a. Bruising
b. Nosebleeds
c. Gastrointestinal bleeding
d. Bleeding into the joints
(hemarthroses)
d. Bleeding into the joints
(hemarthroses)
a. Glanzmann thrombasthenia
b. Bernard-Soulier syndrome
c. Gray platelet syndrome
d. Storage pool disease
a. Glanzmann thrombasthenia
a. Abnormal platelet response to
arachidonic acid
b. Abnormal platelet response to
ristocetin
c. Abnormal platelet response to
collagen
d. Thrombocytosis
b. Abnormal platelet response to
ristocetin
a. Glanzmann thrombasthenia
b. Bernard-Soulier syndrome
c. Storage pool defects
d. Multiple myeloma
c. Storage pool defects
a. Defective granule secretion
b. Altered platelet aggregation
c. Altered expression of
phospholipids on the platelet
membrane
d. Deficiency of vitamin K-dependent
clotting factors
c. Altered expression of
phospholipids on the platelet
membrane
a. Abnormally shaped platelets
b. Extended platelet life span
c. Increased procoagulant activity
d. Decreased numbers of a granules
and dense granules
d. Decreased numbers of a granules
and dense granules
a. Impaired membrane activation,
owing to protein coating
b. Hypercoagulability, owing to antibody
binding and membrane activation
c. Impaired aggregation, because the
hyperviscous plasma prevents
platelet-endothelium interaction
d. Hypercoagulability, because the
increased proteins bring platelets closer
together, which leads to inappropriate
aggregation
a. Impaired membrane activation,
owing to protein coating
a. Urea
b. Uric acid
c. Creatinine
d. NO
d. NO
a. Anti-GP IIb/IIIa antibodies
b. Hemodilution
c. Platelet binding to bypass circuitry
d. Platelet consumption associated with
normal postsurgical hemostatic activity
a. Anti-GP IIb/IIIa antibodies
a. Interference with platelet adhesion to
the subendothelium by blocking of the
collagen binding site
b. Inhibition of transcription of the GP
IIb/IIIa gene
c. Direct binding to GP IIb/IIIa
d. Interference with platelet secretion
c. Direct binding to GP IIb/IIIa
a. Thromboxane A2
b. Ionized calcium
c. Collagen d. ADP
a. Thromboxane A2
a. Senile purpura
b. Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
c. Henoch-Schönlein purpura
d. Waldenström macroglobulinemia
b. Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
a. Musculoskeletal bleeding
b. Mucosal bleeding
c. Hemarthroses
d. None of the above
b. Mucosal bleeding
a. Fanconi anemia
b. TAR syndrome
c. May-Hegglin anomaly
d. Wiskott-Aldrich anomaly
c. May-Hegglin anomaly
a. Petechiae
b. Thrombocytopenia
c. Large overactive platelets
d. Megakaryocyte hypoplasia
c. Large overactive platelets
a. Bak
b. HPA-1a
c. GPIb
d. Lewis antigen a
b. HPA-1a
a. HIT
b. NAIT
c. Acute ITP
d. Chronic ITP
c. Acute ITP
a. Gold salts
b. Abciximab
c. Anagrelide
d. Quinidine
c. Anagrelide
a. Typically unexposed, new platelet
antigens
b. The combination of the drug and
the platelet membrane protein to
which it is bound
c. The drug alone in the plasma, but the
immune complex then binds to the
platelet membrane
d. The drug alone, but only when it is
bound to the platelet membrane
b. The combination of the drug and
the platelet membrane protein to
which it is bound
a. Abnormal platelet morphology in
which the radial striations of the
platelets are missing
b. Abnormal appearance of the iris of
the eye in which radial striations are
absent
c. Abnormal bone formation,
including hypoplasia of the forearms
d. Neurologic defects affecting the root
(radix) of the spinal nerves
c. Abnormal bone formation,
including hypoplasia of the forearms
a. The mother lacks a platelet antigen
that the infant possesses, and she
builds antibodies to that antigen, which
cross the placenta
b. The infant develops an autoimmune
process such as ITP secondary to in
utero infection
c. The infant develops an autoimmune
disease such as lupus erythematosus
before birth
d. The mother has an autoimmune
antibody to her own platelets, which
crosses the placenta and reacts with
the infant’s platelets
d. The mother has an autoimmune
antibody to her own platelets, which
crosses the placenta and reacts with
the infant’s platelets
a. Diarrhea caused by Shigella
species
b. Meningitis caused by Haemophilus
species
c. Pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma
species d. Pneumonia caused by
respiratory viruses
a. Diarrhea caused by Shigella
species
a. Hereditary TTP
b. Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)
c. ITP
d. Atypical HUS
d. Atypical HUS
a. Thrombocytosis can be associated
with hemorrhage and thrombosis
b. Affected patients have platelet counts
in excess of 450,000/mL
c. Thrombocytosis is self-correcting
d. Thrombocytosis can be congenital or
acquired
c. Thrombocytosis is self-correcting