Cellular & Biology
Immunity & Inflammation
Infection & Hypersensitivity
Hematologic Function
Stress & Cancer
100

The cell

What is the basic unit of life?  

100

Protecting the body from harmful pathogens and abnormal cells.

What is the primary function of the immune system?

100

Invasion and colonization of pathogenic microorganisms in the body that harms the host. 

What is infection?

100

Transport oxygen via hemoglobin.

What is the primary function of red blood cells?

100

The acute stress response controlled by the sympathetic nervous system.

What is the “fight or flight” response?

200

Atrophy, Hypertrophy, Hyperplasia, Metaplasia

What are the four types of cellular adaptation?

200

Non-specific and immediate; specific and has memory.

What are innate and adaptive immunity?

 

200

Hospital acquired infections are not insurable and are the hospitals responsibility. 

What are nosocomial infections?

200

I am produced in the kidneys, and stimulate red blood cell production in the bone marrow. 

What is erythropoietin?

200

The hormone released by the adrenal cortex during stress.

What is cortisol?

300

Passive requires no energy; active uses ATP to move substances against a gradient.

What is passive and active transport?

300

They regulate immune cell activity, promote inflammation, and assist in communication between immune cells.

What are cytokines?

300

Toxins excreted by bacteria and damage host cells; toxins that are part of the bacterial cell wall and are released when the cell dies.

What are exotoxins and endotoxins.

300

Small RBCs, iron deficiency; normal size, blood loss; large RBCs, B12/folate deficiency.

What are microcytic, normocytic, and macrocytic anemia?

300

Mutated from proto-oncogenes that promote uncontrolled cell division (cancer).

What are oncogenes?

400

The pump fails, leading to Na+ accumulation in the cell, causing swelling and damage - ultimately cell death. 

What is a defective Na+/K+ pump?

400

A group of plasma proteins that enhance phagocytosis, promote inflammation, and cause cell lysis.

What is the complement system?

400

IgE mediated (allergies), Cytotoxic or tissue specific (blood transfusion reaction), Immune Complex (lupus), Delayed (poison ivy, TB test).)

What are the four types of hypersensitivity? 

400

Anemia due to bone marrow disorder; anemia due to hypoxia increasing EPO production.

What are primary and secondary polycythemia?

400

Prolonged cortisol release suppresses immunity, increases inflammation, and raises the risk of chronic diseases.

What is chronic stress?

500

Hypoxia, free radicals, chemical exposure, physical damage, infection, immune responses, and genetic factors.

What are the major causes of cellular injury?

500

Affecting a specific area with redness, swelling, and pain; then includes fever, leukocytosis, and potential sepsis.

What are localized and systemic inflammatory response?

500

Rh antigens expressed on erythrocytes. 

What are "D" antigens?

500

Platelets adhere to injury → clotting factor activates → thrombin converts fibrinogen to fibrin → fibrin stabilizes the clot.

What is the clotting cascade?

500

Cancer cells invade local tissues, enter the bloodstream/lymphatics, survive circulation, exit at a secondary site, and establish new tumor growth.

What is metastasis?

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