Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

SCC

A
  • twice more in men
  • 90% 5 year survival for lip cancer (half for tongue)
  • 50% 5 year survival for oral and pharyngeal cancer
  • Erythroplakia is more malignant
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2
Q

Granuloma vs Cyst

A

Granuloma (Not vital)

  • defined growth that is continuous with PDL due to pulp necrosis (toxins diffuse into PA area)
  • This can progress to an acute abscess, phoenix abscess (recrudescent abscess)

Cyst

  • Inflammatory response of the PA area from a pre-existing granuloma
  • fluid filled, epi lined
  • chronic infection

Both are usually asymptomatic, radiolucent with defined borders.

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3
Q

Types of Cysts

A

VITAL teeth

  1. cementoma (PA cemental dysplasia) = anterior mandible = radiolucent that calcifies
  2. traumatic bone cyst = not a true cyst = scallops roots
  3. globulomaxillary cyst (developmental cyst) = junction of globular and maxillary process, btwn LI and canine roots.
  4. Lateral Periodontal Cyst = from cystic degeneration of clear cells on dental lamina

NON-vital teeth

  1. Apical scar = results from granuloma, cyst or abscess healing = well-circumscribed like their predecessor
  2. Radicular cyst = occurs in a pre-existing granuloma
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4
Q

Ameloblastoma and Cementoblastoma

A

Ameloblastoma = benign = locally agressive (root resorption) = multilocular radiolucencies = mand. prevalence

Cementoblastoma = cementoblast proliferation making large cementum-like tissue on roots

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5
Q

PA infection bacteria

A

Strep may initiate infection, but PA pathology is due to anaerobic bugs (Porphyromonas, Bacteroides, Eubacterium, Prevotella, Fusobacterium)

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6
Q

All cells in immune system originate where?

A

BW as hematopoietic stem cells which give rise to:
1. Myeloids (monocytes, MO, granulocytes, histiocytes, PMNs) = Innate = non-pecific

  1. Lymphoid (Lymphocytes: T, B cells, NK cells, plasma cells) = Adaptive = specific

Mast cells = lysosomes = histamine + heparin = anaphylaxis
Histiocytes = dermal MO = acute inflam. = Langerhans in subdermal squamous epithelium
PMN, MO (monocytes once they leave the blood) = phagocyte
T cells = antigens are presented to T cells via macrophages.
B cells = bacteria, fungus, virions
NK cells = tumors and viruses

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7
Q

3 stages of inflammation AND 2 phases of acute inflammation

A
  1. immediate
  2. acute (PMN)
  3. chronic (lymphocytes, MO)

Every stage is controlled by WBCs

Phase 1 of acute inflam:

  1. Vasoconstriction
  2. compliment activation (c3a and c5a cause chemotaxis, where c3b cause opsonization
  3. Tissue injury releases bradykinin –> prostaglandins and leukotrienes
  4. Vasodilation from histamine (skin redness)

Phase 2

  1. Adhesion of WBCs and margination (accumulation to a certain spot)
  2. WBC diapedesis (squeeze through endothelial cells)
  3. Chemotaxis
  4. Phagocytosis

First to arrive are PMNs, then MO. With parasites its eosinophils. With viruses its lymphocytes.

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8
Q

Treatment of gingivitis via two ways:

A

OTC essential oil rinse (Listerine)

Rx 0.12% Chlorohexidine Gluconate (12% EtOH)

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9
Q

Dentigerous cyst

A

Due to degenerative changes in reduced enamel epithelium

Any tooth is associated with it

Unerupting tooth = dentigerous = primordial cyst
- TX: derive and keep it exposed

When its erupting, its called erupting cyst

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10
Q

osteomyelitis

A

starts in the medullary space of trabecular bone

Suppurative (acute, infantile) vs non-suppurative (chronic, sclerosing, Garre, actincomytic) groups

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11
Q

Cavernous sinus thrombosis via:

A

(1) anteriorly through the angular and inferior ophthalmic veins (canine space/deep temporal space infections via ophthalmic veins) and
(2) posteriorly through the transverse facial vein and pterygoid plexus of veins

CN 3,4,5,6 pass through the cavernous sinus

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12
Q

malignant lesions

A
  • Bleeds easy
  • Paresthesia (painless)
  • metastatic = malignant = cancer
  • immobile/fixed to tissue
  • anaplastic
  • Hyperchromatic (Nu)
  • pleomorphic
  • ulcerated
  • erythroplasia
  • duration (meaning time)
  • induration (surroudning tissue is firm to touch)
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13
Q

pin point dots of blood on skin

A

Petechiae

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14
Q

Bone vs Cartilage growth

A

Cartilage Growth:

  1. appositional = recruits chondroblasts to add new surface matrix
  2. interstitial = no recruitment needed, chondrocytes already present = mandibular condyle

Bone:
Only appositional growth. Its rigid structure inhibits interstitial growth

NOTE: cartilage is the primary determinant of skeletal growth, where bone follows passively.

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15
Q

Ectopic teeth

A

Max 1M > Mand. Incisors > Mand. 1M
Max > Mand.
Class II patient’s

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16
Q

Bone Formation (Not Growth)

A

messenchyme –> fibrous membrane OR cartilage

  1. Intramembranous ossification = occurs in membranes of CT = osteoproginator cells –> osteoblasts –> collagen matrix forms around it to ossify = maxilla, mandible, cranial vault
  2. Endochondral ossification = occurs in hyaline cartilage = cartilage cells replaced by bone (osteocytes replace chondrocytes) = short and long bones, cranial BASE (sphenoid, ethmoid, occipital bones)

Cranial vault grows in response to the brain (max in 5 yrs)
Cranial base grows are independent of growth potential
Deposition and reposition may not occur in equal amounts
Remodeling = osteons = endosteal and periosteal surfaces

17
Q

Hutchinson and mulberry teeth

A

4-6 weeks in utero prior to calcification.

Maxillary incisors and molars are only affected bc they are the only teeth forking during this time