Test 1: lecture 7 tissue repair Flashcards

1
Q

4 phases of wound repair

A

hemostasis

acute inflammation

proliferation

remodeling

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2
Q

replacement by cells of the same type; requires an intact framework

A

regeneration

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3
Q

2 results of regeneration

A

renewing tissues such as GI can regrow

Stable tissues such as liver and kidney can undergo compensatory growth

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4
Q

What determines whether a tissue will undergo regeneration or healing?

A

Type of tissue damaged
• Damage to the ECM
• Extent of the wound
• Blood supply, nutrition

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5
Q

Although amphibians have the ability to regenerate limbs and some organs, regeneration in mammalian organs is ___

A

compensatory growth.

functional but not exact replica

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6
Q

name two type of cell groups that can undergo regeneration

A

Continuously dividing (labile) tissues - cells proliferate throughout life, replacing those that are destroyed (e.g. gut epithelium).

Quiescent (stable) tissues- low level of replication; may undergo rapid division in response to stimuli and can restore the tissue of origin. G0 stage but can be stimulated to enter G1 (e.g. parenchymal cells of liver, kidneys, and pancreas).

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7
Q

what type of cells can not undergo regeneration

A

post mitotic (terminally differentiated)

cannot undergo mitotic division

example: neurons, cardiac muscle

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8
Q

parenchymal cell death with intact tissue framework results in ___

A

regeneration of normal structure

liver, skin

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9
Q

parenchymal cell death with damaged tissue framework results in

A

repair by scar formation

heart attack

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10
Q

persistant tissue damage results in

A

fibrosis and tissue scar

cirrhosis, chronic pancreatitis

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11
Q

restoration of integrity to injured tissue; typically involves collagen deposition and scar formation.

A

healing

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12
Q

4 stages of wound repair

A

Hemostasis (vascular phase)

Acute inflammation (cellular phase)

Proliferation (proliferation phase- granulation tissue)

Remodeling (maturation phase, contraction)

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13
Q

inflammation phase occurs ___ to ___ hrs after injury

A

24-96

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14
Q

what cells are involved in the inflammation phase

A

Macrophages remove cell debris (w/neutrophils), degrade ECM, release GF (w/fibroblasts) necessary for the proliferation phase.

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15
Q

___ form a loose gel-like matrix to serve as the scaffold for
granulation tissue.

A

fibrin

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16
Q

how long does the proliferation phase last?

A

3-4 weeks depending on size of wound

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17
Q

Granulation tissue proliferation has connective tissue fibers that are ___ to the surface of the wound, fibroblasts, and blood vessels that are ___ to the surface of the wound

A

parellel

perpendicular

18
Q

epithelial and mesenchymal stem cells are turned on in what stage of wound healing

A

proliferation (stage 3 → granulation tissue)

19
Q

what starts to form in the wound during the proliferation phase

A

fibrous connective tissue and blood vessels

20
Q

when does stage 4 of wound healing start

A

remodeling/maturation phase

3-4 weeks after injury after all other phases are done

21
Q

when does collagen form in wound healing

A

remodeling/maturation phase

TGFB and ECM will help convert immature connective tissue into collagen

22
Q

contraction in remodeling tissue is by ___

A

myofibroblasts

23
Q

explain

A

inflammation phase 24-96 hours

1- neutrophils and macrophages come in and clean up

  1. lack of blood causes activation of growth factors which lead to new vessels and recruit fibroblasts, myofibrils and structural cells
  2. old ECM is broken down
  3. fibrin and serum proteins fill the wound
24
Q
A

proliferation phase 3-4 weeks → angiogenesis and fibroplasia→ granulation tissue formation

  1. fibrin acts as framework for granulation tissue with connective tissue parallel and vessels perpendicular
  2. basement membrane reforms and re-epithelization occurs to close area
  3. stem cells found in hair follicles activate
25
Q
A

remodeling phase - 3-4 weeks after injury → collagen formation and wound closure

platelets and macrophages release TFG B that stimulate the formation of collagen and myofibroblast activation

26
Q

what are the white spaces

A

edema

picture of acute wound with fibrin and neutrophils

27
Q
A

7 day wound

see scab and re-epithelization

cell in proliferation phase → depositing granulation tissue

28
Q
A

7 day wound

see scab and re-epithelization- cells are stretched to cover injury

less edema- area now filled with fibrous connective tissue and congested red blood cells

cell in proliferation phase → depositing granulation tissue, vessels and fibroblast

29
Q
A

cirrhosis

heals by fibrosis- bands of fibrosis will contract to form nodules

30
Q

what are some things that disrupt repair

A

Bacterial infection

Poor Nutrition: protein deficiency; Vitamin C deficiency

Glucocorticoid therapy: anti-inflammatory; impairs collagen synthesis

Mechanical factors: local pressure, torsion, movement

Dehiscence

Poor perfusion

Amount of tissue injured

Tissue type: those that cannot regenerate (e.g. myocardium) lead to scarring

Aberrations of cell growth and ECM production (proud flesh)

31
Q

granulation tissue

granuloma

A

granulation tissue-proliferative phase of tissue healing → fibroplasia and neovascularization

granuloma- chronic inflammation→ epithelioid macrophage and multinucleated giant cells

32
Q

fibrin vs fibrous

A

fibrin part of acute/vascular phase of wound healing. leaks from endothelium that has been injured. part of the clotting cascade. acts as framework for fibroblasts to come in and deposit fibrous connective tissue/collagen

33
Q

___ is when organ becomes functional due to cell hyperplasia and hypertrophy (not a replica)

A

compensatory growth

branch of regeneration

34
Q

1st phase of wound repair

A

hemostasis (vascular phase)

35
Q

what happens during the hemostasis phase of wound healin

A

first phase

stops blood flow and then starts rebuilding

injury causes vasospasm→ platelets clot and release TGF that causes vasoconstriction and thrombogenesis and angiogenesis

36
Q

explain how oxygen effects wound healing

A

oxygen tension- lack of O2 to an area causes the production of growth factors that will activate macrophages, fibroblasts and endothelial cells

37
Q

Macrophages clean up cell debris, degrade ECM and release growth factors (along with fibroblasts) to enhance proliferation of endothelial cells, fibroblasts for new ECM, ___ for contraction, and ___ cells for return to normal structure and function.

A

myofibroblasts

parenchymal

38
Q

Degradation of the ECM occurs through physical separation or tearing, ___ from plasma proteins, infiltration by inflammatory cells, and degradation by ___ produced by macrophages, fibroblasts, mast cells, and most leukocytes.

A

dilution

MMPs

39
Q

what three processes occur during proliferation

A

granulation tissue phase

angiogenesis, epithelialization, and fibroplasia.

40
Q

Excessive/exuberant granulation can lead to a type of hypertrophic scar called ____

A

proud flesh.

41
Q

Contraction of healing tissue is mediated by ____

A

myofibroblasts (specialized fibroblasts with contractile activity).

Secretion of TGF-β by platelets and macrophages

Function is to contract the wound and thus bring together injured tissue separated by edema and inflammation.

42
Q

Scirrhous Reaction

A

when too much connective tissue/collagen is put down

causes damage to original tissue

cirrhosis (bands of fibrous tissue that contract to form nodules)