Lymph node and spleen Flashcards
What is/are the differences between the primary and secondary follicle in a lymph node?
Primary follicle consists of aggregates of small, dark staining inactive (naive) B lymphocytes, usually near the capsule, within a network of follicular dendritic cell processes. No germinal center is present.
A secondary follicle arises from primary follicle that develops germinal centers due to antigenic stimulation of B cells and production of antibodies. Contains pale staining germinal center which may be polarized towards site of antigen entry. Surrounded by a mantle zone and marginal zone lymphocytes.
Which cell population occupies the germinal centre of secondary follicles?
Contains predominantly B lymphocytes (including centroblasts and entrocytes) and scattered follicular T helper cells ans and T regs.
Also tingible body macrophages and follicular dendritic cells.
What are centroblasts and centrocytes?
Centroblasts are large noncleaved follicular center cells (B cells) with moderate amounts of basophilic cytoplasm, large round nuclei, open chromatin, multiple peripheral nucleoli. Frequent mitotic figures.
Centrocytes are large and small cleaved follicular center cells (B cells) with scant cytoplasm and inconspicuous nucleoli.
What is CD20+ used to stain for?
Maturing B cells (normally in follicles)
What is CD3+ used to identify?
mature T cells.
A normal germinal center is said to be ‘polarized’. What does this refer to?
Refers to large centroblasts clustered at one side ofhte follicle creating a lopsided appearance.
What composes the mantle zone and where is this?
The mantle zone refers to teh dark outer rim of the follicle which consists of the displaced remains of the primary follicle. It consists of antigen-naive B cells
What supporting elements reside in the germinal centres?
follicular dendritic cells and tingible body macrophages, which clean up the apoptotic debris.
What is CD45 stain?
Stains for human leucocyte antigen, (used to dx metastatic lymphoma)
Which stains, when positive, rule out lymphoma?
Melanoma stains and cytokeratins
Describe the genetic profile of high-grade DLBCL
Genetic rearrangements of MYC, BCL2, and/or BCL6 genes.
How would you characterise Burkitt’s lymphoma?
High grade B cell lymphoma that is identified by its high mitotic rate (Ki67 index of nearly 100%) and its population of medium-sized, densely packed lymmphocytes with intermixed macrophages and apoptotic bodies. “Starry Sky” analogy.
Densely packed tumour
A/W EBV and most cases involve a MYC translocation.
What is the most common lymphoma?
DLBCL
What is the prominent genetic profile of follicular lymphoma?
translocation of BCL2 (an antiapoptotic factor) such that it is abnormally upregulated. NB: BCL2 usually turns off in germinal centers, making the centroblasts and centrocytes susceptible to apoptosis. Abnormal retention of BCL2 leads to cells that do not die.
Histologically, at low power, how does follicular lymphoma appear on a slide?
Nodular proliferation of back-to-back neoplastic follicles that fill the lymp node. Within these fllicles are a mixture of neoplastic centrocytes (smaller) and centroblasts (larger); the realtive proportion determines the grad eof lymphoma. The lymph node is replaced by malignant follicles which lack the mantle zones, polarization and cell heterogeneity of germinal centres. FL can grow and spread to the marrow and transform to DLBCL.