From Pathology Education Instructional Resource
				
								
				
Cytology[edit]
Resident Questions[edit]
- Pseudocyst
- Most common cystic lesion
 
- Etiology is diverse (acute pancreatitis, recurrent chronic pancreatitis, trauma, chronic alcohol abuse)
 
- Clinically patients present with jaundice, pain, nausea, vomiting, weight loss
 
- Pathogenesis
- leakage of pancreatic enzymes into parenchyma
 
- necrosis and chemical peritonitis
 
- inflammatory response and pancreatic secretion accumulation occurs and fibrous tissue walls off irritants which causes cyst formation
 
 
- Localized collection of amylase rich pancreatic secretions, necrotic debris and blood
 
- Most occur in the tail of the pancreas
 
- Usually solitary and unilocular
 
- Lack a true epithelial lining
 
 
 
 
- Variable acute and chronic inflammation
 
- Histiocytes
 
- Giant cells
 
- Necrotic debris
 
- Granulation tissue may be present
 
- No epithelium with atypia
 
 
 
- Ductal adenocarcinoma with cystic degeneration
- Atypia in the epithelium
 
- Pleomorphic nuclei, cytoplasm variable (vacuolated to dense)
 
- Cellular inflammatory background
 
- Positive CEA and cytokeratin
 
 
- Any neoplasm will have epithelial groups and single cells with atypia
 
- Big diagnostic problem is the atypia that can be seen in the granulation tissue