Neuropathology Flashcards
What are potential causes of raised intracranial pressure?
- Increased CSF volume (hydrocephalus)
- Intracranial space-occupying lesion
- neoplasm
- haemorrhage
- abscess
- Cerebral oedema
What are potential causes of raised intracranial pressure?
-
Herniation
- Subfalcial (cingulate) herniation
- Central/transtentorial herniation
- Tonsillar/cerebellar herniation
- Tonsillar/cerebellar herniation may cause compression of the medulla with impairment of vital respiratory and cardiac functions.
What is this an image of?
- Tonsillar Herniation at autopsy
- Coning herniation and compression of the medulla oblongata
- Duret Haemorrhages
Give examples of Space occupying lesions
- Extradural/epidural haemorrhage
- Subdural haemorrhage
- Subarachnoid haemorrhage
- Intracerebral haemorrhage
- Ischaemic infarct with subsequent oedema or haemorrhage
- Neoplasm
- Abscess
What types of head trauma are there?
- Skull fracture
- Parenchymal injury
- Contusion (bruising) Concussion is a clinical term/syndrome
- Laceration (penetration or tearing)
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Coup and contrecoup
- Vascular injury
What are the types of Vascular injury
- Extradural
- Severe trauma with arterial laceration (m. mening. a.)
- Subdural
- Trauma may be minor in atrophy (bridging veins)
- Subarachnoid
- Rupture of saccular (berry) aneurysm (circle of Willis)
- Intracerebral (hypertension)
What type of neuropathology is this?
- an extradural haemorrage on the left parietal lobe
What type of neuropathology is this?
- a flattening of the temporal lobe caused by a Subdural haemorrhage
What type of neuropathology is this?
Intracerebral Haemorrhage
What type of neuropathology is this?
Subarachnoid Haemorrhage
What are the types of Cerebral Oedema?
- Vasogenic: increased vascular permeability
- Cytotoxic: Neuronal, glial or endothelial cell damage
What neuropathology is this?
Cerebral Ischaemic Infarct
What would be seen in the histology of a cerebral ischaemic infarct?
- Acute neuronal injury
- ‘Red neurons’
- Pyknosis of nucleus
- Shrinkage of the cell body
- Loss of nucleoli
- Intense eosinophilia of cytoplasm
- Owing to irreversible hypoxic/ischaemic insult
Types of neurological Infections
- Meningitis
- bacterial (acute or chronic)
- viral
- fungal
- RMSV, neurosyphilis, Lyme disease, malaria
- Abscess
- Usually bacterial
- Encephalitis
- Viral (HSV, CMV, HIV, JC polyomavirus)
- Localised
- Toxoplasmosis, cysticercosis
What types of progressive/ degenerative conditions are there?
- Neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer d., Parkinson d.,)
- Spinocerebellar degenerative diseases
- Demyelinating diseases (Multiple sclerosis)
- Prion diseases (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease)
- Genetic metabolic diseases (Neuronal storage diseases)
- Toxic & acquired metabolic diseases (Vit B1 & B12 def., CO toxicity, alcohol toxicity, radiation toxicity)