NSG530 EXAM 1 Actual Exam 2026/2027
Complete Questions and Verified Answers with
Detailed Rationales Advanced Pathophysiology
Wilkes Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
Section 1: Pathophysiology Foundations
Q1: A 68-year-old male with a 40-pack-year smoking history presents with progressive dyspnea
and a chronic productive cough. Lung biopsy reveals enlarged air spaces with destruction of
alveolar walls but without significant fibrosis. Which cellular adaptation process is most directly
responsible for the structural changes observed in this patient's lungs?
A. Hypertrophy of type II pneumocytes
B. Hyperplasia of bronchial smooth muscle cells
C. Emphysematous destruction representing a form of tissue atrophy and irreversible cell injury
[CORRECT]
D. Metaplasia of ciliated columnar epithelium to squamous epithelium
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Emphysema represents the permanent enlargement of airspaces distal to the terminal
bronchioles due to destruction of alveolar walls. This process involves irreversible injury and
loss of structural cells (particularly elastin fibers and alveolar septal cells), representing a
pathological form of tissue destruction rather than a true adaptive cellular response. The loss of
elastic recoil and surface area for gas exchange results from protease-mediated destruction,
primarily by neutrophil elastase and macrophage metalloproteinases in response to chronic
cigarette smoke exposure.
Q2: A 45-year-old woman presents with fatigue, weight gain, and cold intolerance. Laboratory
studies reveal TSH 12.5 mIU/L (normal 0.4-4.0) and free T4 0.6 ng/dL (normal 0.8-1.8). Which
cellular adaptation is primarily responsible for the palpable goiter observed on physical
examination?
A. Hypertrophy of thyroid follicular cells due to increased TSH stimulation
B. Hyperplasia of thyroid follicular cells driven by TSH receptor activation [CORRECT]
C. Metaplasia of thyroid C cells to follicular cells
D. Dysplasia of thyroid epithelium with nuclear atypia
,2
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: In primary hypothyroidism, decreased thyroid hormone production leads to loss of
negative feedback on the pituitary, causing elevated TSH levels. TSH binds to TSH receptors on
follicular cells, stimulating both hypertrophy (increased cell size) and hyperplasia (increased cell
number). Hyperplasia is the dominant process responsible for the clinically palpable goiter, as
the gland enlarges through increased cell division in an attempt to compensate for insufficient
hormone production.
Q3: A 62-year-old male with chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease undergoes endoscopy.
Biopsy of the distal esophagus reveals columnar epithelium with goblet cells replacing the
normal stratified squamous epithelium. This cellular adaptation increases the risk for which
subsequent pathological condition?
A. Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
B. Adenocarcinoma of the esophagus [CORRECT]
C. Esophageal leiomyosarcoma
D. Esophageal lymphoma
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The described histological findings represent Barrett's esophagus, an example of
metaplasia where one differentiated cell type (stratified squamous epithelium) is replaced by
another differentiated cell type (intestinal-type columnar epithelium with goblet cells). This
adaptation occurs as a protective response to chronic acid exposure. However, Barrett's
metaplasia significantly increases the risk for esophageal adenocarcinoma through the
metaplasia-dysplasia-carcinoma sequence, making it a premalignant condition requiring
surveillance.
Q4: A 58-year-old woman with poorly controlled hypertension presents with left ventricular
hypertrophy on echocardiography. Which pathophysiological mechanism best explains this
cellular adaptation?
A. Increased DNA replication leading to hyperplasia of cardiomyocytes
B. Increased protein synthesis and assembly of contractile elements in existing cardiomyocytes
[CORRECT]
C. Replacement of cardiomyocytes with fibroblasts through metaplasia
D. Accumulation of lipids within cardiomyocytes causing cellular enlargement
Correct Answer: B
, 3
Rationale: Cardiac muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) are terminally differentiated cells that have lost
the ability to undergo mitosis. Therefore, cardiac hypertrophy in response to increased afterload
(pressure overload from hypertension) occurs exclusively through hypertrophy—increased cell
size rather than increased cell number. This involves increased synthesis of structural proteins
(actin, myosin), assembly of additional sarcomeres, and enlargement of cellular organelles to
meet increased metabolic demands.
Q5: A 72-year-old male presents with sudden onset right-sided weakness and aphasia. CT scan
reveals a large hypodense area in the left middle cerebral artery territory with loss of gray-white
differentiation. Within 24 hours, which cellular change is most characteristic of the irreversible
injury occurring in the ischemic tissue?
A. Cellular swelling due to Na+/K+-ATPase pump failure
B. Karyorrhexis with nuclear fragmentation [CORRECT]
C. Formation of apoptotic bodies with intact cell membranes
D. Accumulation of glycogen within viable cells
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Cerebral ischemia leads to irreversible cell injury and necrosis. Within 12-24 hours,
the hallmark of irreversible injury is karyorrhexis—fragmentation of the pyknotic nucleus into
multiple basophilic granular pieces distributed throughout the cytoplasm. This represents the
point of no return in cell death, where chromatin clumping (pyknosis) progresses to nuclear
disintegration, accompanied by cytoplasmic eosinophilia and loss of cellular architecture,
distinguishing necrosis from reversible injury or apoptosis.
Q6: A 35-year-old patient presents with severe crushing chest pain following cocaine use.
Cardiac biomarkers are elevated, and coronary angiography reveals no significant atherosclerotic
disease. Endomyocardial biopsy shows contraction band necrosis. Which pathophysiological
mechanism is primarily responsible for this pattern of myocardial injury?
A. Hypoxia-induced ATP depletion leading to coagulative necrosis
B. Calcium overload causing hypercontraction and myofibrillar degeneration [CORRECT]
C. Free radical-mediated lipid peroxidation of cell membranes
D. Caspase activation with programmed cell death
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Contraction band necrosis (coagulative myocytolysis) is characterized by dense,
irregular transverse eosinophilic bands composed of tightly packed, hypercontracted sarcomeres.
This pattern results from massive calcium influx into cardiomyocytes, causing sustained