Pathology of Stomach & Small Bowel Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the protective and damaging processes that are commonly deranged in gastric disease

A

1) Pre-epithelium is covered in mucus coat that is protective against hydrogen ions and digestive enzymes.
2) Epithelium has tight junctions between cells that resist the passage of acid/digestive enzymes into the lining of the stomach. If there is damage, mucosal cells w/in the epithelium will migrate the the area and secrete a mucus cap
3) Subepithelium is rich in blood supply that provides nutrients, oxygen and anti-inflammatory agents like prostaglandins to the epithelium

Gastritis results when the mucosal barrier is disrupted. Caused by neutrophilic infiltration of the mucosa. Erosions can be severe enough to cause hemorrhage

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2
Q

List the general features and cases of acute and stress-related gastritis

A

Acute = transient gastric mucosal inflammation. Commonly caused by disruption of the gastric mucosal barrier by NSAIDs, H. pylori, ingestion of harsh chemicals, excessive alcohol consumption, cigarettes, radiation therapy or chemotherapy

Chronic/Stress = less severe and more persistent than acute. Lymphocytes and plasma cells in lamina propria. Most common cause is H. pylori

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3
Q

Understand the pathophysiology, epidemiology and common sequelae of Helicobacter infection

A

Ok, I feel like we have lots of other cards that answer this in other lectures. If I’m wrong, please feel free to fill this ou

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4
Q

Understand the pathophysiology and common sequelae of autoimmune gastritis

A

Corpus restricted chronic atrophic gastritis. Will see lymphocytes and plasma cell infiltrate. Can see intestinal metaplasia

Anti-parietal cell and anti-intrinsic factor antibodies

+/- pernicious anemia

Scandinavian and northern
European descent

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5
Q

Discuss the cause of peptic ulcer disease

A

Chronic gastritis caused by H. pylori infection (70% of pts with PUD are infected)

Other causes: NSAID, cigarette or alcohol use

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6
Q

Discuss the appearance of peptic ulcer disease

A

Chronic, recurring lesions of GI mucosa found in gastric atrum and first portion of duodenum

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7
Q

Discuss the complications of peptic ulcer disease

A

Chronic gastritis → intestinal metaplasia (characterized by a change to a intesintal-type columnar epithelium and “punched-out” goblet cells)→ dysplasia and adenoma polyp formation (progresses from low to high grade dysplasia based on degree of nuclear atypia) → adenocarcinoma

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8
Q

Compare and contrast the appearance of the common types of gastric polyps, their associated conditions, and their relationship to gastric cancter

A

Three types:
1. Hyperplastic: Most common (75%). Result from abnormal proliferation of epithelium and lamina propria in response to chronic gastritis. NO risk for malignant transformation

  1. Fundic glands: Associated with prolonged PPI use. Commonly found in patients with FAP. Benign
  2. Adenomas: Proliferation of dysplastic epithelium secondary to chronic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia of the gastric mucosa. May progress to adenocarinomas
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9
Q

What are the risk factors, epidemiology, associations and natural history of gastric adenocarcinoma

A

Epithelial tumor derived from malignant transformation of gastric epithelium; malignant behavior; associated with chronic gastritis (especially Helicobacter) and diet

Accounts for 90% of all malignant gastric tumors

High mortality unless detected early

Wnt signally pathway activation. Loss of CDH1. Amplification of Her2/neu

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10
Q

Describe the appearance, natural history and molecular features of gastrointestinal stromal tumors

A

Mesenchymal neoplasm derived from interstitial cells of Cajal (pacemaker cells controlling peristalsis)

Most contain a mutation in the c-kit oncogene

Used as diagnostic aid on tissue
Targeted therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib

Variable clinical course – indolent to malignant

Risk assessment: location, mitotic rate, and size

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