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PATHO 313 – Exam 1 Study |GUIDE: Pathophysiology Questions with Complete Solutions (2026/2027) | Graded A

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This document provides a focused study prep resource for PATHO 313 Exam 1, fully updated for the 2026/2027 academic year. It contains carefully selected pathophysiology questions with complete, step-by-step solutions, covering all core concepts tested on Exam 1. Graded A, this guide is perfect for efficient revision, self-testing, and building confidence to achieve top exam results.

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January 20, 2026
Number of pages
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2025/2026
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PATHO 313 – Exam 1 Study Guide:

Pathophysiology Review Questions with

Complete Solutions (2026/2027).




1. An ordered photographic display of a set of chromosomes from a

single cell is a(n):

A. Metaphase spread

B. Autosomal spread

C. Karyotype

D. Anaphase spread

CORRECT ANSWER: C

Rationale: A karyotype is an organized profile of a person's

chromosomes arranged in pairs from largest to smallest, used to detect

chromosomal abnormalities. The chromosomes are photographed

,2|Page


during metaphase, creating a "metaphase spread," but the final

arranged display is the karyotype.

2. An error in which homologous chromosomes fail to separate during

meiosis is termed:

A. Aneuploidy

B. Nondisjunction

C. Polyploidy

D. Anaplasia

CORRECT ANSWER: B

Rationale: Nondisjunction is the failure of homologous chromosomes

or sister chromatids to separate properly during cell division (meiosis I

or II). This results in gametes with an abnormal number of

chromosomes, leading to conditions like Down syndrome (trisomy 21).

3. A somatic cell that does not contain a multiple of 23 chromosomes

is called:

A. An aneuploid cell

,3|Page


B. A euploid cell

C. A polyploid cell

D. A haploid cell

CORRECT ANSWER: A

Rationale: Aneuploidy refers to a cell having an abnormal number of

chromosomes that is not an exact multiple of the haploid number

(n=23). Examples include trisomy (3 copies) or monosomy (1 copy).

Euploid cells have exact multiples (e.g., diploid 2n=46).

4. A 20-year-old pregnant female gives birth to a stillborn child.

Autopsy reveals that the fetus has 92 chromosomes. Which of the

following describes this condition?

A. Euploidy

B. Triploidy

C. Tetraploidy

D. Aneuploidy

CORRECT ANSWER: C

, 4|Page


Rationale: A normal diploid human cell has 46 chromosomes

(2n). Tetraploidy means 4 complete sets of chromosomes (4n = 92

chromosomes). This is usually lethal and results in miscarriage or

stillbirth. Triploidy (3n = 69) is another lethal condition.

5. If a person is a chromosomal mosaic, the person may:

A. Be a carrier of the genetic disease

B. Have a mild form of the genetic disease

C. Have two genetic diseases

D. Be sterile as a result of the genetic disease

CORRECT ANSWER: B

Rationale: Mosaicism occurs when an individual has two or more cell

lines with different karyotypes derived from a single zygote. Symptoms

are often milder because some cells are normal. For example, mosaic

Turner syndrome (45,X/46,XX) may have fewer features than non-

mosaic Turner.
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