HistopathologyNotes
Cardiovascular Disease
BP = CO x SVR
CO = HR x SV
Infarction
- Necrosis due to ischaemia
- Arterial
- MI
- Stroke
- Bowel infarction
- Acute limb ischaemia
- Venous
- PE
- Torsion of vascular pedicle
- Sigmoid volvulus
- Testicular torsion
Atherosclerosis
- Arterial wall thickening and loss of elasticity
Stages
- Endothelial cell injury
- Inflammatory response in vessel wall
- Oxidised LDL
- Formation of stable atherosclerotic plaque
- Vascular smooth muscle phenotype shift
- Complication of stenosis or plaque rupture
Risk Factors
- Non-Modifiable
- Age
- Sex
- Family history
- Others - Type A personality, oestrogendeficiency
- Modifiable
- Hypertension
- Diabetes Mellitus
- Smoking
- Hypercholesterolaemia
- Others - physical inactivity, lipoprotein Lp(a)
Complications
- Plaque-related Stenosis(angina, intermittent claudication)
- Plaque rupture
- Thrombosis (MI, stroke, acute limb ischaemia)
- Embolism (MI, stroke, acute limb ichaemia)
- Weakening of vessel wall (AAA)
Acute Coronary Syndrome
- Unstable angina
- No cardiac damage (normal tropnin)
- NSTEMI/STEMI
- Cardiac damage (raised tropnin)
Acute Limb Ischaemia
- Thrombosis (60%)
- Hx of claudication/rest pain
- Onset over hours
- Signs of chronic vascularinsufficiency
- Hard arteries
- No bruits
- Embolism (30%)
- Recent MI, atrial fibrillation, aneurysm
- Onset over seconds
- No evidence of previous disease
- Soft artery
- Bruits
Hypertension
- 140/90 (based upon additional risk factors)
- 160/100 (absolute)
- Primary (essential) - 95%
- Idiopathic
- Secondary
- Renal disease
- Endocrine disease
- Pregnancy
- Drugs
Sequalae
- HTN retinopathy
- CVA
- ↑ Glucose levels
- HTN encephalopathy
- MI
- HTN Cardiomyopathy
- HTN Nephropathy
Cardiac Failure
A syndrome caused by anyabnormality of the heart that may becharacterised by a set of haemodynamic,
neural, and endocrine abnormalities
LVF
- Causes:
- IHD
- Hypertension
- Valve disease
- Myocardial disease
- Consequences:
- Impaired pulmonary outflow
- Congestion and oedema
- Reduced renal perfusion
- Salt and water retention + ATN
- Reduced CNS perfusion (encephalopathy)
RVF
- Causes:
- Left-sided heart failure (Congestive)
- Chronic Lung Pathology - CorPulmonale
- Consequences:
- Portal, systemic and peripheral congestion
- Tricuspid regurgitation
- Renal congestion (R > L)
Cardiomyopathy
Causes / FeaturesHypertrophic / Inherited (50% AD)
Sporadic cases / Pathology - heavy muscular hypertrophy with poor compliance
Often asymmetrical septal hypertrophy
Sequelae:
- Arrhythmias - AF
- LV outflow obstruction
- CHF
- Sudden deathYoung man
Syncope, FH of sudden death, Jerky pulse and double apical impulse, Ejection systolic murmur (+/- mild mitral murmur)
Dilated / Idiopathic
Genetic
Infections e.g. viral myocarditis
Toxins - alcohol, chemotherapy / Four-chambered hypertrophy and dilatation
Poor prognosis
Progressive CCF
Progressive loss of mycoytescausingdilation + heart failure + arrhythmias
Restrictive / Pathology - restriction of ventricular filling with myocardial fibrosis
ARVD / Inflammation and thinning of the right ventricular wall
Usually due to mutation in cell adhesion genes / Key consequences:
-Arrhythmia
- CCF
Valve Disease
Congenital
- Abnormalities e.g. Bicuspid valves
Acquired
- Rheumatic fever/Endocarditis
- Functional (e.g. Mitral/tricuspid valve disease)
- Degeneration (e.gcalcific aortic stenosis)
Stenosis
- Pressure overload + hypertrophy
- Develops slowly
Regurgitation
- Volume overload
- Develops quickly or slowly
Complications
- Hypertrophy
- LVF
- Worsening of IHD, heart failure
- Pro-arrhthymia
- Dilation
- Mitral and atria
- Risk of Endocarditis
Types / Pathogenesis / Features
Rheumatic Fever / Acute inflammatory disorder of children (5-15)
Post-streptococcal (5 weeks) / Foci of fibrinoid necrosis → Aschoff Bodies, Fibrinouspericarditis, Valvulitis
Fribrous thickening + commissural fusion, MacCallum plaques
Infective Endocarditis / Acute / Usually stap. aureus
Very virilant, IV drug users, Very severe / Bulky vegitations with lots of erosion
May produce an abscess
Subacute / Usually strep. viridans
Less virulent, Prosthetic valves, Long course / Small vegetations with little erosion
Pathology of the Lung
Respiratory Failure
- End-stage of all pulmonary disease
- PaO2 < 8 kpa
Type I respiratory failure
- Severe pneumonia, PE, asthma, fibrosis, LVF
- V/Q Imbalance
- CO2 - Compensation (pCO2 - normal/low)
- O2 – No compensation
Type II respiratory failure
- COPD, neuromuscular disease, severe acute asthma
- Hypoventilation
- Impaired transfer of Co2 and O2 (pCO2 elevated)
Pulmonary Embolus
- 95% of PE from deep vein thrombi in legs/pelvis
- Large - Instant death (acute corpulmonale)
- Medium - Chest pain + pulmonary heamorrhage
- Small- Clinically silent (multiple → Pulm. HTN)
- Ix: ECG + D-Dimer
Primary Pulmonary Hypertension
- Unknown cause
- 25mmHg pressure at rest
- Young women
- Complication → Right ventricular failure
- Tx: vasodilators/lung transplantation
RVF
- Causes:
- Left-sided heart failure (congestive)
- Chronic lung pathology → corPulmonale
- Consequences:
- Portal, systemic and peripheral congestion
- Tricuspid regurgitation
- Renal congestion (R > L)
Obstructive pulmonary disease
These are characterized by an increased resistance to airflow (low FEV1 and FEV1/FVC < 0.7)
Asthma
- Kids > adults
- Chronic airways inflammation that is usually reversible
- Part of an atopic trait
- Can be severe and life-threatening
- Macroscopic
- Overinflated, patchy atelectasis, mucus plugs
- Microscopic
- Oedema, pulmonary infiltrates (eosinophils), smooth muscle and mucoal gland hypertrophy
Chronic bronchitis
- Chronic cough with production of sputum most days, for a least 3 months in 2 consecutive years
- Usually smoking/old patients
Emphysema
- Destruction/dilatation of the lung parenchyma distal to the terminal bronchioles
- Can be young (congenital conditions) or old
- Panacinar
- Uniform destruction of acinus (lower basal zones)
- A1AT deficiency
- Centriacinar
- Central/proximal respiratory tree (upper lobes/apices)
- Smokers
Bronchiectasis
- Permanent and abnormal dilatation of bronchi
- Associated with inflammation
- Congenital - Cystic fibrosis, severe immune deficiency
- Post-infectious (severe viral, bacteria, fungal pneumonia)
- Bronchial obstruction (tumour, foreign body)
- Complications
- Chronic infection with H. influenzae
- Secondary infection with:
- Staph. aureus
- Moraxellacatarrhalis
- Pseudomonas
- Right ventricular failure
- Amyloidosis
Cystic Fibrosis
- Autosomal recessive.
- Mutation in CFTR gene → hyperviscous secretions
- Complications:
- Bronchiectasis(recurrent infections - staph, H. influenzae, P. Aeruginosa, B. Cepacia)
- Pancreatic failure
- Sperm maturation defects
Restrictive pulmonary disease
Pulmonary oedema
- Causes:
- IHD
- Hypertension
- Valve disease
- Myocardial disease
- Consequences:
- Impaired pulmonary outflow
- Congestion and oedema
- Reduced renal perfusion
- Salt and water retention + ATN
- Reduced CNS perfusion (encephalopathy)
Pulmonary Fibrosis
- Laying down of fibrotic tissue in the lung parenchyma
- Most important restrictive pathology
- FEV1/FVC > 0.7
- Characteristic features:
- Progressive shortness of breath
- Cyanosis (+ clubbing)
- Fine end inspiratory crackles
Extrinsic allergic alveolitis / Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis - Immune reaction from inhalation of antigens (fungal, bacterial, animal
protein, chemical)
Occupation-related
• Farmer’s lung (thermophilicactinomycetes)
• Bird fancier’s lung (avian proteins)
Pathology - interstitial pneumonitis + non-caseatinggranulomas
Pneumoconoses / Inflammatory lung conditions caused by inhalation of mineral dusts.
Lag Period of up to 30 years
Over-reaction to deeply seated dust particles with peristent inflammation
Types
• Coal dust (coal miners)
Lung nodules (coal macules) + massive fibrosis
• Silicosis (mining, quarrying, glass making)
Nodular fibrosis
• Asbestosis (ship building, construction)
•Diffuse fibrosis
Autoimmune / Sarcoidosis
Non-caseatinggranulomas + multisystem disease
Rheumatoid arthritis
Lupus
Systemic sclerosis
Ankylosingspondylitis
Drugs / Causes pneumonitis(may → fibrosis)
Reversible with early recognition
• Bleomycin
• Amiodarone
Radiation / Well-recognised complication of therapy for:
• Primary Lung Tumours
• Breast Carcinoma
1-6/12 after therapy
Lung cancer
- Benign (rare)
- Hamartomas,
- Clear cell tumours
- Papillomas
- Fribromas
- Asymptomatic
- Malignant
- Non-small cell - 80%
- Squamous cell
- Adenocarcinoma
- Large cell undifferentiated/alveolar cell
- Small cell (neuroendocrine) - 20%
- Local effects
- Bronchial obstruction → collapse
- Impaired mucus clearance →infections
- Invasion
- SVC, brachial plexus, oesophagus
- Extension through pleura/pericardium
- Pleuritis and pericarditis
- Lymphatic invasion → lymphangitiscarcinomatosis
- Distant effects
- Peptide production
- ACTH
- ADH
- PTH-like (particular to squamous)
- Para-neoplastic syndromes
- Lambert-Eaton myaesthenic syndrome, acanthosisnigrians, dermatomyositis
- Metastases (common in bone, brain and liver)
Pneumothorax
- Spontaneous
- Primary - apical blebs
- Secondary - COPD, asthma, pulmonary fibrosis, lung cancer
- Acquired
- Traumatic
- Iatrogenic - central line insertion, pleural aspiration, barotraumas
Asbestos related lung-disease
- Pleural plaques (marker of exposure)
- Asbestosis (pulmonary fibrosis)
- Adenocarcinoma (lung cancer - particularly in smokers)
- Mesothelioma
- Tumor of mesothelial lining (pleural, pericardial, peritoneal)
- Epitheliod, sacromatoid, biphasic, desmoplastic
- Estimated peak of disease around 2020
Hepato-biliary pathology
Hepatic Failure
Clinical syndrome occurring when > 90% functional capacity of liver is lost
Acute Liver Failure
- Common causes
- Acute Viral Hepatitis (AST > 1000)
- Hep. A/B/C, CMV/EBV
- Alcholic Hepatitis (AST < 300)
- Raised GGT + MCV
- Drug-related Hepatitis
- Paracetamol, NSAIDS, antibiotics
- Clinical Features
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Irritability →sleep disturbance →disorientation → coma
- Coagulopathy
- Jaundice (conjugated)
- Infection (sepsis + multi-organ failure)
- Hepato-renal syndrome/hepato-pulmonary syndrome
Chronic Liver Disease
- Persistent liver damage > 6 months without resolution
- Progressive Fibrosis
- Cirrhosis
Cirrhosis
Whole liver involved with triad of:
- Fibrosis
- Nodules of regenerating hepatocytes
- Distortion of liver architecture
- Complications
- Hepatic failure (decompensation)
- Hepatocellular carcinoma
- Portal hypertension
- Ascites
- Porto-systemic shunts
- Oesophageal varices, haemorrhoids, caput medusa
- Splenomegaly(hypersplenism)
- Causes
Cause / Deficit / Features
Alcohol / Alcohol byproducts activate HepaticStellate Cells → Fibrosis
3 distinct pathologies
- Alcoholic Hepatitis
- Alcoholic Fatty Liver
- Alcoholic Cirrhosis
Viral hepatitis
Steatohepatitis / Non-alcoholic liver disease
Similar appearance but associated with metabolic syndrome
? Insulin resistance (reduced peripheral lipolysis)
Continuum
- Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
- Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis(may lead to cirrhosis)
Wilsonʼs disease / Disorder of ATPase Copper transport protein
Accumulation of copper in liver → hepatolenticular degeneration
AD transmission / Neurology + Kayser-Fleisher rings
Low caeruloplasmin + low copper
Haemochromatosis / HFE gene C282Y mutation → excessive GI absorption of iron
AR + manifests > 40 years old
Accumulation in multiple organs / Liver
– cirrhosis
– hepatocellular carcinoma
Heart
– Congestive cardiac failure
– Conducting defects and arrhythmia
– Constrictive pericarditis
Endocrine
– Diabetes
– Panhypopituitarism
– Hypogonadotropism
Joints
– Chondrocalcinosis
Loss of Libido
Alpha-1 anti-trypsindeficiency
Autoimmune / Middle aged women with co-existant autoimmune disease
High transaminases + raised IgG
ANA + anti-SM antibodies
Responds well to steroids
Primary biliary cirrhosis
- Intrahepatic bile ducts (cholangiocytes)
- Pruritus
- Raised ALP + GGT
- Anti-mitochondrial/IgM
Primary sclerosingcholangitis
- Sclerosis of Intra- and extrahepatic ducts
- Association with UC (75%)
- Isolated raised ALP
- Risk of cholangiocarcinoma
Hepatic Neoplasia
Benign Tumours
- Haemangioma
- Most common - 3% population
- Asymptomatic (incidental finding)
- Liver cell adenoma
- Young women on COC
Malignant Tumours
- Hepatocellular Carcinoma
- Develop on background of cirrhosis/chronic inflammation
- 1/3rd→ DNA mismatch repaid
- Cholangiocarcinoma
- Malignancy of intrahepatic bile ducts
- Non-specific presentation
- Jaundice, weight loss, pruritus, pain
- Present late with poor prognosis
Gallstones
- Types:
- Cholesterol (most common)
- Pigment (haemolytic states)
- Risk factors
- Female
- Forty
- Fat
- Fertile
- Fair
Annular Pancreas
- Failure of migration of the ventral bud
- Obstructs duodenum
- Presents in infancy with a similar picture to pyloric stenosis
Pancreas Divisium
- Incomplete fusion of the ventral and dorsal ducts
- Predisposes to
- Chronic Pancreatitis
- Pancreas Ca
Acute Pancreatitis
- Inflammatory condition of the pancreas
- Causes
- Gallstones (45%)
- Ethanol (25%
- Trauma
- Steroids
- Mumps/Infections
- Autoimmune
- Scorpion venom
- Hyperlipidaemia, hypercalcaemia
- ERCP
- Drugs
- Symptoms:
- Epigastric pain radiating to back
- Relieved by sitting forward
- Associated with vomiting
- Signs:
- Unwell
- Fever
- Tachycardia/pnoeia
- Jaundice
- Local/general peritonitis +/- shock and ileus
- Cullen’s Sign
- Grey-Turner’s signS
- Complications
- Respiratory: ARDS, atelectasis, pleural effusion
- Organ failure: myocardial depression
- DIC
- Metabolic: hypocalcaemia, hyperglycaemia, metacidosis
- Necrosis, pseudocyst , abscess, infection
Chronic Pancreatitis
- Repeated episodes of pancreatic inflammation leading to structural damage and fibrosis
- Results in exocrine and endocrine dysfunction
- Symptoms
- Wt loss
- Poor appetite
- Pain
- Exocrine dysfunction
- Endocrine dysfunction
- Signs
- Epigastric tenderness
- Erythemaabigne
Pancreatic Tumours
- M>F
- Elderly
- Western Countries
- Risk Factors
- Lifestyle: smoking, alcohol
- Toxin exposure: naphthylamine (dye industry), benzidine
- Disease states: chronic pancreatitis, diabetes
- Congenital: pancreas divisum
- Symptoms
- Anorexia
- Malaise
- Weight loss
- Chronic epigastric pain radiating to back
- Steatorrhoea
- Diabetes symptoms
- Signs
- Cachexia
- Lymphadenopathy
- Signs of EtOH use
- Painless obstructive jaundice
- Palpable gallbladder
- Hepatosplenomaegaly and ascites
- Thrombophlebitismigrans
- Maranticendocarditis
Pathology of the Gut
Achalasia
- Dysmotility disorder of the oesophagus
- Degeneration of Auerbachplexi
- Sequelae:
- Dysphagia(liquids and solids)
- Hypertrophy
- Squamous cell carcinoma
Hiatus Hernia
- Impaired lower
- oesophageal sphincter
- Reflux of gastric contents + oesophagitis
Reflux Oesphagitis/GORD
- Acidic gastric contents → lower oesophagus
- Risk factors:
- Increased IAP (obesity, posture, large meals, alcohol)
- Hiatus hernia
- Complications
- Peptic Stricture
- Scarring and deformation → narrowing
- BarrettsOesophagitis (10%)
- Columnar metaplasia
- Adenocarcinoma
Barrett’s Oesophagus
- Oesophageal columnar metaplasia
- Adaptive response to acidic damage
- Dx at endoscopy and confirmed by histology
- Pre-malignant potential
Oesophageal Carcinoma
- Presents late
- Malaise, weight loss
- Progressive dysphagia
- Squamous Cell (squamous differentiation)
- Smoking, alcohol, achalasia
- Middle-third
- Adenocarcinoma(glandular differentiation)
- Barrett’s oesophagus
- Lower third
Gastritis
- Causes
- Infection (H. Pylori)
- Autoimmunity (→ Pernicious Anaemia)
- Drugs (NSAID’s)
- Alcohol
H. pylori
- Micro-aerophilic Gram-ve bacterium
- Infects gastric-type mucosa
- Predilection for antral colonisation
- Increase in Gastrin production increases acid production
- Faeco-oral and oro-oral transmission
Peptic Ulcer Disease
- Full thickness breaches in mucosa
- Solitary
- Common sites:
- Gastric antrum
- 1st part of duodenum
- Complications
- Haemorrhage (posterior)
- Haematemesis
- Perforation (anterior)
- Abdominal pain + peritonitis
- Stricture (post-healing)
- Gastric outflow obstruction
Gastric Tumours
Adenocarcinomas
- Intestinal
- Inflammation → metaplasia → dysplasia sequence
- H. Pylori-related
- Diffuse
- Normal mucosa
- SIignet ring cells
- Highly infiltrative + aggressive (linitisplastica)
Gastric lymphoma
- No lymphoid tissue normally
- H. Pylori → migration hyper-stimulation of B lymphocytes
- Can lead to Marginal cell lymphoma
- Responds to antibiotics
Leiomyomas/leimyosarcomas
- Benign/malignant tumour of muscle
- Also affects:
- Uterus (fibroid)
- Oesophagus (rare <1% oesophageal tumours)
- Skin (solitary cutenous, multiple, angioleiomyomas)
Stromal Tumours
- Connective tissue origin
- Features:
- Over-expression of tyrosine kinase KIT
- Exophytic
- May be treated with Imatinib
Coeliac disease
- Gluten-sensitive enteropathy
- Inappropriate T cell driven inflammation → lymphocytic enteritis
- Malabsorption (iron + folate)
- Clinical Features
- Adulthood
- Anaemia
- GI sx - discomfort, altered bowel habit (IBS-like)
- Failure to thrive in kids/adolescents
- Diagnosis
- Antibody serology
- IgAendomysial
- IgGantigliadin
- IgA tissue transglutaminase
- Small bowel biopsy (distal duodenum)
- Complications
- Osteopaenia/osteoporosis
- Enteropathy-associated T cell lymphoma (EALT)
- Deterioration despite good diet control
- Extremely destructive (obstruction/perforation)
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
- Excess wall-based inflammatory activity leading to relapsing and remitting disease
Ulcerative Colitis / Crohns Disease
- Large intestine only (back-wash ileitis)
- Extends proximally from the rectum
- Mucosal layer only
- Pathology:
- Diffuse mucosal inflammation
- Crypt abscess
- Complications
- Dilatation + perforation
- Due to involvement of muscle coat (transverse)
- Adenocarcinoma
- Flat, ill-defined tumours (not usually polyps)
- Endoscopic surveillance
- Any part of bowel (small bowel/colon)
- Lesions “skip”
- Full thickness involvement
- Pathology:
- Patchy full thickness inflammation with small lymphoic aggregates
- Non-caseatinggranulomas
- Deep fissuring ulcers
- Complications
- Obstruction
- Fistulae formation
- Peri-anal disease
- Extra-intestinal manifestations of IBD
- Arthritis (ankylosingspondylitis)
- Erythemanodosum
- Uveitis
Colo-rectal carcinoma
- Aetiology
- Western lifestyle: low-fibre diet, smoking
- Other disease states:
- Familial adenomatouspolyposis (APC)
- Hereditary non-polyposis coli (MLH1)
- Peutz-Jeghers syndrome
- IBD
- Gastrectomy
- Multiple mutations required for Adenoma →carcinoma
- Mutation →spatial reorganisation of crypts
- Proliferative element accumulated superficially
- Exposure of element to luminal carcinogens→ further mutations
- Complications
- Chronic blood loss (IDA)
- Obstruction
- Perforation
Pathology of the Nervous System
Cerebrovascular Accident/Stroke
- Sudden onset neurological deficit lasting > 24 hours
- Attributable to a vascular cause
- Infarction (80%)
- Haemorrhage (20%)
Infarction
- Aetiology
- In-Situ Thrombus
- Rare
- Thrombo-embolism
- Internal carotid artery
- Proximal Intracerebral artery
- Left atrium (AF)
- Left ventricle/valves (post-MI, endocarditis)
Haemorrhage
- Hypertension
- Charcot-Bouchard aneurysms
- Basal ganglia + thalamus
- Cerebral amyloidangiopathy(10%)
- Age-related (not to other amyloid disease)
- Border of white matter
- AV malformation (young patients)
Head Trauma
Location / Injury / Clinical Features / ManagementExtra-dural / Outside the dura
mater / Disruption of arteriesfrom the middlemeningeal artery / LOC → lucid period →
deterioration
(coning) → death / CT (lens shapedhaematoma)
Neurosurgicaldrainage
Sub-dural / Betweenarachnoid anddura / Rupture of bridgingvein / Insidious onset
(alcoholics/elderly)
Headache, sensory and/or motor Sx / Inv: CT
Rx: Surgicalevacuation of
haematoma
Subarachnoid / Under arachnoid / Trauma or ruptured Berry aneurysm / Sudden onsetHeadacheMeningism / Inv: CT, cerebral
angiography
Rx: Conservate/
Surgery (clipping/
embolisation)
Intra-cerebral / Within braintissue / Damage to brain
substance / Compressive and
localising signs / Surgical drainage
Traumatic Parenchymal Injury
- Concussion
- Transient LOC with recovery over days (RAS damage)
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Stretching and tearing of white matter
- Post-traumatic dementia and veg. states
- Contusion
- Haemorrhages on superficial brain surface
- Coup and contracoup
- Traumatic intracerebral haemorrhage
- Deep contusions
- Associated with diffuse axonal injury + oedema + subarachnoid haemorrhage
Cerebral Oedema
- Causes
- Idiopathic
- Generalised
- Hypoxia
- Metabolic disturbance
- Trauma
- Hypertension
- Localised
- Ischaemia
- Haematomas
- Tumours
- Mechanisms
- Acute- cytotoxicity
- Damaged cells swell and leak Na/K.
- Chronic - vasogenic activity
- Cerebral vessel become leaky and fluid leaves
- Clinical features
- Headache (stretch of receptors around intracranial blood vessels)
- Worse in morning + on movn
- Vomiting (stimulation of centres in pons/medulla)
- Papilloedema(swelling of optic disc)
- Complications
- Vascular damage
- Central retinal vein compression → papilloedema
- Haemorrhage/infarct
- Intracranial Nerve damage (III/VI)
- Obstruction to CSF flow
- Herniation
Benign Intracranial Hypertension
- Pseudotumourcerebri
- Unknown cause:
- Obese females
- Headache + papilloedema
- No focal neurology
Brain Tumours