PREP
Advanced Clinical MCQs + Integrated Rationales + Higher-
Order Pathophysiology
Designed for learners seeking deeper clinical understanding beyond
memorization-heavy review materials
Question 1
A 34-year-old woman presents with progressive periorbital
edema and frothy urine developing over several weeks.
Laboratory studies demonstrate heavy proteinuria,
hypoalbuminemia, and hyperlipidemia. Renal biopsy reveals
diffuse effacement of podocyte foot processes without immune
complex deposition. Three weeks later, she develops acute left
flank pain secondary to renal vein thrombosis.
,Which pathophysiologic alteration most directly predisposed
this patient to thrombus formation?
A. Increased hepatic synthesis of fibrinogen following albumin
loss
B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III creating a hypercoagulable
state
C. Endothelial exposure of collagen from glomerular basement
membrane injury
D. Reduced protein C activation due to hepatic dysfunction
E. Platelet destruction from splenic sequestration
Correct Answer: B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III creating a
hypercoagulable state
Clinical Clue Interpretation
The combination of massive proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia,
hyperlipidemia, and podocyte effacement strongly indicates a
nephrotic syndrome. The development of renal vein thrombosis
is a classic complication of nephrotic-range protein loss.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Nephrotic syndromes cause urinary loss of anticoagulant
proteins, particularly antithrombin III, leading to a
hypercoagulable state. This markedly increases the risk of
venous thrombosis, especially renal vein thrombosis.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
,The thrombosis is driven primarily by loss of endogenous
anticoagulants rather than direct endothelial injury.
Why the Other Choices Fail
A. Increased fibrinogen synthesis occurs secondarily but is not
the principal mechanism.
C. Collagen exposure contributes to platelet adhesion locally
but does not explain systemic thrombophilia.
D. Hepatic dysfunction is not present.
E. Splenic sequestration would predispose to bleeding rather
than thrombosis.
Exam Trap
Students often focus on hyperlipidemia or edema and miss the
high-yield thrombotic complications of nephrotic syndromes.
Teaching Point
Nephrotic syndromes increase thrombosis risk through urinary
loss of antithrombin III and other anticoagulant factors despite
preserved hepatic clotting factor synthesis.
Question 2
A 61-year-old man with long-standing hypertension suddenly
develops tearing chest pain radiating to the back. Imaging
demonstrates an aortic dissection originating in the ascending
aorta. Histologic examination of the aortic wall reveals cystic
medial degeneration with fragmentation of elastic fibers.
, Which pathophysiologic process most directly weakened the
vessel wall?
A. Lipid accumulation within the tunica intima
B. Granulomatous destruction of the vasa vasorum
C. Smooth muscle apoptosis with extracellular matrix
degeneration
D. Neutrophilic infiltration causing enzymatic liquefaction
E. Fibrinoid necrosis from immune complex deposition
Correct Answer: C. Smooth muscle apoptosis with
extracellular matrix degeneration
Clinical Clue Interpretation
Ascending aortic dissection associated with cystic medial
degeneration points toward degeneration of the tunica media.
Mechanism Driving the Disease
Loss of smooth muscle cells and fragmentation of elastic tissue
weaken the aortic media, reducing tensile strength and
predisposing to dissection under systemic pressure.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
The hallmark lesion of cystic medial degeneration is
degeneration of elastic connective tissue with smooth muscle
loss.
Why the Other Choices Fail
A. Atherosclerosis primarily affects the intima.
B. Granulomatous vasculitis is characteristic of tertiary syphilis.