Pancreas, Gallbladder, Liver Pathology Flashcards
Mild vs severe pancreatitis
mild: edema
severe: hemorrhage into interstitial area
Elastases cause damage to what structures
blood vessels
Early vs late chronic pancreatitis damaging structures
early: exocrine acinar cell injury
late: endocrine cell injury
(both irreversible)
What is the difference between damaging parenchyma cells and stromal cells?
if stromal damage –> fibrosis
if just parenchyma, may regenerate itself
Type I chronic pancreatitis
IgG4-producing plasma cells
can form nodules
Relatively common pancreatic lesions
pseudocysts
due to acute pancreatitis or trauma
75% of cysts in pancreas
Serous (microcystic) cystadenoma
rare, benign neoplasm of pancreas
cuboidal cells surrounding small cysts
filled with serous fluid
Mucinous cystic adenoma/adenocarcinoma
almost always in women
several, large, mucus-filled cysts
Pancreatic exocrine carcinoma
ductal adenocarcinomas
Pancreatic carcinoma most often occurs where in the pancreas
head, not well circumscribed
Neuroendocrine tumors of pancreas most often occur where
body/tail of pancreas, often well circumscribed
Cholangiocarcinoma
carcinoma of bile ducts
differentiated by location on biliary tree