## Correct Answer: C. Fibrinoid necrosis Polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) is a systemic necrotizing vasculitis affecting medium-sized muscular arteries, characterized by a distinctive pattern of vessel wall necrosis. The hallmark histopathological finding in PAN is **fibrinoid necrosis** of the arterial wall. This occurs due to immune complex deposition (Type III hypersensitivity) and complement activation, which causes fibrin deposition within the vessel wall, creating a homogeneous, eosinophilic appearance on H&E staining that resembles fibrin. The necrosis is transmural, affecting all three layers (intima, media, adventitia), and is accompanied by acute inflammation with neutrophilic infiltration. This fibrinoid pattern is pathognomonic for immune-mediated vasculitis and distinguishes PAN from other forms of arterial necrosis. The fibrin deposition represents immune complex-mediated endothelial injury and is the defining microscopic feature that pathologists use to diagnose PAN. In the Indian context, PAN remains an important diagnosis in patients presenting with constitutional symptoms, peripheral neuropathy, and elevated inflammatory markers, particularly in those with hepatitis B seropositivity (endemic in India). ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Gangrenous necrosis** — Gangrenous necrosis is a morphological pattern of coagulative necrosis that occurs in tissues with poor blood supply (e.g., limbs, bowel), resulting in tissue death and putrefaction. It is not the characteristic necrosis of vasculitis. PAN causes necrosis *of the vessel wall itself*, not tissue ischemia distal to the vessel. This is a common NBE trap—confusing the consequence of vascular disease with the primary vascular pathology. **B. Fat necrosis** — Fat necrosis occurs when adipose tissue is damaged by trauma, pancreatitis, or enzymatic digestion (e.g., pancreatic lipase release). It is not associated with vasculitis. PAN does not primarily affect adipose tissue, and fat necrosis has no role in the pathogenesis of immune-mediated vasculitis. This option exploits students who confuse different necrosis types without understanding the tissue-specific context. **D. Caseous necrosis** — Caseous necrosis is the characteristic necrosis of tuberculosis and some fungal infections, appearing as a cheese-like material on gross examination. It is a hallmark of granulomatous inflammation, not immune complex vasculitis. While TB can cause vasculitis in India, the necrosis pattern in TB-related vasculitis is caseous (granulomatous), not fibrinoid. PAN is non-granulomatous and produces fibrinoid necrosis instead. ## High-Yield Facts - **Fibrinoid necrosis** in PAN is caused by **Type III hypersensitivity** (immune complex deposition) and complement activation in vessel walls. - **Transmural inflammation** with fibrinoid necrosis affecting all three arterial layers (intima, media, adventitia) is the pathognomonic finding in PAN. - **Hepatitis B seropositivity** is associated with PAN in 10–50% of cases in endemic regions like India; HBsAg-positive patients require screening for PAN. - **Fibrinoid necrosis** appears as homogeneous, bright eosinophilic material on H&E staining, distinguishing it from coagulative necrosis. - **Medium-sized muscular arteries** are the primary target in PAN; small arteries and capillaries are spared (unlike microscopic polyangiitis). ## Mnemonics **PAN Pathology: FIN** **F**ibrinoid necrosis, **I**mmune complex, **N**ecrotizing vasculitis. Remembers the three-part pathology of PAN: fibrinoid necrosis is the morphology, immune complexes are the mechanism, and necrotizing vasculitis is the disease. **Necrosis Types by Cause** **Fibrinoid** = Vasculitis (immune), **Caseous** = TB/Granuloma, **Fat** = Pancreatitis, **Gangrenous** = Ischemia. Use when differentiating necrosis patterns across pathologies. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "necrosis" with "vessel" to lure students into choosing gangrenous necrosis (thinking of tissue ischemia from vascular occlusion) rather than recognizing that PAN causes direct immune-mediated necrosis *of the arterial wall itself*, which is fibrinoid in nature. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, a patient presenting with constitutional symptoms, mononeuritis multiplex, and elevated ESR/CRP should raise suspicion for PAN. Checking HBsAg is essential, as HBV-associated PAN is more common in India and requires antiviral therapy alongside immunosuppression. Tissue biopsy showing fibrinoid necrosis of medium-sized arteries confirms the diagnosis. _Reference: Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Ch. 11 (Blood Vessels); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 326 (Vasculitis)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.