Lab 8: Chronic Inflammation and Repair Flashcards
Canine, lung. This animal has had a cough for several weeks, dyspnea, and exercise intolerance.
- What is this pointing at (hard to tell)
- ?
- ?
- ?
- ?
- multiple confluent granulomas disseminated throughout the parenchyma
- lymphocytes at the periphery of the granulomas or pyogranulomas (if neutrophils are abundant.).
- few neutrophils
- Macrophages
- yeast bodies of Blastomyces dermatitidis (cytology image)
Canine, lung. This animal has had a cough for several weeks, dyspnea, and exercise intolerance.
- Describe what is happening here
- In this section of lung there are multiple confluent granulomas disseminated throughout the parenchyma.
- Centrally these granulomas are composed of spheroidal sheets of epithelioid macrophages and variable numbers of neutrophils.
- Surrounding clusters of macrophages is a dense inflammatory infiltrate composed of macrophages, neutrophils, fibroblasts, and aggregates of lymphocytes.
- The remaining parenchyma is relatively normal except for postmortem collapse and increased neutrophils in capillaries.
- In the centers of some granulomas you may find spherical yeast cells (10‑20 μm diameter).
- These have a lightly basophilic nucleus surrounded by a thick refractive cell wall.
- These organisms are Blastomyces dermatitidis and the disease they cause is blastomycosis.
Canine, lung. This animal has had a cough for several weeks, dyspnea, and exercise intolerance.
- Why do these fungal agents cause a granulomatous reaction?
- Fungi have complex cell walls that are not easily killed by killing mechanisms of neutrophils.
- They tend to persist and require macrophages to kill them.
- Even then, it is difficult and longtime inflammation can occur.
Canine, lung. This animal has had a cough for several weeks, dyspnea, and exercise intolerance.
- Histomorphologic Diagnosis?
Severe chronic widely disseminated (or multifocal) (pyo)granulomatous pneumonia (with fungal yeast bodies)
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- generally what is happening on this side of the image?
- this side?
- here? (this is to the right of the above image)
- Granulation tissue: Surface is to the right, which is the part that is proliferating.
- To the left are the more mature, older parts of the process where collagen is much denser.
- Surface is to the right, where the tissue is very loose and has large numbers of neutrophils on the surface (which is exposed to bacteria and hence chemotactically draws pmns (neutrophils).)
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- What is seen here?
- ?
- ?
Granulation tissue:
- note new blood vessels or capillary buds and
- loosely arranged fibroblasts.
- Pmns
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- what is seen here?
- ?
Moderately early granulation tissue: Surface is to the right.
- Note new blood vessels or capillary buds and
- loosely arranged fibroblasts.
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- What is this?
- ?
- ?
- Why is this different than the previous granulation tissue images?
Surface is to the right.
- Note blood vessels
- fibroblasts
- abundant mature collagen.
- It is mature granulation tissue
- This more closely resembles scar tissue.
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- What is the function of granulation tissue?
- Granulation tissue is repair tissue.
- It serves to fill in defects left by wounds and can also initiate a wall around an irritant that cannot be otherwise eliminated.
- Eventually it will mature into fibrous connective tissue producing scarring.
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- What is granulation tissue characterized by?
- Granulation tissue is characterized by fibroblasts, endothelial buds (angiogenesis), and production of an extracellular matrix.
- Granulation tissue also often contains macrophages. (or neutrophils-if an open wound)
Equine. This tissue grew at the site of a wire cut that was not sutured. The section you have is from the middle part of wound.
- Histopathologic Diagnosis
- What can this also be called in horses?
- Granulation tissue with acute inflammation at the surface.
- Granulation tissue in horses is sometime termed “proud flesh”, actually excessive attempts at repair that is common in horses
8 year old Labrador Retriever euthanized for progressive cardiac disease.
- Describe the lesion:
- What is the likely etiology of these lesions?
- The kidney surface contains multifocally coalescing cortical indentations ranging from .5cm to 2cm in diameter.
- etiology- Infarction.
8 year old Labrador Retriever euthanized for progressive cardiac disease.
- How did the original injury resolve?
- Name the lesion.
- Fibrosis
- Chronic renal infarcts.
Signalment and history: Tissue from an 8 year old Holstein cow. Upon presentation, she had ventral pitting edema in her brisket and under her jaw. Pulsating jugular veins were observed. Approximately 1 liter of purulent fluid was removed from the pericardial sac.
- Describe the lesion.
- The epicardium is diffusely covered by a 0.5-3cm thick layer of tightly adhered, pale tan material with a smooth and glistening appearance.
- There is also a small piece of thickened pericardium at the base of the heart which is adhered to the surface of the epicardium by the fibrous connective tissue.
Signalment and history: Tissue from an 8 year old Holstein cow. Upon presentation, she had ventral pitting edema in her brisket and under her jaw. Pulsating jugular veins were observed. Approximately 1 liter of purulent fluid was removed from the pericardial sac.
- Give a morphologic diagnosis for the lesion.
Heart: Severe chronic diffuse fibrosing epicarditis and pericarditis