Upper GI Pathology Flashcards
1
Q
What are the normal structures of the upper GI tract? Describe them
A
Oesophagus
- Squamous epithelium top 2/3
- Columnar epithelium bottom 1/3
- Joined at ‘Z line’
Stomach
- Fundus and body have specialised cells (gastric mucosa, lamina propria, muscularis)
- Antral
Duodenum
- Glandular epitheliu, with goblet cells
- Villous architecture
- Villi:crypt is normally >2:1
2
Q
Describe the pathology of the diseases of the oesophagus
A
Reflux disease
- Most common cause of oesophagitis
- Red and swollen oesophagus
- Causes ulceration, haemorrhage, perforation, Barrett’s
- Treated with lifestyle changes and PPI/H2 antagonists
Barrett’s oesophagus
- Seen in 10% of those with symptomatic reflux disease
- Metaplasia of the squamous epithelium (into gastric or intestinal tissue)
- Migration of the Z-line upwards
- Has a cancer risk (higher in intestinal metaplasia)
Oesophageal adenocarcinoma
- Most common oesophageal cancer in the UK
- Associated with Barrett’s (seen in bottom 1/3)
- Risk factors: smoking, radiation
Squamous cell oesophageal carcinoma
- Most common oesophageal cancer worldwide
- Associated with ETOH, smoking
- Usually found in middle 1/3 of oesophagus
- Progressive dysphagia, weight loss, anorexia
- Poor prognosis
Varices
- As a result of portal hypertension (cirrhosis, portal vein thrombosis)
- Engorged veins that can rupture
- Massive haematemesis
- Treated with emergency endoscopy
3
Q
Name and describe the pathology of the diseases in the stomach
A
Gastritis
- Acute: aspirin, NSAIDs, bleach
- Chronic: H. pylori, autoimmune, chemical
- Complicates into ulcer formation
- Complicates into metaplasia
Gastric ulcer
- Definition: breach through into muscularis layer
- Epigastric pain (worse with eating) and weight loss
- Associated with H.pylori, NSAIDs, stress
- Pathology shows punched out margin with rolled margins
- Investigate for H. pylori
- Complicated into anaemia, perforation, malignancy
Gastric cancer
- H. pylori increases cancer risk by 8 times
- > 95% of cancers are adenocarcinomas (can be intestinal or diffuse)
- 5% are SCCs, GI stromal tumours, neuroendocrine or MALT
- Gastric lymphoma is a B cell lymphoma associated with H. pylori (treated with triple therapy: PPI, clarithromycin, amoxacillin/metronidazole)
4
Q
Name and describe the pathology of the diseases in the duodenum
A
Duodenal ulcers
- 4 times more common than gastric ulcers
- Epigastric pain (relieved by eating)
- Associated with H. pylori, aspirin, NSAIDs, steroids
- Also associated with CMV, giardia, Whipple’s disease
- Complicates into anaemia and perforation
- Can exhibit gastric metaplasia
Coeliac disease
- T cell mediated autoimmune destruction of the villi
- Results in gluten intolerance and villous atrophy and malabsorption
- Presents in childhood with failure to thrive, steatorrhea, abdo pain, bloating
- Investigated with anti-endomysial antibodies and anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies
- Diagnosed on biopsy: villous atrophy and crypt hyperplasia
- Treated by excluding gluten from diet