Mock Midterms Flashcards
3 typical organs for hemorrhagic infarct:
giving you 5 possible answers but they only asked for 3
- Pulmonary Infarct
- Late Reperfusion AMI
- Intestinal Infarct
- Encephalomalacia rubra
- Testis
Most common cause of cardiac wall rupture
Myocardial infarction (mainly occurs during the capillarization period 3-12 days after infarct)
4 Microscopic Features of Necrosis
- Pyknosis, Karyorrhexis, Karyolysis
- Cellular swelling
- Eosinophilic cytoplasm
- Glassy, homogenous
Type of calcification in arteriosclerotic plaque
Dystrophic
Cause and 3 major consequences of prostate hypertrophy
Cause: Decreased production and sensitivity to testosterone/DHT
Consequence:
- Lower urinary tract obstruction
- Bladder distension
- Hydronephrosis
(there may be other answers for this because I feel like they’re all basically the same answer; maybe thrombus from periprostatic veins?)
Definition of abscess
Collagen-enclosed accumulation of pus in a non-preformed body cavity
(differs from empyema which is in a preformed body cavity)
3 examples of infective granulomas:
- tuberculosis
- syphillis
- Aspergillosis pulmonis (a fungus)
Some others we didn’t talk about: leprosy, schistosomiasis, cat scratch disease
4 fates of thrombus
- Lysis
- Embolism
- Organization
- Recanalization
(5: Growth/ Propagation)
Term for blood in the brain ventricles
Haemocephalis internus
Term for inflammation of the cecum
Typhlitis
What is Trousseau’s Sign?
Trousseau has 2 signs named after him, but the first one is probably more important to pathology
- Early sign of pancreatic or gastric cancer: Migrating thrombophlebitis and blood clots
- Hypocalcemia: inflating a blood pressure cuff causes their hand to curl up
4 examples of liquefactive necrosis:
- Gangrena humida
- Anemic cerebral infarcts
- Pulmonary abscess
- Encephalomalacia rubra
(5. pancreatic necrosis has liquefactive as well as fat necrosis)
What is wavefront theory?
MI originates in the subendocardium and progresses outwards towards the subepicardium
This is because the subendocardium works harder and has greater oxygen demands, has higher pressure against the arteries, and is further from the origin of the arteries
3 microscopic signs of acute inflammation:
- Dilated capillaries
- Significant amount of neutrophils are present (macrophages are for later or chronic inflammation)
- Eosinophilic exudate masses
2 types of calcification
Dystrophic
Metastatic