Connective Tissue and Joints Flashcards

1
Q

Central Tolerance

A
  • process by which B and T cells that recognize self antigens are either killed or rendered harmless.
  • autoreactive T cells can become regulatory T cells.
  • developing B cells that react to self antigen undergo Ig rearrangement = receptor editing.
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2
Q

AIRE

A
  • autoimmune regulator.
  • induces self antigen expression.
    • mutation ⇒ autoimmune polyendocrinopathy.
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3
Q

Peripheral Tolerance

A
  • via anergy, suppression by regulatory T cells, deletion by activation-induced cell death, or antigen sequestration.
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4
Q

Anergy

A
  • type of peripheral tolerance.
  • irrversible functional inactivation when T cells don’t receive co-stimulatory signals.
  • APC can inhibit T cells through T cell CTLA-4 or PD-1 receptors.
  • B cells lose capacity for antigenic stimulation with lack of T cell help.
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5
Q

Suppression by Regulatory T cells

A
  • type of peripheral tolerance.
  • regulatory T cells: CD4+, CD25, Foxp3 transcription factor ⇒ inhibit lymphocyte activation and function by secreting IL-10 and TGF-beta.
  • mutation in Foxp3 ⇒ severe autoimmune diseases = immune disregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked (IPEX).
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6
Q

Deletion by Activation-Induced Cell Death

A
  • type of peripheral tolerance
  • persistent activation of self reactive T cells ⇒ increased expression of pro-apoptotic molecules or increased expression of FasL.
  • ↑ FasL ⇒apoptosis of T cells by engaging Fas.
  • B cells deleted by FasL positive T cells.
  • mutation in FAS ⇒ autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome.
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7
Q

Antigen Sequestration

A
  • immune-privileged sites that have an impermanent blood-tissue barrier.
    • ex. eye, testis, brain.
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8
Q

PTPN-22

A
  • encodes a tyrosine phosphatase.
  • mutation ⇒ doesn’t counter activity of lymphocyte tyrosine kinases ⇒ excessive activation of lymphocyte tyrosine kinases.
  • implicatd in type I diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis.
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9
Q

NOD-2

A
  • part of sensing mechanism for intracellular microbes.
  • mutationexaggerated inflammation in resonse to normal GI flora.
  • implicated in inflammatory bowel disease.
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10
Q

IL-2 and IL-7 Receptor

A
  • mutation ⇒ affects regulatory T cell development and maintenance.
  • in multiple sclerosis.
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11
Q

Molecular Mimicry

A
  • microbe sharing epitopes with self antigens could cross-react ⇒ damage normal tissues.
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12
Q

Role of Infection in Autoimmune Disorders

A
  • through molecular mimicry
  • tissue injury ⇒ structurally alter self antigens or release normal self antigens ⇒ activate T cells.
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13
Q

Epitope Spreading

A
  • cryptic epitopes = epitopes within self antigens that aren’t normally presented to T cells.
    • have no tolerance since never see the immune system.
    • when become exposed can ⇒ persistent autoimmunity.
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14
Q

TH1 Responses

A
  • macrophage rich inflammation and substantial Ab-mediated elements.
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15
Q

TH17 Response

A
  • neutrophil-mediated injury.
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16
Q

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)

A
  • autoimmune disorder. 9:1 females:male.
  • Abs: ANA, anti-dsDNA, and anti-Smith.
    • 40-50% have antiphospholipid Abs.
    • may bind to cardiolipin ⇒ false positive for syphilis.
    • lupus anticoagulants = anticoagulant in vitro but procoagulant in vivo ⇒ vascular thromboses, miscarriages, and cerebral ischemia (secondary antiphospholipid Ab syndrome).
  • genetic predisposition
  • defective elimination of self reactive B cells and ineffective peripheral tolerance.
  • inappropriate B cell activation by nuclear RNA or DNA TLR
  • environmental factors: UV light exacerbates SLE, estrogen, procainamide
  • pathogenesis: cell injury ⇒ apoptosis and ↑ burden nuclear antigens.
    • defective B and T cell tolerance ⇒ autoantibodies to nuclear antigens ⇒ immune complexes in B cells and dendritic cells.
    • TLR engagement ⇒ cellular activation, cytokine production, augmented autoantibody synthesis ⇒ cell injury = self-amplifying loop.
  • tissue damage via immune complexes (type III hypersensitivity) or via Ab-mediated injury to blood cells (type II hypersensitivity).
  • morphology: involvement of skin, blood vessels, kidneys, CT.
    • see alterations in: kidney, skin, joints, CNS, pericarditis, cardiovascular system, spleen, and lungs.
  • presentation: systemic, chronic, recurrent, febrile illness particularly involving the skin, kidney, serosal membranes, and joints.
    • can have thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, and anemia.
    • characterized by recurrent flares and remissions.
  • tx: immunosuppression.
  • death usually from renal failure or intercurrent infection.
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17
Q

Lupus Kidney

A
  • almost always involved.
  • injury from immune complex deposition.
  • 5 patterns of lupus nephritis with increasing degrees of cellular infiltration, microvascular thrombosis, and vascular wall deposition.
  • ⇒ varying degrees of hematuria, proteinuria, HTN, and renal insufficiency.
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18
Q

Lupus Vessels

A
  • type III hypersensitivity with acute necrotizing vasculitis and fibrinoid deposits involving small arteries and arterioles.
  • Ig, dsDNA, C3 in vessel walls. perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate.
  • chronic = fibrous thickening and lumenal narrowing.
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19
Q

Lupus Skin

A
  • classic = malar erythema.
  • exacerbated by sunlight.
  • basal layer degeneration with dermal-epidermal junction Ig and complement deposits.
  • dermis has variable fibrosis, perivascular mononuclear cell infiltrates, and vascular fibrinoid change.
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20
Q

Lupus Joints

A
  • nonspecific, nonerosive synovitis with minimal joint deformity.
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21
Q

Lupus CNS

A
  • neuropscyh manifestations from damage to endothelium and antiphospholipid antibodies or impaired neural function from autoantibodies to synovial membrane antigen.
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22
Q

Lupus Serositis

A
  • ex. pericarditis.
  • initially fibrinous with focal vasculitis, fibrinoid necrosis, and edema ⇒ adhesions obliterating serosal cavities.
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23
Q

Lupus Cardiovascular System

A
  • pericarditis, myocarditis.
  • classic = nonbacterial verrucous (Libman-Sacks) endocarditis.
    • small warty vegetations on inflow/outflow of mitral/tricuspid valves.
    • can have diffuse leaflet thickening of mitral/aortic valves ⇒ functional stenosis or insufficiency.
  • ↑ incidence of accelerated coronary atherosclerosis from exacerbated risk factors (HTN, hypercholesterolemia) and antiphospholipid Ab-mediated vascular damage.
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24
Q

Lupus Spleen

A
  • splenomegaly with capsular thickening and follicular hyperplasia.
  • penicilliary artery perivascular fibrosisonion-skin appearance.
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25
Q

Lupus Lungs

A
  • pleuritis and/or effusions in 50%.
  • chronic interstitial fibrosis and 2° pulmonary HTN.
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26
Q

Chronic DIscoid Lupus Erythematosus

A
  • cutaneous lesions that mimic SLE
  • 35% have positive ANA
  • deposition of Ig and C3 at dermal-epidermal junction
  • 5-10% develop systemic manifestations.
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27
Q

Sjögren Syndrome

A
  • characterized by dry eyes (keratoconjunctivitis sicca) and dry mouth (xerostomia) from immune-mediated lacrimal and salivary gland destruction.
  • mostly women btw 35-45yrs.
  • 40% are primary syndrome, rest are in association with autoimmune disease (RA most common but also SLE and scleroderma)
  • can have RF, ANAs to ribonucleoproteins SS-A and SS-B
  • injury started by CD4+ T cells to unknown self antigen.
  • EBV and Hep C may be involved as well as HTLV-1
  • morphology: initially periductal lymphocytic infliltrate with ductal epithelial hyperplasia and luminal obstruction.
    • then acinar atrophy, fibrosis, and fatty replacement. lymphoid infiltrate can make lymphoid follicles and germinal centers.
    • can have corneal inflammation, erosion, and ulceration.
    • atrophy of oral mucosa with inflammatory fissuring and ulceration
    • have nasal drying and crusting, potentially septal perforation.
    • _respiratory involvement _⇒ laryngitis, bronchitis, or pneumonitis.
  • presentation: difficulty swallowing food, vision changes.
    • 1/3 have synovitis, pulmonary fibrosis, peripheral neuropathy.
    • renal tubular acidosis and phosphaturia with tubulointerstitial nephritis.
    • adenopathy with pleomorphic lymph node infiltrate ⇒ ↑ risk B-cell lymphoma.
  • dx: lip biopsy
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28
Q

Mikulicz Syndrome

A
  • lacrimal and salivary gland enlargement from any cause.
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29
Q

Scleroderma

A
  • characterized by widespread vascular injury and progressive perivascular/interstitial fibrosis in multiple organs. skin, GI, kidneys, heart liver, lung.
  • 3:1 f:m ratio, peak ages 50-70yrs.
  • diffuse scleroderma = widespread skin involvement, rapid progression, early visceral involvement.
  • limited scleroderma = limited cutaneous involvement, late visceral involvement, benign course.
    • can develop calcinosis, Raynaud’s, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly, telangiectasia, or CREST syndrome.
  • CD4+ T cells respond to unknown antigens and release TGF-beta and IL-13 to activate inflammatory cells and fibroblasts.
    • markers: antitopoisomerase I (in scleroderma and pulm fibrosis); anticentromere (CREST syndrome)
  • hallmark = microvascular injury from direct autoimmune attack or by-product of chronic perivascular inflammation
    • cycles of endovascular injury with platelet aggregation ⇒ vascular smooth muscle and fibroblast proliferation, matrix synthesis ⇒ narrowing
  • fibrosis from ischemic scarring and fibrogenic cytokine elaboration and hyperresponsiveness of fibroblasts to growth factors.
  • morphology: affects skin, alimentary tract, musculoskeletal system, kidneys, lungs, heart.
  • presentation: cutaneous fibrosis, Raynaud’s phenomenon, dysphagia, malabsorption/intestinal pain/obstruction, pulmonary fibrosis ⇒ respiratory or right-sided heart failure, arrhythmias, malignant HTN ⇒ renal failure.
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30
Q

Scleroderma Skin

A
  • diffuse sclerosis with atrophy
  • initially edematous with doughy consistency
  • face = drawn mask
  • fingers = fibrotic, tapered and clawlike with diminished motility.
  • focal vascular obliteration ⇒ ulceration.
  • fingertips may auto-amputate.
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31
Q

Scleroderma Alimentary Tract

A
  • progressive atrophy and fibrosis of muscularis
    • esophagus = rubber-hose consistency.
  • mucosal thinning, ulceration, scarring.
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32
Q

Scleroderma Musculoskeletal System

A
  • inflammatory synovitis ⇒ fibrosis.
  • muscle involvement begins proximally with edema and mononuclear perivascular infiltrates ⇒ interstitial fibrosis with myofiber degeneration
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33
Q

Scleroderma Kidney

A
  • affected in 2/3 pts.
  • 50% of deaths from renal failure.
  • intimal proliferation and deposition of mucinous or collagenous material in vessel walls.
  • HTN ⇒ fibrinoid necrosis with thrombosis and necrosis.
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34
Q

Scleroderma Lungs

A
  • variable fibrosis of small pulmonary vessels with diffuse interstitial and alveolar fibrosis ⇒ honeycombing
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35
Q

Scleroderma Heart

A
  • perivascular infiltrates with interstitial fibrosis ⇒ restrictive cardiomyopathy or arrhythmias
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36
Q

Mixed Connective Tissue Diseases

A
  • subgroup of autoimmune diseases.
  • can evolve into SLE or scleroderma.
  • characterized by:
    • high Ab titers to U1 ribonucleoprotein
    • modest initial renal involvement
    • good initial response to steroids
    • complications = pulmonary HTN, progressive renal disease.
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37
Q

Direct Pathway of Allograft HLA Recognition by Host T cells

A
  • host T cells recognize donor HLA on donor derived APC, usually donor dendritic cells.
  • CD8+ cells recognize HLA type I ⇒ CTL
  • CD4+ cells recognize HLA type II ⇒ TH1 and TH17.
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38
Q

Indirect Pathway of Allograft HLA Recognition by Host T cells

A
  • host T cells recognize donor HLA through host APC.
  • ⇒ DTH mediated by CD4+ cells.
39
Q

Hyperacute Rejection

A
  • recipient previously sensitized to graft antigens (blood transfusion or pregnancy).
  • circulating Ab binds graft HLA ⇒ immediate complement and antibody dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity injury.
    • occurs within minutes to days.
  • organ looks cyanotic, mottled, and flaccid.
  • resembles immune-complex mediated disease: complement and Ig in vessel walls ⇒ endothelial injury, fibrin-platelet microthrombi, neutrophil infliltrates, and arteriolar fibrinoid necrosis ⇒ distal parenchymal infarction.
40
Q

Acute Rejection

A
  • days to months after transplantation or cessation of immunosuppressive therapy.
  • acute cellular rejection = interstitial mononuclear cell infiltrate (macrophages, CD4+, CD8+)
  • acute humoral rejection = rejection vasculitis. newly made anti-donor Ab ⇒ necrotizing vasculitis with thrombosis
    • complement C4D deposition in vascular beds = diagnostic feature.
    • subacute vasculitis = intimal thickening from proliferating fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, and macrophages** ⇒ vascular narrowing and infarction.**
41
Q

Chronic Rejection

A
  • months to years.
  • progressive organ dysfunction.
  • dense obliterative intimal fibrosis ⇒ allograft ischemia.
42
Q

Means to Increase Graft Survival

A
  • HLA matching
  • immunosuppressive therapy blocking T cell activation or co-stimulation, IL-2 production, signaling, T cell proliferation, and inflammation.
  • T cell destruction
  • Plasmapheresis or anti-B cell therapy
43
Q

Hematopoietic Cell Transplants

A
  • for hematologic malignancies, aplastic anemia, or immunodeficiency states.
  • complications = recipient NK cells or radiation resistant T cells, Graft versus Host Disease.
44
Q

Graft Versus Host Disease (GVHD)

A
  • donor lymphocytes recognize host cells as foreign ⇒ CD4+ and CD8+ mediated injury.
  • mostly affects host immune cells (immunosuppression), biliary epithelium (jaundice), skin (desquamative rash), and GI mucosa (bloody diarrhea)
45
Q

Noninfectious Inflammatory Myopathies

A
  • immune mediated disorders characterized by skeletal muscle inflammation and injury.
    • dermatomyositis
    • polymyositis
    • inclusion body myositis
46
Q

Dermatomyositis

A
  • skin and muscle.
  • targets capillaries.
  • lilac discoloration of upper eyelids and periorbital edema with weakness
  • scaling, erythematous patches over knuckles, elbows, and knees (Grotton lesions).
  • weakness in proximal muscles first, bilaterally symmetric.
  • dysphagia in 1/3 pts.
  • can have interstitial lung disease, vasculitis, and myocarditis.
  • 1/4 adults with this have cancer.
  • kids have GI symptoms, 1/3 have calcinosis.
  • morphology: perivascular inflammatory infiltrates with scattered necrotic muscle fibers muscle fiber atrophy = perifascicular atrophy
  • tx: immunosuppression
47
Q

Polymyositis

A
  • mostly in adults.
  • bilateral muscle weakness starting in proximal muscles.
  • cytotoxic T-cell driven myocyte damage
  • auto-Ab against tRNA synthetases.
  • morphology: endomysial inflammation, scattered necrotic muscle fibers, no vascular injury
  • tx: immunosuppressive therapy
48
Q

Inclusion Body Myositis

A
  • begins with distal muscle involvement (extensors of knee, flexors of wrist).
  • can be asymmetric
  • insidious onset, age >50yrs.
  • frequently have intracellular deposits of beta-amyloid and hyperphosphorylated tau proteins = abnormal protein folding.
  • not helped by immunosuppression.
  • morphology: endomysial inflammatory infiltrates are rimmed vacuoles = clear cytoplasmic vacuoles in myocytes surrounded by thin rim of basophilic material.
    • may have amyloid deposits on Congo red stain.
49
Q

Immune-Complex Associated Vasculitis

A
  • deposition of circulating antigen-Ab complexes ⇒ complement activation and recruitment of Fc receptor-bearing cells.
  • see with drug hypersensitivity, viral infections.
50
Q

MPO-ANCA

A
  • aka p-ANCA.
  • Ab against MPO.
  • see in microscopic polyangiitis and Churg-Strauss syndrome
51
Q

PR3-ANCA

A
  • aka c-ANCA.
  • against a neutrophil azurophilic granule constituent.
  • in Wegener granulomatosis
52
Q

Anti-Endothelial Cell Ab

A
  • see in Kawasaki disease
53
Q

Giant Cell (Temporal) Arteritis

A
  • most common vasculitis in USA
  • focal granulomatous inflammation of med and small arteries
    • temporal arteries
    • involve aorta = giant cell aortitis
  • T cell mediated immune response to vessel wall antigens.
  • morphology: granulomatous vasculitis with elastic tissue fragmentation, multinucleated giant cells, intimal fibrosis with medial scarring and luminal narrowing.
  • presentation: headache and facial pain. may have flu-like symptoms with fever, fatigue, weight loss.
    • ophthalmic artery involved ⇒ visual problems and potential blindness.
  • tx: steroids
54
Q

Takayasu Arteritis

A
  • aka pulseless disease.
  • granulomatous vasculitis of med and large arteries
  • transmural fibrous thickening of aortic arch and obliteration of great vessel branches.
  • morphology: irregular aortic thickening with intimal hyperplasia.
    • adventitial perivascular mononuclear cell infiltrates ⇒ medial fibrosis, granulomas, acellular intimal thickening.
    • indistinguishable from giant cell arteritis.
  • presentation: eye and neuro disturbances, weakening of upper extremity perfusion pressures (weak or absent pulses).
    • involves pulmonary artery 50% of time.
    • also in coronary arteries and renal arteries.
    • HTN 2° to renal artery disease.
    • pt <50yrs.
55
Q

Polyarteritis Nodosa

A
  • necrotizing vasculitis of **small to med arteries. **
  • involves kidney, heart, liver, and GI.
  • 1/3 cases have immune complex deposition.
  • morphology: sharply demarcated lesions.
    • induce thrombus ⇒ distal ischemic area
    • temporal heterogeneity.
    • acute lesion = sharply circumscribed arterial fibrinoid necrosis (hyaline in vessel wall) with neutrophilic infiltrates into adventitia.
    • healed lesion = marked fibrotic thickening of artery with elastic lamina fragmentation and aneurysmal dilation.
  • presentation: young adult with nonspecific systemic symptoms (fever, malaise, weight loss) and presentation of symptoms from organ involved.
  • tx: 90% remission with immunosuppressive therapy.
56
Q

Kawasaki Disease

A
  • acute, febrile, self-limited illness of infants and kids. associated with med to large vessel arteritis.
  • T cell hypersensitivity.
  • morphology: sharply demarcated lesions ⇒ thrombosis ⇒ distal ischemic injury.
    • acute lesions = arterial fibrinoid necrosis with neurophilic infiltrates.
    • healed lesions = fibrotic thickening of artery with elastic lamina fragmentation and some aneurysmal dilation.
  • presentation: fever, lymphadenopathy, skin rash, and oral/conjunctival erythema.
    • 20% ⇒ coronary arteritis if untreated = aneurysms that rupture or thrombose ⇒ MI.
  • tx: aspirin and IV gamma globulin to reduce incidence of coronary arteritis.
57
Q

Microscopic Polyangiitis

A
  • necrotizing vasculitis of vessels smaller than PAN (arterioles, venules, and capillaries).
  • temporal homogeneity.
  • most lesions pauci-immune. p-ANCA indicated.
  • morphology: fibrinoid necrosis but vessel may show leukocytoclastic vasculitis (fragmented neutrophilic nuclei around vessels).
    • necrotizing glomerulonephritis and pulmonary capillaritis common.
    • Ig deposition rare.
  • presentation: symptoms depend on vascular bed. include hemoptysis, hematuria and proteinuria, purpura, or bowel pain and bleeding.
  • tx: cyclosporine and steroids.
58
Q

Churg-Strauss Syndrome

A
  • aka allergic granulomatosis and angiitis.
  • small vessel necrotizing vasculitis associated with asthma, allergic rhinitis, peripheral eosinophilia, and extravascular necrotizing granulomas.
  • ANCAs in <50%.
  • lesions resemble PAN but have eosinophils and granulomas.
  • 60% develop cardiomyopathy from eosinophils. causes mortality in 50%.
59
Q

Wegener Granulomatosis

A
  • triad of:
    • necrotizing or granulomatous vasculitis of small to med sized vessels in lungs and upper airway
    • necrotizing granulomas of upper and lower respiratory tract
    • glomerulonephritis
  • c-ANCA in 95%; T cell hypersensitivity
  • morphology: granulomas with geographic necrosis and vasculitis;
    • granulomas coalesce ⇒ nodules that cavitate
    • renal lesions vary from focal and segmental necrosis to proliferative GN.
  • presentation: men >40yrs.
    • 80% 1yr mortality without tx.
  • tx: cyclophosphamide, steroids, TNF antagonist.
60
Q

Thromboangiitis Obliterans

A
  • aka Buerger Disease
  • in heavy smokers <35yrs old.
  • segmental, thrombosing, acute, and chronic inflammation of **intermediate and small arteries and veins in extremities. **
  • T cell hypersensitivity
  • morphology: acute lesions = neutrophilic infiltrates with mural thrombi with microabscesses. giant cell formation and involvement of adjacent vein and nerve.
    • late lesions organized and recanalized.
  • presentation: consequences = nodular phlebitis, Raynaud’s, leg claudication.
    • vascular insufficiency ⇒ pain at rest, skin ulcers, and gangrene.
61
Q

Osteoarthritis

A
  • aka Degenerative Joint Disease
  • progressive erosion of articular cartilage.
  • primary DJD = insidious onset as age, in a few joints.
    • knees and hands in women; hips in men
  • secondary DJD = at any age in previously damaged joint or pts with diabetes, ochronosis, or hemachromatosis
  • pathogenesis: polymorphisms in PG synthesis and WNT signaling. affected by aging, obesity, muscle strenght, joint architecture.
  • phases:
    • chondrocyte injury from age, trauma, biochemical/genetic influence.
    • chondrocyte proliferation and secretion of matrix and inflammatory mediators ⇒ cartilage remodeling and changes in synovium/subchondral bone.
    • chondrocyte dropout and cartilage loss from repetitive injury and chronic inflammation.
  • morphology: articular surface soft with fragments of cartilage and subchondral bone (joint mice)
    • bone eburnation and sclerotic cancellous bone underneath
    • cystic spaces filled with synovial fluid
    • osteophytes capped by cartilage on edge of articular cartilage.
    • Heberden nodes = osteophytes of distal interphalangeal joints. mostly in women.
    • chondrocyte proliferation, ↑ matrix water, ↓ PG content ⇒ fibrillation and cracking of matrix
    • synovium congested with scattered chronic inflammation
  • presentation: insidious and slowly progressive. deep achy joint pain, worse with use, morning stiffness, crepitus, limited ROM.
    • osteophyte can ⇒ radicular pain, muscle spasm or atrophy, and neurologic deficits.
  • no tx.
62
Q

Rheumatoid Arthritis

A
  • chronic systemic inflammatory disease of joints ⇒ non-suppurative proliferative synovitisjoint destruction and ankylosis
  • can impact blood vessels, skin, heart, lungs, and muscles.
  • f:m 3-5:1. peak ages 40-70 yrs
  • morphology: affects joints, skin, and blood vessels.
    • joint: pannus encroaches on hyaline cartilage ⇒ destruction. bridge btw bones ⇒ fibrous ankylosis.
      • hemosiderin deposits and aggregates of fibrin.
      • bone erosion, osteoporosis, subchondral cysts.
    • skin: rheumatoid nodules found in knees, heart valves, lungs, spleen, aorta, and other viscera.
      • fibrinoid necrosis with activated macrophages.
    • blood vessels: high RF titers ⇒ small to med vessel vasculitis.
  • pathogenesis: exposure to arthritogenic antigen ⇒ loss of self-tolerance and chronic autoimmune response.
    • genetic: HLA-DRB1; PTPN22 - tyrosine phosphatase regulating T cell activation.
    • environmental: microbes (EBV, retroviruses, mycobacteria, Borrelia, Mycoplasma); modified host proteins.
    • autoimmunity to type II collagen and glycosaminoglycans with TH1 and TH17 proliferation.
      • auto-Ab to citrulline-modified proteins
      • auto-Ab to Fc of IgG (rheumatoid factor)
    • damage from IFN-gamma and IL-17 by producing IL-1, IL-6, IL-23, TGFbeta, PDE2 and TNF.
  • presentation: non-specific malaise, fatigue, generalized pain ⇒ insidious onset localized joint involvement.
    • small joints first (digits to wrist to ankles to elbows to knees).
    • bilaterally symmetric
    • joints swollen, warm, painful.
    • greatest damage happens in first 5 years.
    • destruction of tendons, ligaments, and joint capsules ⇒ radial deviation of wrist, ulnar deviation of fingers, flexion-hyperextension abnormalities of digits
    • loss of joint stability and ROM.
    • joint effusions, juxta-articular osteopenia, narrowing of joint space.
  • tx: corticosteroids, methotrexate, TNF antagonists
63
Q

RA Joint Morphology

A
  • synovium edematous and hyperplastic with delicate and bulbous fronds
  • pannus of proliferative synovium, inflammatory cells, and fibroblasts encroach on hyaline cartilage ⇒ destruction
    • bridges bones ⇒ fibrous ankylosis that can ossify
  • lesions have dense perivascular mononuclear infiltrate with focal lymphoid aggregates.
  • neutrophils on synovial surface and in synovial fluid.
  • vasodilation and ↑ vascular permeability with hemosiderin deposits and aggregates of fibrin
  • osteoclast activation with bone erosion, osteoporosis, and subchondral cysts
64
Q

RA Skin Morphology

A
  • rheumatoid nodules: firm, non-tender in subcutaneous tissues of areas under recurrent pressure. (elbow)
  • in lungs, spleen, heart valves, aorta, other viscera.
  • central zone of fibrinoid necrosis with palisade of activated macrophages.
65
Q

RA Blood Vessel Morphology

A
  • severe disease and high RF titers ⇒ small to med sized vessel vasculitis
66
Q

Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

A
  • 7 subsets of arthritis in kids under 16yrs. persist at least 6 weeks.
  • differs from RA by:
    • oligoarthritis more common, systemic disease more common, large joints affected, ANA positive, rheumatoid nodules not present.
  • 10% ⇒ functional disability.
67
Q

Ankylosing Spondyloarthritis

A
  • aka Marie-Strümpell disease
  • chronic ankylosing synovitis of vertebrae and sacroiliac joints.
  • m:f 2-3:1 with onset 20-30yrs.
  • progressive course involving **hips, knees, and shoulders. **
  • complications = uveitis, aortitis, and amyloidosis
  • 90% are HLA-B27 positive
  • also associated with IL23 receptor and ARTS1 (codes a peptidase that trims peptides for HLA class I)
68
Q

Reiter Syndrome

A
  • triad of arthritis, nongonoccocal urethritis or cervicitis, and conjunctivitis.
  • typically a 20-30yr old man.
  • 80% have HLA-B27
  • triggered by prior GI or GU infection. symptoms begin several weeks after urethritis or diarrheal illness.
  • asymmetric distribution btw ankles, knees, and feet.
  • chronic disease involves spine.
  • extraarticular manifestations = conjunctivitis, cardiac conduction abnormalities, aortic regurg.
  • some have recurrent arthritis, tendinitis, and fasciitis with significant impairment.
69
Q

Enteritis-Associated Arthritis

A
  • from GI infections with Yersinia, Salmonella, Shigella, or Campylobacter.
  • arthritis appears suddenly in knees and ankles.
  • remits after 1 yr.
70
Q

Psoriatic Arthritis

A
  • in 10% ppl with psoriasis.
  • affects small hand and foot joints but can involve knees, ankles, hips, and wrists.
  • spinal disease in 20-40%.
  • less joint destruction than RA.
71
Q

Bacterial Arthritis

A
  • by gonococcus, staph, strep, H influenzae (kids <2yrs), gram (-) rods.
  • Salmonella in sickle cell pts.
  • single joint affected, usually knee.
  • predisposing conditions: immune deficiency, debilitating illness, joint trauma, chronic arthritis, and IV drug use.
72
Q

Tuberculous Arthritis

A
  • insidious chronic arthritis from hematogenous spread or nearby TB osteomyelitis.
  • involves hips, knees, and ankles.
  • chronic disease ⇒ severe destruction with fibrous ankylosis.
73
Q

Lyme Arthritis

A
  • in 60-80% untreated ppl after weeks to 2 yrs after initial infection by B. burgdorferi.
  • oligoarticular, remitting, and migratory arthritis of large joints (knees, shoulders, elbows, ankles).
  • clears spontaneously or with antibiotics.
  • 10% ⇒ permanent deformities.
74
Q

Viral Arthritis

A
  • may be from direct infection or from autoimmune response to viral infection.
  • HIV-related seems to be autoimmune
75
Q

Gout

A
  • transient attacks of acute arthritis from crystallization of urates around joints ⇒ chronic gouty arthritis and tophi (large aggregates of urate crystals and inflammation).
  • caused by hyperuricemia (>6.8). Only 0.5% of hyperuricemics get gout.
  • pathogenesis: hyperuricemia from overproduction or reduced renal excretion (lack uricase).
    • ↑ risk with **obesity and alcohol. **
    • thiazides ⇒ ↓ urate excretion.
    • also caused by lead toxicity.
    • overproduction: 10% of cases. from ↑ nucleic acid turnover (cancer, psoriasis, tumor lysis). HGPRT deficiency (lack = Lesch-Nylan Syndrome).
    • ↓ renal excretion: 90% cases. ↓ filtration and underexcretion of uric acid. ** URAT1** imporant for reabsorption.
    • deposition of MSU (monosodium urate) affected by temp and intra-articular concentrations of urates and cations. phagocytosed by macrophages ⇒ release IL-1beta ⇒ recruit and activate neutrophils ⇒ acute arthritis.
      • recurrent rounds ⇒ chronic arthritis and tophus formation, cartilage damage, joint compromise.
  • morphology: acute arthritis = dense neutrophilic infiltrate in synovium and synovial fluid. slender, birefringent MSU crystals in edematous and congested synovium and in neutrophils. scattered chronic inflammation.
    • chronic tophaceous arthritis = urates encrust articular surface ⇒ synovial deposits. synovium hyperplastic and fibrotic, ↑ inflammatory infiltrates. ** pannus extends to juxta-articular bone ⇒ erosions, fibrosis, bony ankylosis**.
    • tophi = pathologic lesions. masses of urates, crystalline or amorphous with intense mononuclear inflammation and foreign body giant cells. occur on ear, olecranon, patellar bursae, periarticular ligaments and CT.
    • gouty nephropathy = renal medullary MSU deposition and uric acid stones. obstruction ⇒ 2° pyelonephritis.
  • presentation: yrs of asymptomatic hyperuricemia followed by excruciating joint pain with hyperemia and warmth. usually monoarticular and on big toe, then involves insteps, ankles, or heels/knees.
    • resolves ⇒ asymptomatic intercritical period. usually recur with ↑ frequency and become polyarticular with joint effacement.
    • see with atherosclerosis and HTN. 20% get gouty nephropathy
76
Q

Calcium Pyrophosphate Crystal Deposition Disease (Pseudo-Gout)

A
  • aka chondrocalcinosis
  • age >50yrs; 30=60% >85yrs
  • autosomal dominant = mutated ANKH encoding pyrophosphate transport channel.
  • 2° form associated with trauma, hyperparathyroidism, hemachromatosis, and diabetes.
    • altered matrix synthesis and pyrophosphate degradation
  • similar to gout: crystals formed in cartilage, seed the joint where macrophages engulf them, activate inflammasomes ⇒ IL-1beta.
    • neutrophil recruitment and recurrence ⇒ joint damage.
  • affects knees, wrists, elbows, shoulders, and ankles.
  • morphology: crystals = chalky, white, friable deposits. rarely make tophus. oval blue-purple aggregates, weakly birefringent, geometric shapes.
    • chronic lesions have mononuclear cell infiltrates and fibrosis.
77
Q

Ganglion Cysts

A
  • small, multiloculated cystic lesions of CT near joint capsules or tendon sheaths (wrist).
  • from myxoid degeneration and softening of CT.
  • NOT lined by epithelium. DO NOT communicate with joint space.
78
Q

Synovial Cysts

A
  • herniations of synovium through joint capsule.
  • synovial lining can be hyperplastic with scattered inflammation.
  • Baker’s cyst = in popliteal fossa.
79
Q

Tenosynovial Giant-Cell Tumor

A
  • benign neoplasms involving synovial membranes, tendon sheaths, and bursae.
  • t(1;2) chromosomal translocation fuses CSF1 to promoter for alpha3 chain of collagen type IV ⇒ **overexpress CSF1 **⇒ accumulation of swarms of macrophages.
  • diffuse type = pigmented villonodular tenosynovitis
    • present with knee pain (80%), locking and swelling, ↓ ROM, aggressive ⇒ bone and soft tissue erosion.
  • localized type = giant cell tumor of tendon sheath.
    • solitary painless mass in tendon sheaths of wrist and fingers. 15% have cortical bone erosion.
  • morphology: red-brown to mottled orange lesions.
    • diffuse = synovium is tangled mat of red-brown folds, nodules, and finger projections along articular surface into subsynovial tissue.
    • localized = well-circumscribed nodular tumors that may be attached to synovium by pedicle.
    • neoplastic cells are polyhedral and look like synoviocytes. many macrophages with hemosiderin, multinucleated giant cells.
80
Q

Lipoma

A
  • most common benign soft tissue tumor in adults.
  • soft, mobile, and painless (except angiolipomas).
  • morphology: well-encapsulated tumor of mature adipocyte.
    • rarely large, intramuscular, poorly circumscribed.
  • tx: excision = cure
81
Q

Liposarcoma

A
  • common adult sarcoma.
  • appear age 40-70yrs.
  • large masses in deep soft tissues of proximal extremities and retroperitoneum.
  • three types:
    • well-differentiated = indolent.
    • pleomorphic = very aggressive.
    • myxoid/round cell = intermediate
      • t(12;16) translocation. ** CHOP/TLS fusion gene**.
  • morphology: cells show **fatty differentiation. **
    • lipoblasts mimic fetal fat cells with clear cytoplasmic lipid droplets scalloping the nucleus.
82
Q

Nodular Fasciitis

A
  • aka pseudosarcomatous fasciitis
  • morphology: large, nodular, with ill-defined margins.
    • lesions cellular and highly mitotic with plump, reactive, immature-appearing fibroblasts or myofibroblasts arranged randomly or in intersecting fascicles.
    • myxoid stroma and scattered lymphocytes.
  • presentation: several week history of solitary, rapidly growing, maybe painful mass on volar forearm, chest, or back.
    • rarely recur after excision.
83
Q

Myositis Ossificans

A
  • reactive fibroblastic proliferation with metaplastic bone.
  • morphology: initially looks like nodular fasciitis, then zone of osteoblasts ⇒ deposits of ill-defined trabeculae of woven bone ⇒ well-formed cancellous bone. after ossification, intratrabecular areas have marrow.
  • presentation: after trauma in adolescents and young adults.
    • initially painful ⇒ painless, hard, well-demarcated mass
  • tx: excision
84
Q

Palmar Fibromatosis

A
  • aka Dupuytren contracture.
  • superficial fibromatosis = benign fibroproliferative lesion with abundant dense collagen.
  • M>F.
  • irregular thickening of palmar fascia, bilateral in 50%.
  • attachment to overlying skin ⇒ skin puckering ⇒ slowly progressive flexion contracture of 4th and 5th fingers.
  • morphology: 1-15cm gray-white, rubbery, poorly demarcated mass made of banal fibroblasts in broad sweeping fascicles infiltrating neighboring tissues.
85
Q

Deep-Seated Fibromatosis

A
  • locally aggressive, recurrent neoplasm with little potential for metastasis.
  • mutations = APC or beta-catenin
  • 3 types: extra-abdominal, abdominal, intra-abdominal.
    • extra-abdominal: M=W; in musculature of shoulder, chest wall, back, and thigh.
    • abdominal: in anterior abdominal wall in women during or after pregnancy.
    • intra-abdominal: in mesentary or pelvic walls.
      • particularly in Gardner syndrome.
  • morphology: 1-15cm gray-white, rubbery, poorly demarcated lesion made of banal fibroblasts in broad sweeping fasciles that infiltrate neighboring tissues.
  • tx: surgery, tamoxifen, chemo, radiation.
86
Q

Fibrosarcoma

A
  • in deep soft tissue, usually in extremities.
  • >50% recur, 25% metastasize.
  • morphology: unencapsulated, infiltrative, soft (fish-flesh consistency) masses with focal hemorrhage and necrosis.
    • all degrees of differention: cellular fibromatosis to highly cellular anaplastic appearance.
87
Q

Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma

A
  • fibrosarcoma variant with extensive pleomorphism and storiform architecture.
88
Q

Rhabdomyosarcoma

A
  • most common soft tissue sarcoma of kids.
  • in head and neck or GU tract.
  • aggressive neoplasms.
  • three types: embryonal, alveolar, pleomorphic.
    • embryonal: (60%) most common. kids <10yrs. ** nasal cavity, orbit, middle ear, prostate, and paratesticular** region.
      • parental isodisomy of 11p15 ⇒ overexpression of IGFII.
      • botryoidessubtype in walls of hollow, mucosa-lined structures = better prognosis
    • alveolar: (20%) middle adolescence in deep musculature of extremities.
      • t[2,13] fuses PAX3 to FOXO1a and t[1,13] fuses PAX7 to FOXO1a
    • Pleomorphic: rare. In deep soft tissue of adults.
  • morphology: rhabdomyoblast round or elongated with sarcomeres and myogenic markers.
    • embryonal: soft, gray, infiltrative masses. sheets of round and spindled cells in myxoid stroma.
      • botryoid subtype looks like cluster of grapes.
    • alveolar: **network of fibrous septae **⇒ clusters that look like alveoli. mod sized tumor cells, little cytoplasm.
    • pleomorphic: resemble pleomorphic sarcomas.
  • tx: surgery, radiation, chemo.
89
Q

Leiomyomas

A
  • benign smooth muscle tumors typically in uterus
  • mass<1-2cm, made of fascicles of bland appearing smooth muscle cells, few mitoses.
  • **autosomal dominant disorder **when: multiple cutaneous leiomyomas from arrector pili muscles, with uterine leiomyomas, and renal cell carcinomas.
    • loss of function of fumarate hydratase gene.
90
Q

Leiomyosarcomas

A
  • 10-20% of soft tissue sarcomas.
  • F>M.
  • in skin and deep soft tissues of extremities and retroperitoneum.
  • superficial = small and good prognosis.
  • retroperitoneal = larger, non-resectable ⇒ death by local extension and metastasis.
  • morphology: painless, firm mass.
    • malignant spindle cells in interweaving fascicles; bundles of muscle filaments ultrastructurally and on immunohistochemistry.
91
Q

Synovial Sarcoma

A
  • unknown origin.
  • btw age 20-50yrs.
  • in deep soft tissues of lower extremity (knee and thigh).
  • t[x;18] ⇒ chimeric transcription factor
  • morphology: biphasic = cuboidal epithelial and spindled mesenchymal differentiation.
    • monophasic = mesenchymal.
    • may have calcified concretions.
  • tx: surgery, chemo.
  • good 5yr survival, poor 10yr survival.
92
Q

Plantar Fibromatosis

A
  • superficial fibromatosis = benign fibroproliferative lesion with abundant dense collagen.
  • M>F.
  • irregular thickening of plantar fascia of foot.
  • rare to be bilateral or have contractures.
  • morphology: 1-15cm gray-white, rubbery poorly demarcated mass made of banal fibroblasts in broad sweeping fascicles that infiltrate neighboring tissues.
93
Q

Penile Fibromatosis

A
  • aka Peyronie disease.
  • superficial fibromatosis = benign fibropriliferative lesion with abundant dense collagen.
  • M.
  • on dorsolateral penis ⇒ abnormal curvature and/or urethral obstruction.
  • morphology: 1-15cm gray-white, rubbery, poorly demarcated lesion made of banal fibroblasts in broad sweeping fascicles that infiltrate neighboring tissues.
94
Q

Benign Fibrous Histiocytoma

A
  • aka Dermatofibroma
  • common painless, slow growing lesion of dermis and subcutis.