Dementia:

Dementia is ... ?
Obesity:

Obesity is a result of ... ?
Diabetes (1&2)

(N/A)
(normal) Metabolism:

Function of chylomicrons ... ?
Atherosclerosis:


Atherosclerosis vs. Arteriosclerosis?
100

Name the (4) main types of dementia that exist.

Vascular Dementia

Frontotemporal Dementia

Lewy Body Dementia

Alzheimer's (Dementia)

100

The pathological effects of obesity originate from which complication of excess adipose tissue? (0-1st step of obesity pathophys.)

Fat spillover from overgrown adipocytes.

100

The main difference between DM1 and DM2?

DM1 is autoimmune, immune sys. created antibodies that atck beta-cells

DM2 is largely due to developped insulin resistance (through unhealthy lifestyle) often preluded by obesity and metabolic syndrome

100

Which lipoprotein is the "healthy" one? and why?

HDL (high density) it can absorb more cholesterol to bring back to the liver

100

Name (the) 5 risk factors for atherosclerosis.

Overweight (high BMI)

Hypertension

(old) Age

DM

Hypercholesterolemia

200

The symptom "reduced inhibition of sexual impulses" and general inappropriate behaviour is most associated with ... ?

Frontotemporal Dementia

200

"Metabolic Syndrome" is defined as .... ?

Having 3/5 of the following:

  1. Elevated glucose (>100 mg/dl)

  2. Hypertension (>130/85)

  3. Elevated TGAs (>150 mg/dl)

  4. Waist circumference >40 in (=101 cm) (XY) & >35 in (=89 cm) (XX)

  5. Low HDL lvls. (<40 mg/dl XY & <50 mg/dl XX)

200

Diabetes tends to come with a few (3) common symptoms, these are....?

3 Ps:

1. polyphagia (increased hunger)

2. polyuria (increased urine)

3. polydipsia (increased thirst)

200

Explain Diabetic Ketoacidosis.

Hypoglycemic state pushes body to lipolysis and eventually ketogenesis (for brain)

200

Main complication of atherosclerosis?

Thrombosis (ruptured plaque) that lodges itself in an artery/arteriole

300

Describe the symptom that differentiates a "Lewy Body dementia" from a "Alzheimer's disease" diagnosis

Cognitive function fluctuation throughout the day, regardless of sleep quality

300

Name the prominent (5) complications of obesity.

1. Hypertension (+tachycardia)

2. Athersclerotic plaques

3. DM2

4. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and(/or) obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS)

5. Non-Alcoholic fatty liver disease

(6. Leptin resistance)

(7. Insulin resistance)

300

Explain how the "state of starvation" in DM2 creates a negative feedback loop contributing to "tired out" pancreatic beta cells.

"starvation" -> lipolysis and FFAs production -> +++ FFAs -> lipotoxicity inhibiting GLUT2 glucose transport in beta cells -> beta cells can't recognize glucose levels -> decrease insulin secretion -> further "starvation"

300

Precursor and Product(s) of Aldolase B (enzyme) activity? (3 answers)

Precursor: Fructose-1-phospate

Products: (x2) Glyceraldehyde + DHAP

300

Name the main diagnostic modalities for Athersclerosis. (3/5 gets the points)

1. US/ doppler US

2. CT

3. MRI

4. intravasc. US

(5. Optical coherence tomography)

400

Primary diagnosis method for dementia + what are you looking for?

MRI: atrophy (hippocampal, frontal, temporal, parietal) + lacunar/strategic (MCA/PCA) infracts, WMLs (white matter lesions)
FDG-PET: rate of metabolism (for Alzheimer's vs. FTD)

400

What are the 4 physiological effects of excess adipokines:

(Hint: efx on: pancreas, RAAS/SNS, Liver, fat distrib.)

Insulin resistance

Hypertension (+tachycardia via SNS activation, +vasoconstriction via RAAS stimulation)

+++ vLDL & TGAs (--- HDL)

Waist circumference increase (increase adipose tissue cell size)

400

Which 3 components lead to the development of insulin resistance in DM2?

Inflammatory mediators, FFAs and adipokines (Leptin, resistin, IL-6, TNF-alpha)

400

The process of "lipogenesis" describes (3 processes) ...? (2/3 gets points)

1. DHAP -> glycerol

2. Acetyl-CoA -> 3x FAs

3. x3 FAs + glycerol -> TGA

400

Recommended treatment options for atherosclerosis?

Lifestyle advice 

Lipid-lowering medication ( statins or PCSK 9 inhibitors) 

Anti-platelet medication 


500

Name the 3 (+1) pathophysiological processes associated with "vascular dementia"

(Hint: large art., small art., capillaries, + cortical art.&capillaries)

Athersclerosis of LARGE arteries --> teritorial infracts

Arteriosclerosis of small arterioles --> lacunar infracts

Microvascular disease --> disrupted capillary functions

(accumulation of amyloid-beta in cortical arteries and capillaries)

500

Explain the first line treatment and the various accessory (pharmacological and surgical) treatment options that exist for obese patients (+ when they can be used/applied)

Points ALL: 1st line, 1/4 pharma, 2/3 surg. + cutoff

First line: physical activity (1 hr moderate-intensity activity/day) + diet changes (reduce caloric intake)

Pharmacological: orlistat, semaglutides, naltrexone, phenteremine

Surgical (>35 BMI + 1 comorbidity / >40 BMI): sleeve gastrectomy (---stomach vol.), gastric banding (---d. esophagus>stomach), gastric bypass (bypass stomach, eso.>SI)

500

Name 9 micro- and macro- complications of DM:

(7/9 gets points)


Oral health, Risk of infection, Peripheral vascular disease, Stroke, Hypertension, Ischemic heart disease, Diabetic retinopathy, Diabetic nephropathy, Diabetic neuropathy


500

The two physiological effects when fructokinase is not performing its action properly? (Fructokinase Deficiency) 


Fructourea, fructoaemia

500

How are foam cells formed, what are their precursors?

Foam cells are made from;

macrophages (migrated monocytes in tunica intima) which absorbed oxidized LDLs

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