Term
Metaplasia: active replacement of one cell type by another. It's a change in the TYPE of differentiation but not a change in ________ of differentiation. |
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Definition
AMOUNT. ie change of respiratory epithelium to stratisfied squamous in the trachea and bronchi of smokers--called squamous metaplasia. USUALLY REVERSIBLE when stimulus removed. |
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Term
The following description describes a ___________: often encapsulated, usually slow growing, well-differentiated, few mitotic figures, homogenous cells, and remain localized. |
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Definition
BENIGN NEOPLASIA. they do not invade. |
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Term
Borderline tumors share characteristics of what two growths? |
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Definition
Some characteristics of benign and some of malignancy. can't be categorized as either so it's called "borderline." |
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Term
Another phrase for premalignant lesion? |
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Definition
CARCINOMA IN SITU. premalignant lesions have cells that have all the changes they need to invade and metastasize, but have not done so yet. "in situ" means in place. carcinoma means malignant neoplasm of epithelial cell origin. |
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Term
Carcinoma are malignant neoplasms of epithelial cell origin, derived from any three germ layers. Type type of carcinoma (how it's named) depends on.... ? |
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Definition
carcinoma nameing depends on what kind of cell the malignant neoplasm produces: ie if it produces squamous cells, it's a squamous cell carcinoma. |
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Term
What are the architectural and cytolgic markers of malignancy & metastasis? |
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Definition
Malignant neoplasia: infiltrative borders, often rapidly growing, poorly differentiated, increased mitoses, pleomorphism (change in cell shape and size), and the potential to metastasize. -pleomorphism -abundance of DNA (stain quite dark), increased NUCLEUS-to-cytoplasm ratio -abnormal mitoses and numerous normal. -loss of polarity (no longer respect their normal orientation) -also may be tumor giant cells, and centra areas may become necrotic when neoplasm outgrows blood supply. |
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Term
What is the difference between grading and staging of tumors? |
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Definition
Grading: degree of differentiation of tumor cells and the # of mitoses within the tumor as presumed correlates of neoplasm's AGGRESSIVENESS. Grades I-IV with increasing anaplasia. STAGING: size of primary lesion, extent of spread to LNs, and presence/absence of blood-borne metastases. T=tumor (primary) size and extent. N=NODe (lymph node). M=metastases. M0=none. M1/M2=blood-borne. |
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Term
How can tumors metastasize? |
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Definition
1) direct seeding of body cavities 2) travel via lymphatics 3) travel through blood |
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Term
What is the most important factor in prognosis of a given tumor type? |
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Definition
STAGING (ie whether it has metastasized... how much) |
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Term
Direct seeding of body cavities can occur in tumor metastasis of what kind of cancer(s)? |
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Definition
ovarian cancers. no need for lymph or blood route. |
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Term
The rate of growth is determined by three main factors: doubling time, fraction of tumor cells in replicative pool, and rate of cells shed/lost. Which factor determines the susceptibility of the tumor to chemo agents? |
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Definition
Growth fraction: cancers where very few cells are proliferating are not very susceptible to chemo agents b/c chemotherapy attacks DIVIDING cells. Growth of tumors is NOT commonly associated with a shortening of cell cycle time (ie they could have small growth fraction, not many cells replicating despite short cell cycle). |
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Term
what is a tumor cell embolus? |
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Definition
In the metastatic cascade, the interaction between cells passing through ECM to the blood WITH host lymphoid cells causes aggregation of tumor cells with platelets; known as tumor cell embolus. Can adhere to basemenent membrane & extravasate OR deposited in distant tissues ( metastaasis) and can grow, stimulating angiogenesis. |
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Term
Hyperplasia (cell # increase): it is physiologic if ___ and ____. Pathologic can be hormonal in _______ for example; and it can be due to ______. |
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Definition
Physiologic: hormonal (breast during pregnancy) and compensatory (after partial hepatectomy. Pathologic can be hormonal (endometrium) or due to viral infections. |
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Term
Hypertrophy of the uterus: is it hormonal or pathologic? |
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Definition
hormonal during prengnacy. endometrial hypertrophy NOT during pregnancy is pathologic (trick question, sorry). |
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Term
Name a very common type of COMPENSATORY HYPERTROPHY (non-pathologic)? (in what cells?) |
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Definition
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Term
Atrophy does nto mean death--it's a reduction of cell mass. It can occur due to diminshed blood supply, but due to what else? (5 things) |
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Definition
1) decreased workload 2) loss of innervation 3) inadequate nutrition 4) loss of endocrine stimulation 5) aging. |
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Term
Name two incidences of SQUAMOUS METAPLASIA and one of COLUMNAR METAPLASIA. |
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Definition
squamous metaplasia (from columnar): respiratory tract due to smoking or stone in pancreatic/bile duct(s). COLUMNAR METAPLASIA (from squamous): Barrett's esophagus. |
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Term
Columnar metaplasia is also called _______ metapasia? |
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Definition
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Term
Dysplasia is an alteration of _______ and a lack of respect for the ________ or cells within a tissue. |
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Definition
alteration in cellular appearance; lack of respect for architectural orientation of normal cells within a tissue. NOT PHYSIOLOGIC. PATHOLOGIC!!! |
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Term
T/F: dysplasia always leads to neoplasia. |
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Definition
False. sometimes reversible. |
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Term
How is carcinoma in situ different from metastases/malignancy? |
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Definition
BASEMENT MEMBRANE IS INTACT but all the dysplastic changes of malignancy. |
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Term
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Definition
benign epithelial neoplasm that forms glandular patterns, or tumors derived from glands but not necessarily reproducing glandular patterns. an adenocarcinoma is malignant tumor with glandular growth pattern. |
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Term
Carcinoma with recognizable glandular pattern is called .... |
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Definition
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Term
malignant tumor of epithelial origin was caled carcinoma. What is a malignant MESENCHYMAL (fat, cartilage, bone, fibrous tissue) TUMOR called? |
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Definition
SARCOMA--these tend to be big and bad, and tend to invade locally. Sarcomas are best treated surgically, because most respond poorly to chemotherapy or radiation. |
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Term
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Definition
the "lei" refers to smooth muscle tissue origin. the "oma" without the "sarcoma" means BENIGN. leiomyosarcoma is big and bad--malignant. |
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Term
T/F: Because of the "oma" ending, lymphoma is a benign tumor of the lymphatics system. |
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Definition
FALSE. the ending of "oma" does mean benign in tumors of mesenchymal origina (fat, fibrous tissue, cartilage, bone). In this case, it means a MALIGNANT NEOPLASM OF LYMPHOID TISSUE. |
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Term
Carcinoma was of epithelial origin; sarcoma was of mesenchymal tissues; what do you think TERATOMA means? |
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Definition
benigh OR malignant neoplasm comprised of MORE THAN ONE GERM CELL TYPE (ectoderm, mesodermm, endoderm). |
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Term
pancreatic tissue in the mucosa of small intestine is an example of WHAT..based on its ectopic rest and being normal tissue? |
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Definition
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Term
T/F HAMARTOMAs are benign. |
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Definition
TRUE. E.g. hamartoma of the lung. There is aberrant differentiation, produces disorganized MATURE cells INDIGENOUS to the organ. |
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Term
Architecture: tumors can grow in different ways. What is the 4th?? 1) Sheets 2) glands 3) cribiform 4) ____ |
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Definition
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Term
The degree of abnormality of an individual tumor cell is called what? |
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Definition
Cytolgic atypia. Cytolgic also includes pleomorphism, and abnormal nulear morphology (hyperchromasia, increased ratio of N:C; irregular nuclear membrane; nucleoi; mitosis (#, atypical, bizarre); loss of polarity; tumor giant cells |
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Term
why is lots of anaplasia BAD??? |
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Definition
Anaplasia means lack of differentiation. undifferentiated neoplasms are the worst... metastasizing etc etc |
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Term
what is the most common neoplasm? |
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Definition
mole!! called "benign nevus" and requires a series of transforming events to give rise to malignancy. malignancy is usually a mole that changes shape and grows fast (noticeable change in size in months rather than years). |
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Term
How is "TGIM" useful in knowing the progression of cancer? |
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Definition
TGIM: transform, grow, invade, metastasize--tells you how a cancer can be successful (at killing you). |
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Term
primary tumors of most organs tend to metastasis via hematogenous spread to_____? how about those of the GI tract? |
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Definition
most organs-->LUNGS GI--> liver |
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Term
staging of cancer is the single most important factor in ______ of a given tumor type? |
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Definition
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Term
WHAT ARE THE THREE MAIN TYPES OF CELLS IN OUR BODY? what does transformation have to do with it??? |
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Definition
1)stable (e.g. liver cells, most cells) 2) permanent (e.g. CNS neuron) 3) labile (e.g. basal epithelium)--more frequently dividing so more vulnerable to transformation by genetic and environmental factors |
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Term
Cancer stem cells are (pick all that apply): 1)initial targets for transformation 2)the aim of cancer treatment 3) identified in lung cancer and PML 4) they are normal cells nearby a tumor that are turned into replicating cancer cells |
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Definition
1 and 2 are correct: Cancer stem cells are initial targets for transformation; cells within a tumor that have the capacity to initiate and sustain the tumor; identified in breast tumors and acute myeloid leukemia; cancer tx aimed at eliminating cancer stem cells. |
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Term
what is a good immunohistochemical staining reaction for sarcomas? |
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Definition
vimentin--looks brownish. probably not an important details for our final, but important in LIFE. |
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Term
Retinoblastoma (RB), Familial adenomatous polyposis, and Li-Fraumeni Syndrome are examples of what? |
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Definition
Examples of autosomal dominant inherited cancer syndromes. RB: mutatnt RB tumor suppressor gene (13q14). FAP: mutant adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) tumor suppressor gene. they develop colon cancer. Li-Fraumeni Syndrome: mutation of p53 tumor suppressor gene. 25 x more likely to develop cancer. |
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Term
difference between proto-oncogenes and oncogenes? |
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Definition
protooncogenes are genes that promote cell growth in NORMAL CELLS (called oncogenes when promoting autonomous cell growth in cancer). |
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Term
ERB B1,an epidermal growth factor receptor, is overexpressed in 80% of what type of cancers? |
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Definition
in 80% of squamous cell carcinomas. ERB B@ (HER2): 25% of breast cancer. |
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Term
how many cycles of proliferation must carcinogen-altered cells undergo for "initiation" stage of chemical carcinogenesis to occur? And what are promoters? |
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Definition
only 1 cycle of proliferation! promoters: results in proliferation of initiated cells (e.g. hormones, phoneols, alcohol, drugs). |
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