Respiratory System Pathology 1A
Respiratory System Pathology 1A - OMPATH
## Summary
This document provides a comprehensive overview of respiratory system pathology, designed for exam preparation covering multiple-choice questions (MCQs), short answer questions (SAQs), and essays. It systematically breaks down common and critical conditions affecting the upper and lower respiratory tracts, including infections, tumors, airway diseases (obstruction, restriction), interstitial lung diseases, and vascular pathologies. The content emphasizes key definitions, epidemiological data, pathogenesis, characteristic morphology, and clinical features for each condition.
The material is structured topic by topic, starting with upper respiratory tract infections and neoplasms, then moving to atelectasis, acute lung injury, obstructive versus restrictive diseases, specific conditions like emphysema, chronic bronchitis, asthma, bronchiectasis, and various chronic interstitial lung diseases (IPF, NSIP, COP, pneumoconioses, sarcoidosis). It also details pulmonary vascular diseases such as pulmonary embolism and hypertension, and diffuse alveolar hemorrhage syndromes. Finally, it covers infectious diseases like pneumonia and tuberculosis, lung cancers, and pleural lesions, concluding with a rapid-fire MCQ anchor section for quick review.
## Key Points
- **Rhinovirus**: Most common pathogen in the common cold.
- **S. pneumoniae**: Most common cause of lobar pneumonia.
- **Adenocarcinoma**: Most common lung cancer subtype overall, and most common in women and nonsmokers.
- **Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)**: Almost always metastatic at presentation, treated with chemotherapy, and has a median survival of approximately 1 year.
- **Panacinar emphysema**: Associated with α1-antitrypsin deficiency and primarily affects the lower lobes.
- **Centriacinar emphysema**: Associated with cigarette smoking and primarily affects the upper lobes.
- **Distal acinar emphysema**: Associated with spontaneous pneumothorax and bullae.
- **Reid Index**: Measures submucosal gland hypertrophy in chronic bronchitis; >0.4 indicates significant enlargement.
- **Hyaline membranes**: Hallmark microscopic finding in Diffuse Alveolar Damage (DAD), characteristic of ARDS.
- **Usual Interstitial Pneumonia (UIP)**: The histologic pattern required for the diagnosis of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF), characterized by patchy fibrosis with temporal heterogeneity.
- **IPF Survival**: Mean survival is 3 years or less.
- **NSIP vs. IPF Prognosis**: Non-specific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) has a significantly better prognosis than IPF.
- **Sarcoidosis**: Characterized by noncaseating granulomas in multiple organs; diagnosis of exclusion.
- **Erythema nodosum**: A skin sign associated with acute sarcoidosis.
- **Sarcoidosis Hypercalcemia**: Caused by active Vitamin D production by macrophages within granulomas.
- **Pleural plaques**: The most common manifestation of asbestos exposure, usually asymptomatic.
- **Asbestosis Location**: Primarily affects the lower lobes of the lungs.
- **Silicosis Lymph Nodes**: May show "eggshell calcification".
- **Silicotuberculosis**: The association of silicosis with tuberculosis, due to impaired cell-mediated immunity.
- **CWP vs. Silicosis vs. Asbestos Lung Cancer Risk**: Coal Worker's Pneumoconiosis (CWP) does not increase lung cancer risk; silicosis has a contentious relationship; asbestos significantly increases lung cancer risk (5x) and risk of malignant mesothelioma (>1000x).
- **Kartagener Syndrome**: A rare autosomal recessive condition characterized by ciliary structural defects leading to bronchiectasis and male sterility.
- **Pulmonary Emboli Source**: Most commonly arise from deep veins of the lower legs.
- **Pulmonary Infarction in PE**: Occurs in only about 10% of cases due to the dual blood supply of the lungs.
- **Sudden Death in PE**: Occurs when >60% of the pulmonary vasculature is obstructed.
- **BMPR-2 Mutations**: Found in 50% of familial primary pulmonary hypertension cases.
- **Goodpasture Antigen**: Non-collagenous domain of the α3 chain of collagen IV, found in lung and kidney basement membranes.
- **Goodpasture Immunofluorescence**: Linear IgG deposition along alveolar and glomerular basement membranes.
- **Diphtheria Pseudomembrane**: Caused by *Corynebacterium diphtheriae*.
- **Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis (RRP)**: Caused by HPV types 6 and 11.
- **Laryngeal Cancer M:F Ratio**: 7:1.
- **Glottic Tumor Location**: Approximately 90% are confined to the larynx at diagnosis due to early symptoms.
- **Asthma Eosinophil Mediator**: IL-5 is key for eosinophil activation.
- **Asthma Mucus Mediator**: IL-13 stimulates mucus production.
- **Curschmann Spirals**: Whorls of shed epithelium found in mucus plugs in asthma.
- **Charcot-Leyden Crystals**: Eosinophil protein crystalloids found in sputum in asthma.
- **Aspirin-Induced Asthma**: Mechanism involves COX inhibition, shifting metabolism to leukotriene production.
## Detailed Notes
## RESPIRATORY SYSTEM PATHOLO