First Aid Pics I Flashcards
- esophagus
- rib
- trachea
- SVC
- Brachiocephalic artery
- Left common carotid
- Aorta
- Scapula
- Vertebral foramen
Differentiate direct vs. indirect ELISA
ELISA = enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay- detects presence of either specific antigen or specific antibody in a pt’s blood sample
- Direct ELISA = use test antibody to see if antigen is present, Ab directly coupled to color-generating enzyme
- Indirect ELISA: use either test antigen or ab, then secondary ab is coupled to color-generating enzyme to detect ab-ag complex
Spleen: what is contained in the red vs. white pulp?
Red pulp is peripherally and contains RBCs
- white pulp centrally containing T cells in the periarteriolar lymphatic sheath, and B cells in the follicles/germinal centers
- marginal zone between where APCs present to lymphocytes
Mechanism of Class III antiarrhthmics
K+ channel blockers (Amidoarone, Sotalol)
- prolongs repolarization
- prolongs AP duration/ERP (end refractory period)/ QT interval
Pt w/ long-standing HTN presents w/ worsening renal fxn, biopsy of renal artery
(a) What stain is this?
(b) Dx
(a) PAS stain
(b) Hypertensive nephropathy- renal artery hyalinosis (deposits in arterial wall that cause thickening of arterial wall, causes subtype of atherosclerosis)
Pt w/ recurrent pyogenic infections, partial albinism, and peripheral neuropathy
-WBC on smear attached
Dx?
Dx = Chediak-Higashi Sydnrome
-WBCs w/ large granules
Chediak-Higashi = protein trafficking defect of impaired phagolysosome formation => increased risk of pyogenic infections (can’t destroy phagocytosed bacteria)
-giant granules in leukocytes are due to fusion of granules from the golgi
MC location of rhinosinusitis in adults
(a) MC cause
Rhinosinuisits = obstruction of sinus drainage into nasal cavity => inflammation and pain
-in adults MC in maxillary sinuses
(a) MC caused by viral URI, can be caused by superimposed bacterial
(a) Name these findings
(b) Dx
(a) Janeway lesions = small painless erythematous lesions on palms
- splinter hemorrhages
(b) 2 clinical manifestations of bacterial endocarditis
Dx
Most common primary cardiac tumor in adults = myxoma
-MC location is LA
Which lung cancer is this most likely?
Squamous cell carcinoma- hilar mass arising from the bronchus
-cavitation
Both squamous and small cell are the 2 lung cancers that are central (‘sentral’), squamous cell is the one that arises from the hilum and appears as a cavitation
Describe the structure of insulin
Preproinsulin –> proinsulin –> C-peptide + insulin
Insulin composed of alpha and beta chains held together by disulfide bonds
-C-peptide as marker of endogenously produced insulin
- coracoid process (scapula)
- clavicle
- R common carotid artery
- thyroid
- L internal jugular vein
- Clavicle (left)
- Subclavian vein (L)
- Humeral head (L)
- spine of scapula
- spinous process
Differentiate the two types of arteriolosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis = hardening of arteries, wall thickening and loss of elasticity
A- hylanosis- deposition of hyaline in intima of BV, caused by primary HTN and dibetes
B- hyperplastic where you get proliferation of smooth muscle cells from severe HTN
Explain the power of a study
(a) How to improve power
Power of a study = percent there is an association and the study finds that there is an association
H1 = alternative hypothesis- presence of association
H0 = null hypothesis- lack of association
(a) Improve power by increasing sample size
Describe the Hgb dissociation curve
(a) Name a few things that shifts it left
(b) Name a few things that shift it right
Hgb curve showing % of Hb saturation at a certain partial pressure of oxygen
(a) Shift left when Hgb has a higher affinity for O2, aka HbF (fetal), or in relaxed form (as it is in the lungs)
(b) Shift right in taut form when want to facilitate O2 unloading into tissues
- enhanced by H+, CO2, exercise, 2,3-BPG, altitude, temperature
Which lung cancer would show this histology
Keratin pearls seen in squamous cell carcinoma (RF: smoking)
Describe the difference in the V/Q matching at the apex vs. the base of the lungs
(a) How does this explain why Tb prefers the apex?
Apex (top) has a V/Q ratio of about 3, tons of wasted ventilation (much more O2 than blood flow)
- base has a V/Q ratio of .6, so higher blood flow (Q) than volume of air (V)
(a) Tb thrives in high O2 => flourishes in the apex, espect granuloma formations to prefer the apex
Differentiate positive and negative skew
Positive skew = result that drags tail to the right, mean > median
Negative skew = some smaller results/outliers that drag mean to the left: mean < median
Describe the structure of an antibody
(a) Light vs heavy chain
(b) Variable vs constant region
- Variable region contains both light and heavy chains, this is the part that recognizes antigens.
- Constant region determines the isotype/class and binds complement. Constant region is only heavy chain
- then have 2 disulfide bonds connecting heavy chains, and one disulfide bond on each side connecting heavy chain to light chain in the variable region
What side of the cell membrane is the ATP site of the Na/K ATPase
(a) Na in or out?
ATP site is on the cytosolic side
(a) 3 Na+ out for 2 K+ in
Mechanism of action (at the cellular level) of the following asthma drugs
(a) Albuterol
(b) Theophylline
(c) Ipratropium
(a) Albuterol = stimulates conversion of ATP –> cAMP, cAMP induces bronchodilation
(b) Theophylline (rarely used b/c of narrow therapeutic index)
(b) Ipratropium = muscarinic antagonist to prevent bronchoconstriction
5 mo old w/ recurrent bacterial infections
- uncomplicated birth but delayed separation of umbilical cord
- blood smear attached
Dx?
Dx =Leukocyte adhesion deficiency
Defect in LFA-1 integrin (CD18) protein on phagocytes => get neutrophilia (high neutrophils in serum) b/c neutrophils can’t escape the blood stream
- get absent pus formation at infection sites and impaired wound healing
- give away is delayed umbilical separation
40 yo M p/w episodic HA and palpitations/sweating
- BP 160/120
- plasma metanephrines elevated
(a) Dx
(b) Expected CT finding
(a) Dx = pheochromocytoma = nonmalignant adrenal medulla tumor secreting epi, norepi, and dopamine
(a) Name the CT finding
(b) Describe the pathology
(a) Ct finding = aortic aneurysm (local dilation in aorta)
- this one is abdominal (AAA) and suprarenal (above where renal artery branches off)
(b) 2/2 atherosclerotic buildup in aorta
Describe the structure of tRNA molecule
(a) 3’ end
(b) 5’ end
(c) Anticodon loop
tRNA = clover-shaped molecule w/
(a) 3’ end with 5’ - CCA - 3’ (always) that acts as amino acid receptor site
- CCA 3’ end gets covalently bonded to an amino acid by aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
(b) 5’ end free
(c) Anticodon loop is what reads the mRNA codon
Briefly explain how antibody diversity is generated
- Random recombination of VJ (light chain) or VDJ (heavy chain) genes
- then random combination of heavy chains w/ light chains
- somatic hypermutation following antigen stimulation
- addition of nucleotides to DNA during recombination by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase
Describe the 3 ways in which CO2 is carried in the blood
90% is carried as HCO3- in RBCs, 5% is carried as dissolved in plasma, 5% is carried as HbCO2 (as bound to Hb)
Describe the process of elongation during protein synthesis
APE sites of ribosome:
- first tRNA binds to start codon (AUG) in P-site, bringing in methionine
- next tRNA enters A-site, ribozyme (rRNA) catalyzes formation of peptide bond, transfering growing polypeptide into the A-site
- ribosome advances 3 spaces towards the 3’ end of mRNA, moving tRNA into the P site until next tRNA comes along
Is this the right or left lung?
Pulmonary artery is anterior to the bronchus => it’s the R lung
RALS describes the relationship of the pulmonary artery to the bronchus: right anterior, left superior
What are lines of Zahn?
(a) Clinical significance
Lines of Zahn = interdigitating/alternating areas of pink (fibrin and platelets) and red (RBCs) in a clot formed pre-mortum
(a) Differentiate clots formed pre vs post-mortum
Differentiate PFT findings in obstructive vs. restrictive lung disease
Obstructive: marked scooping/sloping
Restrictive: very reduced volumes
Describe the main steps of thyroid hormone synthesis
- Iodine enters follicular cell, gets oxidized (by peroxidase) and pushed out into lumen as O2
- thyroglobulin synthesized in follicular cell pushed into lumen where it’s combined w/ I2, forming T3/T4 which gets re-endocytosed into follicular cell
- mostly released as T4 which peripherally gets converted into active form T3
Differentiate the 3 parts of the adrenal cortex
(a) What the secrete
(b) Regulatory system
Adrenal cortex: GFR, deeper you go the sweeter its gets
- Zona glomerulosa- secretes aldosterone (renin-angiotensin)
- Zona fasciculata- secretes cortisol (ACTH, CRH)
- Zona reticulata- secretes androgens (ACTH, CRH)
Explain how a test can be precise but not accurate
Precision = consistency/reproducability, while accuracy is validity/trueness of the response
-so a test can be precise if it consistently gets the same answer, but inaccurate if the answer isn’t the valid/correct one
Differentiate the 4 parts of Medicare
Part A = hospital insurance
Part B = paying the physicians, basic medical bills = doctor’s fees, diagnostic testing
Part C = A and B delivered by approved private companies
Part D = prescription drugs
Dx
Pleural effusion- note the hyperdense fluid btwn pleural layers in right lung
Differentiate centriacinar and periacinar emphysema
Centriacinar = associated w/ smoking (both pics)
Periacinar = alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency
Describe the steps of the cell cycle
(a) M-phase vs. interphase
(b) 3 steps of interphase
Cell cycle: split into interphase and M-phase
(a) Interphase: 90% of cell life, split into G1 (growth), S-phase (synthesis), and G2
- M-phase = mitosis and cytolysis (splititng of cytosol)
(b) Interphase:
- G1 (growth)
- S-phase where new DNA material is synthesized, organelles are replicated (chromosomes become doubled)
- G2
-
Mechanism of Class II antiarrhythmics
Class II = beta-blockers
- decreases cAMP => reduces Ca2+ currents = suppresses abnormal pacemaker cells
- decreases slope of phase 4 depolarization and prolongs AV nodal repolarization
For SVT and rate control for AFib, Aflutter
See this Xray in a pt w/o atherosclerotic disease or peripheral artery disease
Dx?
Dx = Monckeberg atherosclerosis (rare) = medial calcific sclerosis = calcification of the elastic lamina of medium sized arteries
- so you get vascular stiffening w/o obstruction of blood flow
- so the arteries on CXR show up (b/c calcified) and are super huge-appearing, but flow is not obstructed b/c intima is not involved