What is atherosclerosis? - Answers Formation of plaque within arteries; plaque can dislodge and
damage distant organs.
How is atherosclerosis different from arteriosclerosis? - Answers Atherosclerosis is plaque formation
in arteries; arteriosclerosis is the broader idea of arterial stiffening.
What coronary manifestation of atherosclerosis should you know? - Answers Myocardial infarction /
heart attack.
What carotid manifestation of atherosclerosis should you know? - Answers Stroke.
What peripheral manifestation of atherosclerosis should you know? - Answers Intermittent
claudication.
What renal manifestation of atherosclerosis should you know? - Answers Chronic kidney disease.
What mesenteric manifestation of atherosclerosis should you know? - Answers Abdominal pain.
What three broad processes drive plaque development? - Answers Lipids, blood clots, and
inflammation.
What is the foundational pharmacologic approach for reducing ASCVD? - Answers Lower LDL-C.
What are the four major lipoproteins emphasized? - Answers Chylomicrons, VLDL, LDL, and HDL.
What does NPC1L1 do in lipid handling? - Answers Mediates dietary cholesterol uptake into
enterocytes; it is inhibited by ezetimibe.
What happens to VLDL in the endogenous pathway? - Answers It is cleaved by LPL to IDL and then
LDL.
What receptor clears LDL back into the liver? - Answers The LDL receptor.
What receptor delivers HDL cholesterol back to the liver? - Answers SR-BI.
What enzyme do statins inhibit? - Answers HMG-CoA reductase.
What is the main result of lowering blood cholesterol with statins? - Answers Increased LDL receptor
expression and increased LDL uptake from blood.
How do PCSK9 inhibitors lower LDL? - Answers They block PCSK9-driven LDL receptor degradation,
increasing LDL receptor availability.
What enzyme does bempedoic acid inhibit? - Answers ATP-citrate lyase.
What do fibrates activate? - Answers PPAR-alpha.
How does aspirin reduce clotting risk in ASCVD? - Answers It inhibits platelet COX-1, lowering TXA2
and platelet aggregation.
What is the basic blood pressure equation? - Answers Blood pressure = cardiac output x total
peripheral resistance.
What is the cardiac output equation? - Answers Cardiac output = stroke volume x heart rate.
What is normal blood pressure? - Answers Less than 120/80 mmHg.
What do baroreceptors sense? - Answers Stretch in the carotid artery and aorta.
What happens to sympathetic tone when blood pressure falls? - Answers It increases.
Which receptor on the SA node does norepinephrine stimulate to raise heart rate? - Answers Beta-1
receptors.
Which receptor on vascular smooth muscle does norepinephrine stimulate to raise TPR? - Answers
Alpha-1 receptors.
What happens to renin release when blood pressure is low? - Answers Renin release increases,
activating RAAS.
What is pressure natriuresis? - Answers Sodium excretion in response to increased blood pressure.
What blood pressure range is 'elevated'? - Answers SBP 120-129 with DBP less than 80.
What defines stage 1 hypertension? - Answers SBP 130-139 or DBP 80-89.
What defines stage 2 hypertension? - Answers SBP at least 140 or DBP at least 90.
Name three bad outcomes of chronic hypertension. - Answers Stroke, dementia, vision loss, heart
failure, heart attack, kidney disease/failure, sexual dysfunction.
Name three dietary risk factors for hypertension. - Answers Higher sodium intake, lower potassium
intake, lower calcium/magnesium intake, poor diet quality, alcohol intake.
Why do drugs become necessary in chronic hypertension? - Answers Baroreceptors reset upward,
RAAS is overactive, arteries stiffen, and pressure natriuresis shifts right.
Which diuretic class is first line for HTN? - Answers Thiazides.
Name the thiazides emphasized in lecture. - Answers Hydrochlorothiazide, chlorthalidone,
indapamide.
, What are major thiazide adverse effects? - Answers Hyponatremia and hypokalemia.
What does amiloride block? - Answers ENaC in the distal tubule.
What does furosemide block? - Answers NKCC in the thick ascending limb.
What is the main ACE inhibitor adverse effect pair? - Answers Dry cough and angioedema.
Name three ARBs from lecture. - Answers Losartan, valsartan, telmisartan.
What serious combination should never be used? - Answers ACE inhibitor plus ARB.
What is a key adverse effect of spironolactone? - Answers Gynecomastia.
Which calcium channel blocker subclass is first line for HTN? - Answers Dihydropyridines.
Name two non-DHP calcium channel blockers. - Answers Verapamil and diltiazem.
What is the main non-DHP adverse effect? - Answers Bradycardia.
When are beta blockers especially useful in HTN? - Answers When the patient also has HFrEF.
When are alpha-1 blockers particularly useful in HTN? - Answers When the patient also has BPH.
Which antihypertensives are highlighted for pregnancy/preeclampsia? - Answers Methyldopa and
hydralazine.
Name three ways bacteria are classified in this lecture. - Answers By oxygen use, shape, and Gram
cell wall type.
What is a bacillus? - Answers A rod-shaped bacterium.
What is a coccus? - Answers A spherical bacterium.
What is a spirochete? - Answers A spiral-shaped bacterium.
What major polymer makes the bacterial cell wall? - Answers Peptidoglycan.
Which bacterial wall is thicker in peptidoglycan: Gram-positive or Gram-negative? - Answers Gram-
positive.
What additional structure surrounds Gram-negative bacteria? - Answers A second lipid membrane
containing lipopolysaccharides and lipoproteins.
What are the two alternating sugar residues in peptidoglycan? - Answers GlcNAc and MurNAc.
What enzyme polymerizes glycan strands? - Answers Glycosyltransferase.
What enzyme cross-links peptidoglycan strands? - Answers Transpeptidase / DD-transpeptidase /
penicillin-binding protein.
What is the strict definition of an antibiotic? - Answers A soluble compound produced and released
by microorganisms that inhibits or kills other microorganisms.
What is the difference between bactericidal and bacteriostatic? - Answers Bactericidal permanently
removes replicative ability; bacteriostatic temporarily halts growth/replication.
What does 'therapeutic index' mean? - Answers TD50/ED50, the ratio of adverse-effect concentration
to effective concentration.
Why are penicillins and cephalosporins called beta-lactams? - Answers They contain a four-
membered beta-lactam ring.
How do beta-lactams kill bacteria? - Answers They inhibit DD-transpeptidase/PBP, block cell wall
cross-linking, create holes, and act bactericidally.
What cell wall drug in the lecture is not a beta-lactam? - Answers Vancomycin.
How do sulfonamides and trimethoprim work together? - Answers They mimic folate-pathway
intermediates and block sequential steps in bacterial folic acid synthesis.
What cell wall drug is not a beta-lactam? - Answers Vancomycin.
Where do chloramphenicol and macrolides bind? - Answers The 50S ribosomal subunit.
Where do tetracyclines bind and what do they block? - Answers They bind to the 30S subunit and
block incoming tRNA binding.
What are the three emphasized aminoglycoside actions? - Answers Misreading, inhibit translocation.
Why don't these antibiotics usually stop human cytoplasmic protein synthesis? - Answers Because
bacterial 70S ribosomes differ from mammalian 80S ribosomes.
Name four resistance mechanisms. - Answers Drug inactivation, altered binding site, altered
metabolic pathway, reduced drug accumulation/efflux.
What is a virion? - Answers The extracellular virus particle outside an infected cell.
What does 'obligate intracellular parasite' mean? - Answers A virus must use host cell machinery to
reproduce.
What is viral range? - Answers The group of cell types or species a virus can infect.
What is a bacteriophage? - Answers A virus that infects bacteria.
What is pathogenicity? - Answers The ability of a virus to cause disease.
What is virulence? - Answers The degree of pathogenicity.