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Summary BHCS3014 Female pathology

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Compiled from lecture notes, this is a condense but detailed summary of the female pathology, mainly cervical pathology. Containing an overview of all the content in a logical order, easy to search and use for revision.

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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
• Most common endocrine and metabolic syndrome in women of reproductive age
• Depending on geographical location, 6-20% of reproductive age women affected
• Cause unknown – but genetic, environmental and lifestyle factors involved
• Symptoms depend on age/stage of life
o Adolescents – irregular periods
o Hirsutism – excessive body hair
o Acne
o Insulin resistance
o Fast weight gain/difficult to lose weight (due to insulin resistance)
o Male pattern baldness
o Infertility (but can still conceive with PCOS)
o Women may not know they have PCOS until trying to conceive and can’t
• Diagnosis – Rotterdam (2004) criteria; any 2 of the following
▪ Irregular periods (cycle <21 days or >35 days)
▪ Hyperandrogenism
▪ Clinical signs – hirsutism, acne
▪ Biochemical test – blood test for free testosterone, sex-binding hormone
gonadotrophin (SBHG) or a ratio of both
• Morphology
o > 12 follicles on ovary
o ‘cysts’ are follicles
o Not diagnosed on morphology alone as common for women to have lots of follicles of
ovaries
• Pathophysiology
o Main drivers of PCOS (direction of causality unknown)
▪ Insulin resistance
▪ Hyperandrogenism
▪ Inflammation




• No cure – must be managed through lifestyle, diet, birth control, diabetic dug metformin, regular
sleep and exercise
• Infertility stems from unpredictable ovulation
• If diagnosed and managed from young age, reduces long-term metabolic and reproductive
complications
• Low carbohydrate diet to combat insulin resistance
• Vitamin D
o Deficiency seen in 65-87% of PCOS cases
o VitD receptors in ovaries and endometrium suggest role in female reproduction
o Deficiency associated with
▪ Dysregulation of FSH, LH, testosterone

, ▪ Impaired ovulatory function
▪ Dysregulated follicular development
▪ Oxidative stress
o Sequestered in adipose tissue during PCOS weight gain (due to insulin resistance)
o Study found VitD supplement improved follicular development
• Inositol
o Sugar alcohol found in fruit, grains, beans, and nuts
o Produced in body from glucose or taken as supplement
o 2 most common forms function as insulin 2nd messengers and mediate different actions of
insulin
▪ Myo-inositol (M1) converts to inositolphosphoglycan (IPG) 2nd messenger MI-IPG
involved in cellular glucose uptake
▪ D-chiro-inositol (DCI) converts to IPG 2nd messenger DCI-IPG involved in glycogen
synthesis
o In PCOS, deficiency of IPGs in tissues or altered metabolism of inositol to IPG mediators
could play role in insulin resistance
o Nestler et al (1999) – DCI supplement
▪ Significant increase in proportion of women who ovulated
▪ Significant decrease in free testosterone
▪ Significant decrease in plasma triglycerides

Haemolytic disease of the foetus and newborn
• Human blood groups
o Blood group antigens cause blood group incompatibility
o Most important during transfusions and incompatible pregnancies
o Blood antigens are expressed as membrane proteins (e.g., Rh) or as glycoproteins that are
attached to membrane proteins/lipids (e.g., ABO)
o ABO is a carbohydrate system - An enzyme synthesises and adds different antigens to
different glycoproteins/lipids
o Rh proteins are transmembranous with the antigen expressed on an external loop
o There are 43 different blood groups systems – each confer a wide range of functions to red
blood cells
▪ Complement control
▪ Structural
▪ Carbohydrates (ABO)
▪ Transport (Rh)
▪ Surface enzyme
▪ Cytokine receptor
▪ Cell adhesion
o Only ABO and Rh are routinely tested for
• Rh blood group system
o First described by Landsteiner in 1940
o 2nd most significant after ABO group
o Major cause of HDFN
o RhD gene on chromosome 1
▪ 10 exons
▪ Rhesus boxes either side of gene
▪ Smp1 gene after (in between RhD and RhCE genes)
▪ RhD and RhCE genes are ‘tail-to-tail’ – 1 → 10; 10 → 1
▪ Arose as duplication from ancestral RhCE gene
o RhD positive = RhD antigens on erythrocytes
o RhD negative (Caucasian) = missing entire RhD gene

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Uploaded on
January 17, 2023
Number of pages
12
Written in
2022/2023
Type
SUMMARY

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Hello, I have typed all of my lecture notes from 1st year through to 3rd year in easy to read, logical summary that includes all content from lectures that have been expanded upon through my own reading and research. Please leave a positive review if you find the notes helpful - good luck with your studies!

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