NURS6501(WEEK 1-6) NURS 6501 MIDTERM EXAM REVIEW LATEST 2021: ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Nurs 6501 Midterm Exam Review Guide (Weeks 1-6)
Cellular Processes and the Genetic Environment
1. Describe cellular processes and alterations within cellular processes.
Movement. Muscle cells can generate forces that produce motion. Muscles that are attached to
bones produce limb movements, whereas those that enclose hollow tubes or cavities move or
empty contents when they contract. For example, the contraction of smooth muscle cells
surrounding blood vessels changes the diameter of the vessels; the contraction of muscles in
walls of the urinary bladder expels urine.
Conductivity. Conduction as a response to a stimulus is manifested by a wave of excitation, an
electrical potential that passes along the surface of the cell to reach its other parts. Conductivity
is the chief function of nerve cells.
Metabolic absorption. All cells take in and use nutrients and other substances from their
surroundings. Cells of the intestine and the kidney are specialized to carry out absorption. Cells
of the kidney tubules reabsorb fluids and synthesize proteins. Intestinal epithelial cells reabsorb
fluids and synthesize protein enzymes.
Secretion. Certain cells, such as mucous gland cells, can synthesize new substances from
substances they absorb and then secrete the new substances to serve as needed elsewhere. Cells
of the adrenal gland, testis, and ovary can secrete hormonal steroids.
Excretion. All cells can rid themselves of waste products resulting from the metabolic breakdown
of nutrients. Membrane-bound sacs (lysosomes) within cells contain enzymes that break down,
or digest, large molecules, turning them into waste products that are released from the cell.
Respiration. Cells absorb oxygen, which is used to transform nutrients into energy in the form of
adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Cellular respiration, or oxidation, occurs in organelles called
mitochondria.
Reproduction. Tissue growth occurs as cells enlarge and reproduce themselves. Even without
growth, tissue maintenance requires that new cells be produced to replace cells that are lost
normally through cellular death. Not all cells are capable of continuous division.
Communication. Communication is vital for cells to survive as a society of cells. Pancreatic
cells, for instance, secrete and release insulin necessary to signal muscle cells to absorb sugar
from the blood for energy. Constant communication allows the maintenance of a dynamic steady
state.
2. What is the impact of the genetic environment on disease?
Genetic diseases caused by single genes usually follow autosomal dominant, autosomal
recessive, or X-linked recessive modes of inheritance. The recurrence risk for autosomal
dominant diseases is usually 50%. Germline mosaicism can alter recurrence risks for genetic
diseases because unaffected parents can produce multiple affected offspring. This situation
occurs because the germline of one parent is affected by a mutation but the parent's somatic cells
are unaffected. Skipped generations are not seen in classic autosomal dominant pedigrees. Males
and females are equally likely to exhibit autosomal dominant diseases and to pass them on to
their offspring. Penetrance may be age-dependent, as in Huntington disease and familial breast
cancer. Most commonly, parents of children with autosomal recessive diseases are both
heterozygous carriers of the disease gene. In this case, the recurrence risk for autosomal
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,recessive diseases is 25%. Males and females are equally likely to be affected by autosomal
recessive diseases. The frequency of genetic diseases approximately doubles in the offspring of
first-cousin matings. In each normal female somatic cell, one of the two X chromosomes is
inactivated early in embryogenesis. X inactivation is random, fixed, and incomplete (i.e., only
part of the chromosome is actually inactivated). It may involve methylation. Gender is
determined embryonically by the presence of the SRY gene on the Y chromosome. Embryos that
have a Y chromosome (and thus the SRY gene) become males, whereas those lacking the Y
chromosome become females. When the Y chromosome lacks the SRY gene, an XY female can
be produced. Similarly, an X chromosome that contains the SRY gene can produce an XX male.
X-linked genes are those that are located on the X chromosome. Nearly all known X-linked
diseases are caused by X-linked recessive genes. Males are hemizygous for genes on the X
chromosome. X-linked recessive diseases are seen much more often in males than in females
because males need only one copy of the gene to express the disease. Fathers cannot pass X-
linked genes to their sons. Skipped generations are often seen in X-linked recessive disease
pedigrees because the gene can be transmitted through carrier females. Recurrence risks for X-
linked recessive diseases depend on the carrier and affected status of the mother and father. A
sex-limited trait is one that occurs in only one of the sexes. A sex-influenced trait is one that
occurs more often in one sex than in the other. Congenital diseases are those present at birth.
Most of these diseases are multifactorial in etiology. Multifactorial diseases in adults include
coronary heart disease, hypertension, breast cancer, colon cancer, diabetes mellitus, obesity, AD,
alcoholism, schizophrenia, and bipolar affective disorder. It is incorrect to assume that the
presence of a genetic component means that the course of a disease cannot be altered—most
diseases have both genetic and environmental aspects.
3. Explain how healthy cell activity contributes to good health and how its
breakdown in cellular behavior and alterations to cells lead to health
issues.
Cells adapt to their environment to escape and protect themselves from injury. An adapted cell is
neither normal nor injured—its condition lies somewhere between these two states. Adaptations
are reversible changes in cell size, number, phenotype, metabolic activity, or functions of cells. 1
However, cellular adaptations are a common and central part of many disease states. In the early
stages of a successful adaptive response, cells may have enhanced function; thus, it is hard to
differentiate a pathologic response from an extreme adaptation to an excessive functional
demand. The most significant adaptive changes in cells include atrophy (decrease in cell size),
hypertrophy (increase in cell size), hyperplasia (increase in cell number), and metaplasia
(reversible replacement of one mature cell type by another less mature cell type or a change in
the phenotype). Dysplasia (deranged cellular growth) is not considered a true cellular adaptation
but rather an atypical hyperplasia.
Injury to cells and to extracellular matrix (ECM) leads to injury of tissues and organs ultimately
determining the structural patterns of disease. Loss of function derives from cell and ECM injury
and cell death. Cellular injury occurs if the cell is “stressed” or unable to maintain homeostasis in
the face of injurious stimuli or cell stress. Injured cells may recover (reversible injury) or die
(irreversible injury). Injurious stimuli include chemical agents, lack of sufficient oxygen
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,(hypoxia), free radicals, infectious agents, physical and mechanical factors, immunologic
reactions, genetic factors, and nutritional imbalances. Cell injury and cell death often result from
exposure to toxic chemicals, infections, physical trauma, and hypoxia.
4. What are the roles genetics plays in disease processes?
See answer for question 2.
5. What is the relationship of how cells are involved in disease processes?
Common biochemical mechanisms are important to understanding cell injury and cell death
regardless of the injuring agent. These mechanisms include adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
depletion, mitochondrial damage, accumulation of oxygen and oxygen-derived free radicals,
membrane damage (depletion of ATP), protein folding defects, DNA damage defects, and
calcium level alterations. Examples of cell injury are (1) ischemic and hypoxic injury, (2)
ischemia-reperfusion injury, (3) oxidative stress or accumulation of oxygen-derived free
radicals–induced injury, and (4) chemical injury. Altered cellular and tissue biology can result
from adaptation, injury, neoplasia, accumulations, aging, or death. Knowledge of the structural
and functional reactions of cells and tissues to injurious agents, including genetic defects, is key
to understanding disease processes. Cellular injury can be caused by any factor that disrupts
cellular structures or deprives the cell of oxygen and nutrients required for survival. Injury may
be reversible (sublethal) or irreversible (lethal) and is classified broadly as chemical, hypoxic
(lack of sufficient oxygen), free radical, unintentional or intentional, and immunologic or
inflammatory. Cellular injuries from various causes have different clinical and pathophysiologic
manifestations. Stresses from metabolic derangements may be associated with intracellular
accumulations and include carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids. Sites of cellular death can cause
accumulations of calcium resulting in pathologic calcification. Cellular death is confirmed by
structural changes seen when cells are stained and examined with a microscope. The most
important changes are nuclear; clearly, without a healthy nucleus, the cell cannot survive. The
two main types of cell death are necrosis and apoptosis, and nutrient deprivation can initiate
autophagy that results in cell death.
Altered Physiology
6. Evaluate cellular processes and alterations within cellular processes.
Injury to cells and their surrounding environment, called the extracellular matrix, leads to tissue
and organ injury. Although the normal cell is restricted by a narrow range of structure and
function, it can adapt to physiologic demands or stress to maintain a steady state called
homeostasis. Adaptation is a reversible, structural, or functional response to both normal or
physiologic conditions and adverse or pathologic conditions. For example, the uterus adapts to
pregnancy— a normal physiologic state—by enlarging. Enlargement occurs because of an
increase in the size and number of uterine cells. In an adverse condition, such as high blood
pressure, myocardial cells are stimulated to enlarge by the increased work of pumping. Like most
of the body's adaptive mechanisms, however, cellular adaptations to adverse conditions are
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, usually only temporarily successful. Severe or long-term stressors overwhelm adaptive processes
and cellular injury or death ensues. Altered cellular and tissue biology can result from adaptation,
injury, neoplasia, accumulations, aging, or death. Knowledge of the structural and functional
reactions of cells and tissues to injurious agents, including genetic defects, is key to
understanding disease processes. Cellular injury can be caused by any factor that disrupts cellular
structures or deprives the cell of oxygen and nutrients required for survival. Injury may be
reversible (sublethal) or irreversible (lethal) and is classified broadly as chemical, hypoxic (lack
of sufficient oxygen), free radical, unintentional or intentional, and immunologic or
inflammatory. Cellular injuries from various causes have different clinical and pathophysiologic
manifestations. Stresses from metabolic derangements may be associated with intracellular
accumulations and include carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids. Sites of cellular death can cause
accumulations of calcium resulting in pathologic calcification. Cellular death is confirmed by
structural changes seen when cells are stained and examined with a microscope. The most
important changes are nuclear; clearly, without a healthy nucleus, the cell cannot survive. The
two main types of cell death are necrosis and apoptosis, and nutrient deprivation can initiate
autophagy that results in cell death. Cellular aging causes structural and functional changes that
eventually lead to cellular death or a decreased capacity to recover from injury.
7. Analyze alterations in the immune system that result in disease processes.
Inappropriate immune responses are misdirected responses against the host's own tissues
(autoimmunity); directed responses against beneficial foreign tissues, such as transfusions or
transplants (alloimmunity); exaggerated responses against environmental antigens (allergy); or
insufficient responses to protect the host (immune deficiency). Allergy, autoimmunity, and
alloimmunity are collectively known as hypersensitivity reactions. Mechanisms of
hypersensitivity are classified as type I (IgEmediated) reactions, type II (tissue-specific)
reactions, type III (immune complex–mediated) reactions, and type IV (cell mediated) reactions.
Type I (IgE-mediated) hypersensitivity reactions are mediated through the binding of IgE to Fc
receptors on mast cells and cross-linking of IgE by antigens that bind to the Fab portions of IgE.
Cross-linking causes mast cell degranulation and the release of histamine (the most potent
mediator) and other inflammatory substances. Histamine, acting through the H1 receptor,
contracts bronchial smooth muscles, causing bronchial constriction; increases vascular
permeability, causing edema; and causes vasodilation, increasing blood flow into the affected
area. Histamine with H2 receptors results in increased gastric acid secretion and a decrease of
histamine released from mast cells and basophils. Histamine enhances the chemotaxis of
eosinophils into sites of type I allergic reactions. Atopic individuals tend to produce higher
quantities of IgE and to have more Fc receptors for IgE on their mast cells. Ex: seasonal allergic
rhinitis.
Type II (tissue-specific) hypersensitivity reactions are caused by five possible mechanisms:
complement-mediated lysis, opsonization and phagocytosis, neutrophil-mediated tissue damage,
antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, and modulation of cellular function. Ex: Graves
disease, autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura, and autoimmune hemolytic anemia.
Type III (immune complex–mediated) hypersensitivity reactions are caused by the formation of
immune complexes that are deposited in target tissues, where they activate the complement
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