advance histopath Flashcards

1
Q

what is a teratoma

A

type of germ cell tumour

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2
Q

what types of tissue can teratomas contain

A

ectoderm

mesoderm

endoderm

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3
Q

where do teratomas form

A

Common in ovary and testes but can occur in other places

can occur from germ cells that were left behind during embryonic migration from the posterior dorsal ridge

ie in the middle of the body: pineal, base of the skull, mediastinum, retroperitoneum and sacro-coccygeal area

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4
Q
A

ectoderm teratoma

squamous epithelium

hair follicles

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5
Q
A

mesoderm teratoma

cartilage surrounded by metabolically active spindle cells

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6
Q
A

GI epithelium

endoderm teratoma

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7
Q

different types of ovarian tumour

A

from the surface epithelium ie mesothelial lining

Sex cord/stroma – graffian follicle and supporting cell (not ovum in centre)

Germ cell tumour

  • including teratoma
  • Yolk sac and chorio are from the trophoblasts
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8
Q

testicular germ cell tumours

A
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9
Q

classification of teratomas

A
  • Divided into mature and immature
  • Mature – mature tissue
    • mature either solid or cystic (ie dermoid cyst)
    • can become malignant – any type of tumour because any type of tissue can be present
  • Immature – embryonic or fetal tissue – bad prognosis - because the tissue can proliferate because have the stem cells
  • Also contain mixed elements

can be monodermal - ie one layer

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10
Q

epidemiology of teratomas

A

more common in ovary than testes

in ovary - more ‘‘benign’’ ie more mature = act benign

in testes more ‘‘malignant’’ - ie more immature = act malignant

Subtle difference in genetics that make this difference

Incidence is increasing

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11
Q
A

testicular teratoma

Variable looking because have a lot of different tissues

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12
Q
A

mixed germ cell tumour

70% teratoma 30% embryonal ca

Solid

Immature

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13
Q
A
  • Teratoma
  • Extra-dermal elements – skin, teeth, hair
  • Mature cystic
  • A lot of ovarian are cystic – more commonly known as dermoid cyst
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14
Q
A
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15
Q

grading of teratomas

A

look at how much immature neural tissue there is

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16
Q
A

immature nerual tumour

neuroectoderm

primitive – making spinal cord and brain

17
Q

where are neuroendocrine tumours found

A

every tissue of the body

GIT - very common, SI and rectum most common

  • Foregut, mid and hindgut
  • foregut - thymus, oesophagus, lung stomach, duodenum, pancreas
  • migut - appendix, ileum, cecum, ascending colon
  • hindgut - distal bowel, rectum
  • Hindgut tumours – low grade
  • Mid gut – highgrade

lung and bronchus - common

L is GIT, R is pancreas

red granular cytoplasm cells

18
Q

electron microscopy of normal neuroendocrine cells

A

See the granules

19
Q

immunohistochemical markers for neuroendocrine tumours

A

chromogramin – core of the neurosecretory granules – marker for these tumours

synaptophysin - specific marker for neuroendocrine tumours

CD56 also mark NK cells

Also mark tumour for the hormone that it produces ie gastrin, serotonin, insulin

20
Q
A

neuroendocrine tumour

21
Q

grading of neuroendocrine tumour

A

Ki-67 is a marker for the cells that are actively proliferating – more = high grade. <3% low grade well differentiated neuroendocrine tumour

Number of mitoses

22
Q

neuroendocrine tumour behaviour

A

Grade determines behaviour – high = more aggressive – chemo, may have met – need more aggressive therapy

Imaging – low grade – measure uptake of chemical processed by neuroendocrine cell – when v malig – less diff so just use PET

23
Q

staging of neuroendocrine tumour

A

TNM system – staging system depends on the site of the tumour

24
Q

syndromes associated with hypersecretion

A

zollinger-ellison = tumour of the pancreas or duodenum – gastrin = gastroin hypersecretion by parietal cell = acid = peptic ulcer of stomach, duodenum, jejunum

carcinoid = serotonin

hypoglycaemia = insulin