LIVER, BILIARY TRACT, PANCREATIC PROBLEMS
UPPER AND LOWER GI DISORDERS
ARTHRITIS/
MUSCULOSKELETAL
RANDOM
(exam 1-2)
RANDOM
(exam 1-2)
100

What are the stones in cholelithiasis made from and caused by?

made from: cholesterol, bile salts and calcium 

caused by: supersaturated cholesterol 

100

Which peptic ulcer has pain that worsens with eating?

Gastric ulcers

100

Advanced age, obesity and manual labor puts you at a higher risk of which diesease?

Osteoarthritis 

100

What would the CD4 count have to be under to be diagnostic of AIDS? Are there other diagnostic factors?

CD4 count under 200 is indicative of AIDS 

other diagnostic criteria- wasting syndrome 10%, kaposi sarcoma, pneumocitis jiroveci pnemonia, invasive cervical cancer, mycobacterium tuberculosis,  and non-hodgkins lympohoma. 

100

What is the 3 step process for cancer development? 

1. Initiation- alteration of DNA

2. Promotion- reversible reproduction of altered cell

3. Progression- increased growth rate (possibly angiogenisis and metastasis)

200

What labs would you expect with a pancreatitis patient?

Amylase and Lipase increased 

Calcium decreased 

200

What layer of the GI tract is affected in Gastritis?

Mucosa layer of the stomach

200

Describe the RF factor. What disorder has the RF factor?

Body cells are seen as foreign invaders. 

IgG antibodies formed 

New antibodies are made AGAINST the IgG. 

2 antibodies are together this is RF factor. 

Rheumatoid Arthritis.

200

What are the four processes of pain?

1. Transduction- stimulus and activation 

2. Transmission- impulse and transfer

3. Perception- recognition and defined 

4. Modulation- interpretation and response 

200

What levels are increased/decreased in Tumor lysis syndrome? How does tumor lysis syndrome happen?

Elevated: Uric acid, potassium, phosphate, myoglobin

Decreased: calcium 

Tumor lysis syndrome is when the chemo is working 'too good' that cells are lysis and their contents are going into the bloodstream. 

300

Portal Hypertension is a complication of what? And what is portal hypertension?

Complication of Cirrhosis

Liver scarring blocks blood flow to the liver, causing a collateral circulation to develop 

300

What are the two inflammatory bowel diseases? Where is the pain located in each?

Chrons disease RLQ worsens after meals 

Ulcerative Colitis LLQ 

300

Lupus is what kind of hypersensitivity reaction? Describe this reaction. 

Lupus is a type 3 hypersensitivity reaction. Overreactive B and T cells 

complement system is the mediator causing cell lysis 

300

What causes metabolic acidosis and what manifestations would you see with this imbalance? 

 ⬇️ PH ⬇️ BICARBONATE 

causes: shock, kidney disease, severe diarrhea, ketoacidosis

manifestations: kussmal respirations, hyperkalemia

300

what are the normal levels for each electrolyte? calcium, potassium, sodium, magnesium and phosphate. 

calcium- 9-10.5

potassium- 3.5-5

sodium- 135-145

magnesium- 1.3-2.1

phosphate- 3.4-5


400

Where would cholecystitis pain be located?

RUQ- can refer to the right shoulder/scapula

 fatty foods make it worse

400

What is celiac disease? And what is a unique trait only to celiac disease? 

small intestine mucosa is damaged leading to malabsorption of gluten 

unique trait: dermatitis herpetiformis rash 

400

What are the 7 manifestations for compartment syndrome?

Pain 

poikilothermia 

paresthesia 

pallor 

paralysis 

pulselessness 

pressure

400

What is the RAAS system step by step?  what triggers it and what is the result? 

RAAS SYSTEM 

triggered by hypotension 

Renin released by the kidneys, angiotensin 1 converts to angiotensin 2 which causes aldosterone secretion by the adrenal glands (sodium and water reabsorbed by nephrons)

result: fluid retention and raised BP

400

What could you give a patient to help balance out hypernatremia?

a hypotonic fluid

500

What are some unique manifestations of Cirrhosis?

Red Palms, Asterixis, Factor Hepaticus, Caput Medusae, Spider Angioma

500

What are some symptoms of a LARGE bowel obstruction?

severe distention, constipation, gradual onset, ribbon like stool, fecal vomiting possible if obstruction is low 

500

What are the 6 steps of the fracture healing process?

1. Fracture hematoma- blood clot forms 

2. Granulation tissue- blood clot converted to gran tissue 

3. Callus formation- osteoblasts build a callus around fractured parts 

4. Ossification- callus hardens 

5. Consolidation- fracture closes takes up to one year 

6. Remodeling- excess bone tissue is reabsorbed by osteoclasts 

500

Kidney disease, addisons disease and trauma are causes of what electrolyte imbalance?

Hyperkalemia

500

Name the 6 mediators in the Inflammation response and what they do.

1. Prostaglandin- vasodilation, promote fever and pain sensation 

2. Thromboxane- vasoconstriction, blood clotting, goal is to stop bleeding 

3. Leukotrienes- Increased capillary permeability, and airway narrowing 

4. Histamine- Vasodilation, and increased capillary permeability, released by degranulation of mast cells 

5. Kinin- increased capillary permeability, pain sensation and leukocyte recruitment 

6. Complement- vasodilation and increased capillary permeability, chemotaxis and cell lysis 

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