Chemical Biology Flashcards

(186 cards)

1
Q

Commonest cause of hypercalcemia

A

primary hyperparathyroidism parathyroid adenoma

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

High calcium, PTH supressed, increased ALP

A

malignancy

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

no longer sensitive to PTH so high PTH despite high calcium

A

Tertiary hyperparathyroidism

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

This condition expresses 1 alpha reductase and causes hypercalcemia

A

sarcoid

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

The three commonest causes of hypercalcemia

A

primary hyperthyroidism, cancer, sarcoid

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Rememberpatient coming over with constipation, kidney stones and some psychiatry symptoms, bone pain

A

malignacy

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What is the best treatment of hypercalcemia

A

fluids, fluids, fluids,

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Baby with seizures - Low Ca, Low PTH:

A

DiGeorge

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

The calcium stones in hypercalcemia have Ca in them and they are

A

radiopaque

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What is secondary treatment of hypercalcemia?

A

Then after 4l of fluid within 24h was given, give frusemide

give IV pamidoronate in the patient with known cancer

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

If the patient has known cancer then you give X for hypercalcemia

A

IV pamidronate

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

What would the X-ray show of person with hypercalcemia?

A

Radial aspect cystic changes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

If you have a patient with sarcoid –

A

give them steroids

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

how does sarcoidosis cause hypercalcemia?

A

Macropages express 1 alpha hydroxylase

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What would the glucose be in someone with Impaired Glucose Tolerance, 2hr after a OGTT

A

Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) is defined as fasting plasma glucose less than - 7.0 mmol/l and OGTT 2-hour value greater than or equal to 7.8 mmol/l but less than 11.1 mmol/l

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

raised ALT and AST

A

Cirrhosis

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Woman with colicky abdominal pain, raised ALP markedly, others might have been deranged, unsure

A

Complete biliary obstruction

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

can cause hepatic cirrhosis and portal hypertension in some and cardiomyopathy in others

A

Haemachromatosis

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

Markers of synthetic function

A

Clotting albumin and PT

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

HONK

A

↓K, high glucose, high serum osmolality >320, high bicarb bicarbonate >15mmolL

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

Low sodium, high serum osmolality, 50 year old woman

A

Diabetes mellitus - high lipids create a pseudohyponatraemia with normal osmolality

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

3 days post prostatectomy with low sodium and everything else normal - fluid overload (they give plain water in TURP)

A

Post prostatectomy

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

↓K, ↑Na (hypertension), inadequate aldosterone synthesis, hyperandrogenism

A

Congenital adrenal hyperplasia-11 beta hydroxylase deficency

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

Pt with HTN - high Na, Low K, high aldosterone:low renin

A

Conns

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
The commonest cause of congenital adrenal hyperplasia
21 hydrozylase deficiency
26
Wchich metabolite would be raised in 21 hydroxylase deficiency?
17 hydrocyprogesterone
27
Increased levels are seen in the urine of CAH patients?
preganetriol
28
What is used to diagnose SIDAH
serum osmolality
29
Pt becomes drowsy 24 hours after RTA - high Na
Diabetes insipidus
30
Dementia/dermatitis/diarrhoea -
niacin (=pellagra): B3
31
Diet poor in veggies, nuts yeas. In coeliac disease, also caused by drugs
Folate
32
Indian lady who is vegan with tiredness and Imacrocytic anaemia -
B12
33
Coeliac disease with swollen tongue and macrocytic anaemia -
B12
34
Someone 'lacking intrinsic factor’.
B12
35
Crohn’s and macrocytic megaloblastic anaemia
could be methotrexate causing folate deficiency
36
Crohn’s – [as terminal ileum required to absorb and this is commonly affected in Crohn’s]
B12 deficiency
37
Woman with hypothyroidism, T1DM, adrenal failure (polyendocrinopathies – autoimmune and is hinting towards pernicious anaemia): autoimmune anthropic gastritis
B12, Shmidt Disease
38
High LH, FSH, everything else normal
Premature Ovarian Failure
39
Very high prolactin and everything else suppressed
prolactinoma/Macroadenoma
40
High GH, high prolactin? everything else suppressed
acromegaly
41
All values were within normal range
non-­‐functioning adenoma
42
Everything normal but low TSH
subclinical hypothyroidism
43
Everything normal but high TSH and high prolactin (but less than 1000):
Primary Hypothyroidism
44
high TSH, low T3, T4, everything else normal
Myxoedema
45
(any tumor that secrets IGF-2) hypoglycaemia – incomplete low glucose, insulin, C peptide, FFA and ketones
non-islet cell tumor
46
○ Neonates: ■ Ketones present:
IUGR
47
Neonantes, ketones absent
inherited metabolic disorder
48
high prolactin as it presses on the stalk causing pituitary failure -\> low dopamine and high prolactin
Non-functioning pituitary adenoma
49
Patient can’t fit in her shoes or put on her wedding ring and has prognathism,
Acromegalic symptoms – OGTT – (GH elevated), IGF (high through the day). Glucose normally suppresses the GH
50
Thin skin, proximal myopathy, impaired fasting glucose -\> what test do you need to do to confirm
dexamethasone suppression test
51
Pt with ↓Na, ↑K + postural hypotension what test do you need to do to confirm
short synACTHen test. This is addisions, one causes of hyperkalemia (renal failure, drugs. adrenals) Addison's disease: investigations In a patient with suspected Addison's disease the definite investigation is a ACTH stimulation test (short Synacthen test). Plasma cortisol is measured before and **30 minutes after giving Synacthen 250ug IM. A**drenal autoantibodies such as anti-**21-hydroxylas**e may also be demonstrated. If a ACTH stimulation test is not readily available (e.g. in primary care) then sending a 9 am serum cortisol can be useful: \> 500 nmol/l makes Addison's very unlikely **\< 100 nmol/l is definitely abnormal** 100-500 nmol/l should prompt a ACTH stimulation test to be performed Associated electrolyte abnormalities are seen in around one-third of undiagnosed patients: * **hyperkalaemia** * **hyponatraemia** * **hypoglycaemia** * **metabolic acidosis**
52
Patient with low sodium, potassium: normal, low plasma osmolality and urine osmolality was 70
water deprivation test
53
To distinguish if it is cranial or nephrogenic diabetes insipidus you do
Vasopressin test
54
Polyuria, polydipsia, hyponatraemia and high ish serum osmolality -\> blood glucose, as high lipids can cause pseudohyponatraemia.
OGGT
55
Impaired fasting glucose -
6.1-6.9
56
Impaired glucose tolerance -
2 hours post glucose ≥7.8 and \<11.1
57
Diabetes - fasting glucose
fasting glucose ≥7.0, or 2 hour glucose ≥11.1. you do OGGT if fasting is less \<7 mMN ○ Need symptoms + one of these tests OR ○ Both of these tests ○ WHO also recommends HbA1c ≥48
58
Rate limiting enzmye in Haem synthesis
ALA synthase
59
Deficiency resulting in urate overproduction
-linked HGPRT = Leach Nyhan (self mutilating, choreiform movements, mentally retarded, gout)
60
Seen in the kidney of someone with T1DM - renal sclerosis
AA
61
Emphysema in someone who hasn’t smoked
A1AT deficiency
62
Raised in someone with mumps
amylase
63
Boys with the salt-losing form typically present at 7-14 days of life with vomiting, weight loss, lethargy, dehydration, hyponatraemia and hyperkalaemia and can present in shock.
CAH – salt losing crisis (21 hydroxylase deficiency – presents at birth)
64
ALP + pain defecating
metastases
65
Fatty acid oxidation defects testing
blood spot for acylcarnitine profile
66
You take a urine sample from a hypoglycaemic neonate.Lab tells you amount of urine is not enough to do all tests. Which test/substance would you want to rule out ASAP?
Galactosaemia - commonest is Gal-1-PUT and is also the most severe
67
Vomiting since 5 years of age, followed by the failure to thrive.
Tyrosinaemia
68
Diarrhoea and bloody stools, vomiting, poor weight gain, extreme sleepiness, irritability, ‘cabbage like odour’ to skin or urine
Tyrosinaemia
69
Succinylacteonate is pathognomic
of tyrosinaemia
70
Muscular hypotonia, seizures, hepatic dysfunction, dysmorphia
Perioxisomal - disorders in metabolism of very long chain fatty acids
71
Perioxisomal disorders have LD and more eye signs
Zellweger
72
inverted nipples and subcutaneous fat pads-lipodystrophy
Glycosylation
73
cherry spot’ on the retina
Tay-Sachs
74
fat accumulation in the liver
Gaucherie Disease
75
Encephalopathy, respiratory alkalosis and irreversible neurological damage
Urea cycle
76
Encephalopathy, respiratory alkalosis and irreversible neurological damage: ○ High ammonia
the first test you would order
77
sweet smelling urine, also smell of ear wax, seem healthy at birth but quickly deteriorate with severe brain damage during times of metabolic crisis & can die of cerebral oedema. Also build-up of leucine, isoleucine and valine.
Maple syrup urine disease
78
presents in early childhood, some remain completely asymptomatic; presents with metabolism is stressed
Acylcarnitines are elevated
79
excessive glycogen storage and prevents glucose export from gluocneogenetic organs. Present with hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, and ‘doll like faces’’
Von Gierke’s;
80
○ Classically chronic muscle weakness with hyperlactataemia ○ Elevated lactate after periods of fasting (overnight), elevated CK, CSF protein is raised in
Kearns-Sayre
81
How do we define osteporosis?
T score \<-2.5
82
How do we define osteopenia?
T-score -1.0-2.5
83
What is T-score?
T-score is being used from a healthy population of patients
84
What are the symptoms of high calcium?
Constipations, Poluria, Polydypsia, Neuro, Seizures, Comas
85
1. **_Low Na, high K, high urea, increased plasma osmolality and increased urine osmality indicated for_**
the renal cause of hyponatremia, CKD
86
Q) What are the criteria for SIDAH?
- Hyponatremia - Plasma Osmolality \<270 mMol/L - Urine Osmolality\>100 mMol **_-high Urine Na > 20 mMol_** - Euvolemia - No renal adrenal, thyroid dysfunction
87
baby, hypotensive, hypotension, alkalosis
BAtter syndrome, defect in TAL loop of Henle
88
What factors lead to hyperkalemia ?
Addison ACE inhibitors Renal faulre Potassium sparring diuretics
89
What causes hyperkalemia in the presence of low aldosterone?
ACE inhibtors
90
low pH with hypokalemia
renal tubular acidos is
91
ALT, AST (in thousands) high both the same increaseed GGT AST:ALT\<1
NAFLD
92
very high ALP (hundreds), AST and ALT elevated, GGT elevated, high bilirubin
Gallstones
93
total bilirubin elavted Raised unconjugated bilirubin - all else normal
Gilbert
94
AST, ALT super high, ALP also high
Paracetamol overdose
95
high GGT (hundred) and ALP
Alcohol abuse
96
bilirubin \<100, raised ALT, AST and GGT, bile salts \>10
Intrahepatic cholestasis (pregnancy):
97
raised ALT and AST
Cirrhosis
98
very high ALT and AST, ALT\>AST
Viral hepatitis
99
**AST: ALT \>2.5**
Alcoholic hepatitis:
100
20 year old student with two weeks anorexia, fever and malaise - raised ALT, normal ALP and GGT.
Infectious mononucleosis
101
Isolatted GGT
enzyme inducing drugs
102
raised conjugated bilirubin
Dubin Johnson
103
very high constant unnjocugated hyperbilibuinamiea
Criglet-Najar
104
increased alpha-fetoprotein
hepatocellular carcinoma
105
Familial hypercalcaemia
abnormal secretion of thePTH despite high Calcium, results in the mutation of the recptor located on the kidneys and parathyroid glands (mutated receptor on both). THIS WILL BE HYPOCALCURIS STATE LEADING TO REDUCE CALCIUM
106
The most common cause of secondary hyperparathyroidism
chronic renal failure
107
Autonomus productio of PTH causes hypercalcemia
tertiary hyperparathyroidism
108
resistance to PTH, high PTH, high Phospate, hypocalcemia
pseudohypoparathyroidism
109
ataxia and areflexia in cystic fibsosis patient is caused by which vitamin deficency ?
vitamin K
110
what sort of anemia is causing B6 deficency?
sideroblastic anemia
111
112
brittle hair and seizures
homocytinuria
113
developmental delay and musty smell also eczema 1) when was this child born?
phenylketonuria
114
baby with enlarged liver, kidneys and hypoglcemia
von Gieerke
115
baby with sweaty feet
maple syrup disorder
116
cheery spot on the trunk
Fabry
117
hypotension, ataxia, heart block are consequency of which drug toxicity
Phenytoin - antieplieptic
118
diarrohoea, vomitting, tremor and signs of which drug toxicity
Lithium
119
the tocxic effects of this drug are potentiated by cipro or erythromycin
theophylline
120
the potassium you would see in untreated DKA
high
121
calculate osmolarity
2(Na + K) + urea + glucose
122
calculate anion gap
(Na + K ) – (Cl+HCO3-)
123
* what would bicarbonate be in pyloric stenosis is hypochloremic hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis
(40)
124
* What would the glucose be in someone with Impaired Glucose Tolerance, 2hr after a OGTT
Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) is defined as fasting plasma glucose less than 7.0 mmol/l and OGTT 2-hour value greater than or equal to 7.8 mmol/l but less than 11.1 mmol/l
125
Low Na, high K, high urea, increased plasma osmolality and increased urine osmality
renal cause of hyponatremia
126
Markers of synthetic function:
Clotting albumin and PT
127
Impaired fasting glucose -
6.1-6.9
128
Impaired glucose tolerance
2 hours post glucose ≥7.8 and \<11.1
129
diabetes definition
* **fasting glucose** ≥7.0, or 2 hour glucose ≥11.1. you do OGGT if fasting is less \<7 mMN * Need symptoms + one of these tests OR * Both of these tests * WHO also recommends HbA1c ≥48
130
What is the normal range of anion gap?
The normal range = 10-18 mmol/L
131
* **T1DM** (DKA) (↑K, ↓Na, ) – (↓Cl, + bicarbonate: (BG)) \> 12 mmol/L. (anion gap) normal
**Respiratory alkalosis, hyperventilation caused by hypoglycaemia**
132
metabolic acidosis, high anion gap -
DKA
133
* **Hyperosmolar hyperglycaemic state (HHS) is confirmed by:**
* *Dehydration* * *Osmolality \>320mosmol/kg* * *Hyperglycaemia \>30 mmol/L* with pH \>7.3, bicarbonate \>15mmolL and no significant ketonenaemia \<3mmol/L
134
A low urine osmolality high serum osmolality (±↑Na, ↑±Ca, ↓±K)
Diabetes Insipidus
135
Q) What atre the causes of hyperkalemia?
Renal problem Drugs: spironolactone ACE inhibitors Angitensin recptor blocage like Lozartan Low aldersrone (Addison Disease) type IV renal tubular acidosis (low renin, low aldosterone)
136
How would you manage a patient with hyperkalemia?
- 10 ml 10% Calcium glucoganate to stabilise the heart - 50% 50 ml glucose plus 10 units of insulin - nebulised salbutammol
137
How does loop diuretics and Batter syndrome lead to hypokalemia?
Increased Na delivery to the distal nephron
138
What are the causes of hypokalemia?
- GI loss - Renal loss (hyperaldosteroidism, increased Na delivery to the distal nephron, osmotic diuresis) - Redistribution of the insulin into the cells: - insulin, beta aginist, alkalosis Rare causes: renal tubular aicdosis, 1, 2 hypomagnesemia -
139
How would you manage the patient with hypokalemia K 3-3.5
two Sandok tablets
140
How would you manage the hypokalmeic patient with serum K \< 3.0 mmol/L
IV K chlorride 10 mmol/hour
141
Hypokalemia is a side effect of which drug?
Frusemide
142
Hyperkalemia is side effect of which commonly presribed drugs?
Ramipril, Losartan, sprironolactone
143
Which drugs are causing SIDAH?
STOCK **S**SRI **T**CA **O**piates **C**arbamazepine
144
What are the causes of hypernatremia (rare)?
**GI loses** sweatings Renal causes - osmotic diuresis - disbetes inispidius
145
What is the most reliable method to establish hyponatremia?
low urinary sodium
146
•How would you manage a ***hypovolaemic*** patient with hyponatraemia?
Volume replacement with 0.9% saline
147
•What is the most important point to remember while correcting hyponatraemia?
–Serum Na must NOT be corrected \> 8-10 mmol/L in the first 24 hours **Why?** **Due to risks of central pontine myelinosyits**
148
Drugs used to treat SIADH if water resitriction is insufficent?
**•Demeclocycline** –Reduces responsiveness of collecting tubule cells to ADH –Monitor U&Es (risk of nephrotoxicity) •**Tolvaptan** –V2 receptor antagonist
149
•What is the first step in the clinical assessment of a patient with hyponatraemia?
B.1st Clinical assessment of volume status A.2nd Measure plasma & urine sodium
150
What tests would you use for the diagnosis of agromelay?
OGGT and IGF Oral glucose tolerance test in normal patients GH is suppressed to \< 2 mu/L with hyperglycaemia in acromegaly there is no suppression of GH may also demonstrate impaired glucose tolerance which is associated with acromegaly
151
everything normal but decreased bone mineralisation; ALP can be raised if recent fracture
osteoporosis
152
low calcium and phosphate, high ALP and PTH
osteomalacia
153
High calcium, PTH supressed, increased ALP
malignancy
154
no longer sensitive to PTH so high PTH despite high calcium
Tertiary hyperparathyroidism -
155
low calcium and PTH was in the normal range [but you expect it to be low
hypoparathyroidism
156
10 year old with seizures- Low Ca, low PO4 , High PTH
rickets
157
Low Ca, Low PTH: Hypoparathyroidism
DiGeorge
158
Band kerpatpahy of the eye is complication of whaT?
hypercalcemia
159
Lists four complications of hypercalcemia?
- Pancreatitis - Peptic Ulcers - Skeletal changes - Renal stones
160
What test would you do to diagnose SIDAH?
Hyponatremia low plasma osmolalaity high urine osmolality high urine sodium euvoleia no urine, renal, thyroid dysfunction
161
low calcium, low phosphate, high PTH and high ALP
Vitamin D
162
* **_All values of pititary hormones were within normal range_**
(non-­‐functioning adenoma)
163
Everything else supressed, high prolactin but less than \<6000
non-functioning adenoma
164
C-peptide levels are high:
* C peptide levels are high in **insulinoma**, and **elevated** with **oral sulfonylureas (stimulate insulin secretion), type 2 diabetes, indulin resitance**
165
C-peptides levels are low:
type I diabetes, exogenous insulin, liver disease
166
167
* incomplete low glucose, insulin, C peptide, FFA and ketones
Non islet cell tumour (any tumor that secrets IGF-2)
168
The presence of ketones in neonates suggests:
that the baby is premture and this might be IUGR
169
The absence of ketones in neonate suggest that
this might inherited metabolic disorder
170
low dopamine and high prolactin
Non-functioning pituitary adenoma
171
172
Rate limiting enzmye in Haem synthesis
ALA synthethase
173
self mutilating, choreiform movements, mentally retarded, gout)
Deficiency resulting in urate overproduction –X-linked HGPRT
174
What happens to the kidney of someone with T1DM
renal scleriosis
175
* Boys with the salt-losing form typically present at 7-14 days of life with vomiting, weight loss, lethargy, dehydration, hyponatraemia and hyperkalaemia and can present in shock.
* crisis (21 hydroxylase deficiency – presents at birth)
176
Woman with problems in urinating (stones) and defecating (constipation)
* **ALP + pain defecating** =metastases
177
**Tests for metabolic disorders. [urine reducing substances; urine amino acids; etc]** * You suspect ***Acute Intermittent Porphyria***. ***What test? Urine sample protected from light*** * What does ***the Guthrie test*** measure? Phenylalamine * Urine reducing substances. **Galactosemia** * Urine amino acids**. Homocystinuria Organic acidurias LIV (leucine, isoleucine, valine)** * **Fatty acid oxidation defects** blood spot for acylcarnitine profile **Muscle biopsy: Glycogen storage disease**
178
Diarrhoea and bloody stools, vomiting, poor weight gain, extreme sleepiness, irritability, ‘cabbage like odour’ to skin or urine, liver issues
Tyrosinaemia
179
* **Succinylacteonate is pathognomic**
tyrosinaemia
180
* : large fontanelle, osteopaenia of long bones, often with calcified stippling in the patellar region * **_Very long chain fatty acid profile_**
paroximal disorders
181
inverted nipples and subcutaneous fat pads-lipodystrophy
Glycosylation defect
182
Tay (opthamologist who discovered the ‘cherry spot’
Tay Sachs
183
* **_Encephalopathy_**_, **respiratory alkalosis**_ and **_irreversible neurological damage_**
* **Urea cycle**
184
Acylcarnitines are elevated
MCADD:
185
* excessive glycogen storage and prevents glucose export from gluocneogenetic organs. Present with hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, and **‘doll like faces’’**
von gierke
186
* **_Classically chronic muscle weakness with hyperlactataemia_** Elevated lactate after periods of fasting (overnight),
Kearns Sayre: