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Vulvar Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Vulvar Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Clinical: post-menopausal women, most non-HPV-related

Risk factors:
- HPV human papilloma virus, smoking (younger population)
- immunosuppression, lichen sclerosus (older population)

Microinvasive: < 1 mm

Treatment: radical vulvectomy with 1 cm margin and bilateral radical inguinal lymph node dissection

Squamous Cell Carcinoma Variants

Verrucous: large size and pushing club-shaped fingers. Very well differentiated. Ddx: condyloma

Warty: marked atypia associated with koilocytosis and HPV DNA

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Intrauterine Growth Retardation

Intrauterine Growth Retardation

What is Intrauterine Growth Retardation ?

•    Infants with fetal growth restriction (IUGR) have birth weights below the 10th percentile for a given gestational age

•    Infants born at term with a weight less than 2500 grams are considered to have fetal growth restriction (fetal growth restriction/IUGR)

Fetal factors

•    Chromosomal anomalies

•    Congenital anomalies

•    Congenital infections

Placental factors

•    Placenta previa

•    Abruptio placenta

•    Placental thrombosis and infarction

•    Multiple gestations (twin pregnancy)

•    Placental infection

•    Uteroplacental insufficiency (placental hemangioma, single umbilical artery, abnormal cord insertion)

•    Placental mosaicism

Maternal factors

•    Narcotic abuse

•    Chronic hypertension

•    Pre-eclampsia (toxaemia of pregnancy)

•    Alcohol use

•    Heavy smoking

•    Malnutrition

References: Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Seventh Edition
by: Vinay Kumar, Nelso Fausto, Abul Abbas

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Berry Aneurysm

Berry  Aneurysm

Most common locations of Berry Aneurysms:

·         Anterior cerebral artery (anterior communicating artery)

·         Middle cerebral artery

·         Internal carotid artery

Associated systemic conditions for Berry Aneurysms:

·         ADPCKD

·         Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (type IV)

·         Neurofibromatosis type 1

·         Marfan syndrome

·         Coarctation of aorta

·         Fibromuscular dysplasia of extracranial arteries

Predisposing factors for Berry Aneurysms:

-   Cigarette smoking and hypertension are

Berry Aneurysm Gross Features

Unruptured aneurysms are a thin-walled arterial outpouchings at branch points of the circle of Willis or a major vessel just beyond. Measure 2-3 mm and are shiny, bright red surface with thin, translucent wall. Atheromatous plaques, thrombosis, or calcification may be found in wall or lumen of aneurysm. Brownish discolouration of brain/meninges indicates previous hemorrhage. Rupture occurs at apex of sac with extravasation of blood to subarachnoid space, substance of brain, or both.

Histological Features of Berry Aneurysms:

Arterial wall adjacent to aneurysm shows intimal thickening and attenuation of media as it approaches the neck of the aneurysm. At the neck of the aneurysm the muscular wall and intimal elastic lamina stop short and are absent from the aneurysmal wall itself. The sac is made up of thickened, hyalinised intima. The adventitia covering the sac is continuous with that of the parent artery

References:

Robbins Basic Pathology 7th ed, edited by Vinay Kumar, Ramzi S. Cotran, and Stanley J. Robbins, 873 pp, Philadelphia, Pa, Sounders, 2003.

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Gastritis

Gastritis Classification and Causes

Acute Gastritis

NSAID related
Ethanol and smoking related
ICU – burns (curling ulcer) and trauma, such as head trauma and hypovolemic states    Toxins and elements  – alkali ingestion, chemotherapy and radiation treatments, hypothermia                                                                                                                                          Ischemia

Acute Gastritis Histology

NSAIDS usually  affect the antrum. Stress ulcers affect fundus and body.  Findings depend on the biopsy interval. Changes are limited to the mucosa. Superficial lamina propria hemorrhage, mucosal sloughing, PMN infiltration and mucosal necrosis. The healing phase is associated with regenerative epithelium  with dark enlarged nuclei and prominent nucleoli and syncitial glandular architecture, which can be mistaken for malignancy.

Chronic Gastritis

Autoimmune  Gastritis – ie. pernicious anemia -  predominant  in the fundus, normal antrum                                                                                                                                              – autoimmune gastritis patients are at an increased risk of carcinoids and adenocarcinomas

H Pylori

-antrum – increased acid production, increased risk of duodenal ulcers

-pangastritis – multifocal atrophic gastritis – decreased acid production, increased risk of adenocarcinoma and MALT lymphoma

Chemical gastritis, chemical gastropathy – post antrectomy or idiopathic, chronic aspirin or NSAID use

Granulomatous – uncommon – Crohn s disease -50%, isolated granulomatous gastritis  – 25%,   foreign body reaction (food, suture material, barium, mucin) -10%,  sarcoidosis 1%, vasculitis associated granulomata ( ie. Churg Strauss),  infections ( TB, schistosomiasis, histoplasmosis, Whipple’s disease, leprosy, syphilis, H pylori)

Lymphocytic (rare) – associated with celiac disease and H. Pylori gastritis

Other infections  – CMV, HSV, Syphillis, Whipple, TB, leprosy, candida, asperigillus, anisakiasis, strongyloides,

Eosinophilic ( rare) – association with allergy, asthma, eczema, drug hypersensitivity, peripheral blood eosinophilia and

Radiation

Graft versus Host Disease (GVHD)

Chronic Gastritis Histology

Autoimmune Gastritis appears as prominent lamina propria lymphocytic and plasma cell infiltration with loss of parietal and chief cells.

Metaplasias – pyloric, intestinal and pancreatic. Linear and nodular enterochromaffin cells (ECL) hyperplasia in the body mucosa.  The linear and nodular hyperplasia of ECL cells ( in the body) is shown by chromogranin. Gastrin stains shows the G cells ( which may be hypertrophied also) in the antrum.

Chemical gastritis and gastropathy – foveolar hyperplasia with corkscrewing of gastric pits, mucin depletion on the surface epithelium and paucity of inflammatory cells

H pylori  gastritis histology L

Lymphoplasmacytic inflammation (positive for neutrophils if acute on chronic – gastric pititis and crypt abscesses), helicobacter organisms in the mucosal blanket ( usually present if there is an acute component and absent if there is intestinal metaplasia or atrophy) , prominent lymphoid aggregates – do not mistake for MALT lymphoma. Intestinal metaplasia is uncommon in the antral H pylori gastritis ( H pylori gastritis is typically not associated with adenocarcinoma )

Lymphocytic  Gastritis – >1 lymphocyte  per 4-5 epithelial cells, when you count 100 epithelial cells. Differential diagnosis is a MALT lymphoma – distinguished easily by noticing that the intraepithelial lymphocytess are T cells.

Granulomatous Gastritis – granulomata involving any layer. Other findings

Infectious Gastritis – CMV, HSV, Syphillis, Whipple, TB, leprosy, histoplasma, candida, asperigillus, anisakiasis, strongyloides, schisto. – need to work these cases up through histology, stains, cultures, detection assays.

Eosinophilic Gastritis -intense eosinophilic infiltration with prominent lamina propria eosinophils, eosinophilic crypt abscesses and epithelial damage. Antral involvement.

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