Diseases of the Lower Female Genital Tract Flashcards

1
Q

What inflammation is the hallmark of gonorrhea infection?

A

Exudative purulent reaction (FACULTATIVE intracellular inside neutrophils) followed by plasma cell infiltration + granulation tissue / scarring

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2
Q

What are the sequellae of gonococcal cervicitis vs salpingitis?

A

Cervicitis - few sequelae

Salpingitis - sealing of tube with distension by pus (pyosalpinx), can form tuboovarian abscess. May subsequently scar -> infertility

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3
Q

What neonatal complication is associated with gonorrhea infection of the mother and how is it prevented / treated?

A

Neonatal ophthalmitis (neonatal conjunctivitis)

Prevent / treat with erythromycin eye ointment or silver nitrate (AgNO3)

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4
Q

What are the acute conditions caused by Chlamydia, how does it grow? and how is it diagnosed?

A
  1. Venereal urethritis / cervicitis which can ascend to cause PID
  2. Lymphogranuloma venereum
  3. Trachoma (follicular conjunctivitis of eye), also neonatal conjunctivitis

Grows obligate intracellularly inside mucosal cells

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5
Q

How is Chlamydia diagnosed?

A
  1. Giemsa stain
  2. Fluorescent anti-chlamydial antibodies
  3. PCR, nucleic acid amplification tests
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6
Q

What inflammation is seen in Lymphogranuloma venereum?

A

Vesicle at site ofinfection ulcers and has purulent exudate.

base will have granulomatous inflammation
-> both suppurative and granulomatous inflammation

Swollen inguinal, pelvic, and rectal nodes will be seen

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7
Q

What do herpes virus inclusions look like on histological stain and what stain do you use?

A

Tzank smear from bottom of ulcer

IntraNUCLEAR eosinophilic ground glass inclusions with peripheral chromatin clumping. Often have multinucleated giant cells and moulding (nuclei fit together like puzzle pieces)

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8
Q

Where are molluscum bodies?

A

These will be large, eosinophilic intraCYTOPLASMIC bodies
-> only DNA virus family to replicate in the cytoplasm

See pg 159

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9
Q

Does HPV cause squamous cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma? Which strain is responsible?

A

HPV causes BOTH

-> adenocarcinoma mostly caused by HPV 16 & 18

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10
Q

What are the symptoms of trichomoniasis and how is it transmitted? How is it visualized?

A

It is an anerobic, flagellated protozoan which does NOT form cysts so it is sexually transmitted

Symptoms:
Pruritis with foul-smelling greenish discharge
Inflamed cervix: “Strawberry cervix”

Visualize via wet mounts.

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11
Q

What conditions are associated with vaginal candida infection?

A

Think of sketchy

Candy jar - diabetes
Pill bottle - antibiotic use
Birth control - OCP use (high estrogen levels)

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12
Q

What is chronic atrophic dermatitis also called and who tends to get it?

A
Lichen sclerosis (et atrophicus)
-> commonly seen in postmenopausal women, with possible autoimmune etiology
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13
Q

What does Lichen sclerosis look / feel like?

A

Presents as a white patch (leukoplakia) in a butterfly distribution (symmetric)
-> skin surrounding vulva will be “parchment-like” -> very thin

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14
Q

What are the histologic features of lichen sclerosis?

A

Atrophy of epidermis with absence of epidermal ridges

Replacement of underlying dermis with dense fibrotic collagenous connective tissue

Dense, bandlike (lichenoid) inflammation under epidermis

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15
Q

What is the primary worry with lichen sclerosis?

A

Development of carcinoma of vulva

  • > longstanding diseases can progress to non-HPV related vulvar carcinoma related to a p53 mutation
  • > generally occurs in elderly women
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16
Q

What is VIN / what is it analogous to? What is VIN-1 and VIN-3? What is the cause usually?

A

Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia, analogous to CIN (cervical)

VIN-1 = mild, dysplasia limited to lower 1/3
VIN-3 = full thickness dysplasia

Cause is usually high risk HPV strains

17
Q

What is extramammary Paget disease and how does it present grossly / microscopically?

A

Malignant epidermal cells in the epidermis of the vulva (skin around vagina)

Presents an an erythematous, pruritic, ulcerated lesion around vulva

Microscopically - large clear tumor cells in epidermis

18
Q

How is extramammary Paget disease told apart from melanoma (which can sometimes occur on vulva)?

A

Extramammary Paget disease: PAS+ (stains positive for mucin = carcinoma)
Keratin +, S100-

Melanoma: PAS-, keratin-, S100+ (marker for neural crest derivation)

19
Q

Is there an underlying carcinoma in extramammary Paget disease?

A

NO -> cancer is limited to epidermis

This is in contrast to Paget disease of the nipple, in which this is a sign of underlying breast carcinoma

20
Q

Where does cervical intraepithelial neoplasia tend to arise and why?

A

Arises in the transformation zone (zone between ectocervix (squamous epithelium) and endocervix (glandular epithelium)

Transformation zone is delicate and may have rips / tears which allow HPV to enter and infect the BASAL layer -> required for HPV replication

21
Q

Why are Pap smears so effective and where should they be done?

A

So effective because it takes many years for CIN-1 to progress to CIN-3 and then invasive carcinoma. Typically takes 10+ years for this to arise.

They should be done at the transformation zone for reasons explained before

22
Q

What are the risk factors for CIN and is persistent infection common?

A

Persistent infection is actually relatively rare, and is required to develop CIN

Risk factors: Smoking! Important one
Immunodeficiency -> squamous cell carcinoma of anus or cervix is actually an AIDS-defining illness (CD4 < 500, pg 173)

23
Q

What is seen on histology of condyloma acuminatum?

A

Hyperkeratosis, parakeratosis, and mild dysplasia with koilocytic change (raisinoid, hyperchromatic, perivaculolar clearing)

Warty exophytic structure

24
Q

Where does HPV-related adenocarcinoma arise?

A

Arises in endocervical glandular epithelium

25
Q

What is the hallmark of invasive cervical carcinoma and a feared complication?

A

Invasion of the stroma.

Often, it can invade anteriorly into the bladder wall, leading to ureteral obstruction
-> post-renal azotemia is a common cause of death in advanced carcinoma

26
Q

Other than adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, what is one cancer type that HPV can rarely cause?

A

Small cell carcinoma -> tumor of neuroendocrine differentiation which may show rosette formation. High grade necrosis (like small cell cancer of the lungs)

27
Q

How does the treatment of CIN and invasive carcinoma differ and why?

A

CIN - oftentimes very conservative management with followup Pap smear, or cryosurgery / lazer therapy, or removal of the small area.

This is because CIN is still reversible (though less likely from CIN-1 to CIN-3)

Invasive carcinoma - aggressive management -> hysterectomy and lymph node dissection with radiation therapy.

This is because invasive carcinoma is IRREVERSIBLE.