150. Liver Histo + Basic Path Flashcards
What are the two different models for architecture of the liver?
What makes up the portal triad?
What is normal appearance of liver under reticulin and Trichrome Stains?
Lobular Model
Centrilobular - around CV
Periportal - near portal triad
Acinar Model
Zone 1: near portal triad, O2 rich
Zone 2
Zone 3: near CV, risk for ischemia, enzymatic activity
Portal Triad: PV (largest), HA (muscular), BD (cuboidal cell layer)
Reticulin: shows fibrosis
Trichrome: shows fibrosis (blue)
Normal fibrosis around portal tracts - collagen-rich
What are the 5 key mechanisms/signs of injury/repair in liver?
- Hepatocyte Degeneration (reversible): ballooning due to substance accumulation (fat - steatosis; bile - cholestasis)
- Necrosis/Apoptosis: groups of ghost cells around CV (zone 3, coagulative necrosis) vs. individual mummified hepatocyte (apoptosis)
- Inflammation: chronic, autoimmune or med-induced
- Fibrosis: Stellate cells (in b/w sinusoids and hepatocytes), activated due to injury/inflammation - cause deposition of scar matrix and activation of kupffer cells = fibrosis
- Regeneration and Fibrosis: scar/fibrosis commonly in Zone 3, regeneration (scars - fibrous septa - dissolve), becomes irreversible fibrosis if chronic and ongoing
Portal/Pericellular fibrosis = bridging fibrosis = regeneration nodule formation
Acute Liver Failure
- key signs
- fulminant vs. subfulminant
- mechanism
- causes
- histo
sign: hepatic encephalopathy
fulminant (<2wks), subfulminant (<3mo)
Mechanism: massive hepatocyte necrosis
cause: drugs (50% ACETAMINOPHEN), toxins (amanita phalloides, CCl4), viruses (HAV, HBV), Autoimmune hepatitis
Histo:
Acetaminophen Overdose: ONLY centrilobular necrosis (zone 3 responsible for enzymatic metabolism)
Other: necrosis - pink w/o visible nuclei
Chronic Liver Disease
- types
- mechanisms
- causes
- path: Trichrome stain, gross
Types: chronic hepatitis (continuous injury) vs repeated injuries over time
Mechanisms: fibrosis = cirrhosis = liver failure
Cause: AFLD, NASH = NAFLD, viruses (HBV, HCV), autoimmune hepatitis, biliary disease, genetic metabolic disease
Trichrome: normal (collagen in portal tract) = portal fibrosis (extends to nearby hepatocytes) = pericellular fibrosis = bridging fibrosis (blue bands) with regenerating pink nodules
Gross: multiple nodules, not smooth outer surface
What is hepatic dysfx without overt necrosis? What are two causes?
Liver tissue viable but hepatocytes unable to perform metabolic fx
Cause: tetracycline toxicity, acute fatty liver of pregnancy
Fatty Liver Disease
- progression stages
- RF for AFLD and NAFLD
- why does fat develop in liver
- what is the two-hit hypothesis for NAFLD
- Steatosis: fat accumulation in hepatocytes
- Steatohepatitis: inflammation and steatosis
- Fibrosis (progressive) = cirrhosis
- Liver failure or HCC due to ongoing cirrhosis
AFLD: alcohol use (>20g/day)
NAFLD: (<20g/day), Obesity/Metabolic Syndrome, Diabetes
Fatty Liver: liver is checkpoint for fat when adipocytes overwhelmed, ectopic TG storage causing steatosis, in metabolic syndrome - excess energy - increased FA uptake by liver, increased FA synthesis, increased TG synthesis all cause fatty liver
- fat accumulation (steatosis)
- oxidative stress to hepatocytes = steatohepatitis
Histo for different stages of fatty liver disease
include key features of alcoholic liver disease
- Steatosis
Macrovesicular (nuclei periphery) and microvesicular (central nuclei) fat globules/vesicles in hepatocytes - Steatohepatitis
Lipogranulomas (inflammatory cell aggregations
Ballooned hepatocytes
Lipoapoptosis: hepatocyte death due to exposure of non-adipose tissue (liver) to excess of LCFAs
Pericellular + Perivenular Fibrosis (surrounding individual cells or central vein) - Fibrosis/Cirrhosis: bridging fibrosis with regeneration nodules
- HCC/Cirrhosis: micronodularity with fat accumulation
Alcoholic Steatohepatitis: Mallory Bodies!
Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
- types of EtOH consumption
- how does alcohol cause hepatotoxicity?
- what zone does steatosis start in for AFLD?
Binge: too much too fast (5+ drinks in 2 hrs, 1x/wk)
Steady: too much too often (4-5 drinks/day)
95% EtOH oxidized to acetaldehyde then acetate
Alcohol Dehydrogenase (ADH): converts EtOH to acetaldehyde
Aldehydedehydrogenase (ALDH2): converts acetaldehyde to acetate (producing NADH from NAD+)
High NADH/NAD+ ratio favors FA/TG synthesis = Fatty Liver
Hepatotoxic effects: high lipid peroxidation, binds plasma membranes, interferes with mito etc, inhibits nuclear repair, interferes with microtubule fx, increases collagen synthesis (stellate cell activation)
AFLD steatosis begins in Zone 3 and extends toward portal area