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Pediatric Pathology

Pediatric Pathology. “Children are not merely little adults, and their diseases are not merely variants of adult diseases”. Cause of Death Related with Age. UNDER 1 YEAR Congenital malformations, deformations, and chromosomal anomalies   

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Pediatric Pathology

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  1. Pediatric Pathology

  2. “Children are not merely little adults, and their diseases are not merely variants of adult diseases”

  3. Cause of Death Related with Age UNDER 1 YEAR • Congenital malformations, deformations, and chromosomal anomalies    • Disorders related to short gestation and low birth weight    • Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)    • Newborn affected by maternal complications of pregnancy    • Newborn affected by complications of placenta, cord, and membranes    • Respiratory distress of newborn    • Accidents (unintentional injuries)    • Bacterial sepsis of newborn    • Intrauterine hypoxia and birth asphyxia    • Diseases of the circulatory system

  4. 1–4 YEARS • Accidents and adverse effects    • Congenital malformations, deformations, and chromosomal abnormalities    • Malignant neoplasms    • Homicide and legal intervention    • Diseases of the heart (Excludes congenital heart disease) • Influenza and pneumonia

  5. 5–14 YEARS • Accidents and adverse effects    • Malignant neoplasms    • Homicide and legal intervention    • Congenital malformations, deformations, and chromosomal abnormalities    • Suicide    • Diseases of the heart

  6. 15–24 YEARS • Accidents and adverse effects    • Homicide    • Suicide    • Malignant neoplasms    • Diseases of the heart

  7. Congenital Anomalies • morphologic defects that are present at birth • the exact cause remains unknown in at least half to three quarters of the cases • common known causes of congenital anomalies: • Genetic • Environmental • Multifactorial

  8. Genetic • Anomalies that are known to be genetic in origin can be divided into two groups: • Those associated with chromosomal aberrations    • Those arising from single-gene mutations (“mendelian disorders”) trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) is the only one that approaches a birth frequency of greater than 10 in 10,000 total births

  9. Fetal Hydrops • accumulation of edema fluid in the fetus during intrauterine growth • Two Causes: • Immune • Nonimmune

  10. Immune Hydrops • Antibody induced hemolytic disease in the newborn caused by blood group incompatibility between mother and fetus. • Rh and ABO blood group antigens, most common antigens.

  11. Nonimmune Hydrops • Cardiovascular Defetcs. a. structural b. functional • Chromosomal anomalies. a. 45,X karyotype (Turner syndrome) b. Trisomies 21 and 18 - the basis of this is the presence of underlying structural cardiac anomalies • Fetal Anemia due to causes other than Rh and ABO incompatibility.

  12. Fetal Anemia • Homozygous alpha thalassemia – most common cause of HF in Southeast Asia • Transplacental infection e.g. Parvovirus B19 • Virus gains entry into erythroid precursors (normoblasts), where it replicates. • Leads to erythrocyte maturation arrest and aplastic anemia • Parvoviral intranuclear inclusions can be seen within circulating and marrow erythroid precursors

  13. Pathogenesis of Hydrops Severe anemia Hepatic extramedullary hematopoeisis Decreased prdtn of plasma proteins Decreased oncotic pressure

  14. Pathogenesis of Hydrops Congestive heart failure Increased central venous pressure Increased capillary hydrostatic pressure

  15. Pathogenesis of Hydrops Severe tissue hypoxia Endothelial cell damage Capillary leak of fluid & protein

  16. BENIGN TUMORS AND TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS • Hemangioma • are the most common tumors of infancy • Types: • Cavernous • Capillary

  17. Teratomas • Tumor with at least 2 out of 3 germ layers • benign, well-differentiated cystic lesions (mature teratomas) • indeterminate potential • unequivocally malignant teratomas

  18. MALIGNANT TUMORS • incidence in children younger than age 10 years include • (1) leukemia (principally acute lymphoblastic leukemia) • (2) neuroblastoma • (3) Wilms tumor • (4) hepatoblastoma • (5) retinoblastoma

  19. (6) rhabdomyosarcoma • (7) teratoma • (8) Ewing sarcoma posterior fossa neoplasms—principally • (9) juvenile astrocytoma • (10) medulloblastoma • (11) ependymoma

  20. Neuroblastoma • the most common extracranial solid tumor of childhood • most frequently diagnosed tumor of infancy • one case in 7000 live births • median age at diagnosis is 18 months • 40% of cases are diagnosed in infancy • Most cases occur sporadically • most (60% to 80%) children present with stage 3 or 4 tumors (unresectable)

  21. Wilms Tumor • approximately 1 in every 10,000 children in the United States • most common primary renal tumor of childhood • fourth most common pediatric malignancy in the United States • 95% of tumors occur before the age of 10 years • Involves mutation of the WT1 gene

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