Neuropathology 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is demyelination?

A

Destruction of myelin sheath surrounding axon, with relative preservation of axons themselves

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2
Q

What is the purpose of myelin?

A

Insulation- allows rapid conduction of electrical impulses along cell membranes

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3
Q

How is demyelination classified?

A

Primary
Secondary
Metabolic
Toxic

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4
Q

The aetiology and pathogenesis of MS are not fully understood, what factors have been implicated however?

A

Environmental

Genetic

Immune

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5
Q

What appearance does the brain and spinal cord have in MS

A

External appearance is usually normal, when surface is cut reveals multiple areas of demyelination called plaques

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6
Q

What is the distribution of plaques?

A

Any site in CNS, commonly seen in CN II, Periventricular white matter, corpus callosum, brainstem and spinal cord

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7
Q

What are the 4 types of MS plaques?

A

Acute active
Chronic (Inactive)
Chronic active
Shadow

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8
Q

What is an active plaque?

A

Evidence of ongoing myelin breakdown with abundant macrophages

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9
Q

What is an inactive plaque

A

Centre contains little or no myelin, astrocytic proliferation and gliosis are prominent

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10
Q

What are shadow plaques?

A

Border between normal and affected white matter not clear, some abnormally thinned out myelin sheaths can be identified especially at outer edges.

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11
Q

How do acute plaques appear?

A

Demyelinated plaques are yellow/brown, with an ill defined edge which blends into surrounding white matter

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12
Q

How do chronic plaques appear?

A

Well demarcated grey/brown lesions in white matter, classically situated around lateral ventricles.

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13
Q

What are the 3 main features of MS histologically?

A

Demyelination

Inflammation - Perivascular with oedema

Gliosis- Astrocytic gliosis prominent feature in MS

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14
Q

What is dementia?

A

Impairment of occupational or social functioning due to development of memory impairment, associated with impairment of intellectual function

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15
Q

What are the primary dementias?

A

Alzheimers
Lewy body
Huntingtons disease
Pick’s disease

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16
Q

What are the secondary dementias?

A

Disorders resulting in secondary changes in CNS resulting in dementia eg vascular, metabolic, infection and trauma

17
Q

What is the macroscopic features of Alzheimers?

A
Cortical atrophy
Widening sulci
Narrowed Gyri
Compensatory dilation of ventricles
Frontal temporal and parietal lobes affected
Brainstem and cerebellum normal
18
Q

Microscopic features of Alzheimer’s

A

Intracytoplasmic neurofibrillary tnagles

Amyloid angiopathy

Amyloid plaques

Extensive neuronal loss with astrocytosis

19
Q

What are the hallmarks of lewy body dementia?

A

Hallucinations and fluctuating level of attention

Fluctuation in severity on day to day basis

20
Q

What are the pathological features of LBD?

A

Degeneration of substantia nigra

Remaining nerve cells contain lewy bodies

Degeneration of cortical areas

Lewy bodies can be detected by immunochemical staining for Ubiquitin protein

21
Q

What are the symptoms of Huntington’s disease

A

Chorea, myoclonus, clumsiness, slurred speech, depression, irritability and apathy

22
Q

Which gene is affected in huntingtons

A

Huntingtin gene of chromosome 4p

23
Q

Histological appearance in Huntington’s?

A

Loss of neurones in caudate nucleus and cerebral cortex, accompanied by reactive fibrillary gliosis

24
Q

What is Pick’s disease?

A

Progressive dementia commencing in middle life (50 to 60), slowly progressing changes in character and social deterioration leading to impairment of intellect, memory and language

25
Q

How is the brain affected morphologically in Picks?

A

Extreme atrophy of frontal and temporal lobes, neurone loss and astrocytosis

26
Q

What are the histological hallmarks of Picks

A

Picks cells (Swollen neurones)

Intracytoplasic filamentous inclusions know as pick’s bodies

27
Q

Symptoms of Picks

A

Personality and behavioural change
Speech and communication problems
Change in eating habits
Reduced attention span

Rapidly progressive illness, may last between 2-10 years

28
Q

What is multi infarct dementia

A

Deterioration in mental functioning due to changes or damage to brain tissue from hypoxia or anoxia as a result of multiple blood clots within the blood vessels supplying the brain