Title: iBSc: Question 3
1iBSc Question 3
- By Alan McLeod
- Tested by Natalie Hayes
2Getting the best marks
- Read the whole question a latter section may
give you a clue about an earlier one. - To see how many points you need look at the marks
allocated for example a 3 point question is
generally looking for 3 salient points - If giving a list answer put the best answers
first examiners will not usually mark answers
too far down a list
- Always write something it may get you part of a
mark and is anonymised so no one will think you
are stupid! - If you genuinely have no clue then re-write the
question to see if this sparks some ideas. - If not then move on and come back at the end. And
remember always write something. - Good luck!
-
3Question 4
- Mr Jackson, a 62 year old retired bricklayer has
been experiencing haemoptysis for three weeks.
- Q4.1
- List 4 differentials for haemoptysis (4)
-
4Question 4
- Mr Jackson has an 80 pack year smoking history.
- Q4.2
- What is a pack year (2)
-
5Question 4
- Cigarette smoke is a known carcinogen.
- Q4.3
- List two other carcinogens (1)
- Q4.4
- What are the three stages of carcinogenesis (3)
-
6Question 4
- Q4.5
- What additional symptoms might you ask about to
support your hypothesis (2) - Q4.6
- What cancer specific tests might you order (3)
-
7Question 4
- Tests reveal a squamous cell carcinoma of the
lung with liver metastases.
- Q4.7
- Aside from SCC, list two other common types of
lung cancer (2) - Q4.8
- What changes occur in a cancer cell to allow
metastasis? (5) -
8Question 4
- Tests reveal a squamous cell carcinoma of the
lung with liver metastases.
- Q4.9
- Compare the characteristics of normal and
neoplastic cells (4) -
9Question 4
- When you tell him the diagnosis, Mr Jackson
becomes very angry - accusing you of negligence
for not spotting this earlier.
- Q4.10
- Aside from anger, what are the stages of grief in
the model proposed by Kubler-Ross (4) -
10Question 4
- You describe to Mr Jackson the probable prognosis
and progression of the disease.
- Q4.11
- List one local and two systemic effects that
cancers in general may produce (3) -
11The Answers
- View these on note view rather than on full
screen additional notes are provided for some
slides
12Haemoptysis? Wheres that wine
I Infectious / inflammatory Pulmonary tuberculosis
G Genetic / idiopathic
E Endocrine
T Trauma Chest trauma
V Vascular Pulmonary embolism
I Iatrogenic / ingested
N Neoplastic Bronchial carcinoma
O Organs / other Nose epistaxis oesophagus mallory weiss tear Lung bronchiectasis Heart mitral stenosis
13Two Useful Concepts
- Body Mass Index (BMI)
- 20-25 Ideal
- 26-30 Overweight
- 31-35 Obese
- Pack Years
- gt 20 increased chance complications
PY Cigs / day x Yrs
PY 20 x Yrs
BMI Wt (kg)
BMI Ht2 (M)
14Carcinogens
- Cigarette smoke
- Chemicals
- PAH
- Aromatic amines
- Nitrosamines
- UV Radiation
- Ionising radiation
- Radiotherapy
- Radon gas (lung)
- Industry/military
15Carcinogens
- Viruses
- EBV (Epstein-Barr)
- HPV (Papilloma virus)
- HBV (Hepatitis B virus)
- Stages in carcinogenesis
- Initiation
- Promotion
- Progression
16Lung cancer
- Male Female 71
- Decreasing
- Male peak in 60s
- Female peak in 70s
- Rare under 25 years
- Presenting complaints
- 90 symptomatic
- 40 Haemoptysis
- 75 Anorexia
- 75 Dyspnoea
- 75 Cough
- 75 Pain
- Remember Weight Loss
- 10 Incidental imaging
17Lung Cancer - Diagnosis
- Imaging
- Plain film
- CT
- MRI
- Cytology
- Sputum
- Bronchoscopic washings
- Biopsy
- Peripheral lesions
- Percutaneous biopsy
- Proximal lesions
- Bronchoscopic biopsy
- Pleural Effusions
- Fine needle aspiration
18Lung Cancer
- Types
- Small Cell (20-30)
- Non-small Cell
- Large Cell (10-15)
- Adenocarcinoma (20)
- Commonest non-smoking
- Squamous cell carcinoma (40-60)
- Commonest smoking related
- Treatment
- Small cell
- Early metastasis
- Chemotherapy and radiotherapy first line
- Non-small cell
- Surgery first line
- Lobectomy
- Pneumonectomy
- Radio / chemo as req
19Invasion and Metastasis
- Invasion is the spread into adjacent tissues
may occur along natural tissue planes such as
along nerves
- Metastasis is the spread of cells to distant
parts of the body there are several mechanisms
for this
20To Metastasise
- Changes occur in only some cells of the tumour
- By random mutation
- Binds to basement membr
- Becomes motile
- Becomes able to attach to extracellular matrix
- Becomes able to degrade extracellular matrix
- Must be able to survive and grow at site of
implantation
21- Routes of
- Metastasis
- Vascular
- Lymphatic
- Coelomic
22Growth Characteristics
Benign Malignant
Expands only Grows locally Expands and invades local tissues May metastasise
Generally slower Generally faster
23Cytoplasmic Characteristics
Benign Malignant
Normal or slight increase in nucleuscytoplasm ratio High nucleuscytoplasm ratio
Resembles cell of origin (well differentiated) Failure of differentiation
Retains specialisations Loses specialisations
Diploid Range of ploidy
24Histological Characteristics
Benign Malignant
Few Mitoses Many mitoses some of which are abnormal
Cell uniform throughout tumour Cells vary in shape and size (cellular pleomorphism) and/or Nuclei vary in shape and size (nuclear pleomorphism)
Organised tissue Disorganised tissue
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26Local and systemic effects
- Local
- Pressure
- Invasion
- Ulceration
- Obstruction
- Systemic
- Weight loss (cachexia)
- Loss of appetite (anorexia)
- Fever
- Anaemia
- General Malaise
- Paraneoplastic
27The End
- The slides here should allow you to mark your own
work remember 1 mark per answer up to the
maximum for the question. Multiply by 3 to get
percentage points. I assume a 60 pass mark.
Sorry but I am unable to give further advice on
answers due to time constraints.