What are some triggers of asthma
- URTIs
- allergens (dust, house mites, pollen)
- smoke
- exercise
- weather
- pollution
- occupational exposures (SO2, print, flour, bleach)
- food stuffs (sulphites and salicylates)
- GERD
- medications (NSAIDs and beta blockers)
What drugs are used to treat hypertension. Describe two of their mechanisms of action.
What are the four mechanisms that control GFR
What drug do you administer during a paracetamol overdose and what is its effect?
What are the four dopamine pathways in the brain? Which nuclei do they orignate from?
Describe the mechanism of action of salbutamol
Describe the ionic basis of pacemaker cell electrical activity
Describe the difference between BPH and prostate cancer:
What is non-declarative memory and where is it stored in the brain
Outline the three main prefrontal syndromes (what you would see)
What important structures pass through the thoracic diaphragm? Where do they pass and why?
How does CO change with exercise?
Describe the blood supply of the kidney
Discuss the experience of a person with a lesion to the left side of their thoracic spinal cord putting their feet in the sand.
Would they be able to feel that the sand was cold through their feet? Why?
Left Foot
Right Foot
What is generalised anxiety disorder according to the DSM5
Compare and contrast pulmonary and cardiac shunts (causes and presentation)
pulmonary shunt
cardiac shunt
both lead to hypoxemia but have diff underlying mechanisms and clin presentations
Summarise the baroreceptor reflex and control of MAP with reference to four effectors
SA node
Myocardial cells
Veins
Arterioles
Describe actions of ADH on distal nephron
Describe the pathophysiology of an ischaemic stroke
Reduced blood flow due to obstruction leads to reduced oxygen and glucose delivered --> reduced ATP production
ATP needed to maintain ATP dependent pumps --> ionic imbalances
Increase sodium leads to increase water retention -> oedema and lysis (necrosis)
Excitotoxity: excessive release of glutamate leads to overstimulation of neurons, resulting in calcium influx (release from intracellular stores) -> activates calcium dependent enzymes (lipase, nuclease, protease) -> cell death
alongside excitotoxcity there is oxidative stress which is exacerbated if blood is restored
Describe the four types of operant conditioning and provide an example for each one
Operant conditioning is learning of new association between behaviour and its consequence
- positive reinforcement
- negative reinforcement
- positive punishment
- negative punishment