1>Which of the following conditions may lead to development of an
exudate within the pleural cavity?
A. Bacterial pleuritis
B. Cirrhosis of the liver
C. Congestive heart failure
D. Nephrotic syndrome
E. Protein-losing enteropathy
Answer
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2>In which of the following sites do myxopapillary ependymomas most
frequently occur?
A. Cerebellum
B. Conus medullaris
C. 4th ventricle
D. Lateral ventricles
E. Midbrain
Answer
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3>A patient has long-standing severe hemolytic anemia characterized by
hypochromic cells. Electrophoresis studies demonstrate a near complete
absence of beta chains. Several years later, the patient develops
cardiac failure. Intracardiac deposition of which of the following
would be most likely to contribute to the cardiac failure?
A. Calcium
B. Iron
C. Magnesium
D. Potassium
E. Sodium
Answer
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4>Before being approved by the FDA, a chemical is tested for
carcinogenicity by examining its mutagenic effects on bacterial
cells in culture. Which of the following tests is used to make
this determination?
A. Ames test
B. Nitroblue tetrazolium test
C. Watson-Schwartz test
D. Widal test
E. Woellner enzyme test
Answer
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5.A sharp instrument passing through the superior orbital fissure
would most likely sever the
A. abducens nerve
B. facial nerve
C. mandibular nerve
D. maxillary nerve
E. middle meningeal artery
F. ophthalmic artery
G. optic nerve
Answer
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6>An elderly nursing home patient has had multiple small strokes.
On several occasions she has aspirated food, and neurological
examination reveals that her gag reflex is absent. These findings
suggest involvement of the nucleus of which of the following
cranial nerves?
A. Facial (VII)
B. Glossopharyngeal (IX)
C. Hypoglossal (XII)
D. Spinal accessory (XI)
E. Vestibulocochlear (VIII)
Answer
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7>A new antifungal medication is being tested in Phase I clinical
trials. Examination of the pharmacokinetic properties of the drug
reveals that the half-life of the drug is 6 hours. If a continuous
intravenous infusion of this drug were started on a research subject,
how long would it take to reach 75% of steady state?
A. 3 hours
B. 6 hours
C. 9 hours
D. 12 hours
E. 18 hours
F. 24 hours
Answer
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8>A leukemia patient who has undergone multiple courses of chemotherapy
develops herpes simplex encephalitis. Which of the following would you
expect a CT scan of the patient's brain to show?
A. Generalized volume loss
B. Volume loss selectively in the basal ganglia
C. Volume loss selectively in the brainstem
D. Volume loss selectively in the cerebellum
E. Volume loss selectively in the temporal and frontal lobes
Answer
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9>An 18-year-old male takes an employment physical examination that is
remarkable for a systolic murmur preceded by a distinct click on
auscultation. The patient has unique body features, with unusually
long legs and long, tapering fingers. An ocular examination reveals
dislocation of the lens. An abnormality of which of the following
gene products is thought to underlie this condition?
A. Collagen
B. Dystrophin
C. Elastin
D. Fibrillin
E. Myosin b-chain
Answer
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10>A third-world patient develops muscle weakness and atrophy with
fasciculations and hyporeflexia. The patient's condition continues
to deteriorate, and his legs are eventually permanently paralyzed.
The virus that can cause these problems is usually spread by which
of the following routes?
A. Dirt contact with open wound
B. Injection
C. Mosquitoes
D. Oral-fecal
E. Puncture wound of the foot
Answer
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11>Physical examination of a 45-year-old diabetic patient demonstrates a
pulsatile abdominal mass. Radiographic studies demonstrate a 10 cm
diameter aneurysm of the abdominal aorta with foci of calcification
in the walls. Which of the following is the most likely etiology
for this aneurysm?
A. Atherosclerosis
B. Congenital weakness
C. Cystic medial necrosis
D. Syphilis
E. Vasculitis
Answer
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12>A 40-year-old woman is being seen by a physician for the 10th time
this year for evaluation of vague aches and pains. An extensive prior
evaluation has excluded the possibility of serious disease. During the
interview with this patient, she makes repeated statements along the
lines of, "What I want doesn't matter. Do what you want." And, "I'm
afraid you won't have time to see me anymore." The traits this
patient is exhibiting are most consistent with which of the
following personality disorders?
A. Dependent
B. Histrionic
C. Obsessive-compulsive
D. Paranoid
E. Schizoid
Answer
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13>A 60-year-old man suddenly becomes completely blind in one eye, and
angiography demonstrates occlusion of the central retinal artery.
Which of the following is the most likely cause of the occlusion?
A. Atheroma or embolism
B. Cranial (temporal) arteritis
C. Hypertension
D. Polycythemia vera
E. Tumor
Answer
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14 A mailman gets a severe bite wound from a pit bull guarding
a junkyard. The wound is cleansed and he receives a booster
injection of tetanus toxoid and an injection of penicillin G.
Several days later, the wound is inflamed and purulent. The
exudate is cultured on blood agar and yields gram-negative rods.
Antibiotic sensitivity tests are pending. The most likely agent
to be isolated is
A. Bartonella henselae
B. Brucella canis
C. Clostridium tetani
D. Pasteurella multocida
E. Toxocara canis
Answer
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15.A 7-year-old boy is referred to a specialty clinic
because of digestive problems. He often experiences severe
abdominal cramps after eating a high fat meal. He is worked
up and diagnosed with a genetic defect resulting in a deficiency
of lipoprotein lipase. Which of the following substances would most
likely be elevated in this patient's plasma following a fatty meal?
A. Albumin-bound free fatty acids
B. Chylomicrons
C. HDL
D. LDL
E. Unesterified fatty acids
Answer
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16>A 49-year-old woman is in an automobile accident and sustains a closed
head injury. A CT scan does not show any intracranial hemorrhage, but
reveals a small tumor at the cerebellopontine angle of the brain.
Which of the following nerves is most likely to be affected by
this tumor?
A. Facial nerve
B. Glossopharyngeal nerve
C. Optic nerve
D. Trigeminal nerve
E. Vagus nerve
Answer
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17>A 47-year-old male patient presents with painful arthritis in the
right big toe and uric acid renal stones. He has been taking allopurinol
for his condition. What biochemical defect would likely be found in this
patient?
A. A defect in urea synthesis
B. An abnormality of the purine degradation pathway
C. An inability to synthesize non-essential amino acids
D. Defective topoisomerases
E. Increased levels of leukotrienes
Answer
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18>A 3-year-old boy is brought to the emergency department after the acute
onset of headache, vomiting, nuchal rigidity, and impaired mental status.
MRI reveals a posterior fossa tumor that fills the 4th ventricle. Surgery
is immediately started, and intraoperative consultation leads to
a "frozen section" diagnosis of medulloblastoma. Which of the
following pathologic mechanisms most likely accounts for this
child's clinical presentation?
A. Acute hemorrhage into the 4th ventricle
B. Alteration of medullary function
C. Increased intracranial pressure
D. Infiltration of the cerebellar vermis by the neoplasm
E. Spread of tumor to the subarachnoid space
Answer
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19>A diabetic mother gives birth to a baby who dies in the first week of life.
Autopsy reveals a severe cardiac malformation. Which of the following is
the most likely diagnosis?
A. Atrial septal defect
B. Coarctation of the aorta
C. Eisenmenger's syndrome
D. Tetralogy of Fallot
E. Transposition of the great arteries
Answer
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20>There is a classic zoo story about a cage with three monkeys in it. The
largest monkey steals the middle-sized monkey's banana. The middle-sized
monkey then screams with rage, hits the smallest monkey on the head, and
then steals his banana. The middle-sized monkey is using which of the
following mechanisms of defense?
A. Displacement
B. Projection
C. Reaction formation
D. Regression
E. Repression
Answer
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21>A 10-year-old boy has a small tumor in the wall of the right lateral
ventricle. A biopsy of this tumor is consistent with subependymal giant
cell astrocytoma. Which of the following lesions may also be present in
this patient?
A. Café-au-lait spots
B. Cortical tubers
C. Hemangioblastoma
D. Lisch nodules
E. Schwannoma of the 8th cranial nerve
Answer
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22>Physical examination of a 45-year-old diabetic patient demonstrates a
pulsatile abdominal mass. Radiographic studies demonstrate a 10-cm
diameter aneurysm of the abdominal aorta with foci of calcification
in the walls. Which of the following is the most likely etiology for
the aneurysm?
A. Atherosclerosis
B. Congenital weakness
C. Cystic medial necrosis
D. Syphilis
E. Vasculitis
Answer
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23>A 19-year-old female, who recently moved from her family's home in another
state, is hospitalized for attempting suicide by taking an overdose of
antidepressant medications. On the third day of her hospital stay, she
insists, under threat of a lawsuit, that her medications be stopped and
that she be discharged from the hospital so she "can go home and finish
the job." Her sensorium is clear. Her physician should
A. discharge her against medical advice (AMA)
B. honor her request and release her immediately
C. obtain an emergency order of detention
D. release her to go back to her parents' home
E. sedate her
Answer
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24>Which of the following could prevent an allergen from reacting with a
specific IgE molecule present on the mast cell membrane?
A. Antihistamine
B. Blocking antibody
C. Cromolyn sodium
D. Epinephrine
E. Theophylline
Answer
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25>During a fight, a 32-year-old man is hit on the back of the neck with a
chair. A CT scan reveals a bony fragment that penetrated the lateral
portion of the dorsal columns. Which of the following functions would
most likely be affected by a lesion at this site?
A. Fine motor control of the ipsilateral fingers
B. Motor control of the contralateral foot
C. Sweating of the ipsilateral face
D. Proprioception from the ipsilateral leg
E. Vibratory sense from the ipsilateral arm
Answer
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Answers 
[HIDE]11>The correct answer is A. An exudate results from leakage of protein-rich fluid from the plasma into the interstitium. It is usually the result of increased vascular permeability caused by inflammation. Exudates also contain numerous acute or chronic inflammatory cells, depending on the inciting event. Of the above choices, only bacterial pleuritis would produce an exudate. If pleuritis is caused by pyogenic organisms, the exudate is purulent (neutrophil-rich). If pleural inflammation is due to mycobacterial infection or neoplastic infiltration, the resulting exudate will contain chronic inflammatory cells.
In contrast, a transudate contains less protein and few inflammatory cells. There are two main mechanisms of transudate formation: 1) decreased oncotic pressure, such as that which occurs in cirrhosis of the liver, nephrotic syndrome, and protein-losing enteropathy (choices B, D, and E); and 2) increased hydrostatic pressure, which may result from congestive heart failure (choice C).
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2>The correct answer is B. Myxopapillary ependymoma is a variant of ependymoma, a tumor arising from ependymal cells. Histologically, myxopapillary ependymoma contains a myxoid (mucus-rich) intercellular matrix, in which spindly neoplastic ependymal cells are arranged in a fascicular and papillary pattern (hence its designation). It is a benign tumor that almost always occurs in the distal segment of the spinal cord, ie, the conus medullaris. Once excised, the patient is cured.
The cerebellum (choice A) is the favorite site for pilocytic astrocytomas, medulloblastomas, and hemangioblastomas, but not ependymomas.
In general, classic ependymomas occur in close proximity to the ventricular cavities, specifically, the 4th ventricle (choice C) in children and the lateral ventricles (choice D) in adults. The myxopapillary variant does not occur in either location.
A midbrain location (choice E) would be truly exceptional for any type of ependymoma.
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3>The correct answer is B. The disease is beta thalassemia major, which is a severe hemolytic anemia characterized by a failure to produce the beta chains of hemoglobin (some HbF, the fetal form of hemoglobin, is produced). The excess alpha chains are insoluble, leading to intra- and extravascular hemolysis. These patients require large numbers of transfusions, and iron overload with resulting secondary hemochromatosis can contribute to eventual cardiac failure. The heart is also damaged by the chronic high output state needed to compensate for the anemia.
Calcium (choice A) deposition is seen in damaged tissues and states with high serum calcium, such as hyperparathyroidism.
Magnesium (choice C), potassium (choice D), and sodium (choice E) are highly soluble and do not usually precipitate in tissues.
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4>The correct answer is A. The test described is the Ames test, which measures damage to DNA and correlates well with carcinogenicity in vitro. It is relatively inexpensive to perform, compared to other tests of carcinogenicity, and is frequently used as a screening test for potential carcinogens.
The nitroblue tetrazolium test (choice B) is used to examine the ability of neutrophils to undergo a respiratory burst, and is used in the diagnosis of hereditary immunodeficiencies.
The Watson-Schwartz test (choice C) detects porphobilinogen in urine, and is used in the The correct answer is C. Any tumor "filling the 4th ventricle" blocks the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This blockage leads to increased intracranial pressure, which manifests with nausea, vomiting, headache, nuchal rigidity, and mental status changes. If surgery is not performed promptly, cerebellar tonsillar herniation and rapid death will ensue. In children, medulloblastoma and ependymoma are the most frequent neoplasms presenting in this manner.
There is no evidence in this case suggesting that acute hemorrhage into the 4th ventricular cavity (choice A) has occurred, nor is medulloblastoma typically associated with this complication. CNS tumors that frequently bleed are metastases from melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and choriocarcinoma.
Alterations in medullary function (choice B) lead to cardiorespiratory instability and may be caused by direct tumor compression or infiltration of the medulla, neither of which is supported by MRI findings in this case.
Infiltration of the cerebellar vermis (choice D) is certainly seen in many cases of medulloblastoma, a tumor that arises from this midline cerebellar structure. However, this would lead to truncal ataxia and gait instability, not symptoms of increased intracranial pressure.
Medulloblastoma characteristically spreads to the subarachnoid space (choice E), from which the neoplasm may metastasize to distant sites such as spinal cord. Plaques of medulloblastoma are often found on the cerebellar surface, creating a characteristic sugar coating, but this would not cause any significant blockage of CSF circulation.
The correct answer is C. Any tumor "filling the 4th ventricle" blocks the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This blockage leads to increased intracranial pressure, which manifests with nausea, vomiting, headache, nuchal rigidity, and mental status changes. If surgery is not performed promptly, cerebellar tonsillar herniation and rapid death will ensue. In children, medulloblastoma and ependymoma are the most frequent neoplasms presenting in this manner.
There is no evidence in this case suggesting that acute hemorrhage into the 4th ventricular cavity (choice A) has occurred, nor is medulloblastoma typically associated with this complication. CNS tumors that frequently bleed are metastases from melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and choriocarcinoma.
Alterations in medullary function (choice B) lead to cardiorespiratory instability and may be caused by direct tumor compression or infiltration of the medulla, neither of which is supported by MRI findings in this case.
Infiltration of the cerebellar vermis (choice D) is certainly seen in many cases of medulloblastoma, a tumor that arises from this midline cerebellar structure. However, this would lead to truncal ataxia and gait instability, not symptoms of increased intracranial pressure.
Medulloblastoma characteristically spreads to the subarachnoid space (choice E), from which the neoplasm may metastasize to distant sites such as spinal cord. Plaques of medulloblastoma are often found on the cerebellar surface, creating a characteristic sugar coating, but this would not cause any significant blockage of CSF circulation.
diagnosis of porphyrias.
The Widal test (choice D) is used to diagnose typhoid fever.
The Woellner enzyme test (choice E) detects heterophil antibodies in patients with Epstein-Barr virus infection, such as infectious mononucleosis.
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5>The correct answer is A. A good way to remember what goes through the superior orbital fissure is that everything that innervates the eye, other than the optic nerve, passes through this fissure. This includes the oculomotor nerve (CN III), the trochlear nerve (CN IV), the ophthalmic nerve (V1), and the abducens nerve (CN VI).
The facial nerve (CN VII; choice B) passes through the internal auditory meatus.
The mandibular nerve (V3; choice C) passes through the foramen ovale.
The maxillary nerve (V2; choice D) passes through the foramen rotundum.
The middle meningeal artery (choice E) passes through the foramen spinosum.
The ophthalmic artery (choice F) passes through the optic canal.
The optic nerve (choice G) passes through the optic canal.
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6>The correct answer is B. Cranial nerve IX is the glossopharyngeal nerve, which has a nucleus in the medulla and is necessary for the gag reflex. The gag reflex is elicited by touching either side of the posterior pharynx with a tongue blade, producing bilateral elevation of the palate and bilateral contraction of the pharyngeal muscles. The afferent of this reflex arc consists of the ipsilateral glossopharyngeal nerve, while the vagus nerve, bilaterally, supplies the efferent limb. While the glossopharyngeal nerve may seem to be one of the less important cranial nerves, you should remember to test for its function, as a loss of gag reflex can lead to the patient's death secondary to an aspiration pneumonia. This form of pneumonia can be difficult to treat, as it commonly is due to a mixed flora, which may include a variety of anaerobes.
Cranial nerve VII (choice A) is the facial nerve, which supplies motor function to the face, but does not supply the oropharynx.
Cranial nerve XII (choice C) is the hypoglossal nerve, which supplies the tongue. It is not involved in the gag reflex.
Cranial nerve XI (choice D) is the spinal accessory nerve, which supplies the trapezius and sternocleidomastoid.
Cranial nerve VIII (choice E) is the vestibulocochlear nerve, responsible for hearing and equilibrium.
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7>The correct answer is D. The rule of thumb is that the plasma concentration will reach 50% in one half-life, 75% in two half-lives, 87.5% in three half-lives, etc., so that the difference between the current drug level and 100% halves with each half-life. In this instance, it takes two half-lives to reach 75%. The half-live of this drug is 6 hours, so two half-lives is 12 hours.
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8>The correct answer is E. Herpes simplex can cause a necrotizing, hemorrhagic acute encephalitis that may rapidly produce death. The encephalitis characteristically involves the lower portions of the cerebral cortex, notably the temporal lobes and the base of the frontal lobes, possibly because the infection spreads from the oropharynx.
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9>The correct answer is D. The genetic condition is Marfan syndrome, which is characterized by skeletal, ocular, and cardiovascular abnormalities. Typically, Marfan patients are tall with very long legs and tapering fingers. Laxity of joints is present, so that the thumb can be extended back to the wrist. Chest and spinal column deformities may be present as well. The most frequent cardiovascular anomalies are incompetence of the aortic valve, aortic dissection, and mitral valve prolapse ("floppy valve"). The latter may give rise to mitral regurgitation with the typical auscultatory phenomenon of a systolic click followed by a murmur. The most characteristic ocular change is ectopia lentis, i.e., dislocation of the lens. Most deaths are due to rupture of aortic dissections. The gene mutated in Marfan syndrome encodes fibrillin, a 350-kD protein that serves as scaffolding for the deposition of elastin and formation of elastic fibers. Elastin (choice C) is a 70-kD protein that constitutes the central core of elastic fibers. Abundant elastin is found in the walls of large arteries, uterus, skin, and ligaments. Although elastic fibers are disrupted by mutations of the fibrillin gene, the structure of elastin protein is intact in Marfan syndrome.
Collagen (choice A) is affected in a different set of genetic diseases, including Ehlers-Danlos syndromes and osteogenesis imperfecta.
Dystrophin (choice B) is a large transmembrane protein whose function is essential in maintaining the structural integrity of striated muscle fibers. Mutations of the dystrophin gene, located on X chromosome, are responsible for muscular dystrophy.
Mutations of the gene for myosin b-chain (choice E) account for more than one third of cases of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a condition characterized by hypertrophy of the left ventricle. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is not associated with mitral valve prolapse.
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10>The correct answer is D. The disease is poliomyelitis, which is caused by the poliovirus, a picorna virus. The virus is spread via the fecal-oral route and can then cause paralysis by infecting the alpha-motor neurons of the anterior horn of the spinal cord. Early symptoms include malaise, headache, fever, nausea, abdominal pain, and sore throat.
Bacterial and fungal infections can be spread by dirt contact with an open wound (choice A).
AIDS is an example of a disease spread by injection (choice B) or exchange of body fluids.
Malaria is an example of a disease spread by mosquitoes (choice C).
Tetanus is the classic example of disease spread by a puncture wound of the foot (choice E).

11>The correct answer is A. This is a typical presentation of an abdominal aortic aneurysm, which is almost always due to severe atherosclerosis. The foci of calcification described occur within the atherosclerotic plaques, and indicate severe atherosclerotic disease.
Congenital weakness of vessels (choice B) can produce berry aneurysms, especially in cerebral vessels in the circle of Willis.
Cystic medial necrosis (choice C) can produce dissecting aneurysms, especially in Marfan's syndrome.
Syphilitic aneurysms (choice D) typically involve the aortic root as it leaves the heart.
Vasculitis (choice E) can produce aneurysms in small arteries.
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12>The correct answer is A. This scenario is classic for "dependent" personality. Look for reliance on others, subordination of own needs, and fear of abandonment. Note that in real life, patients may show symptoms of more than one personality disorder.
Histrionic personality disorder (choice B) is characterized by theatricality, suggestibility, a strong desire for attention, and shallowness.
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (choice C), also called anancastic personality disorder, is characterized by obsessions, perfectionism, rigidity, and self-doubt.
Paranoid personality disorder (choice D) is characterized by suspiciousness, oversensitivity, querulousness, and an unforgiving character.
Schizoid personality disorder (choice E) is characterized by emotional coldness, solitude, and social insensitivity.
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13>The correct answer is A. The point of this question is that sometimes the obvious explanation is the correct one. Occlusion of the central retinal artery rapidly causes irreversible blindness with loss of the inner retinal layers. (The photoreceptor rod and cone cells are maintained by the pigment epithelium.) The site of occlusion is typically just posterior to the cribriform plate. A garden-variety atheroma or embolism is overwhelmingly the most common cause of central retinal artery occlusion.
Despite all of the teaching about the risk of blindness in temporal arteritis (choice B), this disorder causes only 10% of central retinal artery occlusions.
Hypertension (choice C) is more apt to cause bleeding than thrombosis.
Polycythemia vera (choice D) could (rarely) cause occlusion because of increased blood viscosity and a tendency for thrombosis.
Tumor (choice E) might also cause retinal artery thrombosis, but this would be far rarer than atheroma.
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14>B
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15>C
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16>The correct answer is A. The facial nerve and the vestibulocochlear nerve emerge from the brain stem at the cerebellopontine angle. These are the two nerves which will be initially affected by a tumor in this region.
The glossopharyngeal nerve and vagus nerve (choices B and E) emerge from the brain stem at the post-olivary sulcus. This is caudal to the cerebellopontine angle.
The optic nerve (choice C) exits from the optic chiasm on the ventral surface of the diencephalon. This is rostral to the cerebellopontine angle.
The trigeminal nerve (choice D) emerges from the brain stem at the anterolateral surface of the pons. This is rostral and ventral to the cerebellopontine angle.
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17>The correct answer is B. This patient has gout, characterized by painful joints due to the precipitation of uric acid crystals caused by excessive production of uric acid (a minority of cases are associated with underexcretion of uric acid). Kidney disease is also seen due to accumulation of uric acid in the tubules. The disease mostly affects males, and is frequently treated with allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase. Xanthine oxidase catalyzes the sequential oxidation of hypoxanthine to xanthine to uric acid.
A defect in urea synthesis (choice A) would result in the accumulation of ammonia.
Phenylketonuria is a disease in which tyrosine cannot be produced from phenylalanine (choice C). It is characterized by a musty body odor and mental retardation.
Defective topoisomerases (choice D) would affect DNA unwinding, and therefore replication.
Leukotrienes (choice E) are potent constrictors of smooth muscle and would more likely lead to bronchoconstriction.
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18>The correct answer is C. Any tumor "filling the 4th ventricle" blocks the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This blockage leads to increased intracranial pressure, which manifests with nausea, vomiting, headache, nuchal rigidity, and mental status changes. If surgery is not performed promptly, cerebellar tonsillar herniation and rapid death will ensue. In children, medulloblastoma and ependymoma are the most frequent neoplasms presenting in this manner.
There is no evidence in this case suggesting that acute hemorrhage into the 4th ventricular cavity (choice A) has occurred, nor is medulloblastoma typically associated with this complication. CNS tumors that frequently bleed are metastases from melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and choriocarcinoma.
Alterations in medullary function (choice B) lead to cardiorespiratory instability and may be caused by direct tumor compression or infiltration of the medulla, neither of which is supported by MRI findings in this case.
Infiltration of the cerebellar vermis (choice D) is certainly seen in many cases of medulloblastoma, a tumor that arises from this midline cerebellar structure. However, this would lead to truncal ataxia and gait instability, not symptoms of increased intracranial pressure.
Medulloblastoma characteristically spreads to the subarachnoid space (choice E), from which the neoplasm may metastasize to distant sites such as spinal cord. Plaques of medulloblastoma are often found on the cerebellar surface, creating a characteristic sugar coating, but this would not cause any significant blockage of CSF circulation.
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19The correct answer is E. Maternal diabetes is best known for causing large but immature-for-age babies. There is also a specific association between maternal diabetes and transposition of the great vessels. In transposition of the great vessels, the aorta takes off from the anterior part of the right ventricle and the pulmonary trunk takes off from the posterior part of the left ventricle. This produces a complete separation of the systemic and pulmonary circulations. Without surgical correction, most affected infants die within the first months of life, although a patent ductus arteriosus, patent foramen ovale, or ventricular septal defect may allow enough mixing of blood to temporarily sustain life.
In atrial septal defect (choice A) blood can pass from one atrium to the other.
Associate coarctation of the aorta (choice B) with Turner syndrome.
Eisenmenger's syndrome (choice C) is a shift from a left-to-right shunt to a right-to-left shunt secondary to developing pulmonary hypertension.
Tetralogy of Fallot (choice D) consists of a ventricular septal defect, an overriding aorta, pulmonic stenosis, and right ventricular hypertrophy. It is the most common cause of early cyanosis.
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20The correct answer is A. This is an example of displacement. In this defense mechanism, there is a transfer of emotion from a person, object, or situation with which it is appropriately associated to another that causes less distress. Displacement is common and often destructive to other individuals, such as when a man is fired from his job and subsequently beats his wife or children. In the medical setting, the hospital staff is a frequent target of displacement when family members react to their own feelings of guilt about someone's death.
Projection (choice B) occurs when someone attributes his or her own thoughts to a different person.
Reaction formation (choice C) is the unconscious adoption of behavior opposite to one's true feelings.
Regression (choice D) is the adoption of behavior more appropriate to a younger age.
Repression (choice E) is the deeply subconscious blocking of memories or emotions.
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21The correct answer is B. This item tests your knowledge of neurocutaneous syndromes, a group of hereditary conditions characterized by concomitant neoplastic or hamartomatous lesions predominantly affecting the skin and nervous system. Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma is a peculiar astrocytic tumor that grows from the walls of the lateral ventricles. It is pathognomonic of tuberous sclerosis, which is caused by mutations of TS1 or TS2 genes. Tuberous sclerosis manifests with multiple hamartomatous lesions in the skin, CNS, and visceral organs. Cortical tubers are malformed (hamartomatous) nodules of the cortex, probably resulting from faulty cortical development. Other lesions include shagreen patches and ash-leaf spots on the skin, cardiac myomas, and renal angiomyolipomas.
Café-au-lait spots (choice A) are found in both types of neurofibromatosis. Lisch nodules (choice D) are small pigmented nodular lesions of hamartomatous nature that are present in the iris of patients with neurofibromatosis type 1. Schwannomas of the 8th cranial nerve (choice E), especially when bilateral, are typically associated with neurofibromatosis type 2.
Hemangioblastoma (choice C) is a vascular tumor of unknown histologic origin that frequently develops in the cerebellum of patients with von Hippel-Lindau syndrome. Renal cell carcinomas are also common in this disease. Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome is caused by autosomal dominant mutations of the VHL gene, a tumor suppressor gene. You may recall that mutations of VHL gene are also found in the majority of sporadic renal cell carcinomas
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------22The correct answer is A. This is a typical presentation of an abdominal aortic aneurysm, which is almost always due to severe atherosclerosis. The foci of calcification described occur within the atherosclerotic plaques, and indicate severe atherosclerotic disease.
Congenital weakness of vessels (choice B) can produce berry aneurysms.
Cystic medial necrosis (choice C) can produce dissecting aneurysms (e.g., in Marfan's syndrome).
Syphilitic aneurysms (choice D) typically involve the aortic root as it leaves the heart.
Vasculitis (choice E) can produce aneurysms in small arteries.
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23The correct answer is C. The physician should obtain an emergency order of detention, regardless of her threats of a lawsuit. The woman clearly still has suicidal intent, demonstrated by her expressed verbalizations, and is therefore a danger to herself.
Choices A, B, and D clearly place her in a position where she can carry out her plans to terminate her life.
Sedating her (choice E) is the second best choice since it will prevent her from taking her life; however, sedation does not give therapists the opportunity to address the underlying motivations for her suicidal ideation.
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24The correct answer is B. Blocking antibody is generally an IgG antibody against the allergen. It is induced in the allergic patient by administering small amounts of allergen over a period of time. When the person is again exposed to the allergen, the IgG reacts with the allergen before it can reach the IgE-coated mast cell.
Antihistamines (choice A) would block histamine receptors but would not react with the allergen before it could reach the IgE-coated mast cell.
Cromolyn sodium (choice C) is a drug that stabilizes mast cell membranes, thus inhibiting degranulation, but would have no effect on allergen binding to IgE on mast cells.
Epinephrine (choice D) is the mainstay of therapy in severe cases of immediate hypersensitivity (anaphylaxis). It increases intracellular cyclic AMP, thus decreasing mast cell degranulation, and causes smooth muscle dilation in the airways. Epinephrine would have no effect on the binding of the allergen to IgE on mast cells.
Cyclic AMP is degraded in cells by the enzyme phosphodiesterase. Theophylline (choice E) inhibits this enzyme, thereby increasing mast cell cyclic AMP levels and making degranulation less likely without affecting the binding of the allergen to IgE on mast cells.
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25The correct answer is E. At this level, the lateral portion of the dorsal columns (funiculus) is comprised of the fasciculus cuneatus. Axons carrying tactile, proprioceptive, and vibratory information from the ipsilateral arm enter the spinal cord via the dorsal root, ascend the cord in the fasciculus cuneatus, and synapse in the nucleus cuneatus of the caudal medulla. Secondary neurons from this nucleus give rise to internal arcuate fibers, which decussate and ascend to the thalamus (ventral posterolateral nucleus, VPL) as the medial lemniscus. Tertiary neurons from the VPL project to the ipsilateral somatosensory cortex. Therefore, damage to the fasciculus cuneatus would result in a deficit in tactile, proprioceptive, and vibratory sense in the ipsilateral arm, because the fibers that carry this information do not cross until they reach the medulla.
Fine motor control of the fingers (choice A) would be carried principally by the ipsilateral lateral corticospinal tract in the lateral funiculus of the cord.
Motor control of the contralateral foot (choice B) is carried by the ipsilateral corticospinal tract in the lateral funiculus of the cord.
Hemianhidrosis (lack of sweating) over half of the face (choice C) could be produced by interruption of sympathetic innervation to the face. The hypothalamospinal tract projects from the hypothalamus to the intermediolateral cell column at levels T-1 to T-2. It descends in the lateral funiculus of the cord. Interruption of this tract results in Horner's syndrome (miosis, ptosis, hemianhidrosis).
Proprioception from the ipsilateral leg (choice D) is carried by the fasciculus gracilis in the medial part of the dorsal columns.