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Title: WebPath Respiratory Case Studies


1
WebPath Respiratory Case Studies
  • Dr. Spencer Gilbert

2
Laboratory Part I
3
CASE 1
  • Clinical History
  • A 49 year old male with a 25 pack year smoking
    history presented to you at the homeless clinic
    with complaints of increasing cough that had
    gradually been getting worse over the previous
    six months. He noted that the sputum was
    blood-tinged on one occasion. He also felt
    extremely tired. His x-ray showed upper lobe
    cavitations with nodular infiltrates.

4
Slide 1.1Cavitary lung lesions are seen here
grossly.
5
Slide 1.2The lung lesions are seen here
microscopically at low power.
6
Slide 1.3The lung lesions are seen here
microscopically at medium power.
7
Slide 1.4The lung lesions are seen here
microscopically at higher power.
8
Slide 1.5Note the subpleural lesion along with
the lesion in the hilar lymph node.
9
Slide 1.6Note the small millet seed sized
lesions scattered in the lung parenchyma.
10
Case 1
  • Questions
  • Describe the gross appearance of this lung
    representative of the disease process in your
    patient's lungs (Slide 1.1).
  • Describe the microscopic appearance of the lungs
    (Slides 1.2 - 1.4). What is the probable
    diagnosis?
  • What tests can be performed to diagnose this
    condition? What additional clinical findings
    might be present?
  • Describe the additional gross pathologic patterns
    for this disease process (Slides 1.5 and 1.6).
    What is the differential diagnosis?

11
CASE 1 Tuberculosis
  • Answers
  • Describe the gross appearance of this lung
    representative of the disease process in your
    patient's lungs. There is extensive granulomatous
    disease involving the lung parenchyma. Mainly
    upper lobe is involved. The larger tan-white
    granulomas have caseation with central necrosis
    and in some areas become almost confluent.
  • Describe the microscopic appearance of the lungs.
    What is the probable diagnosis? Granulomatous
    inflammation is present. The granulomas
    demonstrate central caseation and surrounding
    epithelioid macrophages. Some Langhans giant
    cells are seen. Also contributing to the
    inflammatory reaction are lymphocytes. The acid
    fast stain demonstrates many slender red rods
    consistent in morphology with Mycobacteria.
  • What tests can be performed to diagnose this
    condition? What additional clinical findings
    might be present? A tuberculin skin test is used
    mainly for screening patients for possible
    tuberculosis. Sputum samples can be obtained for
    acid fast smear and culture. This patient's acid
    fast smear was 3 positive, and the culture grew
    Mycobacterium tuberculosis that was sensitive to
    rifampin, isoniazid, and ethambutol. A chest
    radiograph will show the extent of pulmonary
    disease (in this case it was extensive, because
    of the cavitation).
  • Describe the additional gross pathologic patterns
    for this disease process. What is the
    differential diagnosis? Primary tuberculosis is
    often seen in children, and is often subclinical.
    There is a subpleural granuloma and extensive
    hilar lymph node granulomatous disease (the
    so-called Ghon complex, as seen in Slide 1.5). In
    adults, when health status declines, the
    quiescent infection may reactivate, or the
    patient may be reinfected, and then secondary
    tuberculosis is seen. Secondary tuberculosis is
    what the patient in this case had, because of the
    extensive upper lobe cavitary disease. When
    resistance to infection is very poor, a miliary
    pattern of infection may be seen, with numerous
    millet seed (1 to 3 mm) sized granulomas
    scattered extensively throughout the lungs (Slide
    1.6). The infection may also disseminate to other
    organs.

12
CASE 2
  • Clinical History
  • A 50 year old man worked in a foundry (casting
    metal materials using earthen molds) for thirty
    years. He was asymptomatic until a few months
    ago, but now has increasing dyspnea. A routine
    chest x-ray shows a "snow-storm" appearance.

13
Slide 2.1One of multiple lung nodules is seen
here at low power.
14
Slide 2.2One of multiple lung nodules is seen
here with polarized light microscopy.
15
Case 2
  • Questions
  • Describe what you see in slides 2.1 and 2.2. What
    is the probable diagnosis?
  • How does this lesion form? What are the offending
    particles seen in Slide 2.2?
  • How do you explain the lengthy hiatus between
    exposure and symptomatology?
  • These patients are at high risk for developing
    what disease?

16
CASE 2 Silicosis
  • Answers
  • Describe what you see in slides 2.1 and 2.2. What
    is the probable diagnosis? The lesion consists of
    concentric whirled bundles of hyalinized collagen
    fibers with scattered black pigment. The pattern
    is usually random, with some nodules located in
    perivascular or peribronchiolar location, and
    others scattered within the lung parenchyma. The
    lesion in Slide 2.2 is viewed under polarized
    light, and demonstrates numerous polarizable
    crystals. This is a characteristic picture of
    silicosis.
  • How does this lesion form? What are the offending
    particles seen in Slide 2.2? The lesion forms in
    reaction to cellular damage thought to be caused
    by interaction between SiOH groups on the
    hydrated surface of the silica crystals, the
    offending particles, with cellular macromolecules
    in macrophages, including phospholipids and
    proteins. There is damage to lipid membranes,
    with cell injury and death leading to release of
    a soluble protein factor that stimulates
    fibroblast proliferation and collagen synthesis.
  • How do you explain the lengthy hiatus between
    exposure and symptomatology? Silicosis is a
    chronic disease that does not manifest itself
    clinically until 20-40 years after the initial
    exposure. The reason can be seen by examining the
    pattern of injury, and realizing that initially
    the hyalinized nodules will be tiny and
    insignificant, but that cellular injury continues
    with ongoing increasing fibrosis and collagen
    deposition until eventually enough normal lung is
    damaged to cause symptoms. This ongoing damage
    does not require continued exposure, rather the
    residual crystals in the lung cause the continued
    damage.
  • These patients are at high risk for developing
    what disease? Tuberculosis. Patients with
    silicosis have impaired resistance to tubercle
    bacilli, possibly on the basis of silica-induced
    injury to macrophages. 0.5 to 5.0 of all cases
    of silicosis contract TB, and up to 60 of
    patients with conglomerate silicosis become
    infected.

17
CASE 3
  • Clinical History
  • The patient is a 67 year old veteran with a 50
    pack year history of smoking who is currently
    hospitalized for pancreatitis. He developed a
    productive cough with thick yellow sputum, fever,
    and hypotension after a week in hospital. He had
    an elevated WBC count with left shift. A chest
    radiograph shows increased AP diameter and areas
    of patchy consolidation.

18
Slide 3.1The lung is seen here grossly with
lesions more numerous in upper lung fields.
19
Slide 3.2The microscopic appearance of the upper
lung field lesions is seen here.
20
Slide 3.3The gross appearance of a lung with
patchy infiltrates on chest radiograph is seen
here.
21
Slide 3.4The microscopic appearance of an area
of consolidation is seen here at medium power.
22
Slide 3.5The microscopic appearance of an area
of consolidation is seen here at higher power.
23
Slide 3.6The microscopic appearance of an area
of consolidation is seen here at higher power.
24
Case 3
  • Questions
  • The patient has both a chronic and an acute
    process. Slides 3.1 and 3.2 demonstrates the
    gross and microscopic appearance of the chronic
    process. Slides 3.3 to 3.6 show gross and
    microscopic findings with the acute process.
    Describe both processes.
  • What is the chronic process? How does it develop,
    and to what in the clinical history is it
    related?
  • This represents one form of this type of lung
    damage. Name the other types, and what their
    respective etiologies are.
  • What is the acute process? How might this have
    developed and/or be related to his hospital
    course?

25
CASE 3 Centrilobular Emphysema w/Bronchopneumonia
  • Answers
  • The patient has both a chronic and an acute
    process. Slides 3.1 and 3.2 demonstrates the
    gross and microscopic appearance of the chronic
    process. Slides 3.3 to 3.6 show gross and
    microscopic findings with the acute process.
    Describe both processes. Chronic process The
    airspaces are dilated grossly, and respiratory
    bronchioles are dilated microscopically, with
    preservation of alveolar sacs. The result is the
    appearance of clubbed septa.
  • Acute process There are gross areas of
    tan-yellow consolidation, and microscopically
    there are large collections of polymorphonuclear
    leukocytes in the alveoli along with some
    hemorrhage.
  • What is the chronic process? How does it develop,
    and to what in the clinical history is it
    related? Centrilobular emphysema. The destructive
    mechanism is thought to be increased protease
    activity in the face of decreased protease
    inhibitors. It is related to smoking.
  • This represents one form of this type of lung
    damage. Name the other types, and what their
    respective etiologies are. The other forms of
    emphysema are
  • Panacinar emphysema, related to the genetic
    absence or decrease of alpha-1-antitrypsin. The
    acini are uniformly damaged and dilated, from the
    respiratory bronchiole to the terminal acinus.
  • Paraseptal emphysema, in which the proximal
    airway is normal and only the distal acinus is
    affected. Greatest in the apices subpleurally,
    and along connective tissue septa. Etiology is
    idiopathic.
  • Irregular emphysema, in which acinus is
    irregularly involved, and process is associated
    with scarring.
  • What is the acute process? How might this have
    developed and/or be related to his hospital
    course? The acute process is acute
    bronchopneumonia. With pancreatitis the patient
    is already ill, is probably not inspiring deeply,
    and is a set up for hospital acquired pneumonia.
    Common bacterial organisms for hospital acquired
    pneumonias include Staphylococcus aureus,
    Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus pneumoniae,
    E. Coli, Klebsiella, and Hemophilus. The most
    common organism for community acquired pneumonias
    is Streptococcus pneumoniae.

26
CASE 4
  • Clinical History
  • A 40 year old female has had a cough that is
    productive of purulent sputum. On occasion, she
    notes spots of blood in the sputum. She has been
    hospitalized for pneumonia twice in the past
    year. She does not have dyspnea, but she has
    recently developed wheezing episodes. Laboratory
    findings include an elevated WBC count with
    neutrophilia and left shift. Sputum culture grew
    3 Serratia marcescens and 2 Pseudomonas
    aeruginosa. A chest radiograph reveals thickened
    bronchi as seen on end, along with linear streaks
    in the right middle lobe.

27
Slide 4.1The lung lesion is seen here grossly.
28
Slide 4.2The lung lesion is seen here at low
power microscopically.
29
Slide 4.3The lung lesion has adjacent parenchyma
seen here microscopically.
30
  • Questions
  • What is the most striking architectural change in
    the lung? Describe it and the related changes?
  • What are the possible etiologies of this
    condition?
  • Further Clinical History
  • A 24 year old male had the findings at autopsy
    shown below. At autopsy his heart weighed 450
    grams and had a dilated right heart with right
    ventricular wall measuring 0.7 cm thick (normal lt
    0.5 cm).

31
Slide 4.4The lung of a patient with cystic
fibrosis is seen here grossly.
32
Slide 4.5The lung of a patient with cystic
fibrosis is seen here microscopically at medium
power.
33
Slide 4.6The lung of a patient with cystic
fibrosis is seen here microscopically at higher
power.
34
Slide 4.7The peripheral pulmonary arteries have
the appearance shown here.
35
Case 4
  • Questions
  • What do you think is the etiology for his
    pulmonary findings? What changes do you see in
    the pulmonary vessels, slide 4.7? How does this
    relate to autopsy findings?
  • Do you think he was currently suffering from
    acute respiratory symptoms when he died? Why or
    why not?

36
CASE 4 Bronchiectasis
  • Answers
  • What is the most striking architectural change in
    the lung? Describe it and the related changes?
    There is bronchiectasis, with the bronchi
    markedly dilated. There has been destruction of
    the bronchial walls, and there is an intense
    chronic inflammatory infiltrate around them. Note
    that although these are "large" bronchi, there is
    no cartilage present. The epithelial lining is
    focally eroded, with underlying granulation
    tissue. There is peribronchial scarring and
    parenchymal collapse.
  • What are the possible etiologies of this
    condition? Multiple possible etiologies,
    including congenital bronchiectasis, post
    obstructive, secondary to necrotizing pneumonia
    (Staphylococcal or TB), immunodeficiency
    disorders, or the immotile cilia and Kartagener's
    syndromes.

37
CASE 4 Bronchiectasis
  • Answers
  • What do you think is the etiology for his
    pulmonary findings? What changes do you see in
    the pulmonary vessels, slide 4.7? How does this
    relate to autopsy findings? The extensive nature
    of the bronchiectasis here, along with the young
    age of the patient, is consistent with cystic
    fibrosis. This is probably the most common
    etiology overall for bronchiectasis, but in such
    cases both lungs are extensively involved. The
    pulmonary arteries show changes of pulmonary
    hypertension, as shown by slide 4.7 which
    highlights a plexiform arteriopathy typical for
    pulmonary hypertension. There is thickening of
    arterial and arteriolar walls, and narrowing of
    lumina. This is related to the relative cardiac
    hypertrophy, and thickening of the right
    ventricular wall (normal is up to 0.5 cm thick),
    indicating a degree of cor pulmonale.
  • Do you think he was currently suffering from
    acute respiratory symptoms when he died? Why or
    why not? Probably, as there are areas of
    consolidation and acute pneumonia. Depending on
    the severity of the generalized process
    throughout the lungs he may or may not have been
    in severe distress. Many cystic fibrosis patients
    have chronic infections with Pseudomonas.

38
CASE 5
  • Clinical History
  • The patient is an 84 year old woman who was
    hospitalized for a broken hip. She spiked a fever
    on the second hospital day, with cough producing
    a watery sputum, shaking chills, and marked
    malaise, but antibiotics were not started and she
    died within 36 hours of becoming systemically
    ill. Chest x-ray shows a diffuse consolidation
    in the left lower lobe. CBC showed an elevated
    WBC count with increased bands. Blood cultures
    were reported positive after she died.

39
Slide 5.1The lung is seen here grossly.
40
Slide 5.2The lung is seen here microscopically.
41
Slide 5.3A complicating lesion of the lung
--abscess formation-- is seen here
microscopically.
42
Case 5
  • Questions
  • What is the process demonstrated in these
    sections? How does this differ in pattern from
    what you saw in Case 3?
  • What organism(s) might have been cultured from
    her blood, had blood cultures been ordered?
  • Does the disease process in these sections look
    severe enough to result in a respiratory death?

43
CASE 5 Lobar Pneumonia
  • Answers
  • What is the process demonstrated in these
    sections? How does this differ in pattern from
    what you saw in Case 3? These slides show a lobar
    pneumonia. There is a diffuse infiltrate of acute
    polymorphonuclear cells in the consolidated lobe.
    In case 3, the infiltrate showed a patchy
    pattern. However, the distinction between
    bronchopneumonia and lobar pneumonia is often not
    clear, as some organisms cause one pattern in
    some patients, and another pattern in other
    patients. Also, treatment with antibiotics can
    alter the pattern as well.
  • What organism(s) might have been cultured from
    her blood, had blood cultures been ordered?
    Streptococcus pneumoniae causes 95 of the lobar
    pneumonias, although Klebsiella, Staphylococci,
    Hemophilus influenze, and some gram negative
    enteric bacteria (E. Coli, Klebsiella) may also
    cause it. S. pneumoniae characteristically
    produces a septic phase within the first 24 to 48
    hours during which the organism can readily be
    cultured from the blood.
  • Does the disease process in these sections look
    severe enough to result in a respiratory death?
    What else might have contributed to her death?
    Although this looks like a relatively early
    pneumonia, the patient also was septic, which
    causes vascular collapse and hypotension. She
    likely died due to a combination of
    susceptibility due to old age, shock of trauma,
    septic shock and pneumonia.

44
CASE 6
  • Clinical History
  • The patient is a 47 year old migrant farm worker
    who had recently moved from Florida to Southern
    California. Three weeks after beginning work in
    the orchards he presented to a local clinic with
    fever, cough, night sweats and pleuritic chest
    pain. Chest radiograph revealed segmental
    infiltrates, some hilar adenopathy and a small
    pleural effusion.

45
Slide 6.1The lung lesion is seen here
microscopically at medium power.
46
Slide 6.2The lung lesion is seen here
microscopically at higher power.
47
Slide 6.3The lung lesion is seen here
microscopically with Gomori methenamine silver
(GMS) stain.
48
Case 6
  • Questions
  • What type of inflammatory process is present?
    Describe the features of this process.
  • What is the differential diagnosis? Which of
    these is most likely given the history? What
    organism do you see?
  • How would the histopathology differ if the
    patient had underlying AIDS?
  • What proportion of normal hosts exposed to this
    organism develop clinical symptomatology? What
    are the possible outcomes/sequelae of this
    infection?

49
CASE 6 Coccidioidomycosis
  • Answers
  • What type of inflammatory process is present?
    Describe the features of this process. The
    process is granulomatous. The well-formed
    granulomas are formed by palisading epithelioid
    macrophages and chronic inflammatory cells with
    surrounding fibroblasts and collagen. The
    macrophages are large pink cells, oval to
    spindled, which line up around the center, and
    Langhans giant cells are also seen.
  • What is the differential diagnosis? Which of
    these is most likely given the history? What
    organism do you see? The differential diagnosis
    includes Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes
    caseating granulomas, and the various invasive
    fungal organisms that can cause pulmonary
    disease. In the absence of immune compromise, the
    possibilities include Histoplasmosis,
    Cryptococcosis, Blastomycosis, Coccidioidomycosis,
    and Paracoccidioidomycosis. These each have
    fairly distinctive morphology on GMS (a silver
    stain that highlights the walls of fungal
    organisms in black, on a green background
    counterstain.) The history and morphology in this
    case are classic for Coccidioidomycosis.
  • How would the histopathology differ if the
    patient had underlying AIDS? If the patient were
    immunocompromised, particularly with AIDS, the
    histopathology of Cocci is far less granulomatous
    and more suppurative (acute inflammatory cells.)
  • What proportion of normal hosts exposed to this
    organism develop clinical symptomatology? What
    are the possible outcomes/sequelae of this
    infection? Only about 10 of the people exposed
    develop clinically evident disease. Of those, the
    vast majority resolve completely either
    spontaneously or with antifungal treatment. gt2 to
    4 may go on to develop systemic dissemination,
    with worsening pulmonary involvement, and spread
    to skin, bones, CNS and other organs.

50
CASE 7
  • Clinical History
  • A 37 year old patient known to be infected with
    the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and whose
    last CD4 lymphocyte count was 75/microliter died
    in respiratory failure.

51
Slide 7.1The high power microscopic appearance
of one etiologic agent for pulmonary infection is
seen here.
52
Slide 7.2The high power microscopic appearance
of the same etiologic agent for pulmonary
infection is seen here.
53
Slide 7.3Multiple pulmonary lesions appear in
this immunocompromised patient.
54
Slide 7.4The microscopic appearance of one of
the multiple pulmonary lesions is seen here.
55
Case 7
  • Questions
  • There are two etiologic agents. Identify and
    describe the manifestations of each, and name the
    probable organisms.
  • Why might this patient have had significant
    bleeding into his lung?
  • What other organs might be involved by these
    organisms?

56
CASE 7 Cytomegalovirus and Aspergillus Infection
  • Answers
  • There are two etiologic agents. Identify and
    describe the manifestations of each, and name the
    probable organisms. The more diffuse of the two
    organisms is cytomegalovirus (Slides 7.1 and
    7.2), with numerous affected alveolar cells. The
    affected cells are markedly enlarged, have large
    nuclei with huge pink intranuclear inclusions
    surrounded by a halo. These inclusions occupy
    half the size of the nucleus. In some cells
    multiple smaller basophilic inclusions can be
    seen in they cytoplasm. These represent viral
    coat, or complete virions.
  • The second organism (Slides 7.3 and 7.4) is found
    focally in two or three areas showing necrosis
    surrounded by acute inflammatory cells and
    nuclear debris (Slides 7.3 and 7.4). Within these
    areas are starbursts of branching hyphae. These
    are evident even on HE stain, but are
    highlighted by a GMS stain, where again the walls
    of the hyphae are stained black by the silver.
    The probably organism is Aspergillus, which can
    be seen in immunocompromised hosts. Other
    possibilities include Candida, which has
    pseudohyphae and budding yeasts.
  • Why might this patient have had significant
    bleeding into his lung? Aspergillus is an
    angioinvasive organism, and causes vasculitis and
    necrosis of vessel walls. Necrosis results in
    holes, holes in vessel walls results in bleeding.
  • What other organs might be involved by these
    organisms? Although any organ may be affected,
    CMV infection is especially prominent in the
    lung, adrenal, brain, eye, and gastrointestinal
    tract.
  • The pulmonary route is the most common site of
    invasion of Aspergillus in immunocompromised
    hosts, though invasion through the GI tract can
    also occur. In disseminated aspergillosis
    virtually any site can be involved, but brain and
    kidney are the most common.

57
CASE 8
  • Clinical History
  • A 56 year old financial officer with a large
    health maintenance organization with no prior
    major medical illnesses presented to the
    emergency room with acute onset of fever, cough,
    and dyspnea. His chest x-ray showed diffuse
    bilateral fluffy perihilar infiltrates.

58
Slide 8.1The gross appearance of the lung is
seen here.
59
Slide 8.2The microscopic appearance of the lung
at high power is seen here with HE stain.
60
Slide 8.3The microscopic appearance of the lung
at high power is seen here with a GMS stain.
61
Case 8
  • Questions
  • What is the material in the alveoli?
  • What do you see on GMS (silver) stain in Slide
    8.3?
  • What is his likely underlying condition?
  • If this patient had some other reason for being
    immunosuppressed, such as being on
    corticosteroids, receiving chemotherapy for
    malignancy, or having an undiagnosed lymphoma,
    how would the biopsy differ most likely?

62
CASE 8 Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonia
  • Answers
  • What is the material in the alveoli? A foamy
    proteinaceous exudate fills each alveolus. There
    is minimal accompanying inflammation.
  • What do you see on GMS (silver) stain in Slide
    8.3? Numerous cup shaped rather delicate
    organisms that look a little like RBC's, however
    notice that the staining is different from RBC's
    in that in the Pneumocystis carinii (PCP) the
    delicate cell wall stains and the center is
    clear, where the RBC's stain more darkly in the
    center.
  • What is his likely underlying condition? Probably
    AIDS with HIV infection, but additional history
    and an HIV test are needed.
  • If this patient had some other reason for being
    immunosuppressed, such as being on
    corticosteroids, receiving chemotherapy for
    malignancy, or having an undiagnosed lymphoma,
    how would the biopsy differ most likely? In PCP
    infection in AIDS the organism burden is
    overwhelming, with the alveoli packed with
    organisms. In immunosuppression due to other
    causes such as lymphoma, chemotherapy, or steroid
    use, often there are many fewer organisms present
    and one has to hunt to find them.

63
CASE 9
  • Clinical History
  • A 9 year old girl has the sudden onset of severe
    dyspnea with wheezing. She has had similar
    episodes in the past.

64
Slide 9.1A sputum cytology specimen is shown
here with a curled thread of inspissated mucus
known as a Curschmann spiral.
65
Slide 9.2A sputum cytology specimen is shown
here with several Charcot-Leyden crystals.
66
Slide 9.3The appearance of a bronchial wall is
seen here at high magnification. Note the many
eosinophils and the dilated submucosal venules.
67
Case 9
  • Questions
  • How do you explain the sputum cytologic findings?
  • Why do you seen the inflammatory cell type that
    predominates in Slide 9.3?
  • How is this disease likely to differ in adults?
  • What are the consequences of this disease?

68
CASE 9 Asthma
  • Answers
  • How do you explain the sputum cytologic findings?
    There is an outpouring of mucus into the airways,
    some of which becomes inspissated and can further
    block expiration, exacerbating the air-trapping
    from the bronchoconstriction. The mucus forms the
    Curschman spirals. The Charcot-Leyden crystals
    are the conglomerates of the reddish granules
    released from eosinophils.
  • Why do you seen the inflammatory cell type that
    predominates in Slide 9.3? Asthma in children is
    most often an allergic phenomenon, and many
    asthmatics will demonstrate other forms of atopy.
    This is a form of type I hypersensitivity
    response. The offending allergen reacts with IgE
    coating mast cells lining the airways, resulting
    in release of mast cell granules containing
    cytokines such as histamine that lead to
    bronchoconstriction and edema. Eosinophil
    chemotactic factor is also released.
  • How is this disease likely to differ in adults?
    In adults, asthma is typically the "intrinsic"
    variety in which the reaction occurs to stimuli
    such as exercise or cold, not an external
    allergen. However, the end result is the same.
  • What are the consequences of this disease? The
    acute episodes can be severe--status
    asthmaticus--which is life-threatening and
    requires immediate treatment with
    bronchodilators. There is a chronic component to
    this disease, since over time there is bronchial
    smooth muscle hypertrophy and submucosal
    glandular hyperplasia. Since this disease is
    typically episodic, chronic obstructive pulmonary
    disease is unlikely to be a result.

69
The END!!
Wait, what? More? Are you kidding me right now?
70
Laboratory Part II
71
CASE 1
  • Clinical History
  • Slides 1 and 2 are from a neonate was born
    prematurely at 28 weeks gestation, weighing 700
    grams (normal for 28 weeks is 950 grams). The
    mother was a two pack per day smoker who refused
    to cut down or stop smoking during her pregnancy.
    The baby survived for 6 days on a respirator
    requiring very high oxygen levels. Diffuse
    infiltrates were seen on chest x-ray, with a
    "ground glass" appearance, and the PO2 was low on
    blood gas analysis.
  • Clinical History
  • Slide 1.3 is from an infant with
    hyperbilirubinemia.

72
Slide 1.1The lung is shown here at low power
microscopically.
73
Slide 1.2The lung is shown here at higher power
microscopically.
74
Slide 1.3The lung is shown here at low power
microscopically in a baby with hyperbilirubinemia.

75
Case 1
  • Questions
  • Describe the microscopic appearance of the lung
    sections.
  • What is the material in the alveoli? What other
    findings are present that are significant in
    understanding this infant's demise?
  • What is the diagnosis? What are the clinical
    manifestations of this disease?
  • How might the mother's smoking history have
    contributed to the outcome? What factors are felt
    to contribute to the development of this disease?
  • What is the chronic form of this disease called?

76
CASE 1 Hyaline Membrane Disease
  • Answers
  • Describe the microscopic appearance of the lung
    sections (Slides 1.1 - 1.3). Sections show
    immature lung with alternating areas of
    atelectasis and alveolar dilatation. Alveolar
    walls are thick, there is marked vascular
    congestion, air spaces contain fluid and
    scattered macrophages, and alveoli are lined by
    thick pink hyaline membranes. In Slide 1.3, the
    jaundice has stained the hyaline membranes
    yellow.
  • What is the material in the alveoli? What other
    findings are present that are significant in
    understanding this infant's demise? Hyaline
    membranes are made of coagulated protein and
    fibrin. The low ratio of air space to
    interstitium is evidence of the lung's
    immaturity, a significant risk factor for
    recovery. Another finding indicating immaturity
    that is not demonstrated in the kodachromes is
    the presence of immature cartilage around
    bronchi.
  • What is the diagnosis? What are the clinical
    manifestations of this disease? Hyaline membrane
    disease of the newborn. Rapid respirations,
    inspiratory rib retraction, expiratory grunting,
    hypoxemia, and cyanosis.
  • How might the mother's smoking history have
    contributed to the outcome? What factors are felt
    to contribute to the development of this disease?
    Smoking during pregnancy is associated with low
    birth weight infants. Possible contributors to
    HMD are prematurity, low birth weight, maternal
    diabetes, intrapartum fetal aspiration, cord
    asphyxia, birth by Caesarean section, maternal
    sedation, and neonatal brain injury, with
    prematurity being by far the most important
    factor.
  • What is the chronic form of this disease called?
    Bronchopulmonary dysplasia. It is characterized
    by interstitial and peribronchial fibrosis, and
    epithelial hyperplasia and squamous metaplasia of
    the large airways.

77
CASE 2
  • Clinical History
  • A 50 year old male with a history of myotonic
    muscular dystrophy was admitted for pneumonia. He
    was doing well and improving after several days
    of IV antibiotics when he suffered a sudden
    cardiac arrest which did not respond to
    resuscitative efforts.

78
Slide 2.1The lesion is seen here grossly.
79
Slide 2.2The microscopic apperance is shown
here.
80
Slide 2.3The microscopic apperance is shown here
at high magnification.
81
Case 2
  • Questions
  • The gross and microscopic appearance of a
    thromboembolus in a pulmonary artery is shown.
    What acute changes might you see in the heart?
  • What do you see in the clot (Slide 2.3) that
    helps you to know this is a pre-mortem and not a
    post-mortem clot? Where do these clots come from?
  • Name as many predisposing conditions as you can
    think of that could lead to pulmonary emboli.
  • What might we see in other sections of the lung
    that would be related to the PE? What are these
    called? What are the signs and symptoms that
    should lead you to suspect PE?

82
CASE 2 Pulmonary Thromboembolism
  • Answers
  • The gross and microscopic appearance of a
    thromboembolus in a pulmonary artery is shown.
    What acute changes might you see in the heart?
    Acute dilatation of the right ventricle, and
    possible right atrium, with thinning of the
    ventricular wall.
  • What do you see in the clot (Slide 2.3) that
    helps you to know this is a pre-mortem and not a
    post-mortem clot? Where do these clots come from?
    Layering of RBC's, fibrin, and WBC's is typical
    of pre-mortem clot, the so called lines of Zahn.
    Thromboemboli in the lungs usually come from deep
    veins in the legs, but may also come from the
    pelvic veins.
  • What factors are involved in thrombogenesis? Name
    as many predisposing conditions as you can think
    of that could lead to pulmonary emboli. The three
    factors involved in thrombogenesis are stasis,
    abnormalities in the vessel wall, and alterations
    in the coagulation system. Conditions associated
    with high risk of thromboembolism include the
    postoperative state, pregnancy, use of birth
    control pills, congestive heart failure, chronic
    pulmonary disease, fractures or other injuries of
    the lower extremities, chronic deep venous
    insufficiency of the legs, prolonged bed rest,
    and carcinoma.
  • What might we see in other sections of the lung
    that would be related to the PE? What are these
    called? What are the signs and symptoms that
    should lead you to suspect PE? You may see
    evidence of earlier PE's, which consist of
    thromboemboli in various states of organization,
    from unorganized clot to thin fibrous bands or
    endothelialized scars on the vessel walls. The
    bands are called "fiddle-strings." The sudden
    onset of severe unexplained dyspnea, syncope, or
    breathlessness should suggest PE. The most
    consistent sign is tachycardia.

83
CASE 3
  • Clinical History
  • This is a 50 year old woman with a previous
    diagnosis of infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the
    breast. She underwent mastectomy. She now
    presents with bilateral serosanguineous pleural
    effusions.

84
Slide 3.1Note what is distending the lymphatic
spaces.
85
Slide 3.2The microscopic appearance of the lung
is seen at low power.
86
Slide 3.3The microscopic appearance of the
adjacent lung parenchyma is seen at high power.
87
Case 3
  • Questions
  • The clusters of malignant cells in this section
    are metastatic breast carcinoma. Where are they
    located?
  • Look carefully at the smaller arterioles? What
    changes do you see in the vessels? What is the
    mechanism?
  • What is/has gone on in the alveolar spaces? What
    is the brown pigment?
  • What do you think this woman's respiratory
    symptomatology was during her terminal phase?
  • What is the most common tumor in the lung?

88
CASE 3 Metastatic Carcinoma
  • Answer
  • The clusters of malignant cells in this section
    are metastatic breast cancer. Where are they
    located? Primarily in lymphatics which run around
    the bronchovascular bundles and in the
    interlobular septa, but you can also see tumor in
    vessels and a few nodules in the parenchyma.
  • Look carefully at the smaller arterioles in Slide
    3.2 What changes do you see in the vessels? What
    is the mechanism? This section demonstrates
    changes of pulmonary hypertension as well as the
    lymphatic and vascular spread of cancer. The
    change you see is marked thickening of vessel
    walls, with luminal compromise, due to intimal
    proliferation and medial hypertrophy. The likely
    mechanism in this case is obstruction downstream
    in the vessels by cancer.
  • What is/has gone on in the alveolar spaces in
    Slide 3.3? What is the brown pigment? Hemorrhage
    is present in the alveoli. The brown pigment is
    hemosiderin.
  • What do you think this woman's respiratory
    symptomatology was during her terminal phase? She
    was likely quite dyspneic and hypoxemic.
  • What is the most common tumor in the lung?
    Metastatic cancer.

89
CASE 4
  • Clinical History
  • A 63 year old male presented with hemoptysis of
    three weeks duration. He had a 50 pack year
    history of smoking. His chest x-ray showed a
    large central peri-hilar mass. A fine needle
    aspiration (FNA) of the mass was performed.

90
Slide 4.1There is a large mass adjacent to the
hilum of the right lung.
91
Slide 4.2There are dark, angular cells with
orange-staining cytoplasm seen in this fine
needle aspiration cytologic smear of cells from
the mass.
92
Slide 4.3The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here at medium power.
93
Slide 4.3The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here at medium power.
94
Slide 4.4The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here at high power.
95
Slide 4.6The microscopic appearance of the
pulmonary parenchyma distal to the lesion is seen
here at high power.
96
Case 4
  • Questions
  • Describe the histopathology of the mass lesion
    (Slides 4.2 - 4.5). What is the diagnosis? What
    features do you use to make this diagnosis?
  • Where does this lesion usually arise? What is the
    hypothesized mechanism of carcinogenesis?
  • What might you see in the parenchyma of the lung
    behind the lesion (Slide 4.6)?

97
CASE 4 Squamous Cell Carcinoma
  • Answers
  • Describe the histopathology of the mass lesion.
    What is the diagnosis? What features do you use
    to make this diagnosis? There are cords and
    sheets of large cells intertwining with whorls of
    desmoplastic fibrous tissue. The large cells are
    arranged in a mosaic pattern, and have abundant
    eosinophilic cytoplasm and large nuclei. The
    nuclei show the malignant features of
    hyperchromasia, irregular nuclear border,
    chromatin clumping, and numerous mitoses. This is
    a moderately differentiated squamous carcinoma.
    To make this diagnosis you need to see
    keratinization and/or keratin pearls, and/or
    intercellular bridges. In this case, bridges are
    fairly easy to find, and there are occasional
    individually keratinized cells, though
    keratinization is not a prominent feature in this
    case.
  • Where does this lesion usually arise? What is the
    hypothesized mechanism of carcinogenesis?
    Squamous carcinomas are most often central,
    arising in the mainstem, 1st, 2nd, or 3rd order
    bronchi. The mechanism of carcinogenesis is
    thought to be a response to a carcinogen, most
    often smoking, in the bronchial epithelium
    resulting first in metaplasia from columnar to
    squamous, going on to cytologic atypia and then
    carcinoma.
  • What might you see (Slide 4.6) in the parenchyma
    of the lung behind the lesion? Since bronchogenic
    carcinoma often arises in bronchi, there is often
    bronchial plugging. This may lead to
    bronchopneumonia in the lung behind the cancer,
    or to endogenous lipid pneumonia. In the first
    case you would see acute inflammation, in the
    second numerous large lipid laden macrophages in
    the alveolar space.

98
CASE 5
  • Clinical History
  • A 32 year old housewife presented to her family
    doctor with cough of six weeks duration and
    recent onset of fever and malaise. A chest x-ray
    showed a right upper lobe infiltrate with
    suggestion of a proximal mass on lateral film.
    She underwent bronchoscopy, biopsy, and
    subsequent right upper lobectomy.

99
Slide 5.1The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here at low power.
100
Slide 5.2The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here at high power.
101
Case 5
  • Questions
  • Describe the main lesion. Where is it located?
    What is the diagnosis?
  • The patient bled profusely when the lesion was
    biopsied. Why? Why had she recently developed
    fever and malaise and how does this relate to her
    chest x-ray findings?
  • What is the characteristic feature of these
    tumors by electron microscopy?
  • In what other organs do these commonly arise?
    What is the prognosis of these tumors?
  • What is the related neoplasm with a more ominous
    prognosis? How does it differ histologically?

102
CASE 5 Pulmonary Carcinoid Tumor
  • Answer
  • Describe the main lesion. Where is it located?
    What is the diagnosis? The mass is composed of
    nests, cords, and sheets of cells lined by
    delicate fibrous septa. The cells are round,
    regular with small uniform nuclei and infrequent
    mitoses. It is located in the bronchus. It is a
    carcinoid tumor.
  • The patient bled profusely when the lesion was
    biopsied. Why? Why had she recently developed
    fever and malaise and how does this relate to her
    chest x-ray findings? Carcinoid tumors are
    extremely vascular and thus often bleed when
    biopsied. The parenchyma behind the tumor shows
    abundant neutrophils and thus she has a
    superimposed pneumonia explaining the symptoms
    and chest x-ray.
  • What is the characteristic feature of these
    tumors by electron microscopy? By electron
    microscopy these tumors show electron dense
    neurosecretory granules.
  • In what other organs do these commonly arise?
    What is the prognosis of these tumors? They often
    arise also in the GI tract, with the appendix
    being a fairly frequent site. The prognosis is
    usually excellent, though they may metastasize to
    regional nodes.
  • What is the related neoplasm with a more ominous
    prognosis? How does it differ histologically? The
    most malignant end of the neuroendocrine spectrum
    is oat cell, or small cell carcinoma of the lung,
    which has an almost uniformly fatal outcome. The
    cells are more hyperchromatic with almost no
    cytoplasm. They show little overall architecture.
    Nuclear molding (nucleus of one cell wrapping
    around that of another) is a distinctive feature.
    Usually the chromatin has a kind of "salt and
    pepper" look to it.

103
CASE 6
  • Clinical History
  • A 47 year old school teacher, a non-smoker, was
    admitted for inguinal herniorrhaphy. A
    pre-operative routine chest x-ray revealed a 3 cm
    nodule in the right upper lobe which was not
    present on an x-ray taken two years prior. No
    evidence of mediastinal adenopathy was found on
    CT scan. A right upper lobectomy was performed.

104
Slide 6.1The chest radiograph is shown here,
with the right upper lobe mass lesion. This
patient has had a previous coronary bypass graft
placed, and there are vascular clips and sternal
wire sutures.
105
Slide 6.2The chest CT scan shown here
demonstrates the right upper lobe mass lesion
which causes a focal scar of the overlying pleura.
106
Slide 6.3This nuclear medicine PET tumor image
scan which looks like a series of paper doll
cutouts demonstrates the right upper lobe mass
lesion but no other areas suggesting metastases.
The brain and bladder have marked uptake.
107
Slide 6.4The gross appearance of a similar
lesion in the left lower lobe is seen here.
108
Slide 6.5The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here at medium power.
109
Case 6
  • Questions
  • Describe the location, gross appearance, and
    histopathology of this lesion.
  • What is the diagnosis? Where are these lesions
    usually located?
  • This lesion was enclosed within the lung and all
    of the hilar and mediastinal nodes sampled were
    free of tumor. What stage is this tumor? What is
    the prognosis for this patient?

110
CASE 6 Adenocarcinoma
  • Answers
  • Describe the histopathology of this lesion. This
    lesion shows sheets and cords of large cells with
    glandular formation, and mucin production. The
    cells have abundant pink to grey, somewhat bubbly
    cytoplasm. The nuclei are oval to angulated and
    have prominent nucleoli. Mitoses are easy to
    find, but not numerous. Areas of necrosis can be
    seen.
  • What is the diagnosis? Where are these lesions
    usually located? This is an adenocarcinoma. They
    are more often peripheral than central.
  • This lesion was enclosed within the lung and all
    of the hilar and mediastinal nodes sampled were
    free of tumor. What stage is this tumor? What is
    the prognosis for this woman? This is a stage T2
    N0 M0 tumor (a T1 tumor of the lung is lt3 cm).
    Five year survival is still only about 30,
    despite the small size and absence of positive
    lymph node involvement.

111
CASE 7
  • Clinical History
  • A 54 year old man suffered chest injuries in a
    car accident. X-rays showed no evidence of broken
    ribs, but an incidental finding of a solitary
    lung nodule was seen peripherally in the right
    lower lobe. No prior x-rays were available for
    comparison. CT scan showed the lesion to be
    sharply circumscribed, with no associated
    detectable adenopathy. Percutaneous CT guided
    fine needle aspiration (FNA) was attempted, but
    no cellular elements were obtained. He went to
    surgery, and after a frozen section diagnosis, a
    segmental wedge resection was performed and the
    patient spared a lobectomy.

112
Slide 7.1The radiographic appearance of this
"coin lesion" is seen here.
113
Slide 7.2The gross appearance of the lesion is
seen here on the right. A similar but smaller
lesion is seen at the left.
114
Slide 7.3The microscopic appearance of the
lesion is seen here.
115
Case 7
  • Questions
  • Describe the gross appearance of the lesion and
    then identify histopathologic features, including
    as many elements as you can identify. Why do you
    think they were unable to obtain cellular
    material by FNA. Had they been able to make the
    diagnosis by FNA, what do you think they would
    have done differently?
  • What is the diagnosis? What is the significance?
  • Where does this lesion arise from?
  • Why was the surgeon able to shell it out, rather
    than remove a lobe?

116
CASE 7 Pulmonary Hamartoma
  • Answers
  • What is the diagnosis? What is the significance?
    This is a pulmonary hamartoma. They are benign,
    harmless lesions, but can be confused on chest
    x-ray with malignancies.
  • Where does this lesion arise from? They are
    thought to arise as abnormal proliferations of
    normal elements in the lung.
  • Why was the surgeon able to shell it out, rather
    than remove a lobe? They are benign, never
    metastasize, and are well- circumscribed and easy
    to separate from the surrounding lung parenchyma.

117
One More
  • Finally

118
CASE 8
  • Clinical History
  • A fire inside a house results in minimal
    superficial burn injuries involving 22 total
    body surface area, mainly the head and neck area,
    to a 28 year old female. However, inhalation of
    hot gases from the fire in an enclosed space
    leads to inhalation injury. In hospital, she
    requires increasing FIO2 to 100 to maintain
    arterial oxygen saturations.

119
Slide 8.1The gross appearance of the lung is
seen here. The lung is diffusely firm and
rubbery.
120
Slide 8.2The microscopic appearance of the lung
is seen here at high magnification. Note the pink
hyaline membranes and the type II cell
hyperplasia.
121
Slide 8.3The gross appearance of the lung is
seen here after a month of mechanical
ventilation.
122
Case 8
  • Questions
  • Describe the gross and microscopic appearances of
    the lungs
  • What is the diagnosis? How does this process
    occur?
  • What is the natural history of this process?

123
CASE 8Diffuse Alveolar Damage (DAD)
  • Answers
  • Describe the gross and microscopic appearances of
    the lungs There is diffuse consolidation along
    with the hyaline membrane formation and type II
    cell hyperplasia.
  • What is the diagnosis? How does this process
    occur? This is pulmonary diffuse alveolar damage
    (DAD) which clinically is often called adult
    respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). There are
    many causes, including shock from trauma,
    infections, inhalation of chemical irritants or
    hot gases in a fire, drug therapy, and others.
    DAD is essentially the final common pathway for
    any severe lung injury. Oxygen toxicity also
    potentiates the lung injury leading to DAD.
    Unfortunately, oxygen therapy is needed to treat
    the lung injury. DAD starts with injury to the
    alveoli and capillaries, resulting in exudation
    of fluids and proteins that form the hyaline
    membranes.
  • What is the natural history of this process? The
    early acute, or exudative, phase of DAD, most
    prominent in the first week of injury, is
    characterized by interstitial and intra-alveolar
    edema, passive congestion, inflammation, and
    hyaline membranes. The hyaline membranes are
    composed of fibrin-rich edema fluid mixed with
    the cytoplasmic remnants of necrotic epithelial
    cells. The type II epithelial cells undergo
    proliferation in an attempt to regenerate to
    alveolar lining.
  • As the process continues, the hyaline membranes
    diminish and the type II cells increase, while
    there is interstitial thickening and increasing
    numbers of mononuclear inflammatory cells. The
    next stage, the proliferative or organizing stage
    of DAD, occurs after 1 to 2 weeks. The exudates
    organize, and interstitial thickening becomes
    more prominent. Fibroblasts begin laying down
    more collagen. Near the end of a month, there is
    extensive fibrosis, with gross changes (seen in
    slide 8.3) of "honeycomb" lung.

124
That all,The End,Fini!
  • This is the last WebPath PowerPoint of 2004. I
    hope you enjoyed!
  • Now go take a nap!

125
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