PREP
Advanced Clinical MCQs + Integrated Rationales + Higher-
Order Pathophysiology
Designed for learners seeking deeper clinical understanding beyond memorization-
heavy review materials
1. A 26-year-old woman presents with progressive lower-
extremity edema and frothy urine. Laboratory studies
demonstrate severe hypoalbuminemia, hyperlipidemia, and
selective albuminuria. She later develops sudden pleuritic
chest pain and dyspnea. Which pathophysiologic alteration
most directly predisposed this patient to her thrombotic
complication?
A. Increased hepatic synthesis of fibrinogen secondary to
hypoalbuminemia
B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III producing a hypercoagulable
state
C. Endothelial destruction caused by circulating immune
,complexes
D. Platelet dysfunction due to nephrotic-range proteinuria
Correct Answer: B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III producing a
hypercoagulable state
Clinical Clue
The combination of massive proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia,
edema, and hyperlipidemia strongly indicates nephrotic
syndrome.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Nephrotic syndrome causes urinary loss of multiple plasma
proteins, including antithrombin III, a major endogenous
anticoagulant. Loss of this inhibitor shifts hemostasis toward
thrombosis, predisposing patients to renal vein thrombosis and
pulmonary embolism.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
The patient’s pulmonary symptoms suggest thromboembolism.
The most direct mechanism linking nephrotic syndrome to
thrombosis is depletion of anticoagulant proteins through the
damaged glomerular filtration barrier.
Why the Other Choices Fail
• A: Increased fibrinogen contributes indirectly but is not
the primary mechanism.
• C: Immune complexes are more characteristic of nephritic
syndromes.
, • D: Platelet dysfunction would predispose to bleeding
rather than thrombosis.
Exam Trap
Students often focus on edema and forget that nephrotic
syndrome creates one of the classic acquired hypercoagulable
states.
Clinical Correlation
Membranous nephropathy and minimal change disease are
classically associated with thrombotic risk due to urinary
anticoagulant loss.
Memory Anchor
“Protein loss includes anticoagulants.”
2. A 67-year-old man with a 50-pack-year smoking history
presents with chronic cough, weight loss, hemoptysis, and
confusion. Laboratory studies reveal hypercalcemia with
suppressed parathyroid hormone levels. Imaging
demonstrates a centrally located hilar mass. Which
mechanism best explains this patient’s metabolic
abnormality?
A. Osteolytic metastases activating osteoclasts
B. Tumor production of parathyroid hormone-related peptide
C. Vitamin D secretion by pulmonary macrophages
D. Ectopic calcitonin production by malignant cells
, Correct Answer: B. Tumor production of parathyroid
hormone-related peptide
Clinical Clue
A central hilar mass in a heavy smoker with hypercalcemia
strongly suggests squamous cell carcinoma of the lung.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Squamous cell carcinoma commonly produces parathyroid
hormone-related peptide (PTHrP), which mimics PTH activity
and increases serum calcium through osteoclastic bone
resorption and renal calcium retention.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
Suppressed endogenous PTH in the setting of hypercalcemia
strongly supports a paraneoplastic PTHrP-mediated process.
Why the Other Choices Fail
• A: Osteolytic metastases can cause hypercalcemia but are
less classically associated with squamous cell carcinoma.
• C: Vitamin D-mediated hypercalcemia is more
characteristic of granulomatous diseases.
• D: Calcitonin lowers calcium levels.
Exam Trap
Students frequently identify the cancer correctly but fail to
connect the associated paraneoplastic mechanism.
Clinical Correlation