3.2 Pathology of liver disease Flashcards

1
Q

define centrilobular

A

The hepatocytes in the vicinity of the terminal hepatic veain

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2
Q

Define periportal

A

The hepatocytes near the portal tract

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3
Q

What is the portal tract?

A

Sinusoids between the liver plates that contains the main blood vessels running into the liver as well as the bile duct

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4
Q

What is steatosis

A

Accumulation of neutral fat and triglycerides in hepatocytes - occurs in defects in lipid metabolism, lipoprotein synthesis or excess in diet/adiposity (fatty liver)

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5
Q

What is the usual pattern of steatosis in alcoholic fatty liver disease>

A

A mixture of small and large fat droplets which are most prominent around the central vein extending out towards the portal tracts

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6
Q

What is the pattern of injury in shock?

A

Perivenular first to die

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7
Q

what is the pattern of injury with toxins?

A

Necrosis around the portal tract as they are the first exposed to toxins

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8
Q

What pathology changes will you see in the liver from cholestasis?

A

dark bile accumulation in the caniculi and hepatocytes

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9
Q

What will you see in alcoholic hepatitis?

A

Central zone swelling
Spotty single necrosis
Mallory bodies
Neutrophil infiltration

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10
Q

What will you see in alcoholic liver disease?

A

Central/perivenular sclerosis
Progressive injury and cirrhosis (central zone injury which will progress across acinus with collagen deposition to portal tracts, cirrhotic nodule formation)
Cirrhosis (dose related)

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11
Q

What will you see with liver cirrhosis?

A

Nodules of regenerating hepatocytes separated by scars with distortion of blood flow

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12
Q

What are the types of cirrhosis

A

Micronodular (regular): uniform nodules and scars formed from fragments of single liver lobules (uniform confluent necrosis)

Macronodular (irregular): nodules and scars of various sizes formed from multiple adjacent lobules (non uniform) END STAGE

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13
Q

What will you see in portal hypertension?

A

Expansile nodules and scar contraction with central zone fibrosis ad venous outflow obstruction

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14
Q

What are the complications of cirrhosis

A

Portal hypertension
Obstruction of bile excretion
Hepatocyte dysfunction
Loss of normal proliferation - HCC

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15
Q

What mutation causes haemochromatosis

A

90% due to C282Y

The most common is H63D but less likely to develop

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16
Q

What are the complications of haemachromatosis?

A

200 x risk of HCC

17
Q

What is the pattern of acute viral hepatitis?

A

hepatocyte injury, apoptosis, necrosis with mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate, hepatocyte regeration

18
Q

What is the pattern of chronic viral hepatitis?

A

portal/lobular inflammation, piecemeal necrosis, bridging necrosis, fibrosis