Pathoma Pics Flashcards
Explain the ‘sawtooth appearance’ on histology of lichen planus
Lichen planus = inflammation (neutrophil infiltration) at the epidermal-dermal junction that gives a saw-tooth appearance of the basement membrane
Which cancer is associated w/ ‘starry sky’ appearance on histology
Buzzword: ‘starry sky’ = Burkitt Lymphoma = neoplasm of intermediate shaped B cells caused by c-myc translocation
These are hepatocytes- describe the changes
Fatty liver! Showing fat droplets inside hepatocytes
ex: CCL4 exposure, free radical production (CCL3 free radical) causes hepatocyte destruction = reduction in apolipoprotein production so fat gets trapped in the liver
Type of tissue necrosis seen in pancreatitis
Pancreatitis = when pancreatic enzymes get activated early, in the pancreatic parenchyma instead of in the lumen of the small intestines
- pancreatic parenchyma undergoes liquefactive necrosis = liquification 2/2 enzymatic breakdown of tissue
- peripancreatic fat undergoes fat necrosis = chalky white appearance due to saponification (deposition of calcium due to FFA deposition)
Image showing both liquefactive (black stuff) and fat necrosis (chalky white)
Differentiate the 5 kinds of neoplasms that can arise from hematopoietic stem cells
5 neoplasms from the HSC –> myeloblasts and leukoblasts
Acute leukemia arises from neoplastic proliferation of blasts due to maturation defect
- when myeloblasts accumulate b/c can’t mature = AML
- when lymphoblasts accumulate b/c can’t mature = ALL
- when mature circulating lymphocytes become neoplastic = chronic leukemia: CLL if mature cells of lymphoid lineage, CML if mature cells of myeloid lineage (granulocytes)
- when mature cells of myeloid lineage neoplastically accumulate = myeloproliferative d/o
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What are Anitschkow cells?
(a) Dx?
Anitschkow cells = histiocytes w/ squiggly nuclei giving them the name ‘catepillar cells’
Anitschkow cells are found in Ashoff bodies in the myocardium pathognomonic for acute rheumatic fever myocarditis
Hallmark histologic feature of basal cell carcinoma
Peripheral palisading of nuclei
Name the main histologic features of a granuloma
Granuloma = aggregate of epitheliod histocytes (meaning lots of cytoplasm so very pink)
- surrounded by ring of lymphocytes (squiggle)
- associated w/ multinucleated giant cells
Note that all histocytes contain their nuclei = noncaseating granuloma
Describe the histologic features of Polyarteritis Nodosa
Polyarteritis Nodosa = vasculitis of medium sized vessels
Histologically characterized by fibrinoid necrosis (see the ton of pink squiggled in the pic)
Explain the mechanism of O2 dependent killing of phagocytosed material
(a) Oxidative burst
(b) Which chemical kills the bacteria?
Overall O2-dependent killing = O2 used to make HOCl- (bleach), bleach then destroys the organism
(a) O2 –> O2- by NADPH oxidase = oxidative burst
(b) Then O2- –> H2O2 (by supraoxide dismutase), H2O2 –> HOCl- by MPO (myeloperoxidase)
- so need NADPH oxidase, SOB, and MPO (all 3 enzymes) for O2-dependent killing
What type of granuloma? Explain
Noncaseating = lack of central necrosis
Differentiate the three stages of nuclear loss during cell death
Starts w/ pyknosis (nuclear shrinkage), then karyorrhexis (nucleus breaks up), then karyolysis (little pieces are broken down into building blocks) and then nucleus gone!
Loss of nucleus = hallmark of cell death
Is this acute or chronic inflammation?
Two key features of acute inflammation = edema and neutrophils
- big white spaces seen btwn tissue = fluid = edema
- small circled multi-lobated cells = neutrophils
(while lymphocytes, plasma cells, and fibrosis would be indicative of chronic inflammation)
Name the two mechanisms of destruction of material inside phagolysosome
(a) Which is more effective?
O2-dependent and O2-independent killing
O2 dependent killing uses NADPH oxidase for oxidative burst and creates HOCl- (bleach) to kill bacteria, O2 independent directly uses enzymes (lysozme) to kill
(a) O2-dependent is much more effective
Name 2 disorders that are due to defects in O2-dependent killing
O2 dependent killing: first rxn is oxidative burst:
O2 –> (NADPH oxidase) –> O2-
O2- –> H2O2
H2O2 –> (myeloperoxidase) –> HOCl-
- NADPH oxidase defect = Chronic granulomatous disease
- MPO deficiency
Dx
Reed Sternberg (‘owl eye’ cells = multi-lobed nucleus w/ prominent nucleoi
- seen in Hodgkin’s Lymphoma: where RS cells release cytokines to draw in reactive inflammatory cells
- then these reactive inflammatory cells, w/ rare RS throughout, make mass
Name the layers of the skin
Basement membrane separates dermis and episdermis
- dermis (light pink, deeper) contains CT, hair follicles, sweat glands, and BV
- epidermis: stratum basalis (basal layer of stem cells, connected to basement membrane by hemidesmosomes) –> stratum spinosum (desmisomes) –> stratum granulosum –> stratum corneum –> keratin (anucleate)
What type of necrosis is shown in the left pic (compared to normal tissue on right)?
(a) Mechanism
(b) Classic clinical example
On the left you see tissue that has preserved cell shape and structure (maintained architecture) but no nuclei
= Coagulative necrosis
(a) Maintain architecture by coagulation of cellular proteins (hence coagulative necrosis…)
(b) This is the type of necrosis that happens 2/2 ischemic infarction of any tissue EXCEPT brain
Free radicals
(a) Name the 3 free radicals produced by partial O2 reduction
(b) Name the rxn by which free Fe produced free radicals
Free radicals are physiologically produced during oxidative phosphorylation if O2 doesn’t get all 4 electrons (so gets partially reduced)
(a) O2 –> O2- (superoxide) –> H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) –> OH- (hydroxyl free radical) –> H20
- glutathione peroxidase is key free radical containing enzyme that catalyzes OH- to water
(b) Fentin rxn = Fe creates free radical
What type of necrosis is indicated by this picture?
(a) Most likely mechanism
Coagulative necrosis 2/2 ischemic infarct- see wedge-shaped pale area of infarction
(a) Ischemic infarct of any tissue besides the brain causes coagulative necrosis
- wedge shaped b/c of the way vessels branch (so obstruction at tip of the wedge causes necrosis in a wedge shape pattern outwards)
Type of necrosis shown in pic
(a) 2 mechanisms of this necrosis
Fibrinoid necrosis = necrotic damage to blood vessel wall
- intracellular proteins are leaked into the vessel wall giving the characteristic pink staining of the wall (squiggled lines)
(a) Seen in malignant HTN and vasculitis
Name the two histological features used to diagnose amyloidosis on fat pad biopsy
- Congo red staining- so see extracellular amyloid deposition (squiggles) around central blood vessel (dot)
- Apple-green birefringence under polarized light
What is the highlighted cell significant for?
Cell is undergoing apoptosis
- first step is cell shrinking = cytoplasmic condenses = eosinophilic (more pink looking)
- nucleus is smaller
Histologic feature of chronic cholecystitis
Chronic GB inflammation causes formation of Rokitasky-Aschoff sinuses = pseudodiverticula, basically inpouchings/pockets in the GB wall
-not dagernous on their own, but can indicate chronic cholecystitis
Classic EKG finding of Digitalis toxicity
‘Scooped’ concave ST segments
Caseating vs. noncaseating granulomas histologically
In pic see central area of necrosis = non-nucleated cells, shrinked/small cells = dead cells in the middle
-characteristic of Tb and other fungal infections
Dx
Blister btwn the basal layer and stratum spinosum = Pemphigus vulgaris
-2/2 IgG against desmosomes
(don’t confuse w/ IgG against hemidesmosomes = Bullous pemphigoid which would make blister btwn dermis and epidermis, see attached to answer card)
Briefly explain mechanism of neutrophil phagocytosis
(a) Name a d/o in which this is defective
Neutrophils (first cells on the scene in acute inflammation) extend out pseudopods that gets ingested as a phagosome, then this phagosome fuses w/ lysosome forming phagolysosome
Key here = phagolysosome
(a) Defective phagolysosome formation (and therefore in overall phagocytosis) seen in Chediak-Higashi syndrome
Clinical significance of FAS ligand
(a) Physiologically
(b) Pathologically
FAS ligand is expressed on a cell and binds to FAS death receptor (CD95) on cytotoxic CD8+ cells to activate extrinsic receptor-ligand pathway of apoptosis
(a) Causes apoptosis of immature T cells in thymus that fail negative selection- aka have too high an affinity for self-antigen)
(b) pathway goes awry in certain cancers
H2 blockers vs. PPI
(a) End of drug name
(b) Mechanism
(c) Duration of action
H2 blockers are (b) Reversible H2 receptor blockers
(a) ‘idine’ like ranitidine
(c) Immediate onset, short acting => take right before a meal
PPIs (a) irreversibly block the H+/K+ ATPase
(a) ‘prazole’ like omeprazole
(c) Long term => take daily for 24 hr protection
What type of granuloma? Explain
Caseating granuloma = presence of central necrosis
Key histologic feature of atherosclerotic emboli
Cholesterol clefts
-how to differentiate atherosclerotic plaque rupture causing embolization from thrombosis etc = cholesterol clefts in the emboli
Non-Hodgkins Lyphoma
(a) MC: T or B cell?
(b) Name the 3 types of small cell NHL
NHL
(a) Almost all are B cell
(b) Small cells are well differentiated- meaning they better resemble normal tissue, so these 3 cause proliferation of certain zones
- Follicular lymphoma = more follicles
- Mantle cell lymphoma = expansion of compartment just adjacent to the follicle
- Marginal Zone Lymhoma
Describe the histologic features of temporal cell arteritis
Temporal giant cell arterities = large vessel vasculitis
Two features = granulomatous inflammation (meaning presence of giant cells) w/ intimal fibrosis
- usually intima and media are up next to each other, here see the thick F (fibrosis) separating the two, therefore narrowing the lumen
- see multinucleated giant cells in peripheral (granulomatous inflammation)
Histologic finding on biopsy of HOCM
Hallmark = myofiber hypertrophy w/ disarray
Key is DISARRAY
-basically super unorganized myocardium
Explain the embryologic defect that leads to cleft lip/palate
5 facial prominences early in pregnancy that form and fuse, must fuse properly to form face
-cleft lip and palate often co-occur since failure to fuse properly causes both
Facial prominences: one from the top, 2 laterally, 2 form bottom
Differentiate gross pathologic features (aka what you’d see on endoscopy) of benign vs. malignant gastric ulcer
Gastric ulcers:
- benign MC due to H. pylori (70%), NSAIDs (20%): small (under 3cm), sharply demarcated
- malignant features: larger, irregular w/ heaped up margins
Name 2 key biopsy findings in Celiac disease
Celiac disease- take biopsy of duodenum (most commonly involved site) and see
- flattening of villi- villi are the upward-going things
- deepening of crypts (downwards protrusion)
(a) What type of stain?
(b) Dx?
(a) Chromogranin A
- neurosecretory granules released from carcinoidtumors stain positive for chromogranin
(b) Dx = carcinoid tumor
Two unique features of difuse type gastric carcinoma
(a) Histologically
(b) Grossly
(a) Signet ring cells = nucleus pushed off to edge by mucus inside the cell
- signet ring cells characteristic of carcinoma, MC gastric but can also be appendix etc
(b) Grossly- get diffuse thickening of the stomach wall (linitis plastica) that clinically causes early satiety
Give exact steps of insulin release (dude this is important just memorize it already)
What is this cell?
(a) Seen in what d/o
Schistocyte or ‘helmet cell’
(a) Seen in microangiopathic hemolytic anemias- basically there are microthrombi in the BVs that shear the RBC as they move thru
- HUS (hemolytic uremic syndrome) and TTP (thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura)
Differentiate platelet receptors used in aggregation vs. adhesion
Primary hemostasis (formation of weak platelet plug): vasoconstriction, plt adhesion, plt degranulation, plt aggregation
- vasoconstriction
- Plt adhesion- Gp1b receptor on plts binds to vWF that is bound to subendothelial collagen
- Plt degranulation- releases ADP (increases Gp2b3a) and TXA2 (promotes aggregation)
- Plt aggregation- plts bind to each other via Gp2b3b receptor that links fibrinogen molecules
Explain secondary hemostasis to form stable fibrin clot
Coagulation cascade generates thrombin,
thrombin converts fibrinogen (binding plts in weak plt plug via Gp2b3a receptors) into fibrin
-the fibrin is then cross-linked, yielding a stable plt-fibrin thrombus
Name the clotting factors involved in the 3 pathways of the coagulation cascade
Mneumonic to memorize: first draw X in the middle
- Start on the left (intrinsic pathway): count down from 12 –> 11 –> (skip 10 b/c is already there) –> 9 –> 8
- Then place 7 on the right side (extrinsic pathway)
- then common pathway from the bottom: 1 x 2 x 5 = 10
Differentiate which coagulation factors are measured by PT vs. PTT
Mneumonic to memorize: first draw X in the middle
- Start on the left (intrinsic pathway): count down from 12 –> 11 –> (skip 10 b/c is already there) –> 9 –> 8. More factors on this side => measured by PTT (more letters than PT)
- Then place 7 on the right side (extrinsic pathway) => fewer factors => measured by PT (fewer lettesr)
- then common pathway from the bottom: 1 x 2 x 5 = 10
Differentiate which lab test (PT or PTT) is best used to measure effect of heparin vs. coumadin
Mneumonic to memorize: first draw X in the middle
- Start on the left (intrinsic pathway): count down from 12 –> 11 –> (skip 10 b/c is already there) –> 9 –> 8. More factors => test w/ more letters PTT. Hep has 3 letters, so does PTT => use PTT to measure effect of heparin
- Then place 7 on the right side (extrinsic pathway). Fewer factors => use test w/ fewer letters (PT) => PT used to measure effect of coumadin
- then common pathway from the bottom: 1 x 2 x 5 = 10
Explain how thrombus is removed in normal fibrinolysis
tPA (tissue plasminogen activator) converts plasminogen –> plasmin, plasmin then cleaves fibrin and serum fibrinogen, destroys coagulation factors, and blocks plt aggregation
Then once clot is broken down, alpha2-antiplasmin inactivates plasmin (don’t want plasmin just continuing to go and break up stuff)
Virchow’s triad
3 RF for thrombosis (pathologic intravascular clot)
- Disruption in normal blood flow: non-laminar flow, plts and factors less dispersed
- immobilization, Afib, aneurysm (irregular flow thru abnormal lumen) - Endothelial damage b/c endothelium is very protective against clots (blocks collagen exposure, produced PGI2, NO, heparin-like molecules, tPa, thrombomodulin
- Hypercoagulable states: deficient or inactive protein C/S
Explain how vitamin B12 deficiency can cause endothelial cell damage
Vitamin B12 is needed to demethylate THF (so that THF can be active in DNA precursor synthesis). Then methylated vit B12 converts homocystine –> methionine
W/o Vitamin B12 (or w/o folate), homocystine precursor builds up and directly damages endothelium
MC cause of homocysteinuria
(a) Clinical presentation
Homocystine in the urine 2/2 deficiency in enzyme needed to convert homocystine –> cystathionine (enzyme called cystathionine beta synthase)
(a) Vessel thrombosis (b/c homocysteine directly damages endothelium), mental retardation, lens dislocation, long slender fingers
Histologic finding of amniotic fluid embolism
Characterized by squamous cells and keratin debris (from fetal skin) in the embolism
-differentiate from fat embolism (see fat chunks in embolism) and atherosclerotic embolism (see cholesterol clefts in embolus)
MC location of osteoma
Osteoma = benign tumor of bone, MC on surface of facial bones
Explain the finding
(a) Dx
(b) Other Xray finding
Finding = ‘Codman’s triangle’ = periosteal lifting due to underlying tumor growth
(a) Dx = osteosarcoma
(b) Classic ‘sunburst’ appearance of osteosarcoma
Describe the general anatomy of a joint
Joint: two bones join w/ articular cartilage (made of collagen type II = hyaline cartilag)
- then synovium laterally that secretes synovial fluid rich in hyaluronic acid to lubricate the joint
- all articular surface and synovium surrounded by joint capsule
Explain what rheumatoid factor is
RF = IgM autoantibody against Fc portion of IgG
-IgM against IgG