Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Spleen. Functions of the spleen 1. Haematopoiesis 2. Reservoir – storage or sequestration of plt and other cells 3. Phagocytosis 4. Immunity.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Spleen. Functions of the spleen 1. Haematopoiesis 2. Reservoir – storage or sequestration of plt and other cells 3. Phagocytosis 4. Immunity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Spleen

2 Functions of the spleen 1. Haematopoiesis 2. Reservoir – storage or sequestration of plt and other cells 3. Phagocytosis 4. Immunity

3 Spleen Pulp White – follicles, PALS Red venous sinuses (littoral cells – special endothelium, discontionuous, also histiocytic markers) cords of Billroth - macrophages Marginal zone

4 Spleen Splenomegaly A. Symptom of a disease B. Causes discomfort C. Ruptures easily

5 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

6 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.

7 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

8 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

9 Congestive splenomegaly Gross appearance

10 Splenic infarcts Source of emboli: Septic infarcts:

11 Congenital anomalies Absence Accessory spleens – spleniculi – very common X splenosis

12 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

13 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

14 Thymus Hypoplasia, aplasia Di George sy – Parathyroid, heart and blood vessels, thymus developmental failure Reduced cell-mediated immunity

15 Thymus cysts

16 Thymus hyperplasia Lymphoid follicles appear Myasthenia gravis, other autoimmune dis. (SLE, RA), other inflammatory dis.

17 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

18 Thymoma Localization Size Capsule Lobulated Intermixed benign T-lymphocytes Clin. symptoms: one third: myasthenia gravis mass, pressure

19 Thymomas - paraneoplastic sy Cushing Pure red cell aplasia Hypogammaglobulinemia dermatomyositis


Download ppt "Spleen. Functions of the spleen 1. Haematopoiesis 2. Reservoir – storage or sequestration of plt and other cells 3. Phagocytosis 4. Immunity."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google