Histopath lower GI Flashcards

1
Q

Hirschsprung’s disease - what is it? Dx?

What is seen on barium enema

A
  • Absence of GANGLION CELLS in myenteric plexus
  • Dx with biopsy
  • Barium enema shows constricted segment
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2
Q

Which part of the colon is GIT is affected by volvulus in infants vs elderly?

A

Infants - small bowel

Elderly - sigmoid

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3
Q

4 Causes of acute colitis?

A

Drugs - esp abx
Infection
Chemo/radio therapy

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4
Q

Causes of ischemic colitis

A
  • Small vessel disease (DM, vasculitis)
  • Low flow (shock, haemorrhage)
  • Arterial/venous OCCLUSION
  • Obstruction
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5
Q

Common affected areas of GIT in ischemic colitis

A

“watershed areas”

i.e, splenic flexure, rectosigmoid

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6
Q

Causes of lower GI obstruction

A
  • Adhesions
  • Volvulus
  • External mass
  • Herniation
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7
Q

Diff btw Crohns’ and UC for epidemiology?

A

Crohn’s usually teens

UC is 20-25yo

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8
Q

Aetiology of IBD

A

unknown

?Infection ?host immunity issue

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9
Q

Diff btw CD and UC pathophysiology?

A

CD - transmural, skip lesions, mouth to anus, non-caveating granulomas

UC - proximally from anus, mucosa affected,

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10
Q

Histology of Crohns’

A
  • Non-caseating granulomas
  • Linear ulcers
  • cobblestone appearance
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11
Q

Sx of IBD

A
IDA - fatigue
Blood in stool
Diarrhoea
Mucus
Pain
Fever
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12
Q

Extra GI manifestations of IBD

A
  • Skin: pyoderma gangrenous, erythema nodosum, clubbing
  • Eyes: uveitis, conjunctivitis
  • Joints
  • Liver - PSC (UC)
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13
Q

Major complication of UC

A

Toxic megacolon - Damage to muscular propia with disruption to neuromuscular function –> chronic dilatation

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14
Q

Which IBD condition is associated with greatly increase risk of adenocarcinoma?

A

UC

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15
Q

Diverticulitis - how can it complicate?

A

Fistula
Gross perforation
Obstruction due to fibrosis

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16
Q

Pathophysiology of diverticular disease

A

Low fibre diet –> High intraluminal pressure –> outpouchings of weak areas of bowel

17
Q

Commonest non-neoplastic polyp?

A

Hyperplastic polyp

18
Q

Which kind of polyp do we worry about and why

A

Adenoma - risk of developing adenocarcinoma

19
Q

What is an adenoma?

A

Excess epithelial proliferation + dysplasia

20
Q

Classification of adenomas?

A

Tubular
Villous
or tubulovillous

21
Q

Risk factors for adenomas to develop into adenocarcinomas?

A

Size of polyp
Degree of differentiation
High proportion of villous change

22
Q

CRC - age affected? what type is 98% of them?

A

60-79 years
(if <50yo, consider familial cause)
Adenocarcinomas

23
Q

Causes of CRC

A

Smoking, alcohol, obesity, low fibre diet, familial syndromes

IBD

24
Q

Dukes staging of CRC

A
A: mucosa
B1: muscularis propria
B2: transmural invasion (no LNs)
C1: muscularis + LNs
C2: transmural invasion + LNs
D: distant mets
25
Q

Mutation in APC gene

A

Familial adenomatous polyposis

26
Q

HNPCC - what is it?

A

AD mutation in DNA repair genes

present with adenocarcinoma at <50yrs