PREP
Advanced Clinical MCQs + Integrated Rationales + Higher-
Order Pathophysiology
Designed for learners seeking deeper clinical understanding beyond memorization-
heavy review materials
1. Nephrotic Syndrome Hypercoagulability
A 42-year-old man presents with progressive lower-extremity
edema and frothy urine for 3 weeks. Laboratory studies reveal
serum albumin of 2.1 g/dL, hyperlipidemia, and 8.2 g/day
proteinuria. Renal biopsy demonstrates diffuse thickening of
the glomerular basement membrane with subepithelial
immune complex deposition. Three days after admission, he
develops sudden pleuritic chest pain and dyspnea.
Which pathophysiologic alteration most directly predisposed
this patient to his new complication?
,A. Increased hepatic synthesis of fibrinogen due to
inflammatory cytokines
B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III causing impaired
anticoagulant regulation
C. Endothelial destruction leading to exposure of
subendothelial collagen
D. Autoimmune platelet activation mediated by circulating
immune complexes
E. Reduced plasminogen activation from hepatic synthetic
dysfunction
Correct Answer: B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III causing
impaired anticoagulant regulation
Clinical Clue
The patient has severe nephrotic syndrome with massive
proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia, edema, and hyperlipidemia. The
sudden onset of pleuritic chest pain strongly suggests
pulmonary embolism.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Nephrotic syndrome causes urinary loss of anticoagulant
proteins, particularly antithrombin III. This creates a
hypercoagulable state that significantly increases risk of venous
thrombosis and pulmonary embolism.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
,The thrombotic tendency in nephrotic syndrome is primarily
driven by loss of endogenous anticoagulants rather than direct
vascular injury.
Why the Other Choices Fail
• A: Fibrinogen synthesis increases but is not the principal
mechanism driving thrombosis.
• C: Endothelial destruction is more characteristic of
vasculitis or DIC.
• D: Immune complex deposition causes glomerular injury,
not primary platelet activation.
• E: Hepatic synthetic dysfunction is inconsistent with
nephrotic syndrome.
Exam Trap
Students often associate edema and hematuria with nephritic
syndromes and overlook the thrombotic complications uniquely
associated with nephrotic-range protein loss.
High-Yield Clinical Correlation
Membranous nephropathy is one of the nephrotic syndromes
most strongly associated with renal vein thrombosis and
pulmonary embolism.
2. Acute Inflammation Mediator Integration
, A 24-year-old woman develops acute bacterial appendicitis.
Histologic examination reveals marked vasodilation and
neutrophilic infiltration of the appendiceal wall. During the
earliest stages of inflammation, which mediator most directly
produced the vascular change responsible for increased local
blood flow?
A. IL-8
B. Bradykinin
C. Histamine
D. C5a
E. Leukotriene B4
Correct Answer: C. Histamine
Clinical Clue
The question specifically asks about the earliest vascular
change producing increased blood flow during acute
inflammation.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Histamine released from mast cells rapidly induces arteriolar
vasodilation and increases vascular permeability.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
Histamine is the classic immediate mediator responsible for the
initial redness and warmth of acute inflammation.
Why the Other Choices Fail
• A: IL-8 primarily recruits neutrophils.