Short post to keep you busy over the weekend!
Good luck everyone!
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pp596LBw4L1OLWFbYaPSGaA&output=html
Pathology
Labels: exam , med student , pathology , Step 1 , USMLE
Endocrine... Challenging & Important
Endocrine
Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia I
- parathyroid- primary hyperparathyroidism
- pituitary- adenomas
Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia II
- parathyroid hyperplasia
- medullary carcinoma of thyroid
- pheochromocytoma- adrenal medulla tumor
Pituitary
Anterior lobe- hormone producing (all the troph cells)
- corticotrophs- ACTH, MSH
Posterior lobe- hormone storage
- supraoptic nucleus- ADH
- paraventricular nucleus- oxytocin (stimulates uterine smooth muscle, lactation)
Anterior Lobe Hyperpituitiarism
Major Cause
- Pituitary Adenoma-
o Benign, uniform cells, stain uniformly
o pituitary apoplexy
o can eventually lead to hypopituitarism if destroy enough of the gland
o MEN I
o Common Types
Prolactinomas- most common
• Treated surgically, and w/ bromocriptime-
• See calcium deposits mico w/ uniform staining
Growth Hormone Adenoma (of somatotrophs)
• GSP oncogene
• Prolactin can be present sometimes
• GH can cause hyperglycemia
o (side note- both GH and cortisol cause hyperglycemia)
• kids- giantism
• adults- acromegaly
Corticotroph adenoma
• ACTH- cushing DISEASE
o Remember: cushing disease involves pituitary, cushing syndrome involves ACTH hypersecretion outside of pituitary
• Nelson syndrome- cushing symptoms, remove adrenal gland, persistant signs of hyperpigmentation- due to MSH of corticotroph adenoma
Anterior Lobe Hypopituitarism
- pallor
- Causes
o Tumors
pituitary carcinoma
• non functional, only diagnosed when metastasize
rathke's cleft cyst
• benign, ciliated cuboidal epithelium, remove surgically
suprasellar tumors- can grow and squish the pituitary
• gliomas
• germinomas: germ cell tumor, midline, look like gonads histologically, Japanese men, AFP elevated
• craniopharyngiomas: benign aggressive remnants of rathke's pouch
o kids: endocrine prob, adults:visual prob (optic chiasm)
o adamantinomatous: wet karatin, calcifications, cholesterol rich fluid in cyst
o papillary: no cystic, keratin, or calcification
o remove surgically
o ischemic necrosis
Sheehan syndrome: ant gland hyp during pregnancy, hypoperfusion postpartum, post gland more resistant
Other causes…results in ischemic necrosis
o empty sella syndrome
o Apoplexy- hemorrhage
o Hypothalamic disease- sarcoidiosis, TB
o Congenital Hypopituitarism- Pit-1 mutation
Posterior lobe syndromes
- ADH
o diabetes insipidus: impaired ADH, excessive urination
o syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion- excessive ADH, hyponatremia (because resorption of escessive amounts of free water), increased in total body water, but blood volume stays the same
- oxytocin- no clinical symptoms
Adrenal
Cortex: zones GFR, products-sweeter as you go deeper
- glom- mineralocorticoids- aldosterone- controlled by angiotensin
- fasc- glucocorticoids- cortisol
- retulari- estrogen/androgen
o G/R- controlled by ACTH
o So remember, ACTH hypersecretion will only affect cortisol, estrogen
Diseases of Cortex
- Hypocorticism
o Acute
Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome
• Usually~ neisseria meningitis (meningococcus)- will see bacterial CSF
• Hypotension
o Red infarct of adrenal gland
• Schwartzman syndrome- breakdown of platelets, accumulation of fibrin- leads to DIC---
o diffuse petechial hemorrhages
o fibrin clumps in glomerulus of kidney
o chronic
Addison's disease
• Hypoglycemia, hyponatremia
• Focal hyperpigmentation- b/c high ACTH due to loss of cortisol neg feedback and ACTH stimulates corticotrophs to produce MSH- melanocytes
• Mostly idiopathic ATROPHY (lymphocytes), OR caused by TB-adrenal granulomas
• Feared complication: Adrenal Apoplexy- adrenal "collapse"---treat w/steroids
- Hypercorticism
o Cushing Syndrome: elevated cortisol
Hypernatremia, hypophos, increased gluconeogenesis---leading to diabetes, lymphopenia/eosinopenia- cortisol depresses lymphocyte generation
Trunkal obesity, buffalo hump, round face
Causes
• Iatrogenic-corticosteroid therapy
• Pituitary--cushing's Disease
• Adrenal cortical adenoma/carcinoma/hyperplasia
• Ectopic ACTH- lung, etc
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
o 21 hydroxylase deficiency- shunts pathway to testosterone
o clitoral/penile enlargement
o hyperplasia in ZONA RETICULARIS (b/c excessive testosterone prod)
o treat- give cortisol
- Conn's syndrome (hypermineraloadrenocorticism)
o Increase in aldosterone (mineralcorticoid) W/O increase in cortisol (glucocort)
o Hypertrophy in zona glomerulosa
o Clinical: severe HTN, loss of renal K+, sodium retention
o Causes
Cortical adenoma: which is a treatable form of HTN
Nodular cortical hyperplasia/adrenocortical carcinoma
Diseases of Medulla
- Neuroblastoma: adrenal MEDULLA tumor
o Kids,
o abdominal mass, hemorrhagic tendencies, increase in urine VMA
o tumor secretes epi/norepi, histo forms rosettes
o Better prog in kids 1 year- because will progress to ganglioneuroma- benign form
- Pheochromocytoma: neoplasm of chromaffin cells
o 30-50 y/o
o secrete epi/nor epi
o MEN II- medullary cancers of thyroid and adrenal glands
o UNILATERAL, benign, will show HTN and increase in VMA
Thyroid
- Thyroid hormone
o Uncouples oxidative phosp: decrease ATP, greater heat release
o Increase
Cardiac output and SYSTOLIC blood pressure (will cause a widened pulse pressure)
GI motility
O2 consumption----atrophy, spastic muscle
Hyperthyroidism
- Grave's disease
o Ab to TSH receptor-autoimmune
o Diffuse goiter, hyperthyroidism, exopthalmos (not due to inc. TSH, doesn't recede when treat Grave's disease)
o More females
o Clin: increase in systolic blood pressure, heat intolerance, diffuse non-nodal thyroid enlargement, red color
o Maj complications
Exopthalmos
High output heart failure
Thyroid storm- collapse, heart failure shock
Hypothyroidism
- Cretinism- kids: tongue, short, mental retardation
- Myxedema- adults: periorbital edema, NON-PITTING EDEMA, infiltration of glycosaminoglycans into subcutaneous tissue
Thyroiditis- inflammation of thyroid
- Hashimotos
o females
o Autoimmune: Ab to thyroblobulin in colloid (anti microsomal Ab in follicle cells)
o Thyroid enlargement due to Lymphycyte infiltration
o hypothyroid
- subacute (granulomatous, deQuervains)
o formation of granulomas in thyroid
o usually ~ post febrile/viral illness- usu. self-limiting
- Riedel's struma (chronic, woody)
o Heavy fibrous infiltration of thyroid, must distinguish from cancer
Thyroid Tumors
- Benign colloid goiter
o Euthyroid fxn
o Non-uniform nodular enlargement w/ non functional enlarged follicles of colloid
- Benign Adenoma of Thyroid
o Mass w/capsule…capsule keeps it benign
o Microscopic- follicular adenoma
- Thyroid carcinoma
o Papillary- most common, best prog
NO CAPSULE, papillary formation, diffuse
o follicular carcinoma-
probably a follicular adenoma that invaded a capsule..remnants of capsule present with evidence of invasion (capsules and blood vessels)
bad prognosis---metastasizes to bone marrow
- Giant Spindle Cell carcinoma of thyroid
o BAD prog- 6 mo to live
o Rapidly growing- can compress trachea
o Contains BOTH Spindle cells and malignant giant cells
Parathyroid
- chief cells- secrete PTH
- waterclear cells (vasserhelle cells)- chief cell at different stage of secretion
- oxyphil cells- red granules, cytoplasm full of mitochondria
- parathyroid hormone: stim by low calcium
o increase Ca2+
indirect osteoclast resorption (via RANK-L)
stimulates 1 hydroxylation of 1, 25 Vit D in KIDNEY
o decrease phos via decreasing renal tubular resorption of phosp
urine PO4 up, serum PO4 down
o increase in alkalinephosphatase- b/c stim osteoclasts
- calcitonin- from parafolicular cells of thyroid, stim by high calcium
o direct inhibition of bone resorption
Diseases
Hypercalcitonin
- Medullary Carcinoma of thyroid
o tumor secreting calcitonin
o low calcium, high phosphate
Hyperparathyroidism
- symptoms
o resorption of distal phalanges
o high Ca2+, high alk phos
o osteitis fibrosa cystica- bone loss with Ca2+/phos release, anchovy paste
o metastatic calcification of kidney- via calcium phos
- Primary hyperparathyroidism: arising in parathyroid gland---high Ca2+, low phos in serum
o PT adenoma- benign, main cause, uniform chief cells
o PT hyperplasia- clear cell hyperplasia
o PT carcinoma- rare
- Secondary Hyperparathyroidism
o Chronic Renal Disease- big sign…high PTH, low Ca2+, high phos in serum
o Defective Vit D formation-impairs Ca2+ absorption
o Low serum Ca2+- chronic PTH secretion- diffuse hyperplasia of PT glands
o High serum phosp- b/c kidney can't effectively excrete phosphate even when PTH stimulates it to
NON-PTH Hypercalcemia
- coma is main cause of death
- high calcium, NORMAL PHOSPHATE (b/c not PTH induced)
- usu due to variety of tumors (lung, breast)
- malignant cells secrete PTH-Related Peptide
Hypoparathyrodism
- symptoms-
o hypocalcemia: tetani, hyperreflexia
o hyperphosphatemia
- causes:
o accidental removal of PT gland during surgery, Di George, autoimmune,
o pseudohypoparathyroidism
end organ resistance
hereditary- short stature, short neck, rounded face, short fingers
hyperplastic parathyroids (b/c PTH keeps trying to secrete/cause changes)
How 'bout a little Lung Pathology
Good evening all! I'm trying to give some quick-hit reading and "to know" for those preparing for USMLE Step 1. This will continue for a couple more weeks. Most of those who will be taking this exam will be completing their preparation during the next 3 weeks and then entering the wards, where I could then become their intern when they rotate through their internal medicine clerkship at the University of Kansas. That is when the fun begins. Right now, it is time to focus on preparing to take THE test that either opens or closes future doors of opportunity. Sadly, this exam does weigh that heavily.
All of you preparing for this exam and have scheduled to take it in the middle to late June should be doing lots and lots of questions from a question bank, such as USMLE world or Kaplan. I would also recommend as you go back through your question bank to have your FirstAid book handy and write in the margins those explanations that really make it stick for you.
You should have or should be thinking about taking a full, mock exam. This will build your stamina for THE day and make you work that recall muscle I blogged about earlier this month.
Build your confidence, daily! Know you are in the right place, at the right time to do well.
Make sure you are exercising and eating right.
Make a plan, do your plan, believe in your plan and execute!
Alright... enough soap box stuff. As important as it is, here is some lung path to work your brain over.
Make sure to inhale! ;)
Interstitial Lung Diseases
Acute Lung Injury- rapid onset, short duration
- Diffuse Alveolar Damage (DAD)- specific cause, rapid progression-infiltrates
- Acute Interstitial Pneumonia (hamman-rich disease)- like DAD, only no specific cause, fulminant course- need biopsy
o The above two present with pretty severe respiratory symptoms
- Bronchiolitis Obliterans (BOOP)- only one with a good prognosis, air space disease- fibroid polyps filling airspaces
o Presents with fever, cough, dyspnea, bilateral infiltrates
Chronic Interstitial Pneumonia
- Usual Interstitial Pneumonia- varying histology- fibrosis, inflammation
o Infiltrates periphery, base
o Worse prognosis, older people 55
- Desquamative Interstitial Pneumonia- uniform, macrophages in airspace
o Better prognosis---younger 45
Honeycomb lung- dilation/mucous filling air spaces/cyst formation/obliteration of small airspaces to create big ones---end stage
- Acute lung injury- DAD
- Chronic- BOTH UIP, DIP
- Asbestos
- Interstitial glanulomatous diseases
- Eosinophillic granuloma
Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis= Extrinsic Allergic Alveolitis
Non-Necrotizing Granuloma: Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
Necrotizing Granuloma: Wegener's granulomatosis
Cyclophosphamide
- UIP
- Wegener's Granulamatosis
Diffuse Pulmonary Hemorrhage Syndromes
- Goodpasture's Syndrome---young males, kidney too
o Hemorrhage in intraalveolar spaces
- Vasculitis assoc- both have good prognosis with treatment
o Wegener's granulomatosis-- 50 y/o males, kidney too--mostly other organs
Necrotizing granuloma in lung and vasculature (necrotizing vasculitis)
C-ANCA
o Chrug-Strauss- ASTHMA, P-ANCA, RARE kidney: skin, nerves, heart, looks like eosinophilic pneumonia
Pulmonary Eosinophilia
- eosinophills in BLOOD or SPUTUM…NOT IN LUNG TISSUE ITSELF
- DISEASES:
o Churg-strauss (see above)
o Eosinophilic pneumonias
Simple- LOEFFLER'S SYNDROME- transient infiltrates
Tropical- filiarial
Chronic- only one that needs biopsy, assoc w/ASTHMA
• Responds well to steroids, lots of diff causes
o Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergilliosis- NO BIOPSY
Hypersens to aspergillius (acute branching hyphae)
Ab to aspergillius, central bronchiectasis (dilation)
Immune, not infectious- treat w/ steroids
Pulmonary Eosinophilic Granuloma (histiocytosis X)
- is NOT A PULMONARY EOSINOPHILIA!!!!!!!!
- the eosinophils are located in the lung tissue, NOT the peripheral blood/sputum
- histocyte proliferation, with a pneumothorax (air in pleural cavity)
- langerhans cells w/ bierbeck granule(ovoid nucleus with central line, stain with S-100) CD 1+
- treatment: stop smoking, corticosteroids
Diseases associated with ASTHMATICS- all have pulmonary eosinophilia (makes sense)
- Churg-Strauss
- Chronic eosinophilic pneumonia
- Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergilliosis
Immunologic lung diseases
- Goodpastures
- Allergic bronchopulm aspergilliosis
Sarcoidiosis- multisystem granulomatosis disease
- multiple non caseating, non necrotizing granulomas, usu along lymph pathways (different from TB- which would caseate)
- black, female, 20-40 y/o
- bilateral infiltrates, hilar lymphadenopathy
- increased serum angiotensin converting enzyme
- increased 24 hour calcium secretion
Necrotizing Granulomas along blood pathways- Wegener's granulomatosis
Non-necrotizing granulomas along lymph pathways- sarcoidiosis
Pneumonconiosis
- non-neoplastic rxn in lung to inhaled mineral/organic dust
- Asbestos Diseases
o Asbestosis- pulmonary parenchymal interstitital fibrosis
o Pleural plaque
o Pleural effusion
o Bronchogenic carcinoma
o Malignant mesothelioma
o Laryngeal/extrapulmonary neoplasms
Lung Biopsies
- OLB- gold standard
- VALB- not good for central biopsy
- TBB- good for sarcoid, cancer, infections
o Bad for UIP, DIP
COPD/PFT
Chronic Obstructive Diseases
- Chronic Bronchitis
- Emphysema
o Above two are usually considered COPD
- Asthma
- Bronchiectasis
Chronic Bronchitis
- middle ages, smokers, males
- hallmarks:
o hypertrophy/hyperplasia of submucosal glands (ried Index)
RIED index- meas ratio of submucosal gland thickness to thickness of bronchial wall..>0.4 is bad
o goblet cell metaplasia in bronchi
Remember----terminal bronchiole---respiratory bronchiole---alveolus
Emphysema: enlargement of airspaces, distal to terminal bronchiole
- pathogenesis: protease/antiprotease balance
- defined in morphologic terms
- males, smoking, 50-80 y/o
Types
- centrilobular: most common, resp bronchioles, UPPER lobes
- panlobular: involves BOTH resp bronch and alveoli (whole acinus), LOWER lobes
o alpha-1-antitrypsin defiency (PiZZ genotype)
- localized - (paraseptal), enlargement distal acinus, upper lung, usu asymptomatic
o young adults- spontaneous pneumothorax
- Irregular (paracicatricial emphysema)- fibrosis
- Bullous- occurs w/ other emphysemas
Asthma:
- smooth musc contraction, mucous secretion, increased vascular permeability-edema---leads to bronchial obstruction
- thickened bronchial basement membrane of bronchioles, hypertrophy of bronchial smooth muscle, mucous plugs
Bronchiectasis
- irreversible dilation of bronchi- due to elastic/muscular elements in wall
- Immotile cilia syndrome
o Inherited non-obstructive cause
o Includes Kartagener syndrome: dextrocardia, bronchiectasis, sinusitis, rhinitis, nasal polyps, otitis media
Non Productive cough: Asthma
Productive Cough: bronchiectasis (mucopurulent sputum)
Middle Aged men
- UIP
- DIP
- Hypersensitivity pneumonia
Pulmonary fxn tests
- when have pulmonary function tests: the percent predicted is the "percentage that the "ideal" predicted value that the patient has achieved
- Forced Expiratory Flow :slope of line through volume/time graphs
o FEF 25-75%- small airway disease
o FEF 200-1200- large airway disease
Infectious Lung Diseases
Productive Cough: Bacterial Pneumonia
Bacterial Pneumonia
- Community Acquired Pneumonia: mild- bad if co-morbidities
- Nosocomial
- Opportunistic
- Abscess is complication of bacterial pneumonia
Viral Pneumonia: usu kids, immunocomp
- chronic interstitial pneumonia- lymphocytes
- diffuse alveolar damage- hyaline membranes
- Cytomegalovirus
o Immunocomp,
o Fever, non productive cough, diffuse infiltrates
o Intranuclear inclusion bodies, intracytoplasmic inclusions
Pneumocystis Pneumonia
- immuno comp
- fever, dry cough,
- inter-alveolar FOAMY exudates
Pulmonary Fungal Infections
- Histoplasmosis
o Soil, bird/bat droppings
o Granulomatous inflammation, small black budding yeast
- Coccidiodomycosis
o Southwest
o Necrotizing granulomatous inflammation
- Cryptococcosis - india ink stain
o Soil, PIGEON poop
o Mucin positive
- North american blastomycosis
o mid west river valleys
o pus forming (suppurative)/granulomatous
o BROAD based budding
- Aspergillosis
o Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis- immunologic
o Aspergilloma- colonizes pulmonary cavity- fungus ball
o Invasive aspergillosis- opportunistic infection
Vascular invasion, thrombus + infarct
Can see hyphae and fruiting bodies
Tuburculosis
- Gohn complex: peripheral granuloma, involvement w/ mediastinal lymph node
Stuff that forms Granulomas
Necrotizing
- TB
- Coccidiomycosis
Non-Necrotizing
Lung Cancer
Men, 60-70 y/o
Central Tumors
- small cell carcinoma
- squamous cell carcinoma
- branchial carcinoids
Peripheral Tumor
- adenocarcinoma
- hamartoma
Malignant
Epithelial Tumors
- squamous cell carcinoma
o smoking males, central lung- keratin pearls
o hemotypsis, symp due to obstruction
o superior vena cava syndrome- compression, dilation of upper body veins
o pancoast syndrome- shoulder pain- ulnar distribution: b/c tumor at apex compresses parts of brachial plexis
o Horner syndrome- b/c pancoast tumor that involves cervical symp plexus- ptosis, miosis, anhydrosis, endopthalmosis
o Massive hemorrhage, dilated bronchi mucopurulent secretions,
o 5 years, 15%
- adenocarcinoma
o peripheral, assoc with scars
o 5 year 15-20%
o Types
Acinar adenocarcinoma
• Gland arrangement, mucous secretions
Broncho-alveolar carcinoma
• Male female 1:1, 5 year 42%, multicentric/diffuse forms worse
• Neoplastic cells line "normal" alveolar architecture
• Types
o Solitary mass
o Multiple nodules- resembles metastatic cancer
o Multicentric diffuse infiltrate- resembles interstitial disease
Solid carcinoma w/ mucous cell formation
• Undifferentiated, anaplastic
Papillary adenocarcinoma
• Papillary structures with central fibrovascular core
Neuroendocrine Carcinomas (small and large cell carcinomas): acts like neuroendocrine system
Small cell carcinoma
o Males, smoking
o Worst prognosis 5 yr 4%, already metastatic by time of diagnosis
o Best response to cancer- important to ID as small cell for TX
o Central
o Types
Oat Cell
Intermediate
• Similar clinically
Combined- oat cell + any other type of tumor (squamous or adenoma)
• Perform surgery to remove
- Large cell carcinoma
o Poorly differentiated- no observable org via light microscopy
Electron microcsopy shows some organization
o cells with lots of cytoplasm (+ lymphocytes…not oat cells)
o Treat with SURGERY NOT CHEMO
Bronchial Carcinoids
- M=F, 45 y/o
- Central, peripheral, atypical
- Central
o GOOD PROGNOSIS- 5-10 y 50-95%!
o Maj metast to lymph, minor to liver
o YELLOWISH color
o Mass invading lumen of larger bronchi (more central)
o Invade bronchial wall into lung tissue
o Uniform cells, strippled chromatin, positive stain for chromogranin
o Can UNUSUALLY cause carcinoid syndrome (via seretonin secretion- skin flush, broncho const, cyanosis, R heart prob, hypotension,edema)
Metastatic Tumors
- lung 2nd most freq after lymph node
- Types
o Multiple- usu late stage cancers
o Lymphangitic- usu from adenocarcinoma
o Solitary- must distinguish from primary tumor
- usu from stomach, breast, colon, uterus, pancreas
Malignant Mesothelioma
- males, 40-70 y/o
- increasing in freq
- asbestos exposure (20-40 year lag)
- PLEURAL EFFUSION
- Pleural tumor encasing the lung- can extend to diaphragm
- Biphasic: epithelial/spindle
Benign
Hamartoma
- Peripheral, well defined
- hamartoma means like tumor, but due to faulty development
o microscopically can reproduce any component of bronchial tissue- cartilage, muscle, fat, cleft like spaces
Putting it all together….
Small cell carcinoma: major one for chemo
All other tumors- surgery is treatment of choice!!
Overall cancer survival rate: 5 years, 8-10 %
In order of better to worse
- squamous, adeno, small, large
Squamous cell, adeno= better prog
Small/Large cell= bad prog
Metastasis: most likely to least likely: lymph nodes, liver, adrenal, bone, brain
Paraneoplastic syndromes
Squamous cell carcinoma: hypercalcemia- PTH
Small cell carcinoma: cushing's (ACTH), inapprop ADH, carcinoid, gyneocmastia, acromegaly
Squamous cell and adenocarcinoma ( prob most frequent and increasing!)are most frequent lung tumors
- small cell and large cell also considered frequent
Drugs with Lung Toxicity:
Bleomycin
Busulfan
Amiodarone
Cyclophosphamide
Methotrexate and methysergide
Nitrosourea and nitrofurantoin