PREP
Advanced Clinical MCQs + Integrated Rationales + Higher-
Order Pathophysiology
Designed for learners seeking deeper clinical understanding beyond memorization-
heavy review materials
Question 1
A 24-year-old woman develops progressive periorbital
edema and frothy urine several weeks after an upper
respiratory infection. Laboratory studies reveal severe
proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, and hyperlipidemia. Renal
biopsy demonstrates diffuse effacement of podocyte foot
processes on electron microscopy without immune complex
deposition.
,Which pathophysiologic alteration most directly increases
this patient’s risk for venous thrombosis?
A. Reduced hepatic fibrinogen synthesis
B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III
C. Platelet destruction due to immune-mediated injury
D. Decreased endothelial tissue factor expression
E. Suppressed hepatic lipoprotein production
Correct Answer: B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III
Clinical Clue
The combination of massive proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia,
and diffuse podocyte foot process effacement strongly
indicates a nephrotic syndrome, particularly minimal change
disease.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Nephrotic syndromes cause urinary loss of multiple plasma
proteins, including:
• antithrombin III
• protein S
• protein C
Loss of these endogenous anticoagulants produces a
hypercoagulable state, predisposing patients to:
,• renal vein thrombosis
• deep venous thrombosis
• pulmonary embolism
Why the Correct Answer Wins
Antithrombin III normally inhibits thrombin and factor Xa.
Urinary depletion removes a major anticoagulant checkpoint,
creating unopposed coagulation activation.
Why the Distractors Fail
A. Reduced hepatic fibrinogen synthesis
Incorrect. Hepatic fibrinogen production actually increases as
part of compensatory protein synthesis.
C. Platelet destruction due to immune-mediated injury
Incorrect. Nephrotic syndrome is associated with thrombosis,
not thrombocytopenic bleeding states.
D. Decreased endothelial tissue factor expression
Incorrect. Reduced tissue factor would impair coagulation
rather than promote thrombosis.
E. Suppressed hepatic lipoprotein production
Incorrect. Lipoprotein synthesis increases, contributing to
hyperlipidemia.
, Exam Trap
Students frequently associate edema-producing renal
disease primarily with fluid imbalance while overlooking the
major thrombotic complications of nephrotic syndromes.
High-Yield Clinical Correlation
Membranous nephropathy carries particularly high risk for
renal vein thrombosis because of severe urinary protein loss.
Question 2
A 67-year-old man with longstanding hypertension suddenly
develops tearing chest pain radiating to the back. Imaging
demonstrates an aortic dissection originating in the
ascending aorta. Histologic examination reveals cystic medial
degeneration.
Which underlying pathophysiologic process most directly
predisposed this patient to the dissection?
A. Granulomatous destruction of the vasa vasorum
B. Medial smooth muscle apoptosis with extracellular matrix
fragmentation
C. Transmural neutrophilic inflammation of the vessel wall
D. Lipid-laden macrophage accumulation within the intima
E. Immune complex deposition in the vascular media