Week 1 Formative Quiz Flashcards
Absence of apoB-100 would result in?
mutation in apoB-100 leads to decreased affinity to LDL-receptor
Capillaries with continuous endothelium are best characterized by which of the following?
ability to contract and redirect blood flow
leakiness to leukocytes
prevalence of small endocytic vesicles and caveolae within the endothelium
structure similar to small lymphatic vessels
prevalence of small endocytic vesicles and caveolae within the endothelium
Capillaries have no vascular smooth muscle, so they cannot contract and redirect blood flow. Leukocytes emigrate across postcapillary venules.
What bind to desmosomes?
Intermediate filaments
Assume that a red blood cell has an intracellular concentration of 290 mOsm of impermeable solutes. The red blood cell is placed in a solution in a beaker. The osmolality of the solution is 580 mOsm. At equilibrium, the volume of the red blood cell is not changed. Which of the following best describes the solution?
All solutes in the solution are impermeable.
hypotonic solution
hypertonic solution
- 9% NaCl plus 290 mOsm urea
- 8% NaCl
A - Incorrect: If all solutes in the solution were impermeable with an osmolality of 580 mosM, cell volume would decrease.
B - Incorrect: Cell volume would be increased in a hypotonic solution.
C - Incorrect: Cell volume would be decreased in a hypertonic solution.
D - Correct: This solution has an osmolality of 580 mOsm and the concentration of impermeable solute is 290 mOsm. Urea is a permeable solute.
E - Incorrect: A solution of 1.8% NaCl would cause cell volume to be decreased.
How are T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum predominantly arranged?
As a diad
A 37-year-old male patient presents to you in your office with complaints of shortness of breath and dizziness. The patient is an avid bodybuilder, and is quite muscular. The patient denies the use of anabolic steroids. All bloodwork is normal, and there are no abnormal valvular sounds. A cardiac ultrasound reveals a marked increase in the size of the heart, particularly in the right ventricle. Which of the following physiological mechanisms may lead to this condition?
- The increased volume of blood passing through the heart triggers the insertion of sarcomeres into the myofibrils. This lengthens each myofibril and allows the heart to pump more blood. This explains the enlarged ventricle.
- There is a large increase in the vasculature surrounding the skeletal muscles. Because of this increased vascular bed there is a decrease in the peripheral resistance to blood flow. Hence his blood pressure will drop leading to the dizziness.
- The increased muscle mass restricts the flow of blood through the muscles by constricting the blood vessels. This increases the diastolic load on the heart. The increase in diastolic load leads the cardiac muscle cells to add myofibrils. The increased myofibrils result in a stiffening of the ventricle due to an increased level of Titan. This leads to stiffening of the ventricle. The heart therefore cannot pump blood efficiently.
- The increased mass of the ventricles lead to an increase in the number and density of gap junctions. These gap junctions result in electrical changes in the heart so that the action potentials will echo throughout the ventricle. This leads to ventricular fibrillation.
The increased muscle mass restricts the flow of blood through the muscles by constricting the blood vessels. This increases the diastolic load on the heart. The increase in diastolic load leads the cardiac muscle cells to add myofibrils. The increased myofibrils result in a stiffening of the ventricle due to an increased level of Titan. This leads to stiffening of the ventricle. The heart therefore cannot pump blood efficiently.
A - Not the best answer. This is true, but it occurs following Aerobic exercise. The enlarged ventricle following aerobic exercise results in a heart that pumps blood more efficiently. The addition of sarcomeres in series does not increase the stiffness of the ventricle. This would not explain the shortness of breath or dizziness.
B - Not the best answer. There is indeed an increase in the vasculature surrounding the muscles. This actually places more resistance on the flow of blood and leads to an increase in blood pressure.
C - This is the best answer.
D - Not the best answer. This would lead to death, not dizziness.
Which one of the following congenital heart diseases is characterized by early cyanosis and a right-to-left shunt?
Aortic stenosis, isolated
Patent ductus arteriosus
Tetralogy of Fallot
Atrial septal defect, sinus venosus type
Atrial septal defect, septum primum type
Tetralogy of Fallot
Among the congenital heart defects listed, tetralogy of Fallot is the only one that has a right to left shunt early in life. This shunt causes early cyanosis.
Absence of apoB-48 would result in?
would result in the absence of chylomicrons
At the peak of a normal action potential the sodium electrochemical energy approaches _________ and the potassium electrochemical energy becomes _________.
zero, greater than 100 mV
the sodium Nernst potential, greater than 100 mV
+60 mV, zero
-100 mV, zero
zero, greater than 100 mV
An ion’s electrochemical energy is the difference between the membrane potential and the ion’s Nernst potential. At the peak of the action potential the membrane potential approaches the sodium Nernst potential (between +40 and +60 mV). Accordingly, Na electrochemical energy approaches zero. Since EK is about -90 mV, the potassium electrochemical energy is greater than 100 mV at the peak of the action potential.
Concentration = Mass / Volume
Mannitol is a large molecule that is largely confined to the intravascular space after i.v. injection. Assume that 10 gm of mannitol was injected i.v. to a person and that blood was withdrawn a short time later. The plasma concentration of mannitol was 0.005 gm per ml. If all mannitol remained within the vasculature and none was excreted, which of the following is the best estimate of the plasma volume in this person?
0.5 liter
1 liter
2 liters
5 liters
10 liters
2 liters
The concentration of mannitol in plasma equals 0.005 gm/ml. This concentration equals the mass of mannitol injected (10 gm) divided by the volume of plasma.
Plasma volume = Mass / Plasma concentration = 10 gm / 0.005 gm/ml = 2000 ml = 2 liters
The liver plays an important role in the metabolism and elimination of cholesterol from the body. The transport of free cholesterol from peripheral tissues to the liver (reverse cholesterol transport) is dependent on which of the following?
chylomicrons
HDL
IDL
LDL
VLDL
HDL
Reverse Cholesterol Transport: Free cholesterol is removed from tissues by plasma high-density lipoprotein (HDL). It is esterified by LCAT associated with HDL and transported to the liver, where it is eliminated from the body primarily after conversion to bile acids or bile salts.
Intravenous infusion of isotonic saline (0.9% NaCl) can be used to correct the sodium deficit associated with dilutional hyponatremia. In this situation, excess water intake decreases plasma sodium below normal levels. Assume that plasma sodium is 110 mEq/liter in a person with dilutional hyponatremia. Which of the following will occur in this person following intravenous infusion of isotonic saline?
decrease in capillary pressure
decrease in intracellular osmolality
decrease in intracellular volume
hypotonic expansion
isotonic contraction
decrease in intracellular volume
Dilutional hyponatremia can occur by excess intake of water, which will initially reduce plasma sodium concentration, decrease ECF osmolality, and increase ECF volume. The decrease in ECF osmolality will cause water to move into cells, increasing ICF volume and decreasing ICF osmolality. I.v. infusion of isotonic saline (290 mOsm) will raise extracellular osmolality towards normal in a person with dilutional hyponatremia. This change will cause water to move out of the ICF.
A - Incorrect: Capillary pressure will be increased due to the increased volume of the ECF.
B - Incorrect: As water moves out of cells, intracellular osmolality will increase towards normal.
C - Correct: ICF volume will decrease.
D - Incorrect: A hypotonic change would increase ICF volume. Infusion of isotonic saline to a person with dilutional hyponatremia will cause ICF volume to decrease.
E - Incorrect: ICF volume is decreased in this situation due to the rise in ECF osmolality following infusion of isotonic saline to a person with dilutional hyponatremia.
A 36-year-old male bartender is brought by ambulance to your emergency room because a patron jumped over the bar, grabbed an ice pick, and stabbed him in the chest rather than pay his bar tab at the end of the night. The ice pick entered the chest about 2 cm to the left of the sternum in between the fourth and fifth rib. Upon examining the bartender, you note very little blood is coming from the puncture wound and normal lung sounds from both the right and left lung. However, his heart is beating rapidly at 100 beats per minute, his external jugular veins are bulging, and you have difficulty hearing his heart sounds. You order a PA and lateral chest film because you suspect which of the following?
Hemothorax
Pneumothorax
Cardiac tamponade
Aortic valve stenosis
Deep venous thrombosis
The answer is C. Cardiac tamponade. (Moore and Dalley, pp 140-141.) The ice pick likely penetrated the left ventricle of the heart, causing blood to leak into the pericardial sac. The rapid filling of the pericardial space does not allow the heart to fully expand between contractions leading to increased venous hypertension, thus the filling of the external jugular veins. Since the heart can only pump small quantities of the blood with each beat, it speeds up (tachycardia). The heart sounds and apical heartbeat soften because the blood surrounding the heart absorbs the sounds. A hemothorax (answers a) and pneumothorax (answer b) are unlikely since both right and left lungs sounds are normal and because of the location of the ice pick injury. Aortic valve stenosis (answer d) would not result from a puncture wound. Deep venous thrombosis (answer e) generally occurs in the lower extremity and results in leg pain and is not caused by a puncture wound.
In the same image there are specific cellular structures. The cellular structures indicated by the arrows would best be described as:
A Bands
Contraction Bands
I Bands
Intercalated Discs
Z Discs
Contraction Bands
A - A Bands. This is incorrect. The A bands are the Dark bands in the sarcomeres. The A bands are visible in the image, as are the striations. The A bands are composed of the myosin filaments.
B - This is the correct answer. These contraction bands form within cardiac tissue about 12 to 48 hours after injury.
C - I Bands. This is incorrect. The I bands are the light bands in the sarcomeres. They are composed of the Z disk and the actin filaments.
D - Intercalated Discs. This is incorrect. The intercalated discs are the connections between the adjacent cardiac myocytes. There is a distinct possibility that one of the structures may be an intercalated disc (far left arrow), but this is more likely a contraction band forming at the intercalated disc. The other two arrows clearly point to contraction bands.
E - Z Discs. The Z discs are not present in this tissue at this magnification. They are found in the middle of the I bands in the sarcomeres. They are the site where the actin filaments attach.
Following the upstroke of the action potential in a nerve, membrane potential moves toward the potassium Nernst potential during repolarization. Which of the following is occurring at this time?
decreasing potassium electrochemical energy
decreasing sodium electrochemical energy
increasing sodium conductance
more negative potassium chemical energy
sodium current is greater than potassium current
decreasing potassium electrochemical energy
Correct answer is A.
A - The potassium electrochemical energy is equal to V – EK. As membrane potential moves more negative during repolarization, V – EK becomes smaller.
B - As V moves more negative during repolarization, the difference between V and ENa becomes greater over time, and so the sodium electrochemical energy increases during repolarization.
C - Sodium conductance increases during the upstroke of the action potential and is responsible for increased sodium current during depolarization.
D - Potassium chemical energy is equal to the potassium Nernst potential. Under normal conditions, an insignificant change occurs in intracellular and extracellular concentrations of sodium and potassium during an action potential, so the Nernst potentials to both ions remain constant. Membrane potential changes during the action potential because of changes in conductance to ions.
E - Sodium current is greater than potassium current during depolarization, and the reverse is true during repolarization.
A 16-year-old boy is brought to the ER with dyspnea. His past medical history is significant for an unrepaired atrial septal defect. Physical examination reveals cyanosis, distended jugular veins, hepatosplenomegaly, and a systolic ejection murmur. This patient has most likely developed which of the following complications of congenital heart disease?
aortic aneurysm
myocardial infarction
paradoxical embolism
pneumonia
pulmonary hypertension
pulmonary hypertension
Answer: E Pulmonary hypertension
Patients with uncorrected ASDs may develop narrowing of the pulmonary vasculature, in which case the flow of blood through the defect may be reversed thereby creating a right-to-left shunt. The increase in pulmonary capillary pressure is transmitted to the pulmonary arteries, called pulmonary hypertension, resulting in right-sided heart failure. Complications of ASDs include cyanosis, right ventricular hypertrophy, right heart failure and paradoxical emboli.
This patient’s diagnosis is Eisenmenger syndrome due to atrial septal defect.
A mother brings her 2-year-old son to the pediatrician. She states he occasionally appears to be short of breath after running or wrestling with his brother. Also, his preschool teacher notes that she sees him squatting down on the playground. On physical exam you hear a holosystolic murmur. A CXR in your office reveals right ventricular hypertrophy of the heart (giving a vague boot-like appearance). You refer the patient to a pediatric cardiologist. The single greatest factor that determines the clinical outcome associated with the most likely congenital heart defect in this patient is:
The severity of rotation of the overriding aorta
Positioning of the aortic arch
Degree of pulmonary stenosis
Age of patient at diagnosis
Presence of left ventricular hypertrophy
Degree of pulmonary stenosis
Correct answer is C. The clinical outcome of Tetrology of Fallot depends primarily on the severity of the pulmonic stenosis, as this determines the direction of blood flow. If the pulmonary stenosis is mild, the abnormality resembles an isolated VSD and the shunt may be left to right without cyanosis. As the obstruction increased in severity, there is greater resistance to right ventricular outflow. As right sided pressures approach or exceed left sided pressures, right to left shunting develops, producing cyanosis.
What will cause myosin to bind?
Myosin will bind whenever the troponin complex does not cover the actin binding site. Activation of myosin by myosin light chain kinase is important in smooth muscle contraction.
For a nerve, shifting the sodium channel activation curve toward a more positive potential would be expected to ______________ the rate of depolarization during the upstroke phase of the action potential and __________ the number of resting sodium channels.
decrease, not affect
decrease, increase
increase, decrease
increase, not affect
decrease, not affect
A depolarizing shift in the sodium channel activation curve would not affect the number of resting channels (determined by the position of the inactivation curve in relation to the resting potential) but would reduce the number of sodium channels activated during the upstroke of the action potential. This reduction in active sodium channels would reduce the magnitude of the inward sodium current thereby reducing the rate of depolarization during the upstroke.
A burn patient under your care has a plasma osmolarity of 280 mOsm. The osmolarity of the interstitial fluid in the burn area is 279 mOsm compared to 277 mOsm in non-burn areas. Which of the following best completes the following statement? In the Burn Area the osmotic pressure difference across the capillary wall acts to drive fluid __________ across the capillary wall and provides a driving force of __________ mm Hg.
from interstitial to plasma; 20
from plasma to interstitial; 20
from interstitial to plasma; 60
from plasma to interstitial; 60
from interstitial to plasma; 20
Correct answer is A. The fluid osmotic pressure inside the capillary is greater than outside for both the burn area and normal area. Accordingly, the osmotic pressure difference will act to drive fluid inward across the capillary wall in the burn area as well as in the normal area. In the burn area the 1 mOsm concentration difference produces a osmotic pressure difference of about 20 mm Hg.
A person with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease had bilateral edema of the lower extremities. Assume that interstitial fluid pressure of the lower extremities is 10 mm Hg, plasma osmolality is 290 mOsm, and interstitial osmolality is 289 mOsm. If the extent of edema is staying constant (i.e., no net fluid movement across the capillary), which of the following is the best estimate of capillary pressure within the lower legs of this person?
10 mm Hg
15 mm Hg
20 mm Hg
30 mm Hg
40 mm Hg
30 mm Hg
Correct answer is D. The difference in solute concentration between plasma and interstitial fluid is 1 mosm/liter. Since each 1 mosm/liter diffence in concentration generates a force equal to 20 mm Hg, the solute difference creates a force for reabsorbtion of water into the capillary of 20 mm Hg. The diffusion of water is from low solute concentration (interstitial fluid) to high solute concentration (plasma within capillaries). For no net movement of water to occur, capillary pressure must be greater than interstitial fluid pressure by 20 mm Hg, so capillary pressure equals 30 mm Hg.