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Pathology is the scientific study of disease. Disease could reasonably be defined as internal problems that cause pain and/or interfere with a person's ability to work, play, and/or love others.
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Injuries (mechanical, chemical, electrical, or thermal), poisonings, and bad habits may or may not be included in someone's definition of disease.
The social pathology that leads to disease is often listed among a patient's problems. Dr. Virchow, the founder of modern pathology, considered it a principal mechanism of disease, though it falls outside the domains of anatomic and clinical pathology.
There are several thousand distinguishable diseases. Generally, we will not tell you in this course about diseases that affect fewer than 1 in 20,000 people during their lifetimes.
INEVITABLE, SERIOUS DISEASES: Everyone who lives long enough will probably get:
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Atherosclerosis: an accumulation of cholesterol and debris in cells of the intimal layer of the large arteries, eventually ruining the artery. Some atherosclerosis is inevitable.
Alzheimer's changes: the anatomic lesions of Alzheimer's appear in the brains of most, probably all, elderly people. Symptomatic Alzheimer's may or may not be inevitable.
Osteoarthritis: irreversible wear-and-tear and age-related changes in joints.
Osteoporosis: irreversible loss of the substance of bones
Senile macular degeneration: Central blindness due to old age
Senile cataract: Opacification of the lens due to old age
OUR VERY COMMON, SERIOUS DISEASES
- Atherosclerosis remains our most ubiquitous health problem. It kills a majority of US citizens. The epidemic peaked in 1968, and atherosclerosis will soon be second to cancer as a killer of Americans.
- Atherosclerosis begins during the first year of life.
Severe atherosclerosis causes transient ischemic attacks, strokes, angina pectoris, heart attacks, ruptured aortic aneurysms, leg claudication, bowel ischemia, kidney destruction (by "atheroembolization") and gangrene of the legs.
Whether atherosclerotic plaques in humans can be made to go away is a subject of debate today. In the animal models, it is largely reversible. I predict that during the next few years, cardiologists will focus on "vulnerable plaque" (i.e., the lipid-rich areas that actually cause most of the trouble) and discover that it often shrivels to nothing when coronary risk factors are eliminated.
- These develop in approximately 35% of US citizens (1,334,100 new cases this year, 556,500 deaths).
- The higher incidence in men is mostly explained by more incidental prostate cancers. The higher mortality in men is mostly explained by men having been smoking longer.
- (1) Prostate cancers (220,900 new cases this year; 28,900 deaths; lung cancer used to be more common,and plus prostate cancer is being diagnosed much sooner)
(2) Lung cancers (91,800 new cases this year; total rate is declining!; 88,400 deaths, obviously as lethal as ever)
(3) Colon-rectum cancers (72,800 new cases this year, 28,500 deaths)
(4) Bladder cancers (42,200 new cases this year; 8600 deaths)
(5) Lymphomas and myeloma (40,100 new cases this year; 17,500 deaths)
(6) Melanomas (29,900 new cases this year; 4700 deaths)
(7) # Kidney cancers (19,500 new cases this year; 7400 deaths)
(8) Oropharynx cancers (18,200 new cases this year, 4800 deaths, going down)
(9) # Leukemias (17,900 new cases this year; 12,100 deaths)
(10) Pancreas cancers (14,900 new cases this year; 14,700 deaths; very lethal cancer);
(11) Stomach cancers (13,400 new cases this year; 7000 deaths)
(12) Liver and biliary cancers (14,800 new cases this year; 10,500 deaths)
(13) Esophagus cancers (10,600 new cases this year; 9900 deaths; very lethal cancer)
(14) # CNS cancers (10,200 new cases this year; 7300 deaths)
(15) Larynx cancers (7100 new cases this year, thankfully declining; 3000 deaths)
- (1) Breast cancers (211,300 new cases this year; 39,800 deaths; the rate probably is stable, while the death rate is declining significantly)
(2) Lung cancers (80,100 new cases this year, will soon catch up with the men; 68,800 deaths, making it the #1 cancer killer of women by a solid margin)
(3) Colon-rectum cancers (74,700 new cases this year; 28,800 deaths)
(4) Endometrium cancers (40,100 new cases this year; 6800 deaths)
(5) Lymphomas and myelomas (35,500 new cases this year; 17,360 deaths)
(6) Ovary cancers (25,400 new cases this year; 14,300 deaths)
(7) Melanomas (24,300 new cases this year; 2900 deaths)
(8) Bladder cancers (15,200 new cases this year; 3900 deaths)
(9) Pancreas cancers (15,800 new cases this year; 15,300 deaths; very lethal cancer)
(10) Thyroid cancers (16,300 new cases this year; 800 deaths)
(11) # Leukemias (12,700 new cases this year; 9800 deaths)
(12) Uterine cervix cancers (12,200 new cases this year, 4100 deaths; despite low U.S. rates, this is the great cancer killer of young women worldwide)
(13) # Kidney cancers (12,400 new cases this year; 4500 deaths)
(14) Oropharynx cancers (9500 new cases this year; 2400 deaths)
(15) Stomach cancers (9000 new cases this year; 5100 deaths)
(16) # CNS cancers (8100 new cases this year; 5800 deaths)
- High blood pressure eventually affects 15% of US citizens. The causes may be apparent but are usually mysterious.
Complications of most forms of high blood pressure include accelerated atherosclerosis, strokes, heart pump failure, brain malfunction, and kidney damage.
Not everyone with occasional elevated blood pressure readings is sick. The significance of such "labile hypertension" remains unclear.
- These are very common, and are to be expected in cigaret smokers and those who must breathe polluted air.
- Maybe 5% of US citizens eventually get some form of diabetes. Today, its most serious consequences are damage to the arteries, arterioles, eyes, kidneys, and nerves.
- These often affect people with underlying physical problems. Bacterial pneumonia is a common mechanism of death in these people.
- This is a very common mechanism of death in people with underlying physical or substance-abuse problems.
Actually most bacterial pneumonias are the results of aspiration of micro-organisms from the mouth.
- TB infection is still common, but serious disease is controllable.
- This is a minor problem by itself, but if the clot breaks off, it can cause sudden death by traveling to the pulmonary arterial tree. When this happens, it is called a
pulmonary thromboembolus ("blood clot in the lung").
- This has always been widespread, but it has only recently been recognized as important. Although it is reported much more often today, I know of no reason to believe that its prevalence in the US is increasing.
- Anxiety, depression, agoraphobia, panic attacks, and related phenomena that appear to result (at least in part) from one's experiences rather than from well-defined organic changes. The basic ability to test reality is preserved.
Somewhere between 10% and 70% of US citizens are impaired by psychoneuroses on any given day.
Emotional overlay ("the supratentorial component") is important in most serious illness.
- Around 10% of US citizens ultimately become alcoholics. This is harmful to them and to their families, employers, and other associates.
If you feel a compulsion to drink, or cannot stop after one drink, then you must stop for the rest of your life. If you don't care about yourself, then at least do this for the sake of those around you.
Around one US citizen in three presently has a serious personal problem because of an alcoholic.
- This is the principal risk factor for:
- lung cancer
emphysema/chronic bronchitis
Buerger's thromboangiitis obliterans (only rare one on the list)
- mouth and throat cancer
esophageal cancer
larynx cancer
- atherosclerosis/sudden cardiac death
bladder cancer
gum disease
kidney cancer
pancreas cancer
upset stomach and peptic ulcer
household fires
- This disables many older people, especially older women. It can produce chronic pain, collapsed vertebral bodies, fractured hips, etc., etc.
- This causes pain and interferes with movement.
- This eventually results in profound loss of mental function.
Alzheimer's disease includes "senility". Around 15% of US citizens have it when they die.
OUR VERY COMMON, USUALLY LESS SERIOUS DISEASES (NON-DISEASES, ETC.):
- Each of these affects 5% or more of US citizens at risk sometime during their lives. Some can be fatal, others are only trivial.
Bacterial diseases
- boils
cellulitis
strep throats
bacterial conjunctivitis
bacterial ear infections
impetigo
food poisoning (especially staphylococcal)
bacterial diarrheas ("Montezuma's revenge", etc.)
gonorrhea (one million cases yearly; 300,000 hospitalizations)
- viral upper respiratory infections
viral and mycoplasmal chest colds
viral and chlamydial conjunctivitis
viral and mycoplasmal ear infections
viral gastroenteritis
infectious mononucleosis
herpes zoster infections (chickenpox, shingles)
herpes simplex I (lip) and II (genitals)
cytomegalic inclusion disease (cytomegalovirus infection)
chlamydial urethritis and cervicitis
- tinea ("athlete's foot", "crotch rot", "ringworm", etc.)
fungal infections of the nails
"subclinical" histoplasmosis
"subclinical" toxoplasmosis
lice ("pediculosis")
- adolescent gynecomastia
knee injuries
varicoceles
sports injuries
inguinal hernias
impotence
premature ejaculation
male pattern baldness (bothers some men, doesn't bother others, some men like it)
homosexuality
- As always, this is extremely politicized; right or wrong, "ego-dystonic" gay men are not the only people nowadays who seek to become more comfortable with a range of sexual expressions
- Again, hard to justify as a "disease" though some men may wish to be rid of the compulsion
- fibrocystic diseases of the breast
menstrual iron deficiency anemia
frigidity
menstrual cramps
vaginal infections (candida, trichomonas, gardnerella)
bacterial urinary bladder and kidney infections
atypias of the cervical epithelium
leiomyomas ("fibroids") of the uterus
endometriosis
vomiting of pregnancy
pre-eclampsia
miscarriages
cystoceles
menopausal hot flashes
kraurosis of the vulva
idiopathic hirsutism
- acne
atopic dermatitis ("eczema")
seborrheic dermatitis (dandruff, "oily skin", etc.)
contact dermatitis
drug rashes
miliaria ("prickly heat", "jungle rot", etc.)
warts
seborrheic keratoses
tinea versicolor and ringworm
capillary hemangiomas
dermatofibromas
pigmented nevi ("moles")
lentigos ("moles", "liver spots", etc.)
epidermoid inclusion cysts ("sebaceous cysts")
sun-damaged skin
actinic keratoses
- floppy mitral valve ("Barlow's syndrome")
patent foramen ovale (usually a trivial autopsy finding)
varicose veins
- dental caries ("cavities")
gum disease
aphthous stomatitis ("canker sores")
reflux peptic esophagitis
hiatus hernias
peptic ulcers of stomach and duodenum
diverticular disease of the colon
functional bowel disease ("spastic colon")
hemorrhoid problems
Gilbert's "disease" (problems conjugating bilirubin)
gallstones
- food allergies (milk, eggs, peanuts, sesame, wheat, fish, shellfish, etc.)
respiratory allergies ("hay fever", asthma)
poison ivy
- functional headaches (muscle spasm, migraine, cluster)
refractive errors, astigmatism
presbyopia
cataracts
conjunctivitis
impacted earwax
otitis externa
presbycusis
serous otitis
otosclerosis
mild perceptual and learning problems
- low back pain
bursitis
tendinitis
sprains
fractures
ingrown toenails
bunions
- obesity
"subclinical" folic acid deficiency (major problem, long-neglected)
iron deficiency
"subclinical" iron overload
(??) "functional hypoglycemia" ("idiopathic post-prandial syndrome")
(??) "subclinical" zinc deficiency
WORLD HEALTH
- All the diseases listed so far are common all over the world.
Other diseases are very prevalent in some or all of the developing nations.
- Keratomalacia (blindness from vitamin A deficiency)
- Malaria (might be the most prevalent serious disease worldwide)
- Measles (about 400,000 deaths worldwide each year, almost entirely in countries where they do not immunize: Int. J. Inf. Dis. 4: 14, 2000)
- Whooping cough (kills hundreds of thousands of children yearly)
- Diarrhea (kills >10,000 babies daily)
- Diphtheria
- Neonatal tetanus (still a terrible problem; there are an estimated 277,000 deaths worldwide each year)
- Trachoma
- Yaws
- Tuberculosis
- Respiratory infections
- Schistosomiasis
- Hookworm
- Typhoid
- Dengue
- Malnutrition (around 35 million people die of malnutrition yearly)
- Polio (thankfully disappearing)
- Hepatitis (A and B)
- Leprosy
- These are primarily political and economic problems rather than scientific mysteries.
WORDS FOR COMMON AND/OR TRANSMISSIBLE DISEASES: You need to know these terms.
- Epidemic: a disease that is widespread in a community of people. (It is often, but need not be, a contagious disease).
Epizootic: an epidemic in a community of animals. (Pronounce it "EPP-ee-zoe-WOTT-ick".)
Pandemic: a worldwide epidemic.
Endemic: a never-ending epidemic.
Infectious disease: one caused (or assumed to be caused) by micro-organisms (the infectious agents) that can be transmitted from creature to creature.
Zoonosis: an infectious disease that people usually acquire from sick animals rather than from other people.
Vector: an organism, usually an insect, that carries an infectious disease from person to person, etc.
Carrier: a person who harbors the infectious agents but has no symptoms.
Reservoir: the place (usually animals or carriers) where an infectious agent lives between epidemics.
HOW COMMON IS A DISEASE?
- First, you must define the disease and the population.
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Criteria for making the diagnosis of a disease are generally established by pathologists. The autopsy is still ultimate proof of the presence or absence of most diseases. Around 40% of hospital autopsies show a previously-unknown illness contributing to death (Arch. Path. Lab. Med. 123: 191, 1999).
The population may be all the people in Kansas City, all the pregnant women in Missouri, all the US citizens currently living in Tokyo, all the scleroderma patients attending a certain clinic, etc.
OUR FATAL DISEASES YESTERDAY
- Our ancestors died of bacterial diseases, smallpox, famine, trauma, and obstetrical catastrophes. Cancer and gout probably followed.Mosquito-borne diseases have also been very important in warmer regions.
- The common bacterial infections caused the majority of deaths, young and old people.
Pneumococcal pneumonia was such a common killer of the elderly that it was called "the old man's friend". It did not spare the young, either. Dr. William Osler called the pneumococcus "captain of the men of death". Today penicillin ("the old man's enemy") cures all but neglected cases.
Other gram-positive cocci (staphylococcus, streptococcus) were major killers. They produce a variety of illnesses.
Tuberculosis ("the white plague") killed 1 person in 5. Today almost all cases are curable using drugs.
Syphilis killed 1 person in 5 or even more in the centuries after its introduction, and caused chronic severe pain and/or insanity in many more. Today it is easily cured using antibiotics.
Bubonic plague ("black death") killed half the people in Europe and Asia every few centuries. Now it is easy to cure.
Typhus, a rickettsial disease transmitted by lice, was another highly fatal epidemic disease, especially during wartime. Cholera was yet another major epidemic killer, especially during the 1800's.
Tetanus killed more victims of war wounds than the wounds themselves did. Today almost everybody in the US is effectively immunized against to tetanus toxin.
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- Diphtheria
Measles
Mumps
Pertussis ("whooping cough")
Rubella ("German measles")
Poliomyelitis
Smallpox (thought to be extinct today)
Tetanus
- Abdominal aortic aneurysms
Appendicitis
Berry aneurysms
Benign ovarian tumors
Bleeding peptic ulcers
Cardiac valvular problems
Congenital heart diseases
Dissecting aneurysm
Diverticulitis
Ectopic pregnancies
Gallstones
GI malformations
Intussusception of the bowel
Kidney stones
Obstetrical problems
Strangulated hernias
Volvulus
OUR FATAL DISEASES TODAY
- What kills the two million people who die yearly in the US?
Atherosclerosis
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Myocardial infarction ("heart attack") and sudden cardiac death
- (These together cause 600,000 deaths per year.)
- (1) Elevated serum cholesterol (by far the most important)
(2) Cigaret smoking
(3) High blood pressure
(4) Diabetes mellitus (less important than any of the first three factors)
(5) Lack of exercise (less important than any of the first four factors)
(6) Hereditary differences in the lipoprotein molecules and their receptors, homocysteine metabolism, and the coagulation proteins. Some of these are very important, and are being sorted out.
(7) Obesity? stress? (Whether these are independent risk factors is unclear. You will have to decide for yourself!)
- Any cancer, untreated, will eventually kill the patient.
Approximately 25% of US citizens die of cancer
- Slightly more men than women die, since breast cancers are often cured.
- Cigaret smoking causes the overwhelming majority of fatal cases.
- High blood pressure promotes atherosclerosis and kidney disease, but it can also kill by causing heart pump failure.
Heart pump failure ("congestive heart failure") may also be due to disease of the valves, anatomical defects, amyloidosis, drugs, virus infections, and so forth.
- Cirrhosis of the liver (70,000 deaths per year from this alone; in the US, alcohol is the usual cause.)
Alcohol is also involved in a majority of homicides, suicides, and accidents.
- Many more patients with serious underlying diseases die with these travelling thrombi as the final mechanism.
- Common fatal kidney diseases include chronic glomerulonephritis, chronic interstitial nephritis ("pyelonephritis"), and adult polycystic kidney disease.
Diabetes mellitus, amyloidosis, systemic lupus, and bad high blood pressure are other common causes of end-stage kidney disease.
- Today, the pneumonias seldom kill a previously-healthy young person.
- In some communities, AIDS remains a leading cause of death.
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Homicides (around 30,000 per year)
Suicides (true number unknown, estimates give it around 50,000 per year)
"Accidents" (around 100,000 per year)
When pathologists speak of the manner of death, we mean "natural", "homicide", "suicide", or "accidental". We may also conclude, after autopsy, that the manner of death is "undetermined".
Iatrogenic disease is disease caused by medical diagnosis and/or treatment. It is epidemic, though deaths are usually listed under the patient's disease and often would have occurred anyway. (Classical scholars call it "iatrogenous disease"....) For the disturbing Harvard study, see NEJM 324: 307 & 377, 1991.
What kills young people in the US?
- "Before birth":
- Coronary artery atherosclerosis (think of hereditary cholesterol problems; marathon runners' immunity to atherosclerosis is a lie)
- Coronary artery malformations
- Berry aneurysms
- Hereditary hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- Right ventricular dysplasia
- Conduction system problems
- Cocaine use
- Electrolyte problems (i.e., diuretic abuse)
- Myocarditis
- An unknown percentage (at least 31%, maybe more -- NEJM 319: 189, 1988) of fertilized eggs fail to implant or are lost before pregnancy is recognized.
Around 1 out of every 6 known implantations is followed by spontaneous miscarriage.
There are around 1.5 million legal abortions performed in the US yearly. (Contrast this to large areas where both contraception and abortion are illegal, and where illegal abortion is the leading cause of death in women aged 15-39: Br. Med. J. 300: 1705, 1990.)
You will have to decide for yourself what all this means.
- Around 1.3% of US newborns die from these causes. This is pretty good; only a few nations with fewer % poor do better.
Mysterious "sudden infant death syndrome" kills around 0.5% of infants during the first year of life. See below.
- Males:
- (1) "Accidents" (around 8000 / year)
(2) Homicide (around 2500 / year)
- (Homicide is extremely common in the age 10-20 range in certain U.S. communities; JAMA 267: 2905, 1992)
- (1) "Accidents" (around 4000 / year)
(2) Cancer (around 1000 / year)
(3) Homicide (around 700 / year, double the suicide rate)
- Males:
- (1) Accidents (around 20,000 / year)
(2) Suicide (around 9000 / year)
(3) Homicide (around 8000 / year)
(4) Heart disease, followed closely by cancer and then HIV infection
- (1) Accidents (around 6000 / year)(2) Cancer (Around 6000 / year)
(3) Heart disease (around 2800 / year)
(4) Suicide, followed closely by homicide and HIV infection
The average American's chances of being killed by
- motor vehicle accident... 1 in 100
murder... 1 in 300
house fire... 1 in 800
firearm accident... 1 in 2500
electrocution... 1 in 5000
passenger plane crash... 1 in 20,000
flood... 1 in 30,000
tornado... 1 in 60,000
fireworks... 1 in 1 million
botulism... 1 in 3 million
asteroid or comet impact with earth... 1 in 3000 to 1 in 250,000
LIFESTYLE-RELATED DISEASES:
- Today's deadly diseases in the US are largely lifestyle-related. (This is one factor that contributes to physicians' dissatisfaction with their work!)
Alcohol abuse and nicotine addiction are grave public health problems. Use of certain of the illegal drugs(amphetamine, cocaine, heroin, phencyclidine, others) is clearly harmful.
- Contrary to what you have been told by doctor-bashers, the prevalence of alcoholism and drug addiction among physicians is substantially lower than among their non-physician peers. However, doctors do have an unfortunate tendency to prescribe mind-altering substances for themselves. Don't do this.
Despite the claims of "alternative medicine", the following are probably not significant health problems. (Let us know if you have additional facts about these.)
- lack of sunlight (where there are other ways to get vitamin D)
- refined sugar
- white flour
- coffee and tea
- cow's milk
- Pasteurized milk
- Bovine growth hormone
- cooked ("dead") food
- antiperspirants
- fluoridated water
- tap water
- food preservatives
- pesticide residues
- immunizations
- subclinical vitamin and mineral deficiencies (except folic acid in junk-food-only folks and folks who need more because of kinks in their metabolisms, and vitamin D in old folks)
- amygdalin ("laetrile", "vitamin B-17") deficiency
- pangamic acid ("vitamin B-15", usually glycine or sugar) deficiency
- toxic bowel settlement ("removed only at enema parlors")
- spinal subluxations (undetectable except by traditional chiropractors)
INHERITED DISEASE AND BIRTH DEFECTS
- Commonest serious Mendelian genetic diseases:
- Familial hypercholesterolemia ("hyperlipidemia type II") (?? 1/200)
- Polycystic kidneys (1/800 adults)
- Fragile X (1/1500 men)
- Cystic fibrosis (1/1600 white kids)
- Sickle cell disease (1/1600 black kids)
- Von Recklinghausen's disease (1/2500 people)
- Tuberous sclerosis (?? 1/1000)
- Duchenne's muscular dystrophy, "Jerry's kids", 1/3500 boys)
- Alpha-thalassemias and sickle-thals (Blacks)
- Beta-thalassemias (Mediterraneans)
- Gaucher's disease (Jewish people)
- G-6-PD deficiencies (a mild Black form, a severe Mediterranean form)
- Hemoglobin C and sickle-C diseases (Blacks)
- Hemoglobin E disease (Vietnamese)
- Hereditary spherocytosis (Scotch-Irish)
- Joseph Disease (Portuguese)
- Pyruvate kinase deficiency (Amish)
- Tay-Sachs disease (Jewish people)
- The suicide rate among black men in the US is also far lower than among white men.
DREAD DISEASES OF YOUNG ADULTS:
- Several common, chronic diseases that can be really bad and that begin during young adult life are listed here, with their approximate prevalence among young adults.
- Alcoholism (8%)
- Ankylosing spondylitis (0.1%)
- Berry aneurysm rupture (0.2%)
- Major mood disorder ("manic-depression", 0.7%)
- Multiple sclerosis (0.1%)
- Regional enteritis (0.1%)
- Rheumatoid arthritis (3%)
- Schizophrenia (1%)
- Systemic lupus erythematosus (0.5%)
- Ulcerative colitis (0.3%)
"NEW DISEASES" (unknown, rare, or seldom recognized a few years ago):
- African tick-bite fever
- Alexithymia
- Angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy
- Anticardiolipin antibody ("lupus anticoagulant") disease
- Asperger's (high-functioning autism, great at science and math, much difficulty learning scial skills)
- Biliary sludge
- Branhamella infections
- BRCA1 anti-oncogene deletion syndrome
- Brugada's: sudden death in young men with a characteristic EKG
- Carbohydrate craving syndromes
- Chlamydia TWAR, the asthma bug(?)
- Chlamydial sexually transmitted disease
- Chronic infectious mononucleosis (??)
- Cryptosporidiosis
- Dysplastic nevus syndrome
- Eosinophilic esophagitis
- Esophageal chest pain
- Facet syndrome (back and neck pain)
- Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia
- Fetal alcohol syndrome
- Fetal tobacco syndrome
- Fibromyalgia syndrome ("fibrositis", "pain modulation syndrome")
- Floppy mitral valve
- Food allergies (the more subtle manifestations)
- Fragile X syndrome (hemizygous, heterozygous)
- Helicobacter infections
- Herpes simplex II
- Homocysteine problems (atherosclerosis, thrombosis)
- Human papillomavirus sexually transmitted disease
- Hypercoagulability genes (antithrombin III and protein C and S deficiencies, V-Leiden)
- Hürthle cell adenoma of the kidney
- Iatrogenic hyponatremia (Br. Med. J. 304: 1218, 1992)
- IgA nephropathy
- Immotile cilia syndromes (Kartagener's, etc.)
- Inflammatory aortic aneurysm
- Interstitial cystitis ("Hunner's ulcer")
- Iron overload syndromes
- Job's hyper-IgE syndrome
- Kawasaki disease
- Legionnaire's disease
- Li Fraumeni anti-oncogene deletion syndrome
- Long QT (about 4000 deaths per year in the US alone)
- Lyme arthritis
- "New" complications of chronic hemodialysis (amyloidosis, kidney cancer)
- Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis
- Non-polyposis familial colon cancer
- Obliterative bronchiolitis (a major factor in tobacco-related lung disease)
- Obsessive-compulsive problems (once "rare")
- Parvo 19
- Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn
- Post-streptococcal behavioral changes ("PANDAS")
- Renal tubular acidosis
- Retrovirus infections (AIDS, epidemic leukemia, etc.)
- Severe acute respiratory syndrome (coronavirus) / hantavirus pneumonia
- SAPHO (acne, pustules within bones, odd bony overgrowths especially on the chest joints)
- Seasonal affective disorder
- Serrated adenoma of the colon, and its premalignant potential
- Sjogren's involvement of the nervous system
- Sleep apnea
- Sleep-related eating disorders
- Sulfite allergy ("salad bar disease")
- Thrombophilias (inherited hypercoagulable blood; several dominant genes)
- Transient stress lymphocytosis (wasn't on the books, but I think it was generally known)
- Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome ("the pain isn't sexual, the sex is painful"; I think it's an organic pain syndrome -- until recently they got sent to the psychiatrist)
"NON-DISEASES" (i.e., named entities that produce no morbidity or are beneficial)
- Absent deep tendon reflexes, many other "neuro" curiosities
- Birthmarks (most types), cherry angiomas
- Carbon pigmentation of the lung ("uncomplicated black lung")
- Cardiac rhythm disturbances (certain types)
- Carrier states, including thalassemia minima and most thalassemia minors
- Certain inborn errors of metabolism (some are even "longevity genes")
- Exercise-related "abnormalities" ("athlete's heart", lab test changes)
- Ectopias (Fordyce granules, etc.)
- Freckles, lentigos, common nevi, most anisocoria and vitiligo cases, morphea
- Hyperlipidemia type IV ("isolated hypertriglyceridemia")
- Macroamylasemia (idiopathic type), many other lab curiosities
- Medial calcific sclerosis of the arteries ("Monckeberg's")
- Minor malformations (torus, Darwin's tubercles, fused toes, many others)
- Nail anomalies (most)
- Orthostatic proteinuria, thin-GBM non-disease
- Physiologic jaundice of the newborn, "Gilbert's" bilirubin conjugation defects
- Pigments from medications (melanosis coli, argyria) or food (carotenemia)
- Soldier's plaque of the epicardium
- Sugar-icing of the peritoneal surfaces
- Tinea versicolor, other trivial infestations
- Tongue anomalies: most geographics, hairys, rhomboids, and scrotals
EASY-TO-MISS DISEASES
- Primary care is the pinnacle of medical practice because the physician must constantly be asking, "What is the WORST TREATABLE thing this COULD POSSIBLY be?" Then the physician must rule this out (or in)
- Here's my list of easy-to-miss, easy-to-treat, deadly-if-untreated diseases.
- addisonism (adrenal cortical insufficiency; several causes)
- arsenic poisoning
- B12 deficiency (pernicious anemia, fad diets)
- bacterial endocarditis
- bacterial meningitis (easy to miss in the very young)
- Behcet's
- carbon monoxide poisoning (bad home heater; miss this and the whole family dies)
- carcinoid syndrome
- cerebrospinal fluid leak
- compartment syndrome (you won't get another chance...)
- cryoglobulinemia syndromes
- cushingism (adrenal cortical hyperfunction; several causes)
- gas gangrene / flesh-eater streptococcus (you won't get another chance...)
- hemochromatosis
- hereditary angioedema
- hyperthyroidism (especially its atypical presentations)
- hypopituitarism (don't miss any form, including adult growth hormone deficiency)
- hypothyroidism
- insulinoma
- lead poisoning
- long QT
- Lyme disease
- manganese poisoning
- meningococcal infection
- neurosyphilis
- normal pressure hydrocephalus
- osteomalacia / vitamin D deficiency (especially with today's fad diets)
- pheochromocytoma
- polyarteritis nodosa / Churg-Strauss
- porphyrias (a whole bunch of them)
- relapsing polychondritis
- renovascular hypertension
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- sarcoidosis
- sleep apnea
- sporotrichosis
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
- temporal arteritis
- thallium poisoning
- tuberculosis, especially in the meninges
- Wegener's granulomatosis
- Whipple's (especially its atypical presentations)
- Wilson's copper overload
DISEASES WE SKIP
- In this course, we do not discuss certain functional medical problems (i.e., those that lack any known anatomic correlate). However, it is obvious that physiologic defects are essential to these processes.
- Addictions (alcoholism, heroin, cocaine, nicotine, etc.)
- Functional obesity, anorexia nervosa, bulemia
- Schizophrenia, autism, major affective disorders
- Idiopathic epilepsy, narcolepsy, sleep apnea, trigeminal neuralgia
- Panic disorder, agoraphobia, globus hystericus
- Conversion reaction, obsessions and compulsions
- Attention disorder ("hyperactive child"), learning and reading problems
- Some personality disorders and gender identity problems, alexithymia
- Phantom limb phenomenon, causalgias
- Functional headaches (tension, migraine, cluster), benign familial tremor
- Normal pressure hydrocephalus, pseudotumor cerebri
- Functional bowel syndrome ("spastic colon"), "colonic inertia" (slow-transit-time constipation), menstrual cramps, bashful bladder, premenstrual syndrome
- Proctalgia fugax, prostatodynia, nocturnal leg cramps
- Fibromyalgia syndrome ("fibrositis")
- Orthostatic proteinuria, intermittent idiopathic hematuria
- Idiopathic paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, other arrhythmias, heart blocks
- Idiopathic infertility, other sexual problems
- Movement disorders (torticollis, Tourette's, blepharospasm, myoclonus, "restless legs")
Other important medical problems are largely mechanical and you will learn about these on your rotations.
- Burns and their complications
- Intertrigo, decubiti (bedsores), stercoraceous ulcers, fecal impaction
- Functional heart murmurs
- Cleft palate, pilonidal cysts
- Hernias, cystoceles, rectal and uterine prolapses
- Muscle strains and sprains, tendinitis, bursitis, carpal tunnel syndromes
- Specific fractures and their complications
- Dislocations, subluxations, compartment syndromes
- Nerve compressions
- Bunions, ingrown toenails, ganglion cysts
- Knee problems (torn menisci, torn ligaments, etc.)
- Other non-traumatic joint problems (congenital hip dislocations, Legg-Calve-Perth's, Osgood-Schlatter's)
- Back and neck problems (curvatures, strains, herniated nucleus pulposus, cervical spondylosis)
- Obstetrical problems (cervical incompetence, disproportions, malpositions, placenta previa, abruption of the placenta)
- Eye problems (presbyopia, cataracts, glaucoma, retinal detachment, strabismus, keratoconus)
- Ear problems (otitis externa and media, Ménière's, Báràny's, otosclerosis, impacted cerumen)
A few other important entities usually fall outside the domain of anatomic pathology:
- Porphyrias and other inborn errors of metabolism have few or no anatomic changes, and we will discuss these only briefly.
RIGHT TREATMENT, WRONG REASON
- "Science is self-correcting". In medical school, I was taught silly mechanisms ("nitrates dilate your calcified coronary arteries!") for the following treatments, which actually work well but by a different mechanism:
- nitrates for angina pectoris (did anybody ever really believe that nitroglycerine dilated all those fibrotic and calcified coronary arteries?!)
- bismuth for peptic ulcer and gastritis (the "antiacid and coating agent" actually kills the bacteria)
- selenium ("blue shampoo") for dandruff and seborrhea (various fanciful mechanisms of action were discarded when we figured out that it really kills the fungi that cause dandruff)
- nitroprusside for hypertensive crisis (breaks down into the previously-unknown endothelially-derived relaxation factor)
- salicylazosulfapyridine for ulcerative colitis (watch for this one; it's an antibacterial that probably kills the bacteria that cause ulcerative colitis; currently "believed to work by inhibiting prostaglandin production and preventing inflammation", though it isn't in use for anything else)
- interferon for Kaposi's "sarcoma"; in the early AIDS era, clinicians went gah-gah over "probable mechanisms of action against this cancer"; now it's clear that Kaposi's is not cancer at all, but a viral infection, and interferon is an anti-viral compound. Ditto interferon and hairy-cell leukemia.
MORE WORDS ABOUT DISEASES
-
Symptoms: what the patient tells you, the physician.
Signs: what you, the physician, discover on physical exam and special studies, by yourself or with help. Means the same as findings.
Lesion: any unit of abnormal anatomy (less often, abnormal chemistry or an abnormal molecule)
Morphology: the anatomic lesion(s)
Etiology: what causes the disease. A noun or nouns. If it's external, it's called the etiologic agent. The etiology of many diseases is unknown.
Pathogenesis: how the etiologic agent causes the disease. A short story that usually includes "many of the steps are presently unknown".
Pathognomonic: a sign or group of signs that occur in only one disease. Same as diagnostic (of).
Prognosis: how the patient can realistically expect to do.
Syndrome: A group of symptoms and/or signs that tend to run together but may be caused by any of several diseases
THE GREATEST MISERY
- Which diseases cause the most overall suffering and time lost from work prior to old age? It is probably a near-tie:
- Alcoholism (self, family member)
- All other psychiatric disease together (schizophrenia, mood disorders, neurosis)
- Musculoskeletal disorders (arthritis, low back pain)
MALE:FEMALE RATIOS
- Many diseases clearly occur more often in one sex or the other.
- The reasons for this are seldom known, but will probably be discovered. (For example, pre-menopausal women are immune to South American blastomycosis because estrogens cause the fungus to revert to hyphal form, which is easily killed by the body.)
-
Women are more likely to get any disease in which autoimmunity is believed to be an important mechanism (except diseases linked to a particular class I HLA molecule, i.e., ankylosing spondylitis and its family).
Women also are more prone to develop significant osteoporosis.
Men are more likely to get all the other diseases.
THE MOST INTERESTING DISEASES
- This is a matter of opinion. You may decide the psychiatric disorders are the most interesting.
Especially intriguing are treatable organic diseases that affect the mind. Remember these before you commit your patient to psychotherapy or a life in custodial care!
- Adrenal gland problems (too much or too little cortisol or catecholamine)
- Brain infections (remember cryptococcus, herpes simplex I, Lyme disease, HIV)
- Brain tumors (especially meningiomas) and many other brain diseases
- Brucellosis, other chronic infections
- Drugs (know atropine, digitalis, methyldopa, reserpine, drugs of abuse)
- Epilepsy (especially temporal lobe problems and psychomotor seizures)
- Hashimoto's encephalopathy
- Hypoglycemia (early type II diabetes, insulin shock, tumors, functional)
- Immunologic disease (systemic lupus, IgE-mediated allergies)
- Infectious mononucleosis (Epstein-Barr, cytomegalovirus "mono")
- Osteomalacia (not all of your "total body pain" patients have fibromyalgia....)
- Parathyroid disease (hypercalcemia, hypocalcemia), other calcium problems
- Poisoning (especially mercury)
- Porphyrias (especially acute intermittent)
- Potassium problems (too much, too little)
- Sensory deprivation (is your patient blind? deaf?)
- Syphilis ("general paralysis of the insane") and perhaps Lyme disease
- Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
- Thyroid problems (too much thyroid hormone, or too little)
- Vitamin B1, B3, and B12 deficiencies
- Wilson's disease (copper disposal problem)
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