| Dystrophic Calcification
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Etiology
Secondary to tissue necrosis from any cause.
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Pathogenesis
The precise pathogenesis
is unknown.
It appears that necrotic material needs to stay unresorbed for prolonged
periods
for dystrophic calcium deposition.
The calcium is derived from serum and not from the tissue itself.,
|
Epidemiology
Common.
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General Gross Description
Appear at white, chalky streaks in tissue.
Can be gritty to the touch or rock hard, depending upon the extent
and whether or not ossification has occurred.
Commonly seen in atheromatous plaques, heart valves, and near the
pancreas, especially after attacks of acute pancreatitis.
|
General Microscopic Description
Appears in
routine histological sections (stained with H&E) as
deep purple deposits in necrotic tissue.
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Clinical Correlation
Small deposits of calcium in
necrotic tissue are clinically without
consequence.
However, if calcification occurs in degenerating heart valves,
the ensuing rigidity of the valve leaflets can impede blood flow.
This can have serious hemodynamic consequences.
|
References
Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th edition. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 17, 31.
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| Dystrophic Calcification
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| Synopsis by: T.V. Rajan M.D. Ph.D. (T1X000M55400)[99]
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