FOUNDATIONS PRE-ASSESSMENT 2026/2027 | 100% Correct
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[Section 1: Foundational Pathophysiology & Cellular Mechanisms (Q1-10)]
Q1. A patient suffers an acute myocardial infarction. The ischemic myocardial tissue
demonstrates preserved tissue architecture, loss of nuclei, and intensely eosinophilic
cytoplasm. This pattern of cell death is best classified as:
A. Liquefactive necrosis
B. Coagulative necrosis
C. Caseous necrosis
D. Fat necrosis
Correct Answer: B. Coagulative necrosis [CORRECT]
Rationale: Coagulative necrosis is characteristic of ischemic injury in solid organs
(except the brain), preserving tissue architecture while denaturing proteins and losing
nuclei. Option A occurs in brain abscesses and cerebral infarcts, C is seen in
tuberculosis, and D occurs in acute pancreatitis and breast trauma.
Q2. A patient with a bacterial brain abscess shows complete tissue destruction with pus
formation and loss of all cellular detail. This type of necrosis is:
A. Coagulative necrosis
B. Liquefactive necrosis
C. Caseous necrosis
D. Gangrenous necrosis
Correct Answer: B. Liquefactive necrosis [CORRECT]
Rationale: Liquefactive necrosis results from enzymatic digestion by neutrophils,
producing liquid pus in abscesses and cerebral infarctions. Option A preserves tissue
architecture in ischemic solid organs, C produces cheese-like debris in granulomas, and
D describes ischemic necrosis of a limb.
,Q3. The extrinsic pathway of apoptosis is initiated when:
A. Mitochondrial membrane permeability increases and cytochrome c is released
B. Extracellular death ligands (FasL, TNF) bind to cell surface death receptors
C. Endoplasmic reticulum stress activates caspase-12
D. DNA damage activates p53 and Bax translocation
Correct Answer: B. Extracellular death ligands (FasL, TNF) bind to cell surface death
receptors [CORRECT]
Rationale: The extrinsic apoptosis pathway is triggered by death ligands binding to
transmembrane death receptors (Fas, TNFR1), activating caspase-8. Option A describes
the intrinsic (mitochondrial) pathway, C describes ER stress-mediated apoptosis, and D
describes p53-mediated intrinsic signaling.
Q4. A breast biopsy reveals a well-circumscribed, encapsulated mass with uniform,
well-differentiated cells, low mitotic activity, and no vascular invasion. These features
are most consistent with:
A. Malignant carcinoma with early metastasis
B. Benign neoplasm
C. Anaplastic transformation
D. Invasive ductal carcinoma
Correct Answer: B. Benign neoplasm [CORRECT]
Rationale: Benign neoplasms are typically encapsulated, well-differentiated,
slow-growing, and non-metastasizing. Options A and D describe malignant features
(invasion, metastasis), while C describes loss of differentiation.
Q5. The retinoblastoma (Rb) gene and p53 gene are classified as:
A. Proto-oncogenes that require mutation for activation
B. Tumor suppressor genes that regulate cell cycle checkpoints and initiate apoptosis
C. Oncogenes that drive uncontrolled cellular proliferation
D. DNA repair genes that fix replication errors
Correct Answer: B. Tumor suppressor genes that regulate cell cycle checkpoints and
initiate apoptosis [CORRECT]
Rationale: Rb and p53 are tumor suppressors that inhibit cell cycle progression and
trigger apoptosis in response to DNA damage; loss of both alleles (two-hit hypothesis)
, leads to malignant transformation. Option A describes proto-oncogenes like RAS, C
describes activated oncogenes, and D describes mismatch repair genes like MLH1.
Q6. An activating mutation in the BRAF gene that causes constitutive signaling through
the MAPK pathway is best described as:
A. A tumor suppressor gene deletion
B. An oncogene activation
C. A DNA repair defect
D. An apoptotic pathway enhancement
Correct Answer: B. An oncogene activation [CORRECT]
Rationale: BRAF is a proto-oncogene; activating mutations convert it to an oncogene,
driving continuous proliferative signaling. Option A describes loss-of-function mutations
in suppressor genes, C describes repair deficiencies, and D is the opposite of oncogene
function.
Q7. Carcinomas most commonly metastasize initially via:
A. Hematogenous spread to distant organs
B. Lymphatic spread to regional lymph nodes
C. Seeding of body cavities
D. Direct extension only without distant spread
Correct Answer: B. Lymphatic spread to regional lymph nodes [CORRECT]
Rationale: Carcinomas (epithelial malignancies) typically metastasize first through
lymphatic channels to regional nodes; hematogenous spread is more characteristic of
sarcomas. Options C and D describe less common or non-metastatic patterns.
Q8. Reversible cell injury is characterized by which of the following ultrastructural
changes?
A. Karyorrhexis and cell membrane rupture
B. Cellular swelling, fatty change, and mitochondrial dysfunction
C. Nuclear pyknosis and lysosomal leakage
D. Enzymatic digestion and inflammatory infiltrate