Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Urinary Path Review Normal Prostate Two components of the prostate: • Glands • Stroma Glands have 2 type of cells: • Basal • luminal Normal prostate • Note the two cell layers and continuous layer of basal cells. • The presence of basal cells indicates benignity What markers and staining do the basal cells have? Basal cells stain with high molecular weight cytokeratin, PSA - and PAP What about the luminal cells? Luminal cells are PSA + and PAP+ Which zone of the prostate is the area of hyperplasia? Transitional Zone, periurethral • In which zone do most carcinomas arise? Peripheral Zone • Makes up the bulk of the gland • Easiest area to biopsy and feel with DRE • What’s the third zone called? Central zone; resistant to pathology. Like me. Point to the zones Transitional Zone Peripheral Zone What is the enzyme that converts testosterone into DTH? 5 alpha reductase. In the prostate this enzyme converts the testosterone secreted by the leydig cells of the testes into DTH. Receptor are located in the stroma. Testosterone receptors are in the epithelium. What’s the hallmark of acute prostatitis? Neutrophils Granulomatous Prostatitis Key here is the presence of giant cells and macrophages. Response to rupture of intraluminal contents or TB/fungi. Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia Note the nodular appearance and the slit-like shape of the urethra due to compression Prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia • Precursor to invasive carcinoma of the prostate • Intraductal lesion Normal prostate Stained with high molecular weight cytokeratin. Note the continuous layer of staining around the glands Benign prostatic hyperplasia More stroma, more glands, more cellular, more dilated Prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia HMWC stain: interruptions in the basal cell layer. Precursor lesion to adenocarcinoma of the prostate. Prostate Carcinoma • Most often in peripheral zone • Most often adenocarcinoma • Firm yellow white nodule on gross T/F: the prostate is necessary for reproduction/fertility False. The prostate secretes bacterialcidal liquid that activates the sperm, but is not necessary for sperm viability. Cystitis • This is acute inflammation Prostate adenocarcinoma • Lots of small glands Prostate adenocarcinoma Grade 5: undifferentiated. Can’t even tell it’s adeno. Fused masses of malignant cells Common sites of prostate CA metastases: • Bone (blastic lesions, not lytic lesions) • Lymph nodes • Invasion is often by perineural invasion Prostate CA Perineural invasion Adenocarcinoma of the prostate • Note that the malignant glands lack the HMWK stain…absence of basal cell layer is bad. Prostatic Abscess • Look for this when you are diagnosing acute bacterial prostatitis. • Important to find because antibiotics won’t penetrate the abscess. • Treatment for acute bacterial prostatitis is usually with Quinolones. Bladder Wall • Image shows the various layers – Urothelium – Lamina propria – Muscularis propria Urothelium • Note the superficial umbrella cells…big and broad… Horseshoe Kidney • Congenital anomaly • Does not cause any functional problems • Important for radiation and surgical treatments… Renal Dysplasia • Most common cause of abdominal mass in newborns • Undifferentiated tubules and ducts in bunch of undifferentiated mesenchyme • Can sometimes contain cartilage and muscle • Note the cysts T/F: Adult polycystic disease is autosomal dominant True. Infantile polycystic disease is autosomal recessive. Infant polycystic kidney disease • • • • Autosomal recessive Cysts = Dilations of the collecting system ¾ infants die in perinatal period Gross: enlarged but smooth kidneys, in contrast to the adult form of the disease, where the kidneys are enlarged but distorted… Hydronephrosis and hydroureter • Due to some obstruction distal to the kidney • Obstruction can be intrinsic (stones, UT neoplasm) or extrinsic (BPH, pregnancy) Clear Cell renal cell carcinoma • Cells are filled with glycogen • Classic presenting triad: – Flank pain – Hematuria – Abdominal mass • Rare to have patients present with these symptoms… Adult polycystic renal disease • • • • • Bilateral Autosomal dominant Midlife renal failure Cysts interspersed with normal kidney Big distorted kidneys Infant polycystic kidney disease • Note how smooth the enlarged kidney is This is associated with which type of bladder cancer? Squamous cell CA • Schistosomiasis • Rare in US, common worldwide Seminoma • Testicular germ cell neoplasm • Note the lymphocytes and malignant germ cells? • What kind of tumor markers will seminomas have? AFP – and BHCG – Embryonal CA • Big ugly cells • Some necrosis • What kind of tumor markers? AFP + and BHCG – Yolk sac tumor • This is an image of the chacteristic lesion called a schiller-duval body..tuft of malignant cells around a vessel • what age group does this hit? • Boys younger than 10 • What tumor markers? • AFP + and BHCG – Choriocarcinoma • I guess some of these are synciciotrophoblasts and some are cytotrophoblasts • What markers? • AFP – and BHCG +++ Teratoma • Tissues from all three germ cell layers • Note the cartilage and glands (GI tract cells)