Fischer Reproduction Test 3: Part 4 Flashcards
Q45: What virus family gives the characteristic either basophilic or acidophilic intranuclear inclusion body?
The Herpesvirus (HSV-1&2, CMV, and V-Z)
Q46) What are the various diseases caused by candida?
Skin infections, paronychia (nailbed infections, diaper rash, vulvovaginitis, thrush, and esophagitis
47) Which testicular tumor is the same as the ovarian dysgerminoma?
Seminoma
48) Which testicular tumor is the same as the ovarian endodermal sinus tumor (female)?
Yolk sac tumor
49) Which testicular tumor produce alpha feto protein vs. beta hCG?
AFP= Yolk sac tumor; beta hCG=choriocarcinoma
50) What are the features of a testicular teratoma?
1) Mature Teratoma=A solid and multicystic lesion that enlarges the testis. The cut surface exhibits mucinous cysts, with solid cartilaginous and osseous foci. Histologically, there is a haphazard arrangement of cells and organoid structures such as neural, skeletal bone, cartilage, thyroid, respiratory epithelium, squamous epithelium, GI tract epithelium and other tissues within a fibrous or myxoid matrix. 2) Immature and Malignant= Much more common in adults and demonstrates the same arrangement as a mature teratoma, but the tissues are less differentiated, and more primitive . The malignant teratoma has clearly malignant squamous carcinoma or malignant sarcomatous components, clearly defining a true malignancy.
51) Which testicular tumor produce androgen vs estrogen?
Leydig cell tumors (interstitial cell tumors) can produce androgens, estrogens, or both.
52) What is a krukengberg tumor?
GI tract tumor that metastasizes to the stomach, most often being stomach carcinomas.
53) What is the histology of a urinary bladder cancer?
Transitional Cell (urothelial) carcinoma
54) Whats the name of the parasite that causes bladder cancer (only one cancer that causes is a squamous cell cancer)?
Schistosoma haematobium in Egypt
55) What are AZO dye and what kind of cancer with AZO dye would cause an increase risk in?
an industrial carcinogen used in the rubber industry and textile printing. Linked to bladder cancer
56) What are the features of a PSA vs a bone alkaline phosphate and which one’s produce by the prostate?
Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) is released by tumors into the circulation and it may be detected immunochemically in the blood and tissue. Detectable levels after prostatectomy suggest persistent local or metastatic disease. Bone Alkaline Phosphatase is another blood enzyme but it is NOT produced by prostatic cells but is abundant in osteoblasts. When the prostatic cancer cells go into the bone and evoke osteoblastic rx, the proliferation of osteoblasts results in an increase in the Alkaline Phosphatase in blood.
57) Differentiate the location of BPH and adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
BPH=periurethral
Adenocarcinoma=posterior lobe, peripherally located
58) What is the most feared long standing complication of BPH (reflects to the kidney)?
Long standing obstruction of the bladder neck is typically associate with trabeculations and infections of the bladder. Infections may spread to upper urinary tract and into kidneys. May lead to end-stage renal disease.
59) What is the underlying ideology of BPH and prostate cancer (would be hormonal or testosterone)?
BPH= hormonal mechanism so testosterone may play a crucial role. Cancer=hormonal theories but poorly understood.