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NR507 Advanced Pathophysiology Final Exam - Chamberlain University 2026/2027 | Complete Guide | Grade A | Disease Mechanism Mastery

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Prepare for your NR507 Advanced Pathophysiology Final Exam at Chamberlain University with this Complete Guide graded A for 2026/2027. This comprehensive resource covers disease mechanisms, system-specific disorders, cellular pathology, genetic influences, immune responses, and clinical correlations for complete pathophysiological mastery. Essential for nursing students demonstrating comprehensive knowledge in final assessment.

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NR507 Advanced Pathophysiology
Course
NR507 Advanced Pathophysiology

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NR507 Advanced Pathophysiology Final Exam -
Chamberlain University 2026/2027 | Complete Guide |
Grade A | Disease Mechanism Mastery



Time Limit: 3 h Pass Mark: 80 % (60/75)



DOMAIN 1 – CELLULAR, GENETIC & IMMUNOLOGIC INTEGRATION (19 Qs)

Q1

A 58-year-old female presents with symmetric joint pain, malar rash, photosensitivity,
and pleuritic chest pain. Lab work reveals positive ANA with anti-dsDNA antibodies,
leukopenia, and proteinuria. A kidney biopsy shows immune complex deposition in the
glomeruli. The primary, interconnected pathophysiologic processes driving this
multi-system presentation are:

A. Type II cytotoxic hypersensitivity targeting renal and dermal basement membranes.

B. Systemic dysregulation of B-cell tolerance with autoantibody production and immune
complex-mediated tissue injury.

C. Isolated overproduction of inflammatory cytokines (e.g., TNF-α) leading to synovitis
and vasculitis.

D. A genetic defect in complement C1 inhibitor leading to uncontrolled inflammatory
pathway activation.

Correct: B

,Rationale: Classic SLE. Core defect = loss of B-cell tolerance → autoantibodies
(anti-dsDNA) → immune complexes (Type III) deposit in skin, kidneys, pleura →
complement activation → inflammation. A = Type II (antibody-mediated) – incorrect
pattern. C = cytokine overproduction is secondary, not primary. D = hereditary
angioedema.



Q2

A 45-year-old man with chronic HBV infection develops hepatocellular carcinoma. Serial
imaging shows a 3 cm hypodense lesion with arterial enhancement and venous
wash-out. Which interconnected molecular pathways best explain the oncogenic
transformation in this setting?

A. HBV DNA integration → insertional mutagenesis of TERT + chronic
inflammation-driven IL-6/STAT3 activation → hepatocyte proliferation and apoptosis
evasion.

B. Single-base substitution in p53 only, without inflammatory contribution.

C. Defective DNA mismatch-repair system causing microsatellite instability.

D. Telomere lengthening via hTERT amplification independent of viral integration.

Correct: A

Rationale: HBV integrates into host genome, commonly near TERT (telomerase),
up-regulating it, while chronic inflammation (IL-6/STAT3) promotes proliferation and
survival. B ignores inflammation. C = mismatch repair defect is characteristic of Lynch
syndrome, not HBV-HCC. D is incomplete – viral integration is key.



Q3

,A 6-year-old boy has recurrent severe bacterial infections (S. pneumoniae, H.
influenzae). Flow cytometry shows absent B cells, low IgG, IgA, and IgM, but normal
T-cell numbers and function. Genetic testing reveals a BTK nonsense mutation. Which
defective cellular signaling pathway underlies his immunodeficiency?

A. IL-12/IFN-γ pathway → impaired intracellular killing.

B. BTK-dependent B-cell receptor signaling → failure of B-cell maturation beyond pre-B
stage.

C. ZAP-70 deficiency → T-cell anergy.

D. Complement C3 deficiency → impaired opsonization.

Correct: B

Rationale: X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) – BTK mutation blocks BCR signaling →
maturation arrest at pre-B → absent B cells and antibodies. A = IL-12/IFN-γ defect (e.g.,
MSMD). C = ZAP-70 defect affects T cells. D = complement defect → extracellular
bacterial infections, but B cells would be present.



Q4

A 35-year-old woman with Crohn’s disease on infliximab develops new-onset psoriasis.
Which immunologic paradox best explains this reaction?

A. Anti-TNF therapy shifts cytokine balance toward IL-23/Th17 axis → psoriatic skin
inflammation.

B. Type I hypersensitivity to infliximab.

C. Neutralizing antibodies leading to loss of mucosal healing.

, D. Direct toxic effect of infliximab on keratinocytes.

Correct: A

Rationale: TNF blockade removes inhibition of IL-23 → Th17 expansion → psoriasis
(paradoxical ADR). B = type I hypersensitivity would present as anaphylaxis/serum
sickness, not psoriasis. C = neutralizing antibodies reduce drug efficacy but don’t cause
psoriasis. D is not a recognized mechanism.



Q5

A 65-year-old male smoker presents with fatigue, weight loss, and splenomegaly. CBC
shows WBC 50,000 with 85 % mature-appearing lymphocytes, anemia, and
thrombocytopenia. Flow cytometry reveals CD5+, CD23+ B cells. Cytogenetics show
del(13q). Which interconnected pathophysiologic mechanisms drive the cytopenias?

A. Autoimmune hemolysis due to warm IgG antibodies.

B. Bone-marrow replacement by clonal B cells + cytokine-mediated suppression of
normal hematopoiesis.

C. Megaloblastic anemia from folate deficiency.

D. Hypersplenism only, without marrow involvement.

Correct: B

Rationale: CLL – mature clonal B cells infiltrate marrow → space-occupying + cytokine
milieu (e.g., IL-10, TGF-β) suppresses normal progenitors → cytopenias. A =
autoimmune hemolysis can occur, but is not primary. C = not megaloblastic. D =
hypersplenism contributes, but marrow infiltration is central.

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NR507 Advanced Pathophysiology

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