General Pathology Basic Principles of Cellular and Organ
General Pathology Basic Principles of Cellular and Organ Pathology Inflammation - III http: //www 1. lf 1. cuni. cz/~jdusk/ Jaroslava Dušková Inst. Pathol. , 1 st Med. Faculty, Charles Univ. Prague
Inflammation Definition: complex reaction of organism to damage (aim: homeostasis maintenance)
Inflammation Sense defensive – agent elimination reparative – damage reparation
Inflammation - Classification: Time view acute v subacute v chronic v
Inflammation - Classification: According to the dominant phase: alterative v EXSUDATIVE v proliferative v
Inflammation - Classification: According to the dominant phase: alterative v exsudative v PROLIFERATIVE v
Inflammation - Classification: Type of granulation tissue: v nonspecific v „specific“ GRANULOMATOUS
Granuloma Def. : Accumulation of macrophages transformed into epithelioid and multinucleated giant cells
infected macrophage intracellular parasites Macrophage activation mature Th clone creation interferon receptor interferon γ cytokins & bactericid subst. secretion activated macrophage
Granuloma - composition u MACROPHAGES u lymphocytes u fibrous deposits of collagen u central necrosis
Granuloma - development uprogressive necrosis ucavity formation uspread with generalisation or metastatic foci u fibrosis u hyalinosis u dystrophic calcification
Granulomatous Inflammatory Diseases 1. v TUBERCULOSIS v sarcoidosis v syphilis v leprosy v Lyme borreliosis v inf. scleroma (rhinoscleroma)
Granulomatous Inflammatory Diseases 2. lymphogranuloma venereum (inguinale) v anthropozoonoses : brucelosis, listeriosis, tularemia, …. . v cat scratch disease (Afipia felis) v mycoses: histoplasmosis, coccidiodomycosis… v parasites: leishmaniasis, schistosomiasis, toxoplasmosis… v large antigen antibody complexes: rheumatoid arthritis v
TUBERCULOSIS Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Koch 1882) Mycobacterium bovis acidoresistance M. avium, intracellulare, Kansasii atypical mycobacterioses
TUBERCULOSIS u killing 30% patients with AIDS u killing 2– 3 mill. people per year u next 10 years : v 90 millions infected v 30 millions deaths u dev. countries - 26% preventable deaths
TUBERCULOSIS u countries with combined therapy – deaths lowered by 70% u death rate in Europe lowered to 1/10 12, 5 / 100 000 u Asia 40 x more 500 / 100 000 u 95% patients unable to pay for therapy
TUBERCULOSIS u portae invasionis – respiratory tract – gastrointestinal tract – skin u types of disease (clinicoepidemiol. view) v open tbc v closed
TUBERCULOSIS Type of infection v childhood (primary, preimmune) v adult (postprimary, immune)
TUBERCULOSIS Morphological features u primary infect (Ghon focus) & primary complex u caseification u isolated organ metastasis u tubercle, exsudate, cavity u early and late generalisation – milliary spread
TUBERCULOSIS Type of infection v childhood (primary, preimmune) v adult (postprimary, immune)
TUBERCULOSIS Terms –Forms– Locations: u phtisis gallopans u scrofulosis u meningitis basillaris u lupus vulgaris u mallum Potti, cold absces
SARCOIDOSIS etiology ? ? ? Pathogenesis: v changed Th and Ts ratio v modified immune reaction
SARCOIDOSIS m. Besnier–Boeck–Schaumann u morphology similar to tbc (and important dif. dg. ) u forms : v localised v generalised
Syphilis Treponema pallidum (F. Schaudin 1905) Syphilis acquisita Syphilis congenita argyrophilia
Syphilis acquisita Stages (1) : I. ulcus durum + bubo indolens II. exanthema syphiliticum, angina syphilitica, condylomata lata
Syphilis acquisita Stages (2): III. gumma Late syphilis (quarterly, meta–) neurosyphylis paralysis progressiva tabes dorsalis panaortitis syphilitica
Syphilis congenita Forms: v fetus maceratus (hepatosplenomegalia) v hepatitis pericellularis pericholangitis syphilitica, v pancreatitis v pneumonia alba v pseudogummata v osteochondritis et periostitis syphilitica v coryza et exanthema syphiliticum
Syphilis congenita tarda Trias Hutchinsoni: v keratitis parenchymatosa v labyrinthitis v Hutchinson´s teath gummata v periostitis syphilitica tibiae v paralysis progressiva infantilis, iuvenilis v v panaortitis syphilitica
LEPROSY u 700 000 new cases/year u more than 10 mil. cases in the world u mostly warm climates u related to living conditions u zoonosis - armadillo (Dasypus novemcinctus) primates, cultivation on a nude mice CURABLE !!!! (combination of antibiotics)
LEPROSY Mycobacterium leprae (Hanseni) 1873 Port of entry respiratory tract Intracellular parasitism macrophages, later Schwann cells Reduced genom (comparing to Mycobacterium tbc)
LEPROSY Classification: v lepromatous (in nonimmune. Virchow lepra cell) v tuberculoid (granulomatous, immune patients) v indeterminate (early stage) v borderline (combined)
Rhinoscleroma –infectious scleroma u Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis u chronic granulomatose inflammation u Mikulicz cells – macrophages u scaring u curable - antibiotics
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