An introduction to gastrointestinal pathology

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Gastrointestinal pathology is a large part of pathology as radiologists can often describe the extent of disease... but don't get the diagnosis right all the time.

Normal

Layers of the alimentary canal:[1][2]

  • mucosa (epithelium, lamina propria, muscularis mucosa)
  • submuscosa and submucosal plexus (or Meissner's plexus)
  • muscularis externa (inner longitudinal, myenteric plexus (or Auerbach's plexus) outer circumferential)
  • adventitia (if retroperitoneal), serosa (if intraperitoneal)

Bowel

Small bowel

  • Villi - should see three good ones in a normal biopsy.
  • Crypts.
  • Paneth cells.

Duodenum

  • Small bowel (as above).
  • Submucosal glands (Brunner's glands).

Large bowel vs. small bowel

  • Small intestine.
    • Villi (key feature).
    • Brunner's glands - duodenum only (key feature).
    • Paneth cells more common.
      • Paneth cells are in the base of the crypts and have eosinophilic granules. They are found (normally) in the small bowel and right colon. They may appear on the left side (i.e. descending colon) in pathologic states, e.g. IBD.
  • Large intestine
    • More goblet cells.
    • More lymphocytes usually.

Intestinal polyps

The bread and butter of gastrointestinal pathology.

Esophagus

Largely forgotten organ at SB... but no shortage of these at SMH.

Stomach

H. pylori, cancer and more...

Small bowel

The part of the GI tract pathology mostly forgot.

Duodenum

Commonly biopsied.

Gallbladder

A growth industry... with the expanding waist lines in the (Western) world.

Liver

An organ that pathologists now sometimes forget.

Colon

Includes discussion of the rectum.

Appendix

Acute appendicitis and more...

See also

References