PREP
Advanced Clinical MCQs + Integrated Rationales + Higher-
Order Pathophysiology
Designed for learners seeking deeper clinical understanding beyond memorization-
heavy review materials
Question 1
A 34-year-old woman presents with progressive lower-
extremity edema and frothy urine developing over several
weeks. Laboratory studies reveal severe hypoalbuminemia,
hyperlipidemia, and selective albuminuria. Renal biopsy
demonstrates diffuse effacement of podocyte foot processes
without immune complex deposition. Two weeks later, she
develops sudden pleuritic chest pain and dyspnea.
,Which pathophysiologic alteration most directly predisposed
this patient to her current complication?
A. Endothelial exposure of subendothelial collagen due to
capillary necrosis
B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III causing a hypercoagulable
state
C. Reduced hepatic synthesis of fibrinogen secondary to
protein depletion
D. Autoimmune destruction of platelets leading to
thrombocytosis
E. Increased factor VIII consumption from chronic
intravascular coagulation
Correct Answer: B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III causing a
hypercoagulable state
Clinical Clue Interpretation
The combination of:
• massive proteinuria
• hypoalbuminemia
• hyperlipidemia
• selective albumin loss
• podocyte foot process effacement
,strongly indicates minimal change disease causing nephrotic
syndrome.
The later development of sudden pleuritic chest pain and
dyspnea suggests pulmonary embolism.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Nephrotic syndrome produces a hypercoagulable state due
to urinary loss of:
• antithrombin III
• protein C
• protein S
Loss of these anticoagulant factors shifts hemostasis toward
thrombosis.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
Antithrombin III deficiency is among the most important
thrombotic mechanisms in nephrotic syndrome and explains
the increased risk for:
• renal vein thrombosis
• deep venous thrombosis
• pulmonary embolism
, Why the Distractors Fail
A. Endothelial exposure of subendothelial collagen
Seen in vasculitic or necrotizing vascular injury, not nephrotic
hypercoagulability.
C. Reduced hepatic synthesis of fibrinogen
The liver actually increases synthesis of clotting proteins in
nephrotic syndrome.
D. Autoimmune destruction of platelets
Would predispose to bleeding rather than thrombosis.
E. Increased factor VIII consumption
Consumptive coagulopathy occurs in DIC, not isolated
nephrotic syndrome.
Exam Trap
Students often associate nephrotic syndrome primarily with
edema while overlooking its major thrombotic complications.
Teaching Point
Nephrotic syndrome predisposes to thrombosis because
urinary loss of endogenous anticoagulants creates a
prothrombotic state despite preserved hepatic clotting factor
synthesis.