TINGALE (LATEST 2026)] COMPLETE EXAM QUESTIONS AND
VERIFIED ANSWERS | 2026–2027 LATEST UPDATE |
GUARANTEED PASS | DETAILED RATIONALES | FULL STUDY
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PREPARATION
1. A patient develops shortness of breath, wheezing, and chest tightness after exposure to dust at
work. Which pathophysiologic process is most likely occurring?
A. Alveolar collapse due to surfactant loss
B. Acute bronchoconstriction mediated by histamine release
C. Pulmonary fibrosis due to chronic inflammation
D. Left ventricular failure causing pulmonary edema
Correct Answer: B. Acute bronchoconstriction mediated by histamine release
Rationale: The symptoms are consistent with an acute hypersensitivity reaction where mast cells
release histamine, causing bronchial smooth muscle contraction. A is associated with ARDS, C is
chronic, and D would present with crackles and fluid overload rather than wheezing triggered by
exposure.
2. Which cellular adaptation is most likely seen in the uterine smooth muscle during pregnancy?
A. Dysplasia
B. Hyperplasia
C. Atrophy
D. Necrosis
Correct Answer: B. Hyperplasia
Rationale: Hormonal stimulation during pregnancy causes an increase in cell number (hyperplasia).
Atrophy is a decrease in cell size, dysplasia is disordered growth, and necrosis is cell death.
3. A patient with chronic smoking history develops persistent productive cough and airway
inflammation. What is the primary mechanism of chronic bronchitis?
A. Alveolar membrane destruction
B. Mucus gland enlargement and increased goblet cells
C. Autoimmune destruction of bronchioles
D. Sudden bronchial vasodilation
Correct Answer: B. Mucus gland enlargement and increased goblet cells
Rationale: Chronic irritation from smoking leads to mucus hypersecretion and goblet cell
proliferation. A describes emphysema, C is not typical, and D is unrelated.
4. Which process is responsible for edema formation in heart failure?
A. Increased oncotic pressure in capillaries
B. Decreased hydrostatic pressure
C. Increased hydrostatic pressure due to venous congestion
D. Decreased lymphatic obstruction only
Correct Answer: C. Increased hydrostatic pressure due to venous congestion
Rationale: Heart failure leads to fluid backing up into venous circulation, increasing hydrostatic
pressure and pushing fluid into tissues.
,5. A patient with type 1 diabetes develops ketoacidosis. What is the primary cause?
A. Excess insulin production
B. Increased glucose uptake by cells
C. Fat breakdown due to insulin deficiency
D. Increased glycogen storage
Correct Answer: C. Fat breakdown due to insulin deficiency
Rationale: Without insulin, the body metabolizes fat for energy, producing ketones. The other options
represent opposite or unrelated processes.
6. What is the earliest cellular response to hypoxic injury?
A. Necrosis
B. Cellular swelling
C. Fibrosis
D. Apoptosis
Correct Answer: B. Cellular swelling
Rationale: ATP depletion disrupts sodium-potassium pumps, causing water influx and swelling.
Necrosis and fibrosis occur later.
7. Which condition is characterized by autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells?
A. Type 2 diabetes mellitus
B. Type 1 diabetes mellitus
C. Diabetes insipidus
D. Metabolic syndrome
Correct Answer: B. Type 1 diabetes mellitus
Rationale: Type 1 DM is autoimmune-mediated beta-cell destruction leading to absolute insulin
deficiency.
8. A patient has fever, leukocytosis, and localized redness after a cut. Which inflammatory
mediator is most responsible?
A. Insulin
B. Histamine
C. Erythropoietin
D. Thyroxine
Correct Answer: B. Histamine
Rationale: Histamine increases vascular permeability and vasodilation, producing redness and
swelling.
9. Which electrolyte imbalance is most commonly associated with cardiac dysrhythmias?
A. Hyperkalemia
B. Hypernatremia
C. Hypocalcemia
D. Hypoglycemia
Correct Answer: A. Hyperkalemia
Rationale: Potassium directly affects cardiac conduction; elevated levels disrupt electrical activity.
10. A patient with liver cirrhosis develops ascites. What is the primary mechanism?
A. Increased albumin production
B. Decreased plasma oncotic pressure
C. Increased red blood cell production
D. Increased cardiac output
, Correct Answer: B. Decreased plasma oncotic pressure
Rationale: Liver dysfunction reduces albumin synthesis, lowering oncotic pressure and allowing fluid
leakage.
11. Which condition is caused by chronic ischemia leading to cell death?
A. Infarction
B. Hypertrophy
C. Hyperplasia
D. Dysplasia
Correct Answer: A. Infarction
Rationale: Infarction is tissue death due to prolonged lack of blood supply.
12. What is the main cause of respiratory acidosis?
A. Excessive bicarbonate loss
B. CO₂ retention due to hypoventilation
C. Excess oxygen intake
D. Hyperventilation
Correct Answer: B. CO₂ retention due to hypoventilation
Rationale: Reduced ventilation leads to CO₂ accumulation and acidification of blood.
13. Which immune cell is primarily responsible for antibody production?
A. T cells
B. B lymphocytes
C. Neutrophils
D. Macrophages
Correct Answer: B. B lymphocytes
Rationale: B cells differentiate into plasma cells that produce antibodies.
14. A patient experiences swelling after bee sting exposure. What type of hypersensitivity is this?
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type III
D. Type IV
Correct Answer: A. Type I
Rationale: IgE-mediated immediate hypersensitivity causes allergic reactions such as swelling and
anaphylaxis.
15. What is the hallmark of right-sided heart failure?
A. Pulmonary edema
B. Jugular venous distention
C. Hemoptysis
D. Pleural effusion only
Correct Answer: B. Jugular venous distention
Rationale: Right-sided failure leads to systemic venous congestion.
16. A patient with chronic kidney disease develops anemia. What is the primary cause?
A. Excess iron intake
B. Reduced erythropoietin production
C. Increased hemolysis from infection
D. Vitamin C toxicity