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immuno - hasan82 - ArchivalUser - 03-26-2007


An 18-year-old high school senior presents to her doctor with tender lymph nodes in her neck on the left side.
She has no significant past medical history. Two weeks ago, she updated her vaccines in preparation for college.
A lymph node biopsy is performed, which shows benign paracortical expansion and scattered multinucleated
giant cells with eosinophilic cytoplasmic and nuclear inclusion bodies. Which of the following vaccines is most
likely responsible for this woman™s lymphadenitis?


A. Hepatitis B

B. Measles

C. Rubella

D. Smallpox

E. Tetanus


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-26-2007

A.HBSAg occurs like inclusion bodies.


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-26-2007

B. Measles



0 - ArchivalUser - 03-26-2007

b....


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-26-2007

warthin finleldy(WF giant cells in paracortex..


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-27-2007

Measles is out, base on the age of the patient.
Small pox vaccination is uncommon at present.
Tetanus is unlikely at that age. Will only needs a booster if ever. This is also a bacteria.
Paracortex houses the T-cells. My guess will be Hep B surface antigen vaccine.
Rubella is common with younger age.
A. Final answer.
What do you all think?


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-27-2007

acctivvityy you can get measles vacine at any age if you are not immune. Thats why they do Rubeola titers to prove that you are immune. So your reason for counting out measles is not scientific. I still think that this is Measles.


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-27-2007

it must be measles


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-27-2007

bbbbbbb


0 - ArchivalUser - 03-27-2007

B. Which is the right answer hasan 82?