MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. A report comes back indicating that muscular atrophy has occurred. A nurse recalls that
muscular atrophy involves a decrease in
... [Show More] muscle cell:
a. number.
b. size.
c. vacuoles.
d. lipofuscin.
ANS: B
Atrophy is a decrease or shrinkage in cellular size. Hyperplasia is an increase in the number of
cells. Vacuoles are membrane-bound vesicles within the cell that contain cellular debris and
hydrolytic enzymes. Lipofuscin is the yellow-brown age pigment.
REF: p. 74
2. During childhood, the thymus decreases in size, and this is referred to as what type of
atrophy?
a. Physiologic
b. Pathologic
c. Disuse
d. Neurogenic
ANS: A
A normal decrease in cell size is physiologic atrophy. Atrophy can result from disease
(pathologic), disuse, or nerve injury (neurogenic).
REF: p. 74
3. When planning care for a cardiac patient, the nurse knows that in response to an increased
workload, cardiac myocardial cells will experience hypertrophy which is an:
a. increase in size.
b. decrease in length.
c. increase in excitability.
d. decrease in number.
ANS: A
TestBankWorld.org
Hypertrophy is a compensatory increase in the size of cells in response to mechanical stimuli
(also called mechanical load or stress, such as from stretching, repetitive, chronic, pressure, or
volume overload) and consequently increases the size of the affected organ. The cells of the
heart and kidneys are particularly prone to enlargement. A decrease in length is not associated
with hypertrophy. A deficiency of electrolytes or minerals could lead to an increase in
excitability; it is not due to increased workload or related to hypertrophy. A decrease in cell
numbers is referred to as hypoplasia.
TestBankWorld.org
REF: p. 75
4. A 55-year-old male with a 30-year history of smoking is examined for respiratory disturbance.
Examination of his airway (bronchial) reveals that stratified squamous epithelial cells have
replaced the normal columnar ciliated cells. This type of cellular adaptation is called:
a. anaplasia.
b. hyperplasia.
c. metaplasia.
d. dysplasia. [Show Less]