Thyroid Pathology Dwight Asseinheimer Flashcards
what cells are present in the thyroid?
Parafollicular cells “clear cells”
Cuboidal follicular cells
Sinusoidal capillaries
Colloid
What is a goitre?
What are some common causes?
Any swelling in the throat region caused by enlargement of the
thyroid gland.
Causes: inflammation neoplasia
hyperplasia hypertrophy
What are the macro/micro features of a diffuse non toxic goitre?
Macroscopic: Hyperplastic, Colloid
Microscopic: flattened/cuboidal, Colloid
Causes of inflammation of the thyroid
• Acute thyroiditis • Hashimoto’s disease • De Quervain’s disease • Subacute Lymphocytic thyroiditis • Chronic thyroiditis • Granulomatous thyroiditis • Riedel’s disease
Acute thyroiditis- causes?
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.
What is Hashimoto’s thyroiditis?
What is the pathogenesis?
What is the morphology?
Autoimme hypothyroidism
Pathogenesis:
1. Humoral & Cellular Immunity
2. Viral/Bacterial initiation?
Morphology:
- Diffuse enlargement
- Preserved capsule
- Mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate (Hürthle cells) HURTHLE CELLS
- Increased connective tissue
If you gave someone with Hashimoto’s iodine , what would happen?
DECREASED IODINE UPTAKE
De Quervain’s disease
Idiopathic, T-Lymphocytes (cytotoxic) attack follicular cells
Macroscopic/microscoic features of De Quervain;s
Weird clinical features–??
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
What is Reidel’s disease?
what are the clinical symptoms?
fibrotic thyroiditis
Tracheal entrapment: chocking feeling dyspnoea, cough
Oesophageal compression: dysphagia
Nerve compression: (recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis), hoarseness dysphonia aphonia
What are the clinical manifestations of hypothyroidism?
Clinical Manifestation:
• Cretinism – children
• Juvenile – in children with adult characteristics • Myxoedema -adult
What are the causes of cretinism?
- 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 - 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
What is myxoedema?
Severe hypothyroidism but can also occur in Graves disease (hyperthyroidism)
Skin changes
3 common causes of hyperthyroidism
- Functional adenoma
- Toxic multinodular goitre
- Diffuse hyperplasia (Graves’s disease a.k.a Graves- Basedow’s Disease and Basedow’s disease) resultant from an abnormal thyroid stimulator
What are the causes of Grave’s disease?
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?)