Test your basic knowledge |

USMLE Step 1 Immunology

Instructions:
  • Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
  • If you are not ready to take this test, you can study here.
  • Match each statement with the correct term.
  • Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.

This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. What lymph node drains the testes?






2. What are the labs in brutons agammaglobulinemia?






3. What is the main cytokine that activates eosinophils?






4. What does granzyme do? who secretes it?






5. What are target cells?






6. Describe the complement independent Type II hypersenstivity reaction. Give an example.






7. What is the main function of interferons?






8. What lymph node drains the breast?






9. What are the autoantibodies for autoimmune hepatitis?






10. What are the autoantibodies for type I diabetes mellitus?






11. What lymph node drains the stomach?






12. What are superantigens? give two examples.






13. What is the pathogenesis of chronic transplant rejection? When does it occur? is it reversible?






14. What are the sinusoids of the spleen? What is the difference between a spleen and a lymph node?






15. what prevents NK cells from killing normal cells if their default is to kill?






16. What are the autoantibodies for wegeners granulomatosis?






17. What is the pathogenesis of acute transplant rejection? When does it occur?






18. IgE has the ___________ in the serum






19. What are howell jolly bodies?






20. What lymph node drains the duodenum - jejunum?






21. which antibody is involved in the primary response or immediate response to an antigen?






22. what cytokine does basophils secrete?






23. What is the pathogenesis of a hypersensitivity reaction?






24. which type of immunity is slow but long lasting? as opposed to...






25. where do somatic hypermutation and class switching occur?






26. after C3 spontaneously hydrolyzes to C3b and C3a - what happens to C3a?






27. What are the autoantibodies for hashimotos?






28. What is the defect in Leukocyte adhesion defect? What is the presentation? What are the labs?






29. Which is the main antibody that provides passive immunity to infants?






30. Which diseases are associated with DR5?






31. What cytokines are released by Th1 cells?






32. What two ways do you test for a type 1 hypersensitivity reaction? what will you see?






33. What happens in a deficiency of C3?






34. How do you test for chronic granulomatous disease?






35. A lymph node is a ________ lymphoid organ.






36. What does interferon gamma do? What two type of cells does it attack mostly?






37. what happens in a deficiency of C5- C8? why dont you get recurrent pyogenic infections like in C3 def?






38. What is the end result of complement activation? what bugs are this important for? through what pathway and why?






39. What is MHC II made out of? Where is it found? What does it bind to? What type of antigens does it present?






40. What is passive immunity?






41. What are the autoantibodies for sjorgens syndrome?






42. What do mature naive B lymphocytes express?






43. What cytokines to Th2 secrete?






44. What are the autoantibodies for other vasculitides?






45. Which are the only two antiinflammatory cytokines?






46. Leukocyte adhesion defect presents with...






47. Describe the Mannose Lectin pathway






48. What is oprelevkin? and What is it used for?






49. The MALT/GALT are not...






50. What are the three types of lymphocytes?