BME 3 Final Study Guide
The loose control approach to managing a patient's diabetes can be characterized by the following:
freedom to eat whatever they choose and a single dose of insulin per day
The HbA1c test measures how much of this molecule is attached to hemoglobin.
glucose
Molecular dynamics simulations show that the structure of proteins
is dynamic; proteins constantly shake and bend.
The fragment of preproinsulin called c-peptide:
is not essential, people can live decades without it.
A black box on a prescription drug label
is used to highlight safety concers.
Engineered E. coli bacteria containing recombinant DNA is not dangerous to humans because:
it is incapable of surviving outside well controlled laboratory environments.
In 1969, Organon applied for a patent on a pregnancy test that could be performed at home. The inventor(s) on the patent were:
just Margaret Crane.
Arnold Beckman invented and sold one of the first integrated
pH meters
From the 1920s through the 1960s, insulin used by patients with diabetes came from which sources:
pigs and cows.
The first home pregnancy test was called:
predictor
Fred Banting developed his idea on how to treat diabetes while he was:
preparing a lecture for medical students
In the 1960's Margaret Crane was working as a :
product packaging designer
Neuropathy in patients with diabetes is caused by:
prolonged high blood glucose levels.
A child who develops diabetes typically loses weight. In 1920, the best treatment for this child would be to:
restrict diet, causing more weight loss
The label of a prescription drug:
summarizes all the scientific information known about the drug.
The quantity known as pH measures
the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution
Afrezza and Exubera are two different insulin delivery systems. The most notable difference between the two is:
the inhaler for Exubera is much larger than the inhaler for Afrezza.
In the 1960's, the annual supply of insulin was limited by:
the number of cows and pigs slaughtered each year
When recombinant DNA technology was developed in the 1970's, a group of prominent scientists proposed a national ban on it, until:
the risks were better understood.
Several insulin analogs, like Lispro, Aspar, and Glulisine, are produced by Eli Lilly. These insulin analogs differ from normal human insulin by:
they act quicker or slower after injection.
An insulin molecule in circulating in your bloodstream consists of:
two chains of amino acids linked together by disulfide bonds
Today, most insulin in produced in a large factory by which types of organisms:
yeast or bacteria
The University of Toronto licensed a patent on the production of insulin to Eli Lilly. The agreement allowed Eli Lilly to manufacture and sell insulin. In return, Eli Lilly would give the University of Toronto
5% of Eli Lilly's net sales from the insulin
Glucose Oxidase was isolated from:
A fungus
The HbA1c test is named after:
A line of hemoglobin observed on a gel.
Fred Banting died in 1941 from:
A plane crash
What causes pernicious anemia?
A vitamin deficiency
Fred Banting entered medical school:
After dropping out of college
Severe symptoms of hypoglycemia could be confused with:
Alcoholic intoxication
A protein is a chain of
Amino acids
Diabetes (type 1) is caused by
An autoimmune reaction
The birth control drug Nexplanon is usually implanted under the skin of a woman's:
Arm
A complete lack of vitamin A in a person's diet can lead to:
Blindness
In 1920 the company Eli Lilly was known for manufacturing
Capsules for drugs
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial monitored this complication that many diabetes patients suffer:
Damage to the retina's blood vessels
What disease was George Minot diagnosed with when he was 35 years old?
Diabetes
The birth control drug Nexplanon is implanted under the skin. Nexplanon is an example of ________ applied to birth control.
Drug delivery
Classic symptoms of diabetes include:
Excessive urination
An IACUC (Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee) is the committee that decides whether to provide funding for scientists' experiments.
False
Around 1920, the amount of glucose in blood could be measured by an electronic meter.
False
Blood test are only for measuring the number of red blood cells a person has.
False
Charles Evan Hughes, the US Secretary of State in 1920, was diagnosed with diabetes in 1920.
False
Currently, if a scientist wants to experiment on mammals, the scientist's experiment must be approved by a committee that is composed entirely of other scientists.
False
Hypoglycemia can be alleviated by injecting insulin.
False
Professor Dorothy Hodgkin was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1964 for deciphering the structure of insulin using the technique of X-ray crystallography.
False
The drug propanolol has been approved by the FDA for use in treating anxiety.
False
When insulin is injected under the skin it has an immediate effect, lowering blood sugar levels within a few seconds.
False
One of the most common problems people who have lived with diabetes for decades have is with their:
Feet
In 1976, a US city held hearings on the safety of recombinant DNA in research. This city was home to which university:
Harvard
Dick Bernstein was one of the first people to :
Have a home blood glucose meter
George Walden was the engineer at the Eli Lilly in charge of insulin production and purification. George Walden's major contribution was that:
He invented isoelectric precipitation.
Beta carotene is a precursor to Vitamin A. The CARET trial showed that heavy smokers who took a daily 30 mg beta carotene supplement had:
Higher rates of lung cancer than the control group
The Ames Reflective Meter was one of the first:
Home based blood glucose meters
James Collip discovered that if he injected too much insulin into a rabbit it developed convulsions. This effect is known as:
Hypoglycemia
The pancreas is located:
In the middle of the abdomen
Choose the two main functions of the pancreas: (Select 2 of the 4 answers)
It produces and secretes digestive enzymes into the stomach It controls glucose level in the blood stream through the secretion of insulin
Congress passed the Animal Welfare Act of 1966 after an uproar caused by the publication of an article about dog dealers in which magazine?
Life
James Collip needed an assay for the activity of insulin in order to develop a purification method. His assay for insulin activity was based upon:
Measuring the change in blood sugar levels in rabbits
One conclusion from the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial was that tight control:
Minimized long term complications
A continuous glucose monitor measures blood glucose approximately once every:
Minute
NPH insulin is a modified form of insulin. The modification results in a longer acting activity. The modification is done by:
Mixing insulin with a protein called protamine
Fred Banting grew up:
On a farm.
Immediately after his one year of surgical residence at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children, Fred Banting
Opened his own practice to see patients
During the summer of 1921, Fred Banting performed experiments on dogs. In one group of dogs, he tried to cause the dogs to develop diabetes by removing an organ. Which organ did he remove:
Pancreas
In 1889, Oscar Minkowski removed an organ from a dog. The dog subsequently developed symptoms similar to diabetes patients. What was the organ?
Pancreas
An IACUC (Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee) weighs the scientific benefit of the application versus:
The harm caused to the animals
James Collip, at the University of Toronto, developed a method to isolate insulin based upon
The solubility of insulin in alcohol/water mixtures
The best treatment for diabetes about 1915 was known as:
The starvation diet
Banting's method of isolating insulin involved a surgical procedure to tie off ducts in the pancreas, waiting several weeks, then removing the pancreas.
This method was used to produce insulin for just a few times
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial tested whether this method of treating diabetes was better than what patients had been doing:
Tight control of glucose levels
An IACUC (Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee) must have at least five members. One of these members must be a veterinarian.
True
Insulin that is secreted into your blood contains two chains: the A chain and the B chain.
True
Patients enrolled in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial were randomly assigned to be part of the tight control group or the standard group.
True
Fred Banting performed his experiments on dogs at
University of Toronto
This technique reveals the structure of complex molecules:
X-ray crystallography
Off label prescribing is when
a physician prescribes a drug to treat a condition that was NOT approved by the FDA.
If a patient with diabetes was seeing Dr Elliot Joslin during the 1950's, which is more likely to characterize the patient's treatment plan:
a strict diet and multiple injections of insulin each day
The self-orienting millimeter scale applicator (SOMA) is a device that might allow oral delivery of insulin, or an insulin pill. The shape of the SOMA is based on the shape of which animal:
a turtle
Axel Ullrich was the first person to insert the human insulin gene into a bacteria, or clone the insulin gene. He obtained the human insulin gene that he cloned from:
a woman's insulinoma tumor that was surgically removed.
A closed loop system for insulin delivery contains:
an insulin pump and a continuous blood glucose meter.
An insulin pen differs from an insulin pump because
an insulin pump is attached to your body by tubing, but an insulin pen is not.
In 1921, picric acid was used as a
both a common laboratory reagent and an explosive for artillery shells
Afrezza and Exubera are two different insulin delivery systems. These two systems both:
deliver insulin through the lungs.
X-ray crystallography can be used to
determine the three dimensional structure of a protien.
The order of amino acids in a protein produced by your body is
determined by your DNA
Insulin from humans and cows are exactly alike.
false