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NURS611/ NURS 650/ NURS 651 Advanced Pathophysiology Exam 1 (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete Exam Questions with Verified Answers and Detailed Rationales | Cellular Adaptation, Genetics, Immunity, Neoplasia, Fluid & Electrolytes, Acid-Base, Inflammati

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD This comprehensive EXAM resource for Advanced Pathophysiology Exam 1 covers Weeks 1-4 content including Cellular Function, Genetics, Immunity, and Neoplasia for the 2026/2027 academic year. It features exam-style clinical scenario questions with verified answers and detailed rationales . Based on official course exam blueprints from multiple graduate nursing programs (NURS 611, NURS 650, NURS 651, UTMB 5355), this resource covers essential topics tested on the first examination . Exam 1 Topics Covered: Cellular Adaptation and Injury: Atrophy (shrinkage in cell size), Hypertrophy (increase in cell size - NOT number), Hyperplasia (increase in cell number), Metaplasia (reversible change of one adult cell type to another), Dysplasia (abnormal changes in size, shape, and organization of mature cells - pre-malignant), Anaplasia (cancerous, undifferentiated cells) . Hypoxia causes decreased ATP → failure of sodium-potassium pump → cellular swelling . Clinical onset is later in life for autosomal dominant disorders while earlier for autosomal recessive disorders . Genetics and Inheritance Patterns: Autosomal dominant (50% chance, each generation affected, examples: Huntington's disease, neurofibromatosis, achondroplasia, familial hypercholesterolemia) . Autosomal recessive (25% of offspring from two carrier parents affected, skips generations, examples: Tay-Sachs, cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, PKU) . X-linked recessive (males more often affected, examples: Hemophilia A, Duchenne muscular dystrophy) . Mitochondrial inheritance (only passed on by females, all mitochondria from mother, can appear in every generation, examples: Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy) . Carrier testing determines whether prospective parents are carriers of specific disorders; prenatal testing assesses fetus health status; preimplantation genetic diagnosis removes a cell from an early embryo to test for genetic defects before implantation . Spontaneous mutations can cause disorders even when parents are not carriers . Neoplasia and Carcinogenesis: Tumors are either benign (similar to cell of origin, slow-growing) or malignant (dissimilar from cell of origin, rapid-growing) . Malignant tumors are either carcinomas (arising in epithelium, most common, spread via lymphatic system) or sarcomas (arising in connective or muscle tissue, spread via bloodstream) . Regulatory genes include proto-oncogenes (normal cellular genes encoding regulatory proteins), oncogenes (altered proto-oncogenes that transform normal cells into neoplastic cells), and tumor suppressor genes (anti-oncogenes that prevent damaged DNA from proliferating) . The p53 gene normally halts cell division, stimulates repair enzymes, and commands mutated cells to self-destruct; it is the most frequently altered gene in human tumors . Carcinogenesis is a multi-step, multi-factorial process consisting of at least three phases: Initiation (irreversible DNA mutation), Promotion/Conversion (promoters enhance development of initiated cells), and Progression (development into biologically malignant cell population with potential metastasis) . Immunology and Inflammation: The five types of immunity include: Natural/Innate immunity (includes inflammation process and NK cells, no memory, broadly specific), Adaptive immunity (cell-mediated immunity, humoral immunity, acquired immunity, passive acquired immunity) . Cell-mediated immunity is carried out by T cells, while humoral immunity is controlled by activated B cells and antibodies . NK cells (Natural Killer cells) come from the lymphoid stem cell line, are part of the innate immune system, and kill via cell lysis or apoptosis without need for specific antigen receptors . Antigen-presenting cells (APCs) include dendritic cells and macrophages; they engulf pathogens and present antigen fragments on MHC II molecules to helper T cells . Fluid and Electrolyte Balance, Acid-Base Disorders: Lipohyalinosis of small penetrating arteries occurs in chronic hypertension, predisposing to intracerebral hemorrhage . In metabolic acidosis (decreased pH, decreased HCO3), the body compensates by respiratory alkalosis (decreased PaCO2 via Kussmaul breathing) . Ascites in liver disease is driven by portal hypertension (increased hydrostatic pressure) plus reduced oncotic pressure from hypoalbuminemia . Central diabetes insipidus: polyuria, low urine osmolality, hypernatremia that corrects with desmopressin administration . Renal compensation for chronic respiratory acidosis occurs via increased bicarbonate reabsorption and ammoniagenesis producing more NH4+ for acid excretion .

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Institution
Advanced Pathophysiology
Course
Advanced pathophysiology

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Advanced Pathophysiology: Exam 1 - (Latest 2026/2027 Update) Cellular
Function, Genetics, Immunity, & Neoplasia | Q&A | Grade A | 100%
Correct (Verified Answers)
Subject: Advanced Pathophysiology / Cellular & Molecular Basis of Disease

Source: Advanced Pathophysiology Exam 1 – Comprehensive Review


Format: Q&A Guide with Clinical Rationale


1: What is a risk factor in pathophysiology?
Correct Answer: Factor that when present increases the chance of disease. Not stressors,
but conditions or situations that increase the likelihood of encountering a stressor.
1. Risk factors may be modifiable (smoking) or non-modifiable (age).
2. Presence of risk factor does not guarantee disease development.
3. Epidemiology identifies risk factors to guide prevention strategies.

2: What is prevalence in epidemiology?
Correct Answer: A measure of disease that allows us to determine a person's likelihood of
having a disease. The number of prevalent cases is the total number of cases of disease
existing in a population. A prevalence rate is the total number of cases of a disease existing
in a population divided by the total population. Indicates how widespread the disease is.
1. Prevalence includes both new and existing cases.
2. Useful for healthcare resource planning.
3. Point prevalence vs period prevalence.


3: What is incidence in epidemiology?
Correct Answer: A measure of disease that allows us to determine a person's probability of
being diagnosed with a disease during a given period of time. Incidence is the number of
newly diagnosed cases of a disease. An incidence rate is the number of new cases of a
disease divided by the number of persons at risk for the disease. Conveys information about
the risk of contracting the disease.
1. Incidence measures new cases over time.
2. Used to study disease etiology and risk factors.
3. Expressed as rate per person-time.


4: What is primary prevention?
Correct Answer: Altering susceptibility or reducing exposure for susceptible persons. Both
illness and disease are absent. Example: vaccinations, healthy lifestyles.
1. Primary prevention occurs before disease develops.
2. Aims to reduce incidence of disease.
3. Examples: immunizations, smoking cessation education, healthy diet.

, 5: What is secondary prevention?
Correct Answer: Early detection, screening, and management of disease. Illness absent,
disease present. Example: screenings and testings.
1. Secondary prevention occurs during early disease stages.
2. Aims to detect disease early before symptoms develop.
3. Examples: mammography, colonoscopy, blood pressure screening.


6: What is tertiary prevention?
Correct Answer: Rehabilitation, supportive care, reducing disability, and restoring effective
functioning. Both illness and disease present. Example: education.
1. Tertiary prevention occurs after disease is established.
2. Aims to reduce disability and improve quality of life.
3. Examples: cardiac rehabilitation, stroke rehabilitation, diabetes education.


7: What is epidemiology?
Correct Answer: Study of the patterns of disease involving populations; examining the
occurrence, incidence, prevalence, transmission, and distribution of diseases in large groups
of populations/people.
1. Epidemiology is the basic science of public health.
2. Identifies risk factors and disease determinants.
3. Guides prevention and control strategies.


8: What is an endemic disease?
Correct Answer: A disease that is native to a local region.
1. Endemic diseases constantly present in a population.
2. Example: Malaria in certain tropical regions.
3. Baseline expected level of disease.


9: What is an epidemic?
Correct Answer: When a disease is disseminated to many individuals at the same time
(spread to many people at the same time).
1. Epidemic exceeds expected endemic levels.
2. Can be limited to one community or region.
3. Example: Influenza outbreak in a city.


10: What is a pandemic?
Correct Answer: Epidemics that affect large geographic regions, perhaps spreading
worldwide (spread to large geographic areas).
1. Pandemic crosses international borders.
2. Affects large numbers of people globally.
3. Examples: COVID-19, 1918 influenza, HIV/AIDS.

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