ToB Diseases/Syndromes COPY Flashcards

1
Q

What are some signs of rickets?

A

Calcium deficiency in children: Long bones that are soft and malformed, bossing, bow legs, enlargement of costochondral junction

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2
Q

What are some symptoms of osteomalacia?

A

Bone pain, backache, muscle weakness and increased risk of fracture

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3
Q

What happens in osteogenesis imperfecta?

A

An autosomal dominant mutation in Type 1 collagen;
Type 1: COL1A1 allele loss leads to frequent fractures after walking (bones are thin, curved and shorter), blue sclera and progressive hearing loss

Type 2: lethal perinatal disease

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4
Q

What is characterisic of Osteoporosis? What are the 2 types?

What are the common fracture sites, how can it be detected and treated?

A

Loss of spongy bone leads to reduced mechanical strength and increased fractures in wrist, spine and hips

Detected with DEXA (measures bone mineral density) and treated with bisphosphonates (binds to calcium hydroxyapatite crystals to suppress osteoclast activity)

Type 1: Postmenopausal women, increased osteoclast activity due to loss of estrogen
Type 2: elderly, reduced osteoblast activity with age

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5
Q

What are 4 modifiable and 5 non-modifiable risk factors for osteoporosis?

A

Modifiable: Ca2+ intake, exercise, smoking alcohol

Non-modifiable: age, gender, previous fractures, limb build and other disorders like rheumatoid

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6
Q

What happens in actinic solar keratosis?

A

Chronic sun exposure - epidermal dysplasia with 8-20% progressing into squamous cell carcinoma

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7
Q

List the 2 types of non-melanoma skin cancers

A
  1. Basal cell carcinomas originate from follicular keratinocytes
  2. Squamous cell carcinomas originate from basal keratinocytes
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8
Q

What is psoriasis? How would you treat it and what are 2 possible causes?

A

The extreme proliferation of the basal layer in response to inflammatory cytokines reduces the epithelial turnover to 3-7 days, causes a reduced granular layer and malformed corneum layer

Treat with Vit D which helps cell differentiation and topical steroids. 2 possible causes are genetic and external environment trigger

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9
Q

What happens in vitiligo?

A

Autoimmune destruction of melanocytes produces patchy depigmentation

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10
Q

What happens in solar/actinic lentigines?

A

Increased melanocytes in response to sun exposure leads to liver spots and can progress to lentigo maligna melanoma

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11
Q

What is malignant melanoma?

A

Benign growth of melanocytes and can be difficult to differentiate from a mole

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12
Q

What is alopecia and what are the 2 main types? What can scarring alopecia cause?

A

Hair loss
1. Androgenic alopecia: hair follicle miniaturisation in response to dihydrotestosterone exposure

  1. Autoimmune alopecia: areata (patches), totalis (whole head), Universalis (all over the body)

Scarring alopecia can cause irreversible follicular stem cell damage

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13
Q

What’s the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic skin ageing?

A

Intrinsic: chronological wrinkles
Extrinsic: UV induced injury to the dermal collagen and elastin, e.g; solar elastosis

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14
Q

What are the components of the dermis!

A

Dense and loose irregular CT, ECM, cells (immune, adipocytes and fibroblasts), sweat glands and mechanoreceptors

Lymphatics, vessels and nerves

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15
Q

What causes Marfan’s syndrome? What are 4 symptoms?

A

An autosomal dominant mutation in fibrillin 1, abnormally tall, arachnodactyly, frequent dislocations and risk of aortic rupture

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16
Q

What causes William’s syndrome? What are 3 symptoms

A

Spontaneous deletion in chromosome 7 that codes for elastin, symptoms include learning and CVS problems and a big mouth

17
Q

Name 2 diseases that occur as a result of elastic fibre disorders?

A

William’s syndrome and Marfan’s syndrome

18
Q

What causes elhers danlos? Name one possible consequence and 2 symptoms

A

An autosomal dominant mutation causing failure to produce type 2 collagen and can cause an aortic rupture.

Symptoms: weak CT around joints causing joint hypermobility and easily bruisable skin

19
Q

What causes scurvy? Name 3 symptoms

A

Lack of Vit. C reduces the ability for prolyl hydroxylase to cleave preprocollagen to procollagen

Symptoms: weak periodontal ligaments can lead to gum ulceration, weak collagen can lead to hemorrhage and re-opening of old wounds

20
Q

What causes osteoarthritis? What are 2 risk factors?

What are 4 symptoms?

A

Wear and tear of articulate cartilage (specifically hyaline), a lack of stem cells means the cartilage doesn’t heal after damage

Risks: age and weight gain

Symptoms: pain, stiffness, tenderness, swelling

21
Q

What is achondroplasia and what causes it? What is one sign?

A

Short limbed dwarfism caused by an autosomal dominant point mutation in fibroblast growth factor FGFR3 which promotes early growth plate closure. This means there are reduced chondrocytes and less matrix production

Symptom: disproportionate limbs

22
Q

What is the difference between multiple sclerosis and Guilliam barre?

A

MS: Autoimmune destruction of myelination in the CNS

Guilliam barre: autoimmune destruction of myelination in the PNS

23
Q

What are 3 symptoms of horner’s syndrome?

A
  1. droopy eyelids
  2. papillary constriction
  3. absence of sweating on half the face
24
Q

What is Hirschsprung’s disease?

A

A rare congenital disease where ineffective peristalsis means stools back up in the intestines leading to constipation and bowel obstruction - can lead to a serious intestinal infarction

25
Q

What is Raynaud’s phenomenon? What are some symptoms and what precipitates it? What can it lead to chronically?

A

Spasming of the digital arteries, usually precipitated by cold and stress and causes pallor, cyanosis, redness, pain and paraesthesia. Chronically it can cause tissue infarction

26
Q

What is Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy?

What are two early signs?

A

X linked recessive, early-onset 2-7 years. Impaired calcium homeostasis damages contractile fibres and absence of dystrophin (a protein that keeps muscles intact) means the sarcolemma is fragile and tears at contractions

Cells may die and undergo pseudohypertrophy (enlargement at the site of an organ) which can be an early sign (they are replaced with CT and fat). Another early sign is gower’s sign

27
Q

What happens in organophosphate poisoning?

A

Irreversibly inhibits Ach esterase which leads to excessive Ach and overstimulation at the junction

28
Q

What happens in Botulinism? Which toxin causes this?

A

Clostridium botulinum blocks Ach release which causes paralysis

29
Q

What happens in myasthenia gravis? What could you give for treatment?

What are 4 symptoms?

A

Autoimmune destruction of endplate Ach receptors, give Ach esterase inhibitors like neostigmine

Symptoms: fragility, sudden falling, droopy eyelids, double vision

30
Q

What is the consequence of rhabdomyolysis?

A

Death of muscle fibres causes them to release their contents into the bloodstream which can present as coca-cola urine and progress to renal failure

31
Q

What is one consequence of thyrotoxicosis?

A

Excessive thyroid hormones leads to an increase in metabolism and excessive protein catabolism

32
Q

What happens during channelopathies? What are 2 things you could give for relief?

A

Anesthetics stimulate the release of stored Calcium which causes muscle contractions and excessive heat, give dantrolene and cooling