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Published byHector McLaughlin Modified over 9 years ago
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Spleen
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Functions of the spleen 1. Haematopoiesis 2. Reservoir – storage or sequestration of plt and other cells 3. Phagocytosis 4. Immunity
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Spleen Pulp White – follicles, PALS Red venous sinuses (littoral cells – special endothelium, discontionuous, also histiocytic markers) cords of Billroth - macrophages Marginal zone
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Spleen Splenomegaly A. Symptom of a disease B. Causes discomfort C. Ruptures easily
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Splenomegaly a sign of an underlying disease a problem per se bigger spleen~ bigger function = destruction of blood cells Hypersplenism 1.splenomegaly 2.(pan) cytopenia 3.correction of blood cytopenia by splenectomy
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Causes of splenomegaly 1. Infections (nonspecific, infect. mono., CMV, TB, typhoid, brucellosis, syphilis, malaria (!) 2. Vascular – congestion due to portal hypertension 3. Primary dis. of lymphoid and other blood elements – benign of malignant (HL, NHL, MM, myeloproliferative dis., hemolytic anemias, ITP) 4. Autoimmune (rheum. arthritis, SLE) 5. Storage dis.(Gaucher, Niemann-Pick, mucopolys.) 6. Misc.
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Nonspecific acute splenitis acute splenic tumor Blood borne infections Microbes and their products S: larger, soft Hist.: acute congestion of the red pulp Less commonly: necrosis – hemolytic Streptoc., necrosis
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Congestive splenomegaly Chronic venous congestion Causes: 1. systemic 2. hepatic – most common – cirrhosis, alcohol 3. disorders of the portal or splenic vein itself (spont. portal vein thrombosis – not entirely spont. – intrahepatic dosorders; inflammation of the portal vein – pyelophlebitis – intraperitoneal infections, pressure of tumours in neighboring organs
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Congestive splenomegaly Gross appearance
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Splenic infarcts Source of emboli: Septic infarcts:
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Congenital anomalies Absence Accessory spleens – spleniculi – very common X splenosis
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Rupture: danger: massive bleeding Normal spleen never ruptures spontaneously 1.Traumatic 2.Nontraumatic a. infection b. malignant infiltration Nontraumatic r. – always suspect an underlying disease – examine the patient!!! Two-tact rupture of the spleen
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Thymus:cradle and school for T-cells Lymphoepithelial organ Epithelial cells – meshwork of varioous density Under the surface: closely packed Deeper: lattice containing lymphocytes Cortex Medulla – Hassal corpuscles
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Thymus Hypoplasia, aplasia Di George sy – Parathyroid, heart and blood vessels, thymus developmental failure Reduced cell-mediated immunity
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Thymus cysts
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Thymus hyperplasia Lymphoid follicles appear Myasthenia gravis, other autoimmune dis. (SLE, RA), other inflammatory dis.
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Thymomas Tumours of thymic epithelial(!) cells Lymphocytes are only a company Classifications complicated Benign thymoma – encapsulated Malignant thymoma – I – locally invasive Biologically locally aggressive, cytologically benign) II – thymic carcinoma – cytologically and biologically aggressive – sq. Cell carcinoma and others
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Thymoma Localization Size Capsule Lobulated Intermixed benign T-lymphocytes Clin. symptoms: one third: myasthenia gravis mass, pressure
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Thymomas - paraneoplastic sy Cushing Pure red cell aplasia Hypogammaglobulinemia dermatomyositis
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