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Pathology of extrahepatic biliary tract and pancreas

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Pathologyofextrahepaticbiliarytractandpancreas. ... therapy: surgery, liver transplantation. Cyst . of. choledochus: mostlyfemales, up to 10 yearsold. tumor-likemass. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pathology of extrahepatic biliary tract and pancreas


1
Pathology of extrahepatic biliary tract and
pancreas
  • MUDr. Helena Skálová

2
Normal biliary tract
  • Liver produces 1 liter of bile per day
  • Storage of concentrated bile in gallbladder
  • Release after meal
  • Bile ducts are essential
  • Gallbladder is not

3
Pathology of biliary tract
  • Inborn malformations
  • Cholelithiasis
  • Cholecystitis, cholangoitis
  • PBC, PSC
  • Tumors

4
Inborn malformations
  • Atresia of biliary ducts
  • narrowing or total closure of the whole lenght of
    extrahepatic bile ducts or segmetally
  • ethiopathogenesis variable, often unknown
    (chromosomal defects, viral infections)
  • symptoms cholestatis in days-weeks after birth,
    progresses to biliary cirrhosis
  • most frequent cause od death from liver disease
    in early childhood
  • therapy surgery, liver transplantation
  • Cyst of choledochus
  • mostly females, up to 10 years old
  • tumor-like mass
  • symptoms asymptomatic, pain, icterus
  • therapy surgery

5
Cholesterolosis
  • Strawberry gallbladder
  • Macrophages with cholesterol
  • Clinically insignificant

6
Cholelithiasis
  • Bile stones in biliary tract
  • 10-20 of adults in developed countries
  • Risk factors age, female, pregnancy, obesity,
    bile stasis, hyperlipidemia, biliary infection
  • Cholesterol stones
  • Pigment stones
  • Mixed stones

7
Cholesterol stones
  • 80 of bile stones
  • Pathogenesis
  • supersaturation of bile with cholesterol
  • slow motility of gallbladder
  • nucleation into cystals
  • aggregation into stones in mucous
  • Yellow - white, transparent
  • Solitary / a few

8
Pigment stones
  • Pathogenesis
  • inflammation (? acidicity)
  • hemolysis (overload with bilirubin)
  • Black, hard or brown, soft
  • Factes, multiple

9
Mixed stones
  • Cholesterol core, pigmented surface
  • Solitary / multiple

10
LocationCholecystolithiasis, hepaticolithiasis,
choledocholithiasis
? ? symptoms, complications
11
Cholecystolithiasis
  • Most common
  • 70 asymptomatic
  • Cholecystitis, hydrops
  • Carcinoma of gallbladder
  • No icterus
  • Stools and urine normal

!
12
Choledocholithiasis
  • Intrahepatic cholestasis
  • Obstructive icterus
  • Pale stools
  • Dark urine
  • Bile colic / strong constant pain
  • Long-term ? secondary biliary cirrhosis

13
Complications of cholelithiasis
  • Acute / chronic cholecystitis, cholangoitis
  • Hydrops of gallbladder
  • Empyema of gallbladder
  • Decubital ulcers
  • Perforation, peritonitis
  • Fistula to duodenum, colon
  • Biliary ileus
  • Obstructive icterus (conjugated
    hyperbilirubinemia)
  • Biliary cirrhosis
  • Pancreatitis
  • Carcinoma of gallbladder

14
Acute cholangoitis
  • Suppurative inflammation
  • Infection stones or tumor
  • May spread to intrahepatic ducts ? cholangiogenic
    abscesses ? sepsis
  • Obstructive icterus
  • Therapy restore bile drainage, atb

15
Chronic cholangoitis
  • Chronic inflammation accompanying obstruction of
    bile ducts
  • Prominent fibrosis
  • Stenosis
  • Attacks of icterus, sepsis
  • Secondary biliary cirrhosis

16
Acute cholecystitis
  • Calculous (90)
  • obstruction of gallbladder neck or ductus
    cysticus
  • ? ischemia, toxic agents from bile ? aseptic
  • inflammation ? infection (E.coli)
  • rarely primarily bacterial (Salmonella typhi)
  • older women
  • Acalculous
  • severly ill patients (surgery, trauma, burns )
  • ischemia
  • Suppurative (empyema)
  • Decubital necrosis, ulcer
  • Gangrenous
  • Complications rupture (esp. acalculous),
    peritonitis

17
Chronic cholecystitis
  • Very common
  • Traumatization by bile stones, repeated mild
    acute cholecystitis, mild infection
  • Wall thicker (fibrosis, hypertrophy of mucosa) or
    thinner (atrophy)
  • Mucosa metaplasia (gastric, intestinal),
    dysplasia (low / high grade)
  • Hydrops chronic obstruction, atrophy, fibrosis,
    clear secretion
  • Porcelain gallbladder calcified
  • Decubital necrosis
  • RF for carcinoma of gallbladder

18
Symptoms of cholecystitis
  • Chronic
  • Milder course
  • Recurrent atacks of steady
  • or colicky pain
  • Nausea, vominting
  • Intolerance for fatty food
  • Therapy cholecystectomy
  • Acute
  • Sudden onset
  • Pain
  • Signs of sepsis
  • Nausea, vomiting
  • Subsides in 1-10 days
  • Relapses more intensively
  • Therapy cholecystectomy

Icterus present ONLY if the inflammation
spreads to choledochus or common hepatic duct
and obstructs them
19
Diseases involving intrahepatic bile ducts
  • Primary biliary cirrhosis
  • (PBC)
  • Autoimmune nonsupurrative destruction of small
    and medium-sized intrahepatic bile ducts, portal
    inflammation
  • Fibrosis, biliary cirrhosis
  • Middle-aged women
  • Primary sclerosing cholangitis
  • (PSC)
  • Etiopathogenesis unknown
  • Association with IBD
  • (70 of patients have UC)
  • Inflammation and obliterative fibrosis of intra-
    and extrahepatic larger bile ducts
  • Dilatation of preserved segments
  • Biliary cirrhosis
  • Middle-aged men

20
Tumors of gallbladder
  • Adenoma
  • tubular, vilous, tubulovilous
  • low / high grade dysplasia
  • Adenocarcinoma
  • 7th decade, slightly more women
  • 80 associated with gallstones (chronic
    inflammation)
  • Asia higher of pyogenic and parasitic diseases
    (without gallstones)
  • infiltrating (scirrhotic) / exophytic
  • fundus, neck
  • invades directly into bile ducts, liver,
    peritoneum, LN
  • metastases LN, peritoneum, GIT, lungs
  • symptoms similar to cholecystitis
  • diagnosis late, after cholecystectomy

21
Adenocarcinoma of extrahepatic bile ducts
  • Uncommon
  • Older age, slightly more men
  • 30 associated with gallstones
  • RF PSC, UC, choledodal cyst, fluke infection
    (Asia)
  • Symptoms painless, progressive jaundice, nausea,
    vomiting, weight loss, hepatomegaly, palpable
    gallbladder
  • Diagnosis early, but tumor is usually not
    resectable
  • Spreads along bile ducts, metastases in LN
  • Klatskin tumor
  • slowly growing sclerotizing tumor from large
    ducts at liver hilus, rare metastases
  • Carcinoma of the ampula of Vater
  • origin may be also in pancreas or duodenum

22
Normal pancreas
  • Exocrine component (80)
  • Acinar cells cca 20 digestive enzymes (trypsin,
    chymotripsin, aminopeptidases, lipasis, amylasis,
    fosfolipasis )
  • Ductules, dutcs bicarbonate
  • Regulation by secretin and cholecystokinin
    (produced by duodenal mucosa) and n. vagus
  • 1-3 l of pancreatic juice / day
  • Protective mechanisms (inactive precursors,
    inhibitors)
  • Endocrine component
  • Langerhans islets (insulin, glucagon,
    somatostatin)

23
Inborn malformations
  • Agenesis
  • rare, associated with widespread malformations
  • Pancreas divisum
  • common, failure of fusion of dorsal and ventral
    part
  • Annular pancreas
  • ring around duodenum
  • Ectopic pancreas
  • common in stomach, duodenum
  • Inborn cysts solitary, multiple
  • Polycystosis kidney, liver, pancreas

24
Cystic fibrosis mucoviscidosis, cystic
pancreatofibrosis
  • White rase, incidence in CR 12500
  • AR, mutation in CFTR gene
  • 2-5 of people are heterozygots (carriers)
  • Defective ion (chloride) transportation
  • Highly viscous mucous
  • ? obstruction of ducts in exocrine
  • glands
  • ? dilatation of terminal ducts and
  • acini (cysts)
  • ? atrophy ? fibrosis

25
Symptoms of cystic fibrosis
  • Pancreas malabsorption, steatorrhea,
    hypovitaminosis, DM (10)
  • Intestine meconium ileus in newborns
  • Bile ducts cholestasis, biliary cirrhosis
  • Salivary, lacrimal glands xerostomia,
    xerophtalmia
  • Epidydimis infertility
  • Skin salty sweat (diagnostic)

26
Cystic fibrosis in lungs
  •  

27
Cystic fibrosis
  • Therapy
  • substitution of pancreatic enzymes
  • vaccination, atb, NSAID
  • mucolytics, oxygenotherapy
  • lung transplantation
  • Prognosis
  • without therapy death in childhood
  • with advanced therapy between 30-40 years

28
Acute pancreatitis
  • Common (Western countries)
  • Etiology
  • Biliary diseases
  • Alcoholism (exacerbation of chronic pancreatitis)
  • Others obstruction of pancreatic ducts, drugs,
    infections, parasites, ischemia, trauma, genetics
  • Types of acute pancreatitis
  • Intersticial nonsuppurative accompanies
    systemic infections (e.g. endemic parotitis)
  • Intersticial suppurative after hemorrhagic
    necrotizing, hematogenous
  • Hemorrhagic necrotizing

29
Pathogenesis and morphology of acute hemorrhagic
necrotizing pancreatitis
  • Obscure
  • Key role of activation of tripsinogen, which then
    activates other enzymes
  • Autodigestion necrosis and liquefaction of
    pancreas
  • Lipase fatty tissue necroses
  • Hypocalcemia precipitation of Ca soaps in fat
    necroses
  • Elastase vascular destruction, hemorrhage
  • Coagulative cascade DIC
  • Enzymes enter blood circulation
  • Lipase - fatty tissue necroses in distant sites
  • Phospholipids surfactant destruction, ARDS
  • Loss of blood volume, electrolyte disturbance,
    release of cytokines, vasoactive factors - shock

30
Symptoms of full-blown acute hemorrhagic
necrotizing pancreatitis
  • Severe constant abdominal pain, vomiting
  • Rapidly progresses to shock and circulatory
    failure, DIC, acute tubular necrosis, ARDS
  • Lab ? amylase, lipase in plasma, leucocytosis,
    hypocalcemia
  • 20 mortality
  • Therapy total restriction of food
  • and fluid, supportive therapy
  • Consequences in surviving patients
  • pancreatic abscess (G- bactieria)
  • pancreatic pseudocyst
  • scarring

31
Chronic pancreatitis
  • Etiology
  • alcoholism (most common)
  • chronic obstruction of pancreatic ducts
    (pseudocyst, concrements, tumor)
  • hereditary
  • autoimmune
  • tropical (malnutrition, Africa, Asia)
  • idiopathic
  • Chronic inflammation, fibrosis, duct dilation,
    destruction of exocrine and much later also
    endocrine parenchyma
  • Irreversible destruction and decrease of function

32
Chronic pancreatitis
  • Symptoms
  • attacks of pain
  • maldigestion
  • jaundice
  • malabsorption, weight loss, hypoalbuminemic edema
  • diabetes mellitus
  • pseudocyst
  • RF for pancreatic carcinoma

33
Tumors
  • Pseudotumors
  • Congenital cyst
  • Pseudocyst
  • Benign tumors
  • Serous cystadenoma
  • Tumors of variable behaviour (low, high grade
    dysplasia, malignant)
  • Mucinous cystic neoplasm (MCN)
  • Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN)
  • Malignant tumors
  • Carcinoma

34
Precancerous lesions
  • Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN)
  • Low grade (PanIN 1)
  • Intermediate grade (PanIN 2)
  • High grade (PanIN 3)
  • Mucinous cystic neoplasm (MCN)
  • Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN)

35
Pancreatic carcinoma
  • 6. 8. decade, slightly more common in black
    race
  • Association with smoking, chronic pancreatitis,
    diabetes mellitus
  • High mortality
  • Ductal adenocarcinoma with abundant desmoplastic
    stroma
  • Symptoms - late
  • long-term silent
  • 60 in head ? obstructive jaundice (tail, body
    without jaundice)
  • weight loss, weakness, anorexia, cachexia
  • thrombophlebitis migrans
  • pain (perineural spread)
  • Metastases LN, liver, lungs, bones
  • Dif. dg. chronic pancreatitis

36
SummaryConsequences of cholelithisis
Biliary cirrhosis
Chronic cholangitis
Acute cholangitis
Cholelithiasis
Acute cholecystitis
Acute pancreatitis
Chronic cholecystitis
Chronic pancreatitis
Carcinoma of gallbladder
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