[go: up one dir, main page]

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
669 views14 pages

Gastrointestinal Pathology

1. The document discusses various pathologies of the oral cavity, esophagus, and stomach. Key conditions mentioned include leukoplakia, oral hairy leukoplakia, erythroplakia, and squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue in the oral cavity. Common esophageal conditions mentioned are hiatal hernia, achalasia, Mallory-Weiss syndrome, esophagitis, and Barrett's esophagus. The stomach section briefly discusses pyloric stenosis and acute gastritis. 2. Squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma are mentioned as the most common esophageal cancers. Risk factors, pathogenesis, morphology, and clinical features are summarized for each.

Uploaded by

Rahul Shukla
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
669 views14 pages

Gastrointestinal Pathology

1. The document discusses various pathologies of the oral cavity, esophagus, and stomach. Key conditions mentioned include leukoplakia, oral hairy leukoplakia, erythroplakia, and squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue in the oral cavity. Common esophageal conditions mentioned are hiatal hernia, achalasia, Mallory-Weiss syndrome, esophagitis, and Barrett's esophagus. The stomach section briefly discusses pyloric stenosis and acute gastritis. 2. Squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma are mentioned as the most common esophageal cancers. Risk factors, pathogenesis, morphology, and clinical features are summarized for each.

Uploaded by

Rahul Shukla
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

1

GIT Pathology
ORAL CAVITY

1. Leukoplakia:
- Well defined white plaques caused by epidermal proliferations
- Cannot be scraped off
- Chronic irritation such as tobacco use, HPV & ill fitting dentures are predisposing factors
- 3-6% undergo malignant transformation
2. Oral Hairy Leukoplakia:
- Fluffy or hairy hyperkaratotic thickenings
- Seen in HIV+ pts; Majority have EBV
- No malignancy potential
3. Erythroplakia:
- Red plaque velvety eroded area with much more atypical epithelial changes
- Malignancy rate > 50%

Clinical:
Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Tongue:
- HPV16 & 18, alcohol, tobacco
- Chronic mucosal irritation: metaplasia ! epithelial dysplasia !squamous cell carcinoma
- Moderately well-differentiated keratinized tumors; keratin pearls, epithelial thickening
- 50% mortality in 5yrs

ESOPHAGUS
- 4 layers the wall: (normally pale pink appearance)
o Mucosa(epithelium, lamina propria, muscularis mucosa, Sub-mucosa (Meissner’s Plexus & glands),
Muscularis propria/externa (Auerbach’s Plexus, long & circular muscles), Adventitia (NO serosa)
- Stratified squamous epithelium

Congenital Non-neoplastic Neoplasms


Atresia Hiatal Hernia Benign
Stenosis Achalasia Malignant
Mallory Weiss Tear
Esophagitis
Barrett’s Esophagus
varices

Congenital

1. Esophageal Atresia
- The esophagus fails to develop
- A portion of the esophagus is replaced by a non-canalized cord
o Associated with: Tracheo-esophageal fistula

Clinical:
- Newborn NOT able to swallow: Excess drooling, regurgitation
- Choking and cyanosis occurs with 1st feed
- Maternal polyhydroamnios & single umbilical artery

Non Neoplastic Conditions

1. Hiatal Hernia:
- Herniation of stomach through enlarged esophageal hiatus in the diaphragm
- There is separation of the diaphragmatic crura
- Incompetence of lower esophageal sphincter (LES)
2

Sliding Type: “Sliding” 95% of cases


- Commonly occurs in patients that have severe reflux esophagitis
- The LES is non-functional
- Will be a “Bell-like” dilation of the stomach into the thoracic cavity
- Gastric reflux: Epigastric pain, heartburn

Paraesophageal Type: “Rolling”


- The greater curvature enters into the thorax
- That part of the stomach can be pinched off by the diaphragm:
o Volvulus ! strangulation ! leading to ischemia and perforation
- Surgery to repair

2. Achalasia/Cardiospasm:
- Lower esophageal sphincter fails to relax during swallowing response.
- Causes:
o Aperistalsis, partial relaxation of LES or ⇑ LES tone
Primary: Loss of inhibitory innervation on LES and smooth muscle
Secondary: Pseudoachalasia: Chaga’s Disease (Trypansoma cruzi), Sarcoidosis, paraneoplastic, Polio
o This causes a loss of ganglion cells in the myenteric plexus (found post-mortem)
Clinical:
- Gradual onset of dysphagia, Odynophagia (pain swallowing)
- Substernal discomfort
- Reflux of contents, vomiting
- Aspiration pneumonia, ⇑ risk of squamous cell carcinoma (toxins in the food bc ⇑ exposure to food)
- Proximal dilation

3. Mallory Weiss Syndrome: Lacerations


- Longitudinal mucosal tears: in the esophagus
o Mucosal or transmural
o Span the esophago-gastric junction
- They are caused by episodes of excessive vomiting without LES relaxation
o Common in alcoholics
- Hematemesis

4. Esophagitis:
- Inflammation of esophagus: many causes
o infections (CMV, HSV, Candidiasis) , Uremia
o Allergic: eosinophilic esophagitis
o Irritants: alcohol, acids: depression of CNS !reflux esophagitis (most common)

Reflux Esophagitis: (commonest esophagitis)


- Reflux of contents: Hyperemia ! inflammatory cells (eosinophils, PMNs) ! elongation of lamina propria
papillae ! basal zone hyperplasia

Complications:
o Hematemesis, stricture formation, aspiration pneumonia
o Barrett’s esophagus & adenocarcinoma
Clinical:
o Dyspepsia (indigestion), heart burn, symptoms ⇑ when lying down
o Regurgitation of gastric acid into the esophagus due to loss of LES
3

5. Barrett’s Esophagus

- Esophageal mucosa replaced by metaplastic


Columnar epithelium (basal cell reprogramming)

Etiology:
- GERD: prolonged injury: GE reflux
- Prolonged reflux esophagitis
- M>F US Caucasian

Pathogenesis:
- Injury (reflux): inflammation & ulceration ! damaged ! basal stem cells reprogram
o ⇓ pH in stomach: Basal cells differentiate into gastric or intestinal type epithelium
- The new epithelium of the esophagus is better equipped to handle the acidic environment
- Z-line: Moves up; Red looking epithelium (intestinal metaplasia with goblet cells)
- Lack of absorptive eneterocytes

Endoscopy:
- Salmon-pink, velvety mucosa
o Exists as “tongues” extending up from the GE junction

Clinical:
- Heart burn
- epigastric pain, dysphagia, stenosis, hematemesis
- 30-40X ⇑ dysplasia of the columnar epithelium ! Esophageal adenocarcinoma
- Antacids: Relieve pain

6. Esophageal Varices:
- Lower esophagus: Dilated tortuous dilated vessel in submucosa
- Portal Hypertension: Left gastric (portal) anastimoses with esophageal (systemic); Sup. Rectal (portal) -
Mid/Inf rectal (caval) [hemorrhoids]; Paraumbilical (portal) - Sup epigastric (caval) [caput medusae]

Portal Hypertension:
o Alcoholic cirrhosis: varices, Ascities, jaundice
o Portal congestion forces blood into systemic system
o Flow: Plexus of esophageal veins ! azygos ! SVC
Clinical:
- Ascities; can be asymptomatic until rupture
- Varices can rupture and produce massive hemorrhage into the lumen
o Hemetemesis (vomit blood) ! possible death

Neoplasms
Benign Tumors Malignant (more common than benign)
Leiomyoma, Fibroma, Lipoma, Hemangioma 1. Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Neurofibroma, lymphangioma 2. Adenocarcinoma

1. Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Esophagus: malignant tumor of the GI tract


keratin pearls = squamos cell
Etiology:
- >50yo Males>Female Blacks>Whites (Asians)
- Diet: Vitamin deficiency, nitrites
- Social: Alcohol, tobacco failure of LES to relax
- Esophageal disturbances: Achalasia, chronic gastritis, Plummer Vinson syndrome
- Genetic: Celiac Disease, Ectodermal dysplasia (Tylosis) iron deficiency causes esoph
web and squam cell in FEM
4

Pathogenesis:
- Potential Carcinogens !chronic esophagitis !epithelial dysplasia ! carcinoma in situ ! neoplasm
- Early onset lesion:
o Small, gray/white, plaque-like thickening & mucosal elevation
o Locally invasive
o Lesions become tumor-like years later
- Middle third: 50%, Upper third: 20%, Lower third: 30% (more adenocarcinomas)
- Lymphatic spread: Survival ⇓ 20%

- 2 associated gene abnormalities


o p16 / INK4 tumor suppressor gene
o EGFR

- 3 forms of tumor:
o Exophytic: Polypoid masses protruding into the lumen
o Excavated: Necrotizing ulcerations; Can erode into respiratory tree or aorta
o Infiltrative: Lead to thickening of the wall; desmoplasia = constriction

Clinical:
- Dysphasia = progressive due to esophageal problems can get aspiration pneumonia b/c tumor burrows
- weight loss into trachea and leaves hole for pathogens
- coughing up small amounts of blood
- cervical lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, hoarseness of voice
mediastinal lymph nodes

2. Esophageal Adenocarcinoma:
- Mucin type tumor of glandular origin

Etiology:
- 50yo Caucasian
- 5-10% esophageal carcinomas
- Occurs in the lower 1/3 of the esophagus

Pathogenesis:
- Squamous cells of esophagus ! gastric reflux
! Barrett’s esophagus ! gastric/intestinal
cells metaplasia ! genetic mutations in cells :p53 over expression
- ⇑ HER-2/NEU and β-catenin

Morphology:
- Increased mucin secreting cell proliferation
- Large nodular masses
- Deeply ulcerative / diffusely infiltrative mass

Clinical:
- weight loss, anorexia, fatigue, weakness
- Dysphagia: pain when swallowing solid food initially
- Chest pain, cough due to local extension of tumor
- Poor prognosis
5

STOMACH

Non neoplastic:

1. Pyloric Stenosis:
- Concentric hypertrophy of circular muscle coat (can be cancerous growth)
- 1st Male child
- M>F
- Regurgitation, projectile vomiting (no bile), palpable epigastric mass, visible peristalsis

2. Acute Gastritis:
- Acute, transient inflammation of the gastric mucosa (PMNs)
- Loss of surface epithelium ! Erosions (more superficial than ulcer)
- Acute Erosive Gastritis: Erosions with hemorrhage

Etiology:
- NSAIDs: Blocks PGE2 (role: ⇑ HCO3-, ⇑ blood to stomach & ⇑ mucin)
- EtOH, smoking, Chemo, Uremia, H.pylori, stress, ischemia, shock
- Burns (Curling ulcers: from hypoxia and systemic acidosis) & head injuries (Cushing ulcers)

Morphology:
- Rugae will look normal, with multiple small ulcers

Pathogenesis:
- Hyperemia, punctuate areas of hemorrhage
- Edema & congestion of lamina propria with PMNs

Clinical:
- Epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting, Hematemesis & melena

3. Chronic Gastritis:
- Chronic mucosal inflammation changes! atrophy/metaplasia

Etiology:
- EtOH, smoking, radiation, Granulomatous conditions (Crohn’s, sarcoidosis)
- H.Pylori: gram –, urease + , motile, noninvasive, located in the gastric mucus layer
o Induces proinflammatory state (IL6, TNF, IL8)
o Protease, Urease, Phospholipase
o Steiner silver stain
o Urea breathe test +
o ⇑ Gastric acid and ⇓ HCO3-; hyperacidity
Text Steiner Silver Stain

Morphology:
- Lymphocyte & plasma cell infiltrate into lamina propria, PMNs in neck region
- intestinal metaplasia: columnar with goblet cells with glandular atrophy
which is normal in intestines adenocarcinoma occurs as well
Clinical:
- Nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain, dyspepsia, normal gastrin levels
- Proliferation of lymphoid tissue: lead to MALToma or lymphoma (B cell)

Autoimmune variant
- Loss of parietal cells from autoAb ! gland destruction!mucosal atrophy
- Pernicious anemia: Loss of acid & IF ! megaloblastic anemia
- Achloridia (loss of acid), hypergatrinemia (redundant development of parts of stomach), ⇑ Gastrin
- Associated with other autoimmune diseases: Hashimoto’s Thryroiditis, Addison’s Disease
- Long term risk: gastric carcinoma & Carcinoid tumors
6

4. Gastric Ulcers
- Loss of mucosa extending through muscularis mucosal layer
- Gastric and duodenal common

Acute Gastric Ulcers


Etiology:
- Severe trauma, Extensive burns (Curling ulcers) head injuries (Cushing ulcers)
Pathogenesis:
- Systemic acidosis and hypoxia (burns)
- Vagal stimulation (cranial lesions) ! ⇑ acid
Morphology:
- Multiple small circular ulcers with normal adjacent mucosa
- Rugae are normal with nonindurated bases

Peptic Ulcer Disease (chronic)


Etiology:
- Text
H.pylori, NSAIDs, Smoking, EtOH, stress, Zollenger Ellison Syndrome
gastrin secreting tumor
Morphology:
- Sites: Duodenum (no malignancy potential) (1), Stomach (2), GE junction (3)
- 50%<2cm round to oval punched out with straight walls
- Raised margins with smooth clean base, radiating surrounding mucosal folds
4 zones:
- Necrotic fibrinoid debris, Inflammatory cell layer, Granulation layer, Scar tissue layer

Clinical:
- Burning epigastric pain 1-3hrs post meal, alkali foods relieve, worse at night, weight loss
- Complications: Bleeding, perforation, gastric outlet obstruction,
- Malignant transformation
- Duodenal ulcers: Pt eats all the time ! ⇑ weight. eating alleviates pain here

Zollenger Ellison Syndrome


- Neuroendocrine tumor: ⇑ gastrin
- Multiple ulcers in stomach duodenum, jejunum & ileum

Neoplastic

5. Gastric Adenocarcinoma
- Exophytic, flat, or excavated mucin producing tumors

Etiology:
- common in Japanese and S. Koreans
- Intestinal Type: 50yo M>F 2:1, Chronic Gastritis, H.pylori, nitrate (smoked foods) signet cells (mucin)
o Amplification of HER2/NEU and ⇑ β-Catenin
- Diffuse Type: Young female, E-Cadherin and FGR2 risk factors

Pathogenesis:
- Intestinal Type: H.pylori: release ROS ! DNA damage
o Intestinal metaplasia
- Excavated tumor: resemble ulcer however has heaped-up margins

Morphology:
excavated diffuse
- Intestinal Type: Neoplastic glands resemble colonic epithelium
- Diffuse Type: No gland formation; Signet-Ring Cells (mucin vacuole w n. in periphery)
o Linitis plastica appearance: leather bottle stomach ! Desmoplasia
7

Clinical:
- Asymptomatic early, then weight loss and abdominal pain later very common symptoms of cancer
- Virchow’s Node, pyloric obstruction, Krukenberg tumor- ovary met with signet ring cells from any origin
- Depth of tumor most prognostic factor Virchow node = supra-clavicular nodes most likely in ovaries
Sister Mary Joseph node = periumbilical
6. Gastrointestinal Stroma Tumors (GIST)
- Tumor of the gastric mesenchyme; Benign or malignant
o Anywhere in GIT; stomach most prominent
- Neoplastic Interstitial Cells of Cajal – (pacemaker cells): stomach for motility
o Usually in submucosa
- Creates Swirls and bundles of Spindle Shaped Cells
- Tumor Marker: C-Kit (CD 117)
- Mutation of CH4
- Tx: GLEEVEC (tyrosine kinase mutation)

SMALL INTESTINE

Congenital abnormalities

1. Meckel’s Diverticulum
- Incomplete involution of vitelline duct/yolk stalk/omphalomesenteric duct (connects gut to yolk sac)
- True Diverticulum: blind out pouching of GI
o Consists of 4 wall layers: mucosa, submucosa, muscularis propria & serosa
- Sometimes lined by gastric mucosa or pancreatic tissue (any path of those tissues can manifest here)

Rule of 2’s:
- 2in, 2ft from ileocecal valve, 2% population, 2% symptoms, 2:1 M>F 2 types of cells: gastric or pancreatic

Clinical:
- Asymptomatic or GI bleed, ulceration, fistula, perforation
- Pernicious anemia: IF diverticula has bacteria (deplete B12)
- Technetium 99m: test for Meckel’s

Complications:
- Hemorrhage, intussception, ulceration, obstruction

Malabsorption Syndromes:

1. Celiac Disease: (Gluten Sensitive Enteropathy or Nontropical Sprue)


Etiology:
- Exposure to Gluten products at young age!
- Common in twins & trisomy 21 (DS)
- HLA-DQ2 (95%), HLADQ8 (5%)
Pathogenesis:
- Immunological sensitivity to Gliadin (in gluten)
- Lamina Propria:
o CD4+Tcells, Lymphocytes, MACs & plasma cell infiltrate
o CH8+ Tcells: NKG2DR (NKcellR): recongnizes stressed epithelial cells & kills them
Morphology:
- Elongated hyperplastic crypts, with atrophy & loss of villi (flattened) in duodenum
Clinical:
- Diarrhea, steatorrhea, Fe deficiency anemia & Ca++
- Serology: Anti-tissue transglutaminase (tTG) Ab, anti-gliadin Ab, Anti-endomysial Ab
Complications:
- Tcell lymphomas (increased risk)
- Dermatitis Herpetiformis
8

2. Tropical Sprue:
- Living or visiting tropics
- Bacterial infection superimposed on small intestine injury
- All SI involved equally (Ileum absorbs bile and B12)
Clinical:
- Symptoms appear months to yrs after exposure
- Responds to antibiotics

3. Whipple’s Disease:
Etiology:
- gram (+) sickle shaped Trepophyrema whippeli
- Commonly in older men!
Pathogenesis:
- Whippeli invade MACs in the lamina propria of the SI: ! systemic disease
- Malabsorption 2o to disruption of normal villi function
- MACs obstruct lymphatics and reabsoption of chylomicrons
Morphology:
- Distended, foamy PAS + inclusion MACs in lamina propria and LNs
- Prominent fat within intestinal mucosa
DDX: Entamoeba Histolitica: Histologically look similar
Clinical:
PAS+ stain of MACs filled with T. whippeli
- Steatorrhea, weight loss anorexia,
- Polyarthritis, hyperpigmentation, CNS complaints (dementia/SZ), lymphadenopathy

LARGE INTESTINE

Congenital Malformation

1. Hirschsprung’s disease
- Commonest cause of congenital intestinal obstruction
Etiology:
- M4:1F, 10% Down Syndrome
- Defects in migration of neuroblasts ! Absence of ganglion cells in Meissner & Auerbach’s plexus
Morphology:
- Megacolon: Dilation & hypertrophy proximal to aganglionic segment
- Rectum always affected
Clinical:
- Delayed meconium passage (constipation), Abdominal distention
- Stercoral ulcers: shallow; produced by impacted, inspissated (removal of water) feces
Complications:
- Enterocolitis, perforation & peritonitis

Non congenital

2. Diverticular Disease:
- Not true diverticula
Etiology:
- Elderly, normally asymptomatic from poor fiber intake
- Lack of fiber leads to sustained bowel contractions & ⇑ intraluminal pressure
Pathogenesis:
- Weakening of circular muscle with longitudinal muscle in teaniae coli! diverticula
- Can become infected ! diverticulitis
- Flask-like structures (95% sigmoid colon)
Clinical:
- Usually asymptomatic, GI bleeding, lower abdominal pain, fever (if -itis), constipation, flatulence, diarrhea
- diverticulOSIS=bleeding, diverticulITIS=pain
9

Colitis
- Inflammation of colon from many underlying causes:
- Infections, necrotizing Enterocolitis, pneudomembranous, ischemia, Inflammatory bowel disease
Clinical:
- Diarrhea, (mucoid or bloody)
- Lower abdominal pain & cramps
- Tenesmus: painful defecation!

1. Pseudomembranous Colitis
- Broad spectrum antibiotic allows C. difficile to take over colonic environment
- #1 nosocominal diarrhea
- C. difficile toxin: causes ribosylation of GTPases (Rho) ! apoptosis of epithelium
Morphology:
- Raised yellow plaques in colon
- Pseudomembrane: fibrin, inflammatory cells and debris (⇑PMNs)
o Surface epithelium denuded !Damaged crypts
o Mucopurulent exudate!forming a cloudy pseudomembrane
- Clinical:
- Fever, leukocytosis, abdominal pain, watery diarrhea, toxin in stool

2. Amebic Colitis
- Caused by Entamoeba histolytica parasite
- Amoebae invade the crypts of colonic glands and burrow down into the submucosa
o inflammation & necrosis of submucosa
o Eat RBCs
- Form Flask shaped ulcers
Clinical:
- amebic dysentery: bloody diarrhea
- Produce amebic liver abscess ! FEVER
- Resembles inflammatory bowel disease on biopsy
- Hystolysin released: kills PMNs
- Rule out IBD (steroids will ⇑ Ameobic growth)

Idiopathic Inflammatory Bowel Disease: (Crohn’s & Ulcerative colitis)


- Common in Young Females of Jewish decent (more associated with Crohn’s)
- Chronic relapsing inflammatory disorders
- Cause malabsorption
- Chronic delayed type inflammatory reaction caused by CD+4 T-cells secreting IL-17
- Extraintestinal associated diseases that can develop before the onset of GI symptoms (More common in UC)
o Migratory Polyarthritis
o ankylosing spondylitis
o erythema nodosum (tender, red nodules on the shins)
o Primary Sclerosing cholangitis (involvement of the biliary tract)
o Aphthous ulcers, gall stones

1. Crohn’s Disease:
Etiology:
- Systemic inflammatory disease affecting any part of GI tract
o Primarily in the Ileum (B12 deficiency)
- Body makes antibodies against cell in the Ileum ! inflammation
- HLA-DR allele associated
- Common in Females and Jews young adults
10

Morphology:
- Transmural involvement of the bowel due to inflammation & mucosal damage
- Non-Caseating Granulomas (40-60% of cases)
- Fistula formation: can perforate
- Bowel wall thickens narrowing lumen ! fibrosis & inflammation in muscularis propria
- Creeping Fat: Omentum wraps around inflamed intestine
- Skip Lesions: due to several segments that are randomly involved.
- Crypt Abscesses: neutrophilic infiltration into the crypts
- Serpentine Ulcers: hemorrhaging separated by discontinuous healthy tissue
- Chronic mucosal damage
o Cobblestone Appearance: Transmural cracks ! can form fistulas (perianal)

Clinical:
- Recurrent episodes of non-bloody diarrhea
- crampy lower right abdominal pain fever lasting days to weeks
- Increased risk of bowel cancer but reduced because parts are resected
- Obstructive Megacolon from stenosis
- String Sign: on Barium swallow small ring from stenosis

2.) Ulcerative Colitis:


- Nongranulomatous inflammatory disease limited to the colon QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

o mucosa & submucosa only; NORMAL serosa


ar e needed to see this picture.

- Always starts at rectum


- Pseudopolyps: Islands of regenerating mucosa bulging upward
- HLA-DRB1

Morphology:
- NO skip lesion, NO granulomas, NO fibrosis, Thin intestinal wall
- Mucosa of Rectum: inflammatory pseudopolyps
- Superficial Ulcers
- Predominately mononuclear infiltrate into lamina propria
- PMN infiltrate into epithelial layer ! form crypt abscesses
- In rare cases: the ulcers can damage neural plexus !neuromuscular
dysfunction ! severe gangrenous TOXIC MEGACOLON

Ulcerative Colitis Clinical:


- Attacks of bloody mucoid diarrhea
- Flare-ups w/stress
- Dysplasia of cells ⇒ Risk of carcinoma
- Extraintestinal associated diseases:
o Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis (p-ANCA)
o Uveitis:
o Ankylosing spondylosis
o Migratory Polyarthritis
o Erythema nodosum: red nodules on shins

Vascular disorders

1. Ischemic Bowel Disease:


Etiology:
- Transmural infarct: Occlusion of M aa (Celiac, S./I. mes.)
- Mural or mucosal infarcts: Hypoperfusion
Predisposing factors of occlusion:
- Systemic atherosclerosis: leads to arterial thrombosis
- Cardiac vegetation: leads to arterial embolism
11

- Hypercoagulable states : venous thrombosis


Non-occlusive :
- Cardiac failure, shock, volvulus, herniation
- Splenic flexure commonest site for Watershed infarcts.

Clinical:
- Elderly man; severe abdominal pain, nausea, bloody stools, absent bowel sounds
- Small bowel is most commonly by occlusion of the Superior mesenteric artery.
- Death is high with transmural
- Gangrene, perforation, peritonitis, shock & vascular collapse

Neoplasm of Small and Large Intestine:

Non-Neoplastic Polyps: no malignant potential Neoplastic Epithelial Lesion


Hyperplastic Polyps Benign Polyps:
Hamartomatous Polyps Adenomas: tubular, villous, tubulovillous
Juvenile Polyps Malignant Polyps:
Peutz-Jeghers Polyps: (FAP) Adenocarcinoma
Inflammatory polyps Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Anus

1. Hyperplastic polyps:
- 90% of all epithelial polyps; NO malignant potential
- Occur sporadically in the intestine;50% more common in Rectosigmoid region
o Small, nipple like smooth protrusions of the mucosa
o Contain abundant crypts lined by well-differentiated goblet cells

2. Juvenile Polyps:
- Adults: called retention polyp
- found in children < 5y/o; usually 1-3cms
- Juvenile Polyposis Syndrome: ⇑ risk of malignancy
- Hamartomatous proliferations of the lamina propria (inflammation)
o Retention polyp: (dilated cystic glands) peduculated rounded
structure

3. Peutz Jegher’s Polyp:


- Autosomal dominant, LKB1 gene no real malignancy but risk of other cancers
- Multiple polyps in GIT
- Network of fribromuscular bands extending into the polyp and glands
- Hyperpigmentation in mucocutaneous areas (lips, face, genitalia)

4. Adenomas:
- Malignant potential; precursor lesions of carcinoma
- Risk ⇑: ⇑ size (2cm); dysplasia & loss of architecture
- Associated with APC gene mutation
- Tubular Adenoma
o Most common (90%)
o Smaller than villous; mainly found retrosignmoid
o Size: 0.3cm for sessile & 1-2cm for pedunculated
- Villous Adenoma
o Most malignant
o Cauliflower-like masses projecting into lumen; larger
o Patient will have a loss of fluid & proteins (needed to make mucin)
" Presents with: Hypoproteinemia and hypokalemia
" Anemia due to occult blood loss
- Tubulovillous Adenoma
o Contain both tubule and villi structures
12

5. Familial Adenomatous Polyposis:


- Autosomal Dominant: APC gene mutation on CH 5q21
- Patient can develop up to 2500 polyps low fiber, high fat diets
o Minimum of 100 for diagnosis
- Most of the polyps are tubular adenomas
- The polyps arise in adolescence/ early adult
- 100% chance of colonic cancer by age 35; prophylactic colectomy

Clinical:
- Pt will be a 29 yo male whose father died of colorectal cancer at age 40
1. Gardner syndrome: APC gene defect
o Tubular adenomas with multiple osteomas and epidermal cysts
2. Turcot syndrome: APC gene defect
a. Adenomas and CNS gliomas
3. Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome: LKB1 gene mutation
a. causes hamartomatous peutz-jeghers polyps. cells are benign and dysplastic
b. Melanotic mucosal and cutaneous pigmentation
4. Cowden Syndrome: PTEN mutation
a. hamartomatous polyps in the GI tract

6. Colorectal Carcinoma:
- Commonly in the elderly or Ulcerative Colitis (younger)
- 90% of cases arise from an adenomatous polyp
- 15% of cases come from a defect in DNA mismatch repair genes
- Spread is to Regional LNs; stage is most important indicator
- Tumor marker: CEA, DCC then to liver —> lung —> bone
- Aspirin may inhibit tumor formation by inhibiting COX-2 enzyme
o COX-2 is expressed in cancers
- Patient will be an elderly man with Iron-deficiency anemia due to GIT malignancy

Two pathways for the development of carcinoma:

1. Mismatch Repair (microsatellite instability)


- HNPCC or acquired: Genetic lesion in mismatch repair genes
- HNPCC: (Warthin Lynch Syndrome) defect in MLH1
- DNA mismatch repair genes: MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS1, PMS2
- Second hit: LOH, mutation or promoter methylation
- mutation ! second hit! mutations accumulate in genes that regulate growth ! formation of repeat segments
called ‘microsatellites’ ! carcinoma
- Right Ascending (proximal) colon:
o Sessile serrated carcinoma Exophytic polypoid masses that grow along one wall
o Bulky and bleed easily (Melena) ! Fe deficiency anemia
o Patient will present with fatigue, weakness
o Mucinous and poorly differentiated carcinomas, Lymphocytic infiltrates

2. APC / β -catenin Pathway (adenoma-carcinoma)


- Inherited or acquired APC mutation (First hit)
- Methylation or inactivation of normal alleles (Second hit)
- β-catenin accumulates activating MYC & cyclin D ! proliferation
- Loss of both APC ! adenomas ! K-RAS ! p53, LOH ! carcinoma
- Left Descending (distal) colon:
o Annular, encircling lesions that produce “napkin-ring” constrictions of the bowel
o Margins of the “ring” are heaped up
o Altered bowel habits (diarrhea-constipation), lower left quadrant discomfort
13

7. Carcinoid tumors:
- GI Neuroendocrine in origin (kulchitsky cells)
- Can metastasize

Stomach occurs in 3 settings:


- Type 1: Gastric atrophy and achlorhydria
o Hypergastrinemia leads to ECL cell hyperplasia
o Can be multiple foci with benign course
- Type 2: Gastrinoma (ZE syndrome)
o Usually MEN2 syndrome; hypergastrinemia
- Type 3: Sporadic
o Usually aggressive tumor with metastasis

Morphology:
- Tend to be yellow, tan, firm with desmoplasia
- Can cause bowel kinking or obstructions
- Dense core granules can be seen in cells on EM
- Cells are round/ oval with stippled nuclei; salt & pepper n.

Clinical:
- 5-HIAA found in urine
- Cutaneous flushing
- Diarrhea, vomiting
- asthma attacks, wheezing
Niacin deficiency
- Pellagra (4D’s)
o Diarrhea
o Dermitits
o Dementia
o Death
- cardiac involvement
o R sided plaques
- Appendix

Neuromarkers:
- Synaptophysin
- Neuron-specific enolase
- Chromogranin A
14

8. Primary GI Lymphomas:
- Represent 1-6% of GI neoplasms
- MALToma: H.pylori: causes Bcell hyperplasia
b. Monoclonal Bcell neoplasm CD5 CD10; t(11:18) common BCL2 + MLT genes
c. Tx: antibiotics
- Bcell: Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease
- Tcell neoplasms
d. Celiac Disease associated

Appendix

1. Acute Appendicitis

Pathogenesis:
- Obstruction ! ⇑ mucin secretion ! Pressure collapses veins ! ischemia ! Infection
- bacterial infection: inflammation, edema, pain, peritonitis, perforation, abscess, bacteremia
Morphology:
- Early Stage: congestion with PMN infiltrates beyond submucosa. Dull granular with red membrane
- Acute suppurative: ⇑ PMNs, fibropurulent reaction on serosa, abscess within wall, ulcerations
- Acute gangrenous: Hemorrhage green ulcerations, necrosis to serosa ! rupture
Clinical:
- Young adults
- Pain, rebound tenderness (peritoneal irritation) at McBurney’s point
- Mild fever, leukocytosis (PMNs) in lamina propria
differential = ectopic pregnancy
2. Appendiceal Mucocele
- Luminal dilation: excess mucin secretions
- Fecalith obstruction allowing mucin to fill
hard stool
3. Pseudomyxoma Peritonei:
- Rupture of adenomous or carcinomous mucocele into peritoneum
- Peritoneal studding of mucinous neoplastic implants
o Mucinous cystadenocarcinomas
- Mucin produced and needs to be drained ! Jelly Belly

Intestinal obstructions:

- Choleocystoduodenal Fistula: gallstone stuck in ileocecal valve ! obstruction; Air in biliary tract
- Meconium Ileus: Children with CF

You might also like