Pathology 310 PDF
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This document provides notes on pathology, focusing on the respiratory tract. It covers topics such as acute infections, allergic inflammation, chronic infections, and tumors. The notes include descriptions of various conditions and their morphological features.
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# PATHOLOSIS ## RESPIRATORY TRACT ### ACUTE INFECTIONS OF UPPER RESPIRATORY TRACT #### RHINITIS - Manifesting as common cold - Causative organism: Rhinovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, para influenza and influenza virus - Manifestations: Nasal congestion and watery discharge, slight fever - M...
# PATHOLOSIS ## RESPIRATORY TRACT ### ACUTE INFECTIONS OF UPPER RESPIRATORY TRACT #### RHINITIS - Manifesting as common cold - Causative organism: Rhinovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, para influenza and influenza virus - Manifestations: Nasal congestion and watery discharge, slight fever - Morphology: Acute catarrhal inflammation with excess mucus #### ACUTE PHARYNGITIS - Mild: sore throat with common cold - Severe: β hemolytic streptococcus and adenovirus → marked hyperemia and exudate #### ACUTE TONSILLITIS - Common in children - Causative organism: β hemolytic streptococcus - Morphology: - Gross: swelling, redness with spots of pus (tonsillar crypts draining suppurating lymphoid follicles) - Microscopic: acute inflammatory cells with pus in lymphoid follicles - Complications: - Spread: - Direct: (Quinzy peritonsillar abscess, otitis media, pharyngitis, laryngitis) - Lymphatic: lymphadenitis (cervical lymph nodes) - Blood: bacteremia- toxemia- septicemia- pyaemia - Hypersensitivity: to streptococci → rheumatic fever - post streptococcal glomerulonephritis - Chronicity: chronic tonsillitis #### ACUTE SINUSITIS - Proceeded by acute or chronic rhinitis → edema → impairment of sinus drainage → retention of secretions → 2ry bacterial infection → periapical tooth infection → maxillary sinusitis ### OTITIS MEDIA - Causative organism: same as rhinitis - Morphology: - Starts as catarrhal inflammation → 2ry infection → purulent inflammation ### DIPHTHERIA - Life-threatening with pseudomembranous inflammation of throat and tonsils of children - Causative organism: droplet infection with corynebacterium diphtheria - Incubation period: 2- 5 days - Sites: tonsils, soft palate, larynx, trachea - Pathological features: - **Pseudomembranous inflammation:** - Gross: Multiple small yellow foci of necrosis → enlarge & fuse → continues membrane raised and adherent → bleeding ulcerating surface, reforms again if removed → yellow foci of necrosis, adherence & reforms again - Microscopic: dilated congested vessels, edema, fibrin, PMNL's (acute inflammatory cells) - Fibrin network with dead epithelia cells, PMNL's, pus cells and macrpohages - **Acute cervical lymphadenitis:** bilateral separate enlarged mobile soft, tender, painful severs acute toxemia - Complications: - Asphyxia by: edema, membrane, laryngeal spasm - Acute Toxemia: - toxic myocarditis, acute heart failure - cloudy swelling and focal necrosis of parenchymal organs - Hemorrhage and necrosis of supra renal cortex → acute insufficiency - Nerve affection → temporary paralysis of palatine, facial, pharyngeal, laryngeal muscles ## ALLERGIC INFLAMMATION OF UPPER RESPIRATORY ### ALLERGIC RHINITIS - Atopic IgE immune mediated reaction (type I hypersensitivity reaction) - Causes: pollen, dust.... type I hypersensitivity reaction - Gross: edema, erythema, of nasal mucosal membranes - Microscopic: acute allergic inflammation with eosinophils + submucous edema - Complications: - Repeated attacks → nasal polyp rich in plasma cells, lymphocytes, eosinophils ### NASAL POLYP - Recurrent allergic rhinitis → edematous mucosal protrusions rich in: plasma cells, lymphocytes, eosinophils → obstruct airway - Gross: - multiple soft pink polyps projecting from mucosa of nose and sinuses - Microscopic: - Respiratory epithelium: pseudo stratified columnar ciliated with chronic irritation → metaplasia → st. squamous epithelium - Hyperplasia of mucous glands - Thick pink basement membrane - With CT core: thick wide edematous infiltrated by plasma cells, lymphocytes, eosinophils - Complications: - nasal obstruction - 2ry infection - epistaxis ### ADENOIDS - Hyperplastic lymphoid tissue at posterior wall of nasopharynx - Due to chronic infections at children & infants - Effects & Manifestations: - Adenoid face: - Mouth breathing - Opened mouth - short upper lip - protruding upper incisors - narrow nasal openings - absent nasolabial folds - Complications: spread of infections - otitis media - pharyngitis ## CHRONIC SPECIFIC INFECTIONS OF UPPER RESPIRATORY TRACT ### RHINOSCLEROMA - Granulomatous inflammation of the nose may affect larynx, pharynx (laryngoscleroma) - Causative organism: Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis bacteria (endemic at Egypt) - Gross: - Small hard nodular mass or masses filling nasal cavity - Microscopic: - Chronic inflammatory infiltration involving submucosa - Mickulicz cells: predominant cells. Large Macrophages (bacteria multiplies inside macrophages) with foamy cytoplasm with small pyknotic nucleus - Russell bodies: plasma cells with hyaline change (accumulated IGs) - Late: Fibrosis - Complications: - 2ry infections - Ulceration - Nasal obstruction - deformity ## TUMORS OF NASOPHARYNX ### JUVENILE ANGIOFIBROMA: - Uncommon – exclusive At males – during adolescence - Benign mesenchymal tumor of nasopharynx - Extremely vascular → nasal bleeding (epistaxis) - Proliferating fibroblasts with wide blood vessels ## NASOPHARYNGEAL CARCINOMA - Incidence: Rare Common at Chinese, EBV - Histological Variants: - Keratinized squamous cell carcinoma - Non- keratinizing squamous cell carcinoma - Undifferentiated carcinoma: excess lymphocytes at stroma (lymphoepithelioma) The most commonly linked to EBV - Spread: - Direct, lymphatic to cervical LNs late to blood - Prognosis and treatment: - Radiosensitive - Lymphoepithelioma has better prognosis than squamous cell carcinoma with irradiation - Causes: - Trauma - FB - Tumors: angiofibroma - Nasal polyps - Rhinoscleroma - General causes: HTN, hemophilia, leukemia Vit C, K deficiency ### EPISTAXIS: Bleeding from nose ## LARYNX ### ACUTE LARYNGITIS: - Acute catarrhal inflammation - Causes: inhalation of irritant fumes or allergy - Causative organism: para influenza virus is the most common cause At children laryngobronchitis (croup) harsh persistent cough and inspiratory stridor ### TUBERCULOSIS OF LARYNX: - As complication of 2ry pulmonary TB - When sputum is coughed up - Ulcer: Undermined edges with caseous floor ## TUMORS ### SQUAMOUS CELL PAPILLOMA - Benign epithelial tumor - Cause: HPV 6,11 - at children: vertical transmission from infected mother during delivery - at adults or multiple, recurrent esp. at children - Gross: fine finger like surface protrusions - Microscopic: - Papillary thin fibrovascular core covered by hyperplastic stratified squamous epithelium with (hyperkertosis, parakeratosis, acanthosis) ### LARYNGEAL NODULE (SINGER NODULE) - Nodule at middle third of the vocal cords - Etiology: - heavy smoking (unilateral) - singers nodule excessive use of voice (bilateral) - Gross: - Smooth hemispheric protrusion less than 0.5 cm in diameter, firm, covered by mucosa - Microscopic: - Mucosa: covered by stratified squamous epithelium - Subepithelium: vascularized fibrous tissue with pink hyaliniosis - Clinical pic.: hoarseness of voice - Complications: - Hoarseness of voice - Recurrence after removal ### SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMA - > 95% of laryngeal cancers - Common in males > females 7:1 40 years old - Sites: Mostly On vocal cords but may arise above or below vocal cords (supraglottic- infraglottic) - Predisposing factors: - Chronic irritation: smoking, asbestos → dysplasia, carcinoma insitu → invasive carcinoma - Morphology: - Gross: ulcerative fungating mass - Microscopic: - squamous cell carcinomas - Glottic are keratinized and better differentiated than others - Clinically: - Smoker above 40 years old with hoarseness of voice - Complications: - Direct spread: esophagus, trachea, pharynx - Lymphatic to cervical LNs esp. supraglottic (area rich in lymphatics) ## LUNG DISEASES ### PULMONARY INFECTIONS #### ACUTE TRACHEOBRONCHITIS - Causes: - Viral infection: common cold, influenza, measles - Bacteria: streptococci, staphylococci, pneumococci - Pathology: - Chronic irritation: dust, smoking irritant gases - Catarrhal inflammation, congested mucosa with mucoid or mucopurulent exudate #### PNEUMONIA ##### Bacterial pneumonia - Definition: Inflammation of lung parenchyma - Anatomic patterns: two - **LOBAR PNEUMONIA:** - Part or all of a lobe is filled with exudate - By radiograph: consolidation - **BRONCHOPNEUMONIA:** - Patchy distribution of inflammation involves more than one lobe - Cause: initial infection of bronchi and bronchioles + extension into lung alveoli - Clinical picture of pneumonia: - Common Follow viral upper respiratory tract infection - Abrupt onset: high fever, chills, pleuritic chest pain - Muco-purulent sputum - Occasional hemoptysis - **LOBAR PNEUMONIA:** - Acute diffuse fibrinous inflammation of alveoli affects part or all of one or more lobes are homogeneous filled with exudate on radiographs as a lobar consolidation - Causative organism: *Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) > 90%* - Highly virulent affects previously healthy young individuals (middle aged). - Route: airborne by droplet - Pathology (morphology): classic example of acute inflammation - Site: lower lobes or right middle lobe is most involved - Four stages: - Congestion: lasts for 24 hrs - lobe is heavy, red, edema - *Microscopic:* lung alveoli are filled with protein rich exudate, capillaries show hyperemia - Red hepatization: lasts for few days - lung is red solid airless, lobe, liver-like consistency - *Microscopic:* the alveolar spaces are uniformly filled with neutrophils, some lymphocytes and macrophages, red cells, and fibrin - Grey hepatization: lasts for few days - the lung is dry, grey, firm, solid - *Microscopic:* - Lysis of RBC's - accumulation of fibrin → shrinks away from alveoli - **Resolution:** on 8-10 days in untreated cases - liquefaction and absorption of Exudates - enzymatic digestion of inflammatory debris macrophages, coughed up - the lung returns to normal - **Fate:** most cases resolution (not common) - **Complications (not common).** - **1- failure of resolution → Carnification (organization of exudate -> lung becomes like piece of flesh)** - **2- Toxemia: on 9th day acute heart failure due to toxic myocarditis** - **3- Spread:** - **Direct: empyema, pericarditis, mediastinitis** - **Blood:** toxemia, septicemia, meningitis, arthritis, infective endocarditis - **4- Post pneumatic lung abscess & gangrene:** focal necrosis and suppuration, putrefactive organisms - **N.B:** - **Consolidation:** solidification of lung tissue due to inflammatory exudate replacing air in alveolar spaces - When affects whole lobe → solid (liver like = hepatization) #### BRONCHOPNEUMONIA (SEPTIC BRONCHOPNEUMONIA) - ✓ patchy areas of consolidation centered on inflamed bronchioles - ✓ infection of bronchi and bronchioles then extension into lung alveoli - ✓ one or several lobes, basal and bilateral - ✓ nature: Suppurative inflammation - **Etiology:** - **Predisposing factors:** - In extreme of ages: infants, old age - With debilitating diseases: diabetes, cancer, heart failure - Complication of viral bronchitis - **Causative organism:** - Streptococcus pneumoniae. H influenza, staph. Aureus, Klebsiella - Hospital acquired pneumonia: MERSA, pseudomonas, Morophology - **Gross:** - bilateral and basal (lower lobe) - patchy yellow consolidation (purulent) (bronchioles contain pus) - **Microscopic:** - Suppurative (neutrophilic) exudate filling bronchi, bronchioles, alveoli - Alveoli are filled with pus (patchy areas of consolidations) - **Complications (very common):** - Death if debilitated patient - Post pneumatic abscess & spread: empyema, pericarditis, mediastinitis - toxemia: toxic myocarditis - septicemia → meningitis, arthritis, infective endocarditis - Fibrosis: common due to tissue destruction by suppuration - Bronchiectasis: healing of bronchial wall by fibrosis → weak walls → permanent dilatation of lumen by traction on wall by peribronchial fibrosis ### ATYPICAL PNEUMONIA - Viral or mycoplasma pneumonia - Definition: inflammation Confined to alveolar septa and interstitium - Atypical due to absence of consolidation on physical examination and lack of alveolar exudate on radiology - Cause: - Mycoplasma pneumoniae - Virus: influenza virus, adenovirus, syncytial viruses - Pathogenesis: - Attachment of organism to respiratory epithelium then necrosis and inflammatory response - Pathology: - Gross: - Patchy or involve whole lobes - Unilateral or bilateral - Microscopic: - Infiltration by mononuclear lymphocytes, macrophages, few plasma cells confined to interstitium with little or without alveolar exudate - In severe cases: diffuse alveolar damage → formation of hyaline membrane of fibrin (adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)) ### LUNG ABSCESS - Definition: localized suppurative inflammation → cavity containing pus - Causative organism: staph. aureus, pneumococci, klebsiella streptococcus pyogenous - Causes and types: 1ry on healthy lung or 2ry on diseased lung - Aspiration lung abscess: - Aspiration of infected materials during oral surgery - Vomitus during anesthesia - FB or food: Comatose patients or with depressed cough reflex (alcoholic intoxication, debilitated patients) - Morphology: - Single - On right side - Posterior segment of upper lobe or apex of lower lobe - More direct course for aspirated material from trachea when the patient is recumbent - Wall: Irregular congested thin wall - Shreddy yellow pyogenic membrane containing yellow pus - Overlying pleura: pleurisy - **Post pneumatic abscess:** - One or more in background of bronchopneumonia or pneumonias as a complication - **Bronchial obstruction with bronchogenic carcinoma:** - Distal atelectasis and aspiration of blood and tumor fragments - **Pyemic abscess:** - Septic embolism from septic thrombophlebitis of systemic veins or from infective endocarditis of the right side of the heart - Morphology: - Multiple small next to blood vessels. - Yellow spots surrounded by zone of congestion(too small to form cavities) - Direct traumatic puncture or spread from adjacent organ: - Direct spread: from mediastinum - Fate and complications: - Small: resolve with treatment - Rupture into bronchus: hemoptysis & cough of purulent sputum - Rupture into pleural cavity: empyema and pyopneumothorax - Lung Gangrene: irregular cavity with necrotic lining + black color, foul odor - Embolization of septic emboli to brain: meningitis and brain abscess - Chronic lung abscess: well defined thick fibrous wall with smooth wall contains thick inspissated thick pus - 2ry amyloidosis with long standing cases ## GRANULOMATOUS INFLAMMATION OF THE LUNG - 1- tuberculosis - 2- sarcoidosis (autoimmune noninfectious) - 3- fungal: aspergillosis, cryptococcoisis ## OBSTRUCTIVE VS RESTRICTIVE PULMONARY DISEASES ### Diffuse pulmonary diseases #### Obstructive (airway) disease: the ratio of FEV1/ FVC is decreased - limitation of air outflow - increase in resistance due to partial or complete obstruction (excluding tumors and FB) - major diffuse obstructive airway diseases: - emphysema - chronic bronchitis - bronchiectasis - bronchial asthma #### Restrictive disease: Ratio of FEV1 / FVC is near normal. - reduced expansion - (-) total lung capacity. - Causes (two categories): - chest wall disorders in normal lungs: - severe obesity, diseases of the pleura, neuromuscular disorders - Chronic interstitial lung diseases: - pneumoconiosis - interstitial fibrosis, sarcoidosis ## OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG (AIRWAY) DISEASES ### EMPHYSEMA - Permanent over distension of the air spaces distal to the terminal bronchioles + destruction of their walls without fibrosis - Types of Emphysema - **CENTRIACINAR (CENTRILOBULAR) (BRONCHIOLAR) EMPHYSEMA:** - The central or proximal parts of the acini (respiratory bronchioles) are affected, while distal alveoli are spared. - More common and sever In the upper lobes (apical segments). - At cigarette smokers, coal worker pneumoconiosis - **PANACINAR (PANLOBULAR) EMPHYSEMA:** - The whole lobular unit, acini are enlarged, distal to terminal bronchioles from the level of the respiratory bronchiole to the terminal alveoli in the lower lung zones - in a1-antitrypsin deficiency. - **DISTAL ACINAR (PARASEPTAL) EMPHYSEMA:** - proximal portion of the acinus is normal but the distal part is affected. - adjacent to the pleura, at the margins of the lobules (subpleural). Along lobular connective tissue septa - It occurs adjacent to areas of fibrosis, scarring, or atelectasis ### PATHOGENESIS - Imbalance between pulmonary protease and inhibitors - Exposure to toxic substances: tobacco smoke and air pollutants → inflammation → recruit neutrophils, macrophages and neutrophils at same time (--) a1-antitrypsin. - Smoking → (++) elastase release from macrophages and neutrophils at same time (--) a1-antitrypsin - Elastase is checked by antielastases (a1-antitrypsin) - Elastases → degrade extracellular matrix (ECM) and elastic tissue of alveoli - prevent alveoli from returning to normal size after inflation during inspiration - congenital al-antitrypsin deficiency → panacinar emphysema at young age - marked individual variation in susceptibility to emphysema because multiple genetic factors control the response to injury after smoking. ### MORPHOLOGY - **Gross:** - **Panacinar emphysema:** pale, dry, voluminous lungs that obscure the heart. - **centriacinar emphysema:** less voluminous and less pale. the upper two thirds of the lungs are more severely affected. - **Microscopic:** - thinning and destruction of alveolar walls without fibrosis → marked enlarged air spaces - loss of septa → (-) number of alveolar capillaries ### CLINICAL FEATURES - Dyspnea: starts insidious and steady progressive - In patients with chronic bronchitis, cough and wheezing - Barrel chest (++ AP diameter) overinflation - Finger clubbing due to hypoxia - **Complications:** - Pulmonary HTN → RHF → corpulmonale - Respiratory failure: (--) ventilation (--) perfusion - (++) Co2 in blood → acidosis & death - Rupture of bulla → pneumothorax ### Conditions Related to Emphysema: SIBK - **Compensatory emphysema:** Asymptomatic - Loss of lung substance nearby → next to fibrosis or atelectasis → compensatory dilation of alveoli & after surgical removal of a diseased lung or lobe - **Bullous emphysema:** - Not separate type of emphysema - Localized accentuation of any form of emphysema → large subpleural blebs or bullae (large cystic spaces greater than 1 cm in diameter) they may rupture → pneumothorax. - **Senile atrophic emphysema:** asymptomatic - senile loss of elasticity accompanying the atrophic changes at old age - **Interstitial (Medial) emphysema:** - Air collect out of the air spaces in the connective tissue septa of the lung → track into connective tissue of the mediastinum and the neck ### CAUSES: - Spontaneous with a sudden increase in intra alveolar pressure (violent coughing in children with whooping cough). - from perforating injuries of the lung. - Clinical pic: - marked swelling of the head and neck - crepitation under skin - air is absorbed spontaneously ### CHRONIC BRONCHITIS - The diagnosis is clinical: persistent productive cough for at least 3 consecutive months in at least 2 consecutive years - Heavy smokers develop chronic outflow obstruction with associated emphysema ### COPD: chronic bronchitis + emphysema (bronchial asthma is not involved any more in this group) - Etiology: - Heavy smokers - Clinical episodes are associated with low grade bronchial infections H influenza, streptococcus pneumonia ### PATHOLOGY: - hypersecretion of mucus, in the large airways (trachea and large bronchi). - hypertrophy of mucous glands in the trachea and main bronchi → marked increase in mucin-secreting goblet cells - In contrast with asthma, there are no eosinophils in chronic bronchitis. ### BRONCHIAL ASTHMA - Definition: chronic inflammatory disorder of airways with paroxysmal recurrent reversible episodes of bronchospasm due to smooth muscle hyper reactivity + increase mucous production - Types: - **ATOPIC (ALLERGIC): the most common type** - type I IgE-mediated hypersensitivity reaction - is triggered by environmental antigens: dusts, pollen, foods - A positive family history of atopy and/or asthma - Asthmatic attacks are preceded by allergic rhinitis, urticaria, or eczema. - A skin test: + ve - **NONATOPIC:** hyper reactivity of airway can be triggered by respiratory infections (viral) + chemical irritation - no family history - serum Ig E is not elevated - **ASPIRIN INDUCED:** - present with triad rhinitis, sinusitis and asthma after exposure to aspirin ### MORPHOLOGY: from autopsy of prolonged sever attack (status asthmaticus) - Gross: - lungs are overinflated - bronchial wall: Thick swollen red - Bronchial lumen: Occlusion by large amount of thick, mucous plugs. - Histologically: - Mucous plugs contain whorls of shed epithelium (Curschmann spirals). - Numerous eosinophils - Charcot-Leyden crystals (derived from eosinophils) - Bronchial wall shows: - Thickening of basement membrane - hypertrophy of the submucosal glands - Hypertrophy and/or hyperplasia of the bronchial smooth muscles ### CLINICAL FEATURES - Wheezing - Cough with scanty tenacious mucous - Repeated attacks of bronchial inflammation → central airway obstruction due to airflow obstruction. - Prolonged emphysema → Status asthmaticus → death from respiratory failure ### BRONCHIECTASIS - permanent dilation of medium sized bronchi and bronchioles associated with chronic suppurative infection - caused by destruction of the muscle and the supporting elastic tissue - Etiology: - **Congenital or hereditary conditions:** - **KARTAGENER SYNDROME:** - Rare hereditary disorder associated with bronchiectasis. ### PATHOGENESIS - Two processes any one of them can come first: Obstruction + chronic persistent infection. - Septic bronchopneumonia: sever persistent suppurative necrotizing inflammation in the bronchi or bronchioles - loss of cough reflex - accumulation of secretions - inflammation of wall → weakening of wall by fibrosis - superimposed infection → damage of weak walls → dilatation - peribronchial fibrosis → traction (-) clearance and accumulation of secretions → obstruction by FB or cancer (--) bronchial wall → Collapsed lung parenchyma with weak bronchial wall - Intrathoracic negative pressure with each inspiration → irreversible dilation. - **MORPHOLOGY** - Gross: bilateral & sever at peripheral lower lobes - Lower lobes bilaterally more usual diameter and bronchioles. - Airways are dilated four times their distal bronchi - bronchi appear thickened with suppuration - Pleura: Thickening and fibrosis with adhesions (subpleural ectatic bronchi) - Dilated bronchi could be seen From hilum to the pleura - Types: - Saccular bronchiectasis: apart of circumference of a segment → sac like dilatation - Fusiform bronchiectasis: the whole circumference of segment of the bronchus - Cylindrical bronchiectasis: the whole circumference of the whole length of bronchus - Microscopic: - Bronchi: - lumen filled with pus & blood - epithelial lining → shows areas of ulceration. - Intense acute and chronic inflammatory exudate - Alveoli: adjacent → fibrosis. Others → compensatory emphysema - pleura: fibrosis and adhesions - Clinical Features - episodic and precipitated by upper respiratory tract infections. - severe, persistent cough with mucopurulent sputum - cough can be associated with morning rising, positional changes → drain collected pus and secretions into bronchi. - Culture: mixed flora: staph. Aureus, strept. Cocci, pneumococci, H. influenza, pseudomonas aeruginosa. - **Complications:** - frank hemoptysis with foul smelling, yellow red sputum - lung abscess - lung gangrene - spread: empyema, pericarditis, mediastinitis, Metastatic brain abscesses - bilateral lung fibrosis → PHT → RHF → cor pulmonale - Secondary reactive amyloidosis - Squamous metaplasia → squamous lung carcinoma ## (RESTRICTIVE, INFILTRATIVE) LUNG DISEASES ### CHRONIC INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASES (CILDS) - reduced expansion of the lung - Reduction in total lung capacity. - Chronic interstitial diseases: heterogeneous group of disorders (many are unknown causes) - Bilateral - Patchy - chronic involvement of interstitium of alveolar walls - The hallmark features: - (--) compliance → stiff lung so more pressure to expand the lungs → main clinical presentation is dyspnea, cyanosis - Damage to the alveolar epithelium and interstitial vasculature → (--) ventilation perfusion ratio → hypoxia. - Scarring → "honeycomb" lung. - Chest radiographs X rays: diffuse small tiny nodules, "ground glass shadows." - End with respiratory failure, pulmonary hypertension and cor pulmonale - Types: - PS CIN - 1- idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis - 2-Non-specific chronic interstitial pneumonia - 3-Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia - 4-Pulmonary involvement in collagen disease as RA, SLE - 5-Sarcoidosis - 6-Pneumoconiosis ### PNEUMOCONIOSIS - ✓ Lung disease that is caused by Inhalation of dust (organic and inorganic (minerals)). - **COAL WORKERS' PNEUMOCONIOSIS:** - Was common at coal workers Now is reduced - **Simple Anthracosis:** - Coal dust pigments are taken by alveolar macrophages - carbon-carrying macrophages: dust cells - **Macules and nodules:** - coal dust laden macrophages with delicate collagen fibers - centrilobular emphysema - **Progressive massive fibrosis:** - Complicated stage - Fibrotic nodules filled with necrotic black fluid. - SILICOSIS silica pesent in sand - the most prevalent chronic occupational lung disease - exposure to free silica dust - in rock mining, sand blasting glass manufacturers, stone cutters - silica is engulfed by alveolar macrophages → die & release their proteolytic enzymes → damage of lung tissue followed by fibrosis - *Silicotic nodules:* whorling fibrosis in which silica can be detected by polarized light - Finally → honey comb pattern - Silicosis is associated with increased susceptibility to tuberculosis silicotuberculosis. - ASBESTOSIS: used for insulation, At brake linings and other friction materials - inhalation of asbestos fibers → Dyspnea and dry cough - Microscopic: - Diffuse pulmonary fibrosis and honey comb appearance - *asbestos bodies (ferruginous bodies):* - golden yellow-brown, beaded rod-shaped bodies with clubbed ends - Predisposition to bronchogenic carcinoma and relative risk to malignant mesothelioma (which is rare tumor) of the pleura (>1000 times greater) ### ATELECTASIS (COLLAPSE) - Failure of expansion Or collapse of previously inflated lung, Affecting part or all of one lung - **Resorption atelectasis:** - Complete airway obstruction prevents air from reaching alveoli - The air already present becomes absorbed → Alveolar collapse. - Cause: obstruction of a bronchus by a mucous plug, postoperative or bronchial asthma, tumor or foreign body in children - **Compression atelectasis:** - Accumulation of fluid, blood, air within the pleural cavity → compress the lung - **Effect of atelectasis:** - Hypoxia - peridispose to bronchiectasis ## LUNG TUMORS - Malignant tumors: - Malignant tumors are more common than benign tumors of lung - The most common lung tumor is metastases (secondary) - Primary lung carcinomas: - 95% carcinoma of lung - the most important Iry malignant tumor - 5%: - carcinoid tumor - fibrosarcoma - leiomyosarcoma - lymphoma - BENIGN TUMORS: - The most common benign tumor is HAMARTOMA: - Gross: spherical 3-4cm, coin like shadow on X ray - Microscopic: mature cartilage, with fat, fibrous tissue and blood vessels ## CARCINOMA OF THE LUNG (BRONCHOGENIC CARCINOMA) LUNG CANCER - incidence: - With the worst prognosis - Lung carcinoma is the leading cause of death from cancer in the world - Age around 50 years - Male > female with increasing incidence in females with cigarette smoking. - (85% to 90%) of lung cancers in smokers: the most common tumors in smokers are adenocarcinoma. - Lung cancers in non-smokers are adenocarcinoma. - Predisposing factors: - Cigarette smoking - Air pollution - Pneumoconiosis (inorganic dust): silicosis, asbestosis - Bronchiectasis - Types: - Squamous cell carcinoma - Adenocarcinoma - Large cell carcinoma - Small cell carcinoma - **SMALL CELL CARCINOMAS (SCLC) (OAT CELL CARCINOMAS)** - rapid growing early metastasizes - smokers - Gross: - in perihilar region central mass - Microscopic: - Cells are twice the size of lymphocytes with scanty cytoplasm. - Extensive Necrosis - Secrete polypeptide hormones (paraneoplastic syndrome) - cells with neuroendocrine features: stained by chromogranin A (marker for neuroendocrine cells) - **NON-SMALL CELL CARCINOMAS (NSCLC) SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMAS:** - arise central - males > females - closely related to smokers - preceded by squamous metaplasis, dysplasia, CIS (may last several years) - Gross: ill-defined greyish white hilar mass - central mass 85% arise in major bronchi: - 1. endobronchial growth - 2. infiltrative tumor invade the bronchial wall and surrounding lung tissue - Microscopic: - cell nests and keratin pearls - various grades of differentiation - **ADENOCARCINOMAS** - arise peripheral, may be multiple - Most common primary lung cancers in women. - Most common lung cancers in non-smokers. - Precursor: atypical adenomatous hyperplasia with adenocarcinoma insitu - Gross: - Peripheral and may be multiple - If at males it is central - Early seeding of the pleura - **LARGE CELL CARCINOMAS:** - undifferentiated tumors with no glandular or keratin formation - May represent undifferentiated SCC or adenocarcinoma. - Diagnosis by exclusion. Can no longer be recognized by light microscope - **Clinical manifestations of lung cancer:** - Cough - Cachexia - Hemoptysis - Dyspnea - Chest pain (pleuritic pain) - **Complications and spread of lung carcinoma:** - bronchial obstruction → collapse - 2ry bacterial infection: bronchiectasis or lung abscess - Hemoptysis - Spread: - Direct: pericardium, mediastinum, esophagus or pancreas - **Pancoast tumor (superior sulcus tumor):** - Apical neoplasm → involvement of the apex of the lung - invade brachial plexus → pain at distribution of ulnar nerve - invade cervical sympathetic chain → Horner syndrome ipsilateral (ptosis, miosis, and anhydrosis) - Pleural seeding: adenocarcinoma - Lymphatic spread: hilar LNs or supraclavicular LN (virchow's LN) may be the first presentation - Blood spread: brain, bone, liver, suprarenal glands, other lung, - **Paraneoplastic endocrine syndromes:** 3-10%, secretion of polypeptide hormones - (ACTH) or ACTH-like activity, hyponatremia with small cell carcinoma (SIADH) with small cell carcinoma of the lung (++ADH) - hypercalcemia and parathyroid-like activity with squamous cell carcinoma. - Myasthenia gravis - Cushing syndrome ## SECONDARY LUNG TUMORS - More common than 1ry - Reach lung through lymphatics or blood - discrete nodules Scattered throughout the lung - From both carcinoma and sarcoma - Carcinoma and sarcoma can metastasize to lung (breast, kidney. GIT) are common ## PULMONARY DISEASES OF VASCULAR ORIGIN ### PULMONARY HYPERTENSION - Causes: - 1- Chronic obstructive or interstitial lung diseases - 2-Recurrent pulmonary emboli - 3-Mitral stenosis - 4-Congenital left to right shunt due to increase pulmonary blood flow - 5-Idiopathic or primary pulmonary hypertension - Pathology: (similar to changes with systemic hypertension) - main elastic artery: Atheroma - Medium sized arteries: cellular and smooth muscles hyperplasia → thick wall narrow lumen - Small arterioles: hyalinosis, elastosis and narrow lumen ## DISEASES OF PLEURA ### INFLAMMATORY PLEURAL EFFUSION - accumulation of fluid in pleural cavity - 1. transudate: HF, liver cirrhosis (hydrothorax) - 2. exudate: serofibrinous (bread and butter) inflammation - Causes: TIC - infections: TB, lung abscess, pneumonia - metastatic tumors to pleura (hemorrhagic) - pulmonary infarction - viral pleurisy - collagen diseases: RA, SLE ### EMPYEMA - Suppurative inflammation of pleura with pus at pleural cavity - Causes: pyogenic organism (staph.) - Direct spread from lung infection, abscess, bronchiectasis, pneumonia - penetrating infected trauma - blood spread: septicemia - Pathology: - diffuse: total: (acute): purulent effusion filling pleura → collapse of lung tissue - localized in pockets (more common) - Complications: - chest sinus draining pus - spread to