Thyroid Pathology Dwight Asseinheimer Flashcards

1
Q

what cells are present in the thyroid?

A

Parafollicular cells “clear cells”
Cuboidal follicular cells
Sinusoidal capillaries
Colloid

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2
Q

What is a goitre?

What are some common causes?

A

Any swelling in the throat region caused by enlargement of the
thyroid gland.
Causes: inflammation neoplasia
hyperplasia hypertrophy

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3
Q

What are the macro/micro features of a diffuse non toxic goitre?

A

Macroscopic: Hyperplastic, Colloid
Microscopic: flattened/cuboidal, Colloid

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4
Q

Causes of inflammation of the thyroid

A
• Acute thyroiditis
• Hashimoto’s disease
• De Quervain’s disease
• Subacute Lymphocytic thyroiditis 
• Chronic thyroiditis •
 Granulomatous thyroiditis 
• Riedel’s disease
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5
Q

Acute thyroiditis- causes?

A

Caused by bacterial infection via hematogenous pathway or direct inoculation from nearby infection.
Pyogenic micro-organisms like Staphylococcus spp are the most common causes.
Small abscesses may resolve without damage to the gland.

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6
Q

What is Hashimoto’s thyroiditis?

What is the pathogenesis?

What is the morphology?

A

Autoimme hypothyroidism
Pathogenesis:
1. Humoral & Cellular Immunity
2. Viral/Bacterial initiation?

Morphology:

  1. Diffuse enlargement
  2. Preserved capsule
  3. Mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate (Hürthle cells) HURTHLE CELLS
  4. Increased connective tissue
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7
Q

If you gave someone with Hashimoto’s iodine , what would happen?

A

DECREASED IODINE UPTAKE

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8
Q

De Quervain’s disease

A

Idiopathic, T-Lymphocytes (cytotoxic) attack follicular cells

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9
Q

Macroscopic/microscoic features of De Quervain;s

Weird clinical features–??

A
macroscopic:
unilateral/bilateral enlargement
hard consistency
yellow-white areas on visual inspection
microscopic:
patchy changes: - acute inflammatory infiltrate - mononuclear infiltrate
collapsed and damaged follicles.

Transient hyperthyroidism (2-6 wk) followed by hypothyroidism

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10
Q

What is Reidel’s disease?

what are the clinical symptoms?

A

fibrotic thyroiditis

Tracheal entrapment: chocking feeling dyspnoea, cough
Oesophageal compression: dysphagia
Nerve compression: (recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis), hoarseness dysphonia aphonia

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11
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of hypothyroidism?

A

Clinical Manifestation:
• Cretinism – children
• Juvenile – in children with adult characteristics • Myxoedema -adult

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12
Q

What are the causes of cretinism?

A
  1. Congenital:
    - due to hypoplasia/aplasia of the thyroid; goitre is not present autosomal-recessive trait expressed by enzymatic defects, with goitrous gland due to excessive TSH production
  2. Endemic: high altitude regions, poor iodine in the soil (Himalayas, Andes, Alps)
    2 forms:
    - myxoedematous (similar to adult) + mental and physical growth retardation
    neurological – mental deficiency, deaf-mute, spasticity and incoordination
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13
Q

What is myxoedema?

A

Severe hypothyroidism but can also occur in Graves disease (hyperthyroidism)
Skin changes

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14
Q

3 common causes of hyperthyroidism

A
  1. Functional adenoma
  2. Toxic multinodular goitre
  3. Diffuse hyperplasia (Graves’s disease a.k.a Graves- Basedow’s Disease and Basedow’s disease) resultant from an abnormal thyroid stimulator
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15
Q

What are the causes of Grave’s disease?

A

Causes :
TSH auto-antibodies:
- Thyroid-stimulating Immunoglobulin
- Thyroid Growth-stimulating Immunoglobulins = - TSH-binding Inhibitor Immunoglobulins

Triggers: molecular mimicry? primary T-cell autoimmunity, infiltrative ophthalmopathy (autoimmune?)

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16
Q

In graves would you get increased or decreased radioiodine uptake?
Would TSH be increased or decreased

A

INCREASED iodine

TSH decreased

17
Q

How would you come to a definitive conclusion of nodule being neoplastic?

A

FNA biopsy and histological studies

18
Q

Distinguish simple adenoma from a colloid adenoma

A

Simple Adenoma:
Very similar to normal thyroid tissue
Great variation in the size of thyroid follicles A common type of adenoma

Colloid Adenoma:
Follicles are very large in size and distended Contain large quantities of colloid
Common occurrence

19
Q

What are the risk factors for tumour?

A

risk factors include age (the younger higher is the chance of neoplasia),
gender (male), and history of radiaQon