CANCER- cellular pathology of cancer Flashcards

1
Q

what is metaplasia and give an example

A

A reversible change in which one adult cell type (usually epithelial)is replaced by another adult cell type

barrett’s oesophagus

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2
Q

what is dysplasia?

A

an abnormal pattern of growth in which some of the cellular and architectural features of malignancy are present

pre-invasive stage with
intact basement membrane

increased nuclear cytoplasmic ratio

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3
Q

when is dysplasia common?

A

HPV infection in cervix

in the bronchus and larynx with smoking

acid reflex in oesophagus

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4
Q

define neoplasia

A

An abnormal, autonomous proliferation of cells unresponsive to normal growth control mechanisms

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5
Q

what are the differences between benign and malignant?

A
  1. benign tumours do not invade and do not metastasise
  2. benign tumours are encapsulated. sharp edge with fibrousy capsule and easy to remover
  3. benign usually well differentiated. looks like the tissue from which it comes.
  4. benign tumours are slow growing
    normal mitoses
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6
Q

when might a benign tumour be fatal?

A

if it is in a dangerous place eg. in the brain- meninges, pituitary

if it secretes something dangerous eg. insulinoma tumour of beta cells in pancreas

get infected eg in the bladder

if they bleed

if they rupture eg. liver adenoma

if theyt twist (torts) eg. ovarian cyst

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7
Q

what are the key points of a malignant tumour

A

invade surrounding tissues

spread to distant sites

no capsule

well to poorly differentiated

rapidly growing
abnormal mitoses

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8
Q

what is metastasis?

A

A metastasis is a discontinuous growing colony of tumour cells, at some distance from the primary cancer

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9
Q

what would a benign tumour of surface epithelium be refered to as? eg. skin, bladder

A

papilloma

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10
Q

which parts of the body give rise to adenomas?

A

glandular epithelium

eg. stomach, thyroid, colon, kidney, pituitary, pancreas

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11
Q

what is a malignant tumour derived from epithelium referred to as?

A

carcinomas

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12
Q

what is a benign tumour of soft tissue called? eg. bone

A

osteoma

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13
Q

what is a malignant tumour of connective tissue called?

A

sarcoma

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14
Q

give examples of different sarcomas

A

Fat = LipoSARCOMA

Bone = OsteoSARCOMA

Cartilage = ChondroSARCOMA

Muscle
striated = RhabdomyoSARCOMA,

smooth = LeiomyoSARCOMA

Nerve sheath = Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumour

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15
Q

what are the tumours of white blood cells

A

Leukaemia a malignant tumour of bone marrow derived cells which circulate in the blood

Lymphoma is a malignant tumour of lymphocytes (usually) in lymph nodes. (tissue based)

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16
Q

what is teratoma?

A

A teratoma is a tumour derived from germ cells (stem type cells), which have the potential to develop into tumours of any type of cell (all three germ cell layers)

totipotent

17
Q

what is the difference between teratomas of the gonads in male and females

A

in males they are almost always malignant

in females they are almost always benign

18
Q

what are hamartomas?

A

localised overgrowth of cells and tissues native to the organ.

cells are mature but architecturally abnormal
(normal looking cells but together are abnormal)

common in children, and should stop growing when they do

e.g. bile duct hamartomas, bronchial hamartomas,

19
Q

what is a malignant tumour of soft tissue called

A

sarcoma

20
Q

what do you call a tumour that has no differentiation

A

anaplastic carcinoma