBCs glycolysis sometimes generates no net ATP. This is bc of
bisphosphoglycerate mutase. They do this to make 2,3 BPG which causes RBCs to have less affinity for oxygen, enabling better oxygen delivery to the cells. Using mutase skips an ATP generating step of glycolysis.
dubin johnson syndrome
black liver, benign, defective hepatic excretion of bilirubin glucuronides; direct hyperbilirubinemia and jaundice. Liver appears black bc impaired excretion of epinephrine metabolites which appear as dense pigemnts within lysosomes.
most common cause of acute urinary retention is
bladder outlet obstruction (urethral compression) due to benign prostatic hyperplasia
bleb
blister filled with serous fluid. Can be a cause of spontanous pneumothorax.
four ways to block acid secretion from parietal cells
block H2 receptors (cimetidine), block CCKB receptors/ gastrin (atropine - vagal moa), block M3 receptors (atropine), PPI - blocks proton pump H+/K atpase proton pump (omeprazole); prostaglandins are inhibitory
rifamycins
block the action of the bacterial DNA dependent RNA polymerase, thereby inhibiting transcription. Resistance is acquired by modification of the rifampin binding site on the bacterial DNA dependent RNA polymerase. Common side effects include hepatotoxicity, blood dyscrasias, and harmless red-orange discoloration of body fluids.
ventricular ependymomas can
block the flow of CSF and cause increased ICP (headache, papilledema) due to obstructive (noncommunicating) hydrocephalus
moa of penicillin
blocks cell wall synthesis by inhibition of peptidoglycan cross linking
moa for sumatriptan
blocks postsynaptic serotonin receptors
mechanism of tetrodotoxin:
blocks voltage gated sodium channels in nerves inhibits passive transport of sodium
cause for iron deficient anemia in ilder men or postmenopausal women
blood loss in the GI tract (occult so they cant see it)
CPAP machine: what decreases
blood pressure bc increased thoracic pressure bc of CPAP air pressure compressing ICV which decreased preload which decreases blood pressure
reticulocytes on Wright Giemsa stain appear
bluish, because of retained basophilic, reticular (mesh like) network of residual ribosomal RNA.
ADR of carbamazapine
bone marrow suppression
meconium ileus is a specific finding in newborn for
cystic fibrosis
unfractionated heparin
both unfractionated heparin and LMWH can bind to antithrobin to increase its activity against Factor Xa. Only unfractionated heparin is able to bind to both antithrombin and thrombin to allow antithrombin to inactivate thrombin.
ACEI induced angioedema is mediated by
bradykinin accumulation
hereditary C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency
bradykinin mediated angioedema but presents early
which organs are more likely to suffer from embolic infarctions
brain and kidneys bc they are perfused at a higher rate
sildenafil is similar moa to bnp and anp how?
brain natriuretic peptide causes vasodilation just like sildenafil bc they both use cGMP increases to causes relaxation of vascilar smooth muscle and vasodilation
BRCA1 and 2
breast cancer and ovarian cancer; tumor suppressor gene; they code for DNA repair genes
tx for haloperidol overdose (neuroleptic malignant syndrome)
bromocriptine or dantrolene
ppl with asbestos exposure get what kind of cancer
bronchogenic carcinoma (of the bronchial epithelium) is the MOST COMMON malignancy assoc with asbestos exposure! Smoking and asbestos have a synergistic effect on this. Malignant mesothelioma is a RARE malignancy of the pleura that asbestos is the only known risk factor for.
ispilateral spastic paralysis (corticospinal tract injury), ipsi loss of tactile/vibratory/position sensation (dorsal columns) and contralateral loss of pain and temp (spinothalamic tract) below the level of the injury
brown sequard syndrome from hemisection of the spinal cord
undulating fevers (different at different times of day) and ate fresh cheese & person has a strong moldy odor
brucella melitensis
idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri)
buildup of pressure compresses the optic nerves, causing bilateral optic disc edema (papilledema) (blurred disc margins on fundu). Presents in young obese women with daily headache (which worsens with valsalva), bilaterally symmetric papilledema, and transient visual distrubances.
bullous pemphigoid vs pemphigus vulgaris
bullous is supepidermal (between the dermis and the epidermis); vulgaris is between the LAYERS OF THE EPIDERMIS
tense, subepidermal blisters
bullous pemphigoid; antibodies against hemidesmosomes
c-myc
burkitt lymphoma (starry sky pattern on histo). t(8;14)
an aneurysm of the internal carotid artery can cause visual problems how?
by impinging laterally on the optic chiasm. Ipsilateral nasal hemianopia by damaging the uncrossed optic nerve fibers from the temporal portion of the retina
thymus: you can live without it as an adult because
by the time you hit puberty, your thymus has already made ALL of your t cells and they are long lived
burkitt lymphoma
c-MYC oncogene overexpression (responsible for transcription activation), tumor on jaw (african type),;t(8;14); starry sky appearance; EBV virus associated.
microarray
cDNA library with flourescent tags, flourescence occurs when the mRNA of the sample is bound to one of the cDNA in the chip
over time, granulomas will fibrose, and
calcify.
CREST syndrome
calcinosis, raynauds, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly, telangiectasia; fingertip ulcers, [the esophageal part is due to fibrous replacement of the muscularis in the lower esophagus]
C cells in the thyroid produce what
calcitonin (parafollicular C cells) and they have sheets of cells in an amyloid stroma.
what is elevated in the serum of multiple myeloma pts
calcium bc of the pathologiuc fractures and lytic bone lesions. (hypercalcemia)
which drug to give to subarachnoid hemorrhage patients (after theyre stabilized)
calcium channel blockers bc it will prevent the cerebral vasospasm that usually happens 3-12 days after the subarachnoid hemorrhage
which drug do you avoid in pts with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
calcium channel blockers; nitroglycerin; ACEI's and diuretics
arteriovenous shunts
can be congenital or acquired; acquired forms can result from medical interventions or penetrating injuries. AV shunts increase preload and decrease afterload by routing blood directly from the arterial system to the venous system, bypassing the arterioles. High-volume AV shunts can eventually result in high-ouput cardiac failure.
calcidiol
can be converted to calcitriol but is dependent on parathryoid hormone and so pts with hypoparathryoidism can have inadequate production of this.
tertiary syphilis
can result in thoracic aortic aneurysm. If the aneurysm compresses adjacent structures and dilates the aortic valve ring, a murmur and mediastinal widening might be present. The pathogenesis begins with vasa vasorum (vessels of the vessels) endarteritis and obliteration, resulting in inflammation, ischemia and weakening of the aortic adventitia. Fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption testing is specific for syphilis.
x linked adrenoleukodystrophy
cant transport very long chain fatty acids into peroxisomes
first line for trigeminal neuralgia
carbamazapine
elevated 5-HIAA levels means
carcinoid syndrome typically presents with episodic flushing, secretory diarrhea, and wheezing. It can lead to pathognomonic plaque-like deposits of fibrous tissue on the right sided endocardium, causing tricuspid regurgitation and right sided heart failure. Elevated 24-hour urinary 5-HIAA (hydroxyindoleacetic acid) can confirm the diagnosis.
5 HIAA
carcinoid tumor causing carcinoid syndrome (flushing, diarrhea, wheezing). Increased 5 HIAA in urine bc its breakdown product of 5HT bc carcinoid tumor secretes serotinin. Tx: octreotide
mitral stenosis
cardiac sounds: loud first heart sound, early diastolic opening snap after the second heart sound and a low pitched diastolic rumble best heard at the apex. Opening snap Is caused by the sudden opening of the mitral valve leaglets when the left ventricular pressure falls below the left atrial pressure at the beginning of diastole.
defective fibrillin in marfan syndrome predisposes pts to aortic dissection which leads to
cardiac tamponade which is low voltage QRS complexes with electrical alternans on an ECG (low voltage QRS complexes and oscillating QRS amplitudes)
beta 1 receptors are found in which tissue
cardiac, and renal juxtaglomeruluar cells(increase renin release) (beta 1 are NOT in vascular smooth muscle, only beta 2)
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy on histo
caripmyocyte hypertrophy with myofiber dissarray and increased interstitial fibrosis. The structural dissarray creates a substrate for ventricular arrhythmia.
the most highly oxygenated blood in the fetus is where
carried by the umbilical vein, which empties directly into the inferior vena cava via the ductus venosus.
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
casued by an autosomal dominant mutation in the tumor suppressor gene TP53. Leukemia, sarcomas, and tumors of the breast, brain and adrenal cortex are most common. If u see a lot of different cancers in one family.
burkholderia cepacia
catalase positive, gram negative,
polymyxins
cationic surfactants with detergent like activity against gram-negative organisms. They bind to and cause destruction of cell membranes. Major toxicities include neurotoxicity (numbness of the extremities, confusion, drowsiness, nystagmus, blurred vision), nephrotoxicity, facial flushing and anaphylactoid reactions.
subserosal leimyomas (fibroids)
cause irregular uterine enlargement, resulting in pelvic pressure. Fibroids arising from the posterior subserosal surface of the uterus can cause constipation due to pressure on the colon.
acute intermittent porphyria
caused by a deficiency of porphobilinogen deaminase, which causes accumulation of aminolevulinate and porphobilinogen. acute attacks of AIP (presenting with abdominal pain, red urine, and psych sx) can be precipitated by certain drugs and alcohol.
yellow fever
caused by a flavivirus and is characterized by headache, photophobia, musculoskeletal pain, and elevated transaminases with AST>ALT. Councilman bodies, eosinophilic degeneration and condensed nuclear chromatin, can be seen on liver biopsy.
acute allergic contact dermatitis
caused by a type IV (delayed) hypersenstivitiy reaction to an antigen on the skin surface. Gross findings include erythematous, papulovesicular, weeping lesions. Histo is characterized by spongiosis, an accumulation of edema fluid in the intercellular spaces of the epidermis. With chronic exposure, lesions become less edematous, with thickening of the stratum spinosum and stratum corneum.
hydroceles and indirect inguinal hernias
caused by an incomplete obliteration of the processus vaginalis. The resultant connection between the scrotum and abdominal cavity can allow for fluid leakage (hydrocele) or the passage of abdominal contents (indirect inguinal hernia)
oral thrush
caused by candida albicans infection and usually presents as white, plaque-like oropharyngeal lesions that are easily scraped off with a tongue depressor. Most cases arise in those who have disruptions to normal flora due to antibiotics or impairments in cell-mediated immunity from chemotherapy, inhaled corticosteroids or HIV. Young, otherwise healthy patients with thrush should be tested for HIV, particularly if they have HIV risk factors or other sx of the virus.
coronary steal with adenosine
caused by dilation of coronary arterioles nearby the atherosclerotic coronary vessel, diverting blood away from it (cilostazol can cause this as well)
acute cholecystitis
caused by gallstone obstruction of the cystic duct; test: it does Not show up on radionuclide biliary scan/ cholescintigraphy which means that the cystic duct is blocked.
anterior cord syndrome
caused by occlusion or hypoperfusion of the ventral spinal artery and results in bilateral deficits in pain and temperature sensation, voluntary motor control and autonomic motor control below the lesion. Dorsal columns are spared. can be caused by aortic aneursym repair.
marfan's on histo of aorta
cystic medial necrosis of the aortic root, leading to aortic dissection
tropheryma whippelii (whipple's disease)
caused by the gram positive actinomycete, tropheryma whippelii, Whipple disease is a rare systemic illness that involves the small intestine, joints, and central nervous system. Classic histo is small instestine mucosa containing enlarged, foamy macrophages packed with both rod-shaped bacilli and PAS-positive, diastase-resistant granules.
COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)
causes air trapping and hyperinflation; these patients breathe at higher baseline lung volumes (higher functional residual capacity). The absolute volume of air in the lungs that is not respired (residual volume) increases substantially, as does the fraction of air in the lungs that is not involved in respiration (residual volume/ total lung capacity ratio).
vitamin A deficiency
causes night blindness and hyperkeratosis. Deficiency of this fat-soluble vitamin can develop in patients with biliary disorders, exocrine pancreatic insufficiency or intestinal malabsorption. An example of a biliary disorder: primary biliary cholangitis in which there is a lack of bile to be able to absorb fats and fat soluble vitamins.
left sided heart failure
causes secondary pulmonary hypertension via elevated left sided diastolic filling pressures transmitting backward to the pulmonary veins, resulting in pulmonary venous congestion. Over time, pulmonary arterial remodeling (medial hypertrophy and intimal thickening with fibrosis) can occur, but not to the extent that occurs in (primary) PAH.
thiazide diuretics ADR
causes slight hypercalcemia by increasing the distal tubular reabsorption of calcium. This suppresses PTH.
central vs peripheral tolerance
central: T cells in the thymus will be removed if theyre reactive to self-antigen. peripheral: when a T cell engages an APC and doesnt receive the second of two signals (CD28-B7) then it is made refractory to future stimulation and is anergic.
3 phases of stimulation of acid secretion within the stomach
cephalic, gastric and intestinal. Cephalic: thought, smell, taste of food). Gastric: presence of gastrin stims histamine secretion and acid secretion - triggered by chemical stim of food and distension of the stomach. Intestinal: initiated when protein-containing food enters the duodenum, but this phase plays only a minor role in stimulating gastric acid secretion. intestinal influences mostly down-regulate gastric acid secretion after a meal via peptide YY on enterochromaffin-like cells.
person travels to south america (bolivia for example) and has fever now with swelling of an eye
chagas (trypanosoma cruzii); acute phase: trypomastigotes; from the triatomine bug. Eye swelling is from bug inoculating the conjunctiva while you sleep. Chronic chagas can lead to cardiomyopathy (HF, arrhythmias, ventricular aneurysm, etc).
reassortment
changes in genomic composition that occur when host cells are coinfected with 2 segmented viruses that exchnage whole genome segments. This process can cause sudden alterations in surface antigens of the viral progeny, as observed with the highly mutagenic influenza virus.
diverticulitis
characterized by inflammation of colonic diverticula. Pts have abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and changes in bowel habits. Low grade fever and leukocytosis are common and physical examination may demonstrate a tender mass in the left lower quadrant. risk increases with age (>60 y/o usually)
ppl predisposed to getting giardiasis
children with IgA deficiency, X linked agammaglobulinemia and common variable immune deficiency (major defense against giardia is IgA)
high urinary cystine can cause what
cystine kidney stones (hexagonal)
obesity hypoventilation syndrome
chronic fatigue, dyspnea, difficulty concentrating, and evidence of hypoventilation (partial pressure of carbon dioxide >45 while awake). It is one of the important causes of hypoxemia with a normal alveolar to arterial oxygen gradient.
negative nitroblue tetrazolium dye reduction test
chronic granulomatous disease (X linked) lack of reduced NADPH oxidase activity.
black pigment gall stones are from
chronic hemolysis (sickle cell, spherocytosis) they have unconjugted bilirubin
hypertensive nephrosclerosis
chronic hypertension can result in hypertensive nephrosclerosis, which is characterized by compensatory medial hypertrophy and fibrointimal proliferation; endothelial damage from elevated systemic pressure also leads to hyaline arteriolosclerosis. The narrowed arteriolar lumens cause a progressive decrease in renal blood flow, resulting in flomerular ischemia and fibrosis (glomerulosclerosis).
erythropoietin signal transduction
chronic kidney disease is commonly assoc with normocytic anemia due to reduced production of EPO by the kidneys. EPO signal transduction is primarily mediated by the Janus Kinase 2/ signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK2/STAT) pathway, which promotes erythrocyte precursor survival.
chronic lymphocytic leukemia
chronic lymphoproliferative disorder marked by progressive accumulation of mature B cells. Most patients are asymptomatic for years but eventually develop anemia, thrombocytopenia, and/or neutropenia. Diagnosis is made when complete blood count reveals dramatic leukocytosis, and flow cytometry shows a clonal population of leukocytes with typical B cell markers such as CD19, CD20 and CD23.
postprandial epigastric pain with assoc food aversion/ weight loss in the setting of generalized atherosclerosis
chronic mesenteric ischemia; atherosclerosis of the mesenteric arteries, resulting in diminished blood flow to the intestine after meals. This causes postprandial epigastric pain (intestinal agina) with assoc food aversion/ weight loss. Its pathogenesis is similar to angina pectoris in that both are due to pain from a lack of blood supply.
brown pigmented macrophages i.e. hemosiderin laden macrophages =
chronic passive lung congestion in the setting of heart failure (LV systolic dysfunction). Left sided heart failure leads to chronically elevated pulmonary venous and capillary pressures with resulting pulmonary edema and extravasation or red blood cells into the alveolar parenchyma. iron in these RBCs is stored as hemosiderin appearing as brown pigment on histopath.
ASD can result in
chronic pulmonary hypertension as a result of left to right intracardiac shunting. Eisenmenger syndrome is the late onset reversal of a left to right shunt due to pulmonary vascular sclerosis resulting from chornic pulmonary hypertension. Closure of the ASD surgically may be required to prevent irreversible pulmonary vascular sclerosis and a permanent eisenmenger syndrome
takayasu arteritis
chronic, large artery vasculitis that primarily involves the aorta and its branches. It presents with constitutional (fever, weight loss) and arterior-occlusive (claudication, blood pressure, discrepancies, pulse deficits) findings in patients age <40. Histo shows granulomatous inflammation of the vascular media. the arterial narrowing that it causes can lead to different blood pressures in different parts of the body. this is differnet from giant cell arteritis bc giant cell is >50 y/o and this is younger ppl (<40) and asian females.
if a herpes virus (VZV, etc) does not have a viral kinase then use which drug
cidofovir bc it doesn't need viral kinase, only the cellular kinase which all of them have.
timolol targets
ciliary epithelium; treats open angle glaucoma; if not treated, leads to progressive loss of peripheral vision; works by diminishing the secretion of aqueous humor by the ciliary epithelium.
liver fibrosis occurs when sinusoidal stellate cells are activated by cytokines and persistant activation of stellate cells leads to transformation of the normal extracellular matrix into
cirrhosis (widespread fibrosis and parenchymal nodules).
baby w lethargy, myotonia, vomiting, diarrhea, hepatomegaly, jaundice, and e. coli sepsis.
classic galactosemia (def of galactose 1 phosphate uridyltransferase). swtich to no galactose.
most common renal malignancy
clear cell carcinoma (arises from proximal tubular cells). Rounded or polygonal cells with abundant clear cytoplasm are seen on LM. Clear cells are generally those with a high glycogen or lipid content that dissolves during routine tissue preparation.
if pt has allergy to aspirin and needs it for coronary heart disease, give them
clopidogrel
atropine treats bradycardia but causes
closed angle glaucoma in susceptible individuals
layer of denuded epithelium, fibrin and inflammatory cells overlaying the mucosa in pt's GI with diarrhea sx. What bug
clostridium difficile
common spore forming pathogens
clostridium species and bacillus (i.e. anthracis)
clot in the artery vs clot in the vein
clot in the artery: embolectomy; vein(DVT): anti-coagulants (heparin, warfarin)
tx for treatment resistant schizophrenia
clozapine
corynebacterium diptheriae
clumped, gram positive bacteria with polar granules that stain deeply with aniline dyes .mild tonsilar erythema with exudates. Pathogenicity: impairment of protein synthesis.
neonatal vitamin K deficiency
common; its why we give neonates vitamin K; it can cause intracranial hemorrhage (increased head circumfrence, downward driven eyes); vit K def results in impaired clotting factor carboxylation. Newborns get it bc poor placental transfer of vitamin K and low content in breast milk.
medullary sinuses of the lymphondes
communicate with efferent lymphatics and contain reticular cells and macrophages.
adherins junctions and desmosomes
composed of cadherins and involved in intercellular adhesion. The cytoplasmic anchor of adherens junctions is the actin filament whereas the cytoplascmi anchor of desmosomes is the intermediate filament. Autoantibodies against desmoglein, a cadherin protein for desmosomes, are found in pemphigus vulgaris.
liddle syndrome and tx
constitutive activation of the epithelial sodium channel in the collecting tubules. leads to early hypertension characterized by low levels of renin and angiotensin, excess reabsorption of sodium and loss of reabsorption of potassium. Pts develop hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis. Tx: triamterene or amiloride (diuretic that inhibits ENaC).
NK cells
contain the cell surface marker CD16, which is an Fc receptor that recognizes IgG bound to foreign pathogens. Release of perforin and granzymes on binding to CD16 helps destroy pathogen-infected cells.
hemoglobin S
contains valine in place of glutamic acid at the sixth amino acid position of the beta globin chain. This promotes hydrophobic interaction among Hb molecules and results in HbS polymerization and erythrocyte sickling.
patent ductus arteriosus
continuous machine like murmur, located in the sixth aortic arch, can produce a continuous machine like murmur. Indomethacin is used to close a PDA and prostaglandins are used to keep a PDA open.
left vs right heart dominance (circulation)
coronary dominance is determined by the coronary artery that supplies blood to the posterior descending artery (PDA). Right: PDA comes form right coronary artery; Left: PDA comes from left circumflex artery
adrenal cortex vs medulla
cortex: GFR (salt sugar sex); medulla: catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine -- this is where pheochromocytomas are, these are neurochromaffin cells that are positive for synaptophysin, chromogranin, and neuron specific enolase)
UMN lesions affect any part of the pyramidal motor system, i.e.
corticospinal tracts of the spinal cord, the medulla, pons, and midbrain, the INTERNAL CAPSULE; and the precentral gyrus (primary motor cortex)
moa of zenker diverticulum
cricopharyngeal motor dysfunction; diminished relaxation of cricopharyngeal muscles during swallowing results in increased intraluminal pressure in the oropharynx. This may eventually cause the mucosa to herniate through a zone of muscle weakness in the posterior hypopharynx, forming a zenker (false) diverticulum, which presents in elderly patients with oropharyngeal dysphagia, halitosis, regurgitation and recurrent aspiration.
easy bruising after partial bowel resection bc of Crohns
crohn disease with ileal resection or extensive ileal involvement can cause bile acid malabsorption, which may lead to impaired absorption of fat soluble vitamins (ADEK). Vitamin K deficiency can result in impaired coagulation with easy bruising, large hematoma formation in deep tissues and joints (i.e. hemarthrosis) after minor trauma, and prolonged bleeding after surgery.
cross sectional study vs others
cross sectional is just prevalance of disease at one point in time. Theres no control group.
the only fungus that has a polysaccarhide capsule
cryptococcus
cryptococcus vs west nile virus
cryptococcus is bird droppings in immuno-compromised (AIDS) and west nile is mosquitos from birds.
cryptosporidium vs cryptococcus
cryptosporidium: parasite that is on modified acid fast stain, causes diarrhea, basophilic cysts lining the intestine, happens in immunocompromised; cryptococcus: fungi
protease inhibitors (-navir), are assoc with what ADR
crystal induced nephropathy, whcih presents with weakness, nausea, flank pain, dark urine.
vibrio vulnificus
curved gram negative in salt water, infects wounds, or thru oysters, ppl with liver disease or iron overload are at high risk of severe fulminant infection (sepsis, necrotizing fascitis).
major side effect of nitroprusside tx
cyanide poisoning (sx: bright red venous blood) (tx for the cyanide poisoning: hydroxycobalamin, sodium nitrite or sulfur donors (sodium thiosulfate).
tx for serotonin syndrome
cyproheptadine
common cause of colitis in patients with advanced AIDS
cytomegalovirus; it's the second most common CMV reactivation disease in this population (CMV retinitis is the most common). Patients with CMV colitis often have abdominal pain, fever, diarrhea and weight loss. Colonoscopy usually shows erythema, erosions and ulcerations; colonic biopsy typically reveals large cells with prominent basophilic intranuclear inclusions.
imprinting
cytosine methylation used in imprinting where diff alleles from diff parents are inactivated via methylation so that only one allele is expressed.
common accidental injury during hysterectomy surgery
damage to the ureters(due to its close proximity to the uterine structures)
drugs that cause hemolysis in ppl with G6PD deficiency
dapsone, and pegloticase (converts uric acid into allantoin)
decorticate posturing vs decerebrate
decorticate: hands are at your cor (flexed); decerebrate is worse; damage at the pons or below causes decerebrate because decorticate is above the red nucleus (pons) and decorticate is below the red nucleus
statins (decrease/increase) hepatic cholesterol synthesis
decrease (HMG coa reducatase inhibitors)
thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
decreased ADAMTS13 level. Results from impaired function of the von willebrand factor cleaving protease ADAMTS13, resulting in uncleaved vWF multimers that are signifcantly more prothrombotic and cause diffuse microvascular thrombosis, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, and thrombocytopenia. normal PT/PTT time but increased bleeding time. anemia.
PSGN
decreased C3; most common cause of nephritic syndrome in kids
common side effects of ACE inhibitors besides cough
decreased GFR (leading to increase in Cr), hyperkalemia, angioedema.
cannabis/ marijuana withdrawal
decreased appetite, depressed mood
bernard soulier disease
decreased glycoprotein Ib
left sided heart failure is common from Mi affecting the left ventricle. The other effect of this is
decreased lung compliance bc of accumulation of edema (restricts inspiratory expansion)
glanzmann thrombasthenia
decreased platelet aggregation and decreased coagulation. platelet disorder caused by decreased glycoproteins IIb/IIIa
idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura
decreased platelet count secondary to an autoimmune anti-GpIIb/IIIa antibodies, which lead to peripheral platelet destruction. Although abciximab is derived from an antibody to GpIIb/IIIa, it is composed of Fab fragments, which act as receptor antagonists and do not lead to destruction of platelets.
on off phenomenon of levodopa
decreased therapeutic window for levodopa due to nigrostriatal degeneration which causes unpredictable fluctuations in motor function (i.e. drug response is unpredictable)
valsalva moa
decreases preload which accentuates/increases murmurs like mitral valve prolapse and HCM. Phase 1 increases preload and phase 2 decreases preload. has to do with increase in thoracic pressure as you bear down, cutting off flow of IVC and this increases flow to heart (phase 1) initially, then decreases it (phase 2).
decreasing what would lead to increased ratio of forward flow volume to regurgitant flow volume
decreasing systemic vascular resistance
artery injured by midshaft fracture of the humerus 9inability to extend wrist as result)
deep brachial artery (runs with radial nerve)
VHL disease
defect in VHL gene on chromosome 3 and confers an increased risk for development of hemangioblastomas, renal cysts, renal cell carcinoma, and pheochromocytoma. Hemangioblastomas are highly vascular tumors composed of foamy cells.
lynch syndrome (HNPCC): genetics
defective mismatch repair; autosomal dominant MSH2 and MLH1; leads to occurrence of colonic adenocarcinomas at a young age (age <50) along with a predispostion for extraintestinal malignancies.
defective process in achondroplasia
defective production of hyaline cartilage models (osteoblasts secrete osteoid over this to form bone - this is endochondral ossification)
DiGeorge syndrome
deletion of chromosome 22q11.2; CATCH (cardiac defects (tet of fallot, truncus arteriosus, interupted aortic arch), abnormal facies, Thymic hypoplasia (t cell deficiency), Cleft palate, Hypocalcemia/ hypoparathyroidism (hypocalcemia)
alcohol withdrawal
delirium, anxiety, seizures
isoniazid inhibits B6 leading to B6 deficiency. B6 is a cofactor for
delta aminolevulinate synthase, the enzyme that catalyzes the rate limiting step of heme synthesis. Inhibition of this step results in sideroblastic anemia (excess iron in mitochondria - ringed sideroblasts)
deyelinating neuropathies vs axonal neuropathies
demyelinating neuropathies: caused by damage to the myelin sheath. Loss of insulation results in delayed (or blocked) nerve conduction velocity. Axonal neuropathies: caused by damage to the nerve axon. Loss of axon fibers results in reduced signal amplitude.
dihydropyridines vs nondihydropyridines
dihydropyridines (-dipines): act only at vascular smooth muscle and cause peripheral vasodilation; non-dihydropyridines: act at cardiac muscle (verapamil) and cardiac muscle/ vascular smooth muscle (diltiazem).
leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON)
disease of painless, subacute visual loss due to mutations in mitochondrial DNA, which is transmitted exclusively thru the mother. A strong family hx of adult-onset blindness as well as manifestations of extraocular sx such as movement disorders, cardiac arrhythmias, and multiple sclerosis-like sx should raise suspicion for LHON.
post MI: 3-7 days
disintegration of dead neutrophils and myofibers; macrophage infiltration at border areas
cystic fibrosis does what to pancreatic ducts
distension and obstruction of pancreatic ducts;
left lower quadrant pain
divertiulitis
calculating drug concentration (mg/L)
divide the (initial drug dose (mg)) by the (volume of distribution (L))
E Coli EHEC O157:H7
does NOT produce glucuronidase and does NOT ferment sorbitol on sorbitol-containing MacConkey agar. MOA of toxin: inactivates ribosomal subunits. It's a shiga-like toxin (binds 60S subunit of ribosomes and inhibits translation).
common peroneal nerve
dorsiflexion, numbness of the calf and dorsal foot)
side effect of loop diuretics
dose related hearing loss (gong in sketchy roller coaster)
small low set ears, flat facial profile, upslanting palepbral fissures, protruding tongue and abnormal space between the first and second toes
down syndrome. They are at high risk for acute lymphocytic leukemia and acute myelogenous leukemia
drugs that tx BPH and hypertension
doxazosin, prazosin, and terazosin (alpha 1 blockers
Fas receptor Fas ligand
drives programmed cell death via CD8 T cells mediated in the extrinsic pathway. Cancer cells splice out (alternative splicing) the exon that codes for the transmembrane domain of the Fas receptor.
what do you monitor when a person is on clozapine
drug of choice for treatment resistant schizophrenia; due to potential for agranulocytosis, weekly bloodwork is required to monitor the white blood cell count (absolute neutrophil count) of these patients.
cromolyn and nedocromil
drugs. Mast cell stabilizing agents that inhibit mast cell degranulation (i.e. vesicle release from the mast cell) independent of the triggering stimulus. They are less effective than inhaled glucocorticoids and are considered second line tx for allergic rhinitis and bronchial asthma.
chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis
due to a rare dfecet in T cells that impairs an individuals ability to defend against candida species. Patients with this condition have recurrent oral thrush and vaginal yeast infections.
charcot bouchard aneurysm rupture
due to chronic hypertension and causes hemorrhage in deep brain structures (basal ganglia, cerebellar nuclei). Deep intraparenchymal hemorrhage is most commonly caused by hypertensive vasculopathy of the small penetrating branches of the cerebreal arteries (charcot bouchard aneurysm rupture). This is in contract to rupture of saccular aneurysms, which typically cause subarachnoid hemorrhage. sx of charcot: progressive neuro deficits (vs saccular is sudden severe headache)
abnormal bleeding in patients with uremia due to renal failure
due to qualitative platelet disorder from the uremic toxins impairing platelet aggregation and adhesion resulting in prolonged bleeding time but normal everything else (PT, PTT, platelet count).
secretin
duodenal S cells secrete secretin in response to increasing H+ concetrations. Secretin increases pancreatic bicarbonate secretion. The chloride content of pancreatic secretions decreases in proportion to bicarbonate concentration increases.
downs are at risk for which GI complication
duodenal atresia (double bubble sign)
ulcers refractory to PPIs or ulcers distal to the duodenum/ duodenal bulb
duodenal neoplasm (zollinger-ellison syndrome)
h pyrlori infection, where do you get the ulcers
duodenum
iron is absorbed where
duodenum and proximal jejunum
FSH and estrogen and OCPs
during the follicular phase of the normal menstrual cycle, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) stimulates follicular maturation and the release of estrogen, which at peak concentrations, causes the ovulation-inducing luteinizing hormone (LH) surge. Oral contraceptives contain exogenous estrogen and progesterone that feed back to negatively inhibit endogenous GnRH release, thereby decreasing FSH concentrations. Without FSH, follicular-phase estrogen concentrations do not increase to the level required for the mid cycle LH surge.
common aeroallergens that trigger asthma
dust mites, cockroaches, pet dander, mold and pollen (and exercise and cold air0
plummer vinson syndrome
dysphagia, (esophageal web formation), iron deficiency anemia (koilonychia (spoon shaped nails) and a shiny red tongue. Tx: iron supplementation
bulbar
dysphonia, difficulty chewing
silicosis
dyspnea and productive cough occurring years after inhalational exposure to crystalline silica. Histo: birefringent silicate particles within dense, whorled collagenous nodules surrounded by dust laden macrophages. Radiogrpahy: numerous small rounded nodules predominant in the upper lobes; calcification of the rim of hilar nodes (eggshell calcification) may also be seen.
e. coli vs salmonella
e. coli: no fever, stains green on hektoen agar; salmonella: fever, produces hydrogen sulfide (stains BLACK on hektoen agar)
lyme disease
early disseminated lyme disease can have cardiac involvement (Lyme carditis) that most commonly manifests with varying degrees of AV conduction block. Patients may be asymptomatic, but those with complete AV conduction block are likely to have dyspnea, lightheadedness or syncope.
liver cyst on US, RUQ pain, vomiting, interaction with dogs or sheep, with eosinophilia
echinococcus granulosis (they make tapeworm cysts in liver); tx: albendazole
alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency leads to
emphysema (panacinar) which is obstructive bc it has air trapping (fricken RV needs increased TLC but its hard w COPD), and this means lower FEV/FVC ratio and TLC is increased and DLCO is decreased.
phosphatidylcholine
emulsifies fats; released by the gallbladder
if you see sickle cells on the smear, and its an infection, its
encapsulated organism like strep pneumo
homeobox genes
encode DNA binding transcription factors that play an important role in the segmental organization of the embryo along the cranio-caudal axis.
HIV 2
endemic to west africa; lower viral loads, less risk of transmission, slower progression to AIDS; suspect this when HIV tests are positive on screening but negative on HIV 1 RNA and western blot
pancreas embyro (beta cells as well)
endoderm (like gallbladder, etc)
dyspareunia and abnormal menstrual bleeding and infertility
endometriosis (ectopic endometrium)
pathogenesis of atherosclerosis
endothelial cell injury - from HTN smoking hyperliidemia, and diabetes - exposure of subendothelial collagen - monocyte and lymphocyte adhesion and migration into the intima - promotes platelet adhesion - grwoth factors produced stim medial smooth muscle cell migration into the intima - increased vascular perm allows LDL into intima where its phagocytosed by macrophages and SMCs to make lipid laden foam cells (fatty streak) - fibrous cap with intermixed SMCs (fibrofatty atheroma)
tx for pulmonary artery htn
endothelin antagonists (bosentan, ambrisentan)
amantadine moa
enhances the effect of endogenous dopamine (by increasing its synthesis/ release and inhibiting its uptake) ADR: anticholinergic (dry mouth, unsteady gait, etc), and reddish-blue rash. its a weak NMDA receptor antagonist.
CMV esophageal histo shows
enlarged cells with intranuclear inclusions
life cycle of west nile
enveloped RNA virus that replicates in birds and is passed to mosquitos (Cluex)
CMV
enveloped double stranded linear DNA virus that is latent in mononuclear cells. It is seen histologically as large cells wiht intranuclear inclusions ("owl's eyes") and is a common cause of pneumonia in immunocompromised patients, especially those 1-4 months post-transplant.
what does IL 5 do in asthma
eosinophil recruitment
what type of HSR do eosinophils employ
eosinophils are recruited by the immune system to help fight parasitic infections. Their main function is to destroy parasites via antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (HSR type 2) and the associated release of cytotoxic proteins (i.e. major basic protein).
moa of cord compression from prostate cancer
epidural aggregates of neoplastic cells
gram negative sepsis can cause schistocytes because
excess fibrin strands exert shearing forces on circulating RBCs, resulting in schistocytes. The coagulation cascade is activated by bacterial endotoxins, leading to firbin dposition and consumption of coag factors and platelets with bleeding.
Rickets
excess of unmineralized osteoid matrix and epiphyseal cartilage due to vitamin D deficiency. Clinical manifestations include frontal bossing, craniotabes, costochondral junction deformity ("rachitic rosary") and bowed legs.
keloid
excessive collagen formation during the remodeling phase of wound healing (hypertrophic scar).
tx for chronic kidney disease (old person with long standing diabetes and nephropathy and anemia)
exogenous EPO (which will cause the red blood cells to differentiate and mature...i.e. it will cause an increase in progenitor cell differentiation)
HPV and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN): (squamous abnormality) what do you see on histo
expansion of immature basal cells to the epithelial surface (bc it starts at the basement membrane and grows up to the surface) basement membrane breach signifies invasive disease
which nerve is commonly injured during thyroidectomy
external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve is at risk of injury during thyroidectomy due to its proximity to the superior thyroid artery and vein. This nerve innervates the cricothyroid muscle. Causes a hoarse voice.
cryptocordism is fixed by pulling the testicle thru a physio opening in which structure
external oblique muscle aponeurosis
the presence of \erythroid precursors in organs such as the liver and spleen is indivative of
extramedullary hematopoiesis. This is most frequently caused by severe chronic hemolytic anemias, such as beta-thalassemia.
hyperacusis
facial nerve (stapedius nerve off of facial)
tumor in the parotid gland; what nerve is it going to compress and what will that cause
facial nerve causing facial droop on that side
gap junctions
facilitate communication and coordination between cells and play an important role in labor contractions. Connecvins are proteins that assemble into gap kunctions and their density increases in the uterus before delivery in response to rising estrogen levels.
what type of transport is glucose transport across plasma membrane of adipocytes
facilitated diffusion (carrier mediated transport); (does not require energy but still requires transport protein)
failure o the PT time to correct with vit K supplementation indicates
factor 7 deficiency whch is often due to underlying liver disease.
hirschprung disease
failure of neural crest cells to migrate to the rectum (failure to pass meconium)
congenital diaphragmatic hernia
failure of the pleuroperitoneal canal to close completely, leading to protrusion of the abdominal viscera into the chest. Pulmonary hypoplasia is the most common cause of death in these pts but pulmonary (artery) hypertension may also be seen.
FTT caused by psychosocial
failure to thrive is usually caused by psychosocial stuff when others can be ruled out (malabsorption, etc). infant's growth curve begins to fall, weight is the first to be affected, followed by height and then head circumference.
truncating mutations (nonsense usually) affecting the TTN gene (titin sarcomere protein) are the most common cause of
familial DCM (dilated cardiomyopathy)
bimodal distribution of speed of INH metabolism is bc
fast and slow acetylators
social anxiety disorder
fear of scrutiny in social situations, and can result in marked social-occupational impairment. Preferred tx: SSRI or SNRI; marked anxiety about 1 or more social situations of for >6 months.
drug to decrease serum triglycerides
fenofibrate
ferrous sulfate overdose: effect on bicarb
ferrous sulfate is an acid; binds bicarb and makes it low. Deferoximine is tx
down syndrome
flat facial profile, epicanthal folds, upslanting palpebral fissures, protruding tongue, and small ears. 50% have heart defects (complete AV canal defect - ASD, VSD AND a common AV valve - is the most common cardiac congenital anomaly with downs syndrome)
lactose intolerance
flatulence, crampy abdominal pain and watery diarrhea after dairy product consumption. It can be acquired by inflammatory/ infectious conditions that injure the mucosal brush border of the small intestine where lactase is expressed. Studies can show increased breath hydrogen content, reduced stool pH (bc the breakdown of lactose in the lumen is acidic), and elevated stool osmolality.
femoral nerve
flex the thigh and extend the knee
tibial nerve
flexion of foot
median nerve courses thru
flexor digitorum superficialis and flexor digitorum profundus muscles
FISH
fluorescence in situ hybirdiation; can identify specific chromosomal translocations, duplications, or deletions using a single stranded , complementary DNA segment that is tagged with a radiotracer. FISH is rapid, highly sensitive, and specific, and can be used on tissues with low mitotic rates. However, the targeted chromosomal abnormality must be somewhat large in order to be identified.
rosacea
flushing in response to heat and alcohol, papules and pustules
chronic long term management of asthma (drug)
fluticasone (corticosteroid)
phenytoin ADR besides gingival hyperplasia
folate deficiency leading to megaloblastic anemia (waitress spilling salad in the air)
pts with sickle cell disease or other hemolytic anemias have increased _ requirements
folic acid (due to increased erythrocyte turnover)
methotrexate
folic acid antagonist
14;18
follicular lymphoma; overexpression of apoptosis inhibitor protein BCL 2
tibial nerve sensory area and motor function
foot plantar flexion and inversion and toe flexion; sensory: on the sole of the foot (bottom of the foot)
TPR (total peripheral resistance)
for a group of vessels in parallel is equal to one divided by the sum of the inverse values for resistance of each of the contributing vessels as follows: 1/TPR = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + ... 1/Rn. Total body circulation can be best decribed as a parallel circuit, whereas circulation in an individual organ is often best described by a series arrangement.
V3 nerve (mandibular) of trigeminal
foramen ovale; senstation to jaw area and motor to muscles of mastication including the masseter, medial and lateral pterygoids and the temporalis muscles.
FVC, FEV1 for COPD
forced expiratory volume and forced vital capacity are both decreased.
foscarnet side effects
foscarnet is used to tx ganciclovir resistant CMV infections. Side effects: chelates calcium, and causes hypomagnesemia which can promote seizures.
myxomatous changes with pooling of proteoglycans in the media layers of large arteries like the aorta
found in cystic medial degeneration, which predisposes to the development of aortic dissections and aortic aneurysms. Medial degeneration is frequently seen in younger individuals with Marfan syndrome.
genetics of duchenne muscular dystrophy
frameshift mutation that causes a truncating mutation leading to inability to produce functional dystrophin bc premature stop codon (vs BMD: in-frame mutation that produces somewhat functional dystrophin)
substance that will reverse warfarin's effects the fastest
fresh frozen plasma
chest pain that gets better with leaning forward
friction rub (acute pericarditis)
parietal cell
fried egg cell on histo
granulomatous inflammation of the media happens in what disease
giant cell arteritis (tx: prednisone)
chronic granulomatous disease
from a genetic defect in NADPH oxidase. Normally NADPH oxidase participates in the killing of microbes within neutrophil and macrophage phagolysosomes. Patients with CGD develop recurrent bacterial and fungal infections that are predominantly caused by 5 catalase positive organisms: staph aureus, burkholderia cepacia, serratia marcescens, nocardia and aspergillus. this is bc bacteria that are catalase positive can kill their own hydrogen peroxide. but catalase negative bacteria will build up hydrogen peroxide and even ppl with no NADPH oxidase (superoxide production impaired) can kill them.
sperm get their energy from where
fructose
_ is one fo the rate determining enzymes in renal gluconeogenesis
fructose 1,6 bisphosphatase
desmosomes anchor cells to each other. whereas hemidesmosomes
function to anchor the cell to the underlying basement membrane.
diuretic for ppl with chronic renal failure
furosemide
amniotic fluid with increased acetylcholinesterase means
fusion of the edges of the neural plate (this and alpha fetoprotein leak out indicating spina bifida or anencephaly)
shigella moa
gains access to GI mucosa by invading microfold (M) cells in ileal peyer pathces thru endocytosis.
lead poisoning hinders what enzyme in the synthesis of heme?
gamma aminolevulinic dehydratase AND ferrochelatase
tx for BTK deficiency (i.e. x linked agammaglobulinemia(
gamma globulin injections
the reduced (active) form of vitamin K is a cofactor for
gamma glutamyl carboxylase
x linked siderblastic anemia hinders what enzyme in the synthesis of heme?
gamma-aminolevulinic acid synthase
how to differentiate between hepatic or bony origin of high alkaline phosphatase/ what test to do next when you get high alkaline phosphatase back
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP) (its in liver and biliary epithelia but not in bone
fenestrae
gaps between endothelial cells that allow for paracellular transport. Swollen fenestrae in renal glomerular capillary endothelial cells are implicated in preeclampsia (presents with new onset HTN and proteinuria or end organ dysfunction at >20 weeks gestation).
perfusion limited vs diffusion limited
gas exchange between the alveoli and pulmonary capillary blood depends on both perfusion and diffusion. The exchange of O2 and CO2 in a normal individual at rest is perfusion limited so alveolar and capillary partial pressure are equal. Situations in which O2 exchange becomes diffusion limited (i.e. emphysema, pulmonary fibrosis) causes a large gradient between alveolar and capillary PO2; PCO2 is less affected due to the greater diffusing capacity of CO2.
hyperplasia of branched tubular submucosal glands containing alkaline secretions which causes abdominal discomfort
gastric acid is neutralized by bicarbonate from the submucosal glands of the duodenum (Brunner glands) and from pancreatic duct secretions. Chronic overproduction of gastric acid can lead to hyperplasia of the submucosal glands.
h. pylori: which site of the GI demonstrates the highest amount of H pylori when infected
gastric antrum
which artery runs behind the duodenal bulb (common target for ulcerations that cause bleeding)
gastroduodenal artery
gastroesophageal reflux disease (silent GERD type)
gastroesophageal reflux disease is caused primarily by gastroesophageal junction incompetence and can be associated with extraesohageal sx (i.e. nocturnal cough) in the absence of heartburn. Acidic gastri contents irritate the esophageal mucosa, leading to characteristic histologic findings that include basal zone hyperplasia, elongation of the lamina propria papillae and scattered eosinophils.
osteoporosis, avascular necrosis of the femoral head, bone crises, hepatosplenomegaly
gaucher disease, AR, pancytopenia
inactivated (killed or component) viral vaccines moa
generate a humoral response against extracellular viral antigens, preventing viral entry into the cell. (i.e. against the viral HA) vs live attenuated: kills virally infected cells with cell-mediated in addition to provoidung humoral immunity
which part of the lymphnode makes immunoglobulins
germinal center
overdose no beta blockers tx is
glucagon bc it increases heart rate and contractility independent of adrenergic receptors. Glucagon activates G protein coupled receptors on cardiac myocytes, causing activation of adenylate cyclase and raising intracellular cAMP. The result is calcium release from intracellular stores and increased sinoatrial node firing.
rapid relief of symptoms of RA
glucocorticoid (prednisone) or NSAIDs
mutations in what gene lead to a state in which higher glucose levels are required to stimulate insulin secretion and are a cause of maturity onset diabetes of the young
glucokinase
steroids promote hyperglycemia by stimulating
gluconeogenesis
insulin sensitive transport proteins vs insulin independent
glucose transport protein (GLUT)-4 is an insulin-sensitive glucose transporter expressed in skeletal muscle cells and adipocytes. In the absence of insulin, it is sequestered in the cytoplasm. However, as insulin concentrations rise, the receptors translocate to the plasma membrane, facilitating glucose transport into the cell. Other tissues have GLUT transporters that are independent of insulin (i.e. renal tubular cells, etc)
excitatory amino acid
glutamate
glycogen synthesis is activated by dephosphorylation (activation) of
glycogen synthase (via protein phosphatase)
how do you make glucose in a fasting state
glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis (alanine from breakdown of protein to make glucose - alternate pathway)
carcinoembyonic antigen
glycoprotein involved in cell adhesion. CEA levels are increased in colon cancer. Its associated with a worse prognosis. Its also a marker of colorectal cancer recurrence.
hyaluronic acid
glycosaminoglycan for water retention in the ECM and determiens the stiffness of the ECM
keratin sulfate is
glycosaminoglycan in the ECM that maintains type 1 collagen fibril organization
if high synovial leukocyte count in knee pain, its
gonorrhea
cyclosporine is assoc with
gout in the post transplantation period due to decreased uric acid secretion
what allows ppl to avoid MI when they have atherosclerotic plaques (naturally)?
gradually developing myocardial ischemia encourages the formation and maturation of collateral vessels and is most likely to occur in the setting of a slow-growing, stable atherosclerotic plaque. An unstable atherosclerotic plaque (i.e. that with active inflammation, a lipid rich core and or a thin fibrous cap) is more likely to rupture, resulting in the abrupt onset of ischemia/ infarction that precludes the development of viable collateral vessels.
bone marrow transplant pts are at high risk for:
graft versuss host disease, in which alloreactive donor T lymphocytes recognize recpient as foreign and mount an immune response.
APL (acute promyelocytic leukemia)
granules in promyelocytes contain strong procoagulant substances and if these cells are disrupted, the granules pour out into the blood and can cause DIC.
fungal infections in the lungs will form
granulomas
reaction to a foreign body in the skin can result in _ on histo
granulomas
giant cell arteritis
granulomatous inflammation of the media with fgragmentation of the internal elastic lamina of medium and small branches of the carotid artery. Tx: immediate glucocorticoid therapy
androgens synthesized in the ovaries are converted estradiol in which cell type?
granulosa cells (they contain aromatase)
reactive (atypical) lymphocytes like CD8 T cells or NK cells contain
granzymes (enter the cytoplasm in the infected cell's membrane) and perforin (create holes in the infected cells membrane)
anti-TSH receptor antibodies
graves disease
most common cause of meningitis in infants 0-3 months old
group B strep, E coli, and listeria monocytogenes. if the infant is preterm and low birth weight, they are at high risk for listeria monocytogenes bc of their increased exposure to hospital personnel. (it's also lymphocyte predominant on CSF analysis - i.e. listeria is).
defect in the ankyrin gene
hereditary spherocytosis
cocaine effects
hallucinations, paranoid (psychotic sx), euphoria, and agitation. Tachycardia. Mydriasis.
haloperidol vs levodopa vs bromocriptine
haloperidol: dopamine antagonist; levodopa: synthetic dopamine; bromocriptine: D2 dopamine agonist
best way to avoid spreading infection in hospital setting (for providers)
hand hygeine (washing hands, etc) after contact with patients.
reperfusion injury
happens after thrombi are removed; it occurs secondary to oxygen free radical generation, mitochondrial damage and inflammation. Creatinine kinase increases bc it leaks out of the damaged cells
crohns disease
has noncaseating granulomas, fistulas and (serpiginous) abscesses (perianal disease is common - i.e. skin tags and fissures); patchy inflammation throughout the entire GI tract. Skip lesions, cobblestoning of the mucosa, bowel wall thickening, and creeping fat.
anti-thyroglobulin/anti-microsomal antibodies/antithyroid peroxidase antibodies
hashimoto's thyroiditis (histo shows lymphocytic infiltration with well-developed germinal centers and Hurthle cells.
cox 2 inhibitors
have anti-inflammatory effects without the side effects of bleeding and GI ulceration assoc with non-selective COX inhibitors. Selective COX 2 inhibitors do not impair platelet function because platelets predominantly express cox 1
factor 10 is
hematin/ hemin (i.e. H influenza needs this and 5 to grow on choclate agar)
when a bruise becomes greenish in color, which enzyme does this
heme oxygenase (converts heme to biliverdin)
bullous pemphigoid
hemidesmosomes, along the basement membrane of the dermal - epidermal junction. Forms tense, subepidermal blisters.
testosterone increases
hemoglobin
sickle cell disease
hemoglobin S aggregates in the deoxygenated state. Sickling occurs under anoxic conditions, i.e. low pH, and high 2,3 BPG.
the 3 variables that affect the total content of blood are
hemoglobin concentration, oxygen saturation of hemoglobin (SaO2) and the partial pressure of oxygen dissolved in blood (PaO2). Anemia is characterized by decreased hemoglobin concentration in the setting of normal SaO2 and PaO2.
emicizumab
hemophilia A is an X linked disorder assoc with a deficiency of factor VIII. Emicizumab, a bispecific monoclonal antibody, mimics the activity of factor VIII by binding to both factor Ixa and factor X, bringing them into close proximity to allow for factor X activation.
bleeding after a dental procedure, is prob _ and tx is _
hemophilia and a general tx to stop the bleeding immediately is thrombin (factor II)
hemophilia A and B
hemophilia is an X linked recessive coagulopathy that presents with intramuscular hemorrhage, hemarthroses, and delayed bleeding after procedures. Lab results show partial thromboplastin time (PTT) prolongation; other tests of hemostatic function are generally normal.
hep B on histo
hep B infection causes the hepatocellular cytoplasm to fill with hepatitis B surface antigen. These inclusions are highlyh pecific for hepatitis B infection and have a finely granular, pale eosinophilic, ground-glass appearance.
window period of hepatitis
hep B; the period between disappearance of HBsAg and appearance of HBsAb. IgM anti-HBc (core antibody) is the only marker of Hep B infeciton during the window period and indicates an acute infection.
tx for thromboembolic disease in pregnancy
heparins (i.e. LMWH: enoxaparin, dalteparin). Patients transitioned to unfractionated heparin when they give birth.
IV drug abuse - tricuspid valve insufficiency leads to
hepatic congestion (prominent systolic pulsation of the liver)
why does hepatitis C virus genome vary so much from virus to virus
hepatitis c lacks 3' -> 5' exonuclease activity which means its RNA is prone to frequent mutations. Its envelope glycoprotein sequences also contain a hypervariable region prone to frequent genetic mutation.
councilman bodies:
hepatitis induced apoptosis of liver cells (eosinophilic round bodies); degraded by cytotoxic T cells
diabetes, hyperpigmentation, cirrhosis, and/or cardiomegaly
hereditary hemochromatosis
abdominal distention, hyperactive bowel sounds, and tenderness on palpation = bowel obstruction caused by abdominal tumor. cancer hx in close relatives + young pt =
hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (lynch syndrome); AD; two hit hypoth; defective 'mismatch repair'
pigmented gallsontes and aplstic crises from parvoviruys B19 infection are complications of what
hereditary spherocytosis resulting from red cell cytoskeleton abnormalities, in the proteins spectrin and ankyrin. Hemolytic anemia, jaundice and splenomegaly.
virus that flares and remits in a cyclical fashion
herpes
erythema multiforme is usually assoc with
herpes simplex virus
hetero vs euchromatin
heterochromatin: condensed chromatin composed of heavily methylated DNA in tight association with deacetylated histones. Euchromatin: loose chromatin w high level of transcriptional activity
sixsteine
hexagonal crystals with cysteinuria
cystine nephrolithiasis
hexagonal stones on microscopy; from defective dibasic amino acid transport; decreased reabsorption of cysteine from the urine; sodium cyanide nitroprusside test can be used to detect excess cystine in the urine
characteristics that trap drugs in the plasma compartment resulting in a low Vd (3-5 L)
hgih molecular weight, high plasma protein binding, high charge, and hydrophilicity.
metabolic alkalosis: how to diag the cause
high arterial blood pH, HCO3- and pCO2. Vomiting/ nasogastric suctioning and thiazide/loop diuretic use cause volume and CL- depletion, resuting in metabolic alkalosis that is saline-responsive. In contrast, hyperaldosteronism leads to metabolic alkalosis that is saline-unresponsive. Determining the patient's volume status and measuring the urinary chloride concentration can help to identify the cause of metabolic alkalosis.
picture of outpouchings of intestine (with assoc pain), what caused this?
high dietary intake of fat and red meat
sheehan syndrome
high estrogen levels during pregnancy cause enlargement of the pituitary gland without a proportional increase in blood supply. Peripartum hypotension can cause ischmeic necrosis of the pituitary leading to panhypopituitarism (sheehan syndrome). Patients commonly develop failure of lactation due to deficiency of prolactin.
aflatoxin
high levels of dietary aflatoxin exposure (grain, peanuts) is assoc with G:C -> T:A transversion in codon 249 of the p53 gene, a mutation that increases the risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma.
thryoidectomy
high rate of injury to the parathyroid glands
fetal hemoglobin has a _ affintiy for oxygen
higher (left shift in the o2-hb curve)
airway resistance in lungs:
highest in the medium sized bronchi bc of the total cross sectional area of all the airways at that level. It gets lower as you get lower in the lungs after that.
CCK (cholecystokinin)
hormone responsible for gallbladder contraction. Made in the duodenum and jejunum in response to fatty acids and amino acids.
risk factor for clostridium difficile colitis
hospitalization, recent antibiotics, PPI
positive sense RNA viruses use
host cell RNA polymerase.
pool water bacteria
hot tub folliculitis is a superfiical and self-limited pseudomonas aeruginosa infection of the hair follicles that tends to occur in minor outbreaks following exposure to a pool or spa in which the chemicals have not been maintained at appropriate concentrations. Pseudomonas are gram negative, oxidase positive, nonlactose fermenting, motile rods that produce green pigment.
paracortex of the lymphnode
houses T cells (mature ones).
medulla of the lymphnode
houses the cords and the sinuses. Cords contain B cells and plasma cells.
high fever followed by a rash in a kid <2 years old
human herpesvirus 6 (HHV 6) "roseola infantum". The MOST common cause of febrile seizures. Tx: supportive.
hypercalcemia of malignancy
humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy is the most common cause of hypercalcemia in patients with malignancy and is due to secretion of parathyroid hormone related peptide (PTHrP) by malignant cells.
first line tx for essential hypertension in the gen population
hydrochlorothiazide
invasive cervical carcinoma is assoc with
hydronephrosis bc it spreads from the uterus to the bladder
septic shock
hyper- or hypothermia; initial disturbance is peripheral vasodilation leading to decreased systemic vascular resistance, decreased entral venous pressure and decreased pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. A compensatory increase in sympathetic drive causes an increase in cardiac output; the resulting high flow rates lead to incomplete oxygen extraction in the tissues, resulting in high mixed venous oxygen saturation.
organ rejection
hyperacute, acute or chronic; acute cellular rejection occurs within weeks of transplantation due to the sensitization of host T lymphocytes against donor MHC (HLA) antigens. This causes a mononuclear (lymphocytic) infiltrate on histo and graft dysfunction. Prevention is attempted with calcineurin inhibitors and tx includes systemic corticosteroids.
if person has diabetes type 1 they have no insulin so they have (_kalemia)
hyperkalemia, bc insulin forces potassium into cells
chronic headaches and low libido
hyperprolactinemia (males or females)
skin hyperpigmentation
hypersecretion of ACTH (primary adrenal insufficiency - addisons disease)(or a corticotroph adenoma)
hypercortisolism
hypertension, central obesity, musclular weakness, ecchymoses, and hyperglycemia.
fibrinoid necrosis
hypertension, vasculitis
acute pancreatitis can be caused by
hypertriglyceridemia (>100 triglycerides) bc the TGs damage the pancreatic acinar cells
bile acid resins (cholestyramine, colestipol, colesevelam) can cause (ADR)
hypertriglyceridemia bc they bind bile acids and prevent recycling of them so the liver makes more cholesterol which makes more VLDL which contains triglycerides.
the most common cause of gastric outlet obstruction in infants (with nonbilious vomiting)
hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
cor pulmonale
hypertrophy and/or dilation of the right ventricle
hypospadias moa vs epispadias
hypo: defect in the urogenital folds that form the penile urethra and ventral shaft of the penis in the male and the labia minora in females. (failure of fusion). epi: defect in formation of the genital tubercle
narcolepsy with cataplexy (loss of motor tone triggered by emotion); which compound is low/ abnormal in these pt's CSF?
hypocretin 1 (orexin A) and hypocretin 2 (orexin B) which are makde in lateral hypothal. They are neuropeptides that promote wakefulness and inhibit REM.
aluminum hydroxide overdose
hypophosphatemia, hypokalemia
opioids cause hypo or hypertension
hypotension bc histamine release
what determines therostatic set point
hypothalamus
pt is missing hair on the lateral third of their eyebrows
hypothyroidism
amiodarone can cause (ADR)
hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism
most common adverse effects of long term lithium therapy
hypothyroidism and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
acute onset left sided heart failure presents with
hypoxemic respiratory failure and the subjective sensation of SOB. Elevated left ventricular diastolic filling pressures lead to the transudation of fluid into the pulmonary interstitium. This causes areas of V/Q mismatch and shunt and an overall decrease in lung compliance.
cutaneous small vessel vasculitis that's assoc with medication
i.e. penicillins and cephalosporins); sx: palpable purpura in the lower extremities, perivascular inflammation of small blood vessels with fibrinoid necrosis and neutrophils and fragmented neutrophilic nuclei (leukocytoclastic vasculitis)
negri bodies
iNtEGRIty; round eosinophilic inclusions in the cytoplasm of pyramidal hippocampal neurons and cerebellar purkinje cells in patients infected with the rabies virus.
bell's palsy
idiopathic paresis of the facial nerve. Facial nerve does motor to facial mm, PS to lacrimal, submandibular and sublingual salivary glands, SSA for taste at anterior 2/3 of the tongue, somatic afferents for pinna and external auditory canal. Sx: unilateral facial paralysis, decreased tearing, hyperacusis, and/or loss of taste sensation over the anterior 2/3 of the tongue.
candida
if oral and new: nystatin if minor infection: fluconazole if major infection: amphotericin B if resistant: caspofungin
anxiety caused by a medical condition
if pt has prominent physical findings on examination (i.e. unintentional weight loss, tachycardia, moist skin, tremor, frightened stare, restlessness), this could be hyperthyroidism or something.
cushing syndrome: diag the cause: high dose dexamethasone suppression test:
if suppressed ACTH levels: pituitary adenoma; if ACTH and cortisol levels unchanged: ectopic ACTH production; if the ACTH levels were suppressed before the test: adrenal adenoma, adrenal malignancy, exogenous glucocorticoid intake; in NORMAL ppl: low dose dexamethasone will suppress ACTH production (that's the initial test for cushings then you gotta figure out where its coming from)
folate deficiency
if you add thymidine to a folate deficient medium, it will stop cells from undergoing apoptosis. Folate deficiency inhibits the synthesis of nucleic acids, particularly the formation of dTMP (deoxythymidine monophosphate). This leads to defective DNA synthesis that causes increased apoptosis of hemopoietic cells and megaloblastic anemia. Thymidine supplementation bypasses this enzyme and can reduce erythroid cell apoptosis.
surgery risk factors for pulmonary embolus
immobilization (venous stasis) and inflammation induces a hypercoagulable state. Fat embolus would be accompanied by a skin rash and neuro findings (confusion).
multiple sclerosis
immune mediated disorder of the central nervous system characterized by focal demyelination (plaques). Histo: plaques contain foci of perivenular inflammatory infiltrates made up primarily of autoreactive T lymphocytes and macrophages. Patchy demyelination occurs followed by astrocyte hyperplasia (glial scarring).
low platelet count, easy bruising or bleeding through skin or mucous membranes, platelets are abnormally large on blood smear bc of increased platelet production, more megakaryocytes in the the marrow.
immune thrombocytopenic purpura; caused by autoantibodies against platelet antigens, where the speen phagocytoses the platelets ia macrogphages; can also be caused by drugs (acetaminophen, TMP/SMX, quinine, heparin, vancomycin). Tx: steroids.
Acyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency
impaired beta oxidation of fatty acids causes hypoglycemia after prolonged fasting and insufficient levels of ketone bodies. Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase catalyzes the first step in the beta oxidation pathwya and is the most commonly deficiency enzyme.
ectopic pregnancy
implantation outside of the uterus. Uterine curettage would reveal decidual changes in the endometrium due to progesterone secretion but no embryonic or trophoblastic tissue (i.e. no villi)
hyroxylation of proline and lysine is improtnat for what and happens where
important for collagen synthesis and they need vitamin C, and it happens in the rough ER
snRNPs
improtant components of the spliceosome, a molecule that removes introns from pre-mRNA during processing within the nucleus. Disorder assoc w this: spinal muscular atrophy, caused by SMN1 gene mutation.
tubular fluid concetration of para aminohipuric acid (PAH) is lowest where
in Bowman's space
cough reflex
in by X and out by X
chagas vs acute rheumatic fever
in chagas youll see the trypanosomes in the heart muscle; interstitial myocardial granulomas (aschoff bodies) are found in carditis due to acute rheumatic fever, which develops after an untreated group A streptococcal pharyngeal infection. Aschoff bodies contain plump macrophages with abundant cytoplasm and central, slender ribbons of chromatin (anitschkow or caterpillar cells)
peri-infarction pericarditis
in contrast to angina, the chest pain of pericarditis is sharp and pleuritic and may be exacerbated by swallowing or coughing. Peri-infarction pericarditis (PIP) occurs between 2-4 days following a transmural myocardial infarction. PIP is an inflammatory reaction to cardiac muscle necrosis that occurs in teh adjacent pericardium.
acute arsenic poisoning
in insecticide. (attempted suicide). Impairs cellular respiration and presents with abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, hypotension and a garlic odor on the breath. Insecticides and contaminated water are common sources of arsenic. Dimercaprol is the chelating tx of choice.
Becker muscular dystrophy
in-frame deletion, manifests with muscle weakness, and/or cardiac disease beginning in adolescence. It is caused by DMD (dystrophin) mutations, such as in-frame deletions and the resulting dystrophin protein retains some residual function.
phenylketonuria (PKU)
inability to convert phylalanine to tyrosine by the phenylalanine hydroxylase system, making tyrosine an essential amino acid in these patients. Classic clinical features of untreated PKU include intellectual disability, seizures, light pigmentation and a musty odor
kid with Downs has large reducible midline abdominal protrusion covered by skin that is more pronounced when he cries. What is the cause?
incomplete closure of the umbilical ring. i.e. umbilical hernia; usually would close and form the linea alba.
sulfonylureas (glyburide and glimepiride)
increase insulin secretion by pancreatic beta cells independent of blood glucose concentration. These meds have a high incidence of hypoglycemia, especially in the elderly.
endodermal sinus (yolk sac)
increased AFP, aggressive, schiller dival bodies resemble glomeruli
exercise test
increased HR and CO but arterial blood gas will show normal partial pressures of arterial oxygen and carbon dixoide
inhibition of BCL 2 protein will lead to
increased activation of caspases on abnormal cells in the setting of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. BCL 2 is an anti-apoptotic protein on the mitochondrial membrane. Tx with a BCL 2 inhibitor causes cancer cell death by promoting cytochrome c release from the mitchondria which activates caspases.
sertoli leydig tumor
increased androgens (hirsutism, clitoromegaly) (in females)
nicotine withdrawal
increased appetite, irritability
normal aging: CV changes
increased basal systolic blood pressure
ADRs of volatile anesthetics (i.e. -fluranes)
increased cerebral blood flow (increased ICP), myocardial depression, hypotension, respiratory depression and decreased renal function
11;14
increased cyclin D1; mantle cell lymphoma
moa for increased gfr in early diabetes
increased glucose filtered load caused increased filtered/ resorbed sodium in the prox tubule and that means macula densa at the DCT senses low sodium and constricts the efferent arteriole and dilates the afferent arteriole (tubuloglomerular autoregulation system)
homocysteinuria
increased homocystine in urine, osteoporosis, marfanoid, ocular changes (down and in lens subluxation), cardiovascular (thrombosis and atherosclerosis), kYphosis (HOMOCYstinuria mnemonic). Supplement with pyridoxine (vit B6) and cysteine; genetics: pleiotropy
celiac disease
increased intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes
beta agonists used for asthma, cause smooth muscle relaxation via what moa
increased intracellular cAMP
things that increase likelihood of renal stones
increased urinary concentrations of calcium, oxalate, and uric acid
niacin
increases HDL
g alpha s
increases cAMP and PKA
effects of desmopressin therapy
increases factor VIII and endothelial secretion of vWF to stop bleeding (for hemophilia A and type 1 vWF disease). In central DI and nocturnal enuresis, it binds to V2 receptors in collecting duct to increase aquaporin channels and increase water reabsorption and decrease urine output.
exercise does what to venous blood mean O2 content
increases it
NE action on the heart
increases venous return to the heart, leading to an increase in stroke volume. This results in a reflex decrease in heart rate; this is known as the reflex bradycardia effect of NE. (this is physiologic)
incretin
incretin is a GI hormones made by the gut mucosa that stims pancreatic insulin secretion in response to sugar containing meals. Two hormones with incretin effects are GLP-1 and GIP (glucose dependent insulinotropic peptide). Incretin is only released following oral ingestion of sugars/ glucose, not IV admin.
ecchymoses
indicates a deep hemorrhage (hematoma) due to bony fracture, ligamentous rupture or muscular injury. They do not blanch under pressure.
hairy cell leukemia
indolent B cell neoplasm found in middle aged men and has bone marrow failure and infiltration into the reticuloendothelial system, causing massive splenomegaly. Other sx: dry tap and presence of lymphocytes with cytioplasmic projections.
in pts with undiagnosed pheochromocytoma, induction of anesthesia can
induce catecholamine surge leading to HTN crisis and a fib
ristocetin
induces platelet aggregation normally; abnormal test: vWF deficiency
perinatal hepatitis B infection
infants born to HBeAg-positive mothers have a high risk of acquiring perinatal hep B virus (HBV) infection. Infected neonates have high levels of HBV replication (high HBeAg and high viral load) and are at high risk for chornic infection btu are usually asymptomatic or have only mildy elevated liver function tests.
medial medullary syndrome
infarct of the anterior spinal artery. the syndrome is characteried by weakness of the contralateral body, ipsilateral tongue deviation, and contralateral loss of proprioception and vibratory sense below the face.
HSV 1 (primary herpes simplex virus type 1)
infection in children causes gingivostomatitis (vesicular lesions on the lips and hard palate). HSV 1 and other herpesviruses are double-stranded, enveloped DNA viruses.
cavernous sinus thrombosis
infection of the medial face, sinuses (ethmoidal or sphenoidal) or teeth may spread through the valveless facial venous system into the cavernous sinus, resulting in cavernous sinus thrombosis. Pts present with headache, fever, proptosis, and ipsilateral deficits in cranial nerves III, IV, VI, and V (opthalmic and maxillary branches).
giardia lamblia moa
infects the small intestine, causing loss of brush border enzymes and resulting diarrhea, gas and bloating. has trophozoites. lactase is one of the brush border enzymes that is lost causing secondary lactose intolerance.
blood supply to internal hemorrhoids
inferior mesenteric vein tributaries (they drain into the superior rectal vein which then drains into the inferior mesenteric vein).
great saphenous vein location
inferolateral to the pubic tubercle
acne vulgaris
inflammatory disorder of pilosebaceous follicles. Contributing factors include hyperkeratinization and obstruction of follicles; sebaceous gland enlargement with increased secretion of sebum; colonization and proliferation in the gland by Propionibacterium (cutibacterium) acnes; and follicular and perifollicular inflammation.
psoas abscess
inguinal mass; pain with extension of the hip
defective interferon gamma signaling - tuberculosis
inherited defects involving the interferon-gamma signaling pathway result in disseminated mycobacterial disease in infancy or early childhood. Patients require lifelong treatment with antimycobacterial agents.
abetalipoproteinemia
inherited inability to synthesize apolipoprotein B, an important component of chylomicrons and very low density lipoprotein. Lipids absorbed by the small intestine cannot be transported into the blood and accumulate in the intestinal epithelium, resulting in enterocytes with clear or foamy cytoplasm.
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency
inherited inborn error of metabolism causing lactic acidosis and neurologic defects. Patients are unable to convert pyruvate to acetyl-CoA, resulting in a shunting of pyruvate to lactic acid. In these patients, metabolism of exclusively ketogenic amino acids (lysine, leucine) can provide energy in the form of acetyl-CoA without increasing lactate production.
beta lactam drugs (cephalosporins, penicillin, etc)
inhibit cell wall synthesis via inhibition of cell-wall synthesis via inhibition of bacterial transpeptidase
aminoglycosides - moa
inhibit mRNA genetic code reading and protein synthesis by binding to the prokarytic 30S ribosomal subunit (causes genetic code misreading)
sulfonylureas
inhibit the ATP sensitive potassium channel on the pancreatic beta cell membrane, inducing depolarization and L type calcium channel opening
moa of vinchristine and colchicine
inhibition of polymerization of microtubules (vs taxanes stabilize them)
glutamic acid is a precursor for
inhibitor neurotransmitter GABA.
most significant risk factor for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III (carcinoma in situ)
lack of barrier contraceptives (i.e. condoms).
ghon complex
initial area of infection (lower lobe, ipsilateral hilar lymphnode). Ghon complex is these two initial sites of primary tuberculosis infection. Over time, these sites become calcified and fibrosed and can be visualized on gross pathology and radiographic imaging (Ranke complex). apical cavitary lesions = secondary TB (reactivation)
stages of acute tubular necrosis
initiation (2 days, tubular injury); maintenance stage (3 weeks, increased Cr, met acidosis); recovery phase (months, restored Cr, but electrolyte wasting)
both the CAAT box and the TATA box promote
initiation of transcription they bindn RNA pol 2
supracondylar humeral fracture with anterolateral displacement leads to
injury of radial nerve and wrist drop
3rd degree heart block tx
insertion of transvenous pacemaker
benzodiazapines withdrawal
insomnia, seizures
high waist circumfrence (metabolic syndrome) is suggestive of increased _ resistance
insulin
advanced chronic kidney disease and diabetes mellitus
insulin is cleared by the kidneys and liver. In advanced chronic kidney disease, pts w diabetes mellitus have decreased renal clearance of insulin which can lead to symptomatic hypoglycemia if exogenous insulin dosease are not adjusted based on the change in renal function.
positive response to candida antigens (skin test) means
intact T cell function
hydrophobic amino acids and transmembrane domains
integral membrane proteins contain transmemrane domains composed of alpha helices with hydrophobic amino acid residues (i.e. alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, methionine, proline, glycine). These transmembrane domains help anchor the protein to the phospholipid bilayer of the cell membrane.
phthirus pubis (pubic louse)(crabs)
intense pruritis; tx: permethrin (topical)
stimulants (cocaine, amphetamine) withdrawal
intense psychomotor retardation, severe depression ("crash"), increased appetite, vivid dreams
path from neck bruit to retinal artery (embolus)
internal carotid artery, ophthalmic artery, retinal artery
the ureter runs (anterior or posterior) to: internal iliac artery and gonadal blood vessels
internal iliac artery: anterior; gonadal blood vessels: posterior
asbestosis
interstitial pattern of involvement most prominent in lower zones of lungs. Pleural plaques. Histo: ferruginous bodies featuring fusiform rods with a translucent asbestos center and a golden brown iron coating.
2 forms of gastric adenocarcinoma
intestinal type forms a solid mass that projects into the stomach lumen and is composed of glandular-forming cuboidal or columnar cells. In contrast, diffuse carcinoma (linitis plastica) infiltrates the stomach wall and displays signet-ring cells on light microscopy.
vitamin A overuse
intracranial hypertension, skin changes and hepatosplenomegaly
tx for severe hypoglycemia with loss of consciousness
intramuscular glucagon (nonmedical setting); IV dextrose (medical setting)
tx for diabetic ketoacidosis
intravenous normal saline and insulin. This increases serum bicarbonate and sodium and decrease serum glucose, osmolality and potassium.
inulin vs PAH
inulin is not reabsorbed or secreted (just like mannitol); PAH and creatinine are secreted at the PCT.
if a cervical intraepithelial neoplasia breaches the basement membrane, it's NOT CIN anymore, it is then called
invasive carcinoma
ST elevation myocardial infraction
involves transmural (full thickness) infarction of the myocardial wall and usually results from acute atherosclerotic plaque rupture with the development of overlying thrombus that fully occludes the coronary artery lumen. It classically presents with sudden onset substernal chest pain that is not releived by rest of short acting nitrates. ECG demonstrates ST elevation in the affected leads with subsequent development of Q waves. if just 80% occlusion only = angina.
transient myocardial ischemia causes myocardial cells to increase in size. This is due to accumulation of which ion
ion pump failure due to ATP deficiency during cardiac ischemia causes intracellular accumulation of Na and Ca. The increased intracellular solute concentration draws free water into the cell, causing the cellular and mitochondrial swelling that is observed histologically.
oculomotor nerve gets impinged by which artery in the circle of willis
ipsilateral posterior communicating artery aneurysms. (PCA)
iron fist bro
iron absorbed at the duodenum, folate at the jejunum, and B12 at the ileum
most common cause of microcytic, hypochromic anemia
iron deficiency (especially in an older patient) can be caused by a nutritional deficiency in iron or chronic bleeding
kid OD's on grandmas pills: vomiting bright red blood and has hypotension and tachycardia. nausea.
iron toxicity can cause GI bleeding and fatal hypovolemic shock. Tx of acute iron toxicity is IV deferoxamine and volume resuscitation.
coagulative necrosis
irreversible ischmeic injury outside the CNS
moa of omeprazole or pantoprazole
irreversibly inhibit the hydrogen potassium ATPase on parietal cells, decreasing gastric acid secretion
primase
is a DNA dependent RNA polymerase that incorporates short RNA primers into replicating DNA
mech of vanco resistance in VRE
is a substitution of D lactate in the place of D alanine during the process of peptidoglycan cell wall synthesis. This prevents the binding of vancomycin to its usual D alanyl D alanine binding site in the cell wall.
erythema multiforme
is a target-shaped, inflammatory skin lesion that typically arises in the setting of infection, particularly with herpes simplex virus or mycoplasma pneumoniae. It is caused by the deposition of infectious antigens in keratinocytes, leading to a strong cell-mediated (i.e. cytotoxic T cell) immune response.
erythrocytosis
is defined as a hematocrit level >52%in men and > 48% in women. Measurement of red blood cell mass is necessary to dstinguish absolute from relative erythrocytosis. A normal red blood cell mass indicates plasma volume contraction as the cause of polycythemia. absolute erythrocytosis is true increase in RBC mass but relative erythrocytosis is decrease in the plasma volume.
Flow cytometry
is often used in the diagnosis of leukemia. Laser-based test that evaluates surface markers (i.e. CD5).
most common cause of DIC in pregnancy
is release of tissue factor (thromboplastin) from an injured placenta(i.e. placental abruption) into the maternal circulation
neuronal damage: acute neuronal injury
ischemia leading to cell death. Shrinkage of cell body, pyknosis of nucleus, loss of nissl bodies, eosinophilic cytoplasm (red neuron) (i.e. if its lacking nissl bodies, its irreversible)
if pt has surgery and has muddy brown casts its
ischemic tubular necrosis/ acute tubular necrosis from blood loss from the surgery
acute ethanol intoxication can lead to hypoglycemia and gap (lactic) acidosis because
it causes an elevated NADH:NAD+ ratio, which favors the conversion of pyruvate to lactate and limits available pyruvate for gluconeogenesis.
SIADH causes hyponatremia bc
it causes large volume and ANP causes excretion of sodium and water thru the kidneys
increasing population/ number of people in a study decreases which type of error
it decreases type 2 error (beta)
ethanol inhibits gluconeogenesis bc
it increases the NADH (and depletes NAD+). NAD+ is required for gluconeogensis, and conversion of malate to oxaloacetate.
bioavailability fraction
its 1 for drugs admin'd intravenously
pt is given penicillin and within hours they get acute inflammatory reaction. What is this
jarisch herxheimer reaction is an acute inflammatory reaciton that occurs within hours of treatment for spirochetal (syphilis) infections. The rapid lysis of spirochetes releases inflammatory bacterial lipoproteins into the circulation and causes acute fevers, rigors, and myalgias. (i.e. bacteria parts into circulation) tx: self limited and doesnt need intervention
horseshoe kidney
keeps anomalous origins of multiple renal arteries to each kidney bc as the kidney ascends embryologically, it gets blood from external iliac, and then gets to higher up and sheds those normally, but with horseshoe it stops at IMA and keeps them
TMP/SMX can cause _ in neonate/ during pregnancy to baby
kernicterus bc it binds to albumin, displacing bilirubin which causes hyperbilirubinemia leading to cerebral toxicity (basal ganglia toxicity via deposition there) in the baby.
tet spell - squatting
kids squat to increase systemic vascular resistance to divert more blood thru the stenotic pulmonary artery to the lungs to be oxygenated.
initial management of septic shock - intravenous admin of what
lactated ringer solution (i.e. isotonic crystalloid); intial management requires rapid fluid resuscitation to replace intravascular volume and restore adequate end organ perfusion. This is best accomplished with intravenous boluses of isotonic crytalloid in the form of 0.9% (normal) saline or lactated ringer solution because these solutions remain int he extracellular space.
lactose fermentation on Macconkey agar
lactose fermenters appear pink and non-lactose fermenters appear white
fibronectins
large glycoproteins made by fibroblasts. They bind integrins, matrix collagen and glycosaminoglycans, serving as a mediator of cell adhesion and migration. Differential expression of integrins is a part of malignant behavior in tumors (including melanoma)
nitrates act where
large veins (reduced venous return to the heart bc increased venous capacitance) (reduced preload) which decreases left ventricular wall stress and oxygen demand to relieve anginal sx
apoE4
late onset familial alzheimer is assoc with apoE4 genotype
don't PICA a horse that can't eat
lateral medullary syndrome (wallenberg syndrome) (hoarsness, dyphagia, PICA occlusion, nucleus ambiguus, CN 9, 10, 11, decreased pain/temp loss c/l, ipsi horners, ipsi ataxia & dysmetria.
single muscle that opens the jaw
lateral pterygoid (V3 nerve)
lateral lowers m's munch
lateral pterygoid is opening of jaw; rest are closing (chewing)
indirect inguinal hernia
lateral to inferior epigastric vessels and superior to the inguinal ligament
test detects stuff earlier but says treatment has longer survival; what bias
lead time bias
cardiac amyloidosis
leading cause of restrictive cardiomyopathy. It is characterized by amyloid infiltration of the myocardial wall, which leads to decreased ventricular compliance, an S4 heart sound and sx of diastolic cardiac dysfunction.
carotid sinus massage
leads to an increase in parasympathetic tone causing temporary inhibition of sinoatrial node activity, slowing of conduction through the AV node, and prolongation of the AV node refractory period. It is a useful vagal maneuver for termination of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia.
turcot syndrome
leads to colorectal as well as brain cancers. It is an autosomal dominant condition that commonly presents with a family history of colorectal cancer and brain malignancies
coronary atherosclerosis
leads to plaque formation that causes downstream myocardial ischemia. Individuals with this present with stable angina, which is characterized by stable, exertional, squeezing chest pain that resolves with rest or nitrates.
clostridium perfringens
lecithinase, also known as alpha toxin, is the main toxin produced by clostridium perfringens. Its function is to degrade lecithin, a component of cellular phospholipid membranes, leading to membrane destruction, cell death, and widespread necrosis and hemolysis.
right gonadal vs left gonadal veins
left = drains to left renal vein; right = drains to IVC
which veins anastomose to give rise to the esophageal veins (the esophageal veins that bleed in esophageal varices)
left and right gastric veins
neurapraxia
left atrial enlargement can sometimes cause left recurrent laryngeal nerve impingement (causing hoarseness). Neurapraxia resulting in left vocal cord paresis and hoarseness may result.
the posterior surface is mostly formed by the ___ and therefore enlargement of this space due to stenosis or regurgitation can compress the mid-esophagus causing cardiovascular dysphagia
left atrium
acute diverticulitis
left lower quadrant pain, in >60 year old patients
machine like murmur
left to right shunting, small PDA. (large PDA will go right to left).
confusion, diarrhea, fever, cough, hyponatremia
legionella pneumophila is a facultative intracellular gram-negative bacillus that can cause a systemic infection.
cutaneous leishmaniasis
leishmania species are obligate intracellular protozoa that mature in macrophages and can be identified on biopsy by the presence of intracellular, round-oval amastigotes with rod-shaped kinetoplasts. They are transmitted to humans by infected sand flies and cause the clinical syndrome of cutaneous leishmaniasis, characterized by a chronic, pinkish papule that evolves into a nodule or plaque.
fat cells produce
leptin; the more fat cells, the more leptin produced.
schizotypal personality disorder
magical beliefs
moa of amiodarone
longer effective refractory period due to the blocking of voltage gated slow potassium channels. blocking potassium channels prolongs phase 3 myocardial action potential (rapid repolarization) which in turn prolongs the effective refractory period. Amiodarone is an agent that uses this mech, and is linked to pulmonary fibrosis, hepatotoxicity, and hypothyroidism/hyperthyroidism.
anemia of chronic disease
looks like iron deficiency anemia; but the total iron binding capacity is low (bc in iron deficiency anemia, you have a lot of iron capacity - transferrin)
most potent diuretics and are first line for rapid relief of sx from acute decompensated heart failure (i.e. fluid/ edema)
loop diuretics (furosemide)
why do MS pts get urge incontinence?
loss of central nervous system inhibition of detrusor contraction in the bladder.
if tx with antibiotics and then get diarrhea, and prolonged PT time its probably
loss of gut bacteria that normally make vitamin K
facial nerve paralysis
loss of the corneal reflex (efferent limb) due to denervation of the orbicularis oculi muscle. Paralysis of the stapedius muscle may lead to increased sensitivity to sound (hyperacusis). Decreased lacrimation, salivation, and loss of taste in the anterior two thirds of the tongue.
mitral stenosis
loud first heart sound (S1), early diastolic sound (opening snap) followed by a mid-daistolic murmur from turbulent flow across the mitral valve.
chronic CHF leads to
low cardiac output, and the kidneys activate the RAAS system bc of poor prefusion which causes dilution of the serum sodium due to ADH (vasopressin) secretion and edema. Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus are the primary way that ADH (vasopressin) is regulated and secreted.
dopamine - hemodynamic effects
low dose dopamine infusion stimulates D1 receptors in the renal and mesentreric vaculature resulting in vasodilation and increased blood flow to these sites. Increasing doses of dopamine stimulate Beta 1 and Alpha 1 receptors, resulting in increased cardiac output and elevated systemic vascular resistance. At the higher end of the dose range, the increase in afterload can result in decreased cardiac output.
anorexic hormone levels
low everything (GnRH, LH, FSH, and estrogen)
S3 sound
low frequency sound after S2 that is assoc with increased ventricular end-systolic volume. S3 is usually mitral regurg and systolic heart failure (dilated cardiomyopathy)
prophylactic anticoagulation drug given to hospitalized patients/ surgery patients
low molecular weight heparin
x linked agammaglobulinemia
low or absent circulating CD19 and CD20 positive B cells and pan-hypogammaglobulinemia; absence of opsonizing and neutralizing antibodies causes patients to have increased susceptability to pyogenic bacteria, enteroviruses and giardia lamblia.
low vs high potency first gen anti psychotics
low potency: chlorpromazine and thioridazine; hihg potency: haloperidol and fluphenazine
nitric oxide has a ___ blood gas partition coefficient
low; its poorly soluble in blood; so it has a low coefficient and a RAPID onset of action
chylothorax
lymph in the pleural cavity bc of disruption or obstruction of the thoracic duct
peua de orange
lymphatic obstruction; inflammatory breast cancer
granulocyts vs lymphocytes
lymphocytes: adaptive immune response (B, T, and NK cells); granulocytes: neutrophils, basophils, or eosinophils (innate immune system)
lynch syndrome vs familial adenomatous polyposis
lynch: (HNPCC) AD, colorectal cancers & others (GI, urinary and female reproductive tracts); FAP: AD, colorectal cancer, but no other cancers
which amino acid used for desmosome cross linking
lysine
liquefactive necrosis in the brain mediated by
lysosomes
fidaxomicin
macrolide antibiotic that inhibits RNA polymerase. It is bactericidal against C difficile. It has a narrow spectum of activity with a lesser effect on normal colonic flora than oral vancomycin (the other tx for C diff).
cell types involved in granuloma formation
macrophage, T cell IL 12 -> Th1 -> IL 17 and TNF alpha and IFN gamma,
ischemic stroke: 3-7 days
macrophage/microglia infiltration and phagocytosis begins
histoplasma capsulatum proliferates in
macrophages
elastase is in
macrophages and neutrophils
macrophages - athersclerotic plaques
macrophages destabilize thin cap fibroatheromas by infiltrating the atheroma and contributing to the breakdown of extracellular matric proteins (i.e. collagen) by secreting metalloproteinases. This causes ongoing intimal inflammation which destabilizes the mechanical integrity of the plaque resulting in plaque rupture and consequent acute coronary syndrome.
cd14
macrophages marker (monocyte macrophage)
pharyngeal infection with strep pyogenes causes
macrophages to produce IL 1 (fever) (increases the hypothalamic set point temperature).
cholesteatomas
made by accumulation of squmaous cell debris that form pearly mass behind the tympanic membrane
chronic rejection of transplants
major problem in lung transplant recipients; affects the small airways, causing bronchiolitis obliterans (obstructive lung disease - reduced FEV1). It is characterized by lymphocytic inflammation, fibrosis and ultimately destruction of the bronchioles.
leydig
make testosterone in response to LH. (testosterone feedback inhibits LH)
nonsense mutation
makes a premature stop codon
if no sertoli cells but there is leydig cells, what do you get
male external genitalia and female/male internal repro organs (this is bc testosterone does internal organs BUT testosterone is peripherally converted to DHT which does external organs)
choriocarcinoma
malignant form of gestational trophoblastic disease composed of anaplastic cytotrophoblasts and syncytiotrophoblasts without villi. It often presents as dyspnea/ hemoptysis due to pulmonary metastasis from hematogenous spread.
inhibited beta oxidation of fatty acids is probably because of an increase in
malonyl CoA (bc malonyl CoA inhibits carnitine acyltransferase, so the carnitine carrier in the mitochondria doesn't work so beta oxidation of FFAs doesn't work
general sensation to the anterior 2/3 of the tongue is which nerve
mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve. (v3)
lobar pneumonia
marked by cytokine-mediated accumulation of neutrophils and proteinaceous material in the alveoli (leakage of protein rich fluids into the alveolar airspaces). Over several days, the proteinaceous material becomes fibrinous, neutrophils are replaced by macrophages and macrophages digest the fibrinous exudate, thereby restoring normal lung histology.
keratin
marker of epithelial cell origin
the trisomies that survive birth (13, 18, 21) have what genetic defect
maternal nondisjunction due to advanced maternal age.
aortic arch derivatives
maxillary stapedial common carotid and internal carotid aortic arch and right subclavian artery pulmonary arteries and ductus arteriosus
middle meningeal artery branches from where
maxillary artery
ANOVA and t tests compare the
means between groups. T test compares 2 groups; ANOVA compares >2 groups
tdt
means cells are lymphoblasts
epiploic
means connecting the stomach to the omentum (i.e. the peritoneal fold over the intestines). Gastroepiploic arteries are therefore on the inferior side of the stomach bc that's the side next to the intestines.
subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
measles; shows hemagglutinin; pt will have high titers of measles antibodies even though they recovered from measles already
correlation coefficient
measure of strength and direction of a linear relationship between 2 quantitative variables
the Hib vaccine will protect a child against what?
meningitis; the H infulenza type B vaccine induces anticapsular antibodies that facilitate complement mediated phagocytosis of the bacterium. The vaccination series has drastically reduced the incidence of invasive disease caused by Hib (meningtitis, epiglottitis)
moa of mesna
mesna counteracts the serious potential side effect of cyclophosphamide-mediated hemorrhagic cystitis. It combats this complication by binding to acrolein, a urotoxic metabolite of cyclophosphamide.
the oocyte is arrested in which stage of meiosis immediately prior to fertilization
metaphase of meosis 2
polygonal cells with abundant clear cytoplasm
metastatic clear cell carcinoma, the most common subtype of renal cell carcinoma.
metformin - lactic acidosis
metformin inhbits gluconeogenesis, resulting in the buildup of substrate molecules. Decreased formation of pyruvate results in excess buildup of its precursor, lactate, which increases the risk of lactic acidosis. This risk is increased in those with renal fysfunction bc they cant clear it as well.
diabetic drug that causes kidney damage
metformin. it inhibits hepatic gluconeogenesis. high anion gap metabolic acidosis in the setting of high serum creatinine levels is characteristic of lactic acidosis due to metformin toxicity.
methylene blue
methemoglobinemia may occur as an adverse effect of oxidizing agents such as dapsone. Patients with methemoglobinemia carry a large amount of oxidized iron (ferric Fe3+) instead of reduced iron (ferrous Fe2+). Fe3+ does not bind oxygen effectively. Methylene blue increases the conversion of Fe3+ back to Fe2+, increasing hemoglobin oxygen content and overall oxygen delivery to body tissues.
amino acid essential for synthesis of surfactant
methionine
tx for diabetic gastroparesis
metoclopramide (prokinetic medication, antiemetic)
pt with amebic abscess (fever, abdominal pain, liver mass on US) (bloody mucoid diarrhea, recent travel to developing country) tx is what?
metronidazole
tx for bacterial vaginosis
metronidazole or clindamycin
shigella and E coli cause what type of anemia
microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (small blood vessel factors cause RBCs to lyse)
hookworm infections cause
microcytic anemia (hanging iron in sketchy)
alpha thalassemia
microcytic, hypochromic anemia with minimal anisocytosis (when its mild). severe: death in utero (hydrops fetalis), this does not happen in beta thalassemia. has target cells as well.
increased activity of a specific intracelluarl enzyme that causes pts to be susceptible to benzopyrene induced lung cancer
microsomal monooxygenase enzyme overactivity (i.e. cytochrome P450 monooxygenase). Procarcinogens need to be activatred by cytochrome P450 oxidase system. Individual susceptibility depends on the activyt of these enzymes.
reye's syndrome
microvesicular hepatic steatosis and encephalopathy from aspirin during viral infection
seated thoracentesis placement
mid-clavicular: 6-8 ribs; midaxillary is 8-10 ribs and posterior/ paravertebral line is 10-12 ribs
primary biliary cholangitis (PBC)
middle aged woman with generalized pruritis and signs of vitamin A deficiency; common autoimmune disease characterized by destruction of small bile ducts in the liver.
the most potassium permeability in the membrane depol graph of of the action potential is the
middle of the down slope
which parameter best correlates with the potency of an inhaled anesthetic
minimal alveolar concentration; it's the concentration of the anesthetic in the alveoli that renders 50% of ppl unresponsive to pain (ED50). Potency is inversely proportional to the MAC: the lower the MAC, the more potent the anesthetic.
work of breathing
minimized in patients with increased elastic resistance (i.e. pulmonary fibrosis) when their respiratory rate is high and tidal volume is low (fast, shallow breaths). In contrast, patients with disease that increase airflow resistance (i.e. asthma, COPD) breathe at a lower respiratory rate and higher tidal volume (slow, deep breaths) to minimize the work of breathing.
leber hereditary optic neuropathy inheritance pattern
mitochondrial (progressive bilateral optic neuropathy leading to blindness)
MELAS
mitochondrial encephalopathy lactic acidosis and stroke like episodes (neuro findings with lactic acidosis)
rheumatic fever is assoc with
mitral stenosis; can cause atrial enlargement -> atrial fibrillation -> mural thromboses. These thrombi can dislodge and cause an embolic stroke
subacute infective endocarditis with an embolic stroke
mitral valve prolapse with regurgitation is the most common predisposing condition for native valve infective endocarditis (IE) in developed nations. Rheumatic heart disease remains a frequent cause of IE in developing nations. Turbulent flow predisposes them to fibrin and platelet clots that cause emboli.
opening snap followed by a diastolic rumbling murmur that's best heard over the apex of the heart
mitral valve stensosi
trastuzumab - heart toxicity
monoclonal antibody that blocks human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) to encourage apoptosis. HER2 normally helps preserve cardiomyocyte function, so trastuzumab causes decrease in myocardial contractility wihtout cardiomyocyte destruction of myocardial fibrosis.
omalizumab
monoclonal antibody that does IgE binding (at the Fc portion) of mast cells to prevent them from being sensitized and degranulated. Thereby preventing the inflammation in asthma from occuring (i.e. prevents release of histamine and leukotrienes)
strong evidence of malignancy in abnormal lymph node architecture
monoclonal lymphocytic proliferation (monoclonal T cell receptor gene rearrangements
the intestine can absorb which type of sugars without processing first?
monosaccharides can be absorbed by the intestinal wall without first being processed (i.e. like the polysaccarides); this means that D-xylose, for instance, is not affected by exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and can be used to differentiate between pancreatic vs mucosal causes of malabsorption.
tx for bipolar disorder
mood stabilizers (lithium, valproic acid, carbamazapine, lamotrigine) or atypical antipsychotics (second gen)
besides meitoic nondisjunction, what can happen with the genetic inheritance of downs
mosaicism (some (not all) of the cells have an extra copy of chrom 21)
TP53
most cancers, Li Fraumeni syndrome; tumor suppressor gene
colon adenocarcinoma
most common GI malignancy; right sided lesions: more likely to bleed and cause iron deficiency; left sided lesions: present with obstructing sx (altered bowel habits, constipation, abdominal distention, nausea and vomiting)
familial hypercholesterolemia
most common autosomal dominant disorders. Result of LDL receptor gene mutation, underexpression of LDL recepotors. Leads to accelerated atherosclerosis and early coronary artery disease.
echinococcus granulosus
most common cause of hydatid cysts. Spilling of cyst contents can cause anaphylactic shock. Surgical manipulation should be performed with caution.
cytomegalovirus
most common cause of ocular disease in patients with untreated AIDS who have CD4 counts <50. diagnosis is made by fundoscopy, which typically reveals yellow-white, fluffy retinal lesions near the retinal vessels with associated hemorrhage. Tx with ganciclovir is required to prevent blindness.
candida albicans
most common cause of oppotunistic mycosis, can affect any organ and cause generalized candidemia. Yeasts and pseudohyphae on LM and a postiive germ tube test are diag of candida infection.
cerebral amyloid angiopathy
most common cause of spontaneous lobar hemorrhage, particularly in the elderly. Most common sites of hemorrhage include the occipital and parietal lobes
porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT)
most common form of cutanea; uroporphyringoen decarboxylaton
follicular lymphoma
most common indolent non-hodgkin lymphoma in adults. B cell origin, and presents with waxing and waning lymphadenopathy. T(14,18) and has overexpression of bcl-2 oncogene (has antiapoptotic effects).
acute lymphoblastic leukemia
most common malignancy of childhood. B cell ALL is responsible for approx 70 -80% of all cases of ALL whereas T cell ALL accounts for 15-17% of all cases of ALL. T cell ALL oftenpresents as a MEDIASTINAL mass that can cause respiratory sx, DYSPHAGIA, or superior vena cava syndrome.
serous cystadenocarcinoma
most common ovarian cancer, bilateral, histo: psammoma
osteosarcoma
most common primary bone malignancy in children and young adults. It occurs most frequently at the metaphyses of long bones and presents with local pain and swelling. Most cases are assoc with sporadic or inherited mutations in RB1 (hereditary retinoblastoma) and TP53 (Li-fraumeni syndrome)
teratomas
most common subtype of germ cell tumor. Ovarian teratomas occur most frequently in females age 10-30. They are divided into mature (cell lines of >1 germ layer, commonly including hair, teeth and skin) and immature types.
fibrinous pericarditis
most common type of pericarditis and is characterized by pericardial inflammation with a serous, fibrin-containing exudate in the pericardial space. Pleuritic chest pain and a triphasic friction rub are frequently seen. Common causes include viral infection, myocardial infarction, uremia, and rheumatologic disease (i.e. systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis)
clear cell carcinoma
most common type of renal cell carcinoma and originates from the epithelial cells of the proximal renal tubules. Gross path shows a sphere like mass of golden yellow cells (high lipid content) with areas of necrotic cells and focal hemorrhage;
papillary thyroid cancer
most common type of thyroid cancer. Histo: large cells with ground glass nuclei (Orphan annie eye - nuclei containing finely dispered chromatin) and intranuclear inclusions or grooves. Psammoma bodies
which effect of cholinergic toxicity (poisoning from pesticides, etc) persists after giving atropine and wghy
muscle weakness/paralysis and fasciculations because its nicotinic and the others are muscarinic
zinc finger is
most commonly identified DNA binding domain in humans; only intraellular receptors located in the cytoplasm or the nucleus can act directly as transcription factors. They typically bind lipid soluble hormones. Examples of these are steroids (aldosterone, cortisol, estrogen), thyroid hormone, and fat soluble vitamin receptors.
fibromyalgia
most commonly in women age 20-55, sx: diffuse musculosketal pain, fatigue, and neuropsychiatric distrurbances. Abnormal central processing of painful stimuli. Tx: aerobic exercise helps to improve pain and function.
acute compartment syndrome
most commoon site for ACS is the anterior compartment of the leg, which includes the foot extensor muscles, anterior tibial artery and the deep peroneal (fibular) nerve. Injury to the deep peroneal nerve causes decreased sensation between the first and second toes, decreased dorsiflexion of the foot, foot drop and claw foot.
infective endocarditis
most likely cause of fever, fatigue and new onset cardiac murmur is IE. Diffuse, prolfierative glomerulonephritis secondary to circulating immune complex deposition may complicate IE and can result in acute renal insufficiency
rat poison
most rat poisons have warfarin (brodifacoum) in them. So if vignette says they ingested rat poison, think warfarin with vitamin K depletion and tx them with fresh frozen plasma. Their sx will be coagulopathy first since warfarin inhibits II, VII, IX and X and C and S but the 2,7, 9, and 10 take 48 hours to be inhibited whereas the C is immediate (and protein C is a natural anticoagulant). so you see coagulation first then bleeding.
achalasia
motility disorder caused by reduced numbers of inhibitory ganglion cells in the esophageal wall, which creates an imbalance favoring excitatory ganglion cells. Esophageal manometry in achalasia shows decreased amplitude of peristalsis in the mid esophagus, with increased tone and incomplete relaxation at the lower esophageal sphincter.
right angle branching of hyphae
mucormycosis (rhizopus, mucor and absidia)
fever facial pain and black eschar in the nose
mucormycosis (rhizopus, mucor)
patho of chronic bronchitis
mucous gland hypertrophy and hyperplasia, chronic inflammatory infiltrate including CD8+ lymphocytes and monocytes, squamous cell metaplasia and fibrosis. This process of disproportionate gland proliferation can be quantified by the Reid Index, which is the ratio of submucosal gland thickness to epithelium and cartilage thickness.
reid index
mucous glands/ submucosa + lamina propria; higher values correlate with increased duration and severity of chronic bronchitis. (smokers)
cardiac tamponade triad:
muffled heart sounds, jugular venous distention and hypotension. (and pulsus paradoxus: fall in systolic BP >10 mmHg on inspiration)
random pedigree =
multifactorial
MEN 2B
multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2B is characterized by medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytomas, mucosal neuromas (painless nodules on lips and tongue), and marfanoid habitus (joint laxity).
rouleaux formation of RBCs
multiple myeloma (also have numerous plasma cells with clock face chromatin and intracytoplasmic inclusions containing immunoglobulin.
clock face chromatin & radiolucent bone lesions & waxy laminated casts on UA
multiple myeloma (waxy casts from light chain cast nephropathy)
if bone marrow shows lots of plasma cells with basophilic cytoplasm its
multiple myeloma.
internuclear ophthalmoplegia and optic neuritis happen in
multiple sclerosis bc of demyelination. Internuclear ophthalmoplegia: the affected eye (ipsilateral to the MLF lesion) is unable to adduct and the contralateral eye abducts with nystagmus.
polyarteritis nodosa
multisystem vasculitis characterized by episodic ischemic sx in various organs with sparing of the lungs. Histo: segmental, transmural inflammation with fibrinoid necrosis. PAN is commonly assoc with hepatitis B. bead like aneurysm formation especially in the mesenteric circulation. can get livedo reticularis and palpable purpura.
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy caused by
mutations affecting structural proteins of the cardiac sarcomere; autosomal dominant mutations affecting the cardiac sarcomere genes (cardiac beta myosin heavy chain gene and myosin binding protein C gene) are responsible for the majority of cases
sporadic and hereditary (assoc with von hippel lindau disease) renal cell carcinomas are assoc with
mutations in VHL gene on chromosome 3p; VHL is a tumor suppressor gene
HIV pol gene
mutations in this gene are responsible for acquired resistance to reverse transcriptase inhibitors, protease inhibitors and integrase strand transfer inhibitors. Mutations of the env gene enable escape from host-neutralizing antibodies.
caseous necrosis
mycobacterial, fungal infections (cheeselike)
serpentine cords
mycobacterium tuberculosis; it surrounds TB and prevents its destruction by macrophages; it also drives the formation of macrophages
cold agglutinins
mycoplasma pneumoniae binds an oligosaccharide on the respiratory epithelium that is also present on erythrocytes, leading to the generation of cross-reacting IgM antibodies (cold agglutinins). Patients with M pneumo infections often develop mild, transiet hemolytic anemia that resolves as IgM antibody titers decline (6-8 weeks after infection begins).
leukemia: bone marrow blasts: peroxidase positive granules (Auer rods)
myeloblast (i.e. granulocytes - PMN's, Eosinophils, basophils)
marker for myeloid cells (i.e. AML)
myeloperoxidase
primary myelofibrosis
myeloproliferative disorder assoc with clonal expansion of megakaryocytes. Bone marrow fibrosis accounts for most of the major manifestations including HSM, cytopenias, and blood smear evidence of dacrocytes. Bone marrow aspiration is usually dry, but bone marrow biopsy will show marked fibrosis with occasional clusters of atypical megakaryocytes.
post MI: 12-24 hours
myocyte hypereosinophilia with pyknotic (shrunken nuclei); coag necrosis, marginal contraction band necrosis.
positive blood on urine dipstick in the absence of red blood cells on microscopy suggests
myoglobinuria (from rhabdomyolysis)
drugs that inhibit P450 will increase _ ADR of statins
myopathy
fibrates combined with statins increase the risk for
myopathy
mcardle disease or glycogen storage disease type 5
myophosphorylase deficiency causes failure of muscle glycogenolysis, resulting in decreased exercise tolerance and myoglobinuria during exercise.
nitrates moa
myosin dephosphorylation leading to relexation of large veins
the most common cardiac neoplasm
myxomas (gelatinous mass; mucopolysaccarhide ground substance) can embolize. With myxomas, you'll heart a mid diastolic murmur (tumor plop) that results from the motion of the tumor mass obstructing the mitral valve orifice.
optics: temporal side of visual field and nasal
nasal crosses; temporal stays the same side
glucagonoma
necrolytic migratory erythema (blistering erythematous plaques with central clearing) affecting the groin, face and extremities. & hyperglycemia
conjugate vaccine
needs a protein AND a polysaccarrhide component (to allow for T cell activation which allows for cell mediated immunity and memory) (CD4)
negative vs positive pressure room
negative pressure: airborne protection from transmitting airborne disease, they pump air in and force it out so it doesnt passively leak out into hospital area; positive pressure room is just a normal room
triad of polyarthritis, vesiculopustular skin rash, and tenosynovitis
neisseria gonorrhoeae. Also get septic arthritis in young, sexually active adult
mesothelioma
neoplasm arising from the pleura. Strongly assoc with asbestos exposure and presents with dyspnea, cough, and chest pain. Unilateral pleural thickening or plaque formation is seen on imaging; pleural effusions are also common and may be hemorrhagic. Histopathology reveals tumor cells with numerous long, slender microvilli and abundant tonofilaments.
chondrosarcoma
neoplastic chondrocytes in a hyaline cartilage matrix, usually with small calcifications
net excretion rate of a substance
net excr rate of sub a = (inulin clearance)(plasma conc of substance A) - (tubular reabsorption of substance A)
melanoma comes from which embyrological derivative
neural crest
schwannoma
neural crest cell origin; cerebellopontine angle (CN VIII) is most common location; sx: tinnutis, vertigo and hearing loss
how to diff b12 vs folate deficiency
neuro sx only seen in b12 deficiency
most common extracranial solid neoplasm in children
neuroblastoma
MYC
neuroblastoma (NMYC); small cell lung cancer (LMYC); protooncogene
NF1
neuroblastoma , neurofibromatosis type 1, sarcoma; tumor suppressor gene
small cell carcinoma of the lung is the most aggressive type of lung cancer and is of what tissue origin
neuroendocrine; therefore on biopsy you'll see neural cell adhesion molecules, neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin and synaptophysin.. because these are neuroendocrine markers. Risks: smoking; assoc with this: lambert eaton syndrome
most common clinical manifestations of vitamin E deficiency
neuromuscular disease (spincerebellar ataxia, polyneuropathy) and hemolytic anemia.
sciatic nerve:
neuropathy can happen from hip fracture. Causes deficits in sciatic nerve, peroneal nerve, and tibial nerve
botulinum toxin
neurotoxin. Prevents release of Ach from presynaptic nerve terminals. Causes both muscarinic and nicotinic blockage. Autonomic sx (pupils dilated, dry mouth) and skeletal muscle weakness (diplopia, dyphagia, resp depression).
nonpurulent vs purulent cellulitis
nonpurulent: beta hemolytic strep; purulent cellulitis: staph aureus
flutamide
nonsteroid anti-androgen that acts as a competitive inhibitor of testosterone receptors (causes impaired androgen-receptor interaction). It is used in combo with long acting gonodotropin releasing hormone agonists for the treatment of prostate cancer.
pressure inside the aorta
normal is 120/80; in aortic regurg its 160/ 60. normal pressure in the LV: 120/10.
small bowel mucosa in ppl with primary lactase deficiency is
normal on histo
electrolyte levels in conn syndrome
normal sodium (bc aldosterone escape bc of ANP), low potassium and high bicarb (bc H+ excretion w K, leads to more bicarb production)
c-Jun and c-Fos
nuclear transcription factors that directly bind DNA via a leucine zipper motif and they are protooncogenes
first event in pathogenesis of acute appendicitis
obstruction of the lumen of the appendix via fecaliths, hyperplastic lymphoid follicles, foreign bodies or tumors.
obtruction of a mainstem bronchus (i.e. just one lung), can prevent ventilation of an entire lung, leading to
obstructive atelectasis (as the O2 trapped in the lung gets dissolved into the blood), and complete lung collapse, causing the trachea to deviate TOWARDS the SIDE OF THE COLLAPSED LUNG. CXR: unilateral pulmonary opacification and deviation of the mediastinum toward the opacified lung.
flow volume loops
obstructive lung disease: scooped out expiratory pattern (reduced expiratory flow rates);
opioid seeking patietn
obtain confirmation of the patients prescription history
acute bacterial parotitis
occurs more in elderly post-op pts who are intubated or dehydrated. Staph aureus is most common bacterial cause. Has elevated serum amylase (with normal serum lipase level- which tells u its not pancreatitis).
HPV 16 and 18 lead to inhibition of _ and _ by E6 and E7 respectively
p53 and Rb tumor suppressors
main measure of association in a case control study
odds ratio
corticosteroids inhibit the down regulation
of beta 2 receptors (which is why you add LABA always to SABA) which is why you always add corticosteroids to beta 2 agonist asthma tx
diabetic mononeuropathy
often involves CN III. It is caused by central ischemia, which affects the somatic fibers but spares the peripheral parasympathetic fibers. Sx: ptosis and a down and out gaze and normal accomodation reflexes.
diverticulitis
often manifests with left lower quadrant abdominal pain and is usually caused by blockage of a diverticulum. The characteristic hito finding of diverticulosis and diverticulitis is attenuated muscularis propria (thinner) (creating a false diverticulum)
adenocarcinoma of the lung
often metastasizes to bone. Histo shows neoplastic glands lined with mucin-producing cells. Most common pulmonary malignancy, histo: invasive glandular cells with eccentrically placed nuclei. Imagin: discrete mass or pneumonia like consilodation at the periphery of the lung.
oligodendrocytes vs schwann cells
oligodendrocytes: CNS (many axons at once); schwann cells: PNS (one axon at a time)
kozak consensus sequence
on eukaryotic mRNA and is defined by: (gcc)gccRccAUGG, in which R is either adenine or guanine. This sequence helps initiate translation at the methionine start codon (AUG). For prokaryotes it's the shine delgarno sequence (AGGAGGU) upstream of the AUG start site.
the AV node is located
on the endocardial surface of the right atrium, near the insertion of the septal leaflet of the tricuspid valve and the orifice of the coronary sinus.
necrotizing enterocolitis
one of the most common GI emergencies in newborns; bacrterial invasion and ischemic necrosis of the bowel wall (pneumatosis intestinalis (air in the bowel wall) is confirmatory
diphenoxylate
opioid agonist, antidiarrheal drug that binds mu opiate receptors in the gut to slow motility. Overuse can lead to euphoria and physical dependence. To discourage abuse, diphenoxylate is combined with atropine wihcih induced adverse effects if taken in high doses. moa: slows motility of the GI.
dextropmethorphan
opioid that causes constipation
right homonymous hemianopia
optic tract lesion; cant see the right side of both eye fields can also have afferent pupillary defect (marcus gunn pupil) in the pupil contralateral to the optic tract lesion.
vancomycin vs metronidazole for c diff
oral vancomycin is first line (metronidazole is second line)
ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
orotic aciduria, hyperammonemia; deficient enzyme: ornithine transcarbamylase; this deficiency interferes with the body's process of eliminating ammonia.
orotic aciduria
orotic aciduria, megaloblastic anemia; deficient enzyme: UMP synthase; these patients will benefit from supplemenation with Uridine (bc these pts have defective UMP synthase aka uridine 5' monophosphate) (Uridine will then be converted to UDP)
ortolani vs barlow
ortolani: hip already Out of socket so you Open legs/ abduct to push it back it; Barlow: suspicion of hip instability, so you adduct and see if you can Break/ dislocate hip.
the peptidoglycan cell wall of gram positive (big layer) and gram negative (little bit of it) organisms gives them the ability to surivive
osmotic changes/ stress
granulosa cell tumors
ovarian tumor, postmenopausal women, sex cord stromal tumors, the cells in these are called Call-Exner bodies (gland like with pink eosinophilic center and coffee bean nuclei), unilateral, secretes estrogen, endometrial hyperplasia. Increased inhibin, increased estrogen
krukenberg tumors
ovaries are a common site for metastases from adenocarcinomas of the alimentary tract, especially from the stomach. These tumors, known as krukenberg tumors, are often bilateral and characterized histologically by overproduction of mucus.
endometriosis commonly affects the
ovary; the uterine mucosa is covered by endometrium, and abnormal implantation of endometrial glands/ stroma is referred to as endometriosis. The ovary is covered by a simple cuboidal epithelium involved in surface repair of defects from ovulation. Endometriosis commonly affects the ovary and results in infertility.
tricyclic antidepressants
overdose can cause fatal cardiac arrhythmias and refractory hypotension due to inhibition of fast sodium channels in cardiac myocytes.
osgood schlatter disease
overuse injury of the secondary ossfiication center (apophysis) of the tibial tubercle
irreversible step in gluconeogenesis
oxaloacetate to phosphoenolpyruvate (catalyzed bny PEP carboxykinase)
fatty acid oxifdation vs synthesis location
oxidation: mitochondria; synthesis: cytosol
transition from adenoma to carcinoma: which gene is inactivated
p53 (KRAS is activated to make it an adenoma in the first place)
locus ceruleus
paired brainstem nucleus located in the posterior rostral pons near the lateral floor of the fourth ventricle and functions as the principal site for norepinephrine synthesis in the brain. It projects to virtually all parts of the CNS and helps control mood, arousal (RAS), sleep wake states, cognition and autonomic function.
absent P waves
palpitations refer to a subjective sensation/ awareness of the heartbeat due to rapid arrhythmias or forceful ventricular contractions. Atrial fibrillation is the most common cause of an irregularly irregular rhythm and is detected on ECG by an absence of organized P waves and varying R-R intervals.
painless obstructive jaundice, and weight loss, and courvoisier sign (painless palpable gallbladder in a jaundiced patient), migratory thrombophlebitis
pancreatic adenocarcinoma; smoking is the most important environmental risk factor for pancreatic cancer. Others are: advanced age, chronic pancreatitis, and genetics (peutz jeghers syndrome)
most common GI manifestation of cystic fibrosis is
pancreatic insufficiency (pancreatic duct obstruction and distension due to viscous mucus leading to fibrosis) (present from birth) - leads to ADEK deficiency
VIPoma
pancreatic islet cell tumor that hypersecretes vasoactive intestinal peptide, which increases intestinal chloride loss into the stool and causes excess losses of the accompanying water, sodium and potassium. VIP also inhibits gastric acid secretion. Somatostatin inhibits the secretion of VIP and is used to treat the sx of VIPoma.
CA 19-9
pancreatic tumor
PSaMMoma bodies
papillary thyroid, serous ovary, meningioma, and mesothelioma
parenteral vaccines
parental = IV; parental vaccines are not good at eliciting an IgA response, which means theyre not good for gut mucosal infections like V cholerae.
parenteral vs enteral
parenteral: anywhere besides the mouth/ alimentary canal (i.e. admin into a vein); enteral: by mouth/ using the alimentary canal.
mumps
parotitis and severe testicular pain
idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
patchy interstitial inflammation intermixed with areas of dense fibrosis and normal lung, focal fibroblastic proliferation, and a honeycomb pattern most prominent in the periphery. Repetitive injury and disordered healing are implicated as potential causes; lung injury results in the focal loss of type 1 pneumocytes and hyperplasia of type 2 pneumocytes. digital clubbing.
differential clubbing (i.e. toe cyanosis but not finger) and cyanosis without blood pressure or pulse discrepancy
patent ductus arteriosis complicated by eisenmenger syndrome (reversal of shunt flow from left to right, to right-to-left.
continuous murmur in the left infraclavicular region with maximal intensity at S2
patent ductus arteriosis.
wide splitting of S2 that does not change with respiration
patent foramen ovale or ASD (transient shunt reversal during periods of coughing or straining)
baby with pee coming out umbilicus
patent urachus (failure of the urachus to obliterate). Urachus is part of the allantoic duct that connect the bladder and umbilicus. Allantois becomes the urachus in the baby. in adults this becomes the mediAN umbilical ligament
anitschkow cells
pathognomnic for rheumatic heart disease (activated macrophages that are part of Aschoff bodies).
membranous segment of the posterior urethra in men is the weakest point and prone to damage in
pelvic fracture
you cant get DOME if your FLACCID penis is VULGAR
pemphigus vulgaris is flaccid bullae and erosions of the skin and mucosal membranes. Autoantibodies against desmosomes.
flaccid bullae, desquamations, and oral ulcerations
pemphigus vulgaris; bullous impetigo; staph aureus; exfoliative toxin A; targets desmoglein 1 and 3 in superficial epidermis (bc big bullae are deeper and not flaccid); desmoglein is a cadherin component of desmosomes
lupus pts can have (heart stuff)
pericarditis
aortic dissection can extend into the
pericardium, causing tamponade with reduced cardiac output and shock
menopause
permanent cessation of menses for 12 months (usually happens at 51) ; elevated serum FSH level confirms the diagnosis. (bc estrogen usually inhibits ant pit from releasing FSH.
zellweger syndrome
peroxisome defect - cant digest very long chain fatty acids.
wallerian degeneration of axons: what will you see 6 months later
persistant myelin debris (can persist for years); suppresses axonal growth and astrocytes also make glial scar that forms a barrier to axon regeneraton. Astrocytes = CNS; Schwann cells = PNS
Obsessive compulsive disorder
persistent, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) and repetitive, time-consuming rituals (compulsions) that the individual feels driven to perform to alleviate anxiety or prevent a feared event (i.e. someone breaking into their house).
bordatella pertussis
pertussis should be considered in any adult who has not had updated vaccination boosters. The clinical presentation is a praoxysmal cough lasting >2 weeks that is associated with post-tussive emesis or inspiratory whoop after a severe coughing episode.
friedreich ataxia
pes cavus, degeneration of the spinocerebellar tracts, dorsal column and dorsal root ganglia. Kyphoscoliosis, heart disease (HCM),
what is responsible for the conversion of C. Diptheriae from nontoxigenic to toxigenic
phage conversion permitting exotoxin production (bacteriophage)
post MI: 7-10 days
phagocytosis of dead cells by macrophages; beginning granulation tissue
daptomycin
pharoah's chicken (police DePt); tx for gram positive organisms; moa: glycopeptide polymerization (the drug is inactivated by pulmonary surfactant)
train of four stimulation pattern for succinycholine
phase 1: constant depol; phase 2: fading depol
PCP
phencyclidine; sx: nystagmus, violence, hallucinogen
Cortisol increases the conversion of NE to epinephrine in the adrenal medulla by increasing the expression of _
phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase (PNMT)
musty body odor
phenylketonuria; tx: phenylalanine-free diet
dipalmitoyl lecithin
phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) levels increase as surfactant is produced; sphingomyelin remains constant. Surfactant production begins at 28 weeks. Phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) is the major component of surfactant (made by the type 2 pneumocytes).
myosin light chain dephosph vs phosph
phosphoryation = contraction; dephosphorylation = relaxation
what causes wrinkles
photoaging is a product of excess exposure to ultraviolet A wavelengths and is characterized by epidermal atrophy with flattening of rete ridges. In addition, there is decreased collagen fibril production and increased degradation of collagen and elastin in the dermis. there is increased crosslinking of collagen with deposition of collagen breakdown products.
the diaphragmatic and mediastinal pleura pain fibers are in the
phrenic nerve (C3-C5). The rest of the pain fibers for the rest of the parietal pleura is the intercostal nerves.
interscalene (brachial plexus) nerve block is danger to what nerve
phrenic nerve roots (C3-C5) bc they pass thru theere
beta endorphin and ACTH
physiologic modulation of pain; beta endorphin is one endogenous opioid peptide that is derived from proopiomelanocortin (POMC). POMC is a polypeptide precursor that oges thru enzymatic cleavage and modification to produce not only beta-endorphins but also ACTH and MSH. The fact that beta endorphin and ACTH are derived from the same precursor suggests that there may be a close physiological relatinshup between the stress axis and the opioid system.
tx for anticholinergic overdose/ toxicity
physostigmine (can reverse both the CNS and PNS sx of anticholnergic toxicity - the other -stigmine's can only do PNS)
Niemann pick disease
pick your big nose with your sphinger, sphingomyelin, big = hepatomegaly
What muscle passes through the greater sciatic foramen
piriformis muscle
malassezia globosa
pityriasis versicolor (tinea versicolor) is a superficial skin infection caused by malassezia species. It causes erythematous, hyper- or hypopigmented macules and patches. Malassezia forms spores and hyphae, producing the characteristic "spaghetti and meatballs" appearance on KOH preparation light microscopy.
ph vs pka
pka is a unique measure of a substance of when it will either be in acid form or basic form. If pH > pka the substance will be in basic form. If pH< pka the substance will be in acidic form
profuse bleeding/ postpartum hemorrhage can result from
placenta accreta (placenta in the muscularis layer of the uterus and therefore it doesn't get entirely evacuated after birth of child and causes continued bleeding). Prior uterine surgery can impair decidualization, resulting in myometrial invasion by villous tissue and a placenta that is abnoramlly adherent to the myometrium (placenta accreta).
thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
platelet disorder due to a deficiency of ADAMTS 13 (a von willebrand factor metalloprotease). typically occurs in pts who have a pentad of fever, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, renal disease, and neurologic sx.
wallenberg syndrome
posterior inferior cerebellar artery occlusion causes lateral medullary (wallenberg) syndrome, characterized by vertigo/ nystagmus, ipsilateral cerebellar signs, loss of pain/ temperature sensation in the ipsilateral face and contralateral body, bulbar weakness and ipsilateral Horner syndrome. This condition can occur in the setting of cervical spine trauma with dissection of the vertebral artery.
Postpartum hemorrhage
postpartum hemorrhage is an obstetrical emergency. Bilateral ligation of the internal iliac artery can decrease uterine blood flow and control postpartum hemorrhage that is unresponsive to medical management (i.e. uterine massage, uterotonic medications).
class 3 antiarrhythmics act via what ion
potassium. They block potassium channels and inhibit outward potassium currents during phase 3 of the cardiac action potential, prolonging repolarization and total action potential duration.
released phosphate binds to free calcium and
precipitates in soft tissues
predictable drug reactions vs nonpredictable
predictable is stuff like gastritis assoc with naproxen (COX inhibitors); nonpredictable includes: exaggerated, idiosyncratic (unpredictable), immunologic (drug allergy), and pseudoallergic drug reaction.
active form of prednisone
prednisolone
preeclampsia vs eclampsia
preeclampsia: proteinuria, hypertension and end organ damage. Eclampsia is all those plus seizures (grand mal).
schizoid
prefers to be a loner; detached, unemotional; persistent pattern of social detachment, preference for solitary activities, and constricted range of affect in social interactions.
pregnancy and thyroid binding globulin
pregnacy upregulates thyroid binding globulin (this is normal) so pregnant women have increased TOTAL T3 and TOTAL T4, and normal FREE T4 and T3.
anterior knee pain - which bursa
prepatellar bursitis (from repetitive or prolonged kneeling)
patients with severe mitral regurgitation: what is the best indicator of the severity of their disease
presence of audible S3 (rapid filling of the ventricles), due to a large volume of regurgitant flow reentering the ventricle during mid-diastole.
adenomyosis
presence of endometrial glandular tissue within the myometrium. Menorrhagia and dysmenorrhea are common presenting symptoms. Patients have a uniformly enlarged uterus with normal-appearing endometrial tissue on biopsy.
periarticular lymphatic sheath (ALS)
present in the spleen
familial chylomicronemia syndrome
presents in childhood with recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis. Patients with this disorder are not usually at increased risk for premature coronary artery disease. Eruptive skin xanthomas may be present in hypertriglyceridemia but tendon xanthomas and xanthelasmas are primarily seen with hypercholesterolemia.
digoxin toxicity
presents with cardiac arrhythmias and nonspecific gastrointestinal (nausea, vomiting), neurological (confusion, weakness), and visual symptoms (color vision alterations). Elevated potassium is another sign of digoxin toxicity is caused by inhiition of Na-K-ATPase pumps. causes increased vagal tone (causing slowing of conduction through the AV node).
digoxin toxicity
presents with nonspecific GI (i.e. anorexia, nausea, vomiting) and neuro (fatugue, confusion, weakness) sx. Changes in color vision are a more specific but rarer finding. Life threatening ventricular arrhythmias are the most serious complication.
central retinal artery occlusion
presents with sudden, painless and permanent monocular blindness. Fundoscopic: pale retina and "cherry-red" macula. Central retinal artery comes from ophthalmic artery which comes from internal carotid artery. Athero and thrombo-emboli can cause this.
catheter IV assoc infections - how to decrease these
prevention: placement of catheter by a specialized IV team, antiseptic techniques, and prompt removal once no longer needed
moa of vancomycin
prevents cell wall synthesis by binding D ala D ala moieties
what type of cancer is an immunosuppressed pt going to get. The mass have cells containing EBV genome.
primary CNS lymphoma. These arise from B cells and are universally assoc with EBV. They are high grade tumors with a poor prognosis. Most commonly assoc with AIDS. The most common subtype if the diffuse large B cell lymphoma. These cells are usually positive for CD20 and CD79a.
lacunar infarcts in the brain: primary cause and what they are
primary cause: lipohyalinosis and microatheromas; they happen bc of hypertension or diabetes and cause liquefactive necrosis in the brain; they are ischemic infarcts involving deep brain structures (basal ganglia, pons) and subcortical white matter (internal capsule, corona radiata). can also be due to hypertensive arteriolar sclerosis (hardening of the vessel wall), which predisposes to thrombotic vessel occlusion.
second most common cause of ring enhancing lesions on MRI of brain
primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL). It's a diffuse, large-cell non-hodgkin lymphoma of B cell origin. Has positive EBV in CSF. T cells (downey cells) are not usually in the brain unless its in AIDS associated T cell lymphoma where they get EBV, not this condition.
x linked (bruton) agammaglobuinemia; due to the absence of B cells _ and _ will not form within lymph nodes
primary lymphoid follicles and germinal centers
pneumothorax
primary spontaneous pneumothorax occurs in patients without preexisting pulmonary disease when a large change in the alveolar or intrapleural pressure results in a break in the visceral (i.e. ruptured superficial bleb) pleura and air trapping between the pleural spaces.
CI's for OCP
prior stroke, hx of estrogen dependent tumor, female 35 or older who smokes, hyper TG's, liver disease, pregnancy
effective reporting system
privacy of whistleblowers; resports from broad range of personnel; reports shared in timely fashion; structure for reviewing and taking action
type 1 error (alpha error)
prob of saying there is a difference between groups when there isnt one
type 2 error (beta error)
prob of saying there is no difference between groups when there is one
IgA protease
produced by neisseria meningitidis, gonorrhea, strep pneumo and H influenza. It cleaves IgA. IgA would normally prevent pili of bacteria and other surface antigens from binding/ adhering to the mucosa (i.e. prevents their penetration of the gut mucosa).
h pylori testing
produces the enzyme urease, which splits urea into CO2 and ammonia and neutralizes the acidic gastric pH. If there is alkalinization bc of the ammonia formation, this is confirmatory.
mifepristone
progesterone antagonist (works for abortion bc progesterone is necessary for implantation and maintenance of pregnancy - used with misoprostol to terminate first trimester pregnancies), and glucocorticoid antagonist
kid whose parents are getting a divorce thinks that they are mad at him when they are really not. This is...
projection (because he is projecting his feelings on to the parents (i.e. he's mad at them).
iatrogenic cushing syndrome
prolonged administration of glucocorticoids. Can lead to osteonecrosis. Both cushings and SLE can increase risk for atherosclerosis and acute coronary events.
why give tetanus vaccine with HiB vaccine?
promotes t cell dependent immune response
inactivation of anti-oncogenes eliminates
proofreading/ oversight of the cell cycle
prostacyclin, thromboxane/ endothelin, and nitric oxide: what do they do to the lung vasculature
prostacyclin: vasodilation; thromboxane/ endothelin: vasoconstriction; nitric oxide: vasodilation
misoprostol
prostaglandin E1 agonist
loop diuretics like furosemide will cause
prostaglandin release (which increases renal blood flow leading to increased GFR and enhanced drug delivery.
which area/type of cancer is the one that most often metastasizes to bone
prostate
antidote for unfractionated heparin
protamine
drug used for heparin reversal
protamine
warfarin induced skin necrosis is from what
protein C activity
transthyretin (TTR) deposition
protein made in the liver, carries thyroxine and retinol, if mutated causes amyloid protein that deposits in the myocardium causing infitrative cardiomyopathy (a restrictive cardiomyopathy that is a form of HFpEF (heart failure with preserved ejection fraction))
which two bugs cause staghorn calculi
proteus and klebsiella (bc theyre both urease positive so they convert urea to ammonia which alkalizes the urine and precipitates magnesium ammonium phosphate crystals aka staghorn calculi).
RET
proto-oncogene. Medullary thyroid cancer, pheochromocytoma
haldane and bohr effects: RBCs will unload what in the presence of increased oxygen?
protons and CO2
KRAS
protooncogene
myotonic dystrophy
proximal muscle weakness and delayed muscle relaxation
if pt takes longer to come out of succinylcholine anethesia it is caused by what
pseudocholinesterase deficiency
ecthyma gangrenosum
pseudomonas aeruginosa (black spots on body/ skin patches with necrotic centers and ulcerations)
malignant otitis externa
pseudomonas is the most common cause of MOE, which is a serious infeciton fo the ear in elderly diabetic patients. MOE presents with exquisite ear pain and drainage, and granulation tissue is often seen within the ear canal.
mucinous cystadenocarcinoma
pseudomyxoma peritonei, mucin-producing epithelial cells
main muscle used for getting up from a seated position
psoas major (hip flexors)
hyperkeratosis, parakeratosis, epidermal hyperplasia, and dilated capillaries in the dermal papillae
psoriasis
psychogenic polydipsia vs DI
psychogenic polydipsia: vasopressin doesn't change the urine osmo & serum sodium is low; central DI: large increase in urine osmo w vasopressin admin; nephrogenic DI: mild increase in urine osmo w vasopressin admin
schizophreniform
psychotic sx >1 month but less than 6 months (schizophrenia)
drug induced lupus (isonaizid)
pts who are slow acetylators are predisposed to drug induced lupus bc INH (and procainamide, and hydralazine) are metabilized via phase 2 acetylation in the liver, so therefore they have increased drug concentrations and get DILE.
tx for PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome)
pts who desire fertility can be tx with clomiphene (estrogen receptor modulator that decreases negative feedback inhibition on the hypothalamus by circulating estrogen, thereby increasing gonadotropin production).
alcoholic with lung abscesses and fever
pts with alcoholism are at increased risk for lung abscess due to the aspiration of oral flora during periods of unconscousness. Usually bacterioides fragilis and tx is clindamycin
gilbert syndrome
pts with no apparent liver disease who have mild unconjugated hyperbiirubinemia that appears provoked by one of the classic triggers.
common complication of systemic sclerosis
pulmonary arterial hypertension, resutling from proliferation of T cells with release of cytokines (TGF beta) and consequent progressive thickening and occlusion of the small and medium sized pulmonary arteries/ arterioles. Patients typically have progressive dyspnea and a loud pulmonic component of S2 and may develop signs of right-sided heart failure (i.e. hepatomegaly, peripheral edema).
pts with rheumatoid arthritis get what kind of lung disease
pulmonary fibrosis from the RA itself and form the tx (methotrexate, cyclophosphamide and sulfasalazine)
congenital diaphragmatic hernia can lead to
pulmonary hypoplasia (oligohydramnios can also cause pulmonary hypoplasia)
atrial fibrillation: most common site of ectopic foci
pulmonary veins in the left atrium.
widening splitting of S2
pulmonic stenosis, pulmonary HTN
forceful postprandial nonbilious vomiting in the first 2 months of life
pyloric stenosis
thiamine is a cofactor for what
pyruvate dehydrogenase (pyruvate->acetyl CoA) & alpha ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (alpha ketoglutarate -> succinyl CoA)
if person is in metabolic acidosis from lactic acidosis, the enzyme that is faulty is prob
pyruvate dehydrogenase bc this shuttles it over to lactate dehydrogenase
drools and has painful throat spasms after camping; what's the entry receptor for this infection
rabies virus (rhabdovirus) enters thru muscle acetylcholine receptors
brachioradialis is innervated by and its action is...
radial nerve and flexion of the forearm at the elbow.
radiculopathy for back pain
radiates to leg; positive straight leg raise test
graves vs postpartum thyroiditis
radioiodine uptake is high in graves but not in postpartum. Like hashimoto's (chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis) the 3 stages are: hyperthyroid (releases bc they lyse the cells) then euthyroid then hypothryoid
third heart sound (S3)
rapid passive filling of ventricles in diastole (after S2)
non-hodgkin lymphoma
rapidly progressive mass, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, B sx (night sweats, weight loss). Dx: lymph node biopsy (large atypical B cells with high nuclear cytoplasmic ratio); EBV can be assoc with NHL bc its known to cause burkitt's lymphoma which is a type of NHL.
ehlers danlos syndrome
rare hereditary disorders that have defective collagen synthesis. Can be caused by procollagen peptidase deficiency, which results in impaired cleavage of terminal propeptides in the extracellular space (N terminal propeptide removal). Patients often have joint laxity, hyperextensible skin, and tissue fragility due to the formation of soluble collagen that does not properly crosslink.
glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase
rate limiting enzyme in the pentose phosphate pathway (glucose 6 phosphate to ribulose 5 phosphate), the mahor source of cellular NADPH. This molecule is necessary for reducing glutathione and for biosynthesis of cholesterol, fatty acids, and steroids.
ischemic stroke: 1-2 weeks
reactive gliosis & vascular proliferation around the necrotic area (liquefactive necrosis (1wk - 1 mo)
chronic neuronal injury
reactive gliosis (ALS, parkinsons) - progressive disease
downey cell
reactive, atypical T lymphocyte (EBV) that functions to destroy virally infected B lymphocytes
biggest risk factor for suicide besides previous attempt and access to guns
recent diagnosis of chronic illness
vertebral osteomyelitis
recent infection, intravenous drug abuse or immune compromise; fevers and night sweats
mast cells are activated via
receptor aggregation; the high affinity IgE receptor (FcERI) is found on the surface of mast cells and basophils and normally binds the Fc portion of circulating IgE antibodies. Cross-linking of multiple membrane bound IgE antibodies by a multivalent antigen results in aggregation of the FcERI receptors, causing degranulation and the release of preformed mediators (i.e. histamine, tryptase) that intiate an allergic response.
intermittent explosive disorder
recurrent episodes of explosive verbal or physical aggression. The aggressive behaviors are impulsive and grossly out of proportion to the provocation.
IgA nephropathy
recurrent hematuria that occurs spontaneously or within 5-7 days of an URI. Unlike PSGN, IgA has normal complement levels
hyperparathyroidism can cause
recurrent kidney stones, and they have hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia.
cystic fibrosis
recurrent respiratory infections with pseudomonas aeuruginosa, diarrhea and failure to thrive, causes steatorrhea and FTT due to malabsorption secondary to pancreatic insufficiency, which can be corrected by pancreatic enzyme supplementation.
red pulp vs white pulp
red = red blood cells; white = white blood cells
ischemic stroke: 12 - 24 hours
red neurons (loss of nissl substance)
moa of niacin
reduced VLDL and hepatic triglyceride synthesis
dihydrorhodamine test (new test) vs nitroblue tetrazolium dye reduction test
reduced flourescence = chronic granulomatous disease or tetrazolium: negative
surfactant moa
reduces the surface tension by disrupting the hydrogen bonds between molecules of water, thereby preventing small alveoli from collapsing. It is made of mostly lecithin (phosphatidylcholine).
how does combined hormonal oral contraceptive work?
reduction of serum gonadotropin levels (i.e. suppresses GnRH and pituitary gonadotropin secretion inhibiting ovulation)
recombination
refers to the gene exchange that occurs through the crossing over of 2 double stranded DNA molecules. Reassortment describes the mixing of genome segments in segmented viruses that infect the same host cell.
lac operon
regulated by two distinct mech: negatively by binding of the repressor protein to the operator locus and positively by cAMP-CAP binding upstream from the promoter region. Constitutive expression of the structural genes of the lac operon occurs with mutations that impair the binding of the repressor protein (Lac I) to its regulatory sequence in the operator region.
releasing factor
releases ribosome when it hits a stop codon
spondyloarthropathy
relieved with exercise; HLA B27; young men, prolonged morning stiffness
osteoarthritis
relieved with rest
protein kinase A
responsible for the intracellular effects of the G protein mediated adenylate cyclase second messenger system. Hormone receptors that use this system include the TSH, glucagon, and PTH receptors.
familial retinoblastoma
result of mutations of each of the two Rb genes (two hits). These pts have an increased risk of secondary tumors, especially osteosarcomas, later in life.
diabetic gastroparesis
results from the destruction of enteric neurons due to chronic hyperglycemia, leading to impaired relaxation and disordered and ineffective peristalsis. This causes delayed gastric emptying, which presents as postprandial fullness, regurgitation of undigested food, nausea and vomiting.
shaken baby/ abuse
retinal hemorrhages; subdural hemorrage (tearing of bridging veins)
wet age-related macular degeneration
retinal neovascularization due to increased vascular endothelial growht factor (VEGF) levels. Patients typically have acute vision loss and metamorphopsia with funduscopy showing a grayish-green subretinal membrane and/or subretinal hemorrhage. Tx: moking cessation and VEGF inhibitor therapy (ranibizumab, bevacizumab).
RB
retinoblastoma, osteosarcoma, other cancers; tumor suppressor gene
tetanus path of infection
retrograde (wound, motor neurons, spinal cord interneurons
cannulation above the inguinal ligament into the femoral artery increases the risk of
retroperitoneal hemorrhage. They usually do it below the inguinal ligament to avoid this risk.
sadpucker mnemonic
retroperitoneal organs. Suprarenal (adrenal) glands, aorta, and IVC, duodenum (not 1st part), pancreas (body and head), ureters and bladder, colon (asc and desc), kidneys, esophagus, rectum (mid-distal)
hand wringing
rett syndrome (return to baby - always girls; X chromosome; ataxia and seizures)
what distinguishes cervical malignancy from low grade dysplasia (from HPV)?
reversibility of changes (low grade dysplasia in HPV often spontaneously regresses) (high grade dysplasia often goes to cancer)
asthma
reversible airway obstructon by mucous plugs, shortness of breath and wheezing. Sputum pf patients with asthma contains eosinophils, charcot leyden crystals and curschmann spirals.
squamous metaplasia is a
reversible, adaptive response to chronic irritation, such as smoking. The normal columnar epithelium is replaced by squamous epithelium, which is more resistant to irritation but has reduced mucociliary clearance. Metaplasia also occurs with Barrett esophagus, in which esophageal squamous epithelium is replaced by columnar epithelium in response to chronic acid exposure.
strongyloides stercoralis - findings in the stool
rhabditiform larvae in the stool
IgM anti-IgG autoantibodies
rheumatoid arthritis
implantable pacemakers can lead to
right heart failure via tricuspid valve regurgitation (bc the pacemaker goes thru the tricuspid valve)
high altitude sickness
right shift in the hemoglobin dissociation curve; hypoxemia leads to hyperventilation and respiratory alkalosis. This causes the sx (headache, fatigue, lightheadedness). The kidneys respond by creating a compensatory metabolic acidosis (decreased HCO3- reabsorption and H+ secretion) and by increasing erythropoietin secretion.
two syndromes that cause QT prolongation due to mutations in K channel
romano ward syndrome and jervell & lange-nielsen syndrome
anterior wall MI can lead to
rupture of the left ventricular free wall, which usually occurs within the first 5-14 days after an MI. Rupture leads to hemopericardium and cardiac tamponade, causing profound hypotension and shock with rapid progression to pulseless electrical activity and death.
most common fetal neoplasm
sacrococcygeal teratoma; and its the most common extragonadal germ cell tumor in infants and children. usually benign.
#1 cause of osteomyelitis in pts with sickle cell anemia
salmonella typhi (bones of fishhead and sickle in hand of seagull)
celiac sprue
same as celiac disease
biopsy of the bladder shows eggs, person is from sudan, has hematuria, what is it and what predisposed the pt to it?
schistosomiasis; contaminated water exposure (snails)
schizoid vs avoidant personality disorder
schizoid: social withdrawal, no close relationships, pts are viewed as reclusive, and emotionally cold. Avoidant: DESIRE companionship/ relationships, fear of rejection keeps them form socializing, feelings of inadequacy,
acoustic neuroma
schwann cell derived tumors that arise from the vestibular portion of the vestibulocochlear nerve and are located at the cerebellopontine angle (between the cerebellum and lateral pons). Patients usually present with unilateral sensorineural hearing loss and tinnitus.
koebner phenomenon
scratching spreads it (psoriasis)
colchicine
second line agent for treating acute gouty arthritis. It inhibits tubulin polymerization and microtubule formation in leukocytes, reducing neutrophil chemotaxis and emigration to sites inflamed by tissue deposition of monosodium urate crystals. Gastrointestinal mucosal function is also impaired by microtubule disruption, leading to diarrhea and less commonly nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain.
11 beta hydroxylase deficiency
second most common cause of congenital adrenal hyperplasia after 21 hydroxylase deficiency. Typically results in excessive adrenal androgen and mineralocorticoid (11 deoxycorticosterone) production. Genetically female infants are born with ambiguous genitalia and affected individuals develop HTN and hypokalemia early in life.
PBG deaminase deficiency
see with acute intermittent porphyria (classically presenting with abdominal pain and neuropsychiatric manifestations).
numbness and paresthesias
sensory disturbance. Can come from a partial (focal) seizure originating in the cortical region (i.e. the postcentral gyrus - primary somatosensory cortex)
kernicterus moa
serious neonatal illness and preterm status are assoc with marked reductions in bilirubin-binding capacity and affinity and an increased risk of kernicterus. Kernicterus is caused by increased unconjugated bilirubin crossing the blood-brain barrier. Albumin binds bilirubin in serum. Decreased levels of albumin prevent complexing and transport to the liver, increasing the risk of kernicterus. (i.e. increased enterohepatic circulation of bilirubin)
raphe nuclei
serotonin releasing neurons in the CNS are located here. This is where SSRI's and TCA's act.
how do you monitor kidney function when using amphotericin B
serum potassium and magnesium levels
liquefactive necrosis
severe bacterial infections (gangrene), CNS infarcts; mediated by digestion by hydrolytic enzymes, the infarcted CNS tissue is replaced by cystic astroglial scar.
lower extremity cyanosis
severe coarctation of the aorta
severe bacterial and viral infections in infancy; chronic diarrhea; mucocutaneous candidiasis
severe combined immunodeficiency (absent T cells and hypogammaglobulinemia. Thymic shadow is not there
rabies
severe encephalitis, hydrophobia; infects the synaptic motor endplate and goes retrograde; negative sense RNA; helical
pituitary apoplexy
severe headache, bitemporal hemianopsia (optic chiasm), ophthalmoplegia (CN III), hemodynamic instability and altered sensorium. Panhypopituitarism (acute and chronic), severe hypotension (central adrenal failure), coma and death.
herpetic gingivostomatitis
severe vesicular or ulcerative disease following primary infection with herpes simplex virus 1. involves gingiva, tongue, palate, and pharynx with sx: fever, malaise. Reactivation of a latent herpes infection in the trigeminal ganglia generally results in just mild perioral vesicles.
pleuritic chest pain
sharp, localized, often severe pain that is exacerbated by coughing, breathing or changing position. Results from inflammation of the pleura. The visceral pleura (covers the lungs) does not have pain fibers. Parietal pleura (forms the outer boundary of the pleural space - divided into costal pleura, mediastinal pleura, diaphragmatic pleura and cervical pleura).
esmolol is
short acting beta blocker (class II antiarrhythmic)
migratory thrombophlebitis
should raise suspicion for cancer. Hypercoag is common paraneoplastic syndrome seen in visceral adenocarcinomas of the pancreas, colon and lung. Bc the tumors make a thromboplastin like substance. Migratory superficial thrombophlebitis, known as trousseau syndrome, is assoc with cancer.
howell jolly bodies
sickle cell disease (nuclear remnants in RBCs as a result of splenic dysfunction)
common causes of avascular necrosis
sickle cell disease, glucocorticoid therapy, and alcoholism
in order for a protein to get into the ER or the nucleus, you have to put _ on the N terminus on the protein
signaling sequence (an amino acid sequence)
GLP1 agonists ADRs
significant weight loss, and pancreatitis; it functions to delay gastric emptying leading to a feeling of satiety longer.
silicosis
silica particles impair macrophage function and this increases risk of TB infection
frameshift mutation
single base deletion leading to alteration in the reading frame
silent mutation
single base substitution that doesn't change anything.
missense mutations
single base substitution that results in placement of an incorrect amino acid in a protein sequence.
Dengue fever
single stranded RNA viruses with 4 different seroptypes. Primary (first) infection can be asymptomatic or cause a self-limited disease in most adults. Secondary infection is due to infection with a different viral serotype and usually causes more severe illness.
appendicitis
singular event, with acute periumbilical or right lower quadrant pain and tenderness
during exercise, total systemic vascular resistance decreases because
skeletal muscles get up to 85% of cardiac output and their vasodilation decreases the total system vascula resistance (despite increased cardiac output and splanchnic vasoconstriction)
blowing/ harsh holosystolic murmur at left sternal border with no symptoms (at birth or around that time)
small VSD
giardia causes (gross)
small bowel inflammation and villous atrophy
lambert eaton is assoc with (cancer)
small cell carcinoma of the lung
chromogranin and synaptophysin stain
small cell carcinoma of the lung (assoc w lambert eaton)
small kidney (unilateral) and hypertension, hyperlipidemia, coronary artery disease,
small kidney is from oxygen and nutrient deprivation from renal artery stenosis
wallerian degeneration causes skeletal muscle atrophy which on histo appears as
small muscle fibers with decreased cross sectional area, which are angulated or triangular.
histoplasma capsulatum on histology
small ovoid bodies on histology.
5 alpha reductase deficiency
small phallus and hypospadias are common
legionella pneumophila
smokers, diarrhea, hyponatremia, doesn't show up on gram stain, tx: fluoroquinolones, macrolides
biggest risk factor of renal cell carcinoma
smoking
risk factor for urothelial cancer of the bladder
smoking
strongest risk factor for squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx aka laryngeal cancer in the vocal cords
smoking
risk factors for urothelial (transitional cell) bladder cancer
smoking, occupational exposure (rubber, plastics, aromatic amine-containing dyes, textiles or leather)
pathogenesis of centriacinar emphysema
smoking; neutrophils & macrophages release proteases (i.e. elastase, cathepsins, and matrix metalloproteinases). This leads to the irreversible airspace dilation distal to the terminal bronchioles.
if renal artery stenosis in one kidney, the other one will increase excretion of what?
sodium bc it senses the increased blood pressure
treatment for TCA overdose
sodium bicarb
when saline is applied to the nasal mucosa, the increase _ absorption in pts with _ causes a more negative nasal transepithelial potential difference, which can be used to diagnose _
sodium, cystic fibrosis
first phase in pacemaker action potential (funny channels)
sodium-mediated (phase 4 is first) then phase 0 which is calcium then phase 3 which is potassium
somatic symptom disorder vs illness anxiety disorder
somatic symptom = several physical complaints that persist for more than 6 mo, but medical work up is normal illness anxiety disorder = no symptoms but they are worried about GETTING an illness so they get tested all the time
non-small cell lung carcinoma
some pts have a chromosomal rearrangement that creates a fusion gene between EML 4 and ALK which results in constitutive active tyrosine kinase that causes malignancy.
conversion of glucose to what, causes diabetic blindness
sorbitol (builds up)
acanthocyte
spiked cell membrane (spur cell)
potassium sparing diuretics (k STAys)
spironolactone& eplerenone = aldosterone receptor inhibitors ; triamterine & amiloride = Na channel blockers at the collecting duct
what are the two areas of the GI that are especially susceptible to ischemia (i.e. watershed areas)
splenic flexure and the rectosigmoid junction (bc they lie between regions of perfusion of major arteries)
gastric varices (of the short gastric veins in the fundus of the stomach) can be caused by increased pressure in which vascular structure?
splenic vein
prion disease on histo
spongiform degeneration of the gray matter with vacuolization of neurons, gliosis, and cyst formation.
Sentral (squamous and small cell); the S's (i.e. both are) are paraneoplastic. Squamous is:.. and small is:...
squamous (PTHrp); small cell (SIADH and ACTH)
actinic keratoses can develop into
squamous cell carcinoma; you're more likely to have just one squamous cell carcinoma
HER1:
squamous cell lung cancer; protooncogene
Myocardial hibernation
state of chronic myocardial ischemia in which myocardial metabolism and function are reduced to match a concomitant reduction in coronary blood flow due to stenosis. Hibernating myocardium refers to the presence of left ventricular systolic dysfunction due to reduced coronary blood flow at rest that is partially or completely reversible by coronary revascularization.
most effective lipid lowering drug for prevention of cardiovascular events
statins
sustained tonic clonic seizures...what is this and whats the treatment
status epilepticus and benzodiazpines
s4 heart sound
stiff ventricle walls - hypertrophy of the ventricles, abnormal filling causes turbulent flow which makes the s4 sound (before s1)
transforming growth factor beta
stimulates connective tissue synthesis and remodeling of the ECM. If overexpressed you get too much collagenous scar tissue (keloid)
APC/ Beta catenin
stomach cancer, colon cancer, pancreatic cancer, familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP); tumor suppressor gene
lamellar bodies of type II pneumocytes
store and release pulmonary surfactant into the fluid layer lining the inner surfaces of alveoli. Deficiency in these will cause alveolar atelectasis, as seen in neonatal respiratory distress syndrome.
urine in the scrotum from trauma
straddle injury causing injury to the bulbous urethra. sx: inability to void, blood in the urethral meatus, and scrotal swelling. confirmation with retrograde urethrogram.
which bacteria has an increased zone of hemolysis when plated with staph aureas
strep agalactiae
urinary incontinence in normal pressure hydrocephalus is caused by
stretching of descending cortical fibers (in the paraventricular arrea). This leads to loss of cortical inhibition on the sacral micturition center causing urge incontenence
which area do you sample to diag hirschprung disease
submucosal (meissner) and myenteric (auerbach) autonomic plexi are absent in the affected segment of the bowel in hirschsprung disease (the narrow part). The submucosa of the narrow part is the most superficial layer that has the absence of ganglion cells.
damage to what neural structure can cause hemiballismus
subthalamic nucleus
nephrotic syndrome is a hypercoagulable state.
suddent onset abdominal or flank pain, hematuria and left-sided varicoceles suggest renal vein thrombosis, a well-known complication of nephrotic syndrome. Loss of anticoagulant factors, especially antithrombin III, is responsible for the thrombotic and thromboembolic complications of nephrotic syndrome.
if somebody has low glucose like they took too much exogenous insulin BUT their C peptide levels are normal...think __
sulfonylurea use!! (it promotes release of endogenous insulin)
average is calculated:
sum of the values (i.e. total number of UTI's) divided by the total number of values (i.e. number of people in the study)
which lymphnodes get drainage from the cutaneous areas below the umbilicus (and the external genitalia and the anus below the dentate line)
superficial inguinal nodes (exceptions: glans penis (para-aortic nodes) and posterior calf (popliteal nodes)
malrotation of the gut - bilious emesis - which artery gets pinched by the ligament of treitz
superior mesenteric artery
sphenoethmoid recess is
superior to the superior concha
superoxide dismutase vs NADPH oxidase
superoxide dismutase: neutralizes reactive oxygen species preventing cell injury. During post ischemic reperfusion, oxidative stress is high and ROS production exceeds the neutralizing capability of antioxidants, leading to cell death. ; NAPDH oxidase: catalyzes the reduction of molecular oxygen to superoxide free radicals, aiding in bacterial destruction by phagocytic cells. deficiency leads to chronic granulomatous disease in whcih those affected are unable to destroy catalase postiive organisms. ; AND just NADPH is involved in G6PD deficiency (without G6PD you cant make NADPH to help protect against oxidation
V/Q mismatch in COPD
supplementl oxygen admin in patients with COPD can lead to increased CO2 retention (oxygen induced hypercapnia), resulting in confusion and depressed consciousness. The major cause is reversal of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, which increases physiologic dead space as blood is shunted away from well-ventilated alveoli.
TNF alpha
suppresses appetite and increases basal metabolic rate which leads to cachexia.
mechanism of omeprazole
suppresses the H/K ATPase primary active transporterwhich leads to an increase in the pH of the gastric lumen
which hypothalamix nucleus controls circadian rhythm
suprachiasmatic nucleus
craniopharyngiomas are
suprasellar cystic masses (from rathke's pouch); found in children and composed of calcified cysts containing cholesterol crystals. Rathke's pouch is an embryonic precursor of the anterior pituitary
HIV associated dementia
suspected in patients with AIDS who have progressive cognitive decline. Histo: microglial nodules (groups of activated microglia/ macrophages around small areas of necrosis) and multinucleated giant cells.
warm reactive autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA)
sx: anemia, hemolysis (jaundice), increased reticulocyte count and positive warm agglutinin test. A peripheral blood smear may demonstrate spherocytes. Corticosteroids are first line initial treatment.
thoracic aortic aneurysm
sx: chest or back pain, can compress structures and cause dysphagia, hoarseness, cough or dyspnea.
galactose 1 phosphate transferase deficiency (classic galactosemia/ severe galactosemia) (second enzyme)
sx: jaundice, vomiting, e coli sepsis, cataract, hemolytic anemia; cessation of breast feeding and switching to soy milk based formula is recommended.
to avoid bleeding during oophorectomy, clamp what?
the suspensory ligament of the ovary (houses the ovarian blood vessels)
muscle phosphorylase kinase
synchronization of glycogen degradation with skeletal mscle contraction occurs due to release of sarcoplasmic calcium following neuromuscular stimulation. Increased intracellular calcium causes activation of phosphorylase kinase, stimulating glycogen phosphorylase to increase glycogenolysis.
theca interna does what
synthesis of androgens
methionine is a precursor for
synthesis of cysteine, carnitine, taurine and lecithin.
glucocorticoids are catabolic, but theu also cause increased hepatic
synthesis of gluconeogenic and glucogenic proteins to increase glucose availability. They also peripherally antagonize insulin, which causes the hyperglycemia.
desmopressin
synthetic analog of vasopressin (ADH). It increases vWF release from endothelial cells, which is tx for ppl with von willebrand disease.
cardiolipin
syphilis, lupus, anti-phospholipid syndrome
diminished pinprick and temp sensation across the upper back, shoulders and arms is what condition and is assoc with a lesion where
syringomyelia; lesion is at ventral white commissure. Leads to bilateral loss of pain and temp sensation that is limited to the affected levels (arms and hands). Destruction of the motor neurons in the ventral horns (due to extension of the syrinx) causes flaccid paralysis and atrophy of the intrinsic muscles of the hand.
tx for dermatomyositis
systemic glucocorticoids
CD3
t lymphocyte marker
the two immediate sx of marijuana intoxication
tachycardia and conjunctival injection
calculating incidence
take the previous "cases" of disease OUT of the total popilation when calculating the incidence
mallory weiss tear
tear in the gastric mucosa near the gastroesophageal junction. It typically results from repetitive forceful vomiting, which can also cause metabolic alkalosis.
patient has second thoughts about participating in a research study what do you tell them
tell them they can change their mind about participating
minute ventilation
tidal volume x respiratory rate
microbial infection of keratinized structures in a flower petal shape
tinea corporis
blood gas partition coefficient
term used to tell you the solubility of a gas in blood. If its high, the gas is highly soluble in blood (and therefore has a slower onset of action). And vice versa. If something has a high coefficient, it will have a slow rise in the partial pressure of anesthetic in arterial blood. this is because its DISSOLVED in the blood and DOESNT contribute to the partial pressure of anesthetic in the arterial blood (think coke can CO2 thats dissolved in coke before opening can)
romberg test
test of proprioception used to distinguish sensory (dorsal column/ peripheral nerves) from cerebellar ataxia. When eyes are open = cerebellar. When eyes are closed = sensory ataxia/ problem with posterior column or peripheral nerves (could be caused by tabes dorsalis/ syphilis or vitamin B12).
frontal lobe is tested by
testing abstraction (asking about the similarities between two related objects)
candida skin test
testing for anergy; T cell mediated. Type 4 hypersens reaction; evident 24-48 hours after exposure.
tx for h pyrlori
tetracyclines and metronidazole
pharyngeal arch: speech muscles
the 6th pharyngeal arch gives rise to the intrinsic muscles of the larynx responsible for speech except the cricothyroid, which is derived from the 4th pharyngeal arch.
mTOR pathway
the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway is an intracellular signaling pathway important for anti-apoptosis, cellular proliferation and angiogenesis. Mutations in growth factor receptors, Akt, mTOR or PTEN that enhance the activity of this pathway contribute to cancer pathogenesis.
HIV and CCR5
the T cell chemokine receptor, CCR5 is a coreceptor that enables the HIV virus to enter cells. Blockade of CCR5 by chemokine receptor antagonists prevents viral entry into host cells.
arteriovenous concetration gradient for anesthetics
the arteriovenous concetration gradient is the difference between the concentration of a gas anesthetic in arterial and venous blood. The solubility of the anesthetic in the peripheral tissues is a major factor in determining the size of the arteriovenous gradient. If tissue solubility is high, a large amount of anesthetic is taken up from arterial blood, which results in low venous concetration. As a restul, saturation of the blood requires further absorption of anesthetic in order to replace that which is absorbed by the peripheral tissues. because blood saturation takes longer, brain saturation is also delayed and onset of action is slower.
the deltoid is innervated by
the axillary nerve
as blood moves from the lungs to the left atrium, there is a slight drop in PO2 because
the blood supplying the bronchi is mixed in with the oxygenated blood at that point
the most important expected physiologic response to combat hypovolemia in a patient's body
the body must retain sodium so it uses renin from the juxtaglomerular cells, i.e. the RAAS mechanism. Juxtaglomerular cells are located in the wall of the afferent arteriole.
what is the most deoxygenated blood in the body?
the cardiac venous blood in the coronary sinus, before it reaches the right atrium
axonal reaction
the changes in the body of a neuron after the axon has been severed are called axonal reaction. This process reflects an increased protein synthesis that facilitates axon repair. Enlarged, rounded cells with peripherally located nuclei and dispersed finely granular Nissl substance are seen.
syringomyelia
the combination of fixed segmental loss of upper extremity pain and temperature sensations, upper extremity lower motor neurons signs, and/or lower extremity upper motor neuron signs in the setting of scoliosis suggests syringomyelia. Lower extrimty stuff: loss of position and vibration senses in the feet due to involvement of the posterior columns. scoliosis can occur due to paresis of paravertebral muscles.
common cardinal veins
the common cardinal veins of the developing embryo drain directly into the sinus venosus. These cardinal veins ultimately give rise to the superior vena cava and other constituents of the systemic venous circulation.
proximal tubule concentrations of solutes
the concentrations of PAH, creatinine, inulin and urea increase as fluid runs along the proximal tubule, while the concentrations of bicarbonate, glucose and amino acids decrease (bc they get absorbed into plasma)
ventral pancreatic primordium
the dorsal pancreatic bud forms the majority of pancreatic tissue (body, tail and most of the head). The ventral pancreatic bud is a precursor of the uncinate process, inferior/ posterior portion of the head, and major pancreatic duct (of Wirsung). Failure of the dorsal and ventral pancreatic buds to fuse leads to pancreas divisum. In this condition, the pancreatic ductal systems remain separate, with the accessory duct draining the majority of the pancreas.
CT of esophagus
the esophagus is located between the trachea and the vertebral bodies in the superior thorax. It is typically collapsed with no visible lymen on CT images of the chest.
left pyriform recess surgery, which nerve is at risk/ what might this affect
the internal laryngeal nerve mediates the afferent limb of the cough reflex above the vocal cords. Foreign bodies (i.e. chicken or fish bones) can become lodged in the piriform recess and may cause damage to the nerve, impairing the cough reflex.
microfilaments and integrin
the intracellulaar domains of integrins interact with microfilaments (actin) and intermediate filaments (keratin) but the extracellular domains of integrins do not.
IGF-1 is made where
the liver
place on the immunoglobulin that complement attaches
the middle
poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
the most common cause of nephritic syndrome in children, occuring 2-4 weeks after a streptococcal infection (i.e. impetigo, cellulitis, pharyngitis). It is caused by a type 3 (immune complex mediated) hypersensitivity reaction from nephritogenic strains of group A beta hemolytic strep.
von willebrand disease
the most common inherited coagulation disorder. Decreased vWF impairs platelet adhesion bc vWF is necessary to stabilize factor III in the coagulation cascade.
osteosarcoma
the most common primary bone tumor in children and young adults and typically arises near the metaphyses of long bones. Patients usually have slowly worsening pain and soft tissue swelling. X ray typically reveals a lytic bone lesions and biopsy classically shows pleomorphic, spindle shaped tumor cells that generate osteoid and thin trabeculae of neoplastic bone.
aortic stenosis - murmur intensity
the murmur of AS is a systolic ejection-type, crescendo-decrescendo murmur that starts after the first heart sound and ends before the A2 component of the second heart sound. The intensity of the murmur is proportional to the magnitude of the left ventricle to aorta pressure gradient during systole.
hepatopancreatic ampulla connects
the pancreas to the duodenum (ampulla of vater)
lipofuscin
the product of lipid peroxidation, accumulating in aging cells (especially in patients with malnutrition and cachexia)
anaphylaxis
the result of widespread mast cell and basophil degranulation and the relase of preformed inflammatory mediators, inclduing histamine and tryptase. Tryptase is relatively specific to mast cells and can be used as a marker for mast cell activation.
coronary sinus communicates freely with
the right atrium; therefore increased pressures in the right heart will affect the coronary sinus as well (i.e. pulmonary hypertension)
elastin fibers in the lung allow it to stretch. What contributes to this property of elastin?
the rubber-like properties of elastin are due to high content of nonpolar (hydrophobic) amino acids and extensive cross-linking between elastin monomers facilitated by lysyl oxidase. Patients with alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency can develop early-onset, lower lobe-predominant emphysema due to excessive alveolar elastin degradation.
subarachnoid villi =
the same thing as the arachnoid granulations
lymphoblastic and lymphocytic
the same thing. lymphoblastic might be earlier form.
fatty streaks can occur as early as
the second decade of life (lipid laden macrophages - foam cells - in the intima that progress to plaques)_
adenomatous polyps
the size of adenomatous polyps determines their malignant potential. Adenomas <1cm are unlikely to undergo malignant transformation, whereas those >4cm are very likely to progress to adenocarcinoma. KRAS protooncogene mutation facilitates the growth of adenomas by causing uncontrolled cell proliferation.
korotkoff sounds
the sounds you hear when taking blood pressure (when its deflated), normal sounds
which artery do you ligate in thyroid surgery
the superior thyroid artery coming off the external carotid artery
why do ppl with crohns get gallstones easier
the terminal ileum is most commonly affected in crohns and so they don't reabsorb bile acids which means that there is less bile acids in the gallbladder to mix with the cholesterol and therefore the ratio of cholesterol to bile acids increases causing gallstones.
cachexia and ubiquitin
the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway mediates targeted protein degradation, which allows for rapid disposal of unneeded intracellular proteins. In cancer-related cachexia, high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines lead to increased ubiquitination of sarcomeric muscle proteins, which in turn leads to extensive skeletal muscle loss.
ecological study
the unit of analysis in ecological studies is populations rather than individuals.
metanephric mesoderm vs ureteric bud
the ureteric bud gives rise to: collecting system of kidney including the collecting tubules, and ducts, major and minor calyces, renal pelvis, and the ureters. The metanephric mesoderm (blastema) gives rise to the glomeruli, bowman's space, proximal tubules, the loop of henle and distal convoluted tubules.
theophylline intoxication
theophylline is a methyl xanthine and its related to caffeine. Intoxication = seizures and tachyarrhythmias. Tx for seizures: beta blockers, benzos and barbiturates.
ring enhacing lesions on MRI of HIV pt =
toxoplasmosis
nail bed cells (dermal glomus bodies) do what?
thermoregulatory functions (modified smooth muscle cells)(shunts away blood from the skin surface in cold temps)
high altitude alkalosis: kidneys bicarb
they excrete bicarb to normalize pH
body dysmorphic disorder
they have a preoccupation with perceived defects in physical appearance.
cretinism
they have elevated levels of thryoid stimulating hormone bc mom has thyroid disease and her IgG antibodies attack the fetus's thyroid OR mom thyroid hormone replacement can block endogenous getal thryoid hormone synthesis.
anorexics get stress fractures bc
they have hypogonadal state which leads to estrogen deficiency which causes osteoporosis.
what do the pancreatic islets look like in type 2 diabetes
they have pancreatic islet amyloid deposition
schizoaffective disorder
they have sx of both schizophrenia and a mood disorder (mania, and/or depression). definition: periods of schizophrenia sx WITHOUT mood disorders for >2 weeks, followed by periods of schizophrenia sx WITH mood disorder sx (mania, depression) tx: mood stabilizers and antipsychotic medications
pt has a mutation in the KIT receptor tyrosine kinase (i.e. they have large clusters of mast cells that are positive for KIT (CD 117)) and hypotension, flushing, pruritis (diffuse itching after hot showers), what do they have and what does it cause
they have systemic mastocytosis and it causes gastric hypersecretion of gastric acid by parietal cells bc of the histamine release from the increased mast cells
HPV: viral proteins E6 and E7
they inhibit the cell cycle regulatory proteins p53 and Rb respectively. Allows unchecked proliferation.
how do SGLT2 inhibitors cause hypotension/ decrease blood pressure
they inhibit the reabsorption of glucose at the proximal convoluted tubule, which leads to urinary glucose loss and an osmotic diuresis which lowers blood pressure. Excess urinary glucose also leads to increased risk for genitourinary tract infections via candida.
GLAM VIP
theyre fabulous so they like to stay inside (hydrophobic) Glycine, Leucine, alanine, methionine, valine, isoleucine, proline
give hydrochlorothiazide to diabetes insipidus bc
theyre peeing out lots of water (hyponatremic urine) and they keep drinking water, so theyre body is hypernatremic and you want to increase the electrolytes they pee out so they can be isonatremic so you give them HCTZ so that they pee out electrolytes (not furosemide bc HCTZ spares calcium)
wernicke's: glucose thiamine infusion, when?
thiamine first then glucose.
what is the thing that obstructs blood flow in an HCM pt
thickened interventricular septum and the mitral valve leaflet (anterior leaflet)
effacement
thinning
agar that contains vancomycin, colistin, nystatin, and trimethoprim
this is a thayer martin agar meant to exclude everything else and grow Neisseria species.
adverse effect of roux en Y gastric bypass:
this procedure ligates the jejunum to a small piece seperated from the stomach. Which makes a pouch attached to the duodenum and the duodenum attaches lower on the jejunum now. It allows for small intestinal bacterial overgrowth which overproduces vitamin K and folate causing nausea and discomfort.
why don't direct Xa inhibitors affect thrombin time?
thrombin time: they put in thrombin in a tube with blood and the other stuff and see if it prolongs bleeding time. But since direct Xa inhibitors affect the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin, and there is already thrombin in there, it doesn't prolong thrombin time but it prolongs PT and PTT time
virchow's triad
thrombosis risk is markedly increased during pregnancy and puerperium due to virchow's triad: stasis, increase in factors VII, VIII and X and vWF and fibrinogen, and endothelial damage due to infection or trauma.
microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA), thrombocytopenia, neurologic and renal abnormalities, and fever. This is the classic pentad of
thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. these pts have large multimers of von willbrand factor bc there is a deficiency of the metalloprotease that breaks down ultralarge vWF multimers. This metalloprotease is ADAMTS13
RNA contains uracil; DNA contains
thymidine
3rd pharygneal pouch
thymus and inferior parathyroid glands arise from this.
tyrosine is a precursor for
thyroxine, dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine and melanin
urticaria
transient hypersensitivity disorder characterized by pruritic erythematous plaques that arise suddenly and resolve over hours. They are most often caused by IgE mediated degraulation of mast cells, leading to increased permability of the microvascultature with edema of the superficial dermis. causes dermal edema.
which enzyme converts fructose 6 phosphate to ribose 5 phosphate
transketolase
synaptophysin
transmembrane glycoprotein found in the presynaptic vesicles of neurons, neuroectodermal and neuroendocrine cells.
left circumflex artery occlusion
transmural ischemia of lateral wall of the left ventricle, with ST elevations mainly in V5 and V6 and possibly also in I and aVL.
Congenital toxoplasmosis
transplacental infection (acquired in utero). Its classic triad includes hydrocephalus, intracranial calcifications and chorioretinitis (white yellow chorioretinal lesions). Expecting mothers should avoid cat feces to help prevent exposure to toxoplasma.
mast cells activated by
trauma IgE, or C3a C5a (anaphylatoxin)
tertiary prevention
treating an established condition with the goal of minimizing its progression or complications
adenosine side effect
treats paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia. ADR: flushing, chest burning, hypotension and high grade AV block
Mccune-Albright syndrome
triad of fibrous dysplasia of the bone, endocrine abnormalities, and café au lait spots. The condition results from an activating mutation in the G protein/CAMP/adenylate cyclase signaling pathway.
dormant virus
trigeminal ganglion: HSV 1; varicella zoster: dorsal root ganglia; HSV 2: sacral ganglia; EBV: B cells; HIV: T cells
decompensated heart failure
triggers neuroendocrine mechs like RAAS and sympathetics to vasoconstrict and volume retention which puts more stress on the heart.
microcephaly, microphthalmia, polydactyly, hypotonia, and heart defects are
trisomy 13 (patau syndrome)
M protein (virulence factor for strep pyogenes) shares structural homology with
tropomyosin and myosin. Its function is to inhibit phagocytosis. This is why we get rheumatic carditis.
skeltal muscle: calcium binds
troponin to pull tropomyosin away from the binding sites so actin can bind to myosin.
T/F: secretin paradoxically stimulates gastrin release from gastrinomas due to abnormal adenylate cyclase activation. (it will inhibit gastric release from normal gastric G cells)
true
meckels diverticulum
true diverticulum (all 3 layers), 2 feet prox to the ileocecal valve; results from failure of omphalomesenteric (vitelline) duct to obliterate at 7th week of devel
serotonin is made from
tryptophan
Mycobacterium leprae: tuberculoid vs lepromatous leprosy clinical presentations
tuberculoid is Th1 response (positive PPD) vs lepromatous is Th2 response (negative PPD)
seizures, intellectual disability, facial angiofibromas and cardiac rhabdomyomas (autosomal dominant), ash leaf spots, shagreen patches
tuberous sclerosis
CA19-9 & CEA
tumor markers assoc with pancreatic adenocarcinoma (used for eval of response to therapy and monitoring recurrnece but no diagnosis)
e-cadherin in tumors
tumors down-regulate e-cadherin which is the thing that enables cells to stick together, this means the tumor can invade the basement membrane and the tumor cells don't stick together so they can disseminate and metastasize
pancoast tumor
tumors located in the lung apex (superior sulcus). Invasion of surrounding structures can lead to ipsilateral Horner syndrome, rib destruction, atrophy of hand muscles and pain in the distribution of C8, T1, and T2 nerve roots.
moa of terbinafine
tx for dermatophytosis. It inhibtis synthesis of fungal membrane ergosterol by suppressing the enzyme squalene epoxidase
asthma is which hypersen reaciton
type 1 hypersensitivity reaction
acute hemolytic transfusion reaction
type 2 hypers reaction, antibody against surface antigens activates MAC complex C5-9
serum sickness
type 3 hypersensitivity rxn to nonhuman proteins characterized by vasculitis resulting from tissue deposition of circulating immune complexes. Cinical findings include fever, pruritic skin rash, arthralgias and low serum C3 and C4 complement levels.
erythema nodosum and the PPD test are which type of hypersensitivity reaction
type IV HSR
if the baby or anyone needs blood, give
type O, Rh negative
absence seizures
type of generalized epilepsy. "brief staring spells with momentary loss of awareness followed by an abrupt return to fill conscousness". EEG: 3 Hz spike wave. Tx: ethosuxamide
influenza epidemics
typically caused by reassortment of the RNA segments coding for hemagglutinin or neuraminidase proteins (major antigenic shifts). This process can occur between human and animal strains of influenza A virus in avian or swine hosts.
insulin receptor is
tyrosine kinase
flexor digitorum profundus split innervation
ulnar half of this muscle flexes the DIPs of the 4th and 5th digits (C8) and median nerve does the others
wrist adduction is which nerve
ulnar nerve
lactate dehydrogenase deficiency
under anaerobic conditions, NADH transfers electrons to pyruvate to form lactate and regenerate NAD+. NAD+ is required to convert glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate to 1-3-bisphosphoglycerate in glycolysis.
Campylobacter jejuni: you can get this from
undercooked poultry and fecal-oral route from domestic animals (dogs)
campylobacter
undercooked poultry, and contact with domesticated animals (dogs). Bloody diarrhea
anaplastic tumors
undifferentiated; bear no resemblance to their tissue of origin. Composed of pleomorphic cells with large, hyperchromatic nuclei that grow in a disorganized fashion. Anaplastic tumors may also contain numerous, abnormal mitoses and giant tumor cells.
the _ feature of the genetic code describes a common language for almost all organisms to translate nucleotide sequences of NDA and RNA into amino acid sequences of proteins.
universal
yersinia
unpasteurized milk (dirty milk bottle), cold temperatures (ice on outside window)
viable sperm after vasectomry
up to 3 months at least 20 ejaculations
fixed, dilated pupils: which part of CNS is affected
upper midbrain contains neural structures (i.e. optic nerve, pretectal nuclei, edinger-westphal nuclei, oculomotor nerve) that mediate the direct and consensual pupillary light reflex.
enhancer and silencer sequences of genes can be located
upstream, downstream or within introns of the gene
gross painless hematuria in an older adult =
urinary tract cancer (urothelial or renal cell carcinoma) until proven otherwise.
renal stones
urine supersaturation is the main mechanism underlying all types of renal stones. Low fluid intake increases the concentration of stone-forming agents, thereby promoting stone formation. All patients with nephrolithiasis should be advised to maintain adequate fluid intake (i.e. drink plenty of water daily).
porphyria cutanea tarda hinders what enzyme in the synthesis of heme?
uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase
pt with low literacy, what do you do
use alternate learning methods like visual aids/ resources to educate the patients
splenorenal shunt
used for esophageal varices ( to decrease the pressure at them)
PTT
used for monitoring unfractionated heparin
two sample t test
used to compare the means of 2 groups of subjects
99mTc pertechnetate (technetium) scintigraphic scanning
used to confirm a meckel diverticulum. the arterial supply for mechel diverticulum comes from the SMA (superior mesenteric artery) as it supplies the midgut and meckels is failure of the developing midgut (obliteration of the vitelline duct).
APACHE II scoring system
used to predict the mortality of patients admitted to the ICU. One common indication for admission to the ICU is acute pancreatitis; however, it (APCHE) does not differentiate between sterile and infected necrosis.
ELISA
used to quantify antibodies or antigens in a fluid.
acromegaly
usually due to a pituitary somatotroph adenoma. MSK manifestations: bony hypertrophy (frontal bossing), and osteoarthritis. Left ventricular hypertrophy is often common in acromegaly and may progress to heart failure.
spindle shaped smooth muscle cells with varying degrees of atypia. increased mitotic rate and areas of necrosis. if pt has abnormal vaginal bleeding, its
uterine leiomyosarcoma
von willebrand factor deficiency
vWF binds to GP 1b receptors; labs: normal platelet count and an abnormal ristocetin cofactor assay. When there isnt VWF, there is poor platelet agglutination in the presence of ristocetin.
predisposing factor for infective endocarditis
valvular abnormalities (rheumatic heart disease, mitral valve prolapse, prosthetic valves, congenital heart disease) and conditions that promote bacteremia/ fungemia (IV drug use, dental procedures).
gardner syndrome
variant of FAP. has occurrance of colorectal polyposis, osteomas, bone and soft tissue tumors, congenital hypertrophy of retinal pigment epithelium and dental abnormalities.
cowdry type A inclusion bodies
varicella zoster, CMV, HSV
kawasaki disease
vasculitis of medium sized arteries that presents with persistant fever for 5 days or more, bilateral conjunctivitis, cervical lymphadenopathy, and mucocutanous involvement. Coronary artery aneursyms are a serious complication. Asian ethnicity. strawberry tongue (mucositis/ fissured lips)
neurophysins
vasopressin and oxytocin both secreted from the posterior pituitary. (paraventricluar and supraoptic nuclei). Neurophysins are invlved in the postranslational processing and stabilization of oxytocin and vasopressin within neurosecretory vesicles.
most common complication of aneurysmal subarachnoud hemorrhage is
vasospasm which occurs 3-12 days after the initial insult and can cause delayed cerebral ischemia (i.e. sudden change in mental stutus, new focal neuro deficits). The CT scan remains unchanged (unlike with rebleeding)
what is the initiating step in the pathogenesis of rheumatic heart disease
vegetations are caused by bacterial colonization and growth on a sterile fibrin-platelet nidus that forms on the damaged/ disrupted endothelial surface of the valvular apparatus.
BNP is secreted from the
ventricular myocardium
harsh, blowing holosystolic murmur best heard at the left sternal border and is the most common congenital cardiac anomaly
ventricular septal defect
tetralogy of fallot
ventricular septal defect, overriding aorta, right ventricular outlfow tract obstruction and right ventricular hypertrophy.
holosystolic murmur over the lower left sternal border
ventricular septal defect.
ventral posterior lateral nucleus of thalamus (VPPPL mnemonic)
vibration, pain, pressure, proprioception, and light touch. (i.e. PCML and spinothalamic tracts is where it gets its info)
path histo: greatest risk of malignant transformation in colonic polyp histo
villous adenomatous polyp or a serrated polyp. Threse are the two types that have malignant potential. Increasing polyp size is the most important risk factor for cancer.
subacute granulomatous thyroiditis aka de quervain thyroiditis
viral illness; painful; HYPERthyroid sx; giant cells (multinucleated)
most common cause of acute pericarditis
viral infection (causes pericardial effusion and diffuse ST elevation on ECG)
vitamin B12 deficiency
vit B12 is an essential cofactor in the recycling of 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate, which is required for amino acid, purine, and thymidine synthesis. Deficiency primarily affects hematopoietic cell materuation and is marked by increased nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio, elading to macrocytic red blood cells and hypersegmented neutrophils; increased apoptosis often also leads to anemia and mild thrombocytopenia/ leukopenia.
pleiotropy
where multiple phenotypic manifestations result from a single genetic mutation. Most syndromic genetic illnesses exhibit pleiotropy (like homocysteinuria)
epistasis
where the allele of one gene affects the phenotypic expression of alleses in another gene
pituitary adenoma
white discharge from nipples
ehrlichia chafeensis
white tailed deer tick, (lone star tick); spreads to mononuclear cells. Causes lymphopenia. Looks like mulberry shpaed intraleukocytic inclusions (morulae). Tx: doxycycline.
unvaccinated kid that has cough followed by vomiting
whooping cough; bordatella pertussis
lipophilic drug metabolism
will have delayed distribution to poorly vascularized peripheral compartments such as skeletal muscle, bone, and fat. Organs with huge blood flow will get it first (brain, liver, kidneys, and lungs)
Deficiency of ALA synthase
will result in a decrease in formation of all porphyrins. Will lead to a decrease in heme synthesis and concurrent hypochromic, microcytic anemia. Pyridoxal phosphate (vitamin B6) is the cofactor required for activity of ALA synthase; therefore, pyridoxine deficiency can result in mycrocytic hypochromic anemia.
WT1
wilms tumor
wilms tumor vs neuroblastoma
wilms tumors: in kidney, gene at 11p13; most common renal tumor in children neuroblastoma: adrenal medulla derived from neural crest cells; from mutation in N-myc (children get secretory diarrhea from paraneoplastic prod of VIP)
kayser fleischer rings are indicative of _ which can cause atrophy where?
wilson's disease which can cause atrophy in the basal ganglia
spinal metastasis
worse at night
treatment of a vit B12 deficiency with folate alone can
worsen the neurologic dysfunction
fragile X syndrome
x linked disorder; most common cause of inherited intellectual disability. The patho involves unstable expansion of trinucleotide repeats (CGG) in the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene. Sx: dysmorphic facial features (large jaw, protruding ears, long face) and macroorchidism.
tender lymphnodes with staining that resembles closed safety pin
yersinia pestis, gram negative coccobacillus. Buboes. Get it from rodents (flea bites)
zero vs first order kinetics
zero: same AMOUNT of drug is metabolized/ glucuronidated per unit time; first: same PROPORTION of drug is metabolized/glucuronidated per unit time
metalloproteinases
zinc-containing enzymes that degrade the extracellular matrix. They participate in normal tissue remodeling and in tumor invasion through the basement membrane and connective tissue.