Wednesday, February 24, 2010

pathology III: esophageal and gastric disorders quiz review

here are some study questions for the quiz on esophageal and gastric disorders.

questions
esophageal disorders...
1. what is the etiology of achalasia?
2. what is the morphology of achalasia?
3. what are the possible sequelae of achalasia?
4. what is DES?
5. what is the morphology of DES?
6. what are the clinical manifestations of DES?
7. what is nutcracker esophagus?
8. what are the clinical manifestations of nutcracker esophagus?
9. what is the etiology of diverticula?
10. what are diverticula called in the proximal vs. distal portion of the esophagus?
11. what are the two types of hiatal hernia? which is most common?
12. what are some complications of hiatal hernias?
13. what is the etiology of mallory weiss syndrome?
14. what is the morphology of mallory weiss?
15. what are the sequelae of mallory weiss?
16. what is the etiology of esophageal varices?
17. what layer of the esophageal wall are esophageal varices?
18. what is a complication of esophageal varices?
19. what is the clinical presentation of esophageal varices?

esophagitis...
20. what are the etiologies for esophagitis that involve external irritation?
21. what are the etiologies for esophagitis that involve decreased LES tone?
22. what are some other etiologies of esophagitis?
23. what are the histomorphological characteristics of esophagitis?
24. what is the morphology of candida esophagitis?

barrett's esophagus, adenocarcinoma...
25. what is the most common etiology of barrett's esophagus?
26. what is the gross morphology of barrett's esophagus?
27. patches that are bigger than what size are at greater risk for developing adenocarcinoma?
28. what is the histomorphology of barrett's esophagus?
29. what is the etiology of esophageal adenocarcinoma?
30. risk of adenocarcinoma might be decreased by...
31. what is the morphology of esophageal adenocarcinoma? where in the esophagus does it affect?

squamous cell carcinoma vs. adenocarcinoma...
32. what is the difference in epidemiological factors in SCC vs. adenocarcinoma?
33. what is the etiology of SCC?
34. what is the difference in location for SCC vs. AC?
35. what is the morphology of SCC?
36. what is the 5 year prognosis for SCC?
37. what is the prognosis for AC?

h. pylori...
38. h. pylori is present in what percentage of chronic gastritis?
39. what are the characteristics of h. pylori that allow it to flourish in the GI system?
40. what are two outcomes of h. pylori infections?
41. what is the morphology of a stomach infected with h. pylori?
42. what are the techniques used to diagnose h. pylori infection?

figure 17-11, robbins 8th ed...
43. what are some "defensive forces" present in normal gastric mucosa?
44. what are injurious forces that can damage gastric mucosa?
45. what are the layers in a gastric ulcer from the lumen to the serosa?

acute gastritis...
46. what are the most common etiologies of acute gastritis?
47. what is the gross morphology of acute gastritis?
48. what kind of exudate is associated with acute gastritis?
49. what are the clinical manifestations of acute gastritis?

chronic gastritis...
50. chronic gastritis is characterized by...
51. what is the incidence of chronic gastritis in the US?
52. what are the etiological mechanisms for chronic gastritis?
53. what are some examples of autoimmune conditions that could result in chronic gastritis?
54. what is the gross morphology of chronic gastritis?
55. what are the clinical manifestations of chronic gastritis?
56. diagnosis of chronic gastritis is made by...
57. what are the complications of chronic gastritis?
58. what is a MALToma?

gastric cancer...
59. which countries does gastric cancer have a particularly high incidence in?
60. which blood type has a high incidence for gastric cancer?
61. which races are particularly affected by gastric cancer?
62. what are some diet related risk factors for gastric cancer?
63. what is the gross morphological difference between a gastric ulcer and gastric cancer?
64. what locations are gastric cancer and a gastric ulcer most prone to affect?
65. what is the histomorphological features of the intestinal and diffuse variants of gastric cancer?
66. both the intestinal and diffuse variants of gastric cancer spread to...
67. describe the stages of pathological progression in gastric cancer.

virchow's node and sister mary joseph nodule...
68. what does virchow's node refer to?
68. what does the sister mary joseph nodule refer to?

answers
1. nerve degeneration causes increased LES tone, decreased LES relaxation, and aperistalsis.
2. progressive dilation, variable wall thickness, loss of myenteric plexus.
3. from increased pressure: SCC, candida esophagitis, diverticula.
4. failure of functional peristalsis: entire esophagus contracts simultaneously.
5. twisted corkscrew shaped esophagus.
6. dysphagia, odynophagia.
7. functional peristalsis but with high amplitude contractions.
8. odynophagia.
9. abnormal motility / spasm.
10. proximal: Zenker. distal: traction.
11. 95% are sliding. 5% paraesophageal.
12. ulceration, hemorrhage, perforation, strangulation, obstruction. [hi. strangle and tear the ham which is perfectly obstructing you]
13. severe alcoholism.
14. longitudinal lacerations, mm to cm in length.
15. inflammatory ulcers, mediastinitis, chronic blood loss.
16. increase in portal hypertension. can be from alcoholic cirrhosis, non-alcoholic cirrhosis, portal vein thrombosis.
17. submucosa.
18. rupture and hemorrhage into into lumen and esophageal wall.
19. asymptomatic until rupture.

20. reflux, radiation, gastric intubation, alcohol, hot fluids, hiatal hernia.
21. hypothryoidism, scleroderma, smoking, obesity, pregnancy.
22. infection / immunosuppression, chemical toxicity, skin disease.
23. eosinophils in the epithelium, basal zone hyperplasia, extended lamina propria papillae.
24. grey/white pseudomembrane loaded with fungal hyphae.

25. long standing GERD.
26. red and velvety patches.
27. 3cm.
28. esophageal epithelium turns into columnar intestinal epithelium with goblet cells.
29. generally occurs in areas of barrett esophagus in patients over 40 years old.
30. h pylori overgrowth.
31. distal esophagus, flat or raised patches that progress to nodular masses that may ulcerate.

32. SCC: older than 50, male, black, iran/china/HK/south africa/PR/eastern europe. AC: older than 40, male, white, US/canada/UK/australia/brazil/netherlands.
33. toxic influences, HPV
34. SCC in mid esophagus, AC in distal esophagus.
35. plaque-like thickenings, tumors that encircle the lumen.
36. superficial: 75%. nodal: 9%.
37. 80%, unless advanced stage: 25%.

38. 90%.
39. motility, urease, protease, adhesion molecules, toxins.
40. antral gastritis / atrophic gastritis, abnormal acid production.
41. intra-epithelial neutrophils, lymphoid aggregates, sub-epithelial plasma cells, hyperplastic / inflammatory polyps.
42. antibody tests, urea breath tests, stool tests, rapid urea test, bacterial culture tests, DNA detection.

43. bicarbonate, mucosal blood supply, mucous secretion, epithelial regeneration.
44. h. pylori
NSAIDs
aspirin
cigarettes
alcohol
hyperacidity
45. necrotic debris
acute inflammation
granulation tissue
scarring (fibrosis)

46. GI irritants, systemic toxins, stress.
47. neutrophils above basement membrane
superficial epithelium erosion
infiltrate and exudate in the lumen
48. fibrin purulent exudate.
49. ulcer like pain
nausea, vomiting
hematemesis

50. chronic mucosal inflammation without erosions that lead to mucosal atrophy and epithelial metaplasia.
51. over 50% in the later decades of life.
52. autoimmune
chronic infection
toxic
mechanical
53. hashimoto, addison's, IDDM.
54. attenuated / flat / reddened mucosa
lymphocytes and plasma cells in lamina propria
metaplasia with intestinal epithelial cells
55. hunger pains
pain at night and with gastric emptying
pain that refers to chest, thoracic spine, left shoulder
56. endoscopy or barium swallow xray.
57. anemia
obstruction
penetration into neighboring organs
perforation
carcinoma in an ulcer [A O P P C] [an outstanding pathologist prevents catastrophe]
58. low grade gastric lymphoma of the MALT tissue.

59. japan and china.
60. type A.
61. african americans, native americans, native hawaiians.
62. food preserved with nitrates
lack of refrigeration
lack of fresh fruits and vegetables
charred foods / polycyclic hydrocarbons
63. gastric ulcer: level margins, smooth base, red/edematous surrounding mucosa.
gastric cancer: raised margins, shaggy/necrotic base, neoplastic tissue extends into surrounding mucosa.
64. GC: lesser curvature, antrum, pylorus. GU: lesser curvature, duodenum.
65. intestinal: broad, cohesive growths, bulky tumors of glandular structures. diffuse variant: signet ring cells, gastric type cells.
66. regional and distant lymph nodes, especially the sentinel node.
67. normal
acute gastritis
chronic gastritis
chronic atrophic gastritis
intestinal metaplasia
dysplasia
gastric adenocarcinoma

68. the sentinel lymph node, the lymph node to which gastric carcinoma often metastasizes.
68. a nodule in the periumbilical region that can be an indicator of metastasis of gastric carcinoma.

3 comments:

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