Principles of Cytology Flashcards

1
Q

How to characterise a cytology sample

A

Is the sample adequate
Inflammatory vs. neoplastic vs. cystic

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2
Q

How to characterise inflammation in cytology sample

A

suppurative vs. granulomatous vs. eosinophilic etc.
Look for evidence of sepsis

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3
Q

How to characterise neoplasia in cytology sample

A

Epithelial vs. round cell vs. mesenchymal
benign vs. malignant

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4
Q

process for cytological examination

A

Low power review- find good places to look at
Assess Quality- any/how many cells, well/poorly preserved
Background- Haemorrhage, granules, protein, matrix, debris, disrupted cells
Predominant cells- neutrophils?/other cells
Look at cells (x40 or oil)

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5
Q

What to assess about cells in cytology

A

Individual vs. organised
single or mixed population
cell size, shape, variation
Nuclear size, shape, variation, abnormal mitoses

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6
Q

Approach to unknown mass

A

Is the sample sufficient for diagnosis
Inflammatory - what type, septic
Is there cystic content- what type
mainly tissue cells -> neoplasia
- what type, benign or malignant

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7
Q

Approach to cytology of known tissues

A

E.g., lymphnode, prostate, spleen, liver
Is the sample sufficient for diagnosis
Think about the normal cell population in that tissue; does what you have on the slide match that. E.g., should it be epithelial, round or mesenchymal or a mixture, what functional cells should be present
Think about possible pathologies (e.g., what 4 things cause lymph nodes to enlarge, what 4 things cause prostatic enlargement); which does the cytology best fit with?
Is there evidence of inflammation
Which of my narrowed list of possibilities fits best?

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8
Q

Approach to cavity effusion cytology

A

Protein content
cell count
classification - exudate/ transudate
Cell types- neutrophils, degenerate/ on-degenerate, bacteria
Lining cells
Epithelial cell (carcinomatosis), lymphoid cells (chyle)

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9
Q

Reactive mesothelial cells

A

Lining cells that can be mistaken for neoplastic cells

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10
Q

Cytological criteria for malignancy

A

Cells ‘alien’ to position which they are found
Pleomorphism (variation) within a cell type
Variable cell size- anisocytosis
Lymphoid tissue malignancy has a monomorphic cell population where there should be variation
High and/or variable nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio

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11
Q

Nuclear criteria of malignancy (4)

A

Variation in shape/size (anisocytosis)
- ratio of smallest diameter to largest >1.5
Multiple, fragmented, or moulded nuclei
Clumped chromatin- some white patches and some darker patches in nucleus
Multiple/irregular nucleoli
abnormal mitotic figures

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12
Q

Cytoplasmic criteria of malignancy (4)

A

Basophilia/hyperchromatic (darker blue colour)
Vacuolation
Granularity
Phagocytosis of other cells

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13
Q

What is reactive hyperplasia

A

Enlarged due to increased activity
In case of lymph nodes- in response to illness, increased production of lymphocytes

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14
Q

what is lymphadenitis

A

Inflammation of lymph nodes
Would see neutrophils, macrophages or eosinophils coming into lymph node

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