invades by extension - many carcinogenic causes - usually papillary
grade - cytology / stage - invasion (inner third of muscle is still safe)
smoking is a risk factor
Treatment: ?resection, chemo
Transitional cell papilloma
seven or fewer layers
Squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder
associated with schistosomiasis (haematobium)
Adenocarcinoma of the bladder
Cystitis glandularis
may resemble adenocarcinoma
Malakoplakia
inflammatory pattern showing michaelis-gutmann bodies (calcified nodules)
Developmental / Pediatrics
[Pediatric Infectious Disease] [vaccination] [Fluid Maintenance]
Teratogenesis
Maternal environment / normal morphogenesis / disrupted development
Pulmonary lung malformations, neonatal lung
Heme hyperbilirubinemia, ABO incompatibility
GI
Liver
Congenital Heart Disease
Bone Juvenile RA
Derm atopic dermatitis, seborrheic dermatitis, miliaria rubra
Neuro NEC, PVLM
Childhood Tumors histiocytoses, renal tumors, neural tumors, other tumors
Genetic Syndromes Down’s, Turner’s, etc.
Metabolic Disorders
Amino acids Homocystinuria, PKU, porphyria
Other enzyme deficiencies
Lysosomal storage disorders
Mucopolysaccharidoses Hurler, Schei, Hunter
Glycogen storage disorders
hepatic hypoglycemia Von Gierke’s, Pompe’s
muscle energy disorders McArdle’s
Fetal Immune System
Teratogenesis (see pharm)
1-2% live births have obvious congenital malformations (suspected 10%) / account for 30-40% hospitalizations
organogenesis 14-56 days, after which teratogens cause deformation, retardation
rubella – 1st trimester
DES - vaginal glands, clear cell carcinoma
AD - Marfan’s / neurofibromatosis
AR - errors of metabolism
XLR - imperforate anus / congenital cataract
multifactorial (gen/env) - cleft lip / pyloric stenosis
Maternal Environment
transplacental - rubella, coxsackie, hepatitis, HSV, CMV, toxoplasmosis, other (malaria, listeria)
delivery - HSV, syphilis, Group B Streptococcus
perinatal: low virulence (E. Coli, Aerobacter, Alcaligenes, Proteus, Group B strep)
chorioamnionitis: ascending infection
fetus swallows maternal PMN’s
villitis: transplacental (may be asymptomatic)
funisitis: inflammation of umbilical cord
nutrition: malnutrition, obesity / endocrine: DM, hyperthyroid
blood dyscrasias: hypochromic anemia (prematurity) / sickle cell / ITP
early abortion: chromosome anomaly, cytotoxic (UV, methotrexate), implantation error, trauma
placenta previa: low implantation site over cervix
placenta accreta: absent decidua basalis, villi enter myometrium
placenta abruptio: separation of placenta from uterus
bilobate (succenturiate) placenta:
marginal (Battledore) insertion: 1 in 5 / usu. asymptomatic
velamentous insertion: placenta in membranes / bleeding risk at delivery
single umbilical artery: 1/4 to ½ with malformations
placenta extrachorialis: membranes insert on fetus rather than margins
amnion nodosum: oligohydramnios causes squamous cell aggregates on fetal skin
amniotic bands: adhere to fetus / compress, constrict
IUGR: occurs with > 15% placental infarction
Pre-eclampsia
(see DIC)
twins: 1/80
1/3 are monozygotic, 2/3 are dizygotic
twin transfusion syndrome / fetus papyraceous
Normal Morphogenesis
embryo: up to 8 wks <30 mm
lungs: embryonic 3-6 / pseudoglandular 6 - 16 / canalicular 16 - 24 / terminal sac 24 - / alveolar 40
kidneys: EC “cap” persists over glomeruli for 18-24 months postnatally
liver: extramedullary hematopoeisis up to 14 days after birth
lymph: primary follicles at 24 wks / germinal centers 4-6 wks after birth
adrenals: large fetal cortex involutes at birth (produces DHEA precursor for placental estriol E-3)
full term: 38-43 wks / 48 cm / 3200g
prematurity: <37 wks gestation / <26 wks marginally viable / 7.5% of births / 64% neonatal death
type 1 IUGR: symmetric / fetal abnormality
type 2 IUGR: asymmetrical with CNS sparing / maternal and placental abnormality
Disrupted Development
highest susceptibility 14 - 56 days
dive reflex - pulmonary artery constriction to preserve brain perfusion
RF: prematurity, DM, twins, C-section
HMD (lack of surfactant) occurs at 4 hours / surfactant by 28 wks
vascular spasm causes underperfusion / ischemia causes transudation / fluid and hyaline block respiration
BPD follows barotrauma and high oxygen therapy results in retrolental fibroplasia
Pulmonary Disease in Infants/Children
Stages of Neonatal Lung Development
embryonic 3-6 wks
pseudoglandular 6 - 16 - cartilage, cilia, goblet cells, glands
canalicular 16 - 28 - acinae, septa, type I and II pneumocytes
terminal sac
saccular 28 - 34 - surfactant
alveolar 40 - 2 yrs
Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Prematurity
PDA – pulmonary edema – capillary leak (see cardiac)
surfactant deficiency -
immature lung structure
Surfactant – phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) 70%, phosphatidylglycerol 10%, phosphatidylethanolamine 5%, sphingomyelin 2%, other 3%, proteins 5%, SP A-D 5%
Presentation: tachypnea, nasal flaring, subcostal and intercostal retractions, expiratory grunt, cyanosis, diminished air entry
CXR: symmetric, homogeneous, ground glass appearance (not well aerated) – also decreased pneumothorax mortality
Diagnosis: evidence of prematurity, signs and lab, other causes (group B streptococcus), radiologic evidence of HMD (reticulo-granular pattern, air bronchograms [because collapsed lung tissue allows dark bronchi to be seen])
Complications: ICH, PDA, BPD, ROP, Secondary infection, Rupture of Lungs
Treatment: supportive care: O2 and/or ventilation, intubation
Drug therapy:
natural surfactant from cow’s lungs - human amniotic fluid (not practical, requires 10 C-sections to get one therapy), alveolar washing and lung extracts from cows, pigs, etc.
synthetic surfactant (no protein) used to tremendous success, 30% decrease in mortality, 1% decreased in overall infant mortality in US)
Prevention: distributes better in liquid interface, may treat when not necessary (40%) (one study shows advantage to prevention therapy before 26 weeks gestation)
Congenital Malformations of the Lungs
Hypoplastic lung
compression, oligohydramnios, obstruction, vascular, CNS
Brachial plexus injury, phrenic nerve injury
One lung is small on CXR because diaphragm is not functional
Pulmonary sequestration
acessory lung blood supply systemic, not pulmonary artery
extralobar sequestration mass of lung separated, systemic blood supply, diaphragmatic hernia (left)
intralobar sequestration more common / systemic blood supply / posterior-basal lung
cystic or solid inflammation
bronchial connection to foregut predisposes to infection
Cystic disease
bronchogenic
lymphangiectasis
may accompany HMD / venous return obstruction / Turner’s syndrome
cystic adenomatoid malformation
gastric epithelium (type 1) / unilobar / associated with heart and kidney malformations / prematurity / type 3 is fatal
congenital lobar emphysema
hyperexpansion due to bronchus collapse / unilobar / normal septa (not true emphysema)
Neonatal Pulmonary Disease
Hyaline membrane disease
insulin retards surfactant production / thyroxine, glucocorticoids promote surfactant / appears after 4 hours of life / macrophages present after 24 hrs.
Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia BPD
artificial ventilation, oxygen therapy - may lead to cor pulmonale
Stage 1 (2-3 days) - acute, exudative / hyaline membranes, atelectasis, lymphatic dilatation
Stage 2 (4-10 days) - regeneration / necrosis, repair, hyperaeration
Stage 3 (10-20days) - transition / bronchiolitis obliterans, histiocytes
Stage 4 (1 month) - honeycombing, peribronchial muscle hypertrophy, squamous metaplasia
Pneumonia (see other)
true pneumonia (fibrinopurulent, hyaline exudate) v. aspiration of maternal WBC’s
Meconium aspiration
intrauterine distress causes excess meconium release into amniotic sac
marked abnormalities and other complications as in BPD
Hx: term or post-term, asphyxia
CXR: hyperinflation (lowered diaphragm), clumpy distribution of lung abnormalities
Treatment: mechanical ventilation, lavage techniques being investigated
26>37>30>
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