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Download The Lung and the Upper Respiratory Tract
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Diseases of the Respiratory System Pathology Department of SiChuan University Su Xueying Normal structure of the respiratory tract The lower respiratory tract Respiratory mucosa • The respiratory system disease is very common • Emvironmental factors is important Major aetiological factors in respiratory disease • Emvironmental Smoking Air pollution Infection Occupation • Genetic Lung cancer Chronic bronchitis and emphysema Susceptibility to infection Chronic bronchitis Susceptibility to infection Influenza Pneumonia Tuberculosis Lung cancer Mesothelioma Cystic fibrosis Some asthma OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Emphysema Chronic Bronchitis 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Emphysema Chronic Bronchitis 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors • Definition Bacteria pneumonia is due to bacteria infection affecting distal airways, especially alveoli, with formation of an inflammatory exudate. often follows a viral upper respiratory tract infection • Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) • Staphylococcus • Haemophilus influenzae • Klebsiella pneumoniae • Moraxella catarrhalis Lobar pneumonia congestion stage red hepatization gray hepatization resolution Bronchopneumonia Lobar pneumonia • Affects a large part, or the entirety of a lobe, frequently unilateral • Affects otherwise healthy adults between 20 and 50 years of age, males more than females • 90% due to Streptococcus pneumoniae Stage of congestion Red, edematous Red hepatization • Red • Solid • Consistency resembling fresh liver Gray hepatization Fibrinous pleuralitis Gray hepatization • Dry • Pale • Firm Gray hepatization Resolution stage Symptoms • High fever • Chills • Chest pain • Mucopurulent cough • with/without hemoptysis (rusty sputum) • Dyspnea Bronchopneumonia (Lobular pneumonia) • Patchy consolidation • Centred on bronchioles or bronchi • Usually in infancy or old age • Usually secondary to preexisting disease • Fever, cough Bronchopneumonia Bronchopneumonia Bronchopneumonia Bronchopneumonia Outcomes of Pneumonia • Complete recovery • Complications developed Abscess formation Empyema Bacteremic dissemination • Organization Empyema Abscess formation abscess formation Organization • Diagnosis & Therapy Physical examination X-ray Blood culture Penicillin or other sensitive antibiotic treatment X-Ray • Diagnosis & Therapy Physical examination X-ray Blood culture Penicillin or other sensitive antibiotic treatment OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Emphysema Chronic Bronchitis 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors Total Recovery Death Mainland 1807 1165 79 Guangdong 1304 1110 46 Beijing 339 33 18 Shanxi 108 8 4 Neimeng 25 8 3 Guangxi 12 0 3 Hunan 6 5 1 SiChuan 5 3 1 Fujiang 3 0 0 Shanghai 2 0 0 Henan 2 0 0 Ningxia 1 0 0 Atypical pneumonia • The concept was set forth in 1938 • The clinical course is unlike the “typical” bacteria pneumonia • Causes mycoplasma virus chlamydia • Gross morphology Red, congested Patchy or whole lobes • Microscopic characteristic the inflammatory reaction is largely confined within the walls of the alveoli, the septa are widened and edematous with mononuclear cells infiltration--interstitial pneumonia interstitial pneumonia Hyaline membrane Virus inclusion body • Clinical course Cough, fever, headache, malaise Sputum is modest No bacteria be isolated Leukocytosis is modest Physical findings of consolidation is varied Prognosis • Good in most uncomplicated cases • Bad in complicated bacterial superinfection cases OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Chronic Bronchitis Emphysema 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors Tuberculosis • Tuberculosis (TB) is a communicable chronic granulomatous disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (tubercle bacillus). • It usually involves the lungs but may affect any organ or tissue in the body. • Typically, the centers of tubercular granulomas undergo caseous necrosis. Epidemiology • Tuberculosis remains a leading cause of death among medically and economically deprived persons throughout the world. poverty crowding elderly person chronic debilitating illness, including AIDS Epidemiology (western world) • Deaths from tuberculosis peaked in 1800s, Steadily declined untill 1984, then increased beause of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected • 25,000 new cases in USA annually currently Epidemiology (Asia) • The incidence of TB in India is the highest in the world, china is the second • It is estimated that there is near 400,000,000 persons have once been infected tubercle bacilli in china Mycobacterium tuberculosis • • • • Slender rod shape Gram + Acid fast + High content of complex lipids • Obligate aerobe • M.hominis and M.bovis( oropharyngeal and intestinal TB) Pathogenesis • Development of a targeted T cell-mediated immunity (>3weeks) that confers resistance to the organism and results in development of tissue hypersensitivity leading to caseous necrosis and granuloma formation Tubercle (Tuberculous granuloma) • Langhans giant cell and foreign body giant cell • Primary tuberculosis • Previously unexposed, unsensitized person, most frequently in children • Almost in the lungs • Typically in the distal airspaces of the lower part of the upper lobe or the upper part of the lower lobe, usually closed to the pleura Primary tuberculosis • Ghon complex (primary complex) parenchymal lesion lymphatitis lymph node involvement Ghon complex • Gohn complex • Histology: granulomatous inflammation with/without caseous necrosis Clinical course • Asymptom • Fever, malaise, anorexia Clinical course • 95% cases development of cell-mediated immunity controls the infection and increases resistance • The Gohn complex undergoes fibrosis and calcification • The scaring foci may harbor viable bacilli for years • A few immunocompromised patients develop progressive primary TB Secondary Tuberculosis • It arises in a previously sensitized host • reactivation of dormant primary lesions or exogenous reinfection • Less than 5% patients Secondary Tuberculosis • Pulmonary tuberculosis • Miliary Tuberculosis • Extrapulmonary tuberculosis Secondary Pulmonary tuberculosis • It is classically localized to the apex of upper lobes • Cavitation occurs readly • The patient raises sputum containing bacilli • • • • Firm Well circumscribed Central caseation Peripheral fibrosis Tuberculoma • Tuberculoma Progressive pulmonary tuberculosis Progressive pulmonary tuberculosis Progressive pulmonary tuberculosis • Miliary Tuberculosis • Systemic miliary tuberculosis liver, spleen, bone marrow, kidney, fallopian tubes • Pulmonary miliary tuberculosis miliary tuberculosis of liver miliary tuberculosis of spleen • pulmonary miliary tuberculosis pulmonary miliary tuberculosis Extrapulmonary tuberculosis • Intestinal tuberculosis Secondary to the swallowing of coughed-up infective material Drinking of contaminated milk is the reason of primary lesion Intestinal tuberculosis lymphadenitis • Most frequent form • Cervical region • Unifocal in HIV(-) patients • Multifocal in HIV(+) patients lymphadenitis Renal tuberculosis Vertebrae TB Vertebrae TB Joint TB Clinical course • Asymptomatic • Systemic symptoms malaise anorexia weight loss fever (low, remittent) night sweats Clinical course • localizing pulmonary symptoms Cough Mucoid, purulent sputum Hemoptysis Pleural pain Dyspnea • localizing extrapulmonary symptoms • Diagnosis & Therapy • History • Physical and x-ray findings of consolidation • Tubercle bacilli must be identified • Multiple drugs treatment OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Chronic Bronchitis Emphysema 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) • 10% US adults involved • The 4th leading cause of death in USA • Persisting and irreversible airway obstruction OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Emphysema Chronic Bronchitis 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors • Definition Emphysema is characterized by permnent Enlargement of the air spaces distal to the terminal bronchioles accompanied by destruction of their walls Emphysema vs With destruction Complicated reasons overinflation without destruction compensatory obstructive Emphysema vs Morphologic feature Restricted to acinus chronic bronchitis clinical feature large and small airway The two deaseas usually coexist Types of Emphysema • Centriacinar • Panacinar • Distal acinar (according to the distribution of lesions in the lobule and acinus) Normal structure of acinus Centriacinar Emphysema • Cigarette smoking • The upper lobe, apical segments Panacinar Emphysema • а1- antitrypsin deficiency • The lower lobe Centriacinar vs Panacinar Emphysema Distal acinar Emphysema • It is more striking adjacent to the pleura, septa, scaring , at the margins of the lobules • Be more severe in the upper half of the lungs Bullous emphysema (Distal acinar Emphysema) Bullous emphysema (Distal acinar Emphysema) • With the destruction of alveolar walls and loss of elastic tissue , Small airways tend to collapse during expiration-----an important cause of chronic airflow obstruction pathogenesis • Protease-antiprotease imbalance • Oxidant-antioxidant imbalance These two imbalances are almost always coexist • Proteolytic activity • а1- antitrypsin Pathogenesis of emphysema Clinical course • Dyspnea • cough, purulent sputum (with bronchitis) • barrel-chest • Secondary pulmonary hypertension develops gradually OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Emphysema Chronic Bronchitis 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors Chronic Bronchitis • Definition (made on clinical ground) persistent productive cough for at least 3 consecutive months in at least 2 consecutive years It is often developed in middle age to old men with cigarette smoking • Causes cigarette smoking other air pollution ( sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide) • epidermal growth factor receptor • Microbial infection • Grossly, the mucosal of the trachea, bronchus, bronchiole is hyperemic, covered by a layer of mucinous or mucopurulent secretion Increased numbers of chronic inflammatory cells in the submucosa. Chronic bronchiolitis Chronic bronchiolitis Clinical course • Cough with mucus or mucopurulent sputum • With/without ventilatiory dysfunction, hypoxemia, hypercapnia (COPD developed) • Secondary pulmonary hypertension develops gradually OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Emphysema Chronic Bronchitis 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors • Definition Bronchiectasis is the permanent dilation of bronchi and bronchioles caused by destruction of the muscle and elastic supporting tissue. It is not a primary disease but rather is secondary to persisting infection or obstruction caused by variety of conditions Conditions that predispose to bronchiecctasis • Bronchial obstruction • Bacteria pneumonia • Congenital conditions pathogenesis • Obstruction Chronic infection Tissue damage secretion accumulation irreversible dilation • Lower lobes bilaterally • Distal bronchi and bronchioles are more severe Cross-section of lung demonstrating dilated bronchi extending almost to the pleura Bronchiectasis. Dilated bronchus in which the mucosa and wall is not clearly seen because of the necrotizing inflammation Clinical Course • severe, persistent cough with copious amount of mucopurulent ,fetid sputum • Hemoptysis • symptoms are episodic and are precipitated by upper respiratory tract infection • Secondary pulmonary hypertension develops gradually OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Chronic Bronchitis Emphysema 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors Cor pulmonale • Definition It also called pulmonary heart disease, is used to describe disease of the right-side cardiac chambers caused by pulmonary hypertension resulting from pulmonary parenchymal or pulmonary vascular disease Disorders that predispose to cor pulmonale Diseases of the lungs Chronic obstructive lung disease Diffuse pulmonary interstitial fibrosis Extensive, persistent atelectasis Cystic fibrosis Diseases of pulmonary vessels Pulmonary embolism Primary pulmonary vascular sclerosis Extensive pulmonary arteritis Drug-, toxin-, or radiation-induced vascular sclerosis Disorders affecting chest movement Disorders inducing pulmonary arteriolar constriction Heart changes • right ventricular, and often right artrial hypertrophy. • It may be dilated when ventricular failure develops. • Conic of pulmonary artery bulges • The point of the heart become blunt and round • Thickness of the right ventricle exceeds the left ventricle • 2cm below the valves of the pulmonary artery>4.5cm Pulmonary changes • Primary lung diseases (such as chronic bronchitis, emphysema) • with blood vessel changes-----pulmonary hypertension. Clinical course • Right cardiac failure • Respiratory failure OUTLINE 1.Pulmonary Infections Bacteria Pneumonias Atypical Pneumonias Tuberculosis 2.Chronic Obstractive Lung Diseases (COPD) Chronic Bronchitis Emphysema 3.Bronchiectasis 4.Cor Pulmonale 5.Lung tumors Lung tumors • Bronchogenic carcinoma:95% • Miscellaneous group:5% bronchial carcinoid tumor fibrosarcoma lymphoma hamartoma Bronchogenic carcinoma • No.1 cause of cancer-related deaths in industrialized countries. • Cigarette smoking is a important cause • The peak incidence occurs between ages 55 and 65 years. • The male to female ratio is 2:1 • The prognosis of lung cancer is dismal Histologic classification of Bronchogenic carcinoma • Non-small cell lung carcinoma 1.squamous cell carcinoma(25%-30%) 2.adenocarcinoma,including bronchioloalveolar ca(30%-35%) 3.large cell carcinoma(10%-15%) • Small cell carcinoma(20%-25%) • Combined pattens(5%-10%) Bronchogenic carcinoma • Carcinoma with cavitation Bronchogenic carcinoma Squamous cell carcinoma adenocarcinoma Small cell carcinoma Metastatic cacinoma Clinical course • Silent, insidious lesion • Chronic cough and expectoration • Hoarseness, chest pain, pleural or pericardial effusion • Symptoms emanating from metastatic spread to the brain, liver,or bone • NSCLCs have a better prognosis than SCLCs Methods to diagnose lung cancer • X-ray, CT scanning • Cytological smear of sputum or bronchial brush • Biopsy from bronchus • Fine needle aspiration of the tumor