Pathology Notes PDF
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These notes cover a variety of pathology topics, with details on different diseases, conditions, and their causes. They include details on common chest conditions like aspiration, atelectasis, and bronchitis.
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PATHOLOGY A. CHEST EFFECT: difficulty in emptying the lungs of ASPIRATION air A mechanical obstruction CAUSED BY: foreign objects are...
PATHOLOGY A. CHEST EFFECT: difficulty in emptying the lungs of ASPIRATION air A mechanical obstruction CAUSED BY: foreign objects are CYSTIC FIBROSIS swallowed/aspirated into air passages of Most common inherited diseases bronchial tree Secretion of heavy mucus cause progressive Most common in small children clogging of bronchi and bronchioles TREATMENT: Heimlich maneuver CAUSED BY: faulty genes in chromosomes No.7 ATELECTASIS Collapse of all or a portion of a lung DYSPNEA CAUSED BY: obstruction of the bronchus A sensation of difficulty in breathing or puncture or “blowout” of an air Most common in older persons passageway CAUSED BY: o Physical exertion BRONCHIECTASIS o Restrictive/obstructive defects within Irreversible dilation or widening of bronchi the lungs or airways or bronchioles o Pulmonary edema CAUSED BY: repeated pulmonary infection or obstruction EMPHYSEMA EFFECTS: Irreversible and chronic lung disease o Increased mucous production Air spaces in the alveoli become greatly o Coughing up sputum enlarge CAUSED BY: BRONCHITIS o Smoking Excessive mucous secretion into the bronchi o Long-term dust inhalation CAUSED BY: cigarette smoking RESULTS: EFFECTS: o Alveolar wall destruction o Cough o Loss of alveolar elasticity o Shortness of breath EFFECTS: o Seriously labored breathing CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY o Serious impedance of gas exchange DISEASE (COPD) within the lungs A persistent obstruction of the airways CAUSED BY: PLEURAL EFFUSION/HYDROTHORAX o Smoking Abnormal accumulation of fluid in the o Emphysema pleural cavity o Chronic bronchitis TYPES: empyema and hemothorax 1 PATHOLOGY EMPYEMA CAUSED BY: Streptococcus pneumonia Accumulation of pus in the pleural cavity CAUSED BY: VIRAL/INTERSTITIAL PNEUMONIA o Chest wounds Inflammation of the alveoli and connecting o Obstruction of bronchi lung structures o Ruptured lung abscess o Pneumonia PNEUMOTHORAX Accumulation of air in the pleural space HEMOTHORAX CAUSED BY: Accumulation of blood in the pleural cavity o Trauma CAUSED BY: trauma/injury o Pathologic conditions EFFECTS: PLURISY o Partial or complete collapse of lungs Inflammation of the pleura surrounding the o Severe shortness of breath lungs o Chest pain CAUSED BY: o Virus or bacterium PULMONARY EDEMA o Visceral and parietal pleura Excess fluid in the lungs “rubbing” during respiration CAUSED BY: coronary artery disease o Pneumonia o Trauma to the chest RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME EFFECT: severe pain Hyaline Membrane Disease in infant Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome in PNEUMONIA/PNEUMONITIS adult Inflammation of the lungs The alveoli and capillaries of the lung are TYPES: aspiration pneumonia, injured or infected bronchopneumonia, lobar pneumonia and CAUSED BY: viral/visceral pneumonia o Lack of lung development EFFECT: ASPIRATION PNEUMONIA o Leakage in fluid and blood into the CAUSED BY: aspiration of foreign objects spaces between alveoli or food in the lungs RESULT: irritation of the bronchi TUBERCULOSIS EFFECT: edema A contagious disease CAUSED BY: Mycobacterium tuberculosis BRONCHOPNEUMONIA TYPES: primary and reactivation/secondary CAUSED BY: Streptococcus or Staphylococcus bacteria PRIMARY TUBERCULOSIS It occurs in persons who have never had the LOBAR PNEUMONIA disease before Confined to one or two lobes of the lungs 2 PATHOLOGY INDICATORS: DYNAMIC (with power or force)/MECHANICAL o Hilar enlargement BOWEL OBSTRUCTION o Enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes Complete or nearly complete blockage of the flow of intestinal contents REACTIVATION/SECONDARY EFFECTS: TUBERCULOSIS o Fibrous adhesions Develops in adult Fibrous band of tissue INDICATORS: interrelates with the intestine, o Irregular calcification in the upper creating a blockage lobes bilaterally Most common cause of o Upward retraction of the hila mechanical obstruction o Crohn’s disease OCCUPATIONAL LUNG DISEASE Chronic inflammation of ANTHRACOSIS intestinal wall Black lung pneumoconiosis CAUSE: unknown CAUSED BY: deposits of coal dust EFFECT: bowel obstruction Most common in young ASBESTOSIS adults CAUSED BY: inhalation of asbestos dust o Intussusception (fibers) Telescoping of a section of EFFECT: pulmonary fibrosis bowel into another loop Most common in ileum SILICOSIS Most common in children CAUSED BY: inhalation of silica (quartz) o Volvulus dust Twisting of a loop of intestine B. ABDOMEN TREATMENT: surgery ASCITES ILEUS Abnormal accumulation of fluid in the peritoneal cavity Non-mechanical bowel obstruction CAUSED BY: TYPES: o Cirrhosis of the liver o Adynamic Ileus o Metastatic disease to the peritoneal Without power or force cavity CAUSED BY: peritonitis o Paralytic Ileus PNEUMOPERITONEUM Paralysis CAUSED BY: lack of Free air or gas in the peritoneal cavity intestinal motility CAUSED BY: Most common in postoperative patients o Gastric or duodenal ulcer o Trauma 3 PATHOLOGY ULCERATIVE COLITIS COLLE’S FRACTURE Chronic disease involving inflammation of Transverse fracture of distal radius with the colon posterior displacement Most common in young adults Most frequently involves rectosigmoid colon SMITH’S FRACTURE Reverse Colle’s Fracture C. UPPERLIMB Transverse fracture of distal radius with BONE METASTASES anterior displacement Transfer of disease or cancerous lesion from one organ or part JOINT EFFUSION Most common bone malignant tumors Accumulation of fluid in the joint cavity CAUSED BY: BURSITIS o Fracture Inflammation of the bursae o Dislocation EFFECTS: o Soft tissue damage o Pain o Inflammation o Limited joint movement OSTEOARTHRITIS CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME Degenerative Joint Disease Common painful disorder of the wrist and Noninflammatory joint disease characterized hand by gradual deterioration of articular cartilage CAUSED BY: compression of the median Most common type of arthritis nerve Most commonly in middle-aged women OSTEOMYELITIS Local or generalized infection of bone or FRACTURES bone marrow Break in the structure of bone CAUSED BY: CAUSED BY: direct or indirect force o Bacteria introduced by trauma or surgery BARTON’S FRACTURE o Diabetic foot ulcer Fracture and dislocation of posterior lip of distal radius OSTEOPETROSIS Hereditary diseased marked by abnormally BENNETT’S FRACTURE dense bone Fracture of the base of the first metacarpal CAUSED BY: fracture of affected bone bone OSTEOPOROSIS BOXER’S FRACTURE Reduction in the quantity of bone or atrophy Transverse fracture of the fifth metacarpal of skeletal tissue neck Most common in postmenopausal women and elderly men 4 PATHOLOGY PAGET’S DISEASE BENIGN BONE/CARTILIGINOUS TUMORS Osteitis Deformans ENCHONDROMA Most common chronic skeletal diseases Slow-growing benign cartilaginous tumor CAUSE: unknown Most commonly found in small bones of the Most common in men older than age 40 hand and feet of adolescents and young adults RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS Chronic systemic disease with inflammatory OSTEOCHONDROMA/EXOSTOSIS changes throughout the body’s connective Most common type of benign bone tumor tissue Most common in persons aged 10-20 years Most common in women Most common at the knee SKIER’S THUMB D. HUMERUS AND SHOULDER Sprain or tear in the ulnar collateral ligament ACROMIOCLAVICULAR JOINT SEPARATION of the thumb Partial or complete tear of the AC and/or CAUSED BY: injury coracoclavicular ligaments CAUSED BY: trauma to upper shoulder MALIGNANT BONE TUMORS region MULTIPLE MYELOMA Tumors that occur in various parts of the ACROMIOCLAVICULAR DISLOCATION body, arising from bone marrow or marrow Superior displacement of distal clavicle plasma cells CAUSED BY: fall Most common of the primary cancerous bone tumors BANKART LESION an injury of the anteroinferior aspect of the OSTEOGENIC SARCOMA/OSTEOSARCOMA glenoid labrum The second most common type of primary CAUSED BY: anterior dislocation of the cancerous bone tumor proximal humerus Most common in persons aged 10-20 years May develop in older persons with Paget’s BURSITIS disease Inflammation of the bursae EWING’S SARCOMA HILL-SACHS DEFECT A common primary malignant bone tumor A compression fracture of the articular Most common in children and young adults surface of the posterolateral aspect of the humeral head CHONDROSARCOMA CAUSED BY: anterior dislocation of A slow-growing malignant tumor of the humeral head cartilage 5 PATHOLOGY IDIOPATHIC CHRONIC ADHESIVE ENCHONDROMA CAPSULITIS/FROZEN SHOULDER Slow-growing benign cartilaginous tumor A disability of the shoulder joint Most often in small bones of the hands and CAUSED BY: chronic inflammation in or feet in adolescents and young adults around the joint EWING’S SARCOMA IMPINGEMENT SYNDROME Common primary malignant bone tumor Impingement of the greater tuberosity and Most common in children and young adults on the coracoacromial ligamentous and SYMPTOMS: low-grade fever and pain osseous arch EXOSTOSIS/OSTEOCHONDROMA SUPRASPINATUS MUSCLE IMPINGEMENT Benign, neoplastic bone lesion Most common injury of the rotator cuff CAUSED BY: consolidated overproduction CAUSED BY: subacromial bone spur of bone at a joint SHOULDER DISLOCATION GOUT Traumatic removal of humeral head from A form of arthritis the glenoid cavity Excessive uric acid in the blood Common initial attacks occur in the first TENDONITIS MTP joint Inflammation condition in the tendon Most common in men F. LOWER LIMB LISFRANC JOINT INJURY BONE CYST Sprains or dislocations-fractures of the bases Benign, neoplastic bone lesions filled with of the first and second metatarsals clear fluid CAUSED BY: Most common near the knee joint in o Motor vehicle crashes children and adolescence o Twisting falls o Falls from high places CHONDROMALACIA PATELLAE/RUNNER’S MULTIPLE MYELOMA KNEE Tumor arises from the bone marrow or Softening of the cartilage under the patella marrow plasma cells Most common in cyclists and runners Most common type of primary cancerous bone tumor CHONDROSARCOMAS Malignant tumors of the cartilage OSGOOD-SCHLATTER DISEASE Most common in the pelvis and long bones Inflammation of the bone and cartilage of of men older than 45 years the anterior proximal tibia Most common in boys ages 10-15 6 PATHOLOGY CAUSED BY: large patellar tendon AVULSION/EVULSION FRACTURES OF THE detaches part of the tibial tuberosity PELVIS Fractures experience after a sudden, forceful OSTEOCLASTOMAS/GIANT CELL TUMORS or unbalanced contraction of the tendinous Benign lesions that occur in the proximal and muscular attachment tibia or distal femur after epiphyseal closure Most common in athlete adolescents Typically occur in the long bones of young adults DEVELOPMENT DYSPLASIA OF THE HIP/CONGENITAL DISLOCATION OF THE HIP OSTEOID OSTEOMAS CAUSED BY: conditions present at birth Benign bone lesions Most common in teenagers or young adults LEGG-CALVE-PERTHES DISEASE SYMPTOMS: localized pain that typically Most common type of aseptic or ischemic worsens at night necrosis Lesions typically involve one hip (head and OSTEOMALACIA/RICKETS neck of femur) Bone softening Most common in boys ages 5-10 years CAUSED BY: deficiency of calcium, phosphorus and/or vitamin D PELVIC RING FRACTURES Rickets in children CAUSED BY: severe blow or trauma to one Osteomalacia in adults side of the pelvis RESULT: fracture site away from the site of REITER SYNDROME primary trauma Bony erosion at the Achilles tendon insertion on the posterosuperior margin of PROXIMAL FEMUR (HIP) FRACTURES the calcaneus CAUSED BY: weakening or collapse of Affects the sacroiliac joints and lower limbs weight-bearing joints of young men Most common in older adults or geriatric CHARACTERISTIC: arthritis, urethritis and patients with osteoporosis or avascular conjunctivitis necrosis CAUSED BY: o Infection of the GI tract SLIPPED CAPITAL FEMORAL EPIPHYSIS o Sexually transmitted disease Epiphysis appears shorter and the epiphyseal plate wider with smaller margins G. FEMUR AND PELVIC GIRDLE Most common in persons ages 10-16 years ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS Rheumatoid arthritis variant involving the H. CERVICAL AND THORACIC SPINE sacroiliac joints and spine CLAY SHOVELER’S FRACTURE Most common in males Avulsion fractures on the spinous processes of C6 through T1 CAUSED BY: hyperflexion of the neck 7 PATHOLOGY KYPHOSIS COMPRESSION FRACTURE Abnormal or exaggerated convex curvature Collapse of the anterior edge of the vertebral of the thoracic spine body, changing its shape into a wedge CAUSED BY: compression fractures of the instead of block anterior edges of the vertebral bodies in CAUSED BY: osteoporotic patients o Osteoporosis RESULTS: o Severe kyphosis caused by other o Stooped posture diseases o Reduced height o Injury of the spinal cord LORDOSIS HANGMAN’S FRACTURE Abnormal or exaggerated concave lumbar Fracture extends through pedicles of C2 curvature with or without subluxation of C2 upon C3 CAUSED BY: CAUSED BY: extreme hyperextension of o Pregnancy the neck o Obesity o Poor posture JEFFERSON’S FRACTURE o Rickets or tuberculosis of the spine Comminuted fracture of anterior and posterior arches of C1 SCOLIOSIS CAUSED BY: Abnormal or exaggerated lateral curvature o Landing on one’s head of the spine o Landing on one’s feet Most common in children ages 10-14 years Most common in girls ODONTOID FRACTURE Fracture involving the dens and can extend SCHEUERMANN’S DISEASE into the lateral masses or arches of C1 Osteochondritis involving one or more of the verterbrae TEARDROP BURST FRACTURE RESULTS IN: abnormal spine curvature of Compression with hyperflexion in the kyphosis and scoliosis cervical region Most common in boys HERNIATED NUCLEUS PULPOSUS TRANSITIONAL VERTEBRA Herniated lumbar disc/Slipped disk Vertebra takes on a characteristic of the CAUSED BY: protrusion of nucleus adjacent region of the spine pulposus (soft inner part) of an invertebral Most often occurs in the lumbosacral region disk through the annulus (fibrous cartilage It also involves the cervical and lumbar ribs outer layer) in the spinal canal 8 PATHOLOGY I. LUMBAR, SACRUM AND COCCYX CAUSED BY: CHANCE FRACTURE o Blunt trauma Fracture through the vertebral body and o Pulmonary injury posterior elements (spinous processes, pedicles, facets, transverse processes) STERNAL FRACTURE CAUSED BY: hyperflexion force CAUSED BY: blunt trauma METASTASES Primary malignant neoplasms that spread to CONGENITAL ANOMALIES distant sites via blood and lymphatics PECTUS CARINATUM Pigeon breast SPINA BIFIDA Anterior protrusion of the lower sternum and Congenital condition in which posterior xiphoid process aspects of the vertebrae fail to develop Most often at L5 PECTUS EXCAVATUM Funnel chest SPONDYLOLISTHESIS Characterized by a depressed sternum Forward movement of one vertebra in relation to another K. SKULL CAUSED BY: SKULL FRACTURE o Developmental defect in the pars Disruptions in the discontinuity of bones of interarticularis the skull o Spondylolysis o Severe osteoarthritis LINEAR FRACTURE It appears as jagged or irregular lucent lines SPONDYLOLYSIS that lie at right angles to the axis of the bone Dissolution of a vertebra CAUSED BY: DEPRESSED FRACTURE o Aplasia (lack of development) of the Ping-pong fracture vertebral arch A fragment of bone that is separated and o Separation of the pars interarticularis depressed into the cranial cavity Most common at L4 or L5 BASAL SKULL FRACTURE J: BONY THORAX– STERNUM AND RIBS Fracture through the dense inner structures RIB FRACTURE of the temporal bone CAUSED BY: o Trauma MULTIPLE MYELOMA o Underlying pathology It consists of one or more tumors that originate in the bone marrow FLAIL CHEST Skull is the common site Fracture of the adjacent ribs into two or more places 9 PATHOLOGY PITUITARY ADENOMAS Tumors of the pituitary gland FINDINGS: o Enlargement of the sella turcica o Erosion of the dorsum sellae MASTOIDITIS Bacterial infection of the mastoid process Mastoid air cells are replaced with a fluid- filled abscess RESULTS IN: hearing loss ACOUSTIC NEUROMA Benign tumor of the auditory nerve sheath originates in the internal auditory canal SYMPTOMS: o Hearing loss o Dizziness o Loss of balance CHOLESTEATOMA Benign cyst-like mass or tumor Most common in the middle ear or mastoid region POLYP Growth arises from a mucous membrane and projects into a cavity CAUSES: chronic sinusitis OTOSCLEROSIS Hereditary disease involving excessive spongy bone formation of the middle and inner ear Most common cause of hearing loss in adults without ear drum damage -THE END- “Board Exam is a matter of preparation. If you FAIL to prepare, you PREPARE to fail” 05/25/14 10