Pancreatic Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Split between exocrine and endocrine pancreas

A

80% of pancreas is exocrine
- contains acinar cells and secretes proenzymes/ proteases

20% is endocrine
- contains islets of langerhans and secretes glucagon, insulin and somatostatin

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2
Q

Pancreatitis

A

Inflammatory broad disorder of the pancreas. Can be acute or chronic

Acute = function of the pancreas can return to normal if the underlying cause is removed

Chronic = irreversible damage to the exocrine pancreas

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3
Q

Acute pancreatitis

A

Usually focal edema, fat necrosis or acute hemorrhages

Common especially within the western world
- incidence = 10-20/100K

Most common cause is impact ion of gallstones within the common bile duct and impeding the flow of pancreatic enzymes Through the ampulla of vater

Second most common is excessive alcohol intake

both alcoholism and gallstones account for 80% of acute pancreatitis cases

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4
Q

Pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis

A

Appears to be caused by auto digestion of pancreas by inappropriately activated pancreatic enzymes

the primary prematurely activated enzyme is trypsin which unleashes proenzymes which leads to tissue injury and inflammation

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5
Q

What are the 3 pathways that can incite the initial enzyme activation to lead to acute pancreatitis?

A

1) Pancreatic duct obstruction
2) Primary acinar cell injury
3) Defective intracellular transport of proenzymes within acinar cells

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6
Q

What are the mechanisms behind alcohols consumption on acute pancreatitis?

A

1) alcohol transiently keeps sphincter of oddi contracted tight and increases pancreatic exocrine secretion
2) has direct toxic effects on acinar cells and induces oxidative stress in acinar cells = membrane damage
3) increases secretion of protein-rich pancreatic fluid which forms “protein plugs” leading to obstruction of small pancreatic ducts

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7
Q

What are the 5 basic alterations in acute pancreatitis?

A

1) microvascular leakage w/ edema
2) necrosis of fat by lipases
3) acute inflammatory reactions
4) proteolytic destruction of pancreatic parenchyma
5) destruction of blood vessels leading to interstitial hemorrhage

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8
Q

Clinical features of pancreatitis

A
  • marked abdominal pain is the #1 symptom*
  • can range from mild to so severe it is incapacitating

Also shows:

  • elevated levels of serum amylase and lipase (#1 diagnostic example)
  • absence of bowel sounds
  • (+/-) hypocalcemia (if present = poor prognosis)
  • *full blown acute pancreatitis is a medical emergency**
  • pain in this instance will be intense, constant and refer to the upper back
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9
Q

What are diagnostic features of severe acute pancreatitis and complications?

A

Intestine referred pain and the following

  • fat necrosis
  • leukocytosis

Complications

  • DIC
  • shock
  • renal failure
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10
Q

Treatment for acute pancreatitis

A

Supportive therapy

  • maintain blood pressure and alleviate pain
  • rest the pancreas and restrict oral foods/fluids
  • surgery (if necrotic)

In surviving patients: produces sterile or infected pancreatic abscesses or pseudocysts

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11
Q

Chronic pancreatitis

A

Prolonged inflammation for he pancreas associated with irreversible destruction of exocrine parenchyma, fibrosis.
- late stages = destruction of endocrine parenchyma

By far the most common cause = long-term alcohol abuse
- middle aged men = more likely

Other causes:

  • duct obstruction
  • hereditary pancreatitis
  • autoimmune pancreatitis
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12
Q

What cytokine is seen in chronic pancreatitis but never in acute pancreatitis?

A

TGF-B and other profibrogenic cytokines

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13
Q

Clinical features of chronic pancreatitis

A

#1 symptom is repeated bouts of intense jaundice

Symptoms :

  • abdominal distention
  • indigestion
  • Persistent/recurrent abdominal pain that radiates to the back (<10% can be silent with no pain though)
  • no onset diabetes
  • malabsorption
  • DEAK deficiencies

long term outlook is poor with 50% mortality within 20-25 years

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14
Q

What are the most common causes of chronic pancreatitis attacks

A

Alcohol abuse

Overeating/binge eating

Opiate use/ sympathetic drug use

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15
Q

What is the most feared complication of chronic pancreatitis

A

Pancreatic cancers

  • 5% of adults get this within 20 years of having chronic pancreatitis
  • **if develops in children due to hereditary loss of PRSS1 gene function = 40-55% risk of pancreatic cancer (often undoes pancreatectomy to avoid this risk)
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16
Q

Cystic neoplasms

A

Diverse tumors that can be benign or metastatic and lethal cancers

  • 5-15% are neoplastic cysts
  • benign = serous cystadenoma
  • malignant = mutinous cystic neoplasms
17
Q

Serous cystadenoma

A

Account for approximately 25% of pancreatic cystic neoplasms
- composed of glycogen-rich cuboidal cells with straw-colored fluid

Typically manifests in the 70s with nonspecific abdominal pain

  • females are 2x more common
  • almost always uniformly benign and treatment is surgical resection
18
Q

Mucinous cystic neoplasms

A

Usually develop in the body and tail of the pancreas and possess painless characteristics (95%)
- also are way more common in women

Filled with thick, mucin and have columnar mucinous epithelium surrounding it with a dense cellular stoma
- resembles a ovary

1/3 of these become invasive adenocarcinoma*

Treatment = distal pancreatectomy (if noninvasive)

19
Q

Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs)

A

Neoplasm found at the head of the pancreas in the main pancreatic ducts and are way more common in men.

if it transforms into colloid carcinomas of the pancreas almost always becomes malignant

20
Q

Infiltrating ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas

A

Is the 3rd leading cause of cancer deaths in the US
- substantially less common than lung and colon (which are above it in leading cause of death) however it has the highest mortality rates**

21
Q

What are the most common antecedent lesion of pancreatic cancer arise in small ducts and ductules?

A

Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasias (PanINs)

22
Q

What are the most commonly affected genes by somatic mutations in pancreatic cancers?

A

KRAS

SMAD4

TP53

DCKN2A/p16

23
Q

Epidemiology of pancreatic carcinoma

A

Primarily affects people 60-80years

Strongest environmental influence is SMOKING (2x risk increase)

Moderately associated with chronic pancreatitis and diabetes mellitus

  • *increased risk with BRCA2 gene (which is the most commonly associated gene for breast cancer)**
  • high levels of BRCA2 in ashkenazi Jews
24
Q

Morphology of pancreatic carcinoma

A

60% of pancreatic cancers arise in the head of the gland
- 50% of these tumors cause extreme jaundice due to blockage of the common bile duct

20% = whole body of the pancreas

15% = body of pancreas

5% = tail of pancreas

25
Q

Clinical features of pancreatic adenocarinoma

A

Are almost always silent until they impinge on other structures

Symptoms: (starts slow and progresses very fast)

  • pain (#1)
  • obstructive jaundice
  • weight loss
  • anorexia
  • generalized malaise
  • weakness
  • new onset diabetes

*migratory thrombophlebitis (trousseau syndrome) can be seen in 10% of patients.

26
Q

What markers are seen for pancreatic adenocarcinoma?

A

CA-19-9 antigens and carcinoembryonic markers

- neither are specific or sensative to screen for pancreatic cancer

27
Q

How does the blood supply fo the liver break down?

A

60-70% = portal vein

30-40% = hepatic artery

28
Q

What kind of epithelium is seen in liver sinusoids?

A

Fenestrated endothelium

29
Q

Changes seen in hepatocytes with liver disease

A

Reversible liver disease:

  • steatosis (fat accumulation)
  • cholestasis (bilirubin accumulation)

Irreversible liver disease:

  • necrosis
  • apoptotic cell death
30
Q

What is the principle cell involved in scar deposition in hepatic injuries

A

Perisinusoidal hepatic stellate cells

- can convert into highly fibrogenic myofibroblasts after injury which produces fibrous scars