Lung 1. The type of emphysema associated with smoking is a. Panacinar b. Centriacinar c. Distal acinar d. Irregular e. None of the above 2. squamous cell lung carcinoma a. has a 5 year survival rate of 60% b. is most commonly associated with smokers c. is commonest peripherally d. is commonest in females e. ? 3. Intrinsic asthma: a. Decreases vagal afferent responsiveness b. Is associated with atopy c. is commonly triggered by viral infections d. IgE levels are often elevated e. The airway is not hyperreactive 4. Lobar pneumonia a. Is more common in the young and the elderly b. Involves morphological changes of red to grey hepatisation c. Not usually associated with a productive cough d. Is associated with immunosuppression e. Rarely caused by streptococcus 5. Chronic bronchitis is characterized by a. Smooth muscle hypertrophy b. Leukocyte infiltration c. Mucous gland hypertrophy d. Increased size of goblet cells e. ? 6. All of the following cause compressive atelectasis EXCEPT: a. Pneumothorax b. Asthma c. CCF d. Peritonitis e. Pleural effusion 7. Which is not true of bronchogenic cysts a. They may become dysplastic b. They occasionally cause pneumothorax c. They have an epithelial layer d. They may contain mucous e. They are often associated with bronchioles 8. Chronic bronchitis major morphological change involves a. Leukocyte infiltration b. Decreased goblet cell number c. Smooth muscle hypertrophy d. Increased mucosal gland depth (REID index) e. Monocyte infiltration 9. Regarding bronchogenic carcinoma a. It most often arises around the hilum of the lung b. Distant spread occurs solely by lymphatic spread c. Metastasis are most common to the liver d. Small cell carcinoma is the most common type e. Surgical resection is often effective for small cell carcinoma 10. In emphysema a. A deficiency of alpha 1 antitryptin is protective b. Centriacinar destruction leads to obstructive overinflation c. The protease-antiprotease mechanism is the most plausible explanation of the disease d. Smokers have an increased number of macrophages in the bronchi e. Elastase activity is unaffected by oxygen free radicals 11. In chronic bronchitis a. The hallmark is hypersecretion of mucous in the large airways b. There is a marked increase in goblet cells in the main bronchi c. Infection is a primary cause d. Cigarette smoke stimulates alveolar leukocytes e. Dysplasia of the epithelium leads to emphysema 12. In bronchial asthma a. Extrinsic asthma is initiated by diverse non-immune mechanisms b. Sub-epithelial vagal receptors in respiratory mucosa are insensitive to irritants c. IgG plays a role d. Bronchial wall smooth muscle is atrophic e. Primary mediators include eosinophilic and neutrophilic chemotactic factors 13. In bacterial pneumonia a. Patchy consolidation of the lung is the dominant feature of bronchopneumonia b. A lobar distribution is a function of anatomical variations c. Klebsiella pneumonia is a common virulent agent d. Alveolar clearance of bacteria is achieved by lymphocytes e. The nasopharynx is inconsequential in defending the lung against infection 14. Regarding anatomical types of emphysema: a. Panacinar is more common than centriacinar b. Centriacinar is not common in smokers c. Paraseptal emphysema is associated with alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency d. Spontaneous penumothorax is common in panacinar type e. Distal portion of acinus is predominantly involved in paraseptal emphysema 15. Comparing the pulmonary oedema of CCF with ARDS, a defining characteristic of ARDS is: a. Spontaneous resolution within 48 hours b. Formation of hyaline membranes c. A deficiency of surfactant d. A distinct lobar pattern of consolidation e. High pulmonary wedge pressures 16. Bacterial pneumonia: a. May be predisposed to by immotile cilia syndromes (eg. Kartageners) b. Is characterized by an acute (neutrophilic) suppurative exudates within alveolar spaces and airways c. Is a frequent cause of death in hospitalized patients d. May be complicated by organisation e. All of the above 17. Atypical pneumonia a. Is characterized by exudates within the alveolar air spaces b. Has a predominantly neutrophilic cell infiltrate c. Has a mortality rate of 20% in non-epidemic cases d. Is most often caused by cytomegalovirus e. Is associated with the formation of hyaline membranes within the alveolar air spaces 18. Regarding pulmonary infections: a. Respiratory tract infections are more frequent than infection of any other organ b. Patchy consolidation is uncommon with bronchopneumonia c. Lobar pneumonia is more frequent than bronchopneumonia d. Haematogenous secondary seeding of lungs does not occur e. Commonest infectious agents are H. influenzae and K. pneumoniae 19. The following is not an obstructive airways disease a. Emphysema b. Pneumonia c. Asthma d. Bronchitis e. Bronchiectasis 20. With respect to atelectasis a. The mediastinum may shift away from the affected lung b. Obstructive atelectasis is commonest after trauma c. Compressive atelectasis is commonly encountered in patients with chronic obstructive airways disease d. It is an irreversible disorder e. It can develop when there is loss of pulmonary surfactant 21. Regarding lung abscesses: a. Aspiration most commonly results in abscesses in the left lung b. Anaerobic organisms are the exclusive isolates in 60% of cases c. A central area of liquefactive necrosis develops d. Infected emboli from bacterial endocarditis typically affect the right lung e. Secondary empyema occurs in 50% of cases 22. Regarding emphysema a. The usual age of onset is 40-50 years b. Copious sputum production is common c. Cor pulmonale is a common feature d. Airways resistance may be normal e. CXR usually shows a large heart 23. Regarding bronchogenic carcinoma a. It most often arises around the hilum of the lung b. Distant spread occurs solely by lymphatic spread c. Metastasis is most common to the liver d. Small cell carcinoma is the most common type e. Surgical resection is often effective for small cell carcinoma 24. All of the following are neoplastic syndromes associated with lung cancer EXCEPT: a. Cushings syndrome b. Syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion c. Hypocalcaemia d. Carcinoid syndrome e. Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy 25. Which of the following is not a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with lung carcinoma? a. Ectopic ADH secretion b. Dermatomyositis c. Migratory thrombophlebitis d. Eaton-Lambert (myasthenic) syndrome e. Thrombocytosis 26. The features of bronchogenic carcinoma include a. The classification of “oat cell” tumour withing the large cell type b. High initial response to chemotherapy for small cell type c. The strongest correlation with cigarette smoking in the adenocarcinoma type d. That 50% of small cell type occur in non-smokers e. Histological deatures identical in small cell carcinomas and squamous cell types 27. In lobar pneumonia: a. It is more common in the young and elderly b. Get a change from red to grey hepatisation c. Not usually associated with a productive cough d. Rarely caused by streptococcus e. Associated with immunosuppression 28. obstructive atelectasis a. the mediastinum moves away from lesion b. involves the reabsorption of air c. is caused by pleural fluid d. ? e. ? 29. Asthma shows all EXCEPT a. Thinning of basement membrane b. Submucosal gland hypertrophy c. Hypertrophy of smooth muscle d. Charcot Leyden crystals e. Cushmann’s spirals 30. Regarding the use of steroids in Asthma a. They inhibit cytokines b. Cause bronchodilation c. Given nocte because of diurnal variation d. ? e. ? 31. The most common type of emphysema associated with cigarette smoking is a. Centrilobular b. Panacinar c. Paraseptal d. Irregular e. Compensatory 32. In regards to bacterial pneumonia a. A predominantly interstitial pattern of inflammation is seen in some paediatric patients b. Most lobar pneumonias are caused by pneumococci which enter the lung haematogenously c. Congestion predominates in the first 72 houes d. Complications are more common with bronchopneumonias e. Organisation of exudates into a fibrotic scar tissue is not a complication 33. Chronic bronchitis a. Is twenty times more common in heavy smokers b. Is present in any patient with persistent cough with sputum production for at least two months in three consecutive years c. Is characterized by early functional respiratory impairment d. Can progress to cor pulmonale and cardiac failure e. Is a disease of the large airways 34. Regarding emphysema a. The commonest type is panacinar form b. In centrilobular form, the distal alveoli are spared c. In panacinar form, the upper lobes of the lungs are mainly affected d. In centrilobular form, the lower lobes of the lungs are mainly affected e. There is no association between cigarette smoking and emphysema 35. Features of atopic asthma include all of the following EXCEPT: a. IgE production by beta-cells b. Induction of TH1 cells c. Release of IL-4 and IL-5 d. Growth of mast cells e. Activation of eosinophils 36. Restrictive lung disease is characterized by a. Acute inflammation of alveolar interstitium b. Increased compliance c. Ground glass appearance on chest X-ray film d. Long term complication of mesothelioma e. Increased lung volume 37. ARDS is associated with all of the following EXCEPT: a. Interstitial fibrosis b. Pulmonary vein obstruction c. Hypoxaemia responsive to oxygen therapy d. Radiation injury e. DKA 38. In the lungs a. Bacterial invasion evokes exudative liquification b. Bronchopneumonia is commonly caused by Chlamydia organisms c. 90-95% of lobar pneumonias are caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae d. grey hepatisation is the first stage of the inflammatory response e. bronchopneumonia shows characteristic radiological appearance of radio-opaque well circumscribed lobe 39. Pulmonary oedema a. Contains a protein rich fluid in the alveolar spaces b. Fluid accumulates especially in the dependent apical regions of the lower lobe c. In a chronic state, can result in interstitial fibrosis d. Is not associated with ARDS e. Can result from increased hydrostatic pressure such as in the nephritic syndrome 40. Characteristic histologic findings of asthma include: a. Thinning of the basement membrane of the bronchial epithelium b. Oedema and an inflammatory infiltrate in the bronchial walls with a prominence of plasma cells c. An increase in size of the submucosal glands d. Atrophy of the bronchial wall muscle e. Undistended lungs because of occlusion of bronchioles 41. Regarding the pathogenesis of COPD: a. Macrophage elastase function is inhibited by alpha1-antitrypsin b. Cigarette smoking activates the classic complement pathway c. Microbiologic infections initiate the changes d. Cmokers have decreased numbers of neutrophils in their alveoli e. Chronic bronchitis is up to 10 times more common in heavy smokers 42. Regarding bacterial pneumonia a. Lobar pneumonia is most often caused by staphylococci b. Coliform bacteria are unlikely to cause bronchopneumonia c. Particles larger than 10mm are deposited in terminal airways of alveoli d. Lobar distribution is an indication of the virulence of the organism e. During resolution, the transudate is digested by enzymes 43. emphysema a. is defined clinically as persistent cough with sputum production for at least three months in at least two consecutive years b. is defined morphologically as the abnormal enlargement of air spaces proximal to the terminal bronchioles c. is a restrictive lung disease d. has airway dilation and scarring as its major pathological change e. develops earlier in smokers with an alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency 44. Regarding asthma a. The inflammatory infiltrate of bronchial walls is predominantly neutrophils b. Hypertrophy of bronchial wall muscle reflects prolonged bronchoconstriction c. It is triggered by IgG response d. Sympathetic stimulation provokes bronchoconstriction e. Bacteria are the most common provokers of an acute attack 45. Regarding malignant mesothelioma a. It is asbestos related in more than 90% of cases b. It has been found to contain adenovirus DNA sequence c. Smoking increases the risk of developing mesothelioma d. 50% of patients die within 6 months of diagnosis e. can contain epithelioid and sarcomatoid cells