deck_5342817 Flashcards
A 65 yo woman receiving therapy for RA presented with a right lower lung mass. Never smoked or drank alcohol. A peripherally stapled wedge of lung parenchyma measuring 9x5x2cm was received and sectioned, showing a reasonably well circumscribed nodular mass 9x1.5 cm immediately beneath the pleura. Ddx?
-neoplasm -infection-effect of drug therapy or R.A.
How does PCP present histologically?
lung parenchyma looks the same but you see foamy, pink exudate in the alveolar spaces
How do granulomas form?
macrophages cant digest inciting agent causing failure of acute inflammatory responses and persistence of injurious agent which results in recruitment of macrophages with epithelioid and giant cell formation
Asteroid body giant cells are seen in what disease?
Sarcoidosis
Tonton giant cells are seen in which disease?
lipid-laden lesions like fat necrosis
Langhans Type giant cells are seen in which disease?
TB but not specific
What do rheumatoid nodules look like?
central area of necrosis surrounded by palisading macrophages and lymphocytes
Fibroblasts in a rheumatoid nodule produce what?
large quantities of metalloproteases
The lymphocytes in a rheumatoid nodule produce what?
IgG and IgM rheumatoid factor
What finding suggests a pre-mortem clot?
lines of zahn
What is migratory thrombophlebitis?
aka Trousseau sign; in 10% due to tumor or tumor necrosis producing PAF and procoagulant these patients respond better to heparin then warfarin
What is the most probably underlying basis for most forms of pulmonary HTN?
Pulmonary endothelial cell and/or vascular smooth muscle dysfunction
Wegener’s is associated with ___-ANCA
C (PR3)
Aspiration pneumonia is common in which patients?
debilitated patients with a history of recurrent pneumonia
How does aspiration pneumonia show histologically?
-organizing pneumonia-often multinucleate giant cells -lipoid pneumonia
What is on the Ddx for aspiration pneumonia?
granulomatous inflammation
Neuroblastoma presentation on H&E
-small round blue cell tumor-rosettes around neuropils
What are some causes of acute eosinophilic pneumonia?
-Aspergillus-Churg-Strauss syndrome -Asthma-tobacco -others
Describe SIMPLE eosinophilic pneumonia
(aka Loffler’s syndrome), self-limited disorder with no/minimal symptoms, and often transient
Describe ACUTE eosinophilic pneumonia
onset in 1-4 days and is accompanied by fever, cough, dyspnea, and chest pain. Prominent eosinophils in a BAL fluid
What is seen in a biopsy of acute eosinophilic pneumonia?
diffuse alveolar damage