XVI - The Liver, Gallbladder and Biliary Tree (with pics) Flashcards
Form of hepatocyte injury characterized as cells with marked swelling and pale-appearing cytoplasms that subsequently rupture (cytolysis). SEE SLIDE 16.1
Ballooning degeneration (TOPNOTCH) Robbins Basic Pathology, 9th ed,. 612
Multiple tiny fat droplets that do not displace the nucleus which appear in such conditions as alcoholic liver disease, Reye syndrome, and acute fatty liver of pregnancy.
MICROvesicular steatosis. SEE SLIDE 16.3. Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 633
A single large fat droplet that displaces the nucleus seen in alcoholic liver disease or in the livers of obese or diabetic individuals.
Macrovesicular steatosis. SEE SLIDE 16.3. (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 633
Diffuse, foamy, swollen appearance to the hepatocyte caused by retained biliary material. SEE SLIDE 16.2
Feathery degeneration(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 633
Poorly stained mummified hepatocytes
Coagulative necrosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 633
Second form of hepatocyte injury where Isolated hepatocytes become shrunken, pyknotic, and intensely eosinophilic.
Apoptosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 633
Hepatocyte necrosis is distributed immediately around the central vein, extending into the midzonal area in the setting of ischemia and several drug and toxic reactions. SEE SLIDE 16.4.
Centrilobular necrosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 633
A pattern of nonrhythmic, rapid extension-flexion movements of the head and extremities, best seen when the arms are held in extension with dorsiflexed wrists, seen in patients with hepatic encephalopathy.
Asterixis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 635
A diffuse process characterized by bridging fibrous septa, in the form of delicate bands or broad scars around multiple adjacent lobes, and the conversion of normal liver architecture into structurally abnormal nodules, encircled by fibrotic bands. Liver architecture is disrupted. SEE SLIDE 16.5.
Liver Cirrhosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 635
Presence of GROUND GLASS hepatocytes, a finely granular, eosinophilic cytoplasm and sanded nuclei, shown by electron microscopy. SEE SLIDE 16.6.
Hepatitis B infection(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 645
Necrotic cells appear to have dropped out with collapse of the sinusoidal collagen reticulin framework where the cells have disappeared; scavenger macrophage aggregates mark sites of dropout.
Hepatocyte cytolysis (in viral hepatitis)(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 647
Hepatocytes shrink, become intensely eosinophilic, and have fragmented nuclei; effector T cells may be present in the immediate vicinity.
Hepatocyte apoptosis (in viral hepatitis)(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 647
The hallmark of serious liver damage
Fibrosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 647
May occur as solitary or multiple lesions, ranging from millimeters to massive lesions, many centimeters in diameter. They are generally produced by gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Klebsiella sp.
Pyogenic (bacterial) hepatic abscesses (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 648
Liver is enlarged, soft, yellow and greasy. Lipid accumulates to the point of creating large clear macrovesicular globules, compressing and displacing the nucleus to the periphery of the hepatocyte.
Hepatic Steatosis (Fatty Liver)(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 649
Almost always accompanied by a brisk sinusoidal and perivenular fibrosis; occasionally periportal fibrosis may predominate.
Alcoholic hepatitis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 650
Liver is yellow-tan, fatty, and enlarged, usually weighing over 2 kg. Over the span of years it is transformed into a brown, shrunken, nonfatty organ, sometimes weighing less than 1 kg.
Alcoholic Cirrhosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 650
Pattern of cirrhosis in viral hepatitis.
Macronodular(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 650
Pattern of cirrhosis in alcoholic hepatitis.
Micronodular(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 650
The liver may shrink to 500 to 700 gm and become transformed into a limp, red organ covered by a wrinkled, overly large capsule. Necrotic areas have a muddy red, mushy appearance with blotchy bile staining. Complete destruction of hepatocytes in contiguous lobules leaves only a collapsed reticulin framework and preserved portal tracts. SEE SLIDE 16.8.
Massive hepatic necrosis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 653
Golden-yellow granules in the cytoplasm of periportal hepatocytes, which stain blue with the Prussian blue stain. Seen prominently in hemochromatosis. SEE SLIDE 16.9.
Hemosiderin(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 655
Green to brown deposits of copper in Descemet membrane in the limbus of the cornea. SEE SLIDE 16.10.
Kayser-Fleischer rings (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 656
Excessive copper deposition in the liver causing hepatic changes ranging from mild fatty change to massive liver necrosis. In the brain, injury affects the basal ganglia (PUTAMEN), demonstrating atrophy and cavitation. Kayser-Fleischer rings are characteristic. SEE SLIDE 16.10.
Wilson disease(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 655
Hepatocytes with round to oval cytoplasmic globular inclusions which are strongly positive in a periodic acid-Schiff stain. By electron microscopy they lie within smooth, and sometimes rough, endoplasmic reticulum. SEE SLIDE 16.11.
Alpha-1 antitrypsin Deficiency (Associated with emphysema and liver injury due to AAT accumulation) (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 657
A rare disease characterized by microvesicular fatty change in the liver and encephalopathy. Microscopy of hepatocellular mitochondria reveals pleomorphic enlargement and electron lucency of the matrices, with disruption of cristae and loss of dense bodies.
Reye syndrome (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p658
Liver is slightly enlarged, tense, and cyanotic, with rounded edges. Microscopically, there is congestion of centrilobular sinusoids. With time, centrilobular hepatocytes become atrophic, resulting in markedly attenuated liver cell cords. Liver fibrosis mostly centrilobular.
Passive congestion of the liver secondary to right-sided heart failure.(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 660
Hepatocytes in the central region of the lobule undergo ischemic necrosis. The liver takes on a variegated mottled appearance, reflecting hemorrhage and necrosis in the centrilobular regions, alternating with pale midzonal areas, known traditionally as the “nutmeg” liver.
Passive congestion of the liver secondary to left-sided heart failure.(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 661
A rare condition wherein there is primary dilation of sinusoids, impeding hepatic blood efflux. Associated with exposure to anabolic steroids, OCP’s and danazol.
Peliosis hepatis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 661
Results from the thrombosis of two or more major hepatic veins and is characterized by hepatomegaly, weight gain, ascites, and abdominal pain. The liver is swollen, is red-purple, and has a tense capsule. The affected hepatic parenchyma reveals severe centrilobular congestion and necrosis.
Budd-Chiari syndrome (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 662
Caused by toxic injury to sinusoidal endothelium. Damaged endothelial cells slough off and create emboli that block blood flow. Accompanied by passage of red blood cell into the space of Disse, proliferation of stellate cells, and fibrosis of terminal branches of the hepatic vein.
Sinusoidal Obstruction Syndrome (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 662
Well-demarcated but poorly encapsulated lesion, consisting of hyperplastic hepatocyte nodules with a central fibrous scar. Appears in noncirrhotic livers and may reach up to many centimeters in diameter. It occurs in response to local vascular injury.
Focal nodular hyperplasia (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 664
These appear in cirrhotic livers, are larger than surrounding cirrhotic nodules but do not display atypical features. Contains more than one portal tract, have an intact reticulin framework, and do not seem to be precursors of malignant lesions.
Macroregenerative nodules (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 664
These are lesions larger than 1 mm in diameter that appear in cirrhotic livers. Considered to be precursors of hepatocelluar cancers, are often monoclonal, and may contain chromosome aberrations similar to those present in liver cancers.
Dysplastic nodules (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 664
May appear grossly as (1) a unifocal, usually massive tumor, (2) a multifocal tumor made of nodules of variable size or (3) a diffusely infiltrative cancer, permeating widely and sometimes involving the entire liver, blending imperceptibly into the cirrhotic liver background. SEE SLIDE 16.12.
Primary Hepatocellular Carcinoma(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 665
A distinctive variant of HCC, which occurs in adults (85% under the age of 35 years). It usually presents as a single hard “scirrous” tumor with fibrous bands coursing through it. SEE SLIDE 16.13. Microscopically, they are composed of well-differentiated cells rich in mitochondria (oncocytes) growing in nests or cords separated by parallel lamellae of dence collagen bundles.
Fibrolamellar carcinoma(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 9th ed, p. 873
Gallbladder stones that are mostly radiolucent, ovoid and firm; can occur singly but most often there are several, with faceted surfaces resulting from apposition to one another. They are pale yellow but w/ increasing proportions of CaCO3, phosphates and bilirubin, they turn gray-white to black and radiopaque.
Cholesterol stones (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 668
May arise anywhere in the biliary tree and are trivially classified as black and as brown. Contain calcium salts of unconjugated bilirubin and lesser amounts of other calcium salts, mucin glycoproteins, and cholesterol.
Pigment stones(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 668
A type of pigment stone found in sterile gallbladder bile, usually small and present in large quantities and crumble easily. 50% to 75% are radiopaque.
Black pigment stones (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 668
A type of pigment stone found in infected intrahepatic or extrahepatic ducts. Tends to be single or few in number and are soft with a greasy, soaplike consistency that results from the presence of retained fatty acid salts released by the action of bacterial phospholipases on biliary lecithins. Contains calcium soaps, and are radiolucent.
Brown pigment stones(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 668
Gallbladder is usually enlarged (twofold to threefold) and tense, and it assumes a bright red or blotchy, violaceous to green-black discoloration, imparted by subserosal hemorrhages. The gallbladder lumen is filled with a cloudy or turbid bile that may contain fibrin, blood, and frank pus.
Acute cholecystitis (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 669
Condition wherein the exudate contained in the gallbladder is composed virtually of pure pus.
Empyema of the gallbladder(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 669
Severe cholecystitis wherein the GB is transformed into a green-black necrotic organ.
Gangrenous cholecystitis(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 669
The gallbladder may be contracted, of normal size, or enlarged. Presence of stones in the absence of inflammation is diagnostic.
Chronic cholecystitis. SEE SLIDE 16.14. (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 669
Defined as a complete obstruction of bile flow caused by destruction or absence of all or part of the extrahepatic bile ducts.
Biliary atresia (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 670
Appears as a poorly defined area of diffuse thickening and induration of the gallbladder wall that may cover several square centimeters or involve the entire gallbladder, scirrhous and very firm in consistency.
Infiltrating pattern of gallbladder carcinoma(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 671
This pattern of GB carcinoma grows into the lumen as an irregular, cauliflower mass, but at the same time it invades the underlying wall.
Exophytic pattern of gallbladder carcinoma(TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 671
Appear typically with an abundant fibrous stroma (desmoplasia) explaining their firm, gritty consistency. Most exhibit clearly defined glandular and tubular structures lined by somewhat anaplastic cuboidal to low columnar epithelial cells. Bile pigment and hyaline inclusions are not found within the cells. SEE SLIDE 16.15.
Cholangiocarcinomas (TOPNOTCH)Robbins Basic Pathology, 8th ed, p. 672
Morphology: Panlobular giant cell transformation of hepatocytes and formation of hepatocyte “rosettes”
Neonatal Cholestasis(TOPNOTCH)
What is the histological hallmark of irreversible liver damage?
Deposition of fibrous tissue(TOPNOTCH)
What type of viral hepatitis frequently show lymphoid aggregates within portal tracts, fatty change, and bile duct injury? SEE SLIDE 16.16
Hepatitis C(TOPNOTCH) Robbins Basic Pathology, 9th ed. 618
What is the most common liver tumor of young childhood?
Hepatoblastoma(TOPNOTCH)
What are the most common benign neoplasm in the liver?
Hemangiomas(TOPNOTCH)
These benign neoplasms tend to occur in young women who have used oral contraceptives and regress on discontinuance of their use.
Liver cell Adenoma(TOPNOTCH)
Rokitansky- Aschoff sinuses are structures seen in what organ? SEE SLIDE 16.14.
Gallbladder(TOPNOTCH)
What is the most common congenital anomaly of the gallbladder?
Presence of Phrygian Cap (folded fundus)(TOPNOTCH)
What is the tetralogy of cholesterol stone formation?
- Supersaturation of bile with cholesterol2. Gallbladder hypomotility3. Cholesterol nucleation4. Hypersecretion of GB mucus(TOPNOTCH)
AKA Strawberry Gallbladder
Cholesterolosis(TOPNOTCH)
Acute calculous cholecystitis is most commonly precipitated by what condition?
Obstruction of the neck or cystic duct by a Gallbladder stone(TOPNOTCH)
Morphology: Prominence of Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses. SEE SLIDE 16.14
Chronic Cholecystitis(TOPNOTCH)
What is the most common cause of cholangitis?
Choledocholithiasis(TOPNOTCH)
True or False. Gallstones are seen in 60%-90% of Carcinoma of the Gallbladder.
True(TOPNOTCH)
What is the most common growth pattern of Gallbladder carcinoma? Infiltrating or Exophytic?
Infiltrating(TOPNOTCH)
These are tumors arising from the part of the common bile duct between the cystic duct junction and the confluence of the right and left hepatic ducts at the liver hilus
Klatskin tumors(TOPNOTCH)