Which form of epithelium lines the bronchi?
How are bronchi distinguished from bronchioles?
What is the function of type 2 pneumocytes?
Which antibody is found in the mucosa?
The 5 granulomatous diseases of the lung are: TB, sarcoidosis, Wegener's, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis and?
Why are smokers prone to lung infections?
Why are elderly prone to lung infections?
What are congestion, red hepatisation, grey hepatisation and resolution the phases of?
A lung has pale, fibrinogen-rich fluid occupying the airspaces, with neutrophils and a few bacteria present, and oedema and dilated capillaries. Which stage of pneumonia?
A lung has a red appearance macroscopically, with profuse fibrinogen clots in the airspaces and numerous bacteria. What is the stage of pneumonia?
A lung has large amount of neutrophils, with no blood flow and reduced capillary congestion. What is the stage of pneumonia?
A lung shows liquefaction of solid exudate and removal of fluid; what is the stage of pneumonia?
A lung has patent airspaces, but inflammation of the septae between alveoli, and many lymphocytes. Which type of pneumonia is this?
Which lung infection, identified by a silver stain, is found in immunocompromised patients?
A patient has a lipoid pneumonia, with lipid in airspaces and foamy macrophages. What are the likely causes?
Which crystals are seen in allergy, due to release by eosinophils?
Is aspiration pneumonia a lobar pneumonia or a bronchopneumonia pattern?
A smoker has a hilar carcinoma, with appear deep blue with scanty cytoplasm on histology. What is the diagnosis?
A lady has a peripherally located lung tumour, which responds to a stain for mucin and shows signet ring cells. What is the diagnosis?
A smoker has a centrally located, well differentiated cancer with keratin whorls. What is the diagnosis?
A lung tumour appears poorly differentiated, with no evident diagnostic signs on histology. What is the diagnosis?
Is chronic bronchitis due to infection or chronic inhalation of irritation substances?
What signs on histology will you see in chronic bronchitis?
Is asthma due to inflammation of the bronchi or smooth muscle spasm?
Which disease is due to localised, irreversible dilation of a part of the bronchial tree?
Which cause of acute respiratory failure will have alveolar membranes present?
Which respiratory disease is a chronic idiopathic, slowly fibrosing disease with a timecourse of months to years?
In diabetic ketoacidosis, is there a high or low intracellular K+?
How will chilling a sample affect the K+ assay?
How will cephalosporins affect a creatinine assay?
What is the term for platelet cells releasing K+ in the act of clotting?
Which patients will have a pseudohypernatraemia
What is the term for the degree of agreement between multiple tests of the sample property?
True or false: A test is suitable if analytical variability is less than half of biological variability?
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