Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 1: From which branchial arches does the hyoid bone develop?
- A. Second and third branchial arches (Correct Answer)
- B. Third and fourth branchial arches
- C. First and third branchial arches
- D. First and second branchial arches
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Second and third branchial arches***
- The **lesser horns** and **upper part of the body** of the hyoid bone originate from the **second branchial arch**.
- The **greater horns** and **lower part of the body** develop from the **third branchial arch**.
*Third and fourth branchial arches*
- While the *third branchial arch* contributes to the hyoid, the *fourth branchial arch* forms structures of the larynx, such as the **thyroid cartilage**, not the hyoid.
- Therefore, this combination does not fully account for the hyoid's development.
*First and third branchial arches*
- The *first branchial arch* forms the **malleus, incus**, and parts of the mandible, maxilla, and zygoma, which are distinct from the hyoid.
- Although the *third branchial arch* contributes to the hyoid, the first arch does not.
*First and second branchial arches*
- The *first branchial arch* is primarily involved in forming the bones of the **mandible and maxilla** and ossicles of the ear.
- While the *second branchial arch* contributes significantly to the hyoid, this option omits the crucial contribution from the *third branchial arch*.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 2: Derivative of the first pharyngeal arch is
- A. Hyoid
- B. Stapes
- C. Maxilla (Correct Answer)
- D. Laryngeal Cartilage
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Maxilla***
- The **maxilla** is a major component of the upper jaw and midface, and its development is primarily derived from the **first pharyngeal arch** (also known as the mandibular arch).
- This arch also gives rise to the mandible, zygomatic bone, and muscles of mastication.
*Hyoid*
- The **hyoid bone** develops from the **second and third pharyngeal arches**.
- Specifically, the lesser horns and superior body of the hyoid are derived from the second arch, while the greater horns and inferior body come from the third arch.
*Stapes*
- The **stapes**, one of the ossicles of the middle ear, is primarily derived from the **second pharyngeal arch** (hyoid arch).
- The malleus and incus, the other two ossicles, are derived from the first pharyngeal arch.
*Laryngeal Cartilage*
- The cartilages of the larynx (e.g., thyroid, cricoid, arytenoid) are derived from the **fourth and sixth pharyngeal arches**.
- These arches also contribute to the development of intrinsic laryngeal muscles and nerves.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 3: Anterior fontanelle corresponds to all structures except which of the following?
- A. Coronal suture
- B. Sagittal suture
- C. Frontal bones
- D. Lambdoid suture (Correct Answer)
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Lambdoid suture***
- The **anterior fontanelle** is located at the intersection of the **coronal**, **sagittal**, and **metopic sutures** [1].
- It is bounded by the **frontal bones anteriorly** and the **parietal bones posteriorly** [1].
- The **lambdoid suture** is located at the posterior aspect of the skull, separating the parietal bones from the occipital bone, and corresponds to the **posterior fontanelle**, NOT the anterior fontanelle [1].
- This is the structure that does NOT correspond to the anterior fontanelle.
*Frontal bones*
- The **frontal bones** (or two halves of the frontal bone before fusion) form the anterior boundary of the anterior fontanelle [1].
- The anterior fontanelle is located where the frontal bones meet the parietal bones [1].
*Coronal suture*
- The **coronal suture** forms part of the lateral boundaries of the anterior fontanelle, separating the frontal bone from the parietal bones [1].
- It runs transversely across the top of the skull on both sides.
*Sagittal suture*
- The **sagittal suture** runs through the middle of the anterior fontanelle, lying between the two parietal bones [1].
- It extends longitudinally along the midline from the anterior fontanelle posteriorly to the posterior fontanelle [1].
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 4: Which structure can be palpated through the anterior wall of the rectum, directly in front of the rectum in the midline, during a rectal examination of a 27-year-old woman?
- A. Bladder
- B. Body of uterus
- C. Cervix of uterus (Correct Answer)
- D. Pubic symphysis
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: Cervix of uterus
- The cervix is located posterior to the bladder and inferior to the body of the uterus, making it palpable through the anterior rectal wall via the rectovaginal septum [2].
- Its firm, rounded structure can be felt as a distinct nodule directly anterior to the rectum in the midline during a digital rectal examination.
- This is a standard clinical finding in pelvic examination.
Bladder
- The bladder is anterior to the uterus and cervix; an empty bladder is usually not palpable through the anterior rectal wall.
- A distended bladder would be palpable, but it would be a soft, fluctuating mass, not a firm structure like the cervix.
Body of uterus
- The body of the uterus is superior to the cervix and in the typical anteverted position (normal in ~80% of women), it is angled anteriorly and superiorly, generally beyond the reach of a digital rectal exam for direct palpation through the anterior rectal wall [1].
- In the less common retroverted uterus, the body may be palpable through the posterior fornix of the vagina or through the rectum, but this is not the typical anatomical relationship.
Pubic symphysis
- The pubic symphysis is a bony joint located at the very anterior aspect of the pelvis, far too anterior and superior to be palpable through the anterior wall of the rectum.
- It forms the anterior boundary of the bony pelvis, while the rectum is situated posteriorly within the pelvic cavity.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 5: Which of the following is a stochastic effect of radiation?
- A. Alopecia in the irradiated portal
- B. Local desquamation in the irradiated field
- C. Genetic mutation (Correct Answer)
- D. All of the options
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Genetic mutation***
- **Stochastic effects** are those for which the probability of occurrence, rather than the severity, is a function of radiation dose without a threshold. **Genetic mutations** are a classic example, as any dose carries some probability of inducing a change in DNA that can be passed to offspring.
- The severity of a genetic mutation, if it occurs, is independent of the dose. It's the chance of it happening that increases with exposure.
*Alopecia in the irradiated portal*
- **Alopecia** (hair loss) due to radiation is a **deterministic effect**, meaning there is a threshold dose below which it does not occur, and above that threshold, the severity increases with dose.
- It occurs locally in the **irradiated field** because it is a direct tissue reaction to cellular damage.
*Local desquamation in the irradiated field*
- **Desquamation** (skin peeling) is a **deterministic effect** that results from direct cell death and damage in the skin, a tissue reaction with a dose threshold.
- Its occurrence and severity are directly related to the **radiation dose received** in the specific area.
*All of the options*
- This option is incorrect because **alopecia** and **desquamation** are deterministic effects, not stochastic effects.
- Only **genetic mutation** falls under the category of stochastic effects among the choices provided.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 6: Which malformation is associated with mutations in the HOX gene?
- A. Polysyndactyly (Correct Answer)
- B. Holoprosencephaly
- C. Mayer Rokitansky syndrome
- D. Gorlin syndrome
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Polysyndactyly***
- The **HOX gene** plays a critical role in limb development and is associated with the malformation of **polysyndactyly**, which is characterized by extra fingers or toes [1].
- This condition is due to the disruption of the normal **patterning** during limb formation, directly involving the action of HOX genes [1].
*Gorlin syndrome*
- Gorlin syndrome is primarily caused by mutations in the **PTCH1 gene**, linked to **basal cell carcinoma** and other abnormalities.
- It does not involve HOX gene mutations, hence is **not** related to limb malformations.
*Holoprosencephaly*
- Holoprosencephaly is a developmental condition often linked to **chromosomal anomalies** and abnormal embryonic development, **not specifically** HOX gene mutations.
- It refers to the incomplete separation of the forebrain, distinct from the **limb malformations** associated with HOX genes.
*Mayer Rokitansky syndrome*
- Mayer-Rokitansky syndrome involves **agenesis** or **hypoplasia** of the uterus and upper two-thirds of the vagina, which is due to other genetic factors.
- This condition is not related to the functions of the **HOX genes** in limb or skeletal development.
**References:**
[1] Kumar V, Abbas AK, et al.. Robbins and Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease. 9th ed. Bones, Joints, and Soft Tissue Tumors, p. 1186.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 7: Statement 1 - A 59-year-old patient presents with flaccid bullae. Histopathology shows a suprabasal acantholytic split.
Statement 2 - The row of tombstones appearance is diagnostic of Pemphigus vulgaris.
- A. Statements 1 & 2 are correct, 2 is not explaining 1 (Correct Answer)
- B. Statements 1 and 2 are correct and 2 is the correct explanation for 1
- C. Statements 1 and 2 are incorrect
- D. Statement 1 is incorrect
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Correct: Statements 1 & 2 are correct, 2 is not explaining 1***
**Analysis of Statement 1:**
- A 59-year-old patient with **flaccid bullae** and **suprabasal acantholytic split** on histopathology is the classic presentation of **Pemphigus vulgaris**
- The flaccid (easily ruptured) nature of bullae distinguishes it from tense bullae seen in bullous pemphigoid
- The suprabasal location of the split (just above the basal layer) with acantholysis (loss of cell-to-cell adhesion) is pathognomonic
- **Statement 1 is CORRECT** ✓
**Analysis of Statement 2:**
- The **"row of tombstones" or "tombstone appearance"** is indeed a diagnostic histopathological feature of Pemphigus vulgaris
- This appearance results from basal keratinocytes remaining attached to the basement membrane while suprabasal cells separate due to acantholysis
- The intact basal cells standing upright resemble a row of tombstones
- **Statement 2 is CORRECT** ✓
**Does Statement 2 explain Statement 1?**
- Statement 2 describes a **histopathological appearance** (tombstone pattern) that is a **consequence** of the suprabasal split
- However, it does NOT explain the **underlying cause** of the flaccid bullae or the suprabasal split
- The true explanation involves **IgG autoantibodies against desmoglein 3 (and desmoglein 1)**, which attack intercellular adhesion structures (desmosomes), causing **acantholysis**
- Therefore, **Statement 2 does NOT explain Statement 1** ✗
*Incorrect: Statement 2 is the correct explanation for Statement 1*
- While both statements describe features of Pemphigus vulgaris, the tombstone appearance is a descriptive finding, not an explanatory mechanism
*Incorrect: Statements 1 and 2 are incorrect*
- Both statements are medically accurate descriptions of Pemphigus vulgaris features
*Incorrect: Statement 1 is incorrect*
- Statement 1 correctly describes the cardinal clinical and histopathological features of Pemphigus vulgaris
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 8: Evaluating a neonate with multiple congenital anomalies including cervical fistula draining mucus, thymic hypoplasia, and cardiac outflow tract defects, which phylogenetic developmental process has most likely been disrupted?
- A. Transformation of pharyngeal pouches and neural crest cell migration (Correct Answer)
- B. Rotation and fixation of midgut loop
- C. Fusion of lateral palatine processes with nasal septum
- D. Canalization of the dorsal aorta and vitelline vessels
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***Transformation of pharyngeal pouches and neural crest cell migration***
- The clinical presentation of **thymic hypoplasia** and **cardiac outflow tract defects** is characteristic of **DiGeorge syndrome**, which involves failure of the **3rd and 4th pharyngeal pouches** to differentiate.
- **Neural crest cells** are essential for the formation of the **conotruncal septum** of the heart; their defective migration leads to both cardiac anomalies and pharyngeal apparatus malformations like **cervical fistulas**.
*Rotation and fixation of midgut loop*
- This developmental process occurs in the abdomen and is responsible for the proper positioning of the **intestines** and **mesentery**.
- Disruption leads to **malrotation** or **volvulus**, but it does not account for thymic, cardiac, or cervical defects.
*Fusion of lateral palatine processes with nasal septum*
- This process is specific to the formation of the **secondary palate** during the 7th to 12th weeks of gestation.
- Failure of this fusion results in **cleft palate**, which, while possibly part of some syndromes, does not explain **thymic hypoplasia** or **outflow tract defects**.
*Canalization of the dorsal aorta and vitelline vessels*
- This refers to the early formation of the **embryonic circulatory system** and vessels supplying the **yolk sac**.
- While vital for vascular development, it is unrelated to the differentiation of **pharyngeal pouch derivatives** or the specific migration of cervical **neural crest cells**.
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 9: A comparative anatomist is evaluating the evolutionary significance of the recurrent laryngeal nerve's circuitous route in humans. A patient with thyroid cancer has involvement of this nerve. Synthesizing embryological and comparative data, which explanation best accounts for this anatomical arrangement?
- A. The nerve originally supplied gills in fish ancestors and maintained its relationship with vascular structures during heart descent (Correct Answer)
- B. The nerve follows the sixth pharyngeal arch artery which becomes the ductus arteriosus in fetal life
- C. The nerve pathway represents failed migration of neural crest cells during development
- D. The nerve loops around subclavian artery due to differential growth of cervical versus thoracic vertebrae
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: ***The nerve originally supplied gills in fish ancestors and maintained its relationship with vascular structures during heart descent***
- In fish-like ancestors, the nerve supplied the **sixth branchial arch** (gills), taking a direct path between the brain and the heart; as the neck lengthened and the heart descended, the nerve was "pulled" inferiorly.
- This represents a **phylogenetic constraint** where the nerve remains hooked under derivatives of the **sixth aortic arch**, specifically the ligamentum arteriosum on the left and the subclavian artery on the right [1].
*The nerve follows the sixth pharyngeal arch artery which becomes the ductus arteriosus in fetal life*
- While it is true the left nerve loops under the **ductus arteriosus**, this statement fails to address the broader **comparative anatomy** and evolutionary significance requested [1].
- It only explains the **embryological mechanism** for the left side, not the evolutionary "why" behind the circuitous arrangement in terrestrial vertebrates.
*The nerve pathway represents failed migration of neural crest cells during development*
- **Neural crest cells** migrate normally to develop the laryngeal cartilages and connective tissues; the nerve's path is a result of **mechanical displacement**, not migratory failure.
- A failure in neural crest migration would typically lead to **craniofacial anomalies** or cardiac outflow tract defects rather than a long nerve loop.
*The nerve loops around subclavian artery due to differential growth of cervical versus thoracic vertebrae*
- The primary driver of the loop is the **caudal descent of the heart** and the great vessels during development, not the growth of the **vertebral column**.
- This option only describes the anatomy of the **right recurrent laryngeal nerve**, ignoring the left side which loops around the **aorta** [1].
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Indian Medical PG Question 10: A patient presents with polydactyly showing 7 fingers on one hand. Analyzing this from an evolutionary perspective, which statement best explains this anomaly in relation to comparative anatomy?
- A. It represents excessive Sonic Hedgehog signaling in the zone of polarizing activity (Correct Answer)
- B. It represents failure of apoptosis in interdigital mesenchyme similar to webbed feet in aquatic birds
- C. It represents atavism showing pentadactyl limb pattern reversion
- D. It represents persistence of prehensile digit pattern seen in primates
Evolutionary Perspectives in Anatomy Explanation: It represents excessive Sonic Hedgehog signaling in the zone of polarizing activity
- **Polydactyly** results from pathologically increased or ectopic **Sonic Hedgehog (SHH)** signaling within the **Zone of Polarizing Activity (ZPA)** of the limb bud.
- From an evolutionary and comparative perspective, the **SHH** signal gradient determines digit number and identity; excessive signaling disrupts the standard **pentadactyl** arrangement common in tetrapods.
*It represents failure of apoptosis in interdigital mesenchyme similar to webbed feet in aquatic birds*
- Failure of **apoptosis** in the **interdigital mesenchyme** leads to **syndactyly** (fused or webbed fingers), not an increase in the number of digits.
- While this involves comparative anatomy principles, it describes the mechanism for **webbing** rather than the morphogenesis of extra skeletal elements seen in **polydactyly**.
*It represents atavism showing pentadactyl limb pattern reversion*
- This is incorrect because the **pentadactyl limb** pattern refers to the **five-digit** blueprint; 7 fingers would be an increase (polydactyly), not a reversion to the 5-digit norm.
- An **atavism** is the reappearance of an ancestral trait; however, human ancestors (tetrapods) stabilized at five digits, making 7 fingers a **developmental anomaly** rather than an atavistic throwback.
*It represents persistence of prehensile digit pattern seen in primates*
- **Prehensility** refers to the ability to grasp (like an **opposable thumb**), which involves the orientation and musculature of digits rather than their total number.
- Non-human **primates** also follow the standard **pentadactyl** limb pattern; having 7 fingers does not reflect a primitive or specialized primate grasping morphology.
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