MULTIPLE CHOICE
a.
coagulative necrosis
b.
liquefactive necrosis
c.
fat necrosis
d.
fibrinoid necrosis
e.
caseous necrosis
ANS: B
Brain infarcts are characterized by liquefactive necrosis.
activation of caspases through receptor transmitted signals on the cell surface
inhibition of ATPase
inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation
activation of lysosomal enzymes
depletion of glycogen
ANS: A
Graft-versus-host–induced cell death in the epidermis is a form of apoptosis. It is mediated by caspases and other enzymes of the suicide pathway of "programmed cell death."
Autophagocytosis
heterophagocytosis
exocytosis
pinocytosis
involution
Uptake of bacteria and other exogenous particulate material into the phagosomes is called phagocytosis.
Nucleus
Rough endoplasmic reticulum
Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
Mitochondria
Cytoskeleton
ANS: E
Neurofibrillary tangles are composed of microtubule-associated proteins and neurofilaments, which form the cytoskeleton of nerve cells.
myocardial infarction
angina pectoris
hypertension
hypotension
ventricular fibrillation
ANS: C
Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) is produced during fetal life in both the atrial and ventricular cells of the heart. After birth, the ANF gene remains active only in the atrium, but can be activated in ventricular cells undergoing hypertrophy. Arterial hypertension is the most common cause of ventricular hypertrophy.
insulin
interleukin-1
tumor necrosis factor α
glucocorticoids
thyroid hormones
Insulin can oppose ubiquitin-proteasome degradation of plasma proteins, whereas all other hormones and mediators of inflammation listed here accelerate it.
Golgi apparatus
smooth endoplasmic reticulum
rough endoplasmic reticulum
mitochondria
peroxisomes
The clinical history (i.e., the concurrence of cirrhosis and pulmonary emphysema) suggests that this young man has a1-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency. The cytoplasmic globules in the liver cells represent misfolded AAT, which cannot be excreted from the liver cells and remains inside the liver cells in the dilated cisterns of the rough endoplasmic reticulum.
hemosiderin
bile
triglycerides
bilirubin
The three most common causes of fatty liver are obesity, alcoholism, and diabetes mellitus. Fat is stored in the liver cells predominantly in the form of triglycerides.
Helicobacter pylori infection
peptic ulcer formation
dystrophic calcification
metastatic calcification
apoptosis
ANS: D
Bluish material in the stroma of the stomach represents foci of calcification. In patients who have chronic renal disease, such calcifications occur in the stomach, the lungs, or the kidneys, and are classified as metastatic. Metastatic calcifications occur in patients who have hypercalcemia, which in this patient was most likely caused by secondary hyperparathyroidism.
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