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Renal

Renal – 2019

Questions from The 2019  Module + Annual Exam of Renal

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Think about which contraceptive method is easiest to access, inexpensive, usable without medical procedure, and can be used both for spacing births and immediate protection. Which one of the listed methods fits those criteria best?

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Category: Repro – Community Medicine/Behavioral Sciences

Which of the following is the most common contraceptive method used in Pakistan?

Think of the fluid that most closely mimics blood plasma for quickly restoring circulating volume.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following is the most preferred fluid to be given to a hypovolemic patient?

Think of the substance that “carries” other molecules around but doesn’t really carry electricity on its own

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following is correct about pure water?

Think of a chronic kidney infection with obstruction and lipid-laden macrophages, often associated with urease-producing bacteria.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following organisms is responsible for xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis?

Think of a glomerular disease with immune complexes, mesangial cell proliferation, and “tram-track” basement membranes.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is a disease that includes the proliferation of cells, infiltration of leukocytes, and deposition of immune complexes in glomerular mesangium and basement membrane?

Think of the level of the pylorus of the stomach (transpyloric plane)—the kidney hilum is roughly at the same horizontal line.

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Where does the hilum of the left kidney lie?

Think of the small “extra push” the kidney gives to clear creatinine beyond what is filtered at the glomerulus.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which is true about creatinine during glomerular filtration at normal levels?

Think of the tiny gaps between podocyte foot processes—small enough to let water and solutes pass but block most proteins.

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Category: Renal – Histology

What is the width of the filtration slit that separates the adjacent foot processes of podocytes?

Think of the cortical tubule with the fuzzy inner lining (brush border) that actively reabsorbs most of the filtrate

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Category: Renal – Histology

Which of the following is a histological feature of the renal cortex?

Think of the activated ribose sugar molecule that acts as the backbone for purine nucleotide assembly.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Ribosyl moiety in purine synthesis is donated by which of the following?

Think of the hormonal system that constricts blood vessels and retains sodium to increase blood pressure.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following causes an increase in blood pressure?

Think of the definitive proof — what you can see under the microscope directly from the affected joint.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is diagnostic of acute gout?

Think of a pyrimidine synthesis defect that leads to DNA synthesis problems and orotic acid buildup in urine.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Megaloblastic anemia is associated with which of the following defects in nucleotide metabolism?

Think of tissues with high energy and nucleic acid demands versus tissues that mostly recycle purines instead of making them from scratch.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

In which of the following organs does purine de novo synthesis not occur?

Think of an enzyme that oxidizes uric acid into a more water-soluble compound, allowing easier excretion in most mammals — but this enzyme is absent in humans and other primates.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Mammals other than primates synthesize which of the following substances from uric acid?

Think of the diuretic that works on the “loop” of Henle and is more potent than thiazides.

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Category: Renal – Pharmacology

Which of the following is an example of loop diuretics?

Think of a child with edema, cola-colored urine, and hypertension after a sore throat or skin infection — classic nephritic picture.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis causes which of the following?

Think of the most frequent intrinsic kidney injury caused by ischemia or nephrotoxins, often seen in hospitalized patients.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is the most common cause of acute renal failure?

Think of a condition where acidosis occurs without accumulating unusual acids, and the chloride rises to keep the gap normal.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Normal anion gap with metabolic acidosis is seen in which of the following conditions?

Think of a child with heavy proteinuria, edema, and normal urine sediment except for lipids, with foot process effacement on electron microscopy.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

A 12-year-old girl is brought to the clinic because of swelling around her eyes. On physical examination, she is afebrile and has periorbital edema. Laboratory findings show proteinuria on dipstick urinalysis, but no gross or microscopic hematuria. Microscopic examination of the urine shows numerous oval fat bodies. Serum creatinine level is 2.3 mg/dL. On electron microscopy, effacement of foot processes is seen. What is most likely the diagnosis?

Think of the most frequent gut bacterium that ascends the urinary tract to infect the kidneys.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is the most common cause of pyelonephritis?

Think of the urea transporters in the inner medulla that ADH uses to help the kidney concentrate urine by recycling urea.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following urea transporters are affected by antidiuretic hormone?

This molecule is a key crossroad — it can start the TCA cycle, help in gluconeogenesis, and is regenerated at the end of the cycle. Think of it as the “doorway” through which many metabolic pathways meet.

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Category: GIT – Biochemistry

Aspartate enters the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA cycle) in the form of which of the following?

Think of the enzyme that removes the phosphate from nucleotides to produce free nucleosides, the first step in purine degradation.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

During degradation of purine nucleotides to uric acid, inosine monophosphate and guanosine monophosphate are broken down by which of the following enzymes?

Think of the pathway that recycles purine bases. If it fails, you get high uric acid and neurological symptoms.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Lesch Nyhan syndrome is due to a defect in which of the following processes?

Think of the first fully formed purine nucleotide that can then be converted into the two main purine nucleotides.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following is the precursor of adenine monophosphate and guanine monophosphate ?

Think of the cortical “bridges” that pass between the triangular medullary pyramids — they are not part of the urine-collecting system.

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Category: Renal – Histology

What is the extension of the cortex in the renal medulla called?

Think of the two most common systemic diseases that gradually damage the kidneys over years, often silently until late stages.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is the most common cause of chronic renal failure?

Think of the hormone that helps conserve water when the blood becomes too concentrated.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following would stimulate the release of antidiuretic hormone?

Think of the diuretic that acts on the loop of Henle, where the kidney reabsorbs the largest fraction of sodium, making it the most potent.

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Category: Renal – Pharmacology

Which of the following is the most powerful diuretic?

Think of the initial filtrate in the nephron — it’s essentially plasma without proteins, so its concentration is about the same as blood.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the osmolality of filtrate in Bowman’s capsule?

Think about the hormone that makes collecting ducts permeable to water and the salt gradient in the medulla that pulls water out.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following contribute towards making the urine concentrated?

Think of the kidney’s upper limit for concentrating urine during severe dehydration — it’s several times the plasma osmolality.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the osmolality of most concentrated urine?

Think of the “open channel from bladder to umbilicus” that allows urine to escape — complete patency is required.

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Category: Renal – Embryology

What causes urine to flow through a patent urachus to the umbilicus?

Think of the solution that has more than three times the salt concentration of plasma — it will pull water out of cells instead of staying neutral

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of these is not an isotonic solution?

Think about the stretchable lining and the involuntary muscle that squeezes urine out — no voluntary skeletal muscle is in the bladder wall itself.

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Category: Renal – Histology

Which of the following is correct about the wall of the urinary bladder?

Think of the sensor cells in the distal tubule that detect low salt and trigger a hormonal cascade to raise blood pressure.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Decrease in the sodium and chloride levels causes macula densa to do which of the following?

Think about the force that pushes plasma out of the glomerular capillaries into Bowman’s space — the main driving force for filtration.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following favors glomerular filtration?

Think of which organ stores water internally and doesn’t directly expel it to the outside environment.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

From which of the following organs, water loss from the body does not occur?

Think of the hormone form of vitamin D that’s activated in the kidney and works to boost calcium uptake in the gut.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following products of the kidney helps in the absorption of calcium in the intestines?

Think of the amino acid that acts as the “universal nitrogen donor” in both major nucleotide pathways.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following amino acids donates nitrogen in both purine and pyrimidine synthesis?

Think of the body trying to “hold on to CO₂” to counteract a high-bicarbonate (alkaline) state.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following is seen in compensated metabolic alkalosis?

Think of the “box” drawn on the back to locate the kidney — one of the suggested horizontal levels doesn’t match the true superior or inferior edges.

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following is not one of the lines of the parallelogram of Morris used to identify the kidneys from the surface of the back?

Think of the tips of the renal pyramids being most vulnerable during a severe kidney infection.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is a complication of acute pyelonephritis?

Think of the fastest, most detailed imaging that can detect almost all types of stones, even the tiny ones.

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Category: Renal – Radiology/Medicine

Which of the following is the most reliable diagnostic test for urolithiasis?

Think about where urine flows or pools versus where it is microscopically processed.

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which part of the kidney can not have stones?

Think about the hormone that helps your body retain salt and water to maintain blood pressure, while letting go of another ion to keep things balanced.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following is the effect of aldosterone on kidneys?

Think of the muscular tubes that actively propel urine from the kidney down to the bladder.

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

The kidney is connected to the bladder through which of the following?

Think about the ion that is most actively reabsorbed in the PCT and drives many other transport processes, including acid-base balance.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Hydrogen ion reabsorption and secretion in proximal convoluted tubule is closely regulated with which of the following ions?

Think of the kidney’s smallest filter-and-processing unit that directly handles blood filtration and urine formation.

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following are the functional units of the kidney?

Think about the special type of epithelium that allows the bladder to expand and contract without tearing.

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Category: Renal – Histology

Which of the following is correct about the urinary bladder?

Think of the drug commonly prescribed to lower uric acid levels in patients with gout.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following is an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase?

Think about where ADH exerts its action — the “last checkpoint” where water balance is finely tuned.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following parts of the nephron is involved in the facultative reabsorption of water?

Think about the pathway of the ureter — the pain doesn’t stay put, it travels along its course.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following is correct about the quality of pain in the case of nephrolithiasis?

Think about the early embryonic duct that also helps form structures in the male reproductive system — that’s where the ureter starts its journey.

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Category: Renal – Embryology

Ureters develop from which of the following?

Think about which type of epithelium is specialized to handle stretch in the urinary system — it’s the same lining as the bladder.

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Category: Renal – Histology

What is the type of epithelium lining the ureters?

Think about the key nitrogen donors in biosynthesis — “GAG”…

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following is not a source of nitrogen for de novo purine synthesis?

Remember, pyrimidine synthesis starts with building the ring first — and the first brick laid is…

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following is the first step in pyrimidine synthesis?

Think feedback inhibition — when the end product builds up, it signals the pathway to slow down CPS-II activity to maintain balance.

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase II (CPS-II) is allosterically inhibited by which of the following?

Think of their position during surgery — if you open the peritoneum, you won’t find ureters inside; you have to look behind it…

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following is true about ureters?

Picture the kidney like an onion — the skin that sticks directly to it, while fat and fascia form the outer protective layers.

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following is the innermost covering of the kidney?

Think of the glomerular filter like a sieve — small molecules pass through easily, but large, negatively charged proteins like albumin stay in the blood.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following component of blood is the least filtered in the renal corpuscle?

Although the glomerular hydrostatic pressure is high (~55 mmHg), remember that two opposing forces (Bowman’s pressure and oncotic pressure) reduce the net driving pressure…

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Net filtration pressure (NFP) is the total pressure that promotes filtration in kidneys. What is its value?

Think of the kidneys as small organs with a disproportionately high blood supply, roughly one-quarter of the heart’s output, to handle continuous filtration needs.

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Renal blood flow (RBF) approximates how much of the total cardiac output?

Think about the average filtering capacity of both kidneys combined — around 180 liters daily, how much would that be per min?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the normal value of glomerular filtration rate (GFR)?

Consider which condition combines ketone production, metabolic acidosis, fruity breath, and deep breathing — pointing to an insulin-deficient state rather than just hyperglycemia.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

A 45-year-old patient is brought to the emergency room in a delirious state with weakness, blurred vision, dehydration, and hypothermia. On examination, he has a rapid pulse and his breathing is deep and labored, with a sickly sweet odor. His blood glucose is 256 mg/dL and his urinary dipstick shows +2 ketonuria. What is most likely the diagnosis?

Think of the range of protein loss where the kidneys are severely compromised, but the number isn’t extremely high — just above the typical threshold that signals severe glomerular damage.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Nephrotic syndrome is characterized by loss of how much protein in urine?

Think of the posterior abdominal wall. Which muscle in the list is not part of the retroperitoneal region, but rather found deep in the gluteal region near the hip joint?

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following structures is not present posterior to the kidney?

Remember the timeline of kidney development: the pronephros is transient and primitive, disappearing quickly as the mesonephros starts to function. Which week marks this transition?

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Category: Renal – Embryology

When do pronephros degenerate during fetal development?

Think of the ascending limb as the “diluting segment” of the nephron — it pumps out salts but does not let water follow. Which option matches this unique property?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following is a property of ascending limb of the loop of Henle?

Think about urea balance: The body needs to excrete enough nitrogen waste but also retain some urea for maintaining the kidney’s medullary osmotic gradient. Which percentage reflects this balance?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the percentage of filtered urea reabsorbed in kidneys per day?

When avoiding latex, think of the catheter material that is completely inert and hypoallergenic, making it safe for sensitive patients.

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Category: Renal – ComMed/BehSci

For individuals with latex allergy, which material of Foley’s catheter is the next choice?

Think about the channel that gets inserted into the luminal membrane of collecting duct cells only when ADH is present. Which aquaporin fits this description?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

The antidiuretic hormone controls water permeability in the collecting ducts of the kidney by regulation of which of the following water channels?

At high altitudes, you need a drug that induces metabolic acidosis to drive more ventilation. Which drug does this by blocking carbonic anhydrase?

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Category: Renal – Pharmacology

Which of the following drugs can be used to treat altitude sickness?

Think about gout: the painful condition linked to purine breakdown. What compound crystallizes in joints when its levels are high?

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which of the following is the end-product of purine metabolism?

Think about the kidney’s “sensor” for blood pressure: which cells in the afferent arteriole act like baroreceptors and release an enzyme that raises blood pressure through RAAS?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

Which of the following cells release the enzyme renin?

Think about how lymph drainage follows blood vessels. The abdominal ureter is supplied by the renal artery — which lymph nodes lie alongside these vessels near the aorta?

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

The superior portion of the ureter drains into which of the following lymph nodes?

Follow the pathway: Renal → Segmental → Interlobar → Arcuate → Interlobular → ? Which of these directly feeds the glomeruli?

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

The renal arterioles are the branch of which of the following arteries?

Remember: systemic capillary pressure is ~25 mmHg, but the kidney must filter large amounts of plasma continuously. Would its filtration-driving pressure be lower, the same, or higher than the rest of the body?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the renal capillary pressure across the glomerular capillaries?

Think segmentally: the abdominal ureter gets its blood supply from vessels of the upper abdomen (kidney region), while the pelvic ureter gets supply from vessels of the pelvis. Which artery near the kidney fits best?

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following supplies blood to the abdominal ureter?

In pyrimidine synthesis, ask yourself: which enzyme controls the very first committed step in the cytosol, and is regulated by feedback from UTP levels?

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Category: Renal – Biochemistry

Which enzyme catalyzes the rate-limiting step of pyrimidine biosynthesis in mammalian cells?

f the lungs are the source of the problem (too much CO₂), which organ steps in to restore balance by adjusting bicarbonate levels?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the compensatory mechanism in respiratory acidosis (increased PCO2)?

Ask yourself: which of these conditions develops slowly over years from vascular damage, rather than presenting suddenly as a metabolic emergency?

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Category: Endo – Pathology

Which of the following can be a chronic complication of diabetes type 1?

If a stone doesn’t show up on a plain X-ray but still causes obstruction symptoms, which type of crystal composition would you suspect?

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following renal calculi are larger and have a radiolucent appearance on X-ray?

Think anatomically: the bladder is the most anterior pelvic organ. Which option in the list is actually a posterior pelvic organ in females rather than lying in front of the bladder?

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Which of the following is not present anterior to the urinary bladder?

Surgeons often remember a phrase: during hysterectomy, one vital structure runs beneath the artery that must be tied. Think about which vessel is that “bridge” and which duct is the “water.”

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Category: Renal – Anatomy

Ureter in female pelvis is present in close association with which of the following?

Think about which glomerular disease typically appears after a throat or skin infection with group A streptococcus and is known for immune complexes forming distinctive “humps” under electron microscopy.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Regarding glomerular diseases, which of the following has hump-like deposits appearing as electron microscope findings?

The penile urethra develops from the part of the urogenital sinus that lies closest to the developing external genitalia. Which portion is that?

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Category: Renal – Embryology

Penile urethra is mainly formed from which of the following?

The male urethra has different embryonic origins depending on the segment. If the question asks about the narrowest part, think about which portion lies deep within the pelvic floor.

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Category: Renal – Embryology

The least dilated part of male urethra develops from which of the following?

When the glomerulus itself is inflamed, what type of cellular “imprint” in the urine would prove that blood leakage originated from the nephron rather than the lower urinary tract?

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following urine findings is observed in case of an infection with group A beta-hemolytic post-streptococcal infection?

*”Consider the kidney’s role as a high-flow filter. To achieve a filtration rate of over 100 mL per minute, what must the total inflow of blood be, especially when nearly a fifth of the plasma is filtered?”*

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Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the combined blood flow through both kidneys in a normal adult man?

Ask yourself: if the urine contains a substance that normally shouldn’t be there in high amounts, and this substance pulls water with it, how would that explain the large urine volume?

92 / 98

Category: Renal – Physiology

What is the reason behind polyuria seen in diabetes?

Consider this: sodium reabsorption in the kidney is tightly tied to the body’s acid–base balance. Which ion, when secreted into the tubular lumen, helps reclaim bicarbonate and neutralize acidosis?

93 / 98

Category: Renal – Physiology

Reabsorption of sodium in renal tubules is associated with the exchange of which of these ions?

Think about the body’s acid–base balance: if the blood is already too acidic, would the respiratory system try to make it more acidic or shift it back toward normal?

94 / 98

Category: Renal – Physiology

Kussmaul’s breathing is characterized by a deep, rapid breathing pattern that is seen with diabetic ketoacidosis. What is the role of Kussmaul’s breathing?

Think about which part of the urinary system mainly acts as a passageway only and does not provide stagnant areas where crystals can easily precipitate.

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Category: Renal – Pathology

Which of the following parts of the urinary tract is not a common site for stone formation?

Which part of the brain acts as the “homeostatic center” for regulating thirst, hunger, temperature, and hormone release — making it the logical place for osmoreceptors?

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Category: Renal – Physiology

An increase in extracellular fluid osmolarity causes special nerve cells called osmoreceptor cells to stimulate the release of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) from the posterior pituitary gland. Where in the brain are these osmoreceptors located?

Think about this: proteins are too large to diffuse like ions or glucose. How would the tubular cells “drink in” these molecules to reclaim them before they are lost in urine?

97 / 98

Category: Renal – Physiology

Proteins are reabsorbed in the renal tubule by which of the following processes?

When blood is not immediately available in acute hemorrhage, what type of solution stays in the blood vessels longer — crystalloids that distribute widely or colloids that expand plasma volume more directly?

98 / 98

Category: Renal – Pathology

A person has lost a lot of blood in a traumatic accident. What should be given to him immediately?

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