Goljan - Notes
Goljan - Notes
Goljan - Notes
is called hypoxemia).
Here are 4 causes of hypoxemia:
a. Resp acidosis (in terms of hypoxemia)
in terms of Dalton s law, the sum of the
partial pressure of gas must =
760 at atmospheric pressure (have O2, CO2, and nitrogen; nitrogen remains consta
nt therefore, when you retain CO2,
this is resp acidosis; when CO2 goes up, pO2 HAS to go down b/c must have to equ
al 760;
Therefore, every time you have resp acidosis, from ANY cause, you have hypoxemia
b/c low arterial pO2; increase CO2=
decrease pO2, and vice versa in resp alkalosis).
b. Ventilation defects
best example is resp distress syndrome (aka hyaline membr
ane dz in children). In adults,
this is called Adult RDS, and has a ventilation defect. Lost ventilation to the
alveoli, but still have perfusion; therefore
have created an intrapulmonary shunt. Exam question: pt with hypoxemia, given 10
0% of O2 for 20 minutes, and pO2
did not increase, therefore indicates a SHUNT, massive ventilation defect.
c. Perfusion defects knock off blood flow
MCC perfusion defect = pulmonary embolus, especially in prolonged flights, with
sitting down and not getting up.
Stasis in veins of the deep veins, leads to propagation of a clot and 3-5 days l
ater an embolus develops and embolizes.
In this case, you have ventilation, but no perfusion; therefore there is an incr
ease in dead space. If you give 100% O2
for a perfusion defect, pO2 will go UP (way to distinguish vent from perfusion d
efect), b/c not every single vessel in the
lung is not perfused.
Therefore, perfusion defects because an increase in dead space, while ventilatio
n defects cause intrapulmonary shunts.
To tell the difference, give 100% O2 and see whether the pO2 stays the same, ie
does not go up (shunt) or increases
(increase in dead space).
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water in mtns
water has nitrites and nitrates, which are oxidizing agents that o
xidize Hb so the iron become +3
instead of +2). Clue was that O2 did not correct the cyanosis. Rx: IV methaline
blue (DOC); ancillary Rx = vitamin C (a
reducing agent). Most recent drug, Dapsone (used to Rx leprosy) is a sulfa and n
itryl drug. Therefore does two things:
1) produce methemoglobin and 2) have potential in producing hemolytic anemia in
glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase
deficiencies. Therefore, hemolysis in G6PD def is referring to oxidizing agents,
causing an increase in peroxide, which
destroys the RBC; the same drugs that produce hemolysis in G6PD def are sulfa an
d nitryl drugs. These drugs also
produce methemoglobin. Therefore, exposure to dapsone, primaquine, and TMP-SMX,
or nitryl drugs
(nitroglycerin/nitroprusside), there can be a combo of hemolytic anemia, G6PD de
f, and methemoglobinemia b/c they
are oxidizing agents. Common to see methemoglobinemia in HIV b/c pt is on TMP-SM
X for Rx of PCP. Therefore,
potential complication of that therapy is methemoglobinemia.
c. Curves: left and right shifts
Want a right shifted curve want Hb with a decreased affinity for O2, so it can r
elease O2 to tissues. Causes: 2,3
bisphosphoglycerate (BPG), fever, low pH (acidosis), high altitude (have a resp
alkalosis, therefore have to
hyperventilate b/c you will decrease the CO2, leading to an increase in pO2, lea
ding to a right shift b/c there is an
increase in synthesis of 2,3 BPG).
Left shift CO, methemoglobin, HbF (fetal Hb), decrease in 2,3-BPG, alkalosis
Therefore, with CO, there is a decrease in O2 sat n (hypoxia) and left shift.
4. Problems related to problems related to oxidative pathway
a. Most imp: cytochrome oxidase (last enzyme before it transfers the electrons t
o O2. Remember the 3 C s
cytochrome oxidase, cyanide, CO all inhibit cytochrome oxidase. Therefore 3 thin
gs for CO
(1) decrease in O2 sat
(hypoxia), (2) left shifts (so, what little you carry, you can t release), and (3)
if you were able to release it, it blocks
cytochrome oxidase, so the entire system shuts down
b. Uncoupling ability for inner mito membrane to synthesize ATP. Inner mito memb
rane is permeable to protons.
You only want protons to go through a certain pore, where ATP synthase is the ba
se, leading to production of ATP; you
don t want random influx of protons
and that is what uncoupling agents do. Example
s: dinitrylphenol (chemical for
preserving wood), alcohol, salicylates. Uncoupling agents causes protons to go r
ight through the membrane; therefore
you are draining all the protons, and very little ATP being made. B/c our body i
s in total equilibrium with each other,
rxns that produce protons increase (rxns that make NADH and FADH, these were the
protons that were delivered to the
electron transport system). Therefore any rxn that makes NADH and FADH that lead
s to proton production will rev up
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hypoxia there will be swelling of the cell due to decreased ATP (therefore will
get O2 back, and will pump it out
therefore it
is REVERSABLE).
In true RBC, anaerobic glycolysis is the main energy source b/c they do not have
mitochondria; not normal in other tissues
(want to utilize FA s, TCA, etc).
3. Cell without O2 leads to irreversible changes.
Ca changes with irreversible damage
Ca/ATPase pump. With decrease in ATP, Ca has
easy access into the cell.
Within the cell, it activates many enzymes (ie phospholipases in the cell membra
nes, enzymes in the nucleus, leading to
nuclear pyknosis (so the chromatin disappears), into goes into the mito and dest
roys it).
Ca activates enzymes; hypercalcemia leads to acute pancreatitis b/c enzymes in t
he pancreas have been activated.
Therefore, with irreversible changes, Ca has a major role. Of the two that get d
amaged (mito and cell membrane), cell
membrane is damaged a lot worse, resulting in bad things from the outside to get
into the cell. However, to add insult to
injury, knock off mitochondria (energy producing factory), it is a very bad situ
ation (cell dies) CK-MB for MI, transaminases
for hepatitis (SGOT and AST/ALT), amylase in pancreatitis.
II. Free Radicals
Liver with brownish
in, bilirubin, etc;
case with the gross
certain things are
pigment
lipofuscin (seen on gross pic; can also be hemosider
therefore need to have a
pic); end products of free radical damage are lipofuscin b/c
not digestible (include lipids).
A. Definition of free radical compound with unpaired electron that is out of orb
it, therefore it s very unstable and it will
damage things.
B. Types of Free Radicals:
1. Oxygen: We are breathing O2, and O2 can give free radicals. If give a person
50% O2 for a period of time, will get
superoxide free radicals, which lead to reperfusion injury, esp after giving tPA
when trying to rid a damaged thrombus.
Oxygentated blood goes back into the damaged cardiac muscle=reperfusion injury.
Kids with resp distress syndrome can
get free radical injury and go blind b/c they destroy the retina called retinopa
thy prematurity; also leads to
bronchopulmonary dysplasia, which leads to damage in the lungs and a crippling l
ung disease.
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active necrosis.
Example: ABSCESS: Lung
yellowish areas, high fever and productive cough; gram st
ain showed gram + diplococcus,
which is strep pneumoniae. (MCC of bronchopneumonia.). Not hemorrhagic b/c its p
ale, and wedged shaped necrosis at the
periphery, which leads to pleuritic chest pain.
Example: pt with fever, night sweats, wt loss
M tb, which has granulomatous (cas
eous) necrosis. Pathogenesis of
granuloma (involves IL-12 and subset of helper T cells and + PPD).
C. Caseous (cheesy consistency) Necrosis:
either have mycobacterial infection (a
ny infections, including atypicals, or
systemic fungal infection); these are the ONLY things that will produce caseatio
n in a granuloma. It is the lipid in the cell wall of
the organism s leads to cheesy appearance.
Sarcoidosis get granulomas, but they are not caseous b/c they are not mybacteriu
m or systemic fungi (hence noncaseating
granulomas)
Crohn s dz
get granulomas, but not caseous b/c not related to mycobacterium or sys
temic fungi.
D. Fat Necrosis:
1. Enzymatic Fat Necrosis: unique to pancreas
Example: pt with epigastric distress with pain radiating to the back
pancreatiti
s (cannot be Peptic Ulcer Dz b/c pancreas is
retroperitoneal), therefore just have epigastric pain radiating to the back. A t
ype of enzymatic FAT necrosis (therefore
necrosis related to enzymes). Enzymatic fat necrosis is unique to the pancreas b
/c enzymes are breaking down fats into
FA s, which combine with Ca salts, forming chalky white areas of enzymatic fat nec
rosis (chalky white areas due to calcium
bound to FA s
saponification (soap/like salt formation)); these can be seen on xra
ys b/c have calcium in them. Example:
A pt with pain constently penetrating into the back, show x-ray of RUQ. Dx is pa
ncreatitis and esp seen in alcoholics. Histo
slide on enzymatic fat necrosis
bluish discoloration, which is calcification (a
type of dystrophic calcification-calcification of
damaged tissue). What enzyme would be elevated? Amylase and lipase (lipase is mo
re specific b/c amylase is also in the
parotid gland, small bowel, and fallopian tubes). What type of necrosis? Another
example: Enzymatic fat necrosis.
Underlying cause? Alcohol produces a thick secretion that will lead to activatio
n of enzymes; which leads to pancreatitis.
Therefore, whenever you see blue discoloration and atherosclerotic plaque in a p
ancreas, it will be calcium.
2. Traumatic Fat Necrosis: Example: woman with damage to breasts is TRAUMATIC FA
T necrosis (not enzymatic); it can
calcify, can look like cancer on mammogram. Diff btwn that and calcification in
breast cancer is that it is painFUL. (cancer =
painless). Traumatic fat tissue usually occurs in breast tissue or other adipose
tissue
E. Fibrinoid necrosis: (the -oid means: looks like, but isn t)
Therefore, looks like fibrin, but is not fibrin .it is the necrosis of immunologic
dz:
Examples of immunologic dz:
Palpable purpura = small vessel vasculitis (immune complex type III).
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1.
Drugs acting on S phase:
a) Ergot alkaloids work on the mitotic spindle in S phase
b) Methotrexate works in S phase: Example: pt with rheumatoid arthiritis has mac
rocytic anemia. Drug responsible for
this is in what phase of the cell cycle? S phase b/c it is methotrexate blocking
dihydrofolate reductase
2.
Drugs acting on G2 phase:
a) Etoposide
b) Bleomycin
3.
Drugs acting on M phase:
a) Gresiofulvin in M phase
b) Paclitaxel specifically works in the M phase: Clinical scenario: this drug is
a chemotherapy agent made from a yew
tree? Paclitaxel (m phase)
c) Vincristine and Vinblastine
d) This drug used to be used for the treatment of acute gouty arthritis but b/c
of all the side effects is no longer used.
What drug and where does it act? Colchicine (m phase)
4. Clinical scenario that does not work on the cell cycle: HIV + person with dyspn
ea and white out of the lung, on a
drug; ends up with cyanosis; which drug? Dapsone
VII. Adaptations to environmental stress: Growth alterations
A. Atrophy: Diagnosis: the decrease in tissue mass and the cell decreases in siz
e. The cell has just enough organelles to
survive, ie less mitochondria then normal cells, therefore, just trying to eek it
out until whatever it needs to stimulate can come
back.
1. Example: hydronephrosis, the compression atrophy is causing thinning of corte
x and medulla, MCC hydronephrosis is
stone in the ureter (the pelvis is dilated). Question can be asked what kind of
growth alteration can occur here. Answer is
atrophy b/c of the increased pressure on the cortex and the medulla and produces
to ischemia, blood flow decreases and
can produce atrophy of renal tubules.
2. Example: Atrophied brain due to atherosclerosis (MC) or degeneration of neuro
ns (alzheimers, related to beta amyloid
protein, which is toxic to neurons).
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Marker for MC leukemia in children = CD10 (calla Ag); positive B-cell lymphoma
CD15 and 30 = RS cell
CD21, Only on B cells
Epstein barr virus; hooks into CD21 on B cells, and actual
ly the atypical lymphocytes are not B-cells
but T-cells reacting to the infected B-cells.
Burkitts is a B cell lymphoma
CD45 is found on all leukocytes, is a common antigen on everything
F. Fever IL-1 is responsible and PGE2 (this is what the hypothalamus is making)
which stimulates the thermoregulatory
center. Fever is good! It right shifts the O2 dissoc curve. Why do we want more
O2 in the tissues with an infection? B/c of O2
dependent myeloperoxidase system. Therefore, with antipyretics it s bad b/c thwart
ing the mechanism of getting O2 to
neutrophils and monocytes to do what they do best. Also, hot temps in the body a
re not good for reproduction of
bacteria/viruses.
II. Types of inflammation (scenarios)
A. post partum woman, with pus coming out of lactiferous duct
this is staph aure
us supplerative inflammation
B. Bone of child with sepsis, on top of the bone, was a yellowish area, and it w
as an abscess
osteomyelitis
staph. aureus; if
the kid had sickle cell, it is salmonella; why at metaphysis of bone? B/c most o
f blood supply goes here, therefore, mechanism of
spread is hematogenous (therefore comes from another source, and then it gets to
bone).
C. Hot, spread over face cellulitis due to strep (play odds!) group A pyogenes
(called erysipilis, another name for cellulitis)
D. Diphtheria = psuedomembrane (corynebacterium diphtheria), a gram + rod, that
makes an exotoxin, messing up
ribosylation of protiens via elongation factor 2, the toxin damages mucosa/submu
cosa, producing a pseudomembrane; when
bacteria doesn t invade, produces a toxin that damages the membrane; clostridium d
ifficile also does this. It also produeces a
pseudomembrane and a toxin, which we measure in stool to make the dx. Therefore,
the answer is C. difficle.
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and left HF due to MI so things backed up into the lungs. B/c the CO decreased,
the EDV increases and pressure on left
ventricle increases, and the pressure is transmitted into the left atrium, to th
e pul vein, keeps backing up, and the
hydrostatic pressure in the lung approaches the oncotic pressure, and a transuda
te starts leaking into the interstitial
space, which leads to activation of the J receptor, which will cause dyspnea. Le
ads to full blown in alveoli and
pulmonary edema, which is what this is.
b. venom from bee sting on arm leads to exudate due to anaphylactic rxn (face sw
elled), with histamine being the
propagator, and type one HPY, causing tissue swelling. Rx
airway, 1:1000 aqueous
epinephrine subcutaneously
c. cirrhosis of liver, with swelling of the legs: transudate, mechanism: decreas
ed oncotic pressure b/c cannot syn
albumin, and increased hydrostatic pressure b/c portal HTN; there is cirrhosis o
f the liver, and the portal vein empties
into the liver; in this case, it cannot, and there is an increase in hydrostatic
pressure, pushing the fluid out into the
peripheral cavities (so there are 2 mech for acites). Pitting edema in legs: dec
reased in oncotic pressure
d. Pt with dependent pitting edema: pt has right heart failure, and therefore an
increase in hydrostatic pressure; with
right heart failure, the blood behind the failed right heart is in the venous sy
stem; cirrhosis of liver is due to decrease in
oncotic pressure.
e. modified radical mastectomy of that breast, with nonpitting edema: lymphedema
. Other causes w. bancrofti,
lymphogranulomon venarium (subtype of chylamdia trachomata scarring tissure and l
ymphatics, leading to
lymphedema of scrotum lymphatic). Inflammation carcinoma of breast (p eau de orang
e of the breast) deals with
dermal lymphatics plug with tumor; excess leads to dimpling, and looks like the
surface of an orange. MCC
lymphedema = postradical mastectomy; can also run risk of lymphangiosarcoma.
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Example: how many liters of isotonic saline do you have to infuse to get 1 liter
into the plasma? 3 Liters (2/3:1/3 relationship);
2 liters in interstial space, and 1 L would go to the vascular space; it equilib
rates with interstial/vascular compartments.
B. Osmolality = measure of solutes in a fluid; due to three things: Na, glucose,
and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) urea cycle is
located in the liver, partly in the cytosol and partly in the mitochondria; usua
lly multiply Na times 2 (b/c one Na and one Cl).
Audio file 6: Fluid and Hemodyn 2
Normal Na is 135-140 range, times that by 2 that 280. For glucose, normal is 100
divide that by 18, let s say it s roughly 5, so
that s not contributing much. BUN: located in the liver, part of the cycle is in t
he cytosol and part of it is in mitochondria. The
urea comes from ammonia, that s ammonia is gotten rid of, by urea. B/c the end pro
duct of the urea cycle is urea. The normal
is about 12; divide that by 3, so we have 4. Therefore, in a normal person Na is
controlling the plasma osmolality. To measure
serum osmolality: double the serum Na and add 10.
C. Osmosis
2 of these 3 are limited to the ECF compartment; one can equilibrate between ECF
and ICF across the cell membranes
urea;
therefore, with an increased urea, it can equilibrate equally on both sides to i
t will be equal on both sides; this is due to osmosis.
B/c Na and glucose are limited to the ECF compartment, then changes in its conce
ntration will result in the movement of WATER
from low to high concentration (opposite of diffusion
ie in lungs, 100 mmHg in a
lveoli of O2, and returning from the tissue is 40
mmHg pO2; 100 vs. 40, which is bigger, 100 is bigger, so via diffusion, O2 moves
through the interspace into the plasma to
increase O2 to about 95mmHb). Therefore, in diffusion, it goes from high to low,
while in osmosis, it goes from low to high
concentration.
1. Example: In the case with hyponatremia water goes from ECF into the ICF, b/c
the lower part is in the ECF (hence
HYPOnatremia); water goes into the ICF, and therefore is expanded by osmosis. No
w make believe that the brain is a single
cell, what will we see? cerebral edema and mental status abnormalities via law o
f osmosis (the intracellular compartment of
all the cells in the brain would be expanded)
2. Example: hypernatremia water goes out of the ICF into the ECF, therefore the
ICF will be contracted. So in the brain, it
will lead to contracted cells, therefore mental status abnormalities; therefore,
with hypo and hypernatremia, will get mental
status abnormalities of the brain.
2.
Example: DKA have (1000mg) large amount blood sugar. Remember that both Na and g
volume.
Need to know what happens if there is decreased CO, what happens when ANP is rel
eased from the atria, and give off
diuretic effect; it wants to get rid salt. ANP is only released in volume overlo
aded states.
Example: pt given 3% hypertonic saline: what will happen to osmolality? Increase
. What will that do to serum ADH?
Increase
increase of osmolality causes a release of ADH.
Example: What happens in a pt with SIADH? decreased plasma osmolality, high ADH
levels.
Example: What happens in a pt with DI? no ADH, therefore, serum Na increases, an
d ADH is low
How to tell total body Na in the pt: Two pics:
pt with dry tongue = there is a d
ecrease in total body Na, and the pt with
indentation of the skin, there is an increase in total body Na. Dehydration: Ski
n turgur is preformed by pinching the skin,
and when the skin goes down, this tells you that total body Na is normal in inte
rstial space. Also look in mouth and at
mucous membranes.
If you have dependent pitting edema that means that there is an increase in tota
l body Na.
SIADH
gaining pure water, total body sodium is normal, but serum Na is low; have
to restrict water.
Right HF and dependent pitting edema fluid kidney reabsorbs is hypotonic salt so
lution with a decreased CO (little more
water than salt), therefore serum Na will low. Numerator is increased for total
body sodium, but denominator has larger
increase with water.
What is nonpharmalogical Rx of any edema states? (ie RHF/liver dz)
and water
restrict salt
4. Septic shock: MC due to E. coli; also MCC sepsis in hospital and is due to an
indwelling of the urinary catheter. Staph
aureus is not the MC cause of IV related septicemia in the hospital, E.Coli wins
hands down. Endotoxin in cell wall is a
lipopolysacharide, which are seen in gram negative bacteria. The lipids are endo
toxins. Therefore, gram negatives have
lipids (endotoxins) in their cell wall, gram positive do not. SO if you have E.C
oli sepsis, you will have big time problems,
and is called septic shock.
5. Classical clinical presentations:
a) Hypovolemic and cardiogenic shock: you would see cold and clammy skin, b/c of
vasoconstriction of the peripheral
vessels by catecholamines (release is due to the decrease in SV and CO) and AG I
I. These will vasoconstrict the skin
and redirect the blood flow to other important organs in the body like brain and
kidneys, leading to a cold clammy skin.
BP is decreased, pulse is increased.
b) Pouseau s laws: is a concept that teaches you about peripheral resistance of ar
terioles which control the diastolic
blood pressure.
TPR = V/r4
TPR = Total peripheral resistance of the arterioles
V = Viscosity
r = radius of the vessel to the 4th power
The main factor controlling TPR is radius to the 4th power
What controls the viscosity in the blood? Hb. So if you are anemic, viscosity of
blood is decreased (ie low hemoglobin),
and if you have polycythemia (high hemoglobin), viscosity will be increased. The
refore, TPR in anemia will decrease,
and in polycythemia will increase.
c) Septic shock
There is a release of endotoxins which activates the alternative
complement system. The complement
will eventually release C3a and C5a which are anaphylatoxins, which will stimula
te the mast cells to release histamine.
The histamine causes vasodilation of arterioles (the same ones of the peripheral
resistance arterioles). Therefore blood
flow is increased throughout the peripheral resistance arterioles and the skin f
eels warm. The endotoxins also damage
the endothelial cells; as a result, two potent vasodilators (NO and PGI2) are re
leased. Therefore, 2 or 3 vasodilators are
released, and affect the TPR to the fourth power. Therefore, the TPR will decrea
se (due to vasodilation).
TPR arterioles control your diastolic BP b/c when they are constricted; they con
trol the amount of blood that remains in
the arterial system while your heart is filling up in diastole. Therefore, when
the TPR arterioles are dilated, the diastolic
BP will pan out.
Think of a dam (with gates): if all the gates are wide open all that water will
come gushing through. This is what
happens to the arterioles when they are dilated. The blood gushes out and goes t
o the capillary tissues, supposedly
PCO2 / .8
High Altitude: (.21 x 200) 40mmHb/.8 = 2mmHg of air in alveoli, therefore will h
ave to hyperventilate at high altitudes, b/c lower
pCO2= increased PO2 (you HAVE to hypverventilate otherwise you die).
However, when you go under, the atm pressure increases, and the nitrogen gases a
re dissolved in your tissues, leading to an
increase in pressure. Ie 60 ft below, want to get up fast; like shaking a soda b
ottle; as you ascend, the gas comes out of fat in
bubbles; the bubbles get into tissues and BV s; this is called the bends; leads to
pain, and quadriplegia, loss of bladder control. Rx =
hyperbaric O2 chamber.
CHAPTER 4: NUTRITION
I. Eating disorders includes obesity, anorexia, bulimia
Difference between anorexia and bulimia?
A. Anorexia
Distorted body image; women with anorexia can have distorted image; control issu
e; they have lost control of everything in
their life, and the only thing that they can control over is what they put in th
eir mouth. With a decrease of body fat and wt,
GnRH decreases, therefore FSH and LH also decrease, leading to low estrogen; as
a result, amenorrhea occurs, AND
predisposes to osteoporosis, as if pt is postmenopausal. Anorexic people will ev
entually develop osteoporosis.
Rx
convince person to gain enough wt to bring period back; not birth control.
(ie first step in management of HP/diabetes = wt loss; as you lose adipose, you
upregulate insulin resistance). In anorexia,
usually die to cardiac dz (heart failure: heart just stops).
B. Bulimia Nervosa
1. Metabolic Alkalosis: It s not a body image problem
they can be obese, normal or
thin (no weight issue); however, they
binge (eat a lot), then force themselves to vomit. Pic on boards: from vomiting,
wear down enamel on teeth; so, brownish
stuff seen on teeth is just dentine (erosions seen on teeth). Metabolic alkalosi
s from forced vomiting will be seen.
Metabolic alkalois is bad b.c there is a left shift curve, and the compensation
is resp acidosis, which drops pO2, therefore will
get hypoxia with metabolic alkalosis, and the heart do not like that. The heart
already with low O2 will get PVC s (premature
ventricular contractions), RRT phenom, then V-fib, then death. Therefore, met al
kalosis is very dangerous in
inducing cardiac arrythmias, and this commonly occurs in bulimics due to forced
vomiting. Pt can also vomit out blood
Mallory Weiss Syndrome tear in distal esophagus or proximal stomach.
2. Borhave syndrome, which is worse. In the syndrome, there is a rupture and air
and secretions from the esophagus get
into the pleural cavity; the air will dissect through subcutaneous tissue, come
around the anterior mediastinum, which leads
to Hemimans crunch observed when dr looks at pt s chest, puts a stethoscope down,
and you hear a crunch . The
crunch is air that has dissected through interstial tissue up into the mediastinum
, indicating that a rupture occurred in the
esophagus; this is another common thing in bulimics.
So, there are 2 things imp in bulimics: 1) Metabolic alkalosis from vomiting (wh
ich can induce arrthymias 2) Borhave s
syndrome
C. Obesity: With obesity, using a diff method: BMI: kg s in body wt/meters in body
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Example: if have young lady pt on retinoic acid for acne, need to check liver en
zymes and ask for headaches (can be
developing papilloedema or cerebral edema related to vit A toxicity). Massive am
ount of vit A in bear livers, and hunter
dies with massive headaches or liver failure
2. Vitamin D = VERY imp on the boards; MC source of vit D is from sunlight.
a. Cholesterol is the
1. Main component of our cell membranes
2. Starting point for making bile salts and bile acids
3. First compound that starts the synthesis of steroid hormones in the adrenal c
ortex
4. And the 7-dehydrocholesterol in the skin is photoconverted to vitamin D.
Therefore we need cholesterol! (makes bile salts, hormones, cell membranes, and
vit D).
b. Source: Sun is the most imp source of vit D. take baby out to expose to sunli
ght (no vit D or vit K in breast milk,
therefore must be supplemented
expose to sun for vit D).
c. Synthesis of Vitamin D: Reabsorbed in the jejunum. Undergoes 2 hydroxylation
steps; first is in the liver, where it is
25 hydroxylated and the 2nd is in the kidney and its 1 alpha hydroxylase. What h
ormone puts 1-alpha hydroxylase in
the proximal tubule? PTH. PTH is responsible for synthesis of 1-a-hydroxylase an
d is synthesized in the proximal
tubule. (ACE is from the endothelial cells of the pulmonary capillary, EPO is fr
om the endothelial cells of the peritubular
capillary). 1-a-hydroxylase is the 2nd hydroxylation step, and now it is active
(the first was in the kidney).
d. Vit D function: reabsorb Ca and phosphorus from the jejunum. It HAS to reabso
rb both of these, b/c its main job is
mineralizing bone and cartilage. Have to have appropriate solubility product to
be able to do that; Ca and phosphorus
are necessary to mineralize cartilage and bone (like the osteoid making bone). T
herefore, it makes sense to reabsorb
Ca and phosphorus b/c it needs to make sure that both of them are present in ade
quate amounts to have an adequate
solubility product to mineralize bone.
e. Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) Functions: (1)is somewhat related to Vitamin D meta
bolism, it helps last step for
hydroxylation of vit D syn. (2) PTH will lead to reabsorption of Ca in the early
distal tubule (this is also where Na is
reabsorbed, and thiazides block this channel). At that location, there is a Ca c
hannel; PTH helps reabsorption of the Ca
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Example: woman on birth control pills and taking phenytoin, and she got pregnant
, why? The phenytoin rev ed up the
p450 system, which increased the metabolism of estrogen and progesterone in the
birth control pills, therefore not
enough levels to prevent pregnancy.
Example: what is the enzyme in the SER that increases when the p450 is rev d up? G
amma glutamyl transferase
(GGT) enzyme of SER! (look at in alcoholics)
Example: MCC chronic renal dz in USA: diabetes mellitus
tubular damage, so no 1a-hydroxylase, therefore inactive
vit D. Therefore, pts with chronic renal failure are put on 1-25-vit D.
Example: if someone gets OTC vit D, what steps does it go through to become meta
bolically active? 25 hydroxylated in
liver, and 1-a-hydroxylated in your kidney (it is NOT 1, 25 vit D
this is a pres
cription drug, and extremely dangerous).
Many people have the misconception that the vitamin D is already working. This i
s not the case; pt must have a
functioning liver and kidney.
With vit D def in kids = rickets; vit D def in adults = osteomalacia (soft bones
).
If you can t mineralize bone, you cannot mineralize cartilage, and they will both
be soft, therefore pathologic fractures
are common.
Kids have different a few things that are different in rickets ie craniotopies,
soft skulls (can actually press in and it will
recoil). They can also get ricketic rosaries, b/c the osteoid is located in the
costochondral junc, and b/c they are vit D
def, there is a lot of normal osteoid waiting to be mineralized, but not an appr
opriate Calcium/phosphorus solubility
product; will have excess osteoid with little bumps, which is called ricketic ro
sary. Not seen in adults b/c they are
getting fused.
So, 2 things you see in kids and not adults: 1) craniotopies 2) ricketic rosarie
s; rhe rest is the same, with pathologic
fractures being the main problem.
h. Toxicity/Hypervitaminosis of vit D: hypercalcemia, therefore risk of having t
oo many stones in the urine, and stones
is a MCC complication.
Type 1 rickets missing the 1-a-hydroxylase
Type 2 rickets missing the receptor for vit D
3. Vitamin E
a. Main function: maintain cell membranes and prevent lipid peroxidation of the
cell membranes; in other words, it
protects the cell membranes from being broken down by phospholipase A (lipid per
oxidation, which is free radical
damage on the cell membrane, and is prevented with vit E). Other function: neutr
alized oxidized LDL, which is far
more atherogenic than LDL by itself. When LDL is oxidized, it is way more injuri
ous to the cell then when it is not
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d) Excess vitamin C: very common b/c pts take way too much vit C (6-8gm), main c
omplication is Renal stones
(increased uric acid stones, and other kinds of stones). Vitamin C and D both ha
ve toxicity stones.
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2) Wet beriberi = heart failure; MCC thiamine def = alcohol (not polished rice).
Alcoholics are the MC people with
thiamine def. Wet beriberi is referring to cardiomyopathy
cause: LHF went into R
HF which lead to pitting edema.
Heart needs ATP to function, therefore, the pt with have congestive cardiomyopat
hy; their heart will have
biventricular enlargement (the whole chest will be heart), with left and right H
F (pitting edema is a sign of right HF
due to increased hydrostatic pressure behind the failed heart). If you give IV t
hiamine, can reverse; and in some
cases it s related to toxicity of alcohol, and cannot work.
the
2) Cirrhosis of the liver defective urea cycle therefore cannot metabolize ammon
ia; most of the ammonia that we have in our
bodies comes from bacteria in our colon that have urease in them (H. pylori); an
d they breakdown urea to ammonia in our
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c) Movable mass at angle of jaw = mixed tumor (in parotid); mixed b/c two histolog
ically have two different types of
tissue but derived from SAME cell layer (not a teratoma, which is from three cel
l layers),. MC overall salivary gland
tumor (usually b9) = mixed tumor
d) Teratoma = tooth, hair, derived from all three cell layers (ectoderm, mesoder
m, and endoderm) Aka germ cell
tumors b/c they are totipotential, and stay midline. Ex. anterior mediastinum, o
r pineal gland; therefore, teratomas
are germ cell, midline tumors.
e) Cystic teratoma of the ovaries: 16 y/o girl with sudden onset of RLQ pain (do
n t confuse with appendicitis, Crohn s
dz, ectopic pregnancy, follicular cyst). On x-ray, see calcifications of the pel
vic area! Cystic teratoma (the
calcifications can be bone or teeth). Usually develop in midline germ cell tumor
.
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colon is
ie vertebrae collapse
If you see any specimen with multiple lesions in it, it is METS (primary cancers
are confined to one area of the
organ).
MC
MC
MC
MC
C. Suppressor genes
Suppressor genes suppress, therefore if knocked off, whatever they were suppress
ing keeps on going. Key suppressor genes:
p53, Rb gene, adenomatos polyposis coli (familial polyposis), neurofibromatosis,
wilm s tumor gene, brca1 and 2
(both involved in DNA repair, and one is on c some 13 while the other is on c some 1
7); brca1 can be breast cancer, ovarian
cancer, or others; brca2 is TOTALLY related to breast cancer. Only 15% of breast
cancers have genetic assoc with these
genes, therefore, most cases are sporadic.
X. Common things that predispose mutations:
Protooncogenes are activated, while suppressor genes are inactivated
3 main ways this occurs: chemicals, viruses, radiation
A. Chemicals:
Which of the three is most common in initiating a cell producing a mutation? Che
micals
smoking = MCC death in USA
due to polycyclic hydrocarbons.
By itself, smoking is MC than virally induced or radiation induced cancers. Smok
ing causes lung cancer, squamous cancer of
the mouth, larynx, lung, pancreas, bladder, and if it s not the #1 cause, it s often
#2, such leukemias, cervical ca, and
colon.
MCC papillary tumor of the bladder = transitional cancer (smoking)
What if you worked in a dye industry? Aniline
What if you had Wegener s granulomatosis, put on a drug and got hematuria, did cyt
ology and saw cells, what
drug is pt on? Cyclophosphamide (hemorrhagic cystitis); prevent with mesna, and
can cause transitional cell
carcinoma (therefore acts as a carcinogen!)
Lung cancer
MCC = polycyclic hydrocarbons from smoke; most often assoc with smok
ing is small cell and squamous;
B. Viruses:
Virus assoc cancer: a virus with nonpruritic raised red lesions. Dx? Kaposi s sarc
oma (due to HHV 8)
Burkitts; due to Epstein barr varies which also causes nasopharyngeal carcinoma,
esp. in Chinese
liver
Hepatocellular carcinoma due to hepatitis B from Asia; also due to a mold
aflatoxin B; combo of hep B,
cirrhosis, plus aflatoxin makes is common in Asia; can also be caused by hep C
HIV is assoc with primary CNS lymphoma. They will ask: the rapidly increasing in
cidence of primary CNS lymphoma can be
directly attributed to what? HIV
HPV causes squamous cancer of cervix, vagina, and vulva, and anus of homosexuals
due to unprotected intercourse; due to
HPV 16, 18, 31. This virus causes anal squamous cell carcinoma in homosexuals. T
he virus works by making two proteins,
E6 which knocks off p53, while E7 knocks of Rb.
C.
Radiation
MC cancer assoc with radiation = leukemia
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MC childhood cancer = ALL leukemia (other childhood tumors include CNS tumors, n
euroblastomas (in the adrenal medulla),
Burkitts, Ewing s (tumor of bone with onion skinning), embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma.
)
Adults: incidence:
in woman: breast, lung, colon
In men: prostate, lung, and colon
Killers: lung is #1 in both (followed by prostate/breast and colon)
2nd MC cancer and cancer killer in men and women combined = colon
Therefore, from age 50 and on, you should get a rectal exam and a stool guaic.
After 50, MCC cancer of + stool guaic is colon cancer.
MC gyn cancer: endometrial (#2 is ovarian, and #3 is cervix)
Cervix is least common b/c Pap smear. When you do a cervical pap, picking up cer
vical dysplasia, not cervical cancer (therefore the
incidence isn t the highest).
B/c cervical pap smears; the incidence of cervical cancer has gone down signific
antly b/c the detection of the precursor lesion,
cervical dysplasia. So, b/c cervical Pap smear, incidence of cervical cancer has
gone down dramatically (picking up the precursor
lesion); with mammography, the incidence of breast cancer decreases, same with P
SA.
MC Gyn cancer killer: ovarian (#2 = cervical, #3 = endometrial); therefore to re
member, the MC has the best prognosis
endometrial is MC and has the best prognosis.
What is the only known existing tumor vaccine? HBV why?
MC infection transmitted by accidental needle stick in the hospital = Hepatitis
B
B/c viral burden of Hepatitis B is greater than any infection, even more so than
HIV.
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filaments); b/c they are RNA filaments, the reticulocyte is still synthesizing H
alpha
. , delta (
( );HbA 2 2 ;HbA2 2 2 ;HbF 2 2
We can dispense 2 of the 4 microcytic anemias immediately:
Fe def = don t have Fe, therefore there is no Fe to form with protoporphyrin to fo
rm heme; so, no Fe = no heme = no Hb
D. Pathogenesis of Anemia of chronic dz
When we have inflammation, our bodies respond to inflammation as if it is an inf
ection. In micro, bugs increase their
reproduction with Fe, therefore, the more Fe they have, the more they reproduce.
Same concept: with anemia of chronic
inflammation and body assumes it is subject to a bacterial infection, the object
is to keep Fe away from the bacteria. How
does it do that? Its like a safety deposit box, and you have the key Fe is norma
lly stored in macrophages in the BM
this
is where transferrin goes (to the macrophage) to pick up the Fe and take it to t
he RBC. If you don t want bacteria to have
access to the Fe, it will be locked away in the macrophages in the BM and the key
to the macrophages will be lost;
therefore, there is lots of Fe in the macrophages of the BM, but cannot get it o
ut. However, the good news is that you are
keeping it away from the bugs so they don t reproduce. Bad news
keeping it away fr
om the RBC s, and therefore have an
decrease in Hb synthesis. However, unlike Fe deficiency, where there is no Fe in
the macrophages of the BM, there is PILES
of Fe, but the key have been lost and you cannot get it out. So, irrespective of t
hat, your serum Fe is decreased b/c it is
all locked in the macrophages, and you don t have enough Fe to make heme. So, it s t
he same mechanism as Fe def, but
for different reasons: (1) you have no Fe (IDA) and (2) you have lots of it, but
its locked in the safety deposit box and you
cannot get it
so, either way, you cannot make heme and therefore you cannot make
hemoglobin. To distinguish
between IDA and ACDz, there are high ferritin levels in ACDz, whereas there is a
high TIBC in Fe def anemia
E. Heme synthesis
Certain rxns in biochem occur in the cytosol, the inner mito membrane (ox phos),
mito matrix (beta ox of FA s, TCA), and in
the cytosol AND the mitochondria (gluconeogenesis, which starts in the mito and
ends up in the cytosol, urea synthesis,
which starts in the mito and goes to the cytosol and back into the mito, and hem
e syn
in mito, then cytosol, and then
again in the mito). So, there are 3 biochemical rxns in the mito and cytosol.
First part of heme syn (aka porphyrin syn) begins in the mito. First rxn is succ
inyl coA (substrate in TCA cycle and substrate
for gluconeogenesis), which can be put together with glycine (which is an inhibi
tory neurotransmitter of muscle, blocked by
tetanus toxin rhesus sardonicus and tetanic contraction
so when glycine is inhib
ited, the muscles are in a tonic state of
contraction). Know all RATE LIMITING Enzyme s (RLE) for every biochemical rxn. (RL
E in cholesterol syn = HMG CoA
reductase).
RLE in heme synthesis = ALA synthase, cofactor = pyridoxine. So, protoporphyrin
is made and goes back to the mito. So
you have protoporphyrin plus Fe, so you have a metal plus protoporphyrin. Chelat
ase puts these together; so, it is called
ferrochelatase, with combines Fe with protoporphyrin and forms heme. Heme has a
feedback mechanism with ALA
synthase (all RLE s have a feedback mech). So, with increased heme, it will decrea
se syn of ALA synthase, and when heme
is decreased, it will increase ALA synthase syn.
F. Pathogenesis of Sideroblastic anemias (least common of the microcytic anemias
). sidero = Fe. Rarest of microcytic
anemias = sideroblastic anemias; they have 3 causes:
1. Alcohol (sideroblastic anemia is NOT the MC anemia in alcohol, MCC of siderob
lastic anemia is alcohol; MC anemia
overall = ACDz, followed by folate def). Alcohol is a mitochondrial poison and u
ncouples ox phos, and damages inner mito
membrane, allowing protons to go in and drain them off. On EM of the mito of an
alcoholic is huge b/c they are damaged
(called megamitochondria). Therefore, any process that occurs in the mito is scr
ewed up. This, therefore, includes heme
synthesis. So, Fe is delivered to the RBC by transferrin and doesn t know where to
go. Some is stored as ferritin, while
most of it goes to the mito, which is BAD news! Why? B/c it can get in, but CANN
OT get out. So, there is damaged
mitochondria that were damaged by alcohol, Fe goes in and now cannot go out. So,
there will lots of Fe caught and Fe
builds up within the mito. Mito is located around the nucleus of an RBC in the B
M, leading to a ringed sideroblast. This is
the marker cell for sideroblastic anemia; also in Fe overload dz
n, and will not get heme b/c mito destroyed
(so alcohol is the MCC).
2) G6PD def
pyridoxine def; ie not taking Vit B6 during Rx of TB. So, no Vit B6
= no heme, and the first rxn will not
happen. But Fe doesn t know that; again, Fe goes to the mito, waiting for porphyri
n, leading to ringed sideroblast.
3) lead poisoning so lead leads to sideroblastic anemia. Lead is a denaturer. Al
l heavy metals denature proteins
(enzymes are proteins). Lead s favorite enzyme to denature is ferrochelatase, so i
t won t work, and no heme = no Hb,
leading to microcytic anemia. Less of inhibitory effect, but does have a little
one on aminolevulinic acid dehydratase. But is
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HbA in it. However, if it was HbF blood that came out, the MCC is bleeding mecke
l s diverticulum. Therefore, bleeding
meckel s diverticulum = MCC Fe def in a newborn and child. Meckel s diverticulum is
NOT the cause of Fe def in an
adult, b/c most have bled by four years of age, and already would have known pt
has it.
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in Fe overload everything is hi
dz (Crohn s). And bacterial overgrowth due to peristalsis prob and/or diverticular
pouches and/or stasis. Whenever
there is stasis you ll get bacterial infection (also bladder infection); bacteria
love B12 and bile salts with bacterial
overgrowth. All of these will lead to B12 deficiency.
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and nothing comes out, therefore prove that they have a problem absorbing B12.
1st
step: give radioactive B12 and IF, collect urine for 24 hrs, and piles in the ur
ine = Pernicious anemia; b/c added what
was missing (IF); if it didn t work, you can EXCLUDE pernicious anemia.
Say this didn t work, then you:
2nd
step: give 10 days worth of broad spectrum antibiotic; pt comes back and again y
ou give them radioactive B12; see
piles of radioactive B12 in the urine, what is dx? Bacterial overgrowth b/c knoc
ked off the bugs eating B12
Say this didn t work, then you:
3rd step: pancreatic extract, swallow pills, then give radioactive B12; 24 hrs l
ater, see what happens; if there is radioactivity
in urine, pt has chronic pancreatitis.
If that didn t work, could be Crohn s, worm, etc.
Summary:
If B12 malabsorption was corrected by adding IF, pt has pernicious anemia
If B12 corrected by adding an antibiotic, pt has bacterial overgrowth
If B12 is corrected by adding pancreatic extract, pt has chronic pancreatitis.
IX. Normocytic anemias
When you do the corrections for the anemia and look for polychromasia; if correc
tion is less than 2%, it is a bad response (BM
not responding correctly). First two things you see: early IDA and ACDz
remember
that you have to have a normocytic
anemia first to become microcytic. Doesn t occur overnight. Therefore, with a decr
eased ret ct (ie less than 2%), must include
microcytic anemia s in the differential, and you need to get a ferritin level.
IDA goes through diff stages: first thing that happens
decreased ferritin, then
Fe decreases, TIBC increased, % sat decrease,
and still won t have anemia. In other words, all Fe studies are ABNORMAL before yo
u have anemia. Then you get mild
normocytic anemia, and eventually microcytic anemia.
A. Causes:
1. Blood loss less than a week = normocytic anemia; no increase in ret response
b/c nothing wrong with the BM, and not
enough time (need 5-7 days for BM to get rev d up) so, after one week, would get a
n appropriate response.
2. Aplastic anemia no marrow; if that is true, the peripheral blood will show pa
ncytopenia (all hematopoetic cells are
destroyed in the marrow); have normocytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and neutrope
nia.
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messes with Rh Ag on surface of RBC and alters them. They are altered so much th
at IgG Ab s are made against the
Rh Ag (our OWN Rh Ag). So, the drug is not sitting on the membrane, it just caus
es formation of IgG Ab s and they
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3. Quinidine: this is the innocent bystander b/c immune complexes are formed. Quin
idine acts as the hapten, and
the IgM Ab attaches; so, the drug and IgM are attached together, circulating in
the bloodstream. This is a different
HPY type III, and will die a different way, b/c this is IgM. When IgM sees the i
mmune complex, it will sit it, and
activate the classical pathway 1-9, leading to intravascular hemolysis, and hapt
oglobin will be decreased, and in the
urine, Hb will be present.
XI. Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
RBC s all fragmented
schistocytes (schisto
means split). MCC chronic intravascular
hemolysis = aortic stenosis, in this
dz, the cells hit something; therefore have intravascular hemolysis, Hb in the u
rine and haptoglobin is down. This is a chronic
intravascular hemolysis, and you will be losing a lot of Hb in the urine; what d
oes Hb have attached to it? Fe; so what is another
potential anemia you can get from these pts? Fe def anemia. Example: will descri
be aortic stenosis (systolic ejection murmur,
2nd
ICS, radiates to the carotids, S4, increased on expiration, prominent PMI), and
they have the following CBC findings: low
MCV, and fragmented RBC s (schistocytes)
this is a microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
related to aortic stenosis.
Other causes of schistocytes: DIC (lil fibrin strands split RBCs right apart b/c
RBC is very fragile); thrombotic thrombocytopenic
purpura, HUS see schistocytes. When you have platelet plugs everywhere in the bo
dy, the RBCs are banging into these things
causing schistocytes and microangiopathic hemolytic anemia. Example: runner s anem
ia, esp. long distance you smash RBC s
as you hit the pavement; very commonly, you go pee and see Hb in it; to prevent,
use bathroom b4.
Another cause of hemolytic anemia: malaria falciparum b/c you have multiple ring
forms (gametocyte (comma shaped and
ringed form). It produces a hemolytic anemia, which correlates with the fever. T
he fever occurs when the cells rupture (the
hemolytic anemia).
CHAPTER 6. HEMATOLOGY: WBC
I. Non-neoplastic Lymphoid Proliferations:
A.
Neutrophils
when you have acute inflammation = ie appendicitis, neutrophilic leu
kocytosis, left shift, toxic granulation,
and leukamoid rxn. Leukamoid rxn means that it looks like leukemia but it isn t an
d it s benign. Usually involves any of cell
lines. What causes leukamoid rxns? TB and sepsis. You see greater than 30-50,000
cells in the blood. Kids get these a lot
(ie otitis media). Adult with otitis med = 12,000; kids with 30,000 (exaggerated
). Example: Pertussus
whooping
cough
lymphocytosis (60,000) pediatricians are worried about ALL leukemia, but k
id doesn t have anemia or
thrombocytopenia; kid comes in pale, coughing. Lymphocytes are mature and are to
tally normal. Lymphocytosis w/ viral
infection or with pertussus.
In atypical lymphocytosis
this is a lymphocyte that is doing what it s supposed to
do when presented to and Ag. It s
responding to the Ag by dividing and getting bigger, so basically it s an antigeni
c stimulated lymphocyte. When talking
about atypical lymphocyte, the absolute first thing that pops into the mind is:
mononucleolosis EBV. Other dz that are
seen with large, beautifully staining bluish cells: CMV, toxoplasmosis, any caus
e of viral hepatitis, phenytoin. EBV is called
generalized painful lymphadenopathy, very commonly get exudative tonsillitis, ja
undice (hardly
transaminases (off the chart), and spleen enlargement and can rupture.
spleen can occur, so avoid contact sports usually for 6-8 weeks.
the kissing dz b/c the virus holds up in the salivary glands. EBV affects B cell
s and CD 21. Mono causes viremia,
ever seen), increased
Therefore don t play sports b/c can ruptured
Also causes macrocytic anemia via inhibiting intestinal
conjugase).
Audio Day 3: Hematology File 5
Example: the boards will give you a classic hx of mono, and ask which tests you
run, but monospot test is not on the
choices b/c that s the trade name, so pick heterophile antibodies (hetero = diff,
phile = loving). Heterophile Ab s are antihorse RBC Ab s (or anti-sheep); they are different, hence hetero phile Ab s. Once you h
ave mono, you always have it and
will have 3-4 recurrences over your lifetime ie reactivation consists of swollen
glands, very tired, etc. EBV lives in B cells;
the atypical lymphs in mono are T cells reacting against the infected B cells.
B.
Monocyte = king of chronic inflammation, therefore expect monocytosis in pts wit
h chronic infections ie rheumatoid
arthritis, Crohn s, ulcerative colitis, lupus, malignancy
Side Note: creatine gives energy b/c it binds to phosphate, and that is the phos
phate you get from making ATP
so what serum
test is markedly elevated in someone taking creatine for their muscles? Creatini
ne! B/c the end product of creatine metabolism is
Creatinine. The BUN is normal in this person. Worthy board question.
C. Eosinophilia
You would see eosinophilia in Hay fever, rash in pt with PCN, strongoloides
Protozoa infections DOES NOT produce eosinophilia, therefore it rules out amabia
sis (pinworm), giardia, and malaria. Only
invasive helminthes produces eosinophilia. Adult ascariasis does NOT cause eosin
ophilia b/c all they do is obstruct bowels,
it s when the invasive larvae form crosses into the lungs that causes eosinophilia
. So anything that is Type I HPY causes
eosinophilia; protozoa do not cause eosinophilia; ascariasis, and pinworms do NO
T cause eosinophilia (all others
ie
whipworms do b/c they invade).
resistance and TPR will go up; it will predispose to thrombosis, which kills you
thrombosis of anything
ie dural sinuses;
MCC Budd chiari = hepatic vein thrombosis; coronary artery, SMV, anything can be
thrombosed b/c blood slugging around
and this is why phlebotomy is done. Phlebotomy is performed to make you Fe def t
hey want to make you Fe def
why? If
you make them Fe def, b/c then it will take longer to make RBC s, so you purposefu
lly slow down the process.
2. Hypovolemia only polycythemia that has an increase in plasma volume that matc
hes the increase in RBC mass; none
of the other causes have an increase in plasma vol (these are measured with radi
oactive techniques). So, it is very rare to
see an increase in plasma vol with polycythemia, except for this case. Why? Myel
oproliferative dz s take years and years to
develop therefore plasma vol is able to keep up; therefore both increase togethe
r over time.
3. Histaminemia
all cells are increased: RBC s, WBC s, platelets, including mast cel
ls and basophils. Example: Classic
hx: pt takes a shower and gets itchy all over body this is a tip off for polycyt
hemia rubivera why? Mast cells and
basophils are located in the skin and temperature changes can degranulate mast c
ells, causing a release of histamine,
leading to generalized itching (very few things cause generalized itching
bile s
alt deposition in the skin in pts with
obstructive jaundice, and pts with mast cell degranulation), face is red looking
, too b/c of histamine b/c vasodilatation,
leading to migraine-like headaches.
4. Hyperuricema b/c nucleated hematopoetic cells are elevated, they then die, an
d the nuclei have purines in them.
The purines will go into purine metabolism and become uric acid. Example: pt on
chemotherapy must also be put on
allupurinol to prevent urate nephropathy and prevent renal failure from uric aci
d. (allupurinol blocks xanthane oxidase).
When killing cells you re releasing millions of purines when the nucleated cells a
re killed and the tubules are filled with uric
acid, leading to renal failure. Must put them on allupurinol. This called tumor
lysis syndrome. The same thing occurs in
polycythemia rubivera b/c there is an increase in number of cells that eventuall
y die and you run the risk of hyperuricemia.
B. RBC mass/plasma vol/O2 sat/EPO
Polycythemia rubivera h,h,N (inappropriate), low (have too much O2 b/c you have
piles of RBCs and therefore suppress
EPO (it s a hormone). The hint was O2 content=1.34 * Hb * O2 sat +pO2
COPD, tetralogy of fallot, high alt
responding to hypoxia)
N, L, N, N
IV. Leukemias
They are a malignancy of the BM and mets anywhere it wants.
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Example: 4 y/o pt that presents with sternal tenderness, fever, generalized nont
ender lymphadenopathy,
hepatosplenomegaly, normocytic anemia, 50,000 WBC count many of which had an abn
ormal appearance cells. What is the
dx? ALL (acute lymphoblastic leukemia. MC cancer in kids; the most common type i
s: common ALL Ag B cell leukemia.
CD10+; calla+ Ag B-cell ALL, associated with down s syndrome
Example: 65 y/o, normal criteria, smudge cells and normocytic anemia. They also
have hypogammaglobinemia b/c they
are neoplastic B cells and cannot change to plasma cells to make Igs. Therefore,
MCC death in CLL = infection related to
hypogammaglobinemia. What is the Dx? CLL
Example: 62 y/o, normal criteria, special stain of TRAP (tartrate resistant acid
phosphatase stain)
hairy cell leukemia
(know the TRAP stain)
Example: 35 y/o pt, with normal criteria, with 50,000 abnormal WBCs and Auer rod
s (abnormal lysosomes), 70% blast
cells in the BM. What is the Dx? AML. Know what Auer rods look like, know the le
ukemia that infiltrates gums (acute
monocytic anemia M5), and acute progranulocytic anemia (M3)
they always have DIC
, has a translocation 15,17. Rx =
retinoic acid (vit A causes blasts to mature into b9 cells).
V. Lymph nodes
A. General Characteristics:
1. Painful vs painless: lymphadenopathy that is painful is not malignant; mean t
hat you have inflammation causing it (does
not always mean infection)
you are stretching the capsule, it s an inflammatory co
ndition (lupus), and that produces pain.
When you have non-tender, think malignant, either (1) mets or 2) primary lymphom
a originating from it. Always tell if
painful/less.
2. Localized vs. generalized lymphadenopathy: Localized (ie exudative tonsilliti
s goes to local nodes; breast cancer goes to
local nodes. Generalized (systemic dz
ie HIV, EBV, Lupus).
3. Examples:
(a) Bruton s agammaglobinemia
germinal follicle absent: B-cell
(b) DiGeorge syndrome paratrabeculae messed up: T-cell country
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Know what plasma cell looks like has bright blue cytoplasm and nucleus is eccent
rally located (around the nucleus are
clear areas present). On EM, will see layer and layers of RER, b/c they are cons
tantly making protein (ribo s are where
ribosomal RNA sits on). Must know what plasma cell looks like on EM and giemsa s
tain. Summary of multiple myeloma
lytic lesions, Bence Jones proteins, and seen in elderly pts.
1. Amyloidosis: is a clinical characteristic of MM
Amyloid on EM is a non-branching, linear compound with a hole on the center of i
t. They always ask a question on
amyloidosis b/c it ends up in the differential dx for multi-system dz (systemic
amyloidosis). Amyloid is a protein, but
what s interesting is that many other different proteins can be transformed/conver
ted into this unique protein
ie prealbumin,
calcitonin (tumor marker for medullary carcinoma of the thyroid),
light chains in MM, and
trisomy 21. In Trisomy 21 (Down s syndrome), the c some 21 codes for beta amyloid, a
nd if you have three of
these, you will make more beta amyloid protein. And beta amyloid protein is toxi
c to neurons; so, if you have
trisomy 21 are making more beta amyloid protein, then you will be losing more ne
urons b/c you are losing
more of this protein that is toxic to neurons. This is why they always ask the q
uestion about a pt dying at
forty and on autopsy, you see atrophy of the brain and it reveals senile plaques
in frontal and temporal lobes,
and will ask what pt had Down s syndrome. All down s pts will get Alzheimer s. Down s pt
s die from 1 of 2
things: either from (1) endocardial cushion defects
which leads to heart defects
and an ASD (in childhood)
and a VSD or (2) Alzheimer s dz (death b/c chromosome 21 is making too much beta a
myloid protein).
Example: 40 y/o with Alzheimer s dz has downs syndrome. Beta amyloid is most impor
tant protein.
Example: what do you follow heparin therapy with? PTT (evaluates the intrinsic p
athway). Factors that antithrombin
III knocks off: 12, 11, 7, 10, 2, 1 are all neutralized by antithrombin III. So,
with pt on heparin, PTT is prolonged, what
is the PT? Prolonged. It s just that the PTT does a better job at evaluating hepar
in (many factors antithrombin III
involved with)
So, BOTH PT and PTT are prolonged if on warfarin or heparin; however, it turns o
ut that PTT is better at evaluating
heparin and PT is better for warfarin.
II. Fibrinolytic system: Plasmin
Plasmin leaves crumbs
its breaks down things (fibrinogen, fibrin, coagulation fa
ctors) think fibrinoLYTIC system. When it
breaks down a clot, there are many pieces (ie fibrin) left around, which are fib
rin degradation products.
What is the single best screening test for DIC? D-dimers (better answer) or fibr
in split products. What plasmin does is breaks things
apart, leaving crumbs behind and you have degradation products. D dimers are the
absolute best test for DIC (di-means 2). When
you form a fibrin clot, factor 13 (fibrin stabilizing factor) makes the clot str
onger. How do you stabilize strands? Link them by putting
connections between them to make them stronger (this is what factor 13 does). So
, how do you make collagen stronger? By, linking
them to increase the tensile strength (factor 13 will put a crossbridge in fibri
n). What D-dimer is detecting are only those fibrin
factors that have a link (ie when there are two of them held together, this what
the test picks up). What does this absolutely prove?
That there is a fibrin clot. Do you see this in DIC? Yes.
Example: Would you see it if you broke apart a platelet thrombus in a coronary a
rtery? (Remember a platelet thrombus is a bunch
of platelets held together by fibrin). So, what would the D dimer assay be if yo
u broke apart that clot? Increased, you would see
increased D dimers and would see the little fibrin strands held together by cros
s linking. They often do that to see if you have
recanalized or if you got rid of your thrombus.
Example: it is often also seen with a pulmonary embolus, b/c if you have a pulmo
nary embolus, one test is a D dimer b/c you will
form a clot that will activate the fibrinolytic system, and it will try to start
breaking it down, and there will be a release of D dimers.
Single best test for DIC. Good test for picking up pulmonary embolus, along with
ventilation/perfusion scans. Excellent test to see if
you have reperfusion after given t-PA b/c it proves that if D dimers were presen
t, a fibrin clot must be present (fibrin was there so it
proves it).
54 | P a g e drbrd
CopyrightedR Material. All Rights Reserved.
checks do PCR test looking for RNA in the virus (most sensitive), do Elisa test.
In fact, the MC mechanism of a healthcare
worker getting HIV = accidental needle stick
Do not transfuse anything into a person unless they are symptomatic in what they
are deficient in. Example: If you have 10
grams of Hb, and have no symptoms in the pt, do not transfuse. You should transf
use the pt if they have COPD and are starting
to have angina related to the 10 grams. Example: 50,000 platelet ct
no epistaxis
= do not treat them; if they do have
epistaxis, treat the pt.
Every blood product is dangerous b/c you can get infections from it.
B. Fresh frozen plasma should never be used to expand a pts plasma volume to rai
se BP
use normal saline (it is too
expensive and you run the risk of transmitting dz). Use fresh frozen plasma for
multiple coagulation factor deficiencies ie
would be legitimate to give frozen plasma to replace consumed factors, as in DIC
.
now, so it builds up. This is an exchange transfusion rxn for ABO incompatibilit
y most of the time is b9, and put under UV
B light. How does UV B light work? It converts the bilirubin in the skin into di
-pyrol, which is water soluble and they pee it
out (Rx for jaundice in newborn). Anemia is mild b/c it is not a strong Ag and d
oesn t holster a brisk hemolytic anemia. If
you do a coomb s test, it will be positive b/c IgG s on the RBC s. So always an O mom
with a blood group A or AB baby.
This can occur from the first pregnancy (not like Rh sensitization where the fir
st pregnancy is not a problem). In any
pregnancy, if mom is blood group O, and she has a baby with blood group A or B,
there will be a problem (blood group O =
no problem).
B. Rh incompatibility
Mom is Rh negative and baby is Rh positive. Example: mom is O negative and baby
is O positive (not ABO incompatible,
but Rh incompatible). In the first pregnancy: deliver baby without going to a Dr
, and there is a fetal maternal bleed, some
of the babies O positive Ab s got into my bloodstream, which is not good. So, mom
will develop an anti B Ab against it. So,
mom is sensitized which means that there is an Ab against that D Ag and now mom
is anti D. 1 year later, mom is pregnant
again, and still O negative, and have anti D and the baby again is O positive. T
his is a problem b/c it is an IgG Ab, which
will cross the placenta, attach to the babies D Ag positive cells (of all the Ag
s, the D Ag hosts the worst hemolytic anemia).
So, the baby will be severely anemic with Rh than will ABO incompatibility. The
same thing happens though
baby s
macrophages phagocytose and mom s liver will work harder. When the baby is born, t
he bilirubin levels are very high, a
severe anemia occurs, and there is an excellent chance that an exchange transfus
ion will be necessary (99% chance), so
take all the blood out (gets rid of all the bilirubin and sensitized RBC s and tra
nsfuse b/c baby is anemic). So, they will
usually always have a exchange transfusion.
Therefore, for the first pregnancy, the baby is not affected, and this is when t
he mother gets sensitized. In future
pregnancies, the baby will a lot worse.
How do we prevent? Mom will do an Ab screen test and she is Rh negative. Around
the 28th week, give her Rh Ig, which is
prophylactic. This is anti D, which comes from woman; it has been sensitized and
heat treated and cannot cross the
placenta. Why do they give at 28 weeks? Pt may get fetal maternal bleeds before
the pregnancy or a car accident or fall
can cause babies blood to get into mom s circulation. So, mom has anti D Ab s to sit
on the D positive cells and destroy
them, so mom won t get sensitized. Then, mom gives birth to baby (lets say it is R
h pos). Do a Plyhowabenti test and takes
mom s blood to ID (if any ) fetal RBC s in the circulation and count them; they can
say how much is in there. Depending on
that, that will determine how many viles of allergen Ig you give the mom to prot
ect her further (anti D only last three
months, and need to give more at birth, especially if the baby is Rh positive).
Example: Mom: O negative; Baby: A positive.
2 problems: ABO incompatible and Rh incompatible. But, there is not going
to be a prob with sensitization. No Why? After delivery of baby, some of the bab
ies cells (which are A cells) get into the
mom s blood (which mom has anti A IgM) ; those cells will be destroyed so fast, th
at in most cases the mom cannot
generate Ab against those cells b/c they have been destroyed. So, ABO incompatib
ility protects against Rh sensitization.
You still would give Rh Immunoglobulin. So if you are ABO and Rh incompatible, R
h sensitization will be protected against.
59 | P a g e drbrd CopyrightedR Material. All Rights Reserved.
or b/c the valvular ring is stretched. So, there can be stretching of the ring a
nd nothing wrong with the valves, and have a murmur,
or you can have damage to the valves and have a murmur. Syphilis is an example o
f stretching of the aortic valve ring leading to a
CopyrightedR Material. All Rights Reserved.
What would be the analogous lesion in the lungs with weakening and outpouching?
Bronchiectasis
due to cystic fibrosis with
infection, destruction of elastic tissue leading to outpouching and dilatation o
f the bronchi. Example: what is the GI aneurysm?
Diverticular dz
have a weakening and outpouching of mucosa and submucosa
2. Law of Laplace the wall stress increases as radius increases. In terms of thi
s, once you start dilating it, it doesn t stop b/c as
you dilate something, you increase the wall stress and eventually it ruptures. S
o, in other words, all aneurysms will rupture
it s
just a matter of when.
3. Abdominal Aorta Aneurysm: Why is the abdominal aorta the MC area of aneurysm?
B/c there is no vasa vasorum or blood
supply to the aorta below the renal arteries. So, the only way abd. aorta gets O
2 and nutrients is from the blood that s in the lumen.
So, part furthest from it mgets screwed. Therefore, apart from the part that is
not getting much O2 and nutrients, it will be more
susceptible to injury, therefore atherosclerosis leads to weakening of the wall
and aneurysm/injury occurs.
a. MC complication abdominal aortic aneurysm = rupture. The triad of s/s are: a
sudden onset of severe left flank pain b/c the
aorta is retroperitoneal organ and so it does not bleed into the peritoneal cavi
ty, but into the peritoneal tissue. So, severe left
flank pain, HypoTN, and pulsatile mass on PE. These are three things that always
occur when there is a ruptured aortic
abdominal aneurysm. MC complication of any aneurysm = rupture
4. Aneurysm of the arch of the aorta MCC = tertiary syphilis. Pathology of syphi
lis is vasculitis of arterioles. Chancre, too.
Its painless b/c if you section it, you will see little arterioles surrounded by
plasma cells and the lumen of the vessel is completely
shut, so it is ischemic necrosis. In other words, it is ischemia of the overlyin
g tissue undergoing necrosis. B/c nerves are next to
vessels, they are knocked off, too, and it is painless. All of syphilis is a vas
culitis. That is what the Treponema infects
small
vessels and arterioles. What are they affecting in the arch of the aorta? The va
sa vasorum; the richest supply of vasa vasorum is in
the arch, so its logical that the Treponema will pick it leads to endarteritis o
bliterans (they are obliterating the lumen), ischemia,
weakening under systolic pressures, leads to depression in the arch of the aorta
(looks like a catcher s mitt). What will that do to the
aortic valve ring? It will stretch it
which murmur will this lead to? Aortic reg
urg. Murmurs can occur b/c there is valvular damage
murmur and aortic regurg.
Aorta should be closing during diastole as you pump the blood out, and the SV go
es down, and b/c the aortic cannot close properly,
only some of the blood will drip back in. So you will have more volume of blood
in the left ventricle in someone with aortic regurg.
Frank-starling forces will be working. As you stretch cardiac muscle, you increa
se the force of contraction. Normally, you have a 120
ml s of blood and get out 80, so the EF is 80/120 =66%. Lets say you have 200 mls
of blood in the LV b/c blood is dripping back in,
and frank-starling force gets out 100 mls of blood, which has an EF of 50%. So t
has hep B surface antigens. So, remember p-ANCA and Hep B surface Ag.
G. Bacterial infections: vessel in RMSF. The rickettsial organisms infect endoth
elial cells; the spots are petechia; unlike other
rickettsial dz s with rash, this starts on the extremities and goes to the trunk (
whereas others start on the trunk and to the
extremities). Also have to remember the vector: tick. Other tick born dz s: Lyme d
z (borrelia burgdorferi b. recurentis is relapsing
fever, and has antigenic shifts; it is a spirochete (Leptospira and syphilis are
also spirochetes). So, 3 spirochetes
Leptospira,
Treponema, Borrelia ( BLT )
F. Fungus that is wide angle, nonseptate , pt has DKA, and cerebral abscesses re
lated to fungus
mucormycosis (know
relationship of this fungus and DKA);
Diabetics commonly have mucor in their frontal sinuses; so when they go into ket
oacidosis and start proliferating, they go through
the cribiform plate into the frontal lobes where they infarct it and infect it w
ith the dz.
VIII. Functional Vascular Disorders: Raynaud Dz
There are many causes this; some involve cold reacting Ab s and cold reacting glob
ulins. People who go outside in the cold weather
will get Raynaud s and cyanosis in the nose and ears (that comes and goes away); s
o, it is due to IgM cold agglutinin dz or
cryoglobinemia in old man with Hep C.
However, we have other dz s that are collagen vascular dz and first manifestation
is Raynaud s; this involves a digital vasculitis and
eventually a fibrosis
progressive systemic sclerosis (aka scleroderma), and its
counterpart CREST syndrome.
Vasculitis of fingers and leads to fibrosis
will eventually auto-amputate finger
(like Berger s).
CREST syndrome Calcinosis (dystrophic calcification) and Centromere Ab (specific
for crest syndrome), Raynaud s, Esophageal
dysmotility, Sclerodactyly (finger that is very narrow), Telangiectasia (very si
milar to the pin point hemorrhages
also seen in Osler
Weber Rendu).***********
Other causes due to vasoconstriction common in pts that take drugs for migraine
drugs for migraines cause vasoconstriction of
vessels. So, Raynaud s can occur after taking Ergot derivatives; Buerger dz, too.
Therefore, general causes of Raynaud s: vasoconstriction, vasculitis of the digits
(ie CREST and scleroderma), and cold
reacting Ab s and globulins .
IX. Hypertension (HTN)
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If you have a valvular problem, and have excess volume of blood in the ventricle
s increased preload = increased work. Therefore,
the frank starling goes into effect b/c stretching and increasing preload in the
re, and you have to work harder to increase the force of
contraction
this produces dilated HPY. Therefore, concentric HPY = afterload pro
blem; dilated HPY = volume overload =
preload problem (increased volume)
II. Heart sounds
S1 heart sound = beginning of Systole = mitral and tricuspids close (mitral clos
es before the tricuspid b/c higher pressures)
S2 heart sound = beginning of Diastole = pulmonic and aortic close (variation wi
th respiration as diaphragm goes down they
increase the intrathoracic pressure. Blood is being sucked into the right side o
f the heart, and the pulmonic valve will close later
than the aortic valve. So, the second heart sound has a variation with inspirati
on the P2 separates away from A2 b/c more blood
coming into the right heart, so the valve closes a little bit later.
S3 heart sound = normal under 35 y/o s. After that, it is pathologic. S1 = beginni
ng of systole and S2 = beginning of diastole;
obviously, S3 = early diastole. S3 is due to blood, in early diastole, going int
o a chamber that is volume overloaded. So, blood from
the left atrium is going into overloaded chamber, causing turbulence, which is t
he S3 heart sound. Only hear S3 heart sound in
volume overloaded chamber. It could be from LHF (left ventricle overloaded) or R
HF (right vent overloaded), so there are left
sided S3 s and right sided S3 s
it means volume overload in the chamber. Analogy: ri
vers going into ocean leads to turbulence
(ocean is the ventricle with a lot of fluid in it and the river is the blood com
ing in during diastole; the river hits this large mass of
fluid in the ventricle, causing turbulence and an S3 heart sound).
S4 heart sound = late diastole this is when the atrium is contracting and you ge
t the last bit of blood out of the atrium into the
ventricles, leading to S4 sound. S4 s occur if there is a problem with compliance.
Compliance is a filling term.
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1. Systolic Murmurs:
Who is opening in systole = aortic and pulmonic valves = therefore, murmurs of a
ortic stenosis and pulmonic stenosis are
occurring in systole. This is when they are opening; they have to push the blood
through a narrow stenotic valve.
a. Aortic Stenosis
LV contracts and it is encountering resistance - intensity of
the murmur goes up; as it is pushing and pushing,
it gets to a peak and this is diamond shape configuration
this is why it is call
ed an ejection murmur. So, they often have
diagrams of the configurations on these murmurs. With an ejection murmur (aortic
stenosis), it will have a crescendo-decrescendo
(hence, diamond shaped configuration).
So, with aortic stenosis, there is an ejection murmur in systole, heard best at
the right 2nd
ICS, which radiates to the carotids, and the murmur intensity increases on expir
ation, and will probably hear an S4
b. Pulmonic Stenosis heard best on left 2nd ICS, ejection murmur, and increases
on expiration.
2. Diastolic murmurs: In diastole, mitral and tricuspid valves are opening.
a. Mitral Stenosis (problem in opening the valve)
who has the problem? Left atri
um. Here s the problem, the mitral valve doesn t
want to open but it has to in order to get blood into the left ventricle. So, th
e left atrium will get strong b/c it has an afterload to
deal with it becomes dilated and hypertrophied (the atrium)
which predisposes to
atrial fib, thrombosis, and stasis of blood. So,
the atrium is dreading diastole b/c it has to get the buildup of blood into the
left ventricle. With the build up of pressure, the mitral
valve snaps open, and that is the opening snap.
LV). With mitral stenosis, there is a problem with opening the valve, and theref
ore you are under filling the left ventricle, and
All the blood that was built up in the atrium comes gushing out into the ventri
cle,
causing a mid-diastolic rumble. So, you have an opening snap followed by a rumbl
ing sound (due to excess blood gushing into
therefore will be no HPY b/c you are under filling it. If you are having trouble
getting blood into it, you are not overworking the
ventricle; the left atrium has to do most of the work. Heard best at the apex an
d will increase in intensity on expiration. (same
concept with tricuspid stenosis, just a different valve).
B. Regurgitation problem in closing the valve.
1. Systolic Murmurs: mitral and tricuspid are closing in systole.
a) Mitral Regurg: If they are incompetent and mitral valve cannot close properly
. Example: 80 mls of blood = normal stroke
volume; lets say 30 mls into the left atrium and only 50 mls leaves the aorta. S
o, an extra 30 mls of blood in the left atrium, plus
trying to fill up and have excess blood there
way more blood ends up in the left
ventricle and it becomes volume overloaded.
So, how would the murmur characteristics be if there is a problem in closing the
valve? It will not be an ejection murmur; will just
sound like whoooosh all the way through, as blood all the way through systole is g
oing through the incompetent mitral valve, back
into the left atrium therefore it is pansystolic or almost pansystolic
so it s a st
raight line effect. Sometimes, it will obliterate S1
65 | P a g e drbrd CopyrightedR Material. All Rights Reserved.
If you have a right to left shunt with unO2 d blood going into the O2 d blood? Step
down.
The O2 saturation on the right side of the heart in blood returning from the bod
y is 75%. The O2 saturation on the left side is 95%.
C. VSD (MC)
Who s stronger -left or right ventricle? Left, therefore the direction of the shun
t is left to right. So, oxygenated blood will be
dumped into the right ventricle, leading to step up. Also, it will pump it out o
f the pulmonary artery, leading to step up. So, you
have a step up of O2 in right vent and pul artery. What if this is not corrected
? With this mech, you are volume overloading the right
side of the heart b/c of all that blood coming over. The outcome of this will be
pulmonary HTN (the pulmonary artery has to deal
that bad
when the right vent contracts, a lot of the blood goes up the pulmonary
artery to get O2 d and less blood gets into the left
ventricle, and therefore probably will not have cyanosis at birth. What if it wa
s a severe stenosis and when the right vent contracts,
very lil blood got up there? Most will be shunted right to left and there will b
e a step DOWN in O2 in the left vent and baby will be
cyanotic. So, it is the degree of pulmonic stenosis that determines whether you
have cyanosis or not. Which of the groups
of shunts is cardio-protective in a pt with tetralogy of fallot? PDA, ASD
good l
ets say there is an ASD, therefore blood will go left
to right b/c we get O2 d blood emptying into the right atrium. This would cause a
step up of blood into the right atrium (this is
good). How about a PDA? Lets make believe this occurs
so, unO2 d blood pushed from
left from the aorta down to the pul artery
to get O2; some of the unO2 d blood put back into the pul artery, where it gets O2 d
and more gets out good to have PDA and
ASD (foramen of ovale) with tetralogy of fallot.
Right to left leads to polycythemia and a real risk for infective endocarditis b
/c shunts going into left side, therefore can get
vegetations going into the brain and other systemic organs. All congenital heart
defects lead to infective endocarditis.
G. Transposition of Great vessels
Example: in Kartagener s syndrome with syndrome with sinus inversus
this not the c
ase with transposition of great vessels have
a normal heart that is on the right side (everything isn t reversed the way it is
in sinus inversus). What s transposed? Not the right
atrium it is still getting unoxygenated blood. Its not the left atrium
it is sti
ll getting 95% O2 saturated blood from the pulmonary
vein. The problem is in the ventricles the right ventricle is being emptied by t
he aorta; and the left is being emptied by the
pulmonary artery. So, the thing that is transposed are the ventricles (the atria
are fine). This is incompatible with life unless you
have shunts: VSD, ASD, and PDA can work. How s does this work?
Start at the atrial side have 95% O2 coming into left atrium and it is going fro
m the left to right; there will be a step up of O2 in
the right atrium and therefore also a step up of O2 in the right ventricle. Some
will go out the aorta and rest will go to the left
ventricle. This is good b/c the left ventricle is being emptied by the pulmonary
artery, so the blood will be taken to the lungs to be
oxygenated. So, these shunts are necessary. Otherwise, the right vent being empt
ied by the aorta would be all oxygenated blood
and the left ventricle being emptied with the pulmonary artery would not be okay
. So, by having the shunts, can get around these
defects. An ASD is necessary so you can get O2 d blood into the right atrium, and
from the right atrium there will be a step up of O2
in the right ventricle, which is being emptied by the aorta; obviously this bloo
d isn t 95% saturated (maybe 80%), and this is why
there is cyanosis in these patients. At least some blood can get out of the aort
a and have some O2 to the pt and they can survive
for a little while. B/c of the right to left shunt, that blood is being emptied
by the pulmonary artery and that is going to the lungs
and being oxygenated. So, the shunts are necessary for life. So, with Kartagener s
, there is NOT a complete transposition of
vessels, but a normal heart on the right side (called sinus inversus).
H. Coarctation have preductal and postductal
Pre = before patent ductus; post = after patent ductus (after the ligamentum art
eriosum)
Preductal occur in Turner syndrome and go straight into failure, therefore must
be corrected immediately. Postductal are not
present at birth and can occur at any time during the pt s adult life. Important t
o recognize b/c they are a surgically correctable
cause of HTN.
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4 types: Angina, Myocardial Infarct, Sudden Cardiac Death Syndrome, Chronic Isch
emic Heart Disease
A. Sudden cardiac death syndrome = death within the last hr
what will you see at
autopsy? Will NOT see a coronary thrombus,
will see severe coronary artery atherosclerosis. So, usually these pts do not ha
ve a thrombus, but do have severe coronary artery
dz, leading to ischemia, PVC s, ventricular fibrillation (die of ventricular arrhy
thmia just like in MI); die so fast that there are no
changes in the heart (ie pallor/Coagulation necrosis); see severe coronary arter
y dz and dx sudden cardiac death. Very high risk in
smokers.
B. Chronic ischemia heart dz It s a lot of our parents, uncles and aunts who have c
oronary artery dz with little infarcts, or had a
small heart attack, basically talking about subendocardial infarctions. What hap
pens is that the muscle gets replaced by fibrous
tissue and eventually the poor LV is all fibrous tissue, with no muscle therefor
e the ejection fraction is very low. Its 0.2 instead of
the normal 0.66 and they die from heart failure. Fibrous tissue does not have co
ntractility; this dz is the 2nd MC indication for a heart
transplant.
C. Angina (MC type of heart dz)
3 types exertional, prinzmetal, unstable (resting) angina
1. Exertional
chest pain on exertion, goes away within 5-10 minutes of resting;
ST depression on EKG (1-2 mm depression)
therefore a candidate for coronary angiogram to see what s going on.
2. Prinzmetal s
seen in women, occurs in morning; due to vasospasm of the coronary
arteries, NOT atherosclerosis. In some
people, TxA2 is implicated for the vasospasm. ST depression means subendocardial
ischemia. Coronary arteries penetrate the
outside of the heart and go in, so the subendocardial tissue get screwed b/c its
furtherest from the blood supply. Therefore, with
coronary artery atherosclerosis, and decreased blood flow, who gets screwed? Sub
endocardium and it reacts to it with pain and ST
depression. With vasospasm of coronary artery, get transmural ischemia therefore
there is ischemia throughout the entire
thickness of the muscle
this produces ST elevation. So, Prinzmetal s angina has ST
elevation b/c transmural ischemia.
3. Unstable aka pre-infarction angina
get angina on resting. Classic hx: initial
ly had stable angina, now pt just get it when they
are sitting. This means that they will need angioplasty and put into the hospita
l. Do not put on treadmill, they will die. What veins do
they use? Saphenous vein over 10 years will become arterialized (it will look ex
actly like an artery). If you take a vein, and put
arterial pressures into it, it will change its histology and look exactly like a
n artery. They have a high tendency for fibrosing off after
10 years b/c they are veins.
Internal mammary is an artery, therefore won t have the same problem b/c it is use
d to those pressures. They will remain patent,
but cannot do four vessel bypass with one internal mammary artery. So, they use
the saphenous vein, which has the tendency to
undergo fibrosis over time b/c they are arterialized under pressure. They can al
so use the internal mammary.
D. Acute MI
Thrombus composed of group of platelet cells bound together with fibrin. TPA doe
sn t have a problem with this b/c it just breaks the
fibrin bonds to destroy the clot. It has a much bigger problem with the breakdow
n of a venous clot b/c those have more fibrin. The
thromboses/clots in the heart do not have that much fibrin. Another factor to de
al with is reperfusion injury
O2 d blood goes into
infracted, therefore
On day 3 pt goes into
there a day before
s something that was
3 weeks to 10 years
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have MVP, what is preload vs. lying down? It is less. Less preload = less blood
in the ventricle = click and murmur closer to S1.
Now, let s say pt lies down
click and murmur closer to S2 b/c increasing preload.
They will ask: what will happen to click and
murmur with anxiety? What will happen to heart rate with anxiety? Increase. Ther
efore, will have less time to fill ventricles, therefore
will come closer to S1.
Queston on examinations
sis
answer is giardi
B. Aortic Stenosis
MC valvular cause of syncope with exercise
MCC angina with exercise.
MCC microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
This will an ejection murmur, right 2nd ICS, radiation into the neck, systolic,
increases in intensity on expiration. Intensity of murmur
with different positions: what will increase the intensity of the murmur (what w
ill make it worse and therefore louder)? Increasing
preload in the ventricle. With decreased blood in the ventricle, it will decreas
e the intensity of the ejection murmur b/c it has to go
out the stenotic valve.
If you are putting more blood into the LV and need to get it out, it will increa
se the intensity -this is imp b/c it differentiates it from
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Why do they get angina with exercise? Pulse is diminished and therefore the stro
ke volume will decrease. So, when do the coronary
arteries fill up? Diastole. With less blood there (b/c couldn t get it out and had
to get it through the valve), there is thickened muscle
and less blood going to the heart, leading to angina. So, this is the MC valvula
r lesion leading to angina. Also, with syncope with
exercise, b/c you have decreased cardiac output, you will faint.
C. Mitral stenosis
Slide: Thrombi, left atrium is dilated; murmur in diastole (stenosis prob in ope
ning and this valve opens in diastole, leading to
snap and rumble), heard at apex and increases in intensity on expiration.
MCC mitral stenosis
rheumatic fever (acute). Rheumatic fever -vegetations; due t
o group A beta hemolytic streptococcal
infection. Usually occurs as post-pharyngitis. As opposed to post streptococcal
glomerulonephritis, this can be pharyngitis or a skin
infection. Most of time rheumatic fever is from a previous tonsillitis. When you
culture blood in pts with rheumatic fever, it will be
negative. Will not be able to grow the organisms b/c its not an infective endoca
rditis. It is an immunologic mechanism. With
strep, M protein is the pathogenic factor for group A strep. Certain strains hav
e Ag s similar to the heart and joints. So, when
we make Ab s against the group A strep, we are also making Ag s against the heart (o
ur own tissue) therefore we attack our own
heart, joints, basal ganglia and elsewhere. This is called mimicry b/c we are de
veloping Ab s against our own tissue, b/c there are
similar Ag s in the M protein of the bacteria, so its is all immunologic! MC valve
involved is the mitral valve. The vegetations are
sterile and line along the closure of the valve. The vegetations usually do not
embolize. Know Jones criteria for dx of acute
rheumatic fever
ie young person, few weeks ago had an exudative tonsillitis, now
cardiac tamponade)
answer is MVP and
conduction defects. So, pt with marfan and dies suddenly, this is due to MVP and
conduction defects (not dissecting
aortic aneurysm).
Tricuspid regurg
serum ANA
the heart
is going o
heart), le
magnitude,
= pericardial effusion. However, this is not what they will ask you
they will as
k what is first step in management?
Echocardiogram shows that they have fluid (proves it
b/c need to call surgeon to
do pericardiocentesis).
What is it MC due to? Pericarditis. What is the MCC pericarditis? Coxsackie.
What if woman has this and a + serum ANA? Lupus.
Any young woman that has an unexplained pericardial or pleural effusion is lupus
until proven otherwise. Why? Serositis = inflame
serosal membranes
its gonna leak fluid, leading to effusions. And is a feature o
f Lupus.
E. Constrictive pericarditis
In third world countries, TB is MC. In USA, due to previous cardiac surgery b/c
its
disorganized, and the conduction bundles are messed up, leading to conduction de
fects -with conduction defects, run the risk of V.
tach and death at any time. This abnormal conduction system and asymmetric septu
m is responsible. Ie 16 y/o bball player that
died suddenly what do you see at autopsy? Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Mech? Abn
ormal conduction
C. Endocardial Fibroelastosis (ie of restricted cardiomyopathy)
If it is restrictive, something is preventing the ventricle from filling up. Thi
s is the MC dz causing restrictive cardiomyopathy in
children, and is called endocardial Fibroelastosis. This dz is the MC reason why
a child needs a heart transplant. If the child does not
get a transplant, they will die. Other causes of restrictive cardiomyopathy
Pomp
e s, Fe overload, amyloid.
D. Cardiac myxoma
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breathe in the flap goes up and on expiration it closes. So, the air stays in th
e pleural cavity. So, every time you breathe,
the flap goes up, air stays in, and on expiration it closes. So, for every breat
h you take, it keeps increasing and the
pressure in the lung. The lung hasn t collapsed yet. The increase in pressure star
ts pushing the lung and the
mediastinum to the opposite side. When it pushes it, it compresses the lung and
it leads to compression atelectasis (it
is not deflated b/c of a hole
there isn t a hole
it s a tear that when the air went
in it went up and it shut on expiration,
and that pos pleural pressure is pushing everything over to the opposite side).
This compression will push on the SVC, right
vent, and left atrium on the opposite side. This will compromise blood return an
d breathing, leading to a medical
emergency. So, it s like filling tire up with air, but cannot get out. Air is fill
ing pleural cavity and cannot get out. It keeps
building up and starts pushing everything to the opp side. With a pos intrathora
cic pressure, the diaphragm will go down
(goes up in spontaneous pneumothorax).
V. Pulmonary Infection
A. Pneumonia
1.
2 kinds
Typical and Atypical
Typical wake feeling normal, then suddenly develop a fever, productive cough
Atypical slow, insidious onset (feel bad over few days)
2.
Community vs. Nosocomial (hospital acquired)
If you get pneumonia in the community and it s typical, it is Strep pneumoniae. If
you get pneumonia in the
community and it is atypical, it s mycoplasma pneumoniae.
Organisms in the hospital (nosocomial) = E coli, Pseudomonas, Staph aureus (will
not get strep pneumoniae in the
hospital).
3.
Productive cough in Typical pneumonia
Reason for productive cough in typical pneumonia: have exudate (pus) and signs o
f consolidation in the
lung Slide: yellow areas with microabcesses which are consolidation in the lung.
Ie lobar pneumonia = see
consolidation in lung, within alveoli, causing consolidation. Therefore, with ty
pical, see consolidation and pus in the
lung. Physical dx tic tools of lung consolidation: decreased percussion, increased
TVF (when the person talks, feel
vibrations in chest
if have consolidation in ie the upper left lobe, will have i
ncreased TVF b/c it is a consolidation,
compared to the other side so, increased TVF indicates consolidation), having an
E to A (egophony) sign (pt
says E and you hear A), whispered pectoriloquy (pt whispers 1, 2, 3 and I will hea
r it very loud with the stethoscope).
Therefore, decreased percussion, increased TVF, egophony, and pectoriloquy = con
solidation.
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gram +
diplococcus (aka di
recover; when pt is
immunocompromised, it leads to reactivation and goes into the apex and produces
a cavitary lesion. There is no
Ghon focus or complex in reactivation TB, only primary TB.
Other things that cavitate in upper lobes:
Which systemic fungus is the TB of the lungs? Histoplasmosis
Which cancer can cavitate in the lung? Squamous Cell carcinoma of the lung
Which bacteria (that has a big mucous wall around it) can also produce cavitatio
ns in the upper lobe? Klebsiella
pneumoniae.
What is acid fast stain staining? Mycolic acids.
So, just b/c something is cavitating the upper lobe, it is not necessarily TB.
C.
Foreign Bodies
If you are standing or sitting up, foreign bodies will go to posterobasal segmen
t of the right lower lobe. This is the
most posterior segment of the right lower lobe.
If you are lying down (MC way to aspirate things), foreign body will go to super
ior segment of the right lower lobe.
If you are lying on the right side, can go to 2 places
or segment of right upper lobe (this is the
ONLY one that is in the upper lobe.
If you are lying down on your left, and aspirate, it will go to the lingula.
Summary:
Sitting/standing = posterobasal segment of right lower lobe
Back: superior segment of right lower lobe
Right: middle or sup segment of right lower lobe
Left: lingula
D.
Abscess
MCC abscess = aspiration of oropharyngeal material
Seen commonly in street people that do not have good dentition, may be drunk and
fall and oropharyngeal material will be
aspirated. Aspirate consists of aerobes and anaerobes, leading to putrid/stanch
smell. The aspirate is a mixture of all
these organisms: Mixed aerobes and anaerobes, fusobacterium, bacteroides. Can ge
t absecces in the lung from
pneumonia: staph aureus, Klebsiella (however, MCC is aspiration), see fluid cavi
ties in lung on x-ray.
VI. Pulmonary Vascular Disease:
A. Pulmonary Embolus
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1. Pneumoconiosis
airborne/dustborne dz s
famous in big cities (LA, NY). Cole work
er pneumoconiosis esp. in west
Virginia/Penn, have an anthrocotic pigment that causes a fibrous rxn in the lung
, leading to restrictive lung dz. Have an
increased incidence of TB, but not cancer.
2. Silicosis Sandblasters get graffiti off things, or work in foundries and deal
with rocks (ie quartz), and break them
down, and breathe in dust, leading to silicoses). Have nodules in the lung that
are hard has rock (literally) b/c there is
quartz in them and it looks like metastatic dz in the lung (silica dioxide
which
is sand in the lung)
again, increased
of TB, not cancer. If pt happens to have rheumatoid arthritis, and also has one
of these pneumoconiosis (ie Cole
workers), have a potential for a syndrome, which is called caplan syndrome. Capl
an syndrome consists of rheumatoid
nodules in the lung (same as extensor surfaces in the arm). Rheumatoid arthritis
commonly involves the lung with
fibrosis. And rheumatoid nodules can form in the lung. The combo of rheumatoid a
rthritis (rheumatoid nodules)
in the lung, plus pneumoconiosis (silicosis/asbestosis/Cole workers) = caplan sy
ndrome.
3.
Asbestos asbestos fibers look like dumbbells (therefore ez to recognize). These
are called ferruginous bodies.
Asbestos fibers coated with iron, therefore can call them either asbestos bodies
or ferruginous bodies. MC pulmonary
lesion assoc with asbestos is not cancer
it is a fibrous plaque with a pleura, w
hich is b9 (not a precursor for
mesothelioma). MC cancer assoc with asbestos = primary lung cancer, 2nd MCC = me
sothelioma, which is a
malignancy of the serosal lining of the lungs. If you are a smoker and have asbe
stos exposure, you have an
increased chance of getting primary lung cancer. This is a good example of syner
gism (other causes of lung cancer
(SCC) include smoking, alcohol). Asbestos + smoker = will get cancer. There is n
o increased incidence of
mesothelioma with smoking (not synergistic). Example: Roofer for 25 years, nonsm
oker (do tell you, but you had to
know that 25 years ago, all the roofing material had asbestos in it; in other pa
rts of NY, many buildings were torn
down, and there was asbestos in the roofing of those buildings, which was inhale
d by many people, and 10-30 years
later they developed primary lung cancer or another complication of asbestosis).
What would he most likely get?
Primary lung cancer (primary pleural plaque was not there). If he was a smoker?
Primary lung cancer. Mesothelioma
takes 25-30 years to develop. Lung cancers take about 10 years to develop. Lung
cancers are more common, and you
die earlier. What is the main cause of asbestos exposure? Roofers or people work
ing in a naval shipyard (b/c all the
pipes in the ship are insulated with asbestos), also in brake lining of cars and
headgear.
4. Sarcoidosis =2nd MCC restrictive lung dz.
Example: classic x-ray lymph nodes (hilar lymph nodes are big), haziness seen, t
oo, which is interstial fibrosis.
Sarcoid is a granulomatous dz that has NO relationship to infection (cause = unk
nown). Causes a noncaseating
granuloma (not caseating b/c no relationship to TB and systemic fungal infection
s). The lungs are ALWAYS involved
(lungs are the primary target organ), and more common in blacks. Example: black
person, 35 y/o, with dyspnea, see
hilar nodes on x-ray, uviitis (blurry vision
this is inflammation of the uveal t
ract this dz always affects something in
the face, and the face the 2nd MC site a lesion will occur with this dz, can als
o involve salivary glands or lacrimal glands
something in the head/neck/face area (behind the lungs). This dz is a dx of excl
usion, therefore must rule out
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means that the TLC will increase, which means that the diaphragm will go down b/
c as the lungs are over inflated, and the
AP diameter will go out. So, with obstructive lung dz, you have increased AP dia
meter and diaphragms go down
(depressed). There is only a certain amount of expansion your chest can go. Even
tually, the chest starts to compress other
volumes (as you trap air and residual volumes go up). So, tidal volume starts de
creasing, vital capacity goes down b/c the
residual vol is increasing and you are compressing other volumes. So, TLC and RV
increases, everything else
decreases. On spirometer, FEV1 is very low (usually 1
normally it is 4). In othe
r words, you have a better FEV1 with
restrictive lung dz b/c you can get air in. The FVC (total amt they can get out)
is 3 liters (vs. 5 liters). When you do a
ratio of FEV1/FVC, the ratio has decreased, hence distinguishing restrictive fro
m obstructive dz s.
Classic COPD x-ray: hard to see the heart, with depressed diaphragms (at level o
f umbilicus), increased AP diameter
dx? Classic obstructive dz x-ray prob getting air out, therefore the diaphragm i
s down and AP diameter is increased.
Example: 3 month old can have this same finding due to RSV
Example: Newborn with Chlamydia trachomatis pneumonia b/c he is trapping air.
B. There are 4 type of obstructive lung dz s: chronic bronchitis, bronchiectasis,
emphysema, asthma. The ones
associated with smoking are bronchitis and emphysema.
1. Chronic Bronchitis
Purely a clinical dx = Pt has productive cough for 3 months out of the year for
2 consecutive years. Where
is the dz? Terminal bronchioles (you have main stem bronchus, segmental bronchi,
terminal bronchioles, resp
bronchioles, alveolar ducts, alveoli). As soon as you hit the terminal bronchiol
es, these are small airway; it is all
turbulent air up to terminal bronchioles. After that, it is parallel branching o
f the airways. The turbulent air hits the
terminal bronchioles and then hits a massive cross sectional airway where you ca
n go diff path s b/c parallel branching
of the small airways. So, the airflow changes from turbulent to laminar airflow.
By the time you hit the resp unit, it is
not moving the air. Most small airway dz s are inflammation of the terminal bronch
ioles, leads to wheeze.
Terminal bronchioles are the site of chronic bronchitis. This is the same area a
s asthma and bronchiolitis. More prox to
the terminal bronchioles, in bronchitis, you will get a mucus gland hyperplasia,
and a lot of crap is coming up (that s the
productive part). The actual area of obstruction is the terminal bronchiole. Hav
e goblet cell metaplasia and mucous
plugs. Think about having one terminal bronchiole and one mucous plug
this is af
fecting a major cross sectional area
of lung b/c all the parallel branches that derive from here will not have CO2 in
them, and they are trying to get air past
the mucous plug, but cannot. So, there is a HUGE vent-perfusion mismatch. This i
s why they are called blue
boaters they are cyanotic. They have mucous plugs in the terminal bronchioles an
d cannot rid CO2.
2. Emphysema
Not in the terminal bronchioles. It is in the resp unit (resp unit is where gas
exchange occurs
cannot exchange
gas in the terminal bronchioles
aka nonresp bronchiole); it is the primary place
for expiratory wheeze and small
airway dz, however. Gas exchange occurs in the resp bronchiole, resp alveolar du
ct and alveoli. Only need to
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ganglion. This is in the posterior mediastinum, therefore will end up with Horne
r s syndrome; as a result, will end up knocking OFF
sympathetic activity
ptosis (lid is lower), anhydrous (lack of sweating), miosis
(in sympathetic, which is fight or flight,
normally have mydriasis, which dilates the pupil
with fight or flight, want as m
uch light as possible, therefore dilating pupil, but this
is cut off, leading to miosis). Do not confuse with SVC syndrome; this is just b
locking off SVC.
Myasthenia has to do with thymoma, which is located in the anterior mediastinum.
Exudate vs. transudate (< 3 grams, without many cells in it)
MCC pleural effusion due to transudate = HF
Exudate = protein > 3 grams, and has cells in it (ie pneumonia s, pulmonary infarc
tion)
CHAPTER 9: GI
I. Diseases of the Mouth
A.
Herpes simplex; Herpes labialis-(fever blisters and cold sores); primary herpes
is a systemic infection. Have fever, viremia,
generalized lymphadenopathy, and goes away; it stays in the sensory ganglia (dor
mant in the sensory ganglia) every now
and then it can come out with stress, menses, whatever, and will form vesicles.
Recurrent herpes is no longer systemic
there is no more fever, and no more lymphadenopathy. Other virus that remain lat
ent herpes zoster
remains latent in
the sensory ganglia; can involve the skin, lips, dermatomes. So, primary herpes
is systemic, recurrent herpes is not.
(No fever = no lymphadenopathy).If we enroot and stain, will see inclusion in he
rpes it is a multinucleated cell with
internuclear inclusions. Biopsy of a multinucleated cell from a pt with HIV, wit
h multiple internuclear inclusions
herpes
esophagitis.
B. Hairy Leukoplakia
This is not an AIDs defining lesion, but IS a preAIDs type of infection
as is th
rush, shingles. Located on the lateral
boarder of the tongue. Has nothing to do with dysplasia (leukoplakia). It is a r
esult of an infection from EBV. So, do not
get the idea that it is a preneoplastic lesion. Start seeing this before the hel
per T cell count get to 200. Rx - Acyclovir
C. Thrush (oral candidiasis)
In an adult, therefore can assume that it is in an immunocompromised patient, wh
ere there is a defect in cellular immunity.
In kids (newborns), they can get it from the mom on the way out. However, it is
not a sign of immunocompromise.
So, adult = IC d
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MC unilateral, ther
Why do you get melana with upper GI bleeds? Upper GI = anything that is a bleed
from the ligamentum of trietz
where
the duodenum hits the jejunum and up. Why is it black? Acid acts on Hb and conve
rts it to hematin. Hematin is black
pigment, leading to melana. This is imp to know, b/c if you have black tarry sto
ols, and its 95% chance that is an upper GI
bleed, and if you play odds, it is prob a duodena ulcer (vs. a gastric ulcer). S
o, Hb is converted by acid to hematin, which is
a black pigment. Vomiting of coffee ground material = blood clots acted upon by
acid and changes to hematin.
Example: Pt, an executive under great stress, and sudden onset of severe epigast
ric pain that radiates into the left
shoulder. First step in work up? Flat plate of the abdomen; see air under diaphr
agm. Odds? Duodenal ulcer. Why did he
have shoulder pain? Air got out, settled under the diaphragm, irritated nerve #4
(phrenic), and got referred pain to the
dermatome (which is the same dermatomes)
D. Rhinitis Plastica: Adenocarcinoma of the stomach
With signet ring cells. Example: 52 y/o female with weight loss and epigastric d
istress. She had an upper gastrointestinal
series, noted that stomach did not move (no peristalsis), and then she died. Dx?
Rhinitis plastica cells that are invading
the wall of the entire stomach, called signet ring cells (which are stained with
mucocarnine cells, are pink
signet cells
are like a diamond ring, and the diamond has been pushed to the periphery). The
mucous is inside, making the cell look
empty, and pushing the nucleus to the side (just like fatty change of the liver)
. However, these are malignant neoplastic
glandular cells, and are characteristic of rhinitis plastica type of gastric ade
nocarcinoma.
Misconception: Krukenberg tumor is not a tumor that is seeding out to the ovary.
This tumor is due to hematogenous
spread to the ovary. There is no such thing as a signet ring carcinoma of the ov
ary (there is no primary cancer of the ovary
that looks like this). The signet ring cells came from stomach cancer that has m
etastasize to ovaries =
Krukenberg tumor.
Most are ulcerative tumors in the lesser curvature of the pylorus and antrum. Le
ather bottle stomach very hard due to all
of the cancer cells and the fibrous response to it.
Gastric cancer is declining in US; other countries it is a primary cancer - Japa
n, b/c smoked products. Other ethnic cancers:
nasopharyngeal carcinoma = china; stomach cancer and HTLV 1 = Japan; Burkitts ly
mphoma = Africa.
If there was a nontender mass in left supraclavicular area and pt with epigastri
c distress one week ago
dx? Metastatic
gastric adenocarcinoma. Cervical cancer can also metastasize here. Left supracla
vicular node drains abdominal organs;
therefore pancreatic cancers but mostly the stomach cancers metastasize there. T
he right supraclavicular node mets are
from lung cancer.
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MCC Hematochezia, with diverticulosis being #1. It s in the cecum b/c law of Lapla
ce (wall stress and radius).
The diameter of the cecum is bigger than any other part of the colon. B/c the di
ameter is greater, the wall stress is
greater. Therefore, putting stress on the vessels in the wall of the cecum, it a
ctually pulls them apart and produces
telangiectasias. As a result, it predisposes to angiodysplasia b/c increased wal
l stress. If one of them ruptures to the
surface, you can end up with significant bleed. A very common cause of Hematoche
zia in older people. So, if
diverticulosis is ruled out, angiodysplasia is probably it.
B. Meckel s Diverticulum/ Small Intestine Dz:
1. Rule of 2 s: 2% of pop n; 2 inches from terminal ileum; 2 ft from the iliocecal v
alve; 2 cm in length; 2 y/o or younger;
and 2% of carcinoid tumors occur in M.D.
MC complication = bleeding. B/c it is a diverticulum, it can be inflamed, and le
ads to diverticulitis. Example:
hematemisis, pain in RLQ area, melana dx? Meckel s (involved melana AND hematemisis
definitely not UC or
Crohn s).
Example: newborn with a sinus and umbilicus was draining poop dx? Persistent vite
lline duct (same as meckel s
sometimes it is open all the way through, therefore there is a communication bet
ween the small bowel and umbilicus, so
feces coming out of umbilicus, which is persistence of the vitelline duct. If yo
u have urine coming out of the vitelline duct,
this is persistence of the uracus. So, feces=vitelline duct, urine = uracus.
C.
MC
MC
MC
Sigmoid Colon
location for cancer in the entire GI tract = sigmoid colon
location for polyps in the entire GI tract = sigmoid colon
location for diverticula in the entire GI tract = sigmoid colon
The area of weakness is where the blood vessels penetrate the valve. The mucosa
and submucosa will herniate right next
to the vessel. This is very bad next door neighbor . When feces are stuck (fecalith
), can erode that vessel, and can see
why diverticulosis is the MCC of Hematochezia
massive lower GI bleed. These exte
nd outside of the lumen, which
is diverticulosis. If you see polyps in the lumen, do not confuse with polyposis
polyps go INTO the lumen, not out.
D.
Diverticulosis
MC complication = diverticulitis; has MANY complications.
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it is a little nubbin
aka hemartomas
Tubular adenoma: looks like a strawberry on stick, therefore has a stalk with st
rawberry, which is the precursor lesion for
colon cancer.
Juvenile Polyp: Slide: coming out of child s butt
venile polyps located in the rectum
and are hamartomas (no precancerous).
Lets say it is an adult and the polyp is sticking out (a reddish mass) dx? Inter
nal hemorrhoids. Rule: internal
hemorrhoids bleed, external hemorrhoids thrombose. Therefore, when you have bloo
d coating the stool, it is internal
hemorrhoid. Internal hemorrhoids are NOT painful, but they do prolapse.
Adult with something reddish sticking out of their butt = prolapsed internal hem
orrhoid. Internal hemorrhoids bleed
and painless, while external thrombose and are painful.
Sessile Polyp (villous adenoma)
looks like the villous surface of the small inte
stine (hence name villous adenoma);
these are lil finger-like excrenses of the small intestine, hence the name villo
us adenoma. These have the greatest
malignant potential, and are usually in the rectal sigmoid. B/c they are villous
/finger like they have a lot of mucous
coating the stool; mucous secreting villous. They have a 50% chance of becoming
malignant. So, tubular adenomas are
precursors for cancer (size determines malignant potential if they are above 2 s
onometers, they are very dangerous) and
villous adenomas lead to cancer, too.
Familial polyposis need to have over 100 polyps to have familial polyposis. This
dz is autosomal dominant, uses APC
suppressor gene, ras, and p53; APC is the major one. Will always get cancer in t
hem, usually between 35-40. Therefore,
will need to prophylactically remove the bowel. The autosomal dominant dz is fam
ous for late manifestations, penetrance,
and variable expressivity (as are all other AD dz s). This means that they will no
t be born with polyps at birth (they start
developing btwn the ages of 10-20; in ADPKD, they do not have cysts are birth, t
hey start developing btwn 10-20; in
Huntington s chorea, do not have chorea at birth, but around 35-40 years, and they
have late manifestations.
Affected colon has polyps and brain tumors = Turcot syndrome (like turban) there
fore, you have a polyposis
syndrome with brain tumor; this dz is auto rec (not dominant).
Gardner s syndrome: Have multiple polyps in there, plus b9 salt tissue tumors: des
moids and osteomas in the jaw.
X. Carcinoid Tumors
Along with auput tumors. All carcinoid tumors are malignant, but have low grade
potential. A lot of it depends on their size and
if they are going to mets. Depends on their size in sonometers
if they are great
er than 2 sonometers they have the ability to
mets. MC location for carcinoid tumor = tip of the appendix
have a bright yellow
color, but they are NEVER the cause
of carcinoid syndrome why? B/c the tip of the appendix will never be greater tha
n 2 sonometers. So, where is the MC
location of carcinoid tumor that CAN be associated with carcinoid syndrome? Term
inal Ileum
they are always
greater than 2 sonometers. What do all carcinoid tumors make? Serotonin. B/c the
appendix and terminal ileum are
drained by the portal vein, the serotonin made goes to the portal vein, goes to
the hepatocyte, is metabolized into 5
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Tumor markers: alpha feto protein is a marker for hepatocellular carcinoma. Can
also use alpha-1 antitrypsin b/c it
is made in the liver (it is increased in hepatocellular carcinoma).
If you have fractionation of bilirubin (less than 20%, 20-50%, and 50+ %), can s
tart d/d; then give transaminase levels
see
how it correlates with liver dz: transaminases correlate with viral hep and conj
bilirubin of 20-50, or obstructive liver dz (alk
phos, gamma glut) and conj bilirubin over 50%.
IV. Viral Hepatitis
A. MC on hepatitis:
MC hep = A (followed by B, C, D, E in that order)
A and E = fecal oral; all the others are transmitted parentally
Hep A = No chronic carrier state
Hep E
ronic
Hep D
Hep A
occur
Hep A
Hep B
Hep C
Hep B
B.
Serology:
HAV: anti A IgM= have hep A; anti A IgG = had it and won t get it again
HCV: anti C IgG Ab s are NOT protective and mean that you have the dz; there are n
o known protective Ab s
HDV: (same as HCV) anti D IgG = have the dz, and no known Ab s will help cure; if
you are anti-D IgG positive it means
you have the active dz now
So, only protective Ab s are HAV, HBV (surface Ab), and HEV.
Hep B (HBV)
First marker that comes up is surface Ag (HBsAg). It comes up about 1 month afte
r you have the infection. You
don t know you have it and are asymptomatic. The enzyme studies are normal. The ne
xt thing that comes up is the
bad guys: E Ag (HBeAg) and HBV DNA, b/c these are only ones that are infective.
Then the first Ab comes up a
lil after the DNA and E Ag, which is core Ab IgM (Anti-HBc) (this is expected b/
c the first Ab against acute
inflammation is IgM). The majority of people with Hep B recover (about 90%); tho
se with HIV+ never recover and will
have chronic cases b/c they have no immune response to knock it off. If you do r
ecover the first things to go away
are E Ag (HBeAg) and HBV DNA. The last of the Ag s that goes away is surface Ag (H
BsAg). So, surface Ag is
the first to come and the last to leave (like a house within a house
look at the c
hart and will see that S Ag is the big
house and E Ag and HBV DNA are the lil houses under big house). In other words,
it is IMPOSSIBLE to be E Ag positive
and S Ag negative (E Ag and DNA come up after S Ag and leave before).
Surface Ab doesn t come up until about 1 month after S Ag is gone, so there is thi
s gap, which is a window with
nothing elevated (only has one Ab there; S Ag, E Ag, HBV DNA are all gone, and S
Ab not there yet). So, how do you
know the pt HAD Hep B? Core IgM doesn t leave
it stays there and becomes IgG over
time. So, the marker for that
window period when all the bad guys are gone and surface Ab hasn t arrived yet, is
core Ab IgM (which tells you
that you HAD Hep B and are in the process of recovery). There is no way you are
infected during this period why?
B/c E Ag and HBV DNA are not there. Therefore, you are not infective it just mea
ns that you HAD Hep B and are in
the process of recovering. YOU ARE NOT INFECTIVE this is between the 5th and 6th
month.
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Never focal, always diffuse. The bumps all over it are called regenerative nodul
es. Know that liver tissue is stable, therefore it s
usually in the Go phase, and something has to stimulate it to go into the cell c
ycle to divide. The liver has an amazing
regenerative capacity. Regeneration of liver cells are hepatocytes with no triad
, no central vein, and no sinusoids. Just wall to
wall hepatocytes which are worthless. Bumps are regenerative nodules, no triad;
there are just wall to wall hepatocytes
surrounded by fibrous tissue. Starts off as micronodular (less then 3 mm) and en
ds up macronodular (over 3 mm). So, have
liver, but cells not working. How is a portal vein gonna be able to empty into t
he liver when there are no sinusoid/triads? It s a
problem portal HTN.
Complications: Pitting edema, ascites, esophageal varices, and metabolic probs (
cannot metabolize estrogen, leads to
gynecomastia). Cannot look at gynecomastia, have to feel it.
Side effects of problems of estrogen metabolism: Side note: There are 3 times in
a lifetime where males can develop
gynecomastia. 1. Newborns males have boobs b/c estrogen from mom; newborn girls
with periods b/c estrogen from, then
drop off, leads to bleeding. 2. Males also get boobs in teens (puberty). 3. Male
s also get boobs when they turn old b/c
testosterone goes down and estrogen goes down, leading to gynecomastia so, get b
oobs (gynecomastia) three times
throughout life, and this is normal. Example: 13 y/o unilateral subalveolar mass
, what is management? Leave it alone.
Gynecomastia is not always bilateral, it is usually unilateral. Women have diff
size breasts b/c each breast has different
susceptibility to estrogen, progesterone, and prolactin. Men do not have breast
tissue, therefore more likely that one will
enlarge, the other will not. Palmer erythema (related to estrogen), spider angio
ma, vit def s, dupatron s contracture in palm
(fibromatosis
increased fibrous tissue around the tendon sheaths, causing finger
s to coil in, commonly assoc with
alcoholics)
Complication of Ascites
adult with ascites spontaneous peritonitis due to E coli
. Child with nephrotic syndrome and get
ascites and spontaneous peritonitis, what is the organism? Strep pneumoniae. So,
adults with ascites and spontaneous
peritonitis = E coli, while kid with ascites and spontaneous peritonitis = Strep
pneumoniae.
XIV. Hepatocellular carcinoma
Nodularity; Cancer in hep vein tributary (ie). This cancer almost always develop
s in the background of cirrhosis. It is very rare
for hepatocellular carcinoma to develop without cirrhosis present. Since alcohol
is the MCC s cirrhosis, is it also the MCC of
cancer? NO. MCC s hepatocellular carcinoma = pigment cirrhosis: hemochromatosis; h
epatitis B and C. This cancer
can produce ectopic hormones
EPO (leads to 2ndary polycythemia), insulin like GF
(leads to hypoglycemia). Tumor marker:
alpha feto protein. Example: pt with underlying cirrhosis, and is stable. But su
ddenly the pt begins to lose wt and ascites is
getting worse. Do a peritoneal tap and it is hemorrhagic (do not assume it is tr
aumatic from the needle, unless they say it). If
there is blood in the acidic fluid it is pathologic bleeding. So, this hx (wt lo
ss, beginning to deteriorate suddenly, blood in
acidic fluid). Know it is hepatocellular carcinoma, but will ask
what test do yo
u do? Alpha feto protein. Many
tumors in liver = mets, prob from lung; lets say it s a nonsmoker, what is the pri
mary cancer? Colon cancer, b/c he is a
nonsmoker, therefore it won t be from a primary lung cancer, so the 2nd MCC is col
on cancer and it doesn t have a high
association with smoking.
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Glomerulus surrounded by proliferating cells that are parietal cells b/c not in
the glomerulus, and has crescent shape, hence
the name crescentic glomerular nephritis. This is the WORST glomerular nephritis
to have b/c in 3 months; pts will
go into acute renal failure and die unless pt is on dialysis. Many dz s have a cre
scentic glomerulonephritis, but the
only one I need to know is Goodpastures; this is a NEPHRITIC dz; this dz has cre
scentic glomerulonephritis on bx
(therefore a BAD dx).
IX. Nephrotic Syndromes:
Pt with casts (fatty casts), polarized specimen with maltese cross this is chole
sterol in the urine. When cholesterol is
polarized, it looks like a maltese cross. These fatty casts are pathonognomic fo
r nephrotic syndrome. Greater than 3. 5
grams protein for 24 hrs, fatty casts in the urine, ascites, pitting edema, risk
of spontaneous peritonitis if you are a child.
Organism? Strep pneumonia in kids, E coli in adults.
A. Lipoid nephrosis aka Minimal Change Dz:
Example: EM of 8 y/o boy that had an URI one week ago, and now is all swollen, h
as pitting edema throughout body
(anasarca) and ascites, normo-tensive, no HTN; saw nothing on renal bx; but then
did a EM
see RBC in glomerular
capillary lumen. So, see endothelial cells, see BM (without electron dense depos
its), podocytes (fused)
fusion of
podocytes is ALWAYS seen in any cause of nephrotic syndrome. Maltese crosses in
urine. Dx? Lipoid nephrosis.
All pt with nephrotic syndrome have hypercholesteremia. Since they have glomerul
ar dz and some of the cholesterol can
get into the urine, some can form casts in the urine. Aka minimal change dz. Why
is this happening? Has lost neg charge
in GBM, therefore albumin can get through. These pts have a select proteinuria t
he only protein in these pt s urine is
albumin, and it is greater than 3.5 grams per 24 hrs. Rx
corticosteroids (usuall
y goes away in 1 year never to come back
again). The MCC nephrotic syndrome in kids.
B. Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis
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Syndrome
dz)
of Henoch Schonlein purpura b/c it is an imm
in buttocks of legs, polyarthritis, GI bleed,
So, adult = renal adenocarcinoma, kid = Wilms tumor; they derived from the proxi
mal tubule and the MCC =
smoking; they make lot of ectopic hormones: EPO, parathyroid hormone (leads to h
ypercalcemia), invade the renal
vein.
Cells are clear, full of glycogen.
Example: flank mass in child, HTN = Wilms tumor; HTN occurs b/c it s making renin;
usually unilateral. Histology: cancer where
pt is duplicating embryogenesis of a kidney everything is primitive. Can see rha
bdomyblasts; likes to mets to lung
If AD, from c some 11, and have 2 classic findings: aniridia (absent iris), and he
mihypertrophy of an extremity (one
extremity is bigger than another)
this is a sign that the wilms tumor has a gene
tic basis.
Papillary lesion in the bladder = transitional cell carcinoma (TCC)
What is the MCC transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder? Smoking
Dye use to look? Aniline dye; what is chemotherapy agent used to Rx Wegener s? Cyc
lophosphamide. What are the
complications of Cyclophosphamide? Hemorrhagic cystitis and transitional cell ca
rcinoma.
How do you prevent this? Mesna.
XVIII. Urinary Tract Infection
MC urine abnormality seen in the lab
Example: arrow pointing to neutrophils in urine; RBC s in it, too, bacteria
(play odds). So, see neutrophils, RBC s and
bacteria. The dipstick will pick up all three of these things.
E coli
+ dipstick for blood due to RBCs. Hematuria is very frequent and sometimes a lot o
f blood comes out (hemorrhagic
cystitis) and most of the time its E coli, but sometimes it can be from adenovir
us.
Also, the dipstick has leukocyte esterase and it s measuring the enzyme in the leu
kocyte.
Most urinary pathogens are nitrate reducers, meaning that they convert nitrate t
o nitrite. On a dipstick, they have a section
for nitrites. B/c E coli is a nitrate reducer, there should be nitrites in the u
rine, which are dipstick + for that.
So, you have a pt, woman or man, who has dysuria, increased frequency, suprapubi
c pain and have a urine sediment of
neutrophils, RBC s, bacteria or dipstick findings of hematuria, leukocyte esterase
pos, nitrate + = UTI
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Varicocele on left side bc spermatic vein connected to left renal vein, wheras t
he spermatic vein on the right is connected to the
IVC; bc of this, the pressures increase, and a varicocele on the left, leads to
increased heat and is one of the most common causes
of infertility
ie what would happen if you blocked the left renal vein? Would de
velop a varicocele. So, if you block the left renal
vein, you will increase the pressure in the spermatic vein and will lead to a va
ricocele.
Torsion
spermatic cord twisting; when there is a torsion of the spermatic cord,
it shortens it. This means that the testicle will go
up into the inguinal canal. This is painful. You will lose your cremasteric refl
ex (in normal male, if you scatch the scrotum, it will
contract, which is lost in torsion of the testicle).
Hydrocele persistence of tunica vaginalis; when you have big scrotum, you don t kn
ow whether its big bc there is fluid in it, or
its big bc there is a testicle in it. So, what do you do? Transilluminate. If it
transilluminates, it is hydrocele. If it doesn t its cancer.
d/d for painless enlargement of testicle : cancer, cancer, cancer!! (why they do
n t even do bx, just remove)
Seminoma
MC (best prognosis); huge cells with lymphocyctic infiltrate. They are
the counterpart of a woman s dysgerminoma.
These will melt with radiation, have little beta hcG; met to paraortic lymph nod
es why? Bc they came from the abdomen, and
that s where they will go.
MC testicular tumor in child? Yolk sac tumor; tumor marker? Alpha feto protein
What is worst testicular cancer? choriocarcinoma
not the same prognosis of a ges
tationally derived choriocarcinma in a
woman
you re dead
Example:: 25 yo male with unilateral gynecomastia and dyspnea. Chest xray reveal
s multiple nodular masses in the lung. So,
gynecomastia and mets dz, - what is the primary cancer? testicle
choriocarcinoma
. Source of gynecomastia: BHCG is like LH, and
therefore it stimulates progesterone in the male, which increases duct growth an
d breast tissue and leads to
gynecomastia
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must do a pregn
Ovarian masses
Surface derived
derived from the surface of the ovary
Germ cell types - dysgerminomas (men have these, too)
Sex chord stromal tumors make estrogens (ie granulosa cell tumors -therefore can
have hyperestrinism which leads to bleeding
and endo carcinomas), some make androgens (sertoli leydig cell tumors of the ova
ry assoc with virulization and hirstuism).
(males just have germ cell tumors)
Follicular cyst
MCC of ovarian mass in a young woman = follicular cyst
Follicle that ruptured, not neoplastic, accumulates fluid and leads to peritonit
is. It is bad if its on the right side bc it can be either
ruptured follicular cyst, appedicitus, ectopic pregnancy (ruptured), PID; look a
t with ultrasound
Under 35 yo, most ovarian masses are b9
Over 35 yo, most ovarian masses have a greater potential of being malignant.
Surfaced derived (overall MC)
MC surfaced derived = serous cystadenoma (B9); serous cystadenocarcinoma (malign
ant)
(these are the MC overall b9 and malignant ovarian tumors)
These are also the MC that are bilateral, and the cystadenocarcinoma has psommom
a bodies (bluish colored
due to apoptosis,
destruction of the tumor cell and replacement with dystrophic calcification). Al
so seen in papillary carcinoma of the thyroid and in
meningioma s
Example:: 65 yo, bilateral ovarian enlargement (remem they tend to arise at this
age)
Any woman that is over 55 and has palpable ovaries is cancer until proven otherw
ise bc a postmenopausal woman should be have
ovaries that are atrophying.
Example:: 62 yo woman with ovarian mass on the right already know its bad bc sho
uldn t have a palpable ovary.
Cystic teratoma
Tooth, sebaceous glands, cartilage, skin, thyroid,,
MC overall germ cell tumor, usually B9
If it is making thyroid, it is called struma ovary
Sex chord stromal tumors
MC = fibromas (B9)
Meigs syndrome: ovarian fibroma, ascites, and right side pleural effusion
goes a
way when you take the ovary out.
Granulosa cell tumor of ovary: low grade malignant tumor; what does the granulos
a cell normally do? It aromatizes androgens and
estrogens, so a granulosa cell tumor is more than likely an estrogen producing t
umor.
Signet ring cells is this a primary cancer, or mets from another site? Site is f
rom stomach called a krukenburg tumor; there is
NO primary ovarian cancer that has signet ring cells.
Gestational Disorders
Placenta
Chorionic villus outside layer = syncytiotrophoblast, clear cells under the outs
ide layer = cytotrophoblast; which is making
hormones? Syncytiotrophoblast.
What hormones is it making? B-hcG and Human Placental Lactogen (HPL)
growth horm
one of pregnancy. Has myxomatous
stroma. Vessels coalesce into umbilical vein, which has the highest o2 content.
Neoplasms of chorionic villus:
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called
Causes of choriocarcinoma:
15% of choriocaricnomas are from preexisting hyadiform mole
25% from spontaneous abortion
25% from normal pregnancy
Hyatidiform moles are b9 tumors of the chorionic villus; choriocarcinomas are a
malignancy of the trophoblastic tissue (do not see
chorionic villi). Loves to go to the lungs and responds well to chemotherapy (ca
n even go away in the presence of mets)
Breast
Picture a schematic with nipple, lactiferous duct, major ducts, terminal lobules
(where milk is made), and the stroma
Nipple = Pagets dz of the breast
Lactiferous duct = Intraductal papilloma (MCC of bloody nipple discharge of woma
n under 50)
b9 papillary tumor, if you press on it,
blood will come out of the areola
Major ducts = where most of the cancers arise from invasive ductal cancers, medu
llary carcinomas, mucinous carcinomas
Terminal lobules (where milk is made)
MC tumor = lobular carnicoma, is famous be
BILATERAL (so, lobular tumors are to the
breast as serous tumors are to the ovary in terms of their bilatterallity); mamm
ography doesn t pic up lobular cancers.
MCC of mass in breast of woman under 50 = fibrocystic change
MCC of mass in breast of woman over 50 = cancer: infiltrating ductal carcinoma (
not intraductal
this means that we are not
picking up the cancer early enough by mammography and picking up in the intraduc
tal phase, and our techniques are insensitive
so we are missing the ductal stage and we are picking up the cancer when it has
invaded to pick up early, need to get at 5mm or
less).
So, if they are intraductal, has a good prognosis
Example: 35 yo woman with movable mass in breast that gets bigger as the cycle p
rogresses = fibroadenoma
These are the most commons in terms of age and location
Slide: fibrocystic change
cysts, lumpy bumpy in breast, more painful as the cycl
e progresses bc they are hormone sensitive
Example:: ductal hyperplasia cannot see; precursor lesion for cancer that are es
trogen sensitive epithelial cells in the ducts (just
like the endometrial glands are estrogen sensitive, the glands lining the ducts
are estrogen sensitive).
Sclerosing adenosis
s)
Fibroadenoma
sign
Example: what if after a long time PTH keeps being made = tertiary hyperparathry
roidism (rare)
Overactivity vs underactivity of glands
Stimulation test: if pt has underactive gland, would use stimulation test to see
if the gland is working.
Supression test: if pt has overactive gland, would use suppression test to see i
f gland will stop working.
Most of the time, things that cause overactivity, we CANNOT suppress them.
There are 2 exceptions where we suppress them, and they deal with overactivity i
n the pituitary gland
1)prolactinoma can be suppressed bc it can prevent the tumor from making prolact
in; bromocriptine suppresses it (dopamine
analog
normally, women do not have galactorrhea bc they are releasing dopamine,
which is inhibiting prolactin (therefore
dopamine is an inhibitory substance
bromocriptine is also used for treating park
inson s bc bromocriptine is a dopamine analog
(which is what is missing in parkinsons dz)
2) Pituitary Cushings: b9 tumor in the pitiuitary that is making ACTH
you CAN su
ppress it with a high dose of dexamethasone.
These are the only two exceptions for a tumor making too much stuff.
(There is no way to suppress a parathyroid adenoma making PTH, or an adrenal ade
mona making cortisol, or a an adrenal tumor
from synthesizing aldosterone these are AUTONOMOUS)
Example: pt with hypocortisolism lets do an ACTH stimulation test
will hang up a
n IV drip and put in some ACTH; collecting
urine for 17 hydroxycorticoids (metabolic end product of cortisol) and nothing h
appens so what is the hypocortisol due to? Addison
dz gland was destroyed
therefore, even if you keep stimulating it, you will not
be making cortisol.
Example: Let s say after a few days you see in an increase in 17 hydroxycorticoids
, then what is the cause of hypocortisolism?
Hypopituitarism
in other words, it s atrophic bc its not being stimulated by ACTH,
but when you gave it ACTH over a period of time,
it was able to regain its function. So, with that single test, you are able to f
ind cause of hypocortisalism.
Can also look at hormonal levels ie Addison s causing hypocortisalism, what would
ACTH be? High; if you have hypopituitarism
causing hypocortisalism, what would ACTH be? Low
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do a schematic of it and
Growth Hormone
When you have a tumor that is expanding in the sella turcica, different releasin
g factors (hormones) decrease in a certain
succession. The first thing that is destroyed is gonadotropin. So, in a woman, w
hat would happen? She would have amenorrhea
(secondary amenorrhea). What if I were a man (what is the analogous condition)?
Impotence; impotence is to a male as
amenorrhea is to a female. Impotence = failure to sustain an erection during att
empted intercourse. The next thing that goes is
growth hormone (which has 2 functions: 1) increases aa uptake and 2) involved in
gluconeogenesis (hormone that produces
bone and tissue growth is insulin like growth factor-1, which is present in the
liver
the liver to release IGF-1 to cause growth of bones linearly and soft tissue); a
n adult with the loss of growth hormone will not get
smaller, but will have the effects of lack of growth hormone: will start to lose
muscle mass and will have fasting hypoglycemia bc GH
is normally gluconeogenic. So, its not there and not contributing is func to glu
cogngeogenesis, leading to hypoglycemia. What
would you see in a child? Pituitary Dwarfism. Would see hypoplasia (incomplete d
evelopment of something). So, pit dwarfisim is
an incompletely developed child, but everything looks normal. What is the best s
timulation test to see if you are GH or IGF-1
defecient? Sleep. You grow when you sleep
exactly at 5 am (that s when GH comes ou
t). So, the best test is sleeping, then
checking blood at 5 am (if it isn t your def).Why is histidine and arginine defici
ent? They are essential to normal growth of a child bc
they stimulate growth hormone. These are basic aa s. This is why wt lifters buy ar
g/his supplements. So, best test is sleep,
followed by measuring arg and his levels. The third hormone to go is TSH, which
leads to hypothyroidism (therefore low TSH and
low T4 cold intolerance, brittle hair, fatigue, delayed reflexes). The next thin
g that goes is ACTH , leading to hypocortisalism. Will
be fatigue will a low cortisol level. Will also lead to hypoglycemia bc cortisol
is gluconeogenic. That last thing to lose is prolactin.
Diabetes Insipidus
Central (lacking ADH) vs Nephrogenic (kidney doesn t respond to ADH)
Central: one of the common causes is car accident, leading to head trauma. The h
ead is shifted and stalk is severed. One of the
first things that goes is ADH bc it is made in the supraopitic paraventricular n
ucleus of the hypothalamus. In the same nerve it is
made in, it goes down the stalk and is stored in the POSTERIOR pituitary. So, if
you sever that stalk, you sever the connection and
leads to ADH def. Also def in all the releasing factors that are made in the hyp
othalamus that stimulate the pituitary, leading to
hypopituitarism (eventually but initially will have s/s of DI = polyurea and thr
ist).
Nephrogenic: have ADH, but doesn t work on the collecting tubule to make it permea
ble to free water. Other polyurea s (DM
mech
= osmotic diuresis, polydipisia mech = drink too much water (psychological probl
em), hypercalcemia leads to polyurea).
Constantly diluting, but will never be able to concentrate urine; SIADH is the e
xact opposite, where ADH is always there, and will
constantly concentrating, and will not be able to dilute. In DI, constantly dilu
ting urine, losing free water, and will never be able to
concentrate the urine. So, you are losing all the water, and serum Na will go up
, correlating with an increased plasma osmolality (bc
most of plasma osmolality is Na).
To test: restrict water in a normal person, if you restrict water, the plasma os
molality will go up to 292 (the upper limit of
normal for the osmolality), 750 urine osmolality -what does that mean? Pt is con
centrating the urine. So, if you are depriving a
normal pt of water, it should concentrate the urine; water is being retained get
into the ECF to get the serum Na into normal range.
Example: pt restricted water and have a 319 and 312 plasma osmolality (which is
the other has an inhibibitory one. So, an overlying symptom that they both have
is pretibial myxedema and GAG deposition. Where
do you see a decrease in GAG s (ie metabolism of GAG s)? Lysosomal storage dzs
rs, Hunters
need lysosomal enzymes for
breaking down dermatan sulfate, etc
Hurle
s/s hypothyroidism
weakness (MC) bc all pts with hypothyroidism have proximal muscle myopathy, so t
hey cannot get up out of chairs , serum CK s are
elevated. Also have brittle hair, course skin, slow mentation, periorbital puffi
ness, delayed reflex, diastolic HTN
Slide: bx of thyroid gland in Hashimotos s no follicle, but do see germinal follic
le bc there is autoimmune destruction of the gland.
There are cytotoxic T cells that destroying it, and are synthesizing Ab s (IgG Abs
, hence you see the germinal follicles), and therefore
looks like a lymph node). Will see a low T4, high TSH, low I 131 (not necessary
to do this test).
Example: pt on estrogen
what will happen to T4? Increase TSH? Normal (no need fo
r I 131 this is bad bc babies thyroid would
take it up and its thyroid would take it up and leads to cretinism)
thyroid hormone is responsible for brain growth in the first year, so it imp to
do thyroid hormone screens to avoid cretinism (will be
severly MR bc brain depends on thyroid hormone for development).
Example: Grave s dz
Example: factitious (taking too much thyroid hormone and have hyperthyroidism)
4 high, TSH low, I 131 low (main factor that
distinguishes from graves)
Goiter
Anytime thyroid is big. Lots cysts.
MCC goiter = Iodine def
Most often due to low iodide levels, so they have hypothyroidism or borderline h
ypothyroidism, so the glands are getting rev d up, T4
goes up and TSH goes down (so TSH will be stimulating it, then not, then it is,
etc..).
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1.
Papillary cancer would show up with a cold nodule, and has Psammoma bodies. Papi
llary carcinomas mets to cervical
lymph nodes next to them. They commonly do this, and have a good prognosis. This
is the only assoc with radiation.
Annie orphan nuclei.
2.
Follicular cancer 2nd MC type, invades vessels. Do not go to lymph nodes. Spread
hematogenously, therefore often go
to lungs and bone.
3.
Medullary carcinoma some cases are sporadic and other cases have AD relationship
; assoc with MEN syndromes
(multiple endocrine neoplasia I, IIa, IIb) Pink stain
stain with congo red and s
ee polarized apple green birefringence =
amyloid A (which came from calcitonin); what is the tumor marker? Calcitonin (wh
ich is the screening test of choice)
Example: where would the cancer be located in the body where the tumor marker is
converted into amyloid? Medullary carcinoma
of the thyroid
MEN I pit tumor, parathyroid adenoma, pancreatic tumor (usually Zolinger Ellison
, leading to peptic ulcer).
MEN IIa
medullary carcinoma, pituitary , pheochromocytoma
MEN IIb medullary carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, mucosal neuroma
How do you screen? Ret protooncogene (unique to coding for receptors in this syn
drome).
Prognosis (best to worst): Papillary>Follicular>Medullary
PARATHYROID GLAND
Pt can have tetany with a normal total Ca. Ca is bound and free
it s the free Ca t
hat is metabolically active (which is true for ANY
hormone the part that is bound is totally metabolically inactive). So, who does
Ca interact with? PTH
So, if Ca is low, the PTH is high, and if Ca is high, PTH is low. Roughly 1/3 of
the binding sites in albumin are occupied by Ca. So, in
other words, roughly 40% of the total Ca is bound to albumin. 47% is ionized Ca
floating around and the rest is phosphate and
sulfates. The ionized Ca is the metabollicaly active form. MCC overall of hypoca
lcemia = hypoalbuminemia. Have low albumin level,
therefore decreased level, and less of albumin binds Ca. So, before you look at
PTH levels, look at albumin levels if that is low, this
is the cause of hypocalcemia. This is not affecting the free hormone level, just
that albumin is decreased. This the same as TBG
being decreased, leading to decreased T4.
Alkalosis (resp or metabolic): have decreased H ions, and pH is increased. What
are the acidic aa s? Glutamate, Aspartate. Why
are they acidic? Have COOH groups (as opposed to basic aa s , which have more basi
c NH groups).
The reason why albumin is such a great binder of Ca is bc it has the most negati
ve charges in the body, bc it has the most acidic aa s
in it. So, if you have an alkalotic state the COOH groups become COO - groups. Bc
if you have less H ions, its COO - . So,
albumin has MORE of a negative charge in an alkalotic state, which means it can
bind more Ca. So, where does it get it from?
Ionized free Ca (so a bunch of ionized free Ca binds to the the albumin). Howeve
r, we have NOT altered the total, just took it. It
doesn t affect the total, but it DOES decrease the ionized Ca level, leading to TE
TANY. So, total is the same, but the ionized level has
decreased. What is the mech of tetany? Have threshold for the AP before the nerv
e is stimulated. Then you have a resting
membrane potential. So, a decreased ionized Ca level will lower the threshold fo
r activating the nerve and muscle. If its -60 for
normal threshold. Pt is partially depolarized, therefore doesn t take a lot to act
ivate the muscle or the nerve (which is the mech of
tetany) so you are lowering the threshold. In hypercalcemia, the opposite occurs
and you are increasing the threshold, so it takes
more ionized Ca to activate the nerve.
PTH on y axis and Ca in x axis
Example: see obese pt with Cushing s symptoms and you think they have Cushings; ho
wever, get a 24 hr urine cortisol test and it s
normal. If it s increased, they truly have Cushings
in other words, they have 99%
sens and specificity.
They will ask about dexmeth suppression test (low vs high dose).
What is dexamethasone? It s a cortisol analog. If you give
dexamethasone to a normal person, it will suppress ACTH. If you suppress ACTH, t
he cortisol levels with be low, indicating the
cortisol levels are suppressible. So, what happens when you give a LOW dose of d
examethasone in a pt with Cushings
will you
suppress their cortisol? No. So, you see a lack of suppression. Therefore pt has
cushing s. However the LOW dose just tells you pt
has Cushings, not what kind they have, so it just a screening test (if you did a
24 hr cortisol urine level, it would be positive).
Remember that there are two endocrine dz s that you CAN suppress
s and prolactinoma.
PITUITARY Cushing
sweat a lot; get a 24 hr urine test for VMA and metenephrine (these are metaboli
c endproducts of NE an Epi (so, anxious, sweating,
HTN). Are there assoc with pheochromocytoma? Yes
MEN IIa and MEN IIb, neurofibro
matosis (ie pt with neurofibromatosis with
HTN what test you get? VMA and metanephrine 24 hr urine, bc high assoc with pheo
).
MC in kids = neuroblastoma (MALIGNANT)
Adrenal Medulla tumors
MC in adults = pheochromocytoma (b9, HTN) (so, adult, HTN, tumor in adrenal medu
lla = pheo); have unstable HTN
anxiety,
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hav
Ulcerative Colitis,
Shigellosis
Psoriasis
Musculoskeletal System
Need to identify crystals in synovial fluid
Gout
Pseudogout
Rhomboid crystals in synovial fluid==pseudogout
But Pseudogout could also have needle-shaped crystals (like those of mono-sodium
urate in Gout) which makes DD difficult. So you
use a special filter to make the whole slide red and then the crystals are made
to look yellow or blue.
When the color of the crystals is yellow when the plane of filter is parallel to
the analyzer= Negatively birefringent =GOUT
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Don t define Gout based on Uric acid level. Elevated uric acid does not necessaril
y lead to gout. About 25% of people might have
elevated uric acid.
Dx: HAS to be by presence of uric acid crystals in the joint.
Treatment: Indomethacin to control inflammation.
Cause: over production (Rx=allopurinol: blocks Xanthine oxidase) or under excret
ion of uric acid (>90% of cases) Rx=uricosuric
drugs like probenecid and Sulfinpyrazone
Chronic Gout = tophus: deposition of monosodium urate in soft tissue malleolus
Very disabling as it erodes the joint.
Rx= allopurinol
Slide: Tophus that was polarized showing MSU crystals
Slide: X-ray of digit showing erosion by tophus
Genetics of Gout:
Multifactorial inheritance
AVOID red meats (full of purines)
AVOID Alcohol. Mechanism:
Metabolic acidosis: uric acid has to compete with other acids for excretion in p
roximal tubule. Alcohol increases all the lactic acid, and
beta hydroxyl butyric acids. So all these acids compete and win against uric aci
d, and get excreted. Uric acid keeps waiting and
waiting; and builds up and causes gout.
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Note the cartilaginous cap on the surface of the bone. This causes a protuberanc
e of the bone. This is the most common benign bone
tumor.
Chondrosarcoma of the hip
MC malignant one
Osteogenic sarcoma
Slide: Note metaphyseal origin of the cancer and extension into the muscle, note
the splinter of periosteum that is elevated which
would correspond to Codman's triangle
Slide: X-ray of proximal humerus showing the "sunburst" appearance of osteogenic
sarcoma that is extending into the muscle,
osteogenic implies that the cancer is making bone
Adolescent, sun burst app, codmans triangle, knee area==Osteogenic Sarcome
Suppressor Gene relationship: Rb suppressor Chromosome 13
Muscular Disorders
Duchenne s Muscular Dystrophy
Gower s maneuver
Elevated Serum CK, Absence of dystrophin protein
Sex linked recessive, missing Dystrophin gene
Variant: Becker s dystrophy: make dystrophin but it is defective
Analogy: alfa 1 antitrypsin def: MCC of HCC in children
Adults get panacinar emphysema: many diff sub types of alfa 1 anti-trypsin:
1) Absent alfa 1 anti-trypsin: get pan acinar emphysema.
2) Alfa 1 anti-trypsin is present but it cannot get OUT of the hepatocytes: so g
et HCC
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th
Myasthenia Gravis
AutoAb against Ach receptor it s an IgG Ab, therefore is an Example: of type II HP
Y, like Grave s, which is an IgG Ab against the
and therefore there is muscle weekness.
muscles of the eye are messed up, leading to diplopia.
esophagus, bc this is where there is STRIATED muscle). Eventually muscle dz prev
ails throughout.
receptor (by definition, this makes it type II). Whether you destroy the recepto
r or just block it is irrelevant. Ach cannot hook into it
The first muscles are the lids, which leads to lid lag. They also get double vis
ion bc
Eventually, they get dysphagia for solids and liquids (gets stuck in upper
Feel energized in the morning and feel tired at night. Tensilon test positive. C
an die.
Rx is acetylcholinestrase inhibitors. By giving an inhibitor, block the breakdow
n of Ach and build up Ach. With few receptors you
have in there, there is a larger chance of hooking up to the receptors and pt do
es well. However, eventually, no receptors there and it
doesn t matter how much Ach is there, so pt is screwed. Then, her only option is a
thymectomy.
The thymus is in the anterior mediastimun. Trick question: they can ask, what is
the pathology? They can describe MG and ask,
what do you expect to see in the mediastinum? Do NOT put thymoma. This is a mali
gnancy of the thymus and does occur in 1520% of cases, but isn t the MC pathology seen in the thymus in a pt with MG. See g
erminal follicles in the thymus (remember, this T
cell country, not B cell country, so its abnormal to have germinal follicles her
e) they are the ones making the Ab causing the MG.
HD,
So, by doing a thymectomy for Rx, you are removing the Ab producing tissue. 1/3
pts get a complete cure. 1/3 get a partial cure,
and 1/3 die bc they waited too long for thymectomy and Rx and didn t have receptor
s, anyway. So, B cell hyperplasia is the MC
thing you see, not thymoma. This where the Ab is being made.
Lupus
Butterfly distribution on the face (malar rash)
Of all the autoimmune dz s this one is the most likely one to have a + ANA (99% sens
itivity). The Ab s you want to order to prove
that its lupus are anti-Smith Ab (which has a 100% spec, therefore no false pos
therefore 100% PPV) for lupus, meaning that if
you test + for this Ab, you have Lupus. The other Ab is anti dsDNA
this not only in
dicates that you have lupus, but also that you
have KIDNEY dz. That has a 98% spec, too. So, these are two good Ab s to confirm l
upus. Morning stiffness is present in lupus
(simulates Rh arthritis/photophobia), rash, pericarditis; LE cell prep
Anti
DNA
Ab s are phagocytosed by neutrophils, and they
have altered DNA. Not specific for lupus (waste of time).
Progressive Systemic Sclerosis/CREST
Tight face, telangiectasia, Raynauds, dysphagia (solids and liquids), dystrophic
calcification, sclerodactly; if kidneys involved, it is
progressive systemic sclerosis, NOT CREST (doesn t involved kidneys).
Dermatomyositis
Racoon eyes, elevated serum CK, rash over the PIP (goutren
c with underlying cancer.
Sjogrens syndrome
Assoc with rh arthritis, autoimmune Ab s destroy salivary glands leading to dry mo
uth, lacrimal glands leading to dry eyes.
Example: bx of lower lip which is a confirmatory test
its looking to see if ther
e is destruction of the minor salivary glands see
lymphocytes (which is confirmatory dx). Ab s are anti-SSa (aka anti-Ro) and anti-S
Sb (aka anti-La) (SS = Sjogren s syndrome).
Anti-ro can also be in lupus pts, and can cross the placenta and disrupts the ba
by s conduction system (leads to complete heart
block).
Skin
Basal cell carcinoma (upper lip)
Squamous cell carcinoma (lower lip)
Psoriasis
silvery lesion that is red and raised. Can involve the hands, scalp
pt
s think they have dandruff (aka seborreic
dermatitis from malasezia furfura), but they really have psoriasis. On black per
son won t see red lesion, will see silver one. Rash
at pressure points
esp the elbow.
Atopic dermatitis
child with allergic diathesis starts dz; have eczema (aka atop
ic dermatitis); type I HPY.
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The most important thing affecting prognosis is depth of invasion (key to progno
sis magic # is .76 mm). If its less than
.76, its not gonna met.
Toxins
2 poisonous spiders
Black widow
Has a neurotoxin causes spasm of the muscles in the upper thighs and abdomen so
strong its almost like tetanus; pain muscle
contractions, esp in the abdomen. There is an antivenom, painful bite
Example: person went down into their cellar, lifted boxes, felt sharp prick on f
inger, and developed contractures over a period of hrs
due to black widow bite.
Brown recluse spider (aka violin spider)
Painless bite, has a necrotoxin, leading to ulcer
So, neurotoxin for black widow, necrotoxin for brown reclous
Where is receptors to androgens? Sebaceous glands (this is why men get more zits
than woman
testosterone will release
lipid rich material which gets into the hair follicle. Then, if you have proprio
num acnei (anaerobe) it has lipases that breakdown fat
from the sebaceous gland and produces FA s that irritate the follicle and end up w
ith acne. So, men more likely to get it bc they have
acne
It all occurs in the erector pili muscle of the skin.
So, there are androgen receptors sebaceous glands and erector pili muscle.
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Meningiomas
Optic nerve gliomas
Syringomyelia
Example: pt that works in factory and one of workers says you are burning your h
and and pt didn t notice this, on exam loss of
musculature (loss of LMN) in intrinsic muscles of the hand, loss of pain and tem
p in cape like distribution across back.
Can t feel pain (not ALS
in ALS, first place of development of loss of muscles is
here, so don t confuse; but ALS is UMN and LMN
loss, PURE MOTOR , so if pt has pain, ie, this is sensory and not ALS)
Big cystic cavity knocking off spinothalamic knocking off pain and temp. can kno
ck off the corticospinal tract and anterior horn cells,
so it will be a COMBO of sensory AND motor loss for syringiomyelia.
Infections
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Mucormycosis
In frontal lobe, therefore from a diabetic in ketoacidosis
Example: special stain on AIDs pt with CD 4 ct of 50, CT showed space occupying
lesion
Dx? Toxoplasmosis
Example: pig herder, and long time problem with focal epileptic seizures (dilati
ng therapy)
multiple calcified and cystic lesions in
brain dx? Cysticercosis
Example: Jacob Cruetzfeltds from prions (mad cow)
ropathologists, neurosurgeons, beef, lettuce
from Arizona (cow manure on it)
Traumatic lesions
Epidural hematoma (above dura) hit in head middle meningeal
have to fracture bon
e (under arterial pressures, can separate
dura from periosteum). When you get 50 mls of blood, you get uncal herniation an
d die. Ie get him, say they are ok, 6 hrs later
epidural hematoma and death
Subdural hematoma rupture of bridging veins betwn dura and arachonoid membrane.
If you have cerebral atrophy, then the
space bwtn the dura and arachnoid membranes is bigger. Bridging veins dangling,
break and get a hematoma. Fluctuating levels of
consciousness. Left untreated lead to dementia. Do CT to r/o epi and subdural he
matoma (also for strokes if its a hemorrhagic
stroke)
Strokes
Slide: Brain: one side is bigger. Atherosclerotic stroke; pale infarct of brain.
At bifurcation, there is an atherosclerotic plaque and
thrombus. No blood flow to brain and it infracted, starts breaking down, no repe
rfusion, so it remains a pale infarct. If the thrombus
did break apart, and reperfusse the brain, the blood in the goes into the area o
f infarction and is called a hemorrhagic infarct.
However, this usually doesn t occur and pale infarcts more common. If no blood, an
d there is infarction, pt is a candidate for
heparin therapy. Over time, if pt survives, ends up with cystic space where ther
e was infarction and this is called liquefactive
necrosis--pale infarct, liquefactive necrosis.
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Lacunar infarcts
small areas on the brain; unusual bc they hit areas of the brai
n. Depending on where in the internal capsule,
can have a pure motor stroke or pure sensory. MC due to HTN
Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
MC demyelinating Dz (autoimmune)
MS
Slide:demylinated: white matter has myelin it, grey doesn t. If you are destroying
white matter, then you ll see grey underneath.
Plaques of MS.
2 ways to demylinate
1) knock off cell that makes myelin in the brain (oligodendrocytes in brain, sch
wann cell in PNS)
viruses do this
subacute
sclerosis, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, HPV they affect the oligo
dendrocyte;
2) can also have Ab s against myelin and not the oligodendrocyte, which is MS pare
sthesias
Nystagmus, ataxia, optic neuritis with blurry vision (MCC of Optic Neuritis= MS
bc demylination of optic nerve)
Internuclear opthalmaplegia (demylination of MLF) - pathognomonic
Spinal tap will show increased protein, normal glucose, increase lymphs
Hydrocephalus Ex Vacuo
Severe atrophy of brain and ventricles look bigger than they should be
Dementia
Alzheimer s Dz
Classic lesion: senile plaque, neurit s, amyloid (Beta!!)
so beta amyloid is toxic
and the more you have the more toxic
pathognomonic of alzheimers, on c some 21, therefore seen in down s, neurofib tangle
s (in any dementia and HD)
Alz probs in higer levels
dementia
Only way to dx is autopsy (confirmation) see senile plaques
Parkinson s Dz
Resting tremor
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