Anatomic Pathology Flashcards
What is anatomic pathology
Pathology:
1. Clinical -> biochem analysis of bodily fluids, OR cytology (FNA, smear, imprint)
2. Anatomic -> gross & microscopic evaluation of tissue morphology
- patterns, interactions b/w cells & adjacent tissue
Cons to anatomic pathology
longer turnaround times (~2days), more invasive, often requires anesthesia
Pros to anatomic pathology
more definitive; can grade, count mitotic figures, etc.; IHC (can ID tumor antigens)
What is the optimal location to sample?
the interface of tumor + healthy tissue
can see cancer cells infiltrating healthy tissue cells
Are larger or smaller sample collections preferred? Why?
Larger
- better “whole” picture of in vivo situation, as more samples = more opportunities for investigation if needed
What is the optimal sample submission size and tissue:formalin ration?
- < 1cm in size (starburst size)
- 1:10 tissue:formalin w/ partial thickness breadloaf slices
Screening samples for necropsy (7)
- Lung
- Liver
- Kidney
- Spleen
- SI
- LI
- Heart
plus all lesions
What are critical aspects of your sample submission that you should never neglect?
A thorough Hx and Ddx list!
What are the important components of every morphologic diagnosis?
Organ, disease process, lesion distribution, severity, chronicity
What is the distribution of pneumonia?
Cranioventral; inflamed, consolidated lung lobe
What are some reasons why a tissue sample (biopsy or necropsy) may not yield a diagnosis?
- disease too acute w/ no morphological changes yet
- the hx/clinical data and sample mismatch
- improper storage/handling
- poor sample margins
- sample is necrotic
- incorrect sample location