Cervical Path And Gyn Cytology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the inflammatory conditions of the cervix?

A

Acute and chronic cervicitis
Due to altered of the vaginal pH causes by overgrowth of other bacteria
No clinical significance if mild

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2
Q

What are endocervical polyps?

A

Common, benign exophytic growth arising within endocervical canal
Can vary from small sessile bumps to large masses
Excision or curettage is curative

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3
Q

What is the characteristic of an endocervical polyp?

A

Loose, fibromyxoid stroma covered by mucus secreting endocervical glands

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4
Q

What are the HPV types?

A

Type 6 and 11- Benign tumors (condylomata acuminata)

Type 16 and 18- malignant tumors

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5
Q

Where does HPV infection occur?

A

HPVs infect immature basal cells in the transition zone

Break in the surface of mature cells allows access to immature basal cells

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6
Q

What are the two oncoproteins associated with HPV?

A

E6

E7

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7
Q

What is the role of E6?

A

Binds to p53 and causes its degradation
P53 is an inhibitor of cell growth
Upregulates telomerase expression- no apoptosis

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8
Q

What is the role of E7?

A

Binds to the activated retinoblastoma protein (rb) causing its degradation
Activated rb is anti Proliferative
Binds to p21 and p27 enhancing cell cycle progression

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9
Q

What is dysplasia?

A

Disordered growth and maturation
Begins at the basal layer snd extends upwards
Nuclei are hyperchromatic with irregular nuclear outlines

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10
Q

What is carcinoma in situ?

A

Full thickness dysplasia with no maturation but no invasion

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11
Q

What are the types of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN)?

A

Low grade squamous intraepithelial lesion

High grade squamous intraepithelial lesion

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12
Q

What are the characteristics of the LSIL?

A

Associated with a productive HPV infection
High level of viral replication
Do not progress directly to invasive carcinoma
60% regress, 30% persist, 10% progress to high grade

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13
Q

What are the characteristics of HSIL?

A

Progressive deregulation of the cell cycle leading to increased cellular proliferation, decreased and arrest maturation
Low rate of viral replication
Treated as high risk for progression to carcinoma

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14
Q

What special stains aid in diagnosis ?

A

P16 immunohistochemical stain shows brown staining of both cytoplasm and nuclei
Characteristic of HSIL and HPV associated squamous cell carcinoma

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15
Q

Who are most affected by cervical carcinoma?

A

Middle aged women , women around 45 years old
Most are squamous cell carcinoma
There is an increase incidence in those who are sexually active early in life
HPV is the biggest risk factor

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16
Q

How does the cells and nuclear cytoplasmic ratio change in different lesions?

A

As the lesions go from low grade to high grade
Cells become smaller
Nuclear cytoplasmic ratio increases

17
Q

How to prevent cervical cancer?

A

Vaccination protect for up to 10 years
All protect against type 16 and 18
Newest vaccine protects against 9 of the most common types of HPV