Pathoma: Lymphoma and Hodgkin's Flashcards
LAD is __________.
lymphadenopathy
Painful LAD is usually _______, while painless LAD can be _________.
acute infection; due to chronic inflammation (such as RA), HIV, or malignancy (metastatic or due to lymphoma)
Which region of the lymph node would be expanded for a lymph node draining a cancer?
The medulla
Which is more common, NHL or HL?
NHL (60% of lymphomas)
Describe the presentation of follicular lymphoma.
Proliferation of neoplastic, CD20+ B cells in the follicle; common in late adolescence/early adulthood; painless LAD; t(14:18) BCL2/IgH
What does rituximab target?
CD20 (hence great for B cell neoplasms)
How can infectious hyperplasia of the lymph nodes be distinguished from follicular lymphoma?
Benign hyperplasia of the lymph nodes will have tingible body macrophages, there to eat negatively selected B cells
Describe the presentation of mantle cell lymphoma.
Painless LAD; neoplastic expansion of the region adjacent to the follicle; t(11;14) cyclin D fusion expansion;
Cyclin D causes the cell to go from the ______.
G1 to the S phase
Marginal zone lymphoma presents with ___________.
neoplastic expansion of the margin; associated with chronic inflammatory states
MALTomas are seen in those with ________.
H. pylori gastritis (think, chronic inflammation)
Which types of NHL are associated with disintegration of the lymph node structure?
Burkitt lymphoma and DLBCL
Burkitt lymphoma is associated with _________.
c-myc translocation t(8;14); Africans have jaw kind, and the sporadic kind is more abdominal; starry-sky sign
What are the small, intermediate, and large kinds of NHL?
Small = follicular, mantle, and marginal; intermediate = Burkitt; large = diffuse large B cell lymphoma
Follicular lymphoma sometimes develops into _______.
diffuse large B cell lymphoma