WGU D236 Pathophysiology OA and PA Exam
with Real Questions Actual Exam 2026/2027 –
Complete Exam-Style Questions with Detailed
Rationales | Pass Guaranteed – A+ Graded
[SECTION 1: CELLULAR & GENETIC PATHOPHYSIOLOGY — Questions 1-12]
Q1: A 45-year-old male bodybuilder presents with significant enlargement of his left biceps
muscle after years of intense resistance training. The muscle cells have increased in size, but the
number of cells has remained the same. Which of the following cellular adaptations best
describes this process?
A. Hyperplasia
B. Atrophy
C. Hypertrophy
D. Metaplasia
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hypertrophy is the correct answer because it is defined as an increase in the size of
individual cells, leading to an increase in tissue mass, without an increase in the number of cells.
This occurs commonly in skeletal muscle due to increased workload, hormonal stimulation, or
mechanical stress. Hyperplasia (A) involves an increase in the number of cells, atrophy (B) is a
decrease in cell size, and metaplasia (D) is a reversible change where one mature cell type is
replaced by another.
Q2: A patient with a history of chronic smoking has undergone a biopsy of the bronchial lining.
The pathologist notes that the normal ciliated columnar epithelial cells have been replaced by
stratified squamous epithelial cells. While this change is reversible, it increases the risk of cancer.
Which cellular adaptation is this?
A. Dysplasia
B. Metaplasia
C. Hyperplasia
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D. Anaplasia
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Metaplasia is the reversible replacement of one differentiated cell type with another,
in this case, columnar to squamous epithelium in response to chronic irritation from smoking.
This adaptive response often occurs to withstand stress but lacks the protective mucus-secreting
function of the original epithelium, predisposing the patient to dysplasia and carcinoma.
Dysplasia (A) refers to disordered growth within a cell lineage, not a change in cell type.
Hyperplasia (C) is an increase in cell number, and anaplasia (D) refers to undifferentiated cells
seen in malignancy.
Q3: A 65-year-old female presents with a history of "getting smaller" as she ages. She has lost
muscle mass and strength. Lab results show no significant hormonal or neurological disease.
This age-related reduction in cell size is best described as:
A. Physiologic atrophy
B. Pathologic hypertrophy
C. Hyperplasia
D. Necrosis
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Physiologic atrophy is the correct term for the decrease in cell size and organ mass
that occurs with normal aging, such as senile atrophy of the brain or muscles (sarcopenia). It is a
programmed decrease in function and structure when tissues are not used or due to reduced
hormonal stimulation. Pathologic hypertrophy (B) is an abnormal enlargement, hyperplasia (C)
is an increase in cell number, and necrosis (D) is a form of cell death, not shrinkage.
Q4: A pathologist examines a tissue sample from a heart attack patient and notices that the
myocardial cells have died, the nucleus has disappeared (karyolysis), and there is significant
inflammatory cell infiltration. The cellular architecture is blurred, but the basic outline of the
tissue remains. Which type of necrosis is this?
A. Liquefactive necrosis
B. Caseous necrosis
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C. Coagulative necrosis
D. Fat necrosis
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Coagulative necrosis is the hallmark of ischemic injury in most tissues, particularly
the heart and kidney. It results from protein denaturation, which causes the cells to become firm
and eosinophilic, often preserving the basic tissue architecture (ghost outlines) while inducing an
inflammatory response. Liquefactive necrosis (A) is typical of brain infarctions or bacterial
infections (digestion of tissue). Caseous necrosis (B) is "cheese-like" and seen in tuberculosis.
Fat necrosis (D) occurs in the pancreas or breast.
Q5: A patient is brought to the emergency department after suffering a stroke. CT scan reveals a
soft, liquefied area in the brain tissue caused by the enzymatic digestion of dead neurons. Which
specific type of necrosis is occurring?
A. Coagulative
B. Liquefactive
C. Fat
D. Fibrinoid
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Liquefactive necrosis is characteristic of the central nervous system (CNS) because
brain cells are rich in lipids and lysosomal enzymes, which digest the dead tissue quickly,
resulting in a soft, liquid-filled space. Coagulative necrosis (A) preserves tissue outlines, fat
necrosis (C) involves saponification of lipids, and fibrinoid necrosis (D) involves immune
complex deposition in blood vessels.
Q6: During a routine Pap smear, cervical cells are identified that are disordered, displaying
pleomorphism (variation in size/shape), hyperchromatic nuclei (dark staining), and increased
mitotic figures. However, the changes are confined to the epithelium and have not invaded the
basement membrane. This condition is known as:
A. Metaplasia
B. Dysplasia
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C. Anaplasia
D. Hyperplasia
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Dysplasia is defined as disordered cellular growth that is often a response to chronic
irritation or inflammation; it is considered a premalignant change because it involves loss of
uniformity and architectural orientation. It is distinct from metaplasia (A) because the cells do
not change type but rather become abnormal within their lineage. Anaplasia (D) refers to
undifferentiated tumor cells, and hyperplasia (C) is simply an increase in the number of cells
without abnormal morphology.
Q7: A researcher is studying a cell that is shrinking and condensing its chromatin. The cell is
breaking into small, membrane-bound fragments called apoptotic bodies, which are being
phagocytosed by macrophages without causing inflammation. This process is best described as:
A. Necrosis
B. Apoptosis
C. Pyroptosis
D. Autophagy
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Apoptosis is programmed cell death characterized by cell shrinkage, chromatin
condensation, DNA fragmentation, and the formation of apoptotic bodies that are phagocytosed,
preventing inflammation. It is a physiological process (e.g., embryogenesis) or a pathologic
response to mild DNA damage. Necrosis (A) causes inflammation and cell swelling. Pyroptosis
(C) is inflammatory cell death often due to infection, and autophagy (D) involves the digestion of
cellular components for recycling.
Q8: A patient with a genetic disorder lacks the enzyme to break down specific complex
molecules, leading to the accumulation of undigested substrates within the lysosomes of cells.
This mechanism of cell injury is primarily classified as:
A. Genetic injury
B. Hypoxic injury