Gallbladder
The gallbladder, in pathology (and general surgery), is a growth industry... due to the worsening obesity epidemic.
Normal histology
- No muscularis mucosae.
- Small amount of lymphocytes in the lamina propria.
Image:
Note:
- As there is no muscularis mucosae, the cancer staging is different; pT1a is lamina propria invasion. pT1b is muscle layer invasion.
Overview
Most common:
- Cholelithiasis with cholecystitis.
Common:
- Antral-type metaplasia.
Uncommon:
- Intestinal metaplasia.
- Gallbladder dysplasia.
- Gallbladder carcinoma.
Common
Chronic cholecystitis
General
Epidemiology
- Female, fat, fertile, family history, forty (though now getting younger... as people get fatter).
Etiology
- Cholelithiasis.
- Thick bile (acalculous cholecystitis).
Clinical (classic)
- Constant right upper quadrant pain after a fatty meal.
- Positive Murphy's sign (physical exam, with ultrasound).
Gross
- +/-Cholelithiasis - strongly associated pathology.
- +/-Strawberry-like appearance - common (due to gallbladder cholesterolosis).
- Small ridges (microvillus architecture).
- Normal gallbladder mucosa = smooth.
- Small ridges (microvillus architecture).
- +/-Congestion/erythema.
- +/-Wall thickening.
- Seen in acute cholecystitis (due to congestion/edema).
Microscopic
Features:
- Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses.[1]
- Entrapped epithelial crypts -- pockets of epithelium in the wall of the gallbladder.
- +/-Foamy macrophages in the lamina propria (cholesterolosis of the gallbladder).
- Chronic inflammatory cells (lymphocytes - most common).
- Fibrotic thickening of the gallbladder wall.
DDx:
Acute cholecystitis
General
- Less common than chronic cholecystitis.
- Usually due to gallstones.[2]
- Classically older individuals (50s and 60s) with a slight female predominance.[2]
Gross
Features:[2]
- Wall thickening - due to edema and hemorrhage.
- Gallstone(s) - classically obstructing the gallbladder neck.
Microscopic
Features:[2]
- Edema.
- Hemorrhage.
- +/-Fibrin thrombi in small veins.
- +/-Mucosal erosions.
- +/-Neutrophils.
Special types
Gangrenous cholecystitis
General:[4]
- Older.
- Clinically "sicker".
- Worse outcome than (acute) non-gangrenous cholecystitis.
Microscopic:
Gallbladder cholesterolosis
- AKA cholesterolosis.
- Informally known as strawberry gallbladder.
General
- Common in cholecystitis.
- Associated with yellow gallstones (cholesterol type gallstones).
Gross
Features:
- Mucosa has strawberry-like appearance.
Microscopic
Features:
- Foamy macrophages in the lamina propria.
Image:
Cholelithiasis
- AKA gallstones.
General
- Often accompanies cholecystitis/contributes and/or causes cholecystitis.
The two types of gallstones:
- Cholesterol stones.
- Pigment stones.
Note:
- Most stones technically speaking are a mix, i.e. cholesterol and pigment. Many call yellow stones that are a mix "cholesterol stones".
Epidemiology
Classic risk factors for gallstones - 4 Fs:[6]
- Female.
- Fat.
- Forty.
- Fertile.
Additional:
- Family history.
Cholesterol stones
- More common than pigment stone.
Appearance:
- Clear or yellow.
- Opaque or translucent.
- Sometimes shinny.
Image:
Pigment stones
- Due to high RBC turnover, e.g. sickle cell disease, thalassemia.
- Radio-opaque.[7]
Appearance:
- Black - key feature.
- Dull.
Less common pathologic diagnoses
Adenomyoma of the gallbladder
General
- Glands in muscle.
- Analogous to what happens in the uterus.
- Significance - may mimic malignant tumours of the gallbladder.[8][9]
- Uncommon.
Gross
- Cystic spaces (Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses) - may be seen on imaging.[10][11]
- Gallbladder wall thickening.
Microscopic
Features:
- Glands in muscularis propria of the gallbladder wall.
- No nuclear atypia.
DDx:
Image:
Gallbladder polyps
General
- Polyps are significant as they may be adenomatous, i.e. pre-cancerous.
- These are similar to polyps found elsewhere GI tract.
Microscopic
- See intestinal polyps.
Flat dysplasia:[12]
- Nuclear changes.
- Increased NC ratio.
- Hyperchromasia (essential).
- +/-Intestinal metaplasia --> goblet cells.
Premalignant lesions
General
- Metaplasia associated with carcinoma.[13]
Hypothesis:[14]
- Antral type metaplasia --> intestinal metaplasia --> dysplasia --> carcinoma.
Intestinal metaplasia
General
Significance:
- Increased risk of carcinoma.[13]
Microscopic
Features:
- Presence of goblet cells -/+ paneth cells.[15]
Antral type metaplasia
General
Microscopic
Features:[15]
- Columnar cells with:
- Abundant, pale, apical mucin.
- Small basal nucleus.
- Cells often in nests -- below luminal surface.
- Cells vaguely resemble foveollar epithelium of the stomach.
Notes:
- May look similar to cells of the gallbladder neck[15] and common bile duct.[16]
- These glandular cells are not as columnar and have less well-defined cell borders.
- Cells with antral type metaplasia >2:1 (height:width), benign mucosal glands <2:1.
- These glandular cells are not as columnar and have less well-defined cell borders.
Images:
Gallbladder dysplasia
General
- Premalignant lesion.
Microscopic
Features:
- Nuclear crowding.
- Nuclear hyperchromasia.
Notes:
- Like in the colon.
DDx:
Gallbladder carcinoma
General
Epidemiology
- Associated with gallstones.
- Increased risk in primary sclerosing cholangitis.
- Sex: female > male.
- Location: usually fundus, sometimes body.
Notes:
- Diffuse calcification of gallbladder wall, AKA "porcelain gallbladder" is not associated with carcinoma - based on a series of 10,741 cholecystectomies.[17]
- Focal mucosal calcification is associated with malignancy.[18]
- Cholangiocarcinoma is dealt with in the liver neoplasms article.
Gross
- Classically mass projects into the lumen.
Image:
Microscopic
Features:
- Usually adenocarcinoma.
- Mimics appearance of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma-- but less cellular mucin.[3]
Notes:
- May be very subtle, i.e. difficult to differentiate from normal glands.
DDx:
- Adenomyoma of the gallbladder.
- Metastatic carcinoma.
See also
References
- ↑ URL: http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/983.html. Accessed on: 29 October 2011.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Mills, Stacey E; Carter, Darryl; Greenson, Joel K; Reuter, Victor E; Stoler, Mark H (2009). Sternberg's Diagnostic Surgical Pathology (5th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 1606. ISBN 978-0781779425.
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tag; name "Ref_Sternberg5_1606" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 3.0 3.1 Tadrous, Paul.J. Diagnostic Criteria Handbook in Histopathology: A Surgical Pathology Vade Mecum (1st ed.). Wiley. pp. 174. ISBN 978-0470519035.
- ↑ Nikfarjam, M.; Niumsawatt, V.; Sethu, A.; Fink, MA.; Muralidharan, V.; Starkey, G.; Jones, RM.; Christophi, C. (Aug 2011). "Outcomes of contemporary management of gangrenous and non-gangrenous acute cholecystitis.". HPB (Oxford) 13 (8): 551-8. doi:10.1111/j.1477-2574.2011.00327.x. PMID 21762298.
- ↑ STC. 25 February 2009.
- ↑ Szwed, Z.; Zyciński, P. (2007). "[4F's--still up to date risk factors of cholelithiasis].". Wiad Lek 60 (11-12): 570-3. PMID 18540184.
- ↑ URL: http://www.rxmed.com/b.main/b2.pharmaceutical/b2.1.monographs/CPS-%20Monographs/CPS-%20%28General%20Monographs-%20U%29/URSOFALK.html. Accessed on: 29 October 2011.
- ↑ Saul, WM.; Herrmann, PK. (1988). "[Adenomyoma of the gallbladder].". Dtsch Z Verdau Stoffwechselkr 48 (2): 112-6. PMID 3168899.
- ↑ Sasatomi, E.; Miyazaki, K.; Mori, M.; Satoh, T.; Nakano, S.; Tokunaga, O. (Oct 1997). "Polypoid adenomyoma of the gallbladder.". J Gastroenterol 32 (5): 704-7. PMID 9350002.
- ↑ Ching, BH.; Yeh, BM.; Westphalen, AC.; Joe, BN.; Qayyum, A.; Coakley, FV. (Jul 2007). "CT differentiation of adenomyomatosis and gallbladder cancer.". AJR Am J Roentgenol 189 (1): 62-6. doi:10.2214/AJR.06.0866. PMID 17579153.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Boscak, AR.; Al-Hawary, M.; Ramsburgh, SR.. "Best cases from the AFIP: Adenomyomatosis of the gallbladder.". Radiographics 26 (3): 941-6. doi:10.1148/rg.263055180. PMID 16702464.
- ↑ Tadrous, Paul.J. Diagnostic Criteria Handbook in Histopathology: A Surgical Pathology Vade Mecum (1st ed.). Wiley. pp. 172. ISBN 978-0470519035.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Duarte I, Llanos O, Domke H, Harz C, Valdivieso V (September 1993). "Metaplasia and precursor lesions of gallbladder carcinoma. Frequency, distribution, and probability of detection in routine histologic samples". Cancer 72 (6): 1878–84. PMID 8364865.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Mukhopadhyay S, Landas SK (March 2005). "Putative precursors of gallbladder dysplasia: a review of 400 routinely resected specimens". Arch. Pathol. Lab. Med. 129 (3): 386–90. PMID 15737036. http://www.archivesofpathology.org/doi/pdf/10.1043/1543-2165%282005%29129%3C386%3APPOGDA%3E2.0.CO%3B2.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 Mills, Stacey E; Carter, Darryl; Greenson, Joel K; Oberman, Harold A; Reuter, Victor E (2004). Sternberg's Diagnostic Surgical Pathology (4th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 1789. ISBN 978-0781740517.
- ↑ EC. 3 March 2011.
- ↑ Towfigh S, McFadden DW, Cortina GR, et al (January 2001). "Porcelain gallbladder is not associated with gallbladder carcinoma". Am Surg 67 (1): 7?0. PMID 11206901.
- ↑ Stephen, AE.; Berger, DL. (Jun 2001). "Carcinoma in the porcelain gallbladder: a relationship revisited.". Surgery 129 (6): 699-703. doi:10.1067/msy.2001.113888. PMID 11391368.