respiratory pathology 1. lobar pneumonia from: stevens a. j lowe j. pathology. mosby 1995 fig. 17.1....

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Page 1: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Respiratory pathology 1

Page 2: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Lobar pneumoniaFrom: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology.

Mosby 1995

Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four stages: (1) congestion (serous alveolitis); (2) red hepatization (fibrinous alveolitis); (3) gray hepatization (leucocytic alveolitis); (4) resolution.

An entire lobe is involved.

Page 3: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Fig. 17.2. Serous alveolitis: (a) parieto-alveolar capillaries are congested; (b) intra-alveolar serous exudate (intense eosinophilic material,rich in proteins, which contains red blood cells and bacteria).

Lobar pneumonia stage I (congestion)From cases of the Pathology Department - U.M.F. “Gr. T. Popa” Iasi

Page 4: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Lobar pneumonia stage II (Red Hepatization ) and III (Red Hepatization) From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995

From cases of the Pathology Department - U.M.F. “Gr. T. Popa” Iasi

Fig. 17.3. Red Hepatization stage (II) and Fibrinous alveolitis: (a) parieto-alveolar capillaries are intensely congested; (b) intra- alveolar fibrinous exudate, as a fibrin network, containing erythrocytes, neutrophiles and infectious agents; fibrinous exudate passes through Kohn pores from an alveolus to another (Mallory stain).

Page 5: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Fig. 17.4. Leucocytic alveolitis: (a) parieto-alveolar capillary network is still congested; (b) alveolar lumen contains a suppurative exudate composed of neutrophils-PMNs and macrophages-Mfs.

Page 6: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Pulmonary carnificationFrom cases of the Pathology Department - U.M.F. “Gr. T. Popa” Iasi

Fig. 17.5.

Page 7: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Fig. 17.5-6. Microscopy: It is a complication of fibrinous alveolitis stage resulting by connective organization of the alveolar fibrinous exudate. The alveolar lumen is occupied by a fibro-vascular granulation tissue (connective vascular tissue of neoformation). (Simionescu staining)

Fig. 17.6

Page 8: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Pulmonary abscessFrom: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995

Fig. 17.7. Pulmonary abscess: (1) the cavity: contains a suppurative material and air content (in case of communication with air conducts); (2) wall: (a) acute abscess – the wall has irregular borders reprezented by suppurative necrotic lung parenchyma; (b) chronic abscess - the wall is a pyogenic membrane that becomes fibrotic by connective organization.

Page 9: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Bronchiectasis From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995

Fig. 17.8. Multiple chystic lesions of varying sizes that extend to the pleura, and contain muco-purulent exudates. Affected bronchial walls are dilated and fibrotic, from where iradiates fibrous bands within parenchimal lung.

Page 10: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

BronchopneumoniaFrom: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995From cases of the Pathology Department - U.M.F. “Gr. T. Popa” Iasi

Fig. 17.9.

Page 11: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Fig. 17.9-10. Microscopy: (1) acute purulent bronchiolitis (purulent exudate in the bronchial lumen and wall; the bronchiolar epithelium is altered and exfoliated into the lumen); (2) peribronchiolar acute exudative alveolitis: (a) leucocytic exudate; (b) fibrino-leucocytic exudate; (c) sero-fibrinous exudate. Between nodular foci of bronchopneumonia the lung tissue is normal.

Fig. 17.10

Page 12: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Bronchopneumonia of aspiration From cases of the Pathology Department - U.M.F. “Gr. T. Popa” Iasi

Fig. 17.11

Page 13: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

It appears at newbornes with premature respiration during passage through mother borne channel by aspiration of amniotic fluid (amniotic cells, epidermal descuamated cells, vernix caseosa – fat, lanugo – hair, etc). Microscopy (HE): (a) Alveolar channels and alveolar spaces contain hematoxilinic structures resembling with dry leaves (components of amniotic fluid) and serous exudate with few neutrophils; (b) Congestion of capillaries into alveolar walls.

Fig. 17.12

Page 14: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Pulmonary emphysema

Microscopically, in PE, the lesions interest entire lung acinus or lobule: (1) central acinus (BR); (2) peripheral lung acinus: (a) alveolar channel and (b) alveolar sac.

From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995From cases of the Pathology Department - U.M.F. “Gr. T. Popa” Iasi

Fig. 17.13

Page 15: Respiratory pathology 1. Lobar pneumonia From: Stevens A. J Lowe J. Pathology. Mosby 1995 Fig. 17.1. In classical type, lobar pneumonia develops in four

Fig. 17.3-4. Microscopy: (1) distention of air spaces (alveolar thin walls) and (2) destruction of alveolar walls with fusion of adjacent alveolar lumens and formation of large air spaces. (3) Capillaries of alveolar walls are compressed and reduced in number (pulmonary hypertension).

Fig. 17.14