Term
Characteristics of Lipid Soluble (Steroid) Hormones
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Definition
Can cross plasma membrane
Carrier proteins in blood
Bind to cytoplasmic receptors which translocate to nucleus to up- or down-regulate DNA expression
Examples: steroid hormones, thyroxin, vitamin D |
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Term
Characteristics of Water Soluble (peptide) hormones |
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Definition
Cannot cross plasma membrane
No carrier protein in blood
Bind to cell surface receptor, act through 2nd messenger cascades to cause intracellular effect
Example: peptide hormones |
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Term
The hypothalamus is connected to the pituitary gland by a connecting stalk called the _____ |
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Definition
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Term
The APG developed from ______. |
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Definition
inferior embryologic tissue of the palate |
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Term
The PPG developed from _____ |
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Definition
nervous embryologic tissue from the hypothalamus |
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Term
Nephrotic Syndrome:
How much protein in urine? |
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Definition
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Term
Membranous Glomerulonephritis:
Who does it occur in?
What generally happens? |
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Definition
Most common glomerulonephritis in adults.
Thickening of glomerular basement membrane in response to endogenous immune complexes. |
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Term
What is a diffuse disease?
Is Membranous glomerulonephritis diffuse? |
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Definition
A disease that affects all of a thing, generally.
So, yes it is bc it affects all glomeruli. |
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Term
How to treat membranous glomerulonephritis? |
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Definition
Immune suppression
(so like low-dose steroids) |
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Term
Membranoproliferative Glomerularnephritis:
Exogenous Immune complexes (what are these)
The complexes do what? |
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Definition
They come from other areas and are deposited in the glomerular basement membrane.
The complexes stimulate mesangial cells to proliferate -> thickening basement membrane |
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Term
Membranoproliferative Glomerularnephritis:
What's the distinctive histological finding? |
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Definition
The glomerular capillary loops show two basements membranes giving the loops a tram track appearance |
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Term
Minimal change disease:
common in?
what happens?
Treated how? |
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Definition
Common in young children 2-6 (more common in males)
Something in the foot process charge changes and the foot processes fuse together.
Treated with steroids (the disease is related to immune complexes) |
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Term
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Definition
Just some of the thing is infected
(example: in focal segmental glomerulosclerosis only some of the glomeruli are infected) |
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Term
Difference between nephritic and nephrotic? |
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Definition
The amount of protein found in urine (there's less in nephritic) and in nephritic syndrome you see blood in urine (there's a capillary rupture) |
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Term
_____ is often the cause of fibrosis, scarring and loss of nephrons. |
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Definition
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Term
The leading cause of kidney failure is ____. The second is _____. |
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Definition
Diabetes, then hypertension Obesity leads to diabetes leads to end stage renal disease |
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Term
What is acute renal failure? |
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Definition
reversible insult (can be fixed) |
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Term
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Definition
low GFR
azotemia
hypervolemia
decreased urine production
retention of H+, K+ |
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Term
Pre-renal (decreased renal perfusion) ARF is characterized by: |
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Definition
high BUN/creatine ratio
high ADH, aldosterone, Ang II |
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Term
Characteristics of post-renal (obstruction to urine flow) ARF: |
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Definition
increased HPc to maintain GFR (despite dilating arterioles)
kidney dilates -> calyces & collecting system will NEVER return to normal |
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Term
Parenchymal ARF (damage to tubules, glomerulus, membranes) is characterized by: |
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Definition
decreased BUN/creatinine ratio |
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Term
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Definition
progressive loss of nephron with no regenerative capacity |
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Term
Chronic renal failure is measured by |
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Definition
plasma creatinine levels, which are inversely proportional to GFR |
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Term
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Definition
problems w/ kidney that cause kidney failure
chronic glomerulonephritis, interstitial nephritis, etc |
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Term
Examples of secondary kidney disease: |
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Definition
hypertensive vascular disease
diabetes
partial urinary tract obstruction |
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Term
Renal insufficiency is defined as |
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Definition
reduction of GFR to 20-50% normal |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
toxin concentration increase in blood due to renal failure |
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Term
Skeletal/bone alterations w/ renal failure: |
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Definition
increased phosphate
impaired Vit D
decreased Ca
hyperparathyroidism
renal osteodystrophy |
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Term
CRF kidneys not producing enough erythropoietin (EPO) leads to |
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Definition
normochromic-normocytic anemia |
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Term
Uremic gastroenteritis is caused by uremia and is...
Uremic fetor is... |
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Definition
bleeding of ulcers along mucosa
bad breath caused by urea breakdown in salivary glands |
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Term
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Definition
man-made membrane
blood forced through this external kidney and returned to body |
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Term
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Definition
biological membrane
fluid injected into peritoneal cavity, allowed to equilibrate for 30 min, then removed |
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Term
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Definition
presence of leukocytes in urine
indication of kidney infection |
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Term
Where is the first step in urine formation? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Diffuse is when all the glomeruli are damaged
Focal is when few glomeruli are affected and the rest are healthy |
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Term
Global vs Segmental/local |
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Definition
these two refer to damage within a single glomerulus
Global is when entire glomerulus is damaged
Segmental/foal is when only a portion of a glomerulus is damaged |
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Term
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Definition
cell proliferation & increase in cellularity
3 types of cells in glomerulus can proliferate: endothelial cells, mesangial cells, podocytes |
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Term
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Definition
increase in thickness of glomerulus basement membrane |
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Term
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Definition
tissue necrosis
no removal of cellular debris by immune system in tissue necrosis |
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Term
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Definition
fibrosis within glomerulus
usually seen in chronic disease (hypertension or diabetes).
fibrosis causes narrowing of capillary lumen |
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Term
nephrotic syndrome leads to ____ which leads to ____ and ____ and ____ and ____ |
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Definition
nephrotic syndrome leads to hypoalbuminemia which leads to edema and hyperlipoproteinemia and a compromised immune system and a hypercoagulable state. |
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Term
cause of nephrotic syndrome |
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Definition
immune system
endogenous and exogenous antigens can cause it
cell mediated immune response (T cells/macrophages responding to injury) can also cause it |
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Term
Membranous glomerulonephritis
(Diffuse)
caused by?
treated by? |
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Definition
caused by endogenous Ag in podocytes and proximal convoluted tubule
treated by steroids |
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Term
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
(Diffuse)
caused by? |
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Definition
caused by exogenous Ag leading to leukocyte deposition and mesangial cell proliferation |
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Term
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis
distinctive feature: |
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Definition
loops of tram track surrounding glomerulus capillary loop (or another basemement membrane basically) |
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Term
Minimal change disease
seem mostly in ____
distinct feature? |
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Definition
children 2-6 years, usually after respiratory infection/immunization
distinct feature: fusion of foot processes on podocytes (causes positively charged basement membrane that filters proteins) |
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Term
Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis
what do focal and segmental mean?
leads to?
does it respond to immunosuppressants? |
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Definition
focal - only some glomerulus in kidney are affected; segmental - only part of the affected glomerulus is damaged
leads to hyperfiltration in healthy glomerulus and eventual damage to filtration barrier (causing protein filtration, drop in GFR)
It DOES NOT respond to immunosuppressants |
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Term
Nephritic syndrome symptoms are |
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Definition
proteinuria, hematuria, azotemia, RBC casts, oliguria, hypertention
(mnemonic PHAROH) |
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Term
COPD describes what three disorders |
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Definition
asthma
emphysema
chronic bronchitis |
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Term
What's the strongest known predisposing factor for development of asthma? |
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Definition
Atopy (strong genetic component) |
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Term
in asthma, eosinophils and mast cells will ____ to release histamine |
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Definition
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Term
if asthma is untreated for a long time it can cause pulmonary fibrosis and result in _____ COPD |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
asthma is mediated by what antibodies |
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Definition
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Term
respiratory bronchioles enlarged in this disease |
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Definition
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Term
acinus is enlarged in this disease |
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Definition
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Term
both emphysema and chronic bronchitis cause Cor pulmonale. What is that? |
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Definition
heart disease that is caused by lung disease |
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Term
Acute intrinsic restrictive disease |
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Definition
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Term
2 types of acute intrinsic restrictive diseases |
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Definition
increased capillary hydrostatic pressure
cardiogenic, neurogenic, cocaine-induces
increased capillary permeability
ARDS, aspiration pneumonitis, heroin-induced |
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Term
FLATPiG
what's produced in the anterior pituitary |
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Definition
FSH
LH
ACTH
TSH
Prolactin
GH |
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