All MCAT Biology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #21 : Heart
Which of the following may occur if the mitral valve were to undergo ischemic damage?
Abnormal blood flow between the left ventricle and aorta
Abnormal blood flow between the left atrium and left ventricle
Abnormal blood flow between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery
Abnormal blood flow between the right atrium and right ventricle
Abnormal blood flow between the left atrium and left ventricle
The mitral (or bicuspid) valve is the atrioventricular valve that is located between the left atrium and left ventricle. Filling of the left ventricle requires that the valve stay open so that blood can enter into the ventricle from the left atrium. With ischemic damage to the valve, abnormal flow between the left atrium and ventricle will occur.
The aortic valve is located between the left ventricle and the aorta. The tricuspid valve separates the right atrium and right ventricle. The pulmonic valve is located between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery.
Example Question #22 : Heart
During strenuous exercise, the sympathetic nervous system functions to increase cardiac output in order to match the metabolic activity of the body. Which of the following is a mechanism of action to increase cardiac output?
Decreased blood pressure
Increased blood pressure
Decreased heart rate
Increased heart rate
Decreased stroke volume
Increased heart rate
The correct answer is increased heart rate.
Cardiac output is the volume of blood pumped by the heart per minute. This volume can be calculated by using two other cardiac measures: heart rate and stroke volume. Heart rate is the number of strokes/contractions per minute, while stroke volume is the volume of blood ejected per beat.
The only way to increase cardiac output is to increase either the heart rate or to increase the stroke volume.
Example Question #22 : Heart
What specialized area of tissue delays the proliferation of electrical stimulation in the heart, allowing the heart chambers to fill with blood?
Bundle branches
Bundle of His
Atrioventricular node
Purkinje fibers
Sinoatrial node
Atrioventricular node
The atrioventricular (AV) node is located in the lower intratrial septum and receives impulses from the sinoatrial node. The sinoatrial node is termed the pacemaker of the heart and is located in the wall of the right atrium. It initiates normal heart beats and is innervated by the vagus nerve, which helps control the rate of impulses. Once an impulse causes the atria to contract, it travels to the atrioventricular node. Once the AV node receives the impulse, cellular mechanisms initiate a delay. This prevents simultaneous atrial and ventricular systole, allowing the ventricles to receive the blood exiting the contracted atria. Following the delay, the impulse travels from the AV node to the bundle of His.nThe bundle of His is a pathway for electrical signals to be transmitted to the ventricles. The Purkinje fibers spread through the myocardium and distribute electical stimuli to cause contraction of the ventricular myocardium. The bundle branches supply the two ventricles with electrical stimuli.
Example Question #851 : Biology
Both the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous systems are essential for homeostasis and for survival. For example, when we are trying to run away from a threat, the sympathetic nervous system is in full effect to allow us to escape from danger. However, when there is no obvious threat, the parasympathetic nervous system tends to be more in control.
There are similarities and differences between the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous systems. In preganglionic nerve fibers, both the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous system utilize the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Closer to the target organ, the parasympathetic nervous system remains dependent on acetylcholine whereas norepinephrine and epinephrine are the predominant neurotransmitters utilized by the sympathetic nervous system.
When norepinephrine and epinephrine bind to their receptors, different effects are carried out based on the type of receptor, affinity, and location of the receptor. For example, epinephrine has a higher affinity for the beta-2 receptor. When epinephrine binds to the beta-2 receptor, common effects include vasodilation and bronchodilation. Norepinephrine has a stronger affinity for the alpha-1, alpha-2 and beta-1 receptors. When norepinephrine binds to its receptor, common effects on the body include vasoconstriction (alpha-1), increased heart rate (beta-1) and uterine contraction (alpha-1).
In patients with heart failure, the physician might prescribe a beta blocker to help with the condition. How will a beta blocker be useful in patients with heart failure?
Blocking the beta-2 receptor, which prevents the heart from having to work as hard.
Blocking the beta-1 receptor, which will cause vasoconstriction.
Blocking the beta-2 receptor, which will make the heart work harder.
Blocking the beta-1 receptor, which will make the heart work harder.
Blocking the beta-1 receptor, which prevents the heart from having to work as hard.
Blocking the beta-1 receptor, which prevents the heart from having to work as hard.
The heart has the beta-1 receptor on its surface. When norepinephrine binds to beta-1 receptors on the heart, the effect is an increase in heart rate. In patients with a heart problem, increasing the heart rate might exhaust the heart and provoke heart failure. By blocking this receptor with a beta blocker, agonists to the beta-1 receptor cannot increase the heart rate.
Example Question #25 : Circulatory System
Carbonic anhydrase is a very important enzyme that is utilized by the body. The enzyme catalyzes the following reaction:
A class of drugs that inhibits this enzyme is carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (eg. acetazolamide, brinzolamide, dorzolamide). These drugs are commonly prescribed in patients with glaucoma, hypertension, heart failure, high altitude sickness and for the treatment of basic drugs overdose.
In patients with hypertension, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors will prevent the reabsorption of sodium chloride in the proximal tubule of the kidney. When sodium is reabsorbed back into the blood, the molecule creates an electrical force. This electrical force then pulls water along with it into the blood. As more water enters the blood, the blood volume increase. By preventing the reabsorption of sodium, water reabsorption is reduced and the blood pressure decreases.
When mountain climbing, the atmospheric pressure is lowered as the altitude increases. As a result of less oxygen into the lungs, ventilation increases. From the equation above, hyperventilation will result in more being expired. Based on Le Chatelier’s principle, the reaction will shift to the left. Since there is more bicarbonate than protons in the body, the blood will become more basic (respiratory alkalosis). To prevent such life threatening result, one would take a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor to prevent the reaction from shifting to the left.
Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors are useful in patients with a drug overdose that is acidic. The lumen of the collecting tubule is nonpolar. Due to the lumen's characteristic, molecules that are also nonpolar and uncharged are able to cross the membrane and re-enter the circulatory system. Since carbonic anhydrase inhibitors alkalize the urine, acidic molecules stay in a charged state.
How can taking a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor help a patient with signs of heart failure?
By increasing the Sodium reabsorption
By increasing the blood pressure
By lowering the blood pressure
By increasing the heart contractibility
By increasing the water reabsorption
By lowering the blood pressure
As mentioned in the passage, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors will prevent the reabsorption of sodium and water at the proximal tubule. By preventing water reabsorption, the blood volume decreases. Lowering the blood volume will lower the blood pressure. The heart is constantly pushing blood against a pressure. The higher the blood pressure is, the more work the heart will have to do to push the blood out. Therefore, by lowering the blood pressure, the heart does not have to work as hard.
Example Question #871 : Mcat Biological Sciences
The liver primarily serves to help detoxify both endogenous and exogenous substances from the blood and intestines. Once blood from the intestines (delivered by the portal vein) or from the systemic circulation (delivered by the hepatic artery) enters the liver, it is filtered over liver cells called hepatocytes. Endogenous substances, such as bilirubin, and exogenous substances, such as drugs, are taken up by transporters on hepatocytes and undergo three phases of metabolism. The three phases allow the transported compound to be detoxified by a method of electron transfer (phase I), by addition of amino acid derivatives (phase II), and finally by exocytosis from the hepatocyte into the bile (phase III). The bile is then transported into the small intestine, and finally excreted from the body.
Amino acid derivatives are often taken from the Krebs cycle, added to sugar nucleotides, and transferred to molecules for detoxification. A common example of an enzyme responsible for this is UDP-glucuronosyl transferase.
The flow of substances through the liver follows the portal triad. The portal triad does not include which of the following structures?
Hepatic artery
Central vein
Portal vein
Bile duct
Central vein
The passage details the passage of substances through the liver. The portal triad consists of the portal vein, hepatic artery, and bile duct. Blood from the intestines enters the liver through the portal vein and is filtered by hepatocytes on its way to the central vein that connects to the inferior vena cava and onto the rest of the venous circulation. The liver is thus able to filter out toxic metabolites before they reach systemic circulation.
Example Question #1 : Blood Vessels And Vasculature
Which of the following vessels has the highest concentration of oxygen?
Pulmonary arteries
Skeletal capillaries
Inferior vena cava
Superior vena cava
Pulmonary veins
Pulmonary veins
The pulmonary veins have the greatest concentration of oxygenation, because they bring oxygenated blood from the lungs to the left atrium. They are the only veins that carry oxygenated blood.
Blood in the pulmonary arteries is deoxygenated and travels from the right ventricle to the lungs for gas exchange. Blood in the vena cavae is returning to the heart after systemic circulation, and is thus deoxygenated. Blood in the capillaries is a mixture of oxygenated and deoxygenated, but is always less oxygenated than the blood of the pulmonary veins.
Example Question #872 : Mcat Biological Sciences
Hemoglobin is the protein responsible for the transport of oxygen throughout the bloodstream. The saturation of hemoglobin can be graphed based on the pressure of oxygen. As the pressure of oxygen increases, the saturation of hemoglobin with oxygen will increase in a sigmoidal fashion. This oxygen dissociation curve can be shifted depending on the external conditions in the blood.
Where would hemoglobin have the lowest saturation percentage of oxygen?
The pulmonary veins
The left atrium
The superior vena cava
The pulmonary artery
The gastric artery
The pulmonary artery
Keep in mind that the saturation percentage of hemoglobin depends on the pressure of oxygen. Before returning to the lungs, hemoglobin has given up the majority of attached oxygen to the body's tissues. As a result, the hemoglobin will be least saturated just before entering the lungs to become oxygenated once again. This is why the pulmonary artery will contain blood with the lowest saturation of hemoglobin.
The low partial pressure of oxygen in the pulmonary artery, compared to the high partial pressure of oxygen in the alveoli, generates the gradient for oxygen to enter the blood stream.
Example Question #2 : Blood Vessels And Vasculature
In extremely cold temperatures, which of the following is most directly responsible for constricting blood flow to the skin in order to preserve heat?
Arterioles
Arteries
Venules
Capillaries
Arterioles
The arterioles feed into the capillaries, and control which tissues and parts of the body get more oxygenated blood. During cold weather conditions, the arterioles are activated in vasoconstriction of oxygenated blood to the capillary beds in the skin.
Example Question #1 : Blood Vessels And Vasculature
Edema is a condition caused by a build-up of fluid in the interstitium.
Which of the following is associated with edema?
Decreased hydrostatic pressure
High plasma albumin
Increased plasma oncotic pressure
Increased blood vessel wall permeability
Increased blood vessel wall permeability
Increased blood vessel wall permeability can lead to edema. Edema is the result of abnormal fluid homeostasis; proper fluid homeostasis is achieved by balancing hydrostatic pressure and oncotic pressure in blood vessels. If hydrostatic pressure is greater than oncotic pressure in a blood vessel, fluid will filter out of the blood vessel and into the interstitium. The Starling Equation describes fluid movement across capillary membranes in relation to hydrostatic pressure and oncotic pressure within the blood vessel.
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