PREP
Advanced Clinical MCQs + Integrated Rationales + Higher-
Order Pathophysiology
Designed for learners seeking deeper clinical understanding beyond memorization-
heavy review materials
1. A 24-year-old woman presents with progressive periorbital
edema and frothy urine 2 weeks after an upper respiratory
infection. Laboratory studies reveal serum albumin of 2.1
g/dL, hyperlipidemia, and selective albuminuria. Electron
microscopy demonstrates diffuse podocyte foot process
effacement. The patient subsequently develops renal vein
thrombosis. Which pathophysiologic alteration most
directly predisposed this patient to the thrombotic
complication?
A. Increased hepatic fibrinogen synthesis
B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III
C. Endothelial exposure of tissue factor
,D. Complement-mediated endothelial injury
E. Reduced plasminogen activation
Correct Answer: B. Urinary loss of antithrombin III
Clinical Clue
Selective albuminuria with podocyte foot process effacement
strongly indicates minimal change disease producing
nephrotic syndrome.
Mechanistic Interpretation
Nephrotic syndromes cause urinary loss of anticoagulant
proteins, especially antithrombin III, producing a
hypercoagulable state. Renal vein thrombosis is a classic
complication.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
Loss of antithrombin III removes inhibition of thrombin and
factor Xa, markedly increasing thrombotic risk despite
preserved clotting factor production.
Why the Other Choices Fail
• A: Hepatic fibrinogen synthesis increases secondarily but is
not the primary driver.
• C: Tissue factor exposure is more characteristic of severe
endothelial injury or DIC.
• D: Complement injury is not central in minimal change
disease.
,• E: Reduced plasminogen activation contributes less
significantly than anticoagulant loss.
Exam Trap
Students often associate thrombosis only with inflammatory
vasculitis or endothelial injury while overlooking urinary
anticoagulant loss in nephrotic states.
High-Yield Clinical Correlation
Membranous nephropathy and minimal change disease are
among the nephrotic syndromes strongly associated with
thromboembolic complications.
2. A 63-year-old man with long-standing hypertension
develops acute pulmonary edema after a myocardial
infarction involving the left ventricle. Despite
supplemental oxygen, he remains profoundly hypoxemic.
Histologic examination of the lungs would most likely
demonstrate which alteration most directly responsible for
impaired gas exchange?
A. Destruction of alveolar septa
B. Diffuse fibrin-rich hyaline membrane formation
C. Bronchial smooth muscle hypertrophy
D. Pulmonary arterial medial hyperplasia
E. Caseating granulomatous inflammation
, Correct Answer: B. Diffuse fibrin-rich hyaline membrane
formation
Clinical Clue
Refractory hypoxemia after severe systemic injury suggests
acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).
Mechanistic Interpretation
ARDS involves diffuse alveolar damage with increased
vascular permeability leading to leakage of protein-rich fluid
into alveoli.
Why the Correct Answer Wins
Hyaline membranes composed of fibrin and necrotic cellular
debris impair oxygen diffusion and reduce lung compliance,
causing severe hypoxemia.
Why the Other Choices Fail
• A: Seen in emphysema, not ARDS.
• C: Characteristic of asthma.
• D: Associated with pulmonary hypertension.
• E: Seen in tuberculosis or fungal infections.
Exam Trap
ARDS is frequently mistaken for cardiogenic pulmonary
edema. The key distinction is diffuse alveolar damage and
permeability injury.