Patterns in histopathology

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Transcript of Patterns in histopathology

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PATTERNS IN HISTOPATHOLOGY

PRESENTER- DR. ANKITA BAGHELMODERATOR- DR. HEMALATHA A.

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OBJECTIVES

• By the end of this session you should be able to differentiate between most of the patterns in histopathology.

HOPEFULLY!!!!

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WHAT IS TRABECULAE?

• A small supporting beam or bar.

• Any of the supporting strands of connective tissue projecting into an organ and constituting part of the framework of that organ.

• Any of the fine spicules forming a network in cancellous bone.

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TRABECULAR PATTERN

• In cord-like arrays separated by fibrous septa in Long nests and cords of cell groups

• Two cell-thick (microtrabecular pattern)

• Eight to Ten cell-thick (macrotrabecular pattern)

• Cells arranged perpendicular to the longest axis.

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EXAMPLES?

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HCC HTA

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WHAT IS A SYNCYTIUM?

• a multinucleate mass of cytoplasm resulting from fusion of cells.

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SYNCYTIAL PATTERN

• Having cytoplasmic continuity between the constituent cells.

• Looks like a collection of nuclei without recognizable borders.

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EXAMPLES?

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MTC MENINGIOMA

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WHAT IS ALVEOLUS?

• a small cavity or pit• a socket in the jaw for a tooth• a small air-containing compartment of the lungs in

which the bronchioles terminate and from which respiratory gases are exchanged with the pulmonary capillaries

• an acinus of a compound gland• a cell of a honeycomb

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ALVEOLAR PATTERN• Tumor cells grow in nests or clusters separated by fibrous

septa

• In little sacs or nests or nested structure

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ASPS A-RMS

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WHAT IS HERRING?

• name given to a type of fish found in the shallow waters of north pacific and north atlantic.

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HERRING BONE

• The Herring Bone is nothing but the name given to the skeleton of the Herring fish

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HERRING BONE PATTERN

• arrangement in columns of short parallel lines with all the lines in one column sloping one way and lines in adjacent columns sloping the other way.

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HERRINGBONE PATTERN

• Shows bundles intersecting in a zig-zag array

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FIBROSARCOMA FIBROMA

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WHAT IS STORIFORM?

• having an irregularly whorled pattern somewhat like that of a straw mat.

• Having a cartwheel pattern, such as spindle cells having elongated nuclei radiating from a center.

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STORIFORM PATTERN

• Cartwheel pattern - spindle cells with elongated nuclei radiating from a center point

• Cellular spindled lesion with whorls as opposed to parallel fasicles or right angle bundles

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MFH

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WHAT IS A FASCICLE?

• a section of a book or set of books being published in installments as separate pamphlets or volumes.

• a small bundle, tight cluster, or the like.

• a close cluster, as of flowers or leaves.

• a small bundle of nerve or muscle fibers.

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FASICULAR• Bundles of elongated spindly cells streaming in polarized

arrays

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LEIOMYOMA

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GLANDULAR PATTERN• Forming gland structures with lumens having polarized

cells radiating around a lumen

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WHAT IS CRIBRIFORM?

• Sieve-like; containing many perforations.• describing a structure with many perforations or

punctures, as in the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone.

• descriptive term referring to a sieve-like histologic pattern, in which sheets of epithelial cells are punctuated by gland-like spaces

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CRIBRIFORM PATTERN• Perforated• Appearance: Well-formed holes within a glandular lumen

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ADENOID CYSTIC BREAST DCIS

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WHAT IS TUBULE?

• a minute tube, especially as an anatomical structure.

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TUBULAR PATTERN

• Crowded small round tubules lined by single to multiple layers of cuboidal to low columnar cells

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TUBULAR CA TUBULAR ADENOMA

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WHAT IS PAPPILAE?

• any small, nipplelike process or projection.• one of certain small protuberances concerned with

the senses of touch,taste, and smell: the papillae of the tongue.

• a small vascular process at the root of a hair.• a papule or pimple.

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PAPILLARY PATTERN

• complex, branching, and randomly oriented, with a central fibrovascular core and a single or stratified lining

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PTC INSITU PAPILLARY CA

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MICROPAPILLARY

• Papillary-shaped epithelial projections without true fibrovascular cores

• medusa-head appearance

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SEROUS CARCINOMA BREAST

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WHAT IS INDIAN FILE?

• a line of persons or things arranged one behind the other.

• in a line: to walk single file

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INDIAN FILE PATTERN

• Cells in a single line one after the other

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LOBULAR CA-INDIAN FILE

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HOBNAIL PATTERN

• Resembling a large headed nail used for shoes

• Epithelial or endothelial cells round up and protrude into the lumen as little bumps.

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ANGIOSARCOMA

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WHAT IS ROSSETTE?• an ornament usually made of material gathered or pleated so as to

resemble a rose and worn as a badge of office, as evidence of having won a decoration (as the Medal of Honor), or as trimming

• a disk of foliage or a floral design usually in relief used as a decorative motif

• a cluster of leaves in crowded circles or spirals arising basally from a crown (as in the dandelion) or apically from an axis with greatly shortened internodes (as in many tropical palms)

• rose windows found in gothic cathedrals

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ROSSETTE IN PATHOLOGY

• A rosette is halo or "spoke-wheel" arrangement of cells around a central structure (which can be a lumen or cytoplasmic processes).

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CARCINOID

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YOLK SAC TUMOUR

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MICROCYSTIC PATTERN

• consisting of a loose network of cystic spaces lined by flattened epithelial cells Resembling a network or net-like array

• Microcystic or honeycomb appearance

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LYMPH NODE

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WHAT IS A FOLLICLE?• A small bodily cavity or sac.• A crypt or minute cul-de-

sac or lacuna, such as the depression in the skin from which the hair emerges.

• An ovarian follicle.• A spherical mass of cells usually containing a cavity.• Botany A dry, single chambered fruit that splits along only one seam to release its seeds, as inlarkspur and milkweed.

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FOLLICULAR NEOPLASM THYROID

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STAGHORN PATTERN

HEMAGIOPERICYTOMA

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Sheets of cellStarry sky

BURKKITS LYMPHOMA

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REFERENCES

• Rosai and Ackerman surgical pathology 10th edition• www.pathologyoutlines.com• www.pathpedia.com

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THANK YOU