A patient with congestive heart failure develops ankle edema. The
fluid is low protein due to hydrostatic/oncotic imbalance. What is it
called?
A. Exudate
B. Seroma
C. Transudate
D. Hematoma
C. Transudate
A swollen joint aspirate is cloudy and protein-rich from increased
vascular permeability. What is this fluid?
A. Exudate
B.
Transudate
C. Seroma
D. Lymph
A. Exudate
A macrophage senses cytosolic ATP and low intracellular K+ during
tissue damage. Which receptor family detects these danger
signals?
A. Toll-like receptors
B. Selectins
C.
Integrins
D. NOD-like receptors
D. NOD-like receptors
Inflammasome activation most directly increases production
of:
A. IL-4
B. IL-1
C. IL-10
D. IFN-γ
B. IL-1
The initiating step of inflammation begins with recognition of
microbial components by:
A. Toll-like receptors
B. MHC I
molecules
C. B-cell receptors
D. T-cell receptors
A. Toll-like receptors
In postcapillary venules, the initial rolling of neutrophils along
endothelium is mediated by:
A. Integrins
B. PECAM-1
C.
Selectins
D. Cadherins
C. Selectins
The main ligands for selectins on leukocytes are:
A. Collagen
fibers
B. Sialylated oligosaccharides
C. Complement
fragments
D. Fibrin polymers
B. Sialylated oligosaccharides
Endothelial cells increase coordinated adhesion molecule expression
primarily in response to:
A. IL-4 and IL-5
B. IL-6 and
IL-8
C. IFN-α and IFN-β
D. TNF and IL-1
D. TNF and IL-1
A patient twists an ankle and develops rubor, calor, tumor, dolor,
and impaired use. Which sign completes this classic set?
A. Loss
of function
B. Blistering
C. Cyanosis
D. Pruritus
A. Loss of function
Which pairing correctly matches inflammation type with its dominant
tissue change?
A. Acute: fibrosis
B. Chronic:
exudation
C. Acute: granulomas
D. Acute: fluid exudation
D. Acute: fluid exudation
In acute inflammation, vasodilation occurs first at the:
A.
Capillaries
B. Arterioles
C. Venules
D. Lymphatics
B. Arterioles
Vasodilation in acute inflammation is quickly followed by:
A.
Basement membrane synthesis
B. Platelet aggregation
C.
Increased microvascular permeability
D. Smooth muscle hypertrophy
C. Increased microvascular permeability
Endothelial cell retraction causing leakage is induced by:
A.
Histamine serotonin thromboxane
B. IL-12 IL-23 IL-17
C. TNF
IFN-γ IL-2
D. Histamine bradykinin leukotrienes
D. Histamine bradykinin leukotrienes
The system that generates multiple inflammatory mediators (e.g.,
anaphylatoxins) is the:
A. Renin-angiotensin system
B.
Complement system
C. Coagulation cascade only
D. Kinetochore complex
B. Complement system
In autoimmune disease, inflammation is commonly driven by:
A.
Cytokines from B cells
B. Histamine from mast cells
C.
Cytokines from T lymphocytes
D. IgE cross-linking only
C. Cytokines from T lymphocytes
In tuberculosis, infectious granulomas can become poorly perfused;
the combination of hypoxia and free-radical–mediated injury most
classically produces which type of necrosis within the
granuloma?
A. Coagulative necrosis
B. Caseous
necrosis
C. Liquefactive necrosis
D. Fat necrosis
B. Caseous necrosis
Which is a major component of acute inflammation involving movement
from blood to tissue?
A. Fibroblast proliferation
B.
Collagen deposition
C. Granuloma formation
D. Leukocyte
emigration to injury
D. Leukocyte emigration to injury
In the general steps of inflammation, controlling and shutting down
the reaction corresponds to:
A. Recognition
B.
Regulation
C. Recruitment
D. Repair
B. Regulation
The initiating step of inflammation is best described as:
A.
Recognition of harmful stimulus
B. Fibrosis of injured
tissue
C. Epithelial regeneration
D. Antibody class switching
A. Recognition of harmful stimulus
Red streaks tracking proximally from a skin wound most strongly
suggest:
A. Allergic urticaria
B. Sterile
inflammation
C. Bacterial infection
D. Autoimmune vasculitis
C. Bacterial infection
In resting endothelium, P-selectin is stored in a specific granule
type and later redistributed to the cell surface during inflammation.
Where is it stored?
A. Specific neutrophil granules
B.
Weibel-Palade bodies
C. Rough ER cisternae
D. Lysosomal granules
B. Weibel-Palade bodies
Early, weak rolling interactions that slow leukocytes and create time
for endothelial binding are mediated by:
A. Selectins
B.
Cadherins
C. Integrins
D. PECAM-1
C. Integrins
During endothelial activation, ligands for integrins are upregulated
primarily by which cytokines?
A. TNF and IL-1
B. IL-4 and
IL-5
C. IL-10 and TGF-β
D. IFN-α and IFN-β
A. TNF and IL-1
A neutrophil squeezes between endothelial cells (diapedesis). This
transmigration occurs mainly in:
A. Arterioles
B.
Capillaries
C. Small arteries
D. Postcapillary venules
D. Postcapillary venules
A key immunoglobulin-superfamily molecule for leukocyte diapedesis is
CD31, also called:
A. ICAM-1
B. PECAM-1
C.
VCAM-1
D. E-selectin
B. PECAM-1
A patient with bacterial cellulitis has strong neutrophil
recruitment. The most common exogenous chemoattractant signal
is:
A. N-formylmethionine peptides
B. Leukotriene B4
C.
IL-8 chemokines
D. Complement fragments
A. N-formylmethionine peptides
Which set contains only endogenous chemoattractant sources listed in
these notes?
A. Histamine, bradykinin, serotonin
B. Albumin,
fibrinogen, IgM
C. Cytokines, complement, leukotriene B4
D.
Myeloperoxidase, elastase, defensins
C. Cytokines, complement, leukotriene B4
Chemotactic agents guide leukocytes by binding to:
A. Nuclear
steroid receptors
B. Ligand-gated ion channels
C. Cytosolic
tyrosine kinases
D. Transmembrane G-protein receptors
D. Transmembrane G-protein receptors
In the first 6–24 hours of acute inflammation, the dominant
inflammatory infiltrate is:
A. Eosinophils
B.
Neutrophils
C. Macrophages
D. Plasma cells
B. Neutrophils
Once recruited to a site of infection/cell death, leukocytes
recognize offending agents primarily via:
A. Toll-like
receptors
B. T-cell receptors
C. MHC class II
D. Fcε receptors
A. Toll-like receptors
Leukocyte activation triggers signaling with increased cytosolic ion
levels plus enzyme activation. Which option matches these
notes?
A. ↓Ca2+, inhibits PKC
B. ↑cAMP, inhibits
PLA2
C. ↓Ca2+, activates NOS
D. ↑Ca2+, activates PKC and PLA2
D. ↑Ca2+, activates PKC and PLA2
A bacterium is coated to enhance phagocytosis. Which trio lists the
major opsonins from these notes?
A. IgG, C3b, plasma
lectins
B. IgE, C5a, albumin
C. IL-1, TNF, IL-6
D.
LTB4, histamine, bradykinin
A. IgG, C3b, plasma lectins
A receptor that binds and mediates endocytosis of LDL particles and
microbial particles is best described as a:
A. Toll-like
receptor
B. Selectin receptor
C. Scavenger receptor
D.
Complement receptor only
C. Scavenger receptor
The primary mechanism listed for killing ingested microbes by
phagocytes is:
A. Complement MAC formation
B. Reactive
oxygen species
C. Antibody secretion
D. Collagen synthesis
B. Reactive oxygen species
ROS are produced mainly within the:
A. Cytosol
B.
Nucleus
C. Extracellular space
D. Phagolysosome
D. Phagolysosome
The most potent bactericidal system in neutrophils (per these notes)
is the:
A. Complement MAC pathway
B. Nitric oxide
pathway
C. H2O2–MPO–halide system
D. Lactoferrin chelation system
C. H2O2–MPO–halide system
An inherited deficiency of components of the phagocyte oxidase system
causes:
A. Leukocyte adhesion deficiency
B. Chronic
granulomatous disease
C. Chediak-Higashi syndrome
D.
Hyper-IgE syndrome
B. Chronic granulomatous disease
A macrophage generates the gas NO for antimicrobial activity. NO is
produced from which amino acid via which enzyme?
A. Ornithine via
nitric oxide synthase
B. Arginine via arginase
C. Tyrosine
via nitric oxide synthase
D. Arginine via nitric oxide synthase
D. Arginine via nitric oxide synthase
Neutrophil specific (secondary) granules contain lysozyme,
collagenase, gelatinase, lactoferrin, plasminogen activator,
histaminase, and ALP. Which is a secondary granule component?
A.
Lactoferrin
B. Myeloperoxidase
C. Defensins
D. Elastase
A. Lactoferrin
The two major phagocytes emphasized in acute inflammation
are:
A. Basophils, eosinophils
B. NK cells, dendritic
cells
C. Neutrophils, macrophages
D. Mast cells, plasma cells
C. Neutrophils, macrophages
A neutrophil’s azurophilic (primary) granules carry enzymes for
antimicrobial killing. Which primary-granule protein is classically
present?
A. Lactoferrin
B. Collagenase
C.
Myeloperoxidase
D. Gelatinase
C. Myeloperoxidase
A lab isolates neutrophil primary granules (azurophilic). Which set
best matches their contents?
A. Defensins, elastase, cathepsin
G
B. Lysozyme, ALP, histaminase
C. Lactoferrin, gelatinase,
collagenase
D. Plasminogen activator, ALP, lysozyme
A. Defensins, elastase, cathepsin G
Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) require an enzyme that converts
arginine → citrulline to drive downstream nuclear changes. Which
enzyme is cited here?
A. Nitric oxide synthase
B.
Lipoxygenase-5
C. Phospholipase A2
D. Arginine deaminase
D. Arginine deaminase
In NET formation, arginine-to-citrulline conversion most directly
leads to:
A. Microtubule stabilization
B. Chromatin
decondensation
C. Ribosomal shutdown
D. Membrane lipid peroxidation
B. Chromatin decondensation
A patient develops recurrent cold abscesses and is unusually
susceptible to fungal and bacterial infections due to impaired
neutrophil recruitment. Loss of which cytokine best fits?
A.
IL-17
B. IL-10
C. TNF
D. IL-1
A. IL-17
Resolution of inflammation can occur when anti-inflammatory cytokines
are liberated. Which pair best dampens the response?
A. IL-1 and
TNF
B. IL-17 and TNF
C. TGF-β and IL-10
D. IL-1 and IL-17
C. TGF-β and IL-10
Histamine and serotonin are among the earliest mediators released in
inflammation. Histamine IS NOT ACTIVATED BY:
A. Physical
injury
B. Antigen cross-links IgE
C. C3a/C5a
fragments
D. Leukotriene B4
D. Leukotriene B4
In leukocytes, arachidonic acid is freed from membrane phospholipids
by:
A. Cyclooxygenase-2
B. Phospholipase A2
C.
Lipoxygenase-5
D. Myeloperoxidase
B. Phospholipase A2
Leukotrienes are generated in leukocytes and mast cells mainly
through:
A. Lipoxygenase
B. Nitric oxide synthase
C.
Myeloperoxidase
D. Inflammasome protease
A. Lipoxygenase
In neutrophils, 5-lipoxygenase converts arachidonic acid into which
intermediate that precedes leukotrienes?
A. Prostaglandin
H2
B. Thromboxane A2
C. 5-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic
acid
D. Lipoxin A4
C. 5-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid
A patient with acute bronchospasm has mediator-driven airway
narrowing. Which leukotriene set is the cysteinyl group that causes
intense vasoconstriction and bronchospasm?
A. LTB4, LTA4,
LTB5
B. LTC4, LTD4, LTE4
C. LXA4, LXB4, LTB4
D. PGE2,
PGI2, TXA2
B. LTC4, LTD4, LTE4
Lipoxins primarily:
A. Suppress inflammation, inhibit
chemotaxis
B. Amplify inflammation, activate chemotaxis
C.
Increase vasodilation, increase edema
D. Activate complement,
activate IL-1
A. Suppress inflammation, inhibit chemotaxis
A patient on high-dose corticosteroids has reduced inflammatory gene
expression. Which target is explicitly downregulated in these
notes?
A. Arginine deaminase
B. Lipoxygenase-5
C.
Cathepsin G
D. TNF
D. TNF
IL-1 generation depends on the:
A. Membrane attack
complex
B. Phagolysosome
C. Inflammasome
D. NET scaffold
C. Inflammasome
Prolonged TNF production can cause:
A. Urticaria
B.
Cachexia
C. Polycythemia
D. Thrombocytosis
B. Cachexia
A cytokine program driven by IL-1 and TNF induces chemokines that act
primarily on neutrophils. Which chemokine class fits?
A. C
chemokines
B. CX3C chemokines
C. C-C chemokines
D.
C-X-C chemokines
D. C-X-C chemokines
C-C chemokines act on monocytes, eosinophils, basophils, and
lymphocytes. Which mediator selectively recruits eosinophils?
A.
Eotaxin
B. IL-1
C. Lipoxin
D. IL-17
A. Eotaxin
Which chemokine class is relatively specific for lymphocytes?
A.
C-C chemokines
B. C-X-C chemokines
C. C chemokines
D.
CX3C chemokines
C. C chemokines
Which chemokine family promotes strong adhesion of monocytes and T
cells?
A. C-X-C chemokines
B. CX3C chemokines
C. C-C
chemokines
D. C chemokines
B. CX3C chemokines
In complement activation, the critical step is proteolysis of C3.
Which trio lists the pathways that can cleave C3?
A. Terminal,
MAC, lytic
B. IgE, histamine, serotonin
C. Neutrophil,
monocyte, mast
D. Classical, alternative, lectin
D. Classical, alternative, lectin
A patient mounts an antibody response; immune complexes form on a
pathogen surface. Which event initiates the classical complement
pathway?
A. C1 binds IgM/IgG on antigen
B. MBL binds
microbial mannose
C. C3a binds neutrophil receptors
D.
Factor H cleaves C3b
A. C1 binds IgM/IgG on antigen
In the classical pathway, C1 binds to which immunoglobulins after
they have bound antigen?
A. IgA or IgE
B. IgG or IgM
C.
IgD or IgA
D. IgE or IgM
B. IgG or IgM
A septic patient has complement activation triggered directly by
microbial surface molecules without antibody involvement. Which
pathway matches, per these notes?
A. Classical pathway
B.
Lectin pathway
C. Alternative pathway
D. Terminal pathway
C. Alternative pathway
In these notes, the alternative pathway is described as being
triggered when microbial surface molecules activate:
A.
C3a
B. C1 inhibitor
C. C4a
D. CD59
A. C3a
A child with recurrent infections has impaired lectin-pathway
recognition. The initiating binding molecule is:
A. C1
inhibitor
B. Mannose-binding lectin
C. Decay accelerating
factor
D. Complement factor H
B. Mannose-binding lectin
In the lectin pathway, mannose-binding lectin binds carbohydrates on
microbes and then:
A. Directly activates C1
B. Directly
activates CD59
C. Cleaves C3b to iC3b
D. Blocks C3 convertase
A. Directly activates C1
All three complement activation pathways converge on formation of
which enzyme complex?
A. C1 inhibitor
B. Membrane attack
complex
C. C3 convertase
D. Lipoxygenase
C. C3 convertase
The key action of C3 convertase is to:
A. Split C5 into
C5a/C5b
B. Split C3 into C3a/C3b
C. Split C4 into
C4a/C4b
D. Split IgG into fragments
B. Split C3 into C3a/C3b
Which trio of complement fragments is listed as mediators of
inflammation?
A. C3b, iC3b, C5b
B. C5a, C3a, C4a
C.
C1q, C2, C9
D. Factor H, DAF, CD59
B. C5a, C3a, C4a
A lab studies leukocyte chemotaxis and finds a complement fragment
strongly attracting multiple leukocyte types. Which fragment is
chemotactic here?
A. C4a
B. C3b
C. C5a
D. C5b
C. C5a
In these notes, C5a is chemotactic for:
A. Neutrophils,
monocytes, eosinophils, basophils
B. Lymphocytes, plasma cells,
platelets, RBCs
C. Fibroblasts, myocytes, osteocytes,
neurons
D. Hepatocytes, adipocytes, chondrocytes, keratinocytes
A. Neutrophils, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils
Beyond chemotaxis, C5a also activates which pathway (explicitly noted
as not complement) ?
A. Cyclooxygenase pathway
B.
Lipoxygenase pathway
C. Nitric oxide pathway
D. Kallikrein pathway
B. Lipoxygenase pathway
Opsonization is impaired in a patient with complement dysfunction.
Which complement proteins act as opsonins here?
A. C3a and
C4a
B. C5a and C5b
C. C3b and iC3b
D. C1 and C2
C. C3b and iC3b
A patient has recurrent swelling episodes due to uncontrolled
complement activation. Which regulator normally blocks activation of
C1?
A. CD59
B. DAF
C. C1 inhibitor (C1INH)
D.
Factor H
C. C1 inhibitor (C1INH)
Deficiency of C1 inhibitor most directly causes:
A. Hemolytic
uremic syndrome
B. Hereditary angioedema
C. Paroxysmal
nocturnal hemoglobinuria
D. Macular degeneration
B. Hereditary angioedema
Two complement regulators are membrane-linked by a specific anchor;
loss of that anchor predisposes RBCs to lysis. What anchor links DAF
and CD59?
A. GPI anchor
B. Actin anchor
C. Integrin
anchor
D. Collagen anchor
A. GPI anchor
Decay accelerating factor (DAF) protects cells by preventing
formation of:
A. C3 convertases
B. C1 complexes
C. C5a
fragments
D. Bradykinin
A. C3 convertases
CD59 protects cells by inhibiting formation of the:
A. C3
convertase
B. Membrane attack complex
C. Mannose lectin
complex
D. C1 inhibitor complex
B. Membrane attack complex
Defective enzymes that create GPI anchors cause excess RBC lysis
in:
A. Hereditary angioedema
B. Hemolytic uremic
syndrome
C. Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
D. Macular degeneration
C. Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
Complement factor H inhibits the alternative pathway by
promoting:
A. Proteolysis of C3
B. Cleavage and destruction
of C3b
C. Assembly of MAC
D. Activation of C1
B. Cleavage and destruction of C3b
A patient has thick yellow “pus” draining from a wound; the reaction
is purulent. The most common cause of purulent inflammation
is:
A. Viral cytolysis
B. Autoimmune reaction
C. Fungal
infection
D. Bacterial infection
D. Bacterial infection
A tender, fluctuant skin lesion is incised and a localized collection
of pus is released. This lesion is a(n):
A. Abscess
B.
Ulcer
C. Granuloma
D. Serous blister
A. Abscess
Endoscopy shows a crater-like defect/excavation on mucosa caused by
sloughing of inflamed necrotic tissue. This is a(n):
A.
Abscess
B. Seroma
C. Ulcer
D. Granuloma
C. Ulcer
Compared with acute inflammation, chronic inflammation is best
characterized by:
A. Neutrophils only, no repair
B.
Mononuclear cells, destruction, repair
C. Vasodilation only, no
cells
D. Edema only, no injury
B. Mononuclear cells, destruction, repair
Which cell types are commonly present at sites of chronic
inflammation (beyond macrophages)?
A. Basophils and
platelets
B. Neutrophils and mast cells
C. Erythrocytes and
fibroblasts
D. B cells and plasma cells
C. Erythrocytes and fibroblasts
Classical macrophage activation (M1) is induced by microbial products
plus:
A. Interferon-gamma
B. IL-4
C. IL-13
D. IL-10
A. Interferon-gamma
Alternative macrophage activation (M2) is most strongly induced
by:
A. IL-1 and TNF
B. IFN-gamma and IL-17
C. IL-4 and
IL-13
D. C3a and C5a
C. IL-4 and IL-13
A cytokine that predominates in classical macrophage activation (not
alternative) is:
A. IL-5
B. Interferon-gamma
C.
IL-4
D. IL-13
B. Interferon-gamma
Which pairing correctly matches macrophage activation pathway to
primary role?
A. Classical repair; Alternative defense
B.
Classical eosinophils; Alternative neutrophils
C. Classical
antibodies; Alternative complement
D. Classical defense;
Alternative repair
D. Classical defense; Alternative repair
CD4+ T lymphocytes at inflamed sites primarily:
A. Neutralize
toxins directly
B. Phagocytose microbes
C. Promote and shape
inflammation
D. Secrete IgG antibodies
C. Promote and shape inflammation
A CD4+ subset drives classical macrophage activation by producing
IFN-gamma. Which subset is this?
A. Th1
B. Th2
C.
Th17
D. Treg
A. Th1
A CD4+ subset secretes IL-4, IL-5, IL-13, recruits eosinophils, and
promotes alternative macrophage activation. Which subset is
this?
A. Th1
B. Th2
C. Th17
D. Treg
B. Th2
A CD4+ subset secretes IL-17, inducing chemokines that recruit
neutrophils and monocytes. Which subset is this?
A. Th2
B.
Treg
C. Th1
D. Th17
D. Th17
Th1 and Th17 responses are most involved in defense against:
A.
Helminths and allergy
B. Protozoa only
C. Bacteria, viruses,
autoimmunity
D. Tumors only
C. Bacteria, viruses, autoimmunity
Th2 responses are most involved in defense against:
A. Helminths
and allergy
B. Bacteria and viruses
C. Autoimmune
diseases
D. Intracellular bacteria only
A. Helminths and allergy
A long-standing T-cell–macrophage interaction in chronic inflammation
can result in:
A. Serous blistering
B. Granuloma
formation
C. Immediate pus formation
D. Pure edema only
B. Granuloma formation
In granulomatous inflammation, which cell types are typically
elevated at the lesion?
A. Eosinophils and basophils
B.
Neutrophils and platelets
C. T lymphocytes and
macrophages
D. RBCs and fibroblasts
C. T lymphocytes and macrophages
Foreign body granulomas characteristically occur in the absence
of:
A. Neutrophil recruitment
B. Complement
activation
C. Antibody production
D. T cell responses
D. T cell responses
In immune granulomas, elevated IFN-gamma is most associated with
production by:
A. Th1 cells
B. Th2 cells
C. B
cells
D. Mast cells
A. Th1 cells
In IgE-mediated allergy and parasitic reactions, which pairing is
correct?
A. Eosinophil: IgE Fc receptor; Mast: MBP
B. Mast:
IgE Fc receptor; Eosinophil: MBP
C. Mast: MBP; Eosinophil:
prostaglandins
D. Eosinophil: histamine; Mast: MBP
B. Mast: IgE Fc receptor; Eosinophil: MBP
In tuberculosis, infectious granulomas can become poorly perfused;
the combination of hypoxia and free-radical–mediated injury most
classically produces which type of necrosis within the
granuloma?
A. Coagulative necrosis
B. Caseous
necrosis
C. Liquefactive necrosis
D. Fat necrosis
A. Coagulative necrosis
Which three cytokines are the most important mediators of the
acute-phase reaction?
A. IL-4, IL-5, IL-13
B. IFN-γ, IL-2,
IL-12
C. TGF-β, IL-10, IL-35
D. TNF, IL-1, IL-6
D. TNF, IL-1, IL-6
A patient with pneumonia has fever, leukocytosis, elevated
acute-phase proteins, and increased heart rate/blood pressure with
reduced sweating. This systemic pattern is best termed the:
A.
Acute-phase response
B. Type I hypersensitivity
C.
Complement deficiency syndrome
D. Granulomatous inflammation
A. Acute-phase response
Which pair are the key endogenous pyrogens?
A. IL-6 and
TGF-β
B. IFN-γ and IL-17
C. IL-1 and TNF
D. Histamine
and serotonin
C. IL-1 and TNF
During the acute-phase reaction, the prostaglandin that drives
neurotransmitter production involved in hypothalamic temperature
regulation is:
A. PGI2
B. PGE2
C. TXA2
D. PGD2
B. PGE2
Which acute-phase protein is most IL-1/TNF–dependent?
A.
C-reactive protein
B. Fibrinogen
C. Albumin
D. Serum
amyloid A
D. Serum amyloid A
Which mediator reduces iron availability to erythroid progenitors in
bone marrow?
A. Transferrin
B. Ferritin
C.
Hepcidin
D. Haptoglobin
C. Hepcidin
A CBC shows leukocytosis with a marked neutrophil predominance after
a new lobar pneumonia. This leukocyte pattern most strongly
suggests:
A. Bacterial infection
B. Viral infection
C.
Helminth infestation
D. Typhoid fever
A. Bacterial infection
Which pairing correctly matches the condition with its expected
leukocyte pattern?
A. Viral infection: neutrophilia
B.
Bacterial infection: lymphocytosis
C. Typhoid:
eosinophilia
D. Helminths: eosinophilia; typhoid: leukopenia
D. Helminths: eosinophilia; typhoid: leukopenia
A patient with severe infection develops disseminated intravascular
coagulation (DIC), hypotensive shock, and insulin resistance with
hyperglycemia. This “clinical triad” is most consistent with:
A.
Acute-phase response alone
B. Septic shock triad
C. Viral
syndrome
D. Granulomatous inflammation
B. Septic shock triad
Following tissue injury, repair proceeds through two core processes.
Which pair correctly names them?
A. Chemotaxis and
exudation
B. Necrosis and apoptosis
C. Regeneration and
scarring
D. Vasodilation and edema
C. Regeneration and scarring
After a fibrin-rich exudate fills a tissue space, fibrovascular
ingrowth produces fibrosis within that exudate-occupied space. This
outcome is called:
A. Organization
B. Regeneration
C.
Caseation
D. Metaplasia
A. Organization
In wound healing, the highly vascular granulation tissue that
initially fills the defect is gradually replaced by:
A.
Fibrin
B. Elastin
C. Keratin
D. Collagen
D. Collagen
The macrophage population most associated with repair and wound
healing is predominantly derived from which activation
pathway?
A. Classically activated macrophages
B.
Alternatively activated macrophages
C. Neutrophil-derived
macrophages
D. Plasma-cell derived macrophages
B. Alternatively activated macrophages
In liver regeneration, Kupffer cells release a cytokine that “primes”
hepatocytes (makes them competent) before growth factors push
cell-cycle entry. Which cytokine is this?
A. IL-6
B.
IL-4
C. IL-10
D. IFN-γ
A. IL-6
In the second phase of hepatocyte proliferation, which growth factors
act on primed hepatocytes to stimulate metabolism and move them from
G0 toward G1?
A. VEGF and FGF-2
B. TNF and IL-1
C. HGF
and TGF-alpha
D. Angiopoietin-1 and -2
C. HGF and TGF-alpha
After hepatocytes complete the replication phase, return to
quiescence is driven by which antiproliferative cytokine?
A.
IL-6
B. HGF
C. TGF-alpha
D. TGF-beta
D. TGF-beta
If liver injury is too severe for mature hepatocytes to restore mass
effectively, which cells become primarily responsible for
repair?
A. Stellate cells
B. Progenitor cells
C.
Kupffer cells
D. Endothelial cells
B. Progenitor cells
During angiogenesis, the earliest step includes vasodilation and
increased permeability. Which pair matches this step?
A. NO and
VEGF
B. VEGF and endothelin
C. Histamine and
serotonin
D. FGF-2 and IL-6
A. NO and VEGF
Which factors are most associated with maturation of the new vessel
wall?
A. VEGF and NO
B. FGF-2 and Angiopoietin-1
C.
Angiopoietin-1 and -2
D. Nitric oxide and Angiopoietin-1
C. Angiopoietin-1 and -2
Stabilization of newly formed vessels and pericytes is primarily
mediated by:
A. VEGF and FGF-2
B. PDGF and TGF-beta
C.
IL-1 and TNF
D. IL-4 and IL-13
B. PDGF and TGF-beta
PDGF stabilizes newly formed vessels mainly by:
A. Inhibiting
endothelial proliferation
B. Increasing
metalloproteinases
C. Driving vessel branching
D. Recruiting
smooth muscle cells
D. Recruiting smooth muscle cells
TGF-beta stabilizes new vessels mainly by:
A. Suppressing
endothelium, increasing ECM
B. Recruiting smooth muscle
cells
C. Stimulating neutrophil chemotaxis
D. Triggering
mast cell degranulation
A. Suppressing endothelium, increasing ECM
Sprouting and branching of new vessels is regulated by the:
A.
MAPK signaling pathway
B. JAK-STAT signaling pathway
C.
NOTCH signaling pathway
D. Hedgehog signaling pathway
C. NOTCH signaling pathway
VEGF promotes vessel branching by stimulating expression of:
A.
Notch ligands
B. Smooth muscle actin
C. C3
convertase
D. Myofibroblast networks
A. Notch ligands
During angiogenic sprouting, ECM proteins aid vessel extension by
binding:
A. Selectins
B. Toll-like receptors
C.
Cadherins
D. Integrins
D. Integrins
ECM remodeling and vascular tube extension are enabled by:
A.
Tight junction proteins
B. Matrix metalloproteinases
C.
Sialylated oligosaccharides
D. Complement anaphylatoxins
B. Matrix metalloproteinases
Connective tissue deposition is driven by
macrophage-released:
A. IL-1, TNF, IL-6
B. VEGF, NO,
Angiopoietins
C. PDGF, FGF-2, TGF-beta
D. Histamine,
serotonin, bradykinin
C. PDGF, FGF-2, TGF-beta
The growth factors for connective tissue deposition are mainly
released by:
A. Th1 lymphocytes
B. Neutrophils
C. Mast
cells
D. M2 macrophages
C. Mast cells
The single most important cytokine for connective tissue
synthesis/deposition is:
A. TGF-beta
B. IL-6
C.
IFN-gamma
D. IL-17
A. TGF-beta
TGF-beta decreases ECM degradation primarily by:
A. Activating
lipoxygenase
B. Increasing elastase release
C. Inhibiting
metalloproteinases
D. Upregulating complement pathways
C. Inhibiting metalloproteinases
A factor that prolongs inflammation and increases local tissue injury
is:
A. Rapid re-epithelialization
B. Early wound
contraction
C. Angiogenesis maturation
D. Infection
D. Infection
Glucocorticoids inhibit inflammation partly by decreasing:
A.
TGF-beta production
B. Notch ligand expression
C. PDGF
receptor density
D. Integrin binding affinity
A. TGF-beta production
Healing by first intention most typically involves:
A. Large
tissue defects
B. Skin wounds
C. Deep abscess
cavities
D. Extensive necrotic slough
B. Skin wounds
In second intention healing, type III collagen is replaced over weeks
by:
A. Type II collagen
B. Type IV collagen
C. Type I
collagen
D. Type V collagen
C. Type I collagen
Wound contraction is driven primarily by networks of:
A.
Keratinocytes
B. Endothelial cells
C. Neutrophils
D. Myofibroblasts
D. Myofibroblasts
Venous leg ulcers result from chronic venous hypertension and often
show:
A. Hemosiderin deposits
B. Amyloid plaques
C.
Bilirubin crystals
D. Melanin accumulation
A. Hemosiderin deposits
Arterial ulcers most often develop in patients with:
A. Chronic
venous hypertension
B. Peripheral artery atherosclerosis
C.
Prolonged tissue compression
D. IgE-mediated reactions
B. Peripheral artery atherosclerosis
Pressure sores are skin ulcerations/necrosis caused by:
A.
Immune complex deposition
B. Ischemia from vasculitis
C.
Prolonged compression against bone
D. Excessive collagen breakdown
C. Prolonged compression against bone
Excessive formation of repair components most directly
causes:
A. Caseous necrosis
B. Serous effusion
C.
Purulent exudate
D. Hypertrophic scars and keloids
D. Hypertrophic scars and keloids
Scar tissue that grows beyond the original wound boundary is
a:
A. Keloid
B. Contracture
C. Ulcer
D. Granuloma
A. Keloid
Hypertrophic scars commonly follow thermal/traumatic injury
involving:
A. Epidermis
B. Deep dermis layers
C.
Mucosa
D. Subcutaneous fat
B. Deep dermis layers
Contractures are most prone to develop in the:
A. Neck, scalp,
face
B. Abdomen, flank, back
C. Palms, soles, anterior
thorax
D. Hips, thighs, calves
C. Palms, soles, anterior thorax
Liver progenitor cells are found within the:
A. Space of
Disse
B. Central vein
C. Portal triad artery
D. Canals
of Hering
D. Canals of Hering