PART 1:
1. Which is LEAST LIKELY to cause high-output heart failure?
A. anemia
B. high fever
C. hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (*)
D. hyperthyroidism
E. Paget's osteitis deformans
2. "Fibrolipomatosis", a
newly-discovered cause of sudden death
in
athletic young people, is usually found by the pathologist in
the
A. aortic valve cusps
B. right atrium
C. right ventricle (*)
D. left atrium
E. left ventricle
3. At autopsy of a "victim" of
cocaine abuse, which of these
would
be most helpful to the pathologist in confirming that
cocaine
actually caused the death?
A. amyloid deposition
B. contraction band necrosis (*)
C. endocardial fibrosis
D. mycotic aneurysm(s)
E. septal hypertrophy
4. What did the brewers in Quebec add to their
beer, causing
the
epidemic cardiomyopathy?
A. adriamycin
B. cobalt (*)
C. dioxin
D. homocysteine
E. selenium
5. Which of these bacteria is most likely to
set up acute
bacterial
endocarditis on a previously-normal valve?
A. clostridia
B. staphylococcus (*)
C. streptococcus pyogenes
D. streptococcus viridans
E. pseudomonas
6. Cardiomyopathy of pregnancy is most closely
related
epidemiologically
to
A. alcohol abuse
B. folic acid deficiency
C. high salt intake
D. poverty (*)
E. tobacco smoking
7. Which systemic disease often features
sterile vegetations
located
on the surfaces of valve leaflets, and not just their
lines
of closure?
A. amyloidosis B
B. hemophilia
C. lupus (*)
D. rheumatoid arthritis
E. scleroderma
8. What accumulates in the heart in Pompe's
disease?
A. cholesterol
B. glycogen (*)
C. lipofuscin
D. mitochondria
E. non-pigmented lipid breakdown products
9. Which is most likely to produce tricuspid
valve stenosis?
A. carcinoid heart disease (*)
B. Ebstein's anomaly
C. endocarditis from IV drug use
D. severe atherosclerosis
E. tetralogy of Fallot
10. In Kawasaki's disease, you will probably NOT
see
A. enlarged lymph nodes containing granulomas
(*)
B. erythema of the palms
C. fever
D. reddening of the oral mucosa
E. reddening of the surfaces of the eyes
11. What's the major risk factor for Buerger's
thromboangiitis
obliterans?
A. alcohol abuse
B. cocaine use
C. old age
D. sexual promiscuity / multiple partners
E. smoking (*)
12. In Osler-Weber-Rendu, you'll first notice the
little
vascular
malformations on the
A. conjunctiva
B. digits
C. lips (*)
D. retina
E. skin of the face
13. Unable to make HDL...
A. common familial hypercholesterolemia
B. Milroy's disease
C. Noonan's syndrome
D. Refsum's disease
E. Tangier's disease (*)
PART 2
1. Which is most typical in Down's syndrome?
A. atrial septal defect just above crux of
heart (*)
B. coarctation of the aorta
C. sinus venosus defect
D. very low-placed tricuspid valve
E. widely patent foramen ovale
2. Sudden death during sleep in a 30 year old
Laotian man with
no
known coronary risk factors
suggests
A. Brugada's (*)
B. cardiac syndrome X
C. lipoprotein LpS2
D. Lp(a)
E. Tangier's
3. Which fact about a group of vegetations
would be most
helpful
in letting you know that it's
Libman-Sacks
(as in lupus anticoagulant syndrome) rather than
marantic
endocarditis (as in
cancer
of the pancreas)?
A. contain numerous plasma cells
B. cause damage to the underlying valve
C. contain hematoxylin bodies
D. contain many neutrophils
E. not confined to lines of closure (*)
4. What's the eponym for angina caused by
coronary spasm?
A. Buerger's
B. Ebstein's
C. Heberden's
D. Osler's
E. Prinzmetal's (*)
5. A healthy, sedentary adult's heart usually
weighs no more
than
A. 150 gm
B. 250 gm
C. 350 gm (*)
D. 450 gm
E. 550 gm
6. Wavy fibers in the absence of other
myocardial pathology
suggest
what to the autopsy
pathologist?
A. amyloidosis
B. cobalt cardiomyopathy
C. hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
D. long QT (abnormal waves)
E. sudden coronary death (*)
7. Most "unstable angina" is probably
due to
A. a thrombus forming and lysing (*)
B. extreme hypercholesterolemia and rapid
atherogenesis
C. multiple emboli to the coronaries
D. serial hemorrhages within a plaque
E. various rhythm disturbances developing and
disappearing
8. Which is most likely to produce
dextrocardia, i.e., a heart
on
the right side instead of the left?
A. Down's syndrome
B. fetal alcohol syndrome
C. immotile cilia syndrome (*)
D. rubella in the unborn child
E. Turner's XO syndrome
9. Which structure is most likely to rupture as
a result of
Barlow's
syndrome?
A. mitral chorda (*)
B. papillary muscle body
C. posterior leaflet, longitudinally
D. posterior leaflet, transversely
E. ventricular free wall
10. Which is LEAST LIKELY to give you a dilated
cardiomyopathy?
A. amyloid cardiomyopathy (*)
B. autoimmune cardiomyopathy
C. Chagas's cardiomyopathy
D. Duchenne's cardiomyopathy
E. sarcoid cardiomyopathy
11. Listen carefully to your ankylosing
spondylitis patients
because
they are much more likely than
other
folks to develop
A. aortic insufficiency (*)
B. aortic stenosis
C. carotid bruits
D. mitral insufficiency
E. pulmonic stenosis
12. Finding a Weibel-Palade body on electron
microscopy
establishes
that the cell is
A. endothelium (*)
B. myocardium
C. myointima
D. neoplastic
E. smooth muscle
13. A folic-acid deficient diet probably places a
person at risk
for
coronary disease by raising
plasma
A. homocysteine (*)
B. homogentisic acid
C. oxidized LDL
D. lipoprotein A
E. total LDL cholesterol
14. You are LEAST LIKELY to see hyperplastic
arteriolar
sclerosis
as a result of
A. hemolytic-uremic syndrome from E. coli
B. malignant hypertension
C. scleroderma
D. severe diabetes (*)
E. ventricular septal defect leading to
Eisenmenger's
PART 3:
1. The myocardial hypertrophy seen in
patients with aortic stenosis, which is often extreme but which usually allows
the heart to empty adequately, is considered an example of:
* A. concentric
hypertrophy
B. eccentric hypertrophy
C. egocentric
hypertrophy
D. hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
E. physiologic hypertrophy
2. Infamous as a cause of sudden death:
A. aortic
regurgitation
* B. aortic
stenosis
C. mitral
stenosis
D. pulmonic
stenosis
E. tricuspid
insufficiency
3. In "sudden cardiac death"
without an acute coronary artery lesion, the pathologist usually finds at least
what percent stenosis of all three coronary arteries?
A. 50-55%
B. 60-65%
* C. 70-75%
D. 80-85%
E. 90-95%
4. In long QT syndrome caused by a potassium
channel mutation, sudden death commonly occurs during participation in what
sport?
A. basketball
B. being
struck in the chest by a baseball
C. skiing
(cold exposure)
* D. swimming
E. weight-lifting
5. In classic tertiary syphilis, the valve
lesion was
* A. aortic
insufficiency
B. aortic
stenosis
C. mitral
stenosis
D. papillary
fibroelastoma
E. tricuspid
insufficiency
6. Which portion of the mitral valve is most
likely to calcify as a result of old age?
* A. annulus
B. anterior
leaflet
C. chordae
D. papillary
muscle
E. posterior
leaflet
7. What's the common cardiac malformation in
fetal alcohol syndrome?
A. Chiari
meshwork
B. Ebstein's
anomaly
C. patent
ductus arteriosus
D. sinus
venosus ASD
* E. ventricular
septal defect
8. A very widely patent foramen ovale,
causing an atrial septal defect, is described as (a)
A. Lutembacher's syndrome
B. ostium primum defect
* C. ostium
secundum defect
D. Roger's disease
E. sinus venosus defect
9. Uncomplicated hypertension and diabetes
are most likely to produce what change at the level of the arterioles?
A. amyloidosis
B. atherosclerosis
* C. hyaline
sclerosis
D. intimal onionskinning
E. transmural inflammation
Could we have more "practical" questions relating to the Cardiovascular system? You know, pressure-volume loops, response to exercise, compensatory mechanisms? Kind Regards, John Turton
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