Uworld37 Flashcards
Renal papillary necrosis classically present with
gross hematuria, acute flank pain, and passage of tissue fragments in urine.
It is most commonly seen in patients with sickle cell disease or trait, diabetes mellitus, analgesic nephropathy, or severe obstructive pyelonephritis
Hereditary spherocytosis results from?
red blood cell cytoskeleton abnormalities, most commonly in the proteins spectrin and ankyrin.
The diagnosis can be confirmed with a positive osmotic fragility test. Hemolytic anemia, jaundice, and splenomegaly are classic manifestations.
Complications include pigmented gallstones and aplastic crises
formula of specificity
the specificity of a test is its ability to correctly identify individuals without the disease
Specificity = true negatives / (true negatives + false positives)
mechanism of shiga toxin
Shiga toxin is produced by enterohemorrhagic escherichia coli and shigella dysenteriae.
It inhibits the 60S ribosomal subunit in human cells, blocking protein synthesis and causing cell death
how does combination oral contracetive pills treat hirsutism?
male pattern hair growth in women is called hirsutism; the most common cause is polycystic ovary syndrome.
Combination oral contraceptive pills can treat hirsutism by suppressing pituitary LH secretion and subsequently decreasing ovarian androgen production.
treatment of gonococcal urethritis +/- chlamydia
urethritis in young men is usually due to sexually transmitted infection.
Treatment for gonococcal urethritis with uncertain or positive chlamydia coinfection status is ceftriaxone plus doxycycline.
Treatment for gonococcal urethritis with negative chlamydia is ceftriaxone alone.
Patients with no gonorrhea who have chlamydia are treated with azithromycin or doxycycline monotherapy
schistocytes are seen in which diseases
schistocytes suggest microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (hemolytic uremic syndrome, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, disseminated intravascular coagulation or mechanical damage (prosthetic valve)
In childhood, HUS is often preceded by bloody diarrhea. Coagulation studies (prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time) are normal in HUS-TTP but abnormal in DIC.
what is Zika virus
a single stranded RNA virus that infects fetal neural progenitor cells, causing severe congenital malformations (microcephaly, arthrogryposis), cerebral cortical thinning, and possible fetal demise
what is a leukemoid reaction
a significant leukocytosis (may exceed 50,000) that occurs in response to an underlying condition, commonly severe infection.
Blood smear often shows neutrophilia with reactive features (Dohle bodies), as well as increased neutrophil precursors (bands, metamyelocytes, myelocytes).
The leukocyte alkaline phosphatase score is normal or increased.
What is the triad of Wernicke syndrome?
oculomotor dysfunction, ataxia, and confusion form the triad of Wernicke syndrome.
Most of these symptoms usually resolve after thiamine administration.
Korsakoff syndrome is a chronic and irreverisble complication of Wernicke encephalopathy, the hallmarks of which are permanent memory loss and confabulation.
What is the most common complication of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage?
vasospasm, which typically occurs 3-12 days after the initial insult and can cause delayed cerebral ischemia (sudden change in mental status, new focal neurological deficits).
The CT scan usually remains unchanged, unlike with rebleeding.
What is the most abundant amino acid in collagen?
Glycine.
The triple helical conformation of collagen molecules occurs due to the repetitive amino acid sequence within each alpha chain, in which glycine (Gly) occupies every third amino acid position (Gly-X-Y)
What is a schwannomas?
present histologically with a biphasic pattern of cellularity (antoni A and B areas) and S-100 positivity (indicating neural crest origin).
Schwannomas can arise from the peripheral nerve, nerve roots, and cranial nerves (except CN II and CN I).
Acoustic neuromas are the most common type of intracranial schwannoma and are located at the cerebellopontine angle at CN VIII.
MOA of methadone
slows the delayed rectifier potassium current responsible for ventricular repolarization, and high doses are associated with QT interval prolongation.
QT interval prolongation predisposes to the development of torsade de pointes, a serious ventricular arrhythmia that can cause syncope and sudden cardiac death
Organ susceptibility to infarction after occulusion of a feeding artery is ranked from greatest to least as follow:
central nervous system, myocardium, kidney, spleen, liver
The presence of a dual and/or collateral blood supply (as seen in the liver, which is supplied by the hepatic artery and portal vein) enables an organ to tolerate arterial occlusion better than those with end-arterial circulations.
what is takaysu arteritis?
chronic, large artery vasculitis that primarily involves the aorta and its branches.
It presents with constitutional (fever, weight loss) and arterio-occlusive (claudication, blood pressure discrepancies, pulse deficits) findings in patients age <40
Histopath shows granulomatous inflammation of the vascular media
the onset of action of a gas anesthetic depends on
its solubility in the blood (blood/gas partition coefficient)
Drugs with high blood/gas partition coefficients are more soluble in the blood, demonstrate slower equilibrium with the brain, and have longer onset times
osteonecrosis (avascular necrosis) occurs due to?
disruption of the macrovasculature or microvasculature of bone.
The femoral head is the most common location.
Sickle cell disease can cause osteonecrosis due to the thrombotic occlusion of arteries.
Other major risk factors include embolic disorders, high dose systemic corticosteroids, excessive alcohol use, vasculitis (eg, systemic lupus erythematosus) and femoral neck fracture
what are the most common masses in the anterior mediastinum?
thymoma, teratoma (and other germ cell tumors), lymphoma and thyroid neoplasm.
An anterior mediastinal mass with elevated serum levels of alpha fetoprotein and beta-hCG is classic for nonseminomatous germ cell tumor
moa of azathioprine
an immunosuppression drug that is metabolized into active metabolites by hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and inactivated by xanthine oxidase.
Coadminstration with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor (allopurinol, febuxostat) shunts azathioprine metabolism toward the production of active metabolites, resulting in increased immunosuppression and risk of cellular toxicity
what is creatinine
creatinine, a waste produce generated by the breakdown of creatine in the muscles, is used to estimate the glomerular filtration rate.
Creatinine formation is dependent on muscle mass and meat intake; therefore, patients with low muscle mass (elderly patient, those with amputations) or low intake (low protein vegetarian diet) can have significantly lower GFRs for any given creatinine level
translocation for acute promyelocytic leukemia
the cytogenic defect t(15;17) is associated with acute promyelocytic leukemia (AMPL).
A translocation involving the retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARA) gene from chromosome 17 and the promyelocytic leukemia (PML) gene on chromosome 15 leads to the formation of PML/RARA, a fusion gene whose product inhibits differentiation of myeloblasts and triggers the development of APML
what is schistosomiasis
a parasitic blood fluke infection that is associated with bathing in freshwater contaminated with cercariae from infected snails.
Patients often are asymptomatic for months or years but may eventually develop eosinophilic granulomatous inflammation in the liver, spleen, gastrointestinal tract, or genitourinary system.
One common manifestation of genitourinary schistosomiasis is painless terminal hematuria, eggs can often be identified in the urine or on biopsy
What is disseminated intravascular coagulation
a common complication of gram negative bacterial sepsis due to activation of the coagulation cascade by bacterial endotoxins, which leads to the formation of micro thrombi.
Peripheral smear shows fragmented erythrocytes (schistocytes) and thrombocytopenia.
Labs: decreased fibrinogen and prolonged PT and PTT
what is molluscum contagiosum
caused by poxvirus and presents with small, firm, rounded papules that often have a central umbilication.
Adults who are immunocompromised (HIV) or sexually active are at increased risk
biopsy: intracytoplasmic eosinophilic inclusion bodies of poxvirus in ketatinocytes