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Pathophysiology of Disease Test Bank (8th Ed) | Hammer & McPhee | Case-Based Clinical

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Pathophysiology of Disease Test Bank (8th Ed) | Hammer & McPhee | Case-Based Clinical MCQs for Exam Prep Description: Master clinical pathophysiology with a comprehensive, exam-ready test bank built directly from Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine, 8th Edition by Gary D. Hammer and Stephen J. McPhee—the gold-standard text for mechanism-driven clinical learning. This digital test bank provides full textbook coverage across all chapters and organ systems, delivering 20 clinically oriented, case-based MCQs per chapter with clear, evidence-based rationales. Each question is designed to strengthen diagnostic reasoning by integrating molecular, cellular, and systemic disease mechanisms with real-world clinical presentations, laboratory data, and disease progression patterns. Ideal for learners who need efficient, high-yield review, this resource supports deep conceptual understanding, faster content mastery, and greater exam confidence. Questions emphasize cause-and-effect relationships, differential diagnosis, and clinical decision-making—precisely the skills assessed in professional health science programs. Perfect for courses and curricula using Hammer & McPhee, including: Pathophysiology and Medical Pathophysiology Clinical Medicine and Internal Medicine foundations Medical-Surgical Pathophysiology Advanced Nursing Pathophysiology (BSN, MSN, DNP) Physician Assistant (PA) didactic coursework Key Features: Full coverage of Pathophysiology of Disease, 8th Edition 20 high-quality MCQs per chapter Detailed rationales grounded in disease mechanisms Case-based, clinically realistic question design Optimized for exams, quizzes, and independent study A trusted, time-saving study solution for mastering clinical pathophysiology and excelling on exams. Keywords: pathophysiology of disease test bank Hammer and McPhee pathophysiology clinical pathophysiology questions medical pathophysiology study guide case-based pathophysiology MCQs pathophysiology exam prep PA pathophysiology test bank advanced pathophysiology questions Hashtags: #PathophysiologyTestBank #ClinicalPathophysiology #HammerMcPhee #MedicalExamPrep #PAStudentStudy #NursingPathophysiology #CaseBasedMCQs #MedicalEducation #PathophysiologyStudy #ClinicalReasoning

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Uploaded on
December 31, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF DISEASE: AN
INTRODUCTION TO CLINICAL MEDICINE
8TH EDITION


AUTHOR(S)GARY D. HAMMER; STEPHEN J.
MCPHEE


TEST BANK

1
Reference
Ch. 1 — Principles: Homeostasis, Stress, and Adaptation
Clinical stem
A 58-year-old man with long-standing hypertension develops
concentric left ventricular hypertrophy and later reports
exertional dyspnea. Laboratory tests show preserved systolic
function but progressive diastolic dysfunction. Which
mechanism most plausibly explains the transition from
compensated hypertrophy to symptomatic diastolic heart
failure?

,A. Progressive loss of cardiomyocytes from necrosis leading to
reduced contractile mass
B. Maladaptive extracellular matrix remodeling with increased
interstitial fibrosis reducing ventricular compliance
C. Persistent neurohormonal blockade causing decreased
myocardial contractility
D. Developmental metaplasia replacing myocardium with
fibrocartilage
Correct answer
B
Rationale — Correct (B)
Pressure overload induces cardiomyocyte hypertrophy as an
adaptive response, but chronic stress promotes extracellular
matrix deposition and interstitial fibrosis. Fibrosis increases
ventricular stiffness, impairs diastolic filling, and explains
preserved systolic function with symptomatic diastolic
dysfunction. This mechanism is described in the chapter’s
discussion of adaptation and maladaptive remodeling.
Rationales — Incorrect
A. Necrosis with loss of contractile mass more commonly leads
to systolic dysfunction rather than isolated diastolic failure.
C. Neurohormonal blockade (e.g., therapeutic) would not
explain progression to dysfunction; persistent neurohormonal
activation—not blockade—contributes to maladaptation.
D. Metaplasia to fibrocartilage is not a recognized cardiac

,response to pressure overload and is mechanistically
implausible.
Teaching point
Chronic pressure overload → hypertrophy → interstitial fibrosis
→ reduced compliance (diastolic dysfunction).
Citation
Hammer, G. D., & McPhee, S. J. (2019). Pathophysiology of
Disease (8th ed.). Chapter 1.


2
Reference
Ch. 1 — Cellular Injury: Mechanisms and Outcomes
Clinical stem
A 35-year-old woman presents after an overdose of
acetaminophen with elevated AST/ALT, rising prothrombin time,
and hepatic encephalopathy. Which cellular mechanism
primarily explains centrilobular hepatic necrosis in
acetaminophen toxicity?
A. Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation uncoupling due to
direct alcohol-derived lipid peroxidation
B. Formation of a reactive metabolite causing glutathione
depletion and covalent protein binding with oxidative injury
C. Immune-complex deposition in hepatic sinusoids triggering
complement-mediated cytolysis
D. Ischemic hypoperfusion from systemic hypotension only

, Correct answer
B
Rationale — Correct (B)
Acetaminophen is metabolized to a reactive intermediate
(NAPQI) that depletes glutathione and binds cellular proteins,
producing oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction
leading to hepatocellular necrosis—classically centrilobular.
Chapter 1 outlines chemical injury via reactive metabolites and
antioxidant depletion as central mechanisms.
Rationales — Incorrect
A. Lipid peroxidation is a mechanism of oxidative injury but the
stem specifies acetaminophen; alcohol-related pathways are
different.
C. Immune-complex deposition is not the primary mechanism in
acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity.
D. Systemic hypotension can cause ischemic injury but the
pattern and lab findings here point to toxin-mediated
centrilobular necrosis.
Teaching point
Reactive metabolite (NAPQI) → glutathione depletion →
covalent binding → hepatocyte necrosis.
Citation
Hammer, G. D., & McPhee, S. J. (2019). Pathophysiology of
Disease (8th ed.). Chapter 1.
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