Colon

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The colon and rectum smell like poo... 'cause that's where poo comes from. It commonly comes to pathologists because there is a suspicion of cancer or a known history of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

An introduction to gastrointestinal pathology is found in the gastrointestinal pathology article.

Surgery

Introduction to colorectal surgery:

  1. Colonic resection - remove a piece of large bowel.
  2. Total colectomy - leaves rectum and anus.[1]
  3. Subtotal colectomy - part of colon removed --or-- some of the rectum remains.
  4. Right hemicolectomy - right colon + distal ileum.
  5. Lower anterior resection (LAR) - proximal rectum +/- sigmoid (for proximal rectal malignancies).
  6. Abdominoperineal resection (APR) - anus + rectum - results in a permanent stoma (for distal rectal malignancies).

Grossing

  • Lymph nodes - should get at least 12 - if it is cancer.[2]

Quirke method

  • Bowel is not opened.

Standard method

  • Bowel is prep'ed by opening it along the antimesenteric side.
  • Dimensions - length, circumference at both margins.
  • Radial margin/circumferential margin - should be painted.
    • Rectum starts/sigmoid ends @ place where serosa ends on the posterior aspect of the bowel.
      • The proximal, anterior aspect of the rectum has serosa, i.e. it is not painted.

Common clinical problems

Obstruction

Top three (in adults):[5]

  • Neoplasia,
  • Volvulus (cecal, sigmoid),
  • Diverticular disease + stricture formation.

Bleeding

Mnemonic CHAND:[6]

  • Colitis (radiation, infectious, ischemic, IBD (UC >CD), iatrogenic (anticoagulants)),
  • Hemorrhoids,
  • Angiodysplasia,
  • Neoplastic,
  • Diverticular disease.

Infectious colitis with bleeding - causes:

  • Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) -- commonly 0157:H7,
  • Campylobacter jejuni,
  • Clostridium difficile,
  • Shigella.

Infectious colitis in the immunosuppressed:

Inflammatory bowel disease

The bread 'n butter of gastroenterology. A detailed discussion of IBD is in the inflammatory bowel disease article.

Microscopic

Features helpful for the diagnosis of IBD - as based on a study:[9]

  • Basal, i.e. crypt base, plasmacytosis with severe chronic inflammation,
  • Crypt architectural abnormalities, and
  • Distal Paneth cell metaplasia.
    • Paneth cells should not be in the left colon[10] - if you see 'em think of IBD and other long-standing injurious processes.
    • Some claim that (friendly right colonic) paneth cells and paneth cell metaplasia look quite different and can be distinguished.[11]

Bowel ischemia

Radiologic correlate

  • Bowel wall thickening.

Gross

Features:[12]

  • Luminal part (mucosa & submucosa) affected.
  • Splenic flexture of colon commonly affected (vascular watershed).

Note:

  • May have pseudomembranes (classically assoc. with C. difficle colitis), i.e. mimics an infectious process.
  • DDx for pseudomembranes:[13]
    • C. difficle induced pseudomembranous colitis.
    • Ischemic colitis.
    • Volvulus.
    • Necrotizing infections.
    • ... anything that causes severe mucosal injury.

Histology of pseudomembranes:[13]

  • Loss of surf. epithelium.
  • PMNs in lamina propria.
  • +/- capillary fibrin thrombi.

NB: Pseudomembranes arise from the crypts.

Image:

Angiodysplasia

General

  • Causes (lower) GI haemorrhage.
  • Generally, not a problem pathologists see.
  • May be associated with aortic stenosis; known as Heyde syndrome.[14]

Location

  • Cecum.

Epidemiology

  • Older people.

Etiology

  • Thought to be caused by the higher wall tension of cecum (due to larger diameter) and result from (intermittent) venous occulsion/focal dilation of vessels.[15]

Pseudomelanosis coli

  • AKA melanosis coli.[16]

General

  • Not melanin as the name melanosis coli suggests; it is actually lipofuscin (in macrophages).[17]
  • Endoscopist may see brown pigmentation of mucosa and suspect the diagnosis.

Epidemiology

  • Classically associated with anthracene containing laxative (e.g. Senokot) use and herbal remedies.[17]

Gross

  • Brown pigmentation of the mucosa.

Image:

Microscopic

Features:

  • Brown granular pigment - in the lamina propria.
    • Typically more prominent in the cecum and proximal colon.[17]

Images:

Notes:

  • DDx of brown pigment:
    • Lipofuscin - comes with age (can be demonstrated with a PAS stain[18] or Kluver-Barrera stain[19]).
      • Melanosis coli.
    • Old haemorrhage, i.e. hemosiderin-laden macrophages (may be demonstrated with Prussian blue stain[20]).
    • Melanin (from melanocytes) - rare in colon (may be demonstrated with a Fontana-Masson stain[21] -- though not so useful in the GI tract).
    • Foreign material (e.g. tattoo pigment) - not seen in GI tract.

Stains

Microscopic colitis

General

Definition:

  • As the name suggests, they are microscopic, i.e. endoscopic examination is normal.

Presentation:

  • Chronic diarrhea, non-bloody.[23]

Notes:

Microscopic colitis - types

  • Lymphocytic colitis (LC).
  • Collagenous colitis (CC).

Some believe that LC and CC are different time points in the same process-- but this is unproven.[23]

Epidemiology

  • Age: a disease of adults - usually 50s.
  • Sex:
    • LC males ~= females,[23]
    • CC females:males = 20:1.[23]
  • Drugs are associated with LC and CC.
    • NSAIDs - posulated association/weak association,
    • SSRIs (used primarily for depression) - moderate association, dependent on specific drug.
  • Associated with autoimmune disorders - celiac disease, diabetes mellitus, thyroid disorders and arthritis.[24]
  • No increased risk of colorectal carcinoma.[24]

Treatment

  • Sometimes just follow-up.
  • Steroids - budesonide -- short-term treatment.[24]

Characteristics

Lymphocytic colitis

  • Lots of intraepithelial lymphocytes (>=20/100 lymphocytes/surface epithelial cells[24]) and
  • lymphocytes in the lamina propria.
  • NEGATIVES:[25]
    • No PMNs.
    • No crypt distortion.

Collagenous colitis

  • Intraepithelial lymphocytes, and
  • lymphocytes in the lamina propria.
  • Collagenous material in the lamina propria (pink on H&E) -- key feature.
    • Can be demonstrated with a trichrome stain -- collagen = green on trichrome.
    • Subepithelial collagen needs to be >= 10 micrometres thick for Dx.[24]
      • 8 micrometres is the diameter of a RBC.
      • The normal thickness of the subepithelial collagen is 3 micrometres.[24]
    • Thickening "follows the crypts from the surface" - useful for differentiating from tangential sections of the basement membrane.[26]
    • Collagen may envelope capillaries - useful to discern from basement membrane.[27]

Images:

Notes:

  • CC is typically more prominent in the proximal colon - may reflect concentration gradient of offending causitive agents.[24]
  • Significant negative findings:[25]
    • No PMNs.
    • No crypt distortion.

Spirochetes

General

  • Very rare cause of diarrhea.
  • Caused by Serpulina pilosicoli and Brachyspira aalborgi.[28]
  • Tx: metronidazole.[29]

Histology

  • Hyperchromatic fuzz on luminal aspect of epithelial cells; at brush border.

Special stain:

  • Silver stains highlight 'em (e.g. Warthin-Starry stain).

Amebiasis

General

  • Infection with Entamoeba histolytica.[30]
  • May also be spelling amoebiasis.
  • May mimic colon cancer.[31]

May cause:[32]

  • Dysentery (diarrhea containing mucus and/or blood in the feces).
  • Colitis.
  • Liver abscess.

Microscopy

Features:

  • Entamoeba histolytica are round/ovoid eosinophilic bodies ~ 40-60 micrometers in maximal dimension.
    • Found in bowel lumen.
    • Ingest RBCs.

Image:

Cryptosporidiosis

General

  • Usually in immune incompetent individuals, e.g. HIV/AIDS.

Microscopic

Features:

  • Uniform spherical nodules 2-4 micrometres in diameter, typical location - GI tract brush border.
    • Bluish staining of brush border key feature - low power.

Polyps

Polyps are the bread & butter of GI pathology. They are very common.

Main types:

  • Hyperplastic (most common)
  • Adenomatous (quite common, pre-malignant)
  • Hamartomatous (rare, weird & wonderful)
  • Inflammatory (associated with IBD)

Most common (images):

Colorectal Tumours

These are very common. The are covered in a separate article entitled colorectal tumours.

Solitary rectal ulcer

General

  • Clinically may be suspected to a malignancy - biopsied routinuely.
  • Mucosal ulceration.
  • "Three-lies disease":[33]
  1. May not be solitary,
  2. May not be rectal -- can be in left colon,
  3. May not be ulcerating -- non-ulcerated lesions: polypoid and/or erythematous.

Note: Each of the words in solitary rectal ulcer is a lie.

Epidemiology

  • Typically younger patients - average age of presentation ~30 years in one study.[34]
  • Rare.

Clinical

  • Usually presents as BRBPR ~ 85% of cases.[34]
  • Abdominal pain present in approx. 1/3.[34]
    • May be very painful.

Microscopic

Features:[33]

  • Fibrosis of the lamina propria - should be obliterated.
  • Thickened muscularis mucosa - abnormally extends to the lumen.

Histologic DDx

Treatment

  • Usually conservative, i.e. non-surgical.
  • Resection - may be done for fear of malignancy.

Rectal prolapse

Generally

  • Usually close to the anal verge.
  • Rare forms can occasionally be confused with cancer.[35]

Microscopic

Features:[36]

  • "Fibromuscular hyperplasia" - key feature:
    • Fibrosis (submucosa, lamina propria).
    • Muscularis mucosae is "too superficial" (muscle in the lamina propria).
  • Surface ulceration + inflammation (neutrophils).
  • +/-Serration of epithelium at the surface.

Notes:

  • Important NEGATIVE: no nuclear atypia.

Images:

Mucosal prolapse syndrome

  • Similar to rectal prolapse???

Weird stuff

Drugs

Kayexalate (sodium polystyrene sulfonate):[37]

Image: Sodium polystyrene crystals (WC).

Graft-versus host disease

  • Abbreviated as GVHD.
  • Seen in the context of bone marrow transplants.

Bowel transplant

The histology of bowel transplant rejection is identical to GVHD - see GVHD.

Chronic constipation

This is occasionally an indication for colectomy.

Causes:

  • Tumour.
  • Adhesions - due to previous surgery.
  • Neuropathy.
  • Congenital defect (Hirschsprung's disease).
  • Medications/substance use.
  • Idiopathic.

Work-up if no tumour is identified:[38]

  • Routine H&E.
  • Pan-actin.
  • Gomori trichrome.
  • CD117 - to look for the interstitial cells of Cajal.
  • HU - neuronal marker.[39]

Goblet cell carcinoid

Described in detail in the appendix article.
  • AKA crypt cell carcinoma.
  • Biphasic tumour; features of carcinoid tumour and adenocarcinoma.

See also

References

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  2. Bilimoria KY, Bentrem DJ, Stewart AK, et al. (September 2008). "Lymph node evaluation as a colon cancer quality measure: a national hospital report card". J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 100 (18): 1310–7. doi:10.1093/jnci/djn293. PMID 18780863. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/581463.
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  27. BEC 4 Mar 2009
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