Difference between revisions of "Robbins and Cotran 9th Edition Questions"
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{{hidden|What do we think that the rest of the genome does?|80% of the genome binds proteins, implying that it is involved in regulating gene expression, related to the regulation of gene expression, often in a cell-type specific fashion.}} | {{hidden|What do we think that the rest of the genome does?|80% of the genome binds proteins, implying that it is involved in regulating gene expression, related to the regulation of gene expression, often in a cell-type specific fashion.}} | ||
{{hidden|List the major classes of functional non-protein-coding sequences found in the human genome.|1. Promoter & enhancer | {{hidden|List the major classes of functional non-protein-coding sequences found in the human genome.| | ||
*1. Promoter & enhancer | |||
*2. Chromatin binding site structures | |||
*3. non-coding regulatory RNAs | |||
*4. Mobile genetic elements (transposons) | |||
*5. telomeres | |||
*6. centromers. }} | |||
{{hidden|What are the two most common forms of DNA variation in the human genome?|1) Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) | {{hidden|What are the two most common forms of DNA variation in the human genome?| | ||
*1) Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) | |||
*2) copy number variations (CNVs)}} | |||
{{hidden|What are the possible implications of SNPs.|1) regulatory = alters gene expression | {{hidden|What are the possible implications of SNPs.| | ||
*1) regulatory = alters gene expression | |||
*2) Correlation with disease states when in close proximity with altered genes | |||
*3) association used to define linkage disequilibrium,?}} | |||
{{hidden|Define epigenetics.|Heritable changes in gene expression which are not caused by alterations in DNA sequence.}} | {{hidden|Define epigenetics.|Heritable changes in gene expression which are not caused by alterations in DNA sequence.}} | ||
{{hidden|List the 6 types of epigenetic changes.|1) Histone & histone modifying factors (Histones organize chromatin into heterochromatin and euchromatin | {{hidden|List the 6 types of epigenetic changes.| | ||
*1) Histone & histone modifying factors (Histones organize chromatin into heterochromatin and euchromatin | |||
*2) histone methylation | |||
*3) histone acteylation | |||
*4)histone phosphorylation | |||
*5) DNA methylation | |||
*6) Chromatin organizing factors.}} | |||
{{hidden|What is the function of micro-RNA (mi-RNA)?|It does not encode protein, instead they function primarily to modulate the translation of target mRNAs into their corresponding proteins, and are responsible for post-transcriptional silencing of gene expression.}} | {{hidden|What is the function of micro-RNA (mi-RNA)?|It does not encode protein, instead they function primarily to modulate the translation of target mRNAs into their corresponding proteins, and are responsible for post-transcriptional silencing of gene expression.}} | ||
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== Chapter 2: Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults: Adaptation, Injury and Death == | == Chapter 2: Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults: Adaptation, Injury and Death == | ||
{{hidden| | Experimenting, please ignore | ||
{{hidden | |||
*1. Etiology | | headerstyle = text-align: left; | ||
**Genetic - Inherited mutations and disease-associated gene variants, or polymorphisms | | header = What are the four aspects of a disease? | ||
| content = *1. Etiology | |||
**Genetic - Inherited mutations and disease-associated gene variants, or polymorphisms. | |||
**Acquired - Infectious, nutritional, chemical and physical. | **Acquired - Infectious, nutritional, chemical and physical. | ||
*2. Pathogenesis - The sequence of cellular, biochemical, and molecular events that follow the exposure of cells or tissues to an injurious agent. | *2. Pathogenesis - The sequence of cellular, biochemical, and molecular events that follow the exposure of cells or tissues to an injurious agent. | ||
*3. Morphological changes - The structural alterations in cells or tissues that are either characteristic of a disease or diagnostic of an etiologic process. | *3. Morphological changes - The structural alterations in cells or tissues that are either characteristic of a disease or diagnostic of an etiologic process. | ||
*4. Clinical Manifestations - Symptoms and signs of disease, as well as its clinical course and outcome | *4. Clinical Manifestations - Symptoms and signs of disease, as well as its clinical course and outcome.}} | ||
}} | |||
== Chapter 3 == | == Chapter 3 == | ||
Line 151: | Line 161: | ||
== Chapter 9 == | == Chapter 9 == | ||
== Chapter 10 == | == Chapter 10 == | ||
== Chapter 11 == | == Chapter 11: Blood Vessels== | ||
* Describe the two principal mechanisms underlying vascular disease. | |||
* Describe the four main disease mechanisms and the vessels for which they have a predicliction. | |||
* Describe the three layers of artery/vein walls. | |||
* Describe how the media of arteries changes as one gets further away from the heart. | |||
* List 5 differences between arterial vessels and venous vessels. | |||
* List and briefly describe three vascular anomalies. | |||
* List 5 functions of endothelial cells. | |||
* List 5 factors which activate endothelial cells. | |||
* List 6 features of an activated endothelial cell. | |||
* Define endothelial dysfunction. | |||
* List 5 functions of vascular smooth muscle cells. | |||
* Describe how intimal thickening occurs in a healing vessel. | |||
* List 5 difference between neointimal and medial smooth muscle cells. | |||
* In a non diabetic what are the thresholds for diastolic and systolic blood pressure associated with increased atherosclerotic disease. | |||
* List 5 causes of secondary hypertension. | |||
* List 5 diseases resulting from hypertension. | |||
* About 50% of patients with hypertension die from what 3 diseases. | |||
* Define malignant hypertension, and list 3 ocular findings. | |||
* Describe how cardiac function affects blood pressure. | |||
* Describe how blood volume affects blood pressure. | |||
* Describe how peripheral resistance affects blood pressure | |||
* Describe the pathophysiological mechanisms associated with renovascular hypertension. | |||
* List some single gene disorders which cause secondary hypetension. | |||
* List four factors are mechanisms of essential hypertension. | |||
* List five vascular changes associated with hypertension. | |||
* Describe the differences between hyaline and hyperplastic arteriosclerosis. | |||
* List three types of arteriosclerosis. | |||
* What is Monckeberg medial sclerosis and how is it different from atherosclerosis? | |||
* What disease causes more morbidity and mortality than any other in the western world? | |||
* What is an atheromatous plaque? | |||
* List four constituitive risk factors for atherosclerosis. | |||
* List 5 modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis. | |||
* List five non constituituve and non modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis. | |||
* Briefly describe the pathogenic steps in atherosclerosis. | |||
* What are the two most important causes of endothelial dysfunction? | |||
* Briefly describe the role of LDL in atherosclerosis. | |||
* How does inflammation contribute to atherosclerosis? | |||
* List three viruses for which there is limited evidence of contribution to atherosclerosis. | |||
* How do smooth muscle cells contribute to atherosclerosis? | |||
* What are the differences between a fatty streak and a atherosclerotic plaque? | |||
* List five most common locations of atherosclerotic plaques. | |||
* What are the three main components of an atherosclerotic plaque. | |||
* What is neovascularization of an atherosclerotic plaque? | |||
* What four clinically significant changes can occur in an atherosclerotic plaque? | |||
* What are the four major consequences of atherosclerosis? | |||
* Define critical stenosis and the possible sequelae there of? | |||
* What is the catch 22 of a fibrous plaque? | |||
* What is one possible explanation for the abrupt rise in MIs after 9-11. | |||
* What four basic mechanisms cause vasoconstriction? | |||
* What are the possible sequelae of thrombi in a coronary artery? | |||
* Classify aneurysms. | |||
* List three syndromes where the connective tissue quality results in aneurysms. | |||
* Briefly describe how collagen degradation and synthesis maintained. | |||
* What is cystic medial degeneration and how does it relate to aneurysm formation? | |||
* How does syphilis cause aneurysms of the aorta, and how to most of the patients die? | |||
* What are the two most important causes of aortic aneurysms? | |||
* What is a mycotic aneuryms and what are the three possible origins? | |||
* Who most classically gets a AAA and where is it? | |||
* List three variants of AAA and briefly describe each. | |||
* What are the four most common clinical manifestations of a AAA aside from a palpable pulsating abdominal mass. | |||
* Describe how the risk of rupture of a AAA increases with size. | |||
* What is the most common cause of thoracic aneurysm, and describe 5 features of this syndrome. | |||
* List 5 signs or symptoms of thoracic aneurysm. | |||
* What two groups of patients have aortic dissections? | |||
* What is the most significant risk factor for aortic dissection? | |||
* Describe the difference between an aneurysm and a dissection. | |||
* Classify aortic dissections. | |||
* Classify vasculitides. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Giant cell arteritis. | |||
* List 5 defining features of granulomatosis with polyangitis. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Churg-Strauss syndrome. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Polyarteritis nododum. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Leukocytoclastic vasculitis. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Beurger disease. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Behcet disease. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Takayasu arteritis. | |||
* List 5 defining features of microscopic polyangitis. | |||
* List 5 defining features of Kawasaki disease. | |||
* List 5 immune complext mediated vasculitides. | |||
* List 3 granulomatous vasculitides. | |||
* What is a pauci immune vasculitis and give three examples. | |||
* List some causes of infectious vasculitis. | |||
* List 5 features of Raynaud's phenomenon. | |||
* What is the difference between primary and secondary Raynaud's? | |||
* What is Takotsubo cardiomyopathy? | |||
* List 5 causes of myocardial vessel vasospasm. | |||
* What are varicose veins? List three risk factors. List 5 clinical feautures. | |||
* What three sites are venous varicosities most commonly found? | |||
* What are the 5 most common sites of venous thrombosis? | |||
* | |||
== Chapter 12 == | == Chapter 12 == | ||
== Chapter 13 == | == Chapter 13 == | ||
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== Chapter 21 == | == Chapter 21 == | ||
== Chapter 22 == | == Chapter 22 == | ||
== | ==[[Breast (CH 23)]]== | ||
== Chapter 24 == | == Chapter 24 == | ||
== Chapter 25 == | == Chapter 25 == |
Latest revision as of 13:03, 3 September 2015
Chapter 1: The Cell as a Unit of Health and Disease
Short Answer Questions
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Chapter 2: Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults: Adaptation, Injury and Death
Experimenting, please ignore
What are the four aspects of a disease?
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Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
MC cause of spontaneous abortion is ?
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1% of all newborn infants possess a gross chromosomal abnormality and 5% of people <25y present with
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Mutation
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List and describe 4 broad categories of human genetic disorders:
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ii. Often highly penetrant (large proportion of pop with gene has disease) b. Chromosomal disorders i. Structural or numerical alterations in autosomes and sex chromosomes ii. Uncommon, high penetrance c. Complex multigenic disorders i. Interactions between multiple variant forms of genes and environmental factors (polymorphisms), poly genic means disease when many polymorphism present d. Single gene disorders with nonclassic patterns of inheritance (not mendelian) i. Disorders resulting from triplet repeat mutations ii. Mutations in mitochondrial DNA iii. Those influenced by genomic imprinting iv. Those influenced by gonadal mosaicism]] |
List and describe the possible outcomes of a point mutation in a coding region?
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[[a. Missense mutation – pt mutation changes amino acid code, conservative when the amino acid is preserved, non conservative when replaced with another amino acid, b. Nonsense mutation – makes a stop codon ]] |
List and describe the possible outcomes of point mutation or deletion in a non-coding region.
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List and describe the possible outcomes of deletions and insertions.
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i. Tay Sachs disease: 4 base pair insertion in Hexosaminidase A gene ]] |
List and describe the possible outcomes of trinucleotide repeat mutations.
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[[a. Usually G&C, dynamic and increase during gametogenesis, “RNA stutters”,b. Fragile X – CGG 250-4000, Huntinton’s Disease ]] |
List and describe three examples of inheritance of single gene mutations
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[[a. AD – manifested in the heterologous state, one parent of index case is usually affected, males and females affected and both can transmit conditioni. De novo cases may not have affected parentii. Penetrance = fraction of people with gene who have the traitiii. Variable expressivity = those with mutant gene have variety of phenotypesiv. Often age of onset is delayed so can reproduce before die from diseasev. Biochem mechanisms1. Reduced production of a protein or dysfunctional/inactive protein2. Involved in regulation of complex metabolic pathyway subject to feedback inhibition3. Key structural proteins (collagen and cytoskeleton of RBC)a. May be a dominant negative , e.g. osteogenesis imperfecta4. Gain of function are rare, 2 formsa. Increased in proteins normal function (excess enzyme activity)b. Huntinton’s diseas (abn protein accumulates, toxic to neurons)b. ARi. Largest category – both alleles at a locus are mutated1. Expression is uniform, complete penetrance common, early onset, unaffected carrier family members, mostly enzymesc. X Linkedi. All sex linked, and almost all are recessive , if Y Chromosome affected usually infertile males > no progenyii. Male expression b/c hemizygous, daughter carriers with variable phenotype because of lionization of 2nd X e.g G6DPiii. Dominant . vitamin D resistant rickets]] |
Stopped at P142
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11: Blood Vessels
- Describe the two principal mechanisms underlying vascular disease.
- Describe the four main disease mechanisms and the vessels for which they have a predicliction.
- Describe the three layers of artery/vein walls.
- Describe how the media of arteries changes as one gets further away from the heart.
- List 5 differences between arterial vessels and venous vessels.
- List and briefly describe three vascular anomalies.
- List 5 functions of endothelial cells.
- List 5 factors which activate endothelial cells.
- List 6 features of an activated endothelial cell.
- Define endothelial dysfunction.
- List 5 functions of vascular smooth muscle cells.
- Describe how intimal thickening occurs in a healing vessel.
- List 5 difference between neointimal and medial smooth muscle cells.
- In a non diabetic what are the thresholds for diastolic and systolic blood pressure associated with increased atherosclerotic disease.
- List 5 causes of secondary hypertension.
- List 5 diseases resulting from hypertension.
- About 50% of patients with hypertension die from what 3 diseases.
- Define malignant hypertension, and list 3 ocular findings.
- Describe how cardiac function affects blood pressure.
- Describe how blood volume affects blood pressure.
- Describe how peripheral resistance affects blood pressure
- Describe the pathophysiological mechanisms associated with renovascular hypertension.
- List some single gene disorders which cause secondary hypetension.
- List four factors are mechanisms of essential hypertension.
- List five vascular changes associated with hypertension.
- Describe the differences between hyaline and hyperplastic arteriosclerosis.
- List three types of arteriosclerosis.
- What is Monckeberg medial sclerosis and how is it different from atherosclerosis?
- What disease causes more morbidity and mortality than any other in the western world?
- What is an atheromatous plaque?
- List four constituitive risk factors for atherosclerosis.
- List 5 modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis.
- List five non constituituve and non modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis.
- Briefly describe the pathogenic steps in atherosclerosis.
- What are the two most important causes of endothelial dysfunction?
- Briefly describe the role of LDL in atherosclerosis.
- How does inflammation contribute to atherosclerosis?
- List three viruses for which there is limited evidence of contribution to atherosclerosis.
- How do smooth muscle cells contribute to atherosclerosis?
- What are the differences between a fatty streak and a atherosclerotic plaque?
- List five most common locations of atherosclerotic plaques.
- What are the three main components of an atherosclerotic plaque.
- What is neovascularization of an atherosclerotic plaque?
- What four clinically significant changes can occur in an atherosclerotic plaque?
- What are the four major consequences of atherosclerosis?
- Define critical stenosis and the possible sequelae there of?
- What is the catch 22 of a fibrous plaque?
- What is one possible explanation for the abrupt rise in MIs after 9-11.
- What four basic mechanisms cause vasoconstriction?
- What are the possible sequelae of thrombi in a coronary artery?
- Classify aneurysms.
- List three syndromes where the connective tissue quality results in aneurysms.
- Briefly describe how collagen degradation and synthesis maintained.
- What is cystic medial degeneration and how does it relate to aneurysm formation?
- How does syphilis cause aneurysms of the aorta, and how to most of the patients die?
- What are the two most important causes of aortic aneurysms?
- What is a mycotic aneuryms and what are the three possible origins?
- Who most classically gets a AAA and where is it?
- List three variants of AAA and briefly describe each.
- What are the four most common clinical manifestations of a AAA aside from a palpable pulsating abdominal mass.
- Describe how the risk of rupture of a AAA increases with size.
- What is the most common cause of thoracic aneurysm, and describe 5 features of this syndrome.
- List 5 signs or symptoms of thoracic aneurysm.
- What two groups of patients have aortic dissections?
- What is the most significant risk factor for aortic dissection?
- Describe the difference between an aneurysm and a dissection.
- Classify aortic dissections.
- Classify vasculitides.
- List 5 defining features of Giant cell arteritis.
- List 5 defining features of granulomatosis with polyangitis.
- List 5 defining features of Churg-Strauss syndrome.
- List 5 defining features of Polyarteritis nododum.
- List 5 defining features of Leukocytoclastic vasculitis.
- List 5 defining features of Beurger disease.
- List 5 defining features of Behcet disease.
- List 5 defining features of Takayasu arteritis.
- List 5 defining features of microscopic polyangitis.
- List 5 defining features of Kawasaki disease.
- List 5 immune complext mediated vasculitides.
- List 3 granulomatous vasculitides.
- What is a pauci immune vasculitis and give three examples.
- List some causes of infectious vasculitis.
- List 5 features of Raynaud's phenomenon.
- What is the difference between primary and secondary Raynaud's?
- What is Takotsubo cardiomyopathy?
- List 5 causes of myocardial vessel vasospasm.
- What are varicose veins? List three risk factors. List 5 clinical feautures.
- What three sites are venous varicosities most commonly found?
- What are the 5 most common sites of venous thrombosis?