Parathyroid glands share embryologic origin with the:
A. Thyroid
gland
B. Pancreas
C. Thymus
D. Adrenal cortex
C. Thymus
The parathyroid gland is composed of which two main cell
types?
A. Chief cells and oxyphil cells
B. Follicular cells
and C cells
C. Pituicytes and chromaffin cells
D. Alpha
cells and beta cells
A. Chief cells and oxyphil cells
The primary function of the parathyroid gland is regulation
of:
A. Sodium homeostasis
B. Glucose homeostasis
C.
Potassium homeostasis
D. Calcium homeostasis
D. Calcium homeostasis
Vitamin D is biologically active primarily in which form?
A.
Monohydroxy form
B. Dihydroxy form
C. Trihydroxy
form
D. Methylated form
B. Dihydroxy form
A patient with elevated PTH is expected to have increased urinary
excretion of:
A. Calcium
B. Phosphate
C.
Bicarbonate
D. Magnesium
B. Phosphate
Primary hyperparathyroidism is most commonly caused by a
parathyroid:
A. Hyperplasia
B. Carcinoma
C.
Cyst
D. Adenoma
D. Adenoma
Overexpression of cyclin D1 in primary hyperparathyroidism is
classically driven by:
A. CCDN1 gene inversion
B. CDC73 gene
deletion
C. CASR gene gain-of-function
D. GCM2 gene loss-of-function
A. CCDN1 gene inversion
The CCDN1 inversion associated with primary hyperparathyroidism
occurs on chromosome:
A. 17
B. 20
C. 11
D. 7
C. 11
A common cause of sporadic parathyroid adenomas is loss of the tumor
suppressor:
A. RB
B. Menin (MEN1)
C. APC
D. PTEN
B. Menin (MEN1)
CDC73 abnormalities are implicated in:
A.
Hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor syndrome
B. Multiple endocrine
neoplasia type 1
C. DiGeorge syndrome
D. Cowden syndrome
A. Hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor syndrome
An oxyphil cell parathyroid adenoma most resembles which thyroid
tumor type?
A. Papillary thyroid carcinoma
B. Medullary
thyroid carcinoma
C. Follicular adenoma
D. Hurthle cell tumor
D. Hurthle cell tumor
Based on these notes, which statement matches gland
involvement?
A. Carcinomas multiple; adenomas one
B. Both
enlarge multiple glands
C. Carcinomas one; adenomas
multiple
D. Both enlarge one gland
C. Carcinomas one; adenomas multiple
The common skeletal manifestations of primary hyperparathyroidism
include:
A. Osteoporosis brown tumors osteitis fibrosa
B.
Rickets osteomalacia arthritis
C. Paget disease osteonecrosis
fractures
D. Scoliosis kyphosis lordosis
A. Osteoporosis brown tumors osteitis fibrosa
Severe hyperparathyroidism most characteristically causes:
A.
Dystrophic calcification
B. Metastatic calcification
C.
Caseous necrosis
D. Amyloid deposition
B. Metastatic calcification
The most common cause of secondary hyperparathyroidism is:
A.
Vitamin A excess
B. Primary adenoma
C. Renal failure
D.
Pituitary disease
C. Renal failure
Chronic renal insufficiency is associated with decreased:
A.
Serum calcium
B. PTH secretion
C. Vitamin C
absorption
D. Phosphate secretion
D. Phosphate secretion
Which enzyme is necessary to synthesize the active form of vitamin
D?
A. 5-alpha reductase
B. Alpha1-hydroxylase
C.
Aromatase
D. Catechol-O-methyltransferase
B. Alpha1-hydroxylase
In secondary hyperparathyroidism, parathyroid glands are
typically:
A. Atrophic
B. Necrotic
C.
Hyperplastic
D. Calcified
C. Hyperplastic
Hypoparathyroidism is rare and is most often due to:
A. Viral
infection
B. Pituitary adenoma
C. Renal infarction
D. Surgery
D. Surgery
Autoimmune hypoparathyroidism most commonly involves mutations
in:
A. AIRE
B. MEN1
C. CDC73
D. GNAS
A. AIRE
Autosomal dominant hypoparathyroidism is classically caused
by:
A. GCM2 loss-of-function
B. MEN1
loss-of-function
C. CASR gain-of-function
D. CCDN1 inversion
C. CASR gain-of-function
CASR gain-of-function causes hypoparathyroidism because it:
A.
Lowers calcium sensing
B. Heightens calcium sensing, lowers
PTH
C. Blocks vitamin D activation
D. Increases PTH transcription
B. Heightens calcium sensing, lowers PTH
Familial isolated hypoparathyroidism is most classically due
to:
A. Autosomal recessive GCM2 loss-of-function
B.
Autosomal dominant AIRE gain-of-function
C. X-linked CASR
loss-of-function
D. Mitochondrial CDC73 mutation
A. Autosomal recessive GCM2 loss-of-function
The GCM2 gene is necessary for:
A. Calcitonin secretion
B.
PTH receptor signaling
C. Vitamin D transport
D. PTH maturation
D. PTH maturation
The hallmark clinical feature of hypoparathyroidism is:
A.
Tetany
B. Hyperreflexia only
C. Peripheral edema
D. Exophthalmos
A. Tetany
Positive Chvostek and Trousseau signs most strongly suggest:
A.
Hyperthyroidism
B. Hyperparathyroidism
C.
Hypoparathyroidism
D. Addison disease
C. Hypoparathyroidism
The CDC73 gene encodes:
A. Cyclin D1
B. Menin
C.
Calmodulin
D. Parafibromin
D. Parafibromin
Osteitis fibrosa cystica is also called:
A. Paget disease of
bone
B. von Recklinghausen bone disease
C. Osteogenesis
imperfecta
D. Avascular necrosis
B. von Recklinghausen bone disease
A lytic skeletal lesion classically seen in primary
hyperparathyroidism is:
A. Osteomalacia
B. Rickets
C.
Osteonecrosis
D. Brown tumor
D. Brown tumor
Menin is encoded by which gene?
A. GNAS
B. MEN1
C.
CASR
D. CDC73
B. MEN1
With CASR gain-of-function, the receptor “believes” serum calcium
is:
A. Lower than actual
B. Zero despite normal
C.
Higher than actual
D. Unchanged despite shifts
C. Higher than actual
Defective alpha1-hydroxylase most directly reduces:
A. Dihydroxy
vitamin D
B. Calcitonin secretion
C. Cyclin D1
levels
D. Parafibromin expression
A. Dihydroxy vitamin D
Tapping a nerve causes facial twitching and eye muscle contractions.
This is:
A. Babinski sign
B. Brudzinski sign
C.
Chvostek sign
D. Kernig sign
C. Chvostek sign
The Chvostek sign is elicited by tapping the:
A. Facial
nerve
B. Vagus nerve
C. Median nerve
D. Phrenic nerve
A. Facial nerve
In a positive Chvostek sign, tapping induces:
A. Tongue
fasciculations
B. Foot dorsiflexion
C. Abdominal
guarding
D. Eye muscle contractions
D. Eye muscle contractions
The Trousseau sign is best described as:
A. Thenar atrophy with
tapping
B. Carpal spasm with cuff
C. Triceps spasm after
pinprick
D. Finger tremor at rest
B. Carpal spasm with cuff
Thyroid function can be inhibited by agents called:
A.
Goitrogens
B. Beta blockers
C. Bisphosphonates
D. Glucocorticoids
A. Goitrogens
Propylthiouracil most directly acts by:
A. Blocking TSH receptor
binding
B. Inhibiting thyroglobulin synthesis
C. Activating
iodide symporter
D. Inhibiting iodide oxidation
D. Inhibiting iodide oxidation
Calcitonin lowers serum calcium primarily by:
A. Increasing
renal calcium reabsorption
B. Promoting skeletal calcium
uptake
C. Stimulating osteoclast bone resorption
D.
Increasing intestinal phosphate absorption
B. Promoting skeletal calcium uptake
The most common cause of thyrotoxicosis is:
A. Toxic
multinodular goiter
B. Subacute thyroiditis
C. Graves
disease
D. Exogenous levothyroxine
C. Graves disease
Hyperthyroidism is typically associated with increased:
A.
Parasympathetic tone
B. Somatic tone
C. Sympathetic
tone
D. Vestibular tone
C. Sympathetic tone
Abrupt onset of severe hyperthyroidism in Graves is termed:
A.
Myxedema coma
B. Subacute flare
C. Thyrotoxic
adenoma
D. Thyroid storm
D. Thyroid storm
Radioiodine uptake confined to one nodule most suggests:
A.
Graves disease
B. Toxic adenoma
C. Hashimoto
thyroiditis
D. Thyroid lymphoma
B. Toxic adenoma
Worldwide congenital hypothyroidism is most often due to:
A. TSH
receptor mutation
B. Thyroid agenesis
C. Iodine
deficiency
D. Maternal blocking antibodies
C. Iodine deficiency
Most autoimmune hypothyroidism is caused by:
A. Hashimoto
disease
B. Graves disease
C. Granulomatous
thyroiditis
D. Toxic adenoma
A. Hashimoto disease
Drugs like methimazole and propylthiouracil generally:
A.
Stimulate thyroid secretion
B. Inhibit thyroid secretion
C.
Replace thyroid hormone
D. Amplify TSH release
B. Inhibit thyroid secretion
A common lipid abnormality in hypothyroidism is high:
A.
HDL
B. VLDL
C. Chylomicrons
D. LDL
D. LDL
Nonpitting edema in hypothyroidism is due to deposition of:
A.
Collagen and elastin
B. Fibrin and platelets
C.
Glycosaminoglycans and hyaluronate
D. Triglycerides and cholesterol
C. Glycosaminoglycans and hyaluronate
Hashimoto thyroiditis commonly features antibodies against:
A.
Thyroglobulin and TPO
B. TSH receptor and TPO
C.
Thyroglobulin and TRAb
D. T3 receptor and T4
A. Thyroglobulin and TPO
Hashimoto genetic predisposition is linked to:
A. BRCA1 BRCA2
TP53
B. CTLA4 PTPN22 IL2RA
C. MEN1 RET VHL
D. GNAS AIP HRAS
B. CTLA4 PTPN22 IL2RA
Hashimoto thyroiditis is characterized histologically by:
A.
Reed-Sternberg cells
B. Psammoma bodies
C. Multinucleate
giant cells
D. Hurthle cells
D. Hurthle cells
Painless nodules with anti-TPO, grossly normal, and large germinal
centers suggests:
A. Subacute lymphocytic thyroiditis
B.
Hashimoto thyroiditis
C. Graves disease
D. Granulomatous thyroiditis
B. Hashimoto thyroiditis
Subacute lymphocytic thyroiditis typically shows fibrosis and Hurthle
metaplasia that:
A. Are prominent
B. Are patchy
C. Are
absent
D. Are calcified
C. Are absent
Granulomatous thyroiditis is most often:
A. Autoimmune
B.
Viral
C. Bacterial
D. Iatrogenic
B. Viral
Granulomatous thyroiditis commonly shows:
A. Hurthle cell
nests
B. Germinal center hyperplasia
C. Amyloid
stroma
D. Multinucleate giant cells
D. Multinucleate giant cells
A classic Graves triad feature is:
A. Thyroid nodules
B.
Pretibial myxedema
C. Cold intolerance
D. Carpal spasm
B. Pretibial myxedema
A classic Graves triad eye finding is:
A. Exophthalmos
B.
Ptosis
C. Miosis
D. Papilledema
A. Exophthalmos
The best description of thyroid storm is:
A. Gradual painless
goiter
B. Chronic low T4 state
C. Abrupt severe
hyperthyroidism
D. Postpartum pituitary infarct
C. Abrupt severe hyperthyroidism
A scan shows uptake only in one solitary hot nodule. Most likely
cause:
A. Thyroiditis
B. Hashimoto thyroiditis
C.
Graves disease
D. Adenoma
D. Adenoma
High LDL plus nonpitting edema is most consistent with:
A.
Hyperthyroidism
B. Thyroid storm
C. Graves disease
D. Hypothyroidism
D. Hypothyroidism
A patient with Graves develops proptosis. The most common mechanism
is:
A. Retroorbital fat hypertrophy
B. Extraocular muscle
necrosis
C. Retroorbital GAG deposition
D. Optic nerve demyelination
C. Retroorbital GAG deposition
To dampen increased sympathetic tone in Graves disease,
prescribe:
A. Beta-blockers
B. Thiazide diuretics
C.
Bisphosphonates
D. ACE inhibitors
A. Beta-blockers
Diffuse nontoxic goiter typically:
A. Produces single hot
nodule
B. Produces early nodularity
C. Produces papillary
projections
D. Does not produce nodularity
D. Does not produce nodularity
Two phases of diffuse nontoxic goiter are:
A. Fibrotic phase,
necrotic phase
B. Hyperplastic, colloid involution
C.
Atrophic phase, malignant phase
D. Cystic phase, hemorrhagic phase
B. Hyperplastic, colloid involution
Persons with simple goiters most often remain:
A. Clinically
euthyroid
B. Overtly hyperthyroid
C. Overtly
hypothyroid
D. Clinically thyrotoxic
A. Clinically euthyroid
Recurring episodes of goiter most often produce:
A. Toxic
adenoma
B. Anaplastic carcinoma
C. Multinodular
goiter
D. Medullary carcinoma
C. Multinodular goiter
Long-standing goiter develops an autonomous nodule causing
hyperthyroidism. Diagnosis:
A. Hashimoto disease
B. Plummer
syndrome
C. Diffuse nontoxic goiter
D. Subacute thyroiditis
B. Plummer syndrome
A solitary thyroid nodule in a younger male is more likely:
A.
Reactive
B. Congenital
C. Postinfectious
D. Neoplastic
D. Neoplastic
Gain-of-function mutations implicated in thyroid adenomas
include:
A. TP53 CTNNB1 TERT
B. RET NTRK BRAF
C. TSHR
EZH1 GNAS
D. CTLA4 PTPN22 IL2RA
C. TSHR EZH1 GNAS
EZH1 encodes a:
A. Histone methyltransferase
B. DNA ligase
enzyme
C. Sodium channel subunit
D. G-protein alpha subunit
A. Histone methyltransferase
The hallmark of follicular adenoma is:
A. Extensive necrosis and
hemorrhage
B. Numerous psammoma bodies
C. Diffuse
infiltrative growth
D. Well-formed intact capsule
D. Well-formed intact capsule
Compared with follicular carcinomas, follicular adenomas have
capsules that:
A. Are absent, no boundaries
B. More intact,
less invasion
C. Have prominent invasion
D. Are replaced by fibrosis
B. More intact, less invasion
Most thyroid carcinomas arise from:
A. Vascular
endothelium
B. Stromal fibroblasts
C. Thyroid follicular
epithelium
D. Lymphoid germinal centers
C. Thyroid follicular epithelium
Most mutations causing follicular carcinoma involve:
A. RTK
pathway components
B. Notch pathway components
C. WNT
pathway components
D. JAK-STAT components
A. RTK pathway components
Conventional papillary thyroid carcinoma is characterized by:
A.
RAS mutations, TP53 loss
B. RET-NTRK fusion, BRAF
mutations
C. CDC73 loss, MEN1 loss
D. CASR gain, GCM2 loss
B. RET-NTRK fusion, BRAF mutations
The RET gene is located on:
A. Chromosome 7
B. Chromosome
11
C. Chromosome 17
D. Chromosome 10
D. Chromosome 10
In papillary thyroid carcinoma, RET most commonly fuses with:
A.
PTC1 and PTC2
B. RAS and BRAF
C. EZH1 and GNAS
D. TP53
and TERT
A. PTC1 and PTC2
Most BRAF-mutant conventional papillary carcinomas have:
A.
G12D
B. Q61R
C. V600E
D. L858R
C. V600E
Follicular neoplasms are commonly associated with:
A. RET-NTRK
fusion
B. RAS gain-of-function
C. EZH1
loss-of-function
D. CASR gain-of-function
B. RAS gain-of-function
Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma commonly shows mutations in:
A. RET
NTRK BRAF
B. TSHR EZH1 GNAS
C. CTLA4 PTPN22 IL2RA
D.
TP53 CTNNB1 TERT
D. TP53 CTNNB1 TERT
Medullary thyroid carcinoma is commonly seen in:
A.
MEN-2
B. MEN-1
C. DiGeorge syndrome
D. Cowden syndrome
A. MEN-2
In Graves orbitopathy, the deposited material is primarily:
A.
Collagen fibers
B. Amyloid protein
C.
Glycosaminoglycans
D. Calcium salts
C. Glycosaminoglycans
In Graves exophthalmos, GAG deposition occurs in the:
A.
Subcutaneous pretibial skin
B. Thyroid follicular lumen
C.
Cavernous sinus
D. Retroorbital space
D. Retroorbital space
The early proliferative phase of diffuse nontoxic goiter is:
A.
Colloid involution phase
B. Hyperplastic phase
C. Fibrotic
phase
D. Necrotic phase
B. Hyperplastic phase
The later involutional phase of diffuse nontoxic goiter is:
A.
Hyperplastic phase
B. Fibrotic phase
C. Colloid involution
phase
D. Malignant phase
C. Colloid involution phase
A patient with a simple goiter is most likely:
A.
Euthyroid
B. Hyperthyroid
C. Hypothyroid
D. Thyrotoxic
A. Euthyroid
A thyroid tumor with RET-NTRK fusion is most consistent with:
A.
Follicular adenoma
B. Medullary carcinoma
C. Anaplastic
carcinoma
D. Conventional papillary carcinoma
D. Conventional papillary carcinoma
A thyroid nodule with gain-of-function TSHR mutation most
suggests:
A. Hashimoto thyroiditis
B. Thyroid
adenoma
C. Anaplastic carcinoma
D. Subacute thyroiditis
B. Thyroid adenoma
A solitary thyroid nodule that is encapsulated and intact is most
consistent with:
A. Follicular adenoma
B. Granulomatous
thyroiditis
C. Diffuse nontoxic goiter
D. Medullary carcinoma
A. Follicular adenoma
Compared with follicular adenoma, follicular carcinoma more often
shows:
A. Completely intact capsule
B. No capsule
formation
C. Capsular invasion prominent
D. RET-NTRK fusion present
C. Capsular invasion prominent
The pathway most often implicated in follicular carcinoma mutations
is:
A. G-protein signaling pathway
B. Receptor tyrosine
kinase pathway
C. Notch signaling pathway
D. Calcineurin
signaling pathway
B. Receptor tyrosine kinase pathway
A thyroid tumor with BRAF V600E most strongly supports:
A.
Follicular adenoma
B. Medullary carcinoma
C. Anaplastic
carcinoma
D. Conventional papillary carcinoma
D. Conventional papillary carcinoma
A thyroid tumor with RAS gain-of-function most suggests a:
A.
Follicular neoplasm
B. Papillary carcinoma variant
C.
Medullary carcinoma
D. Diffuse nontoxic goiter
A. Follicular neoplasm
TP53 + CTNNB1 + TERT mutations most support:
A. Follicular
adenoma
B. Graves disease
C. Subacute thyroiditis
D.
Anaplastic carcinoma
D. Anaplastic carcinoma
MEN-2 association most strongly points to:
A. Follicular
adenoma
B. Medullary carcinoma
C. Conventional papillary
carcinoma
D. Diffuse nontoxic goiter
B. Medullary carcinoma