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USMLE - Goljan, Chapter 1 Cell Injury

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Question
Answer
ischemia   not enough blood flow to an area  
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hypoxemia   decreased PaO2 (O2 dissolved in plasma)  
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If one has anemia, what would you expect PaO2 and SaO2 to be?   both should be normal; you just have less RBC's overall  
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PaO2   O2 dissolved in plasma  
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SaO2   O2 bound to Hb  
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If pt has methemoglobinemia, what would you expect PaO2 and SaO2 to be?   PaO2 normal, decreased SaO2 because metHb has an oxidized heme group, which can't bind O2  
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What should you think of when you see "chocolate colored blood"?   methemoglobinemia  
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With metHb, would you expect cyanosis to improve when 100% O2 administered?   No  
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What are the treatments for metHb?   Methylene blue --> activates MetHb reductase; Ascorbic acid --> deoxidizes the heme group so Hb can bind O2 again  
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If pt has CO poisoning, what would you expect PaO2 and SaO2 to be?   normal PaO2; decreased SaO2 because CO competes with O2 for binding sites on Hb  
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How do you treat CO poisoning?   100% O2  
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why are free radicals bad?   degrade nucleic acids --> damage DNA; damages lipids in cell membranes  
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what neutralizes O2-derived free radicals?   superoxide dismutase  
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Three compounds that can neutralize peroxide (H2O2) free radicals   superoxide dismutase; glutathione peroxidase; catalase  
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What can neutralize free radicals generated by taking acetominophen?   glutathione peroxidase  
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What do vitamin anti-oxidants do?   block the formation of free radicals and degrade free radicals  
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Name some vitamin anti-oxidants   ascorbic acid, vitE, B carotenes  
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What drug is the most common cause of fulminant hepatitis? When would this happen?   Acetominophen. When GSH (glutathione) is depleted in the liver -- you need glutathione to conjugate/break down acetominophen.  
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In acetominophen-induced hepatitis, where would you see the necrosis   around the central veins  
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How would you treat acetominophen-induced hepatitis?   give N-acetylcysteine, which increases synthesis of glutathione, which neutralizes the free radicals  
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Hereditary hemochromatosis   body absorbs too much Fe from food; excess Fe stored in liver, heart, pancreas; intracellular Fe --> OH free radicals --> damage cells  
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hemosiderin   the form of Fe in the blood  
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hemosiderosis   too much Fe in body's storage; abnormal accumulation of Fe  
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What happens when cytochrome c is released from mitochondria?   Apoptosis  
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What can cause release of cytochrome c from mitochondria?   Alcohol, salicylates (aspirin), increase Ca2+ in cytosol  
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Where is the CYP450 enzyme system located?   smooth ER of liver cells  
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What can alcohol, barbuturates and phenytoin do to the smooth ER of liver cells?   SER hyperplasia  
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What is the result of SER hyperplasia in liver cells?   increased CYP450 activity --> increase drug metabolism --> decreased therapeutic drug levels in blood  
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What do PPI's and macrolides do to the CYP450 system?   Inhibits CYP450 --> decreased drug metabolism --> higher than expected therapeutic drug levels  
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Inclusion-cell disease   hydrolytic enzymes destined for primary lysosomes are NOT marked with mannose 6-phosphate like they're supposed to be --> primary lysosomes don't contain the appropriate hydrolytic enzymes --> accumulation of undigested substrates in the cytosol  
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What are the sx's of inclusion-cell disease?   psychomotor retardation and early death  
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Gaucher's disease   lysosomal storage disease; deficiency of the enzyme glucocerebrosidase, leading to an accumulation of its substrate, the fatty substance glucocerebroside in lysosomes; autosomal recessive  
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what is ubiquitin?   marker for intermediate filament degradation  
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What are Mallory bodies and where do you find them?   damaged (ubiquinated) intermediate filaments in hepatocytes -- see hyaline inclusions on slides; seen in alcoholic liver disease  
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What are Lewy bodies and where do you find them?   damaged neurofilaments in idiopathic Parkinson's dz (eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions in the degenerating substantia nigra)  
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what is the most common cause of fatty change in the liver?   alcohol  
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Kernicterus   damage to the brain centers of infants caused by increased levels of bilirubin; Rh-induced hemolytic dz in newborns --> fat-soluble unconjugated bilirubin --> enters basal ganglia nuclei in brain --> permanent damage  
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Xanthelasma   Yellow plaque on eyelid (like Ba Ngoai); cholesterol in macrophages  
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Von Gierke's glycogenosis   Deficiency of G6P --> excess of glycogen in hepatocytes and renal tubular cells  
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Addison's disease   destruction of the adrenal cortex --> hypocortisol --> increased ACTH --> excess melanin--> diffuse pigmentation of skin and mucosa  
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What is the difference between ferritin and hemosiderin?   Ferritin is major SOLUBLE iron storage protein and can be measured in serum; hemosiderin is INSOLUBLE product of ferritin degradation in lysosomes and is NOT in serum.  
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Where is ferritin stored?   in bone marrow macrophages and hepatocytes  
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What is does serum ferritin measure?   Amount of ferritin stores in the bone marrow  
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In Fe-deficiency anemia, what level of ferritin would you expect to see?   Decreased  
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What is the difference between dystrophic and metastatic calcification?   Dystrophic calcification is calcification of necrotic tissue (normal serum Ca and Phosphate); metastatic is calcification in normal tissue (elevated serum Ca and P)  
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What does parathyroid hormone do?   Releases Ca into the serum & decreases uptake of P from the kidney (more P is released in the urine). PTH releases Ca from bone marrow, decreases loss of Ca in urine, and stimulates production of VitD so that more Ca can be absorbed in intestines  
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Why would hypoparathyroidism cause hyperphosphatemia and metastatic calcification?   decreased PTH --> increased retention of P (not as much excreted through urine); Ca levels not maintained in the serum --> Ca driven into normal tissues  
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Difference between atrophy, hypertrophy, and hyperplasia   Atrophy - decrease in cell SIZE; hypertrophy - increase in cell SIZE; hyperplasia - increase in cell NUMBER of NORMAL cells  
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Difference between hyperplasia, metaplasia, dysplasia   Hyperplasia - increase in number of NORMAL cells; metaplasia - replacement of one fully differentiated cell type by another (new type is less sensitive to a particular stress); dysplasia - disordered cell growth  
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What is polycythemia?   net increase in the total number of red blood cells in the body (overproduction of RBCs, malignancy, or chronic low O2)  
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Coagulation necrosis   preservation of structural outline of dead cells (but no nuclei); from denaturation of enzymes/proteins inside cell --> autolysis of cell  
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What kind of necrosis in dry gangrene in pts with diabetes mellitus?   coagulation necrosis  
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what is an infarction?   gross manifestation of coagulation necrosis secondary to the sudden occulsion of a vessel  
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What is a pale/ischemic infarction?   coagulation necrosis in dense tissue -- RBCs can't diffuse through  
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What is a hemorrhagic infarction?   coagulation necrosis in loose tissue -- RBCs CAN diffuse through  
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Liquefactive necrosis   necrotic tissue that becomes liquefied due to lysosomal enzymes released by necrotic cells or neutrophils  
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What type of necrosis in cerebral infarction?   Liquefactive (hydrolytic enzymes released by neuroglial cells)  
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What kind of necrosis in abscess from bacterial infxn?   Liquefactive (hydrolytic enzymes from neutrophils)  
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What kind of necrosis in wet gangrene in pts with diabetes mellitus?   It is an anaerobic infxn (i.e. C.perfringens) --> liquefactive  
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Caseous necrosis   acellular and cheese-like; lipid released from cell walls of M.TB and systemic fungi such as Histoplasma after destruction by macrophages  
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Enzymatic fat necrosis   Adipose tissue surrounding acutely inflamed pancreas; pancreatic lipase --> hydrolysis of TG's in fat cells  
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Fibrinoid necrosis   in damaged basement membrane in small vessels  
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What are caspases?   Cysteine proteases that initiate apoptosis  
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BAX gene   pro-apoptosis gene  
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TP53 gene   suppressor gene (aborts apoptosis): temporarily arrests the cell cycle in G1 to repair DNA; if damage is too great --> activate BAX gene --> apoptosis  
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BCL-2 Gene family   inhibits apoptosis (prevent mitochondrial leakage of cytochrome c into the cytosol)  
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pyknosis   Ink dot appearance of nucleus -- indicates cell is undergoing apoptosis  
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AST (aspartate aminotransferase)   mitochondrial enzyme; marker of diffuse liver cell necrosis; increased in alcohol-induced liver dz  
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ALT (alanine aminotransferase)   Marker of diffuse liver cell necrosis; more specific for liver cell necrosis than AST  
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CK-MB (creatine kinase MB)   isoenzyme that is a marker for acute MI or myocarditis  
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Amylase and lipase are markers for what pathology?   acute pancreatitis; lipase more specific because amylase is also increased in salivary gland inflammation such as mumps  
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