1. Normal and postmortal pancreas: Difference between revisions

From greek.doctor
Created page with "The staining of this slide is HE . This slide shows the pancreas. A part of it is normal, while a part of it is pathological. The part shown on the picture is pathological. A part of it is very pale and eosinophilic compared to the rest of the slide. Upon closer inspection you can see that the cells in this part also lack nuclei. The normal structure and arrangement of the cells is mostly lost, and the remaining cells are less organized. All these characteristics can a..."
 
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The staining of this slide is HE . This slide shows the pancreas. A part of it is normal, while a part of it is pathological. The part shown on the picture is pathological.
[[File:Postmortem pancreas overview.jpg|thumb|Overview|354x354px]]'''Staining:''' HE . '''Organ:''' Pancreas
 
'''Description:''' This slide shows the pancreas. A part of it is normal, while a part of it is pathological. The part shown on the picture is pathological.


A part of it is very pale and eosinophilic compared to the rest of the slide. Upon closer inspection you can see that the cells in this part also lack nuclei. The normal structure and arrangement of the cells is mostly lost, and the remaining cells are less organized.
A part of it is very pale and eosinophilic compared to the rest of the slide. Upon closer inspection you can see that the cells in this part also lack nuclei. The normal structure and arrangement of the cells is mostly lost, and the remaining cells are less organized.


All these characteristics can also be found in acute pancreatitis as well. To differentiate between postmortal pancreas and acute pancreatitis, we must check to see if there is a vital reaction. The word “vital” in this case means “living”. The vital reaction is a reaction that would be present in a living person. When we talk about the vital reaction in this case, we mean the presence of neutrophils. In the case of an acute pancreatitis will the body recruit neutrophils to the inflammation, but the body obviously cannot recruit them there post-mortem. To summate: If there are neutrophils present, the slide is of an acute pancreatitis, if not, the slide is a postmortal pancreas. In this particular slide, there is no vital reaction.
'''Diagnosis:''' Normal and postmortal pancreas


Note the lack of nuclei in the cells, and their increased eosinophilia.
'''Theory:''' All these characteristics can also be found in acute pancreatitis as well. To differentiate between postmortal pancreas and acute pancreatitis, we must check to see if there is a vital reaction. The word “vital” in this case means “living”. The vital reaction is a reaction that would be present in a living person. When we talk about the vital reaction in this case, we mean the presence of neutrophils. In the case of an acute pancreatitis will the body recruit neutrophils to the inflammation, but the body obviously cannot recruit them there post-mortem. To summate: If there are neutrophils present, the slide is of an acute pancreatitis, if not, the slide is a postmortal pancreas. In this particular slide, there is no vital reaction. Note the lack of nuclei in the cells, and their increased eosinophilia.[[File:Normal pancreas.jpg|thumb|Normal pancreas. Everything looks normal. Anatomy department should’ve used this slide.|left]]
[[File:Postmortem pancreas overview.jpg|center|thumb|Overview]]
[[File:Postmortem pancreas.jpg|thumb|Postmortal pancreas. Note the absence of nuclei, hypereosinophilia and loss of structure. Note that there are no neutrophils.|285x285px]]
[[File:Normal pancreas.jpg|center|thumb|From the normal pancreas. Everything looks normal. Anatomy department should’ve used this slide.]]
[[File:Postmortem pancreas.jpg|center|thumb|From the postmortal pancreas. Note the absence of nuclei, hypereosinophilia and loss of structure. Also, there are no neutrophils, which means that there’s no vital reaction.]]
[[Category:Pathology 1 - Histopathology slides]]
[[Category:Pathology 1 - Histopathology slides]]

Latest revision as of 18:04, 21 December 2024

Overview

Staining: HE . Organ: Pancreas

Description: This slide shows the pancreas. A part of it is normal, while a part of it is pathological. The part shown on the picture is pathological.

A part of it is very pale and eosinophilic compared to the rest of the slide. Upon closer inspection you can see that the cells in this part also lack nuclei. The normal structure and arrangement of the cells is mostly lost, and the remaining cells are less organized.

Diagnosis: Normal and postmortal pancreas

Theory: All these characteristics can also be found in acute pancreatitis as well. To differentiate between postmortal pancreas and acute pancreatitis, we must check to see if there is a vital reaction. The word “vital” in this case means “living”. The vital reaction is a reaction that would be present in a living person. When we talk about the vital reaction in this case, we mean the presence of neutrophils. In the case of an acute pancreatitis will the body recruit neutrophils to the inflammation, but the body obviously cannot recruit them there post-mortem. To summate: If there are neutrophils present, the slide is of an acute pancreatitis, if not, the slide is a postmortal pancreas. In this particular slide, there is no vital reaction. Note the lack of nuclei in the cells, and their increased eosinophilia.

Normal pancreas. Everything looks normal. Anatomy department should’ve used this slide.
Postmortal pancreas. Note the absence of nuclei, hypereosinophilia and loss of structure. Note that there are no neutrophils.