lesions of the oral cavity salivary glands see oral pathology · abdomen (confusing appendicitis),
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Lesions of the oral cavitySalivary glands
See Oral pathology
Esophagus
• From highly lethal Ca to bland esophagitis.• Dysphagia, heartburn, hematemesis, melena.
• Anatomic and motor disorders:– Stenosis - adults, dysphagia, lower esophagus narrowing due
to reflux and inflammation– Atresia and fistula - newborn with aspiration (absence of
lumen), tracheoesophageal fistula (may be together) – Mucosal webs - acquired mucosal membrane occluding the
lumen– Diverticula - nocturnal regurgitation, acquired outpouching of
the wall
Esophagus
• Hiatal hernia:• Separation of the diaphragmatic crura and
widening of the space between the muscular crura.• Two patterns:
– 1/axial (sliding) hernia - 95 % of cases, protrusion of stomach through the diaphragm, bell-shaped,
– 2/paraesophageal (rolling) - separate portion of stomach, cause obscure. Heartburn, regurgitation of food, incompetence of sphincter. Obesity! Complications - ulceration, bleeding, perforation.
Esophagus
• Achalasia:– "Failure to relax" of lower esophageal sphincter in
swallowing– aperistalsis, – partial or incomplete relaxation of the lower
sphincter, – increased resting tone of the lower sphincter– Impaired arrangement of innervation.
– Secondary - destruction of the myenteric plexus - Chagas' disease (Trypanosoma cruzi).
– Progressive dilatation of proximal esophagus, inflammation, thickening, nocturnal regurgitation, young adults, childhood, risk of squamous Ca.
Esophagus
• Laceration (Mallory-Weiss syndrome):
–Longitudinal tears - chronic alcoholics - inadequate relaxation of the musculature of lower sphincter during vomiting.
–Mucosal tear - bleeding, wall tear - ulcer, mediastinitis
Esophagus
• Varices:–Porto-caval anastomoses
–Liver cirrhosis - portal hypertension–2/3 of all cirrhotic patients–massive hemorrhage, 40% die
during first episode, 1/2 within 1Y
Esophagus
• Esophagitis:–gastric intubation, uremia, irritant
foods, alcohol, smoking, radiation, chemotherapy–Higher incidence in Northern Iran and
China–Mild - hyperemia, severe - ulceration–Heartburn, regurgitation, chest pain
(mimicking MI), bleeding, Barrett
Esophagus
• Barrett's esophagus:– long-lasting reflux, – abnormal metaplastic columnar
epithelium with goblet cells – low pH - ulcers, 30-40x increased
risk of adenoCa.– red, velvety mucosa - up from
gastroesophageal junction or isolated islands in the distal esophagus
Esophageal tumors
• Benign tumors –papilloma –Leiomyoma–Lipoma –Etc.
Esophageal carcinoma
–squamous cell Ca–Risk factors:»esophagitis, achalasia, Plummer-
Vinson sy (microcytic hypochromic anemia, atrophic glossitis)»Life style - alcohol, tobacco»Genetic - tylosis (hyperkeratosis of
palms and soles) - Northern Iran»Barrett - adenoCa»Long prodromes, dysplastic
changes.
Esophageal carcinoma
–Grossly:– 1/polypoid – 2/ulcerative – 3/diffuse
– AdenoCa:– Barrett - distal esophagus
• Weight loss, anorexia, fatigue, pain related to swallowing
• Biopsy, surgery
Stomach
– From bland gastritis to carcinoma.– Congenital . pyloric stenosis, diaphragmatic
hernia, gastric heterotopia (esophagus, small intestine - Meckel).
– Heartburn, vague pain, hematemesis, melena.
• Gastritis:– Inflammation of gastric mucosa.
• Acute or chronic
Chronic gastritis Type B
– > frequent x acute– atrophy or metaplasia– Helicobacter pylori, persists for decades– enzymes + toxins + noxious chemicals from
recruited neutrophils– Intestinal metaplasia - dysplasia– Proliferation of lymphoid tissue - ML– Hypochlorhydria
Type A– autoimmune - antibodies x parietal cells – atrophy - loss of acid + intrinsic factor – achlorhydria – pernicious anemia – hypergastrinemia
Peptic ulcers• Erosion – mucosa• Ulcer – lamina muscularis mucosae and deeper• Acute or chronic• Gastric x duodenal• Loss of balance betwen protective and aggressive
forces• Most frequent cause = Helicobacter p.
– Helicobacter pylori - > 70% gastric ulcers– Only 10-20% patients with Helicobacter pylori develop peptic ulcer.
Unknown interactions.
• Zollinger-Ellison sy - hypergastrinemia• Cigarette smoking, alcohol. corticosteroids, stress
• Acute ulcers:–Mainly in stomach, rare in duodenum– stress– trauma, surgical injury of CNS,
extensive burns, gastric irritant drugs– Small - up to 1 cm, anywhere in the
stomach, usually multiple. Adjacent mucosa without inflammation
Acute peptic ulcers
• Chronic u. - several cm– Elevated walls - radial mucosal folds. Gastritis is almost
always associated.• Complications:• penetration - to omentum, liver, pancreas• perforation – peritonitis• bleeding - melena, exsanguination
• Symptoms - burning and boring pain, weight loss, hemorrhage. Pain is worse at night, relieved by alakali or food
Chronic peptic ulcers
Tumors
• Epithelial tumors predominate
• Polyps:• 1/ hyperplastic - 80 - 85% - not true
neoplasms • 2/ fundic gland polyps - 10% - dilated glands• 3/ adenomatous - 5% - true neoplasms• All more frequent in chronic gastritis.
Gastric carcinoma–AdenoCa (95%), • Geographical incidence - most
common in Japan, Hungary.• AdenoCa - two forms - • 1/ intestinal type - from intestinal
metaplasia - chronic gastritis - male predominance - nitrites, smoked foods, Helicobacter pylori, pernicious anemia• 2/ diffuse type - in younger, directly
from gastric glands - risk factors unknown
Gastric carcinoma
• Localization- pylorus, antrum, cardia, remainder of the body and fundus
• Early cancer - mucosa, submucosa• Morphology:
– 1/ exophytic– 2/ flat– 3/ ulcerative
– Leather-bottle stomach - scirhous carcinoma (linitis plastica)
Gastric carcinoma
• Histology:– 1/ intestinal type– 2/ diffuse - "signet ring" cells
• Metastasis - regional lymph nodes, supraclavicular node (Virchow's). Krukenberg tumor (ovary), liver
• Symptoms - abdominal discomfort, weight loss, pain.
• Therapy – surgery
• Prognosis – very bad in advanced
Small intestine
• developmental anomalies–Atresia - segmental–Stenosis - segmental –Duplication –Meckel's diverticulum - failure of involution of omphalomesenteric duct, 3-4 cm long, distal ileum, asymptomatic, gastric metaplasia, islands of pancreatic tissue
Large intestine
• developmental anomalies–Malrotation - cecum in left upper
abdomen (confusing appendicitis), –Hirschprung disease - megacolon
Hirschprung disease - congenital megacolon
• Aganglionic segment of intestinal wall - 1/5 of cases - longer segment, rarely - the whole colon. Males predominate (4:1). Sometimes extreme dilatation (15-20 cm in diam.) - ulcers, stercoral peritonitis.
• resection of aganglionic segment (frozen sections - intraoperative).x
• Acquired megacolon:• 1/Chagas's disease - trypanosomes destroy the
plexus• 2/obstruction by the tumor• 3/toxic megacolon• 4/functional psychosomatic disorder
Vascular disorders
• Ischemic bowel disease:• Acute occlusion – infarction. • end-arteries - transmural necrosis
–venous obstruction (thrombosis) - hemorrhagic infarsation.
Vascular disorders
• Conditions
1/ arterial thrombosis - AS, vasculitis, surgical accidents, oral contraceptives
2/ arterial embolism3/ venous thrombosis4/ non-occlusive ischemia - shock, dehydration, cardiac failure
Vascular disorders
– Transmural infarction - dark red hemorrhagic, gangrene (bacteria), perforation
– Mural and mucosal - multifocal, ulcerations, inflammation, pseudomembrane
– Symptoms - usually in older patients, transmural - severe pain, bloody diarrhea, shock, high mortality
– Mural and mucosal - abdominal distention, bleeding, pain, may be fatal but may heal
Vascular disorders• Angiodysplasia:
• Tortuous dilatation of mucosal and submucosal vessels - cecum, 6th decade, bleeding• hereditary hemorrhagic teleangiectasia
(Osler-Weber-Rendu sy)• isolated lesions, cause - mechanical factors
• Hemorrhoids:• Varices - rectum and anus, after the age of
50, pregnancy, obstipation, liver cirrhosis• Complications - bleeding, prolaps,
thrombosis
Diarrheal diseases
• Bacterial enterocolitis:– Toxins (Staphylococcus aureus, Vibrio, Clostridium
perfringens,, Clostridium botulinum), – Salmonella (typhi, enteritidis) - S. typhi - typhoid
fever – Shigella - distal colon.– Campylobacter jejuni - superficial ulcers. – Yersinia enterocolitica - lymph node granulomas
(lymphadentis mesenterialis).– Vibrio cholerae - small intestine, mucus depleted
crypts.– Clostridium difficile - pseudomembranous colitis.– Clostrdium perfringens - severe necritizing
enterocolitis with perforation (pigbel)
Diarrheal diseases
• Viral gastroenteritis - (gastritis less pronounced in a case of all gastroenteric cases):
• Rotavirus, Norwalk virus, other viruses (adenovirus, calcivirus, astrovirus)
• Protozoal infection:• Entamoeba histolytica • Giardia lamblia
Malabsorption syndromes
• Impaired absorption of fats, proteins, carbohydrates, electrolytes, minerals, and water
• Most common - due to pancreatitis, celiac sprue, and Crohn's disease
Malabsorption syndromes
• Pancreatic insufficiency - chronic pancreatitis, cystic fibrosis.
• Bacterial overgrowth - osmotic diarrhea, steatorrhea
• Lactose intolerance - inherited disaccharidase deficiency - milk intolerance
Malabsorption syndromes
• Gluten-sensitive enteropathy = celiac sprue– non-infectious - crossreactivity– sensitivity to gluten (grains of wheat, oat,
barley, rye) – epithelial damage
• Tropical sprue - infection (unknown), diffuse enteritis, ATB treatment
• Whipple's disease - intestine, CNS, joints– macrophages laden by Gram+ Tropheryma whippelii– ATB treatment, males, 4-5th decade
Idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease
• Crohn's disease• Ulcerative colitis
Idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease
• Crohn's disease • segmental transmural inflammation, fibrosis
and thickening, usually terminal ileum and caecum
• "skips", anywhere in GIT (systemic disease - accompanied by uveitis, sacroilitis, polyarthritis, sclerosing cholangoitis
• Any age, most 2nd - 3rd decade• Symptoms - non-characteristic - pain, fever,
diarrhea, sometimes bleeding, remissions, relapses
Idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease
• transmural, mucosal damage, granulomas, fissures and fistulae
• ulcers in mucosa, mucosal inflammation, granulomas
• dysplastic changes, higher risk of Ca• Complications - fistulae to other
bowel loops, urinary bladder, vagina, skin, abdominal abscesses, intestinal strictures
Idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease
• Ulcerative colitis • limited to mucosa and submucosa. • Starts in rectum, extends proximally
(whole colon)• Systemic disease - migratory polyarthritis,
uveitis, sclerosing cholangitis• Any age, peak 20-25 years• Symptoms - pain, bloody mucosal
diarrhea, weight loss Extraintestinal manifestations - migratory polyarthritis
• Dg - endoscopy, biopsy
Idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease
• Ulcerative colitis • Granulomas & skip lesions absent, little fibrosis• Rectum+sigmoideum - 80%, entire colon 10%. • Bleeding, edema, inflammatory pseudopolyps• ulcers - longitudinal, sometimes gangrene, mucosal
atrophy• Diffuse inflammatory infiltrate, crypt abscesses• ulcer healing - submucosal fibrosis• Dysplastic changes, high risk of Ca (duration &
extent of disease play a role)
Colonic diverticulosis
• Congenital - all three layers - Meckel.• Most - acquired - anywhere in GIT, mostly in
sigmoid colon• nerves and vessels penetrate internal (circular)
muscular layer - defects• Older age, Western countries (low fiber diet)
• Symptoms - asymptomatic, discomfort• diverticulitis - pain, abscess formation. • Treatment - high-fiber diet, diverticulitis - surgery
Colonic diverticulosis
• Two factors:– 1/ peristaltic contractions - elevation of
pressure– 2/ focal defects of muscular wall
• Appearance - up to 1 cm, usually sigmoid, adjacent to teniae, thin-walled
• Complications - inflammation - diverticulitis, perforation - peritonitis, adhesions
Bowel obstruction
• Hernias - protrusion of pouchlike, serosa-lined sac of peritoneum - hernial sac. Inguinal, femoral, umbilical canal, surgical scars.
• Retroperitoneal hernia - Treitz ligament. Segments of viscera trapped,
• Incarceration – ischemia – necrosis (hemorrhagic infarction), ileus
• Acute abdomen !
Bowel obstruction• Intussusception - proximal segment
to distal
• Volvulus - twisting of the loops or other structures (ovary) - small bowel usually - obstruction, infarction
Tumors• High incidence of colorectal Ca in Czech
Republic• Vast majority- large intestine
• Polyps – Sessile– Pedunculated– non-neoplastic - inflammatory – Hyperplastic– adenomatous polyps– Mesenchymal– lymphoid
Tumors
• Non-neoplastic polyps - increase with age, 90% of all polyps, hyperplastic - small (up to 5 mm), singly or multiple, no malignant potential!
• Juvenile polyps - hamartomatous, cystic glands, children younger than 5 years. In adults - retention polyps - long stalk, occur in rectum
• Peutz-Jeghers polyps - hamartomatous - smooth muscle within mucosal stroma
Adenomas• Small to large, large intestine, dysplastic
changes• Majority of all adenoCa arise from adenomas• Symptoms - asymtomatic, occult bleeding,
bleeding, anemia. Polyp in Vater's ampulla - biliary obstruction. All adenomas potentially malignant
• Three types:– 1/tubular– 2/villous– 3/tubulovillous
Adenomas• Tubular - most common, pedunculated, • branching glands, dysplasia – biopsy• sometimes intramucosal Ca - invasive -
growth into the stalk• Villous - larger, sessile - up to 10 cm in diam.,
higher risk • Tubulovillous - admixture.
• Risk of Ca - size, histology, grade of dysplasia
Familial polyposis syndromes
• Autosomal dominant, familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) - Gardner sy - more than 100
• Most - tubullar adenomas• Risk of Ca - 100% by mid life.• Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal
cancer (HNPCC) - autosomal dominant (Lynch's sy) - high risk of colorectal Ca and endometrial Ca
Colorectal carcinoma• Large intestine (98%), 6 - 7th decade• Higher risk - adenomas, ulcerative colitis• M>F• High – USA, Europe• Low – India, South America, Africa. Japan
• Dietary causes:– 1/ low-fiber– 2/ high content of refined carbohydrates– 3/ high content of animal fat– 4/ low vitamin A, C, and E
Colorectal carcinoma
Distribution of Ca • proximal colon - polypoid, fungating mass. • Sigmoid&rectum - circular, stenosing• Both penetrate – up to the serosal surface• Symptoms - silent, fatigue, iron deficiency anemia• Right sided – bleeding• Rectal – stenosis• Meta - regional LN, liver, lungs, bones• Detection - occult bleeding test, colonoscopy, biopsy,
CT - spread (metastases)• Therapy – surgery, radiation, chemotherapy
Small intestinal tumors
• Only 3-6% of GIT tumors• AdenoCa - unusual, circular growth -
duodenum (ampula), LN spread
• Carcinoid - producing hormones (serotonine)
• derived from neuroendocrine cells • low-grade malignant, local infiltrative growth,
meta rare• Small bowel, appendix, rectum, bronchi
Small intestinal tumors• Carcinoid• yellow-tan, desmoplasia• Mitoses rare• Asymptomatic - hormones metabolized in
liver• Carcionid sy - (cutaneous flushes,
diarrhea, asthma, heart fibrosis (pulmonary + tricuspid valve) - hepatic metastases.
• GIT malignant lymphoma - usually non-Hodgkin, MALToma, H. pylori!
Appendix
• Acute appenicitis - acute abdomen. oxyuris vermicularis
• Mucocele - dilatation of the lumen by mucus - non-tumorous obstruction (fecalith) - mucosal atrophy
• rarely mucocele ruptures - mucoperitoneum
Appendical tumors
• Carcinoid• Mucinous cystadenoma • cystadenoCa• Pseudomyxoma peritonei =
mucus+tumor cells, implantation metastasis
• Jelly – like material in peritoneal cavity