First Aid: Behavioral Science/ Renal Flashcards
What does a cross sectional test tell you?
Cross sectional study = observational study that looks at group of ppl at a particular point in time (one point in time, not longitudinal)
- can give disease prevalence
- can tell you associated risk factors, but not causality
Is a cohort study prospective or retrospective?
(a) Result
Cohort study can be either prospective (take exposure and look forward to see who has disease) or retrospective (take disease and look back to see who had exposure)
-compares group w/ exposure vs. w/o exposure
(a) Relative risk
ex: Prospective asks who will develop disease, retrospective asks who developed the disease
Which of the 4 core ethical principles do the following protect
(a) Informed consent
(b) Triage
(c) Confidentiality
4 core ethical principles: autonomy, beneficence (what’s in the pt’s best interest), nonmalificence (do no harm), justice (fair and equitable)
(a) Informed consent to respect the pt’s ability to chose = autonomy
(b) Triage = justice, fairness
(c) Confidentiality = autonomy
Explain sensitivity vs. specificity
Sensitivity = true positive rate = probability that test will be positive in a pt w/ the disease
SNNOUT- negative result rules out disease
Specificity = true negative rate = probability that test will be negative in pt w/o the disease
SPPIN- positive result rules disease in
Differentiate the 4 phases of a clinical trial?
Clinical trial phases
I- small group of healthy subjects to assess safety
II- small group of diseased subjects to assess efficacy/dosing/side effects
III- large group of randomly assigned pts to compare tx to standard of care
IV- postmarket surveillance after approval to assess for rare or long term side effects
Is a case control study prospective or retrospective?
(a) Result
Case control = observational study that is retrospective (looking back) comparing group of ppl w/ disease to group of ppl w/o
-to look at prior exposure to a risk factor
(a) Odds ratio
ex: pts w/ COPD had a higher odds of a history of smoking than those w/o COPD
- take disease (COPD) and look back at RF (smoking)
Define low birth wt
(a) Associated conditions
Low birth wt = under 2500 g
(a) Neonatal respiratory distress, necrotizing enterocolitis, interventricular hemorrhage
Which: positive predictive value or sensitivity/specificity- are fixed properties of a test
Sensitivity/specificity are fixed properties of a test
-while PPV and NPV vary depending on the disease prevalence
Name the 5 components of the APGAR score
APGAR score: (get 2 pts for each) appearance pulses grimace activity respiration
Differentiate incidence and prevalence
Incidence = over a period of time
Prevalence = current cases at a single point in time
Which observational study gives you
(a) Odds ratio
(b) Relative risk
Observation study that gives
(a) Odds ratio = case control = retrospective study comparing group w/ and w/o disease
(b) Relative risk = cohort study = compares group w/ and w/o given exposure
Describe number needed to treat
(a) Formula
NNT = number of pts who need to be treated for one patient to benefit
(a) NNT = 1 / ARR
- ARR = absolute risk reduction (difference in risk attributable to the intervention)
Ex: Flu vaccine: 2% who get vaccine get the flu, 8% who don’t develop flu
ARR = 8-2 = 6%
NNT = 1/6
Differentiate primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention
(a) Give example of each
Primary prevention = prevent disease before it occurs
(a) Gardasil (HPV) vaccine
Secondary prevention = preventing morbidity after pt has clinical disease, catch and treat early
(a) Pap smear screening
Tertiary = preventing symptoms from already apparent clinical disease, reduce disability from disease
(a) Chemotherapy for diagnosed cancer
Differentiate null and alternative hypothesis
H0 (null) hypothesis = no association btwn variables
H1 (alternative) hypothesis = association exists
Is a sensitive or specific test better as a screening test?
As a screening test you want a sensitive test b/c high sensitivity means high false negative rate (you won’t miss ppl)
Examples of when confidentiality can be broken
- reportable diseases (STI, TB, hepatitis, food poisoning): physician warns public officials who can then warn ppl at risk
- Tarasoff decision = physicians required to inform and protect potential victims
- child/elder abuse
- suicidal/homicidal pts
Differentiate statistical tests
(a) T-test
(b) ANOVA
(c) Chi squares
Statsssss
(a) T-test compares the means of two groups
(b) ANOVA compares the means of 3 or more groups = analysis of variance (called by UWORLD…poopheads)
(c) Chi-squared compares the percentage or proportions (not the mean) of two or more groups
ex: Comparing the percent of members of 3 different ethnic groups who have essential HTN (not comparing the numbers of BP, just the proportion of population w/ HTN)
Explain PPV vs. NPV
PPV = probability of pt having disease is test is positive
NPV = probability of pt being disease free if a test is negative
Give the term for the following
(a) True negative rate of a test
(b) True positive rate of a test
(a) True negative rate = specificity = probability that test will be negative given pt is disease free
(b) True positive rate = sensitivity = probability that test will positive in pt w/ disease
Ex] Study showed 21% of smokers developed lung cancer while only 1% of non-smokers developed LC
(a) What is the relative risk?
(b) What is the attributable risk?
(a) Relative risk = 21/1 = 21, risk of developing disease in exposed group / risk in unexposed group
(b) Attributable risk = 21 - 1 = 21, proportion of disease attributable to the exposure
Formula for
(a) Sensitivity
(b) Specificity
based on the classic 2x2 table
(a) Sensitivity (true positive rate) = (TP) / (TP + FN)
- probability test will detect disease when disease is present
(b) Specificity = probability test will be negative in disease free pt = (TN) / (TN + FP)
Name a noninherited caused of cystic kidney disease
(a) Mechanism of disease
Multicystic dysplastic kidney = noninherited but congenital malformation of the renal parenchyma leading to cysts w/ abnormal tissue (typically cartilage)
(a) Due to abnormal interaction btwn the ureteric bud and metanephric mesenchyme during embryologic development
Mesonephros vs. metanephros
Mesonephros acts as the primitive kidney during the first trimester, later contributes to the male GU system
While metanephros is the permanent structure that begins development around 5th week of gestation
-contains the ureteric bud and metanephric mesenchyme
Ureteric bud gives rise to what structures?
(a) Needs differentiation signal from what?
Ureteric bud => collecting ducts, calyces, pelvis, ureters (collection systme)
(a) Requires interplay/differentiation from metanephric mesenchyme (forms nephrons)
D/o that arises from abnormal interaction btwn the ureteric bud and the metanpehric mesenchyme
Abnormal communication => multicystic dysplastic kidney = noninherited congenital abnormal renal parenchyma w/ cysts and cartilage
Name some etiologies of Potter sequence
Potter sequence 2/2 oligohydramnios: flat facies, low set ears, limb/extremity hypoplasia, pulmonary hypoplasia
Etiologies of oligohydramnios = when the fetus can’t produce urine
- b/l renal agenesis
- ARPKD (aut recessive polycystic kidney disease)
- obstructive uropathy (ex: posterior urethral valves)
Which kidney is taken for donor transplant?
Take the left b/c it has a longer renal vein
What percent of total body water is intra vs. extra cellular?
60% of our body is water, then 1/3 of that water is extracellular while the other 2/3 is intracellular
So 40% of total body mass is intracellular water, while 20% is extracellular water
Formula for renal clearance of a substance
C = (U x V) / P
C = clearance U = urine concentration of substrate (mg/ml) V = urine flow rate (ml/min) P = plasma concentration of substrate (mg/ml)
What do the following best predict
(a) Renal inulin clearance
(b) Renal PAH clearance
(c) Renal creatinine clearance
(a) Inulin is used as a predictor of GFR b/c there is no net secretion or reabsorption, so amount filtered is what gets excreted
(b) PAH gets both filtered and secreted, so basically all of it in serum gets excreted, so PAH clearance predicts renal plasma flow
(c) Creatinine clearance estimates GFR (a bit overestimated bc bit of Cr secretion)
Formula for filtration fraction
(a) Normal value
FF = GFR / RRF (renal plasma flow)
RPF = RBF / (1 - Hct)
(a) FF normally 20%
- so about 20% of the blood thru the afferent arteriole gets filtered
Formula for filtration fraction using substituted clearance values
FF = GFR / RPF = (Creatinine clearance) / (PAH clearance)
Change in filtration fraction due to
(a) Dilation of afferent arteriole
(b) Constriction of efferent arteriole
(c) Increase in plasma protein concentration
FF = GFR / RPF
(a) Stays the same when prostaglandins dilate the afferent arteriole, b/c both GFR and RPF are increased
(b) FF increases when ATII constricts the efferent arteriole b/c RPF decreases but GFR increases
(c) Increased plasma protein decreases GFR => decreases FF
At what level of serum glucose does glucosuria begin?
Above serum glucose of 200 (threshold), glucose excreted in urine
Then TM of receptors is about 375, above which no glucose can be reabsorbed
How does Hartnup disease result in features of pellagra?
Hartnup disease = autosomal recessive defect in neutral amino acid transporter in the proximal convoluted tubule (AA reabsorbed actively) and enterocytes
=> tryptophan (neutral AA) can’t be reabsorbed by kidney or reabsorbed in gut => decreased tryptophan available to make niacin (B3) => pellagra-like symptoms
2 places where PTH acts on the nephron
PTH activity on the nephron: ‘phosphorus trashing hormone’
PTH acts on PCT to inhibit Na/PO4 cotransport => increase PO4 excretion (decrease phosphate reabsorption)
PTH also acts on the DCT to increase Ca/Na exchange to increase Ca reabsorption