Hematological Patho II Flashcards

1
Q

What is a leukaemia and what does it lead to

A

massive proliferation of leukaemia cells eventually causes suppression of myelogenes which lead to:

  • decreased RBC
  • decreased mature leukocytes
  • decreased platelets
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2
Q

what are the signs and symptoms of bone marrow pathology

A
Lymphoma
leukemias
immune disorders
diffuse boen bane
lymphadenopathy/splenomegaly
blood vessels occlusion
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3
Q

What are myeloid cells of chronic myeloid leukaemia characterized by

A

By the philidlphia chromosome on karyotyping

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4
Q

What is the translocation of the philadelphia chromosome that causes CML

A

translocation of q arm of chromosome 22 to the q arm of chromosome 9 t(9:22)

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5
Q

what is leukemia generaly + what is their origin

A

Neoplastic process which represents a monoclonal proliferation of one transformed precursor cell

80-85% of leukemias and lymphomas are B cell in origin

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6
Q

what is acute vs chronic leukemia

A

Acute: composed of immature cells, sudden onset few months from symptoms to dx

Chronic- composed of mature cells (myelocytes)

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7
Q

What is acute lymphoid leukemia, dx criteria and age

A
  • Neoplastic monoclonal proliferation of lymphoid cells predominantly in blood (lymphoblasts)
  • bone marrow > 30% blasts

ALL occurs mc in children (70% of all childhood leukemias)

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8
Q

What does ALL usually happen w

A

Down syndrome

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9
Q

What is chronic lymphoid leukemia and epidemiology

A

neoplastic proliferation of mature lymphocytes in peripheral blood and bone marrow

-pts older than 50 (2:1 M:F)

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10
Q

What is a major marker of T cell

A

CD5 is a t cell marker

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11
Q

What is the microscopic presentation of CLL

A

Smudge cells

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12
Q

What is acute myeloid leukemia characterized by + epidemiologu

A

clonal proliferation of myeloid precursors

predominantly older pts (40 isH)

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13
Q

markers and pres of AML

A

T(15;17)

classic clinical case is a younger pt (40ish) with symptoms of leukemia (anemia, bruising) who presents w disseminated intravascular coagulation

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14
Q

What is chronic myeloid leukemia, epidemiology and associated abnormality

A

Neoplastic monoclonal proliferation of granulocytes
older pts

Associated with philadelphia chromosome t(9;22)

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15
Q

clinical s/s of CML

A
  • up to 40% asymptomatic
  • fatgue/letheragy
  • SOB

Signs- markedly elevated WBC, low leukocyte alkaline phospjatase, high uric acid level and lactate dehydrogenase

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16
Q

Course of CML (indolent and chronic phase)

A

Idolent phase- lasts 3-5 years and can be asymptomatic

Chronic phase- leads to an accelerated phase characterized by fever, weight loss, night sweats etc

Finally pts progess to blast cells

17
Q

What is timor lysis syndrom, when does it happen and what does it release

A

Group of metabolic complications can occur after tx of neoplastic disorder
-caused b massive tumor lysis w release fo large amounts of potassium, phosphate and nucleic acids

18
Q

What is hodgkin lymphoma generally

A

tumor of germinal centre or post germinal centre of B cells

-Contains a minority of neoplastic cells (Reef sternberg cells) in an inflammatory background d

19
Q

Epidemiology of HL

A

10% of all lymphomas

-one peak in young adults and one in older adults

20
Q

mc type of HL

A

Nodular sclerosis (60-80%)

21
Q

HL vs non HL

A

Hodgkin- Reed sternberg cells, Sigle group of axial nodes, contiguous spread, constitutional symtoms, bimodal age distribution

non HL- No reed sternberg, multiple groups of peripheral nodes, non continues spread, fewer constitutional symptoms, 20-40yold

22
Q

what is something that presents in 80% of HL cases

A

Cervical or supraclavicular lymph nodes

23
Q

Symptoms of HL

A

(only 1/3 have symptoms)

Consituitional symptoms
Generalized pruritus
Lymphadenopathy
Pain in the lymph nodes w ingestion of alcohol

24
Q

What is contiguous spread in HL

A

HL appears to spread or grow my contiguous extension (spreading from one lymph node to adjacent nodes)

Non HL is more difuse

25
Q

Staging of Hodgkins Lymphoma (4)

A
  1. Only a single lymph site
  2. two or more lymph nodes on one side of diaphragm
  3. Lymph nodes on both sides of the diaphragm are involved
  4. Extensive involvement of extra nodal sites
26
Q

What are the 2 major categories of plasma cell lesions

A
Involving single bones (plasmacytoma)
Multiple bones (multiple myeloma)
27
Q

what will you measure in a plasma cell lesion

A

Overproduction of one clone of Ig-> produces M spike in gamma (y) region of electrophoresis

28
Q

Multiple myeloma- age, presentation

A

50-60yold

Path fx
Hypercalemia (due to bone resorption)
Decreased functional Ig
Increased light chains

29
Q

What is a plasmacytoma

A

osseous solitary plasmacytoma of bone is localized in bone tumor of plasma cells without evidence of plasma cell myeloma or marrow plasmacytosis

30
Q

What is monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined sig

A

Presence of M spike without osteolytic lesions, waldenstrom macroglobulinemia, amyloidosis, or lymphoproliferative disorders

31
Q

What % of in with monoclonal gammopathy of undermined sig go on to MM

A

20%

32
Q

What is lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma

A

uncommon form of non HL

33
Q

what is waldenstrom macroglobulinemia and what does it overproduce

A

type of Non HL that produces large amount s of IgM

- too much of the IgM causes slugging of cells in the vessels (hyper viscosity)

34
Q

What are heavy chain diseases

A

rare B cell proliferative disorders characterized by the production of monoclonal protein consisting of portion of the imunogllobulin heavy chain without a bound light chain