Term
REVIEW What cells are involved in the innate immune response? |
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Definition
Mcrophages Neutrophils DC NK cells |
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Term
REVIEW What is the role of complement? |
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Definition
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Term
REVIEW What cytokines (and functions) are involved in the innate response? |
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Definition
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Term
REVIEW What are the effector mechanisms against a) extracellular and b) intracellular pathogens? |
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Definition
a) complement b) dendritic then later NK cells |
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Term
Difference between innate and adaptive immune response? |
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Definition
Adaptive is driven by antigen-specific receptors |
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Term
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Definition
Describes the properties of antibodies and TCR that interact selectively with only one type or a few types of antigens (epitopes). |
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Term
Why are B cells flexible? |
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Definition
Hinges on a disulfide bond |
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Term
B cell start off as ___ ____ proteins. T cells, however, remain on the ____. |
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Definition
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Term
Antibody structure consists of 4 proteins which are: |
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Definition
Pair of identical 2 heavy chains 2 light chains |
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Term
T cell receptor structure are made up of: |
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Definition
same size: alpha and beta |
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Term
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Definition
Protein on the antigen that binds to antigen binding site |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
ONE THING (ONLY peptides that are tightly associated w/ other molecules aka - ACCESSORY MOLECULES) |
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Term
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Definition
Major Histocompatibility Complex MHC) Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) |
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Term
Two different types of T cells that are needed to eliminate pathogens: |
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Definition
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Term
Pathogens that live INSIDE cells get represented by: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Pathogens that live OUTSIDE the cell get represented by: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
CD8 binding to HLA class I induces what to the cell? |
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Definition
APOPTOSIS - gets rid of virus |
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Term
Does apoptosis occur in the cell when CD4 binds to HLA class II? |
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Definition
NO- need to alert the rest of the body |
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Term
A B cell receptor looks like which Class protein? |
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Definition
(Mnemonic::: B1T2)
class I (bc has heavy and light chains) |
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Term
A T cell receptor looks like which Class protein? |
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Definition
(Mnemonic::: B1T2)
CLASS II because has 2 similar size chains (alpha and beta) |
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Term
Extracellular and Intracellular Pathogens must be treated differently in the cell: Where do extracellular pathogens end up in the cell? |
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Definition
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Term
Extracellular and Intracellular Pathogens must be treated differently in the cell: Where do intracellular pathogens end up in the cell? |
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Definition
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Term
Where do HLA class I and II get synthesize inside the cell? |
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Definition
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Term
What does TAP do in the ER? |
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Definition
Membrane bound protein that transports peptide fragments from cytosol into ER |
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Term
What is the purpose of changing the proteosome subunits and increasing the production of HLA class I? |
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Definition
Make virally infected cells better targets for CD8 T cell killing |
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Term
How to maximize peptide presentation? |
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Definition
MHC molecules are polygenic. MHC molecules are polymorphic. NOTE: for T cell, it's gene rearrangement |
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Term
The ability of HLA molecules to present repertoire of peptides: |
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Definition
polygeneism Anchor residues |
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Term
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Definition
The AA (of the antigen peptide) that the HLA molecule attach to |
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Term
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Definition
1) NECESSARY for B cell activation
2) Growth factor for Th2 T Cells
3) Isotype switching - IgG and IgE
4) Prevents diff. of naive CD4 T cells into Th1 T cells
5) With IL-10 and IL- 13 down regulates NK cell activity
6) With IL-10 and IL-13 down regulations CD8 T cell activity |
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Term
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Definition
1)Necessary for B cell activation
2)Absolutely necessary to activate eosinophils that defend against parasites
3)Isotype switching to IgE |
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Term
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Definition
1)Necessary for B cell activation
2) Increases antibody production in activated B cells |
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Term
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Definition
1) With TGFbeta, causes isotype switching to IgA in humans
2)Suppresses macrophage respiratory burst and cytokine secretion 3) Suppresses development of new Th1 T cells. |
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Term
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Definition
1)Growth factor for B cells
2) With IL-4 down regulations NK cell activity
3) With IL-4 down regulates CD8 T cell activity. |
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Term
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Definition
1) Inhibits growth of B cells
2) With IL-10 isotypes switches to IgA
3)Inhibits macrophage activation
4)Activates neutrophils. |
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Term
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Definition
Drives B cell proliferation. Causes B cell differentiation. Causes isotype switching. |
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Term
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Definition
1) Induces respiratory burst enzymes to generate activated destructive macrophages (w/ CD40L). 2) Increases activated CD8 T cell activity. 3) Increases activated NK cell activity. 4) Causes B cells to switch to IgG the isotype. 5) Causes epithelium and other cell types to up-regulate MHC molecule expression. 6) Changes proteosomes subunits to increase peptide production for MHC class I molecules. 7) Prevents naive CD4 T cell differentiation into TH2 T cells. |
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Term
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Definition
1) T cell growth factor
2) Can induce apoptosis in armed effector T cells |
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Term
TNF alpha - causes macrophages to secrete what? |
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Definition
Causes activated macrophages to secrete nitrous oxide (an enzyme that can destroy tissue) |
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Term
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Definition
LT is LYMPHOTOXIN 1) Inhibits B cells 2) Kills T cells 3) Activates macrophages and induces activated macrophages to secrete NO 4) Activates neutrophils. 5) Kills tumor cells
AKA TNF BETA |
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Term
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Definition
Induces apoptosis in FAS bearing cells |
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Term
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Definition
1) Activates macrophages ( w/ IFN gamma) 2) Induces cytokine production in activated macrophages. 3)Induces respiratory burst enzymes in activated macrophages. 4) Causes cytokine production by dendritic cells. |
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Term
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Definition
1. Activates vascular endothelium. 2. Helps to activate naive T lymphocytes. 3. Causes local tissue destruction. 4. Increases access of effector cells. 5. Acts systemically to produce fever. 6. Up regulates IL-6 production. |
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Term
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Definition
1) Activates vascular endothelium
2) Shuts down venous return to increase fluid drainage to lymph nodes
3) Acts systemically to produce fever
4) Mobilizes metabolites
5) Can cause shock |
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Term
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Definition
1) Upregulates antibody production 2) Increases lymphocyte production 3) Assists in B cell activation 4) Acts systemically to produce fever 5)Causes production of acute phase protein |
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Term
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Definition
1) Steers other immune cells to the site of antigenic challenge. 2) With TNF alpha, activates neutrophils. |
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Term
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Definition
1) Activates NK cells 2) Causes differentiation to Th1 T cells |
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Term
Cytokines released by macrophages |
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Definition
IL-1 TNF-α CXCL8 IL-12 IL-6 |
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Term
Cytokines released by macrophage and TH2 |
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Definition
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Term
Cytokines released from TH2 T cell |
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Definition
IL-4 IL-5 IL-10 IL-13 TGFβ CD40L |
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Term
Cytokines released by TH1 and TH2 |
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Definition
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Term
Cytokines released by TH1 T cell |
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Definition
IFNγ IL-2 TNGβ Lymphotoxin) FASL CD40L |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Heavy blood in stools, usually in the upper or proximal portion of the tract |
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Term
The stratified squamous mucosa of the esophagus may be damaged by a variety of irritants including |
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Definition
alcohol, corrosive acids or alkalis, excessively hot fluids, and heavy smoking |
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Term
Esophagitis due to chemical injury is associated with |
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Definition
dysphagia (pain with swallowing) |
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Term
Esophagitis - what may occur in severe cases? |
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Definition
Hemorrhage, stricture, or perforation may occur in severe cases |
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Term
Iatrogenic injury to the esophagus may be caused by |
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Definition
- cytotoxic chemotherapy
- radiation therapy
- graft-versus-host disease (GVHD)
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Term
Infections may occur in otherwise healthy individuals but are most frequent in |
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Definition
- HSV
- CMV
- fungal infections (Candida)
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Term
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Definition
- Reflux of gastric contents into the lower esophagus
- Causes: Esophagitis
- Found in:
- adults over 40
- infants and children
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Term
Conditions that decrease lower esophageal sphincter (LES) tone, or increase abdominal pressure contribute to GERD and include |
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Definition
- sliding hiatal hernia
- alcohol
- cigarette smoking
- obesity
- CNS depressants
- pregnancy
- delayed gastic emptying
- increased gastric volume
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Term
W/ GERD, the mucosa can develop |
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Definition
- leukoplakia
- ulcers
- fibrosis
- esophageal stricture which lead to dysphagia.
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Term
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Definition
- Due to:
- Change of squamous cell to intestinal goblet cells in lower third of esophagus
- Predisposes to:
- Common in:
- white males between 40 and 60
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Term
COMPLICATIONS of ESOPHAGITIS |
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Definition
• Ulcerations • Fibrosis • Strictures • Dysphagia • Leukoplakia • Metaplasia • Malignancy |
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Term
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Definition
- transient mucosal inflammatory process
- can be be asymptomatic
- can cause variable degrees of
- epigastric pain
- nausea
- vomiting
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Term
Acute gastritis is caused by |
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Definition
- aspirin
- NSAIDs
- alcohol
- cigarettes
- Helicobactter (H. pylori) infection
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Term
Surface epithelium in Acute gastritis |
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Definition
Intact with scattered PMNs. |
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Term
What signifies active inflammation in acute gastritis? |
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Definition
- presence of neutrophils in acute gastritis above the basement membrane in direct contact with epithelial cells is abnormal in all parts of the GI tract and signifies active inflammation.
- With more severe mucosal damage, erosions and hemorrhage develop.
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Term
What does erosion denote in acute gastritis? What may occur due to this? |
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Definition
- loss of the superficial epithelium, generating a defect in the mucosa that is limited to the lamina propria, a thin layer of vascular connective tissue beneath the epithelium
- Hemorrhage may occur and cause dark punctae or spots like coffee grains.
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Term
Complications of Gastric Ulcers |
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Definition
Bleeding
- Most frequent complication ; May be life-threatening; May be the first indication of an ulcer
Perforation
- Accounts for two thirds of ulcer deaths ; Is rarely first indication of an ulcer
Obstruction
- Mostly in chronic ulcers ; Secondary to edema or scarring; associated with pyloric channel ulcers ;May occur with duodenal ulcers
- Causes incapacitating, crampy abdominal pain; rarely cause total obstruction and intractable vomiting
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Term
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Definition
- Cause: H.pylori inf or Autoimmune gastritis
- Clinical of H. pylori
- less severe but more persistent than acute
- Nausea
- upper abdominal discomfort
- sometimes with vomiting
- hematemesis is uncommon
- Atrophic gastritis
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- Due to autoimmune gastritis, with a loss of parietal cell mass.
- Clinical:
- Leads to pernicious anemia
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Term
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Definition
- H. pylori organisms are present
- duodenal ulcers *most
- gastric ulcers
- chronic gastritis (antrum- 90% of cases)
- Complications of H. Pyloris Gastritis:
- Peptic Ulcer disease (also seen in chronic)
- increases the risk of gastric cancer
- In US
- associated with poverty, household crowding, limited education, African-American or Mexican-American ethnicity, residence in rural areas, and birth outside of the United States
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Term
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Definition
- characterized by
- (1) antibodies to parietal cells + loss of intrinsic factor + achlorhydria
- (2) vitamin B 12 def - pernicious anemia. May cause atrophic glossitis and peripheral neuropathy
- Pernicious anemia and autoimmune gastritis are associated with other autoimmune diseases:
- Hashimoto thyroiditis
- insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus
- Addison disease
- Graves disease
- vitiligo
- myasthenia gravis
- Spares the antrum + hypergastrinemia
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Term
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Definition
- associated with H. pylori-induced chronic gastritis + NSAIDs use
- Location:
- Anywhere but most common in duo than gastric antrum
- Path-phys-
- The imbalances of mucosal defenses and damaging forces that cause chronic gastritis
- develops on a background of chronic gastritis
- cigarette smoking (impairs blood flow to the gastric mucosa)
- high dose corticosteroid therapy (suppresses prostaglandin synthesis and impairs healing)
- Clinical
- perforation, hemorrhage, and pyloric stricture (due to fibrosis)
- epigastric pain, or aching pain
- iron deficiency anemia may result
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Term
Intestine - Viral Gastroenteritis include: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
- Causes: nonbacterial infectious gastroenteritis
- Get it by:
- Contaminated food or water, schools, hospitals, nursing wards, and cruise ships.
- Clinical
- Nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea, and abdominal pain.
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Term
Crohn disease (regional enteritis) |
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Definition
- Transmural inflammation on any part of GI
- due to-not clear: bacterial, dietary factors, stress
- Clinical
- early lesion- aphthous ulcer
- transmural inflammation - leathery
- edema
- nodular lymphoid aggregates
- non-caseating granulomas in submucosa
- “skip lesions” - cobblestone appearance
- abdominal pain, diarrhea, fever, malabsorption
- if in small intestine, bleeding intestinal obstruction, fistulae
- creeping fat - mesenteric fat extends around the serosal surface
- complication
- stricture due to fibrosis and obstruction
- inc risk to intestinal cancer
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Term
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Definition
- Inflammation limited to the mucosa of colon and the superficial submucosa
- Due to: genetic factors
- Clinical
- Crypt abscesses
- bleeding, cramps, blood diarrhea
- moderate anemia with moderate colitis
- dehydration, electrolyte depletion, massive hemorrhages
- Increased risk for:
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Term
Vascular diseases - Infarction. The causes: |
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Definition
- Embolism or thrombosis
- hernia intussusception
- volvulus
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Term
Vascular diseases - Hemorrhoids |
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Definition
- Marked dilation or varicosity of hemorrhoidal venous plexus
- very common
- less common cause is obstruction of portal circulation in liver cirrhosis.
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Term
Neoplasms of the Esophagus |
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Definition
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- in the USA - low incidence, more in males, Caspian sea area, Iran, Central Asia, Mongolia No. China-esophageal cancer belt with incidence 30-70 x greater
- distribution suggests environmental factors
- Clinical
- alcohol, cigarette smoking, nitrosamines,
- Plummer Vinson syndrome, chronic esophagitis, achalasia, esophageal stricture
- dysphagia, cachexia, anorexia, poor survival
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Term
Adenocarcinoma of the Stomach |
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Definition
- In Japan, Chile, Costa Rica, and Eastern Europe the incidence = 20x higher. US rates dropped.
- Dietary and environmental factors:
- N-nitroso compounds used w/ smocked meats or fish, pickled vegetables
- Risk inc w/:
- H. pylori infection in chronic gastritis
- Barrett esophagus and may reflect the increased incidence of GERD and obesity
- individuals with multifocal mucosal atrophy and intestinal metaplasia
- Clinical
- early symptoms include: dyspepsia, dysphagia, and nausea.
- Loss of E-cadherin
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Term
Adenocarcinoma Stomach- the neoplastic cells: |
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Definition
- signet-ring cell morphology
- contain vacuoles mucin that expand the cytoplasm and push the nucleus to the periphery
- desmoplastic reaction
- fibrous CT that stiffens the gastric wall
- linitis plastica
- Leather bottle appearance due to diffuse rugal thick. + rigid thick wall (from large areas of infiltration)
- most powerful prognostic indicators for gastric cancer
- depth of invasion + extent of nodal and distant metastasis
- Local invasion:
- duodenum, pancreas, and retroperitoneum
- Five year survival- adv gastric cancer <20 %.
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Term
Polyps (in general) in the intestines |
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Definition
- Lesions pedunculated or flat base (sessile)
- Found:
- colon* most
- can be seen in esophagus, stomach, SI
- Neoplastic polyp
- adenoma (can progress into cancer)
- Non-neoplastic polyps
- inflammatory
- hamartomatous
- hyperplastic
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Term
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Definition
- benign tumor-like nodule
- It is an overgrowth of mature cells + tissues normally present in the affected part, but with disorganization and with one element predom
- occur
- sporadically
- genetically determined
- acquired syndromes
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Term
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Definition
- focal malformations of the mucosal epithelium + lamina propria
- Clinical
- sporadic or in clinical syndromes
- Typically pedunculated
- Most in the rectum
- Most with rectal bleeding
- Dysplasia occurs in a small proportion of juvenile polyps
Autosomal dominant juvenile polyposis syndrome = increased risk of colon adenocarcinoma.
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Term
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Definition
- Auto dominant syndrome
- multiple GI hamar polyps + mucocutaneous pigmentation
- Who:
- Clinical
- SI and pedunculated
- Brown macules around the mouth, eyes, nostrils, buccal mucosa, palmar surfaces of the hands, genitalia, and perianal region.
- Complictions:
- increased risk of wide variety of cancers
- The GI adenocarcinomas arise independently of the hamartomatous polyps
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Term
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Definition
- Epithelial proliferations that represent a "piling up" of goblet cells and absorptive cells
- found in:
- Lesions = without malignant potential
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Term
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Definition
- Most clinically important neoplastic polyps:
- colonic adenomas, benign polyps that are precursors to colorectal adenocarcinomas.
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Term
Neoplastic polyps = Adenomas |
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Definition
- intra-epithelial neoplasms
- Range: small, pedun polyps to large, sessile
- Found in:
- 50% of Western world by age 50
- no gender preference
- Three types
-
- presence of epithelial dysplasia.
- the majority of adenomas do not progress to become adenocarcinoma
- Most adenomas are clinically silent, with the exception of large polyps that produce occult (hidden) bleeding and anemia.
- A positive guaiac test detects occult blood in the stool
- 50% of all polyps are found in the rectosigmoid region
- 50% are evenly distributed throughout the rest of colon
-
- 2/3 of all benign adenomas;
- less than 2cm in diameter
- attached to a stalk (pedunculated)
- Large tumors show a range of dysplastic changes
-
- predominantly in the rectosigmoid colon.
- large
- (sessile)
- elevated lesions
- 60 % are larger than 2 cm in diameter;
- commonly 1/3 of villous adenomas contain foci of carcinoma
- higher potential for malignant transformation to colorectal carcinoma than tubular adenomas
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Term
Colorectal Adenocarcinoma |
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Definition
- Men and women equal affected
- Peaks at 60 to 70; 20 % of cases before age 50
- Etiology
- low fiber diet, high fat diet, high anaerobic bacterial content, genetic predisposition, Crohn disease
- Protective measures include
- colonoscopy, cruciferous vegetables, calcium, selenium, and aspirin (as COX-2 inhibitor)
- distributed equally over the entire length of the colon
- Colon cancer can metastasize to the lymph node, lung, liver, and brain
- Elevated carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is seen in about 25% of patients.
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Term
What is the most important characteristic that correlates w/ the risk of malignancy? What is a risk factor progression into cancer? |
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Definition
- Size
- ie, while cancer is extremely rare in adenomas less than 1 cm in diameter, some studies suggest that nearly 40 % of lesions larger than 4 cm in diameter contain foci for cancer
- high-grade dysplasia is a risk factor for progression to cancer.
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