Neoplasia. Means a new growth Or "neoplasm". In clinical practice, called a tumour. This is not...

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Neoplasia

Transcript of Neoplasia. Means a new growth Or "neoplasm". In clinical practice, called a tumour. This is not...

Page 1: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Neoplasia

Page 2: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Means a new growth Or "neoplasm". In clinical practice, called a tumour. This is not strictly correct, since the

term tumour refers to all swellings, e.g. inflammation, haematoma etc., but it is so generally accepted .

Oncology (Greek oma = tumour) Is the science of studying neoplasms

Page 3: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Definition

Neoplasm is an abnormal new growth, of cells independent of physiologic growth stimuli (autonomous).

Its presence serves no useful purpose Its growth is uncoordinated with that

of the surrounding tissue Its growth persists after cessation of

the stimuli which provoked its formation

Page 4: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

In neoplasia proliferation, differentiation and organisation are all disturbed

Proliferation: a neoplasm is characterized by partial or complete loss of regulation of mitosis and cell maturation

Differentiation reduction or deletion of the specialized function of the cells

Organization loss of the morphologic tissue and organ characteristics.

Page 5: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Classification of neoplasms

According to their clinical behaviour into: Benign tumours, which usually grow slowly

and do not interfere with the person's well being or shorten his life, unless the tumour encroaches on a vital organ e.g. the brain or produces harmful substances e.g. excess hormones.

Malignant tumours generally are more rapidly growing, destroy and infiltrate the normal structures and unless effectively treated interfere with health and eventually cause death.

Page 6: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

All tumours, benign and malignant are formed of

two basic components:

1- Parenchymal neoplastic cells, (proliferating neoplastic cells)

2- Supportive stroma of connective tissue and blood vessels and possibly lymphatics

Page 7: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Classification of tumours

1. Benign: Epithelial Mesenchymal Germ cell tumours

2. Malignant: Epithelial Mesenchymal Germ cell tumours

Page 8: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Classification of Tumours

A-Tumours of epithelial origin1-Str. Sq. epithelium Squamous cell papilloma. Squamous cell

carcinoma. 2-Glandular epithelium Adenoma Adenocarcinoma 3-Neuroectoderm Nevus Malignant

melanoma

Page 9: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

B-Tumours of Mesenchymal originMalignant=sarcoma Benign=oma

Fibroma ( benign tumor of fibroblasts) Lipoma ( benign tr of lipocytes) Leiomyoma ( benign tr of smooth

muscle fibers) Rhabdomyoma( benign tr of striated

muscle fibers) Osteoma ( benign tr of osteoblasts) Chondroma ( benign tr of chondrocytes) Angioma ( benign tr of endothelium)

Page 10: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

C- Tumours derived from more than one germ layer (from totipotential cells)

Teratoma (mature) Immature teratoma

Page 11: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Characterization of benign and malignant tumours

1- Capsulation

Benign tumours grow by expansion leading to pressure atrophy of the surrounding tissue with formation of a fibrous capsule. Though not all benign tumours are encapsulated, but there is always a plane of cleavage around the tumours.

Page 12: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Malignant tumours grow by an infiltrative manner that destroys and penetrates the surrounding tissue; they do not develop a capsule. The infiltration tends to occur in anatomic planes of cleavage

Page 13: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Comparison between a benign tumor of the myometrium (leiomyoma) and a malignant tumor of similar origin

(leiomyosarcoma).

Page 14: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Benign tumor

Capsule

Page 15: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Uterine leiomyoma

Page 16: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Malignant tumor

Page 17: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Malignant tumor

Page 18: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

2 -Differentiation and anaplasia

Differentiation refers to the extent to which the tumour cells resemble their normal counterpart, both morphologically and functionally

Page 19: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Benign neoplasms are composed of well-differentiated cells that resemble very closely their normal counterpart e.g. lipoma. Mitoses are extremely scant in number and are normal in configuration.

Page 20: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Follicular adenoma thyroid

Page 21: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Malignant tumours are characterized by a wide range of parenchymal differentiation from surprisingly well-differentiated to those completely undifferentiated.

Page 22: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Well differentiated adenocarcinoma colon

Page 23: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Poorly differentiated carcinoma

Page 24: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Anaplasia: Definition

It implies dedifferentiation or loss of structural and functional differentiation of normal cells.

eg. Malignant tumours formed of undifferentiated cells are called anaplastic tumours,

anaplasia is a marker of cancer.

Page 25: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

The following cytologic features characterize malignant cells:

Nuclear and cellular pleomorphism: wide variation in the shape and size of cells and nuclei.

Hyperchromatism: darkly-stained nuclei that frequently contain prominent nucleoli.

Page 26: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.
Page 27: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Nucleo-cytoplasmic ratio: approaches 1:1 instead of 1:4 or 1:6 reflecting enlargement of nuclei.

Abundant mitoses: reflect proliferative activity. Mitotic figures may be abnormal (atypical e.g. tripolar, quadripolar or multipolar spindles).

Tumour giant cells: containing a single large polypoid nucleus or multiple nuclei.

Page 28: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.
Page 29: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Anaplastic tumours also demonstrate a total loss of tissue architecture e.g. in an anaplastic tumour of uterine cervix, the normal orientation of squamous epithelial cells with respect to each other is lost (loss of polarity).

Page 30: Neoplasia.  Means a new growth Or "neoplasm".  In clinical practice, called a tumour.  This is not strictly correct, since the term tumour refers to.

Well-differentiated tumours, whether benign or malignant, tend to retain the functional characteristics of their counterparts such as the production of hormones in tumours of endocrine origin or keratin in squamous epithelial tumours. Anaplastic tumours have no specialized functional activity.