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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. In order to produce Antibodies - does the antigen have to be phagocytosed? give an example with a bug and an autoimmune (type II hypersensitivity for example).






2. what will NK cells do to cells covered in IgG Ab? why?






3. What is the difference of IgE AIHA and IgG AIHA if they are both complement dependent type II hypersensitivities?






4. Describe complement dependent Type II hypersensitivity. Give an example.






5. What is the white pulp of the spleen?






6. What are the autoantibodies for myasthenia gravis?






7. when can graft versus host disease? What is the result?






8. Which are the only two antiinflammatory cytokines?






9. What is a factor that is a predictor for a bad transplantation?






10. What is the clinical use for sirolimus? what should you combine it with?






11. How do we use thymus dependent antigens to prevent infection from organisms that lack a peptide component?






12. What does IgA pick up from epithelial cells before being secreted?






13. How is the thymus organized? what happens in each section?






14. What are the PALS?






15. give an example of how influenza does a major antigenic shift.






16. What are the symptoms of serum sickness?






17. Name two endogenous pyrogens






18. Only the _______ contribute to the Fc region






19. A lymph node is a ________ lymphoid organ.






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






21. How does complement link innate and adaptive?






22. what characterizes an arthus reaction?






23. What is the main function of IL 8?






24. Describe the Mannose Lectin pathway






25. What lymph node drains the stomach?






26. Name 5 ways Antibody diversity is generated?






27. What part of the lymph node specifically expands during a cellular immune response? when would this occur?






28. How fast does it occur?






29. What is the late phase reaction of anaphylaxis allergy? what mediates it?






30. What is epo used for?






31. What are the autoantibodies for hashimotos?






32. What is thrombopoietin used for?






33. What are the two signals required for B cell class switching? Which is the second signal?






34. What are the autoantibodies for graves?






35. What are the autoantibodies for pemphigus bulgaris?






36. What are the main symptoms of T cell immunodeficiencies?






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






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






39. What is the defect in hyper IgM syndrome? What are the lab results?






40. The secondary follicles have __________; primary follicles are dense






41. What is the presentation of Brutons agammaglobulinemia?






42. From where do cytokines come from?






43. What is three common causes of severe combined immunodef? What is the result of all three?






44. What is colostrum?






45. Complements are...






46. What are HEV? Where are they found? Where does the vasculature of the lymph node travel to?






47. What are the autoantibodies for polymyositis and dermatomyositis?






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






49. What are the autoantibodies for goodpastures syndrome?






50. So antibodies are the effectors for the humoral response. List some of their functions.