Cell injury, response and adaptations Flashcards

1
Q

What are internal injurious stimuli?

A
  • Oxygen deprivation
  • Nutritional imbalance
  • Immune system reactions
  • Genetic abnormalities
  • Ageing
  • Workload imbalance
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2
Q

What are external injurious stimuli?

A
  • Infectious agents
  • Physical agents
  • Chemicals, drugs & toxins
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3
Q

What is atrophy?

A

decrease in size

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4
Q

What is hypertrophy?

A

increase in cell size due to increased number and size or organelles

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5
Q

What is dysplasia?

A

reversible/partial reversible change categorised by disorder growth

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6
Q

What is hyperplasia?

A

An increase in the number of parenchymal cells in an organ or tissue

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7
Q

What is metaplasia?

A

Change from the normal cell type to another type that is better able to withstand the insult/stress

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8
Q

What are the 4 main mechanisms for cell injury?

A

-impaired ATP production
-impaired cell membrane function
-biochemical pathway derangement
-DNA damage

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9
Q

What may cause mitochondrial damage/ dysfunction?

A
  • damage to mitochondrial membranes
  • increased cytosolic calcium
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10
Q

What can cause impaired ATP production?

A

Hypoxia caused by
- Respiratory failure
- Cardiac failure
- Reduced vascular perfusion (ischaemia
- Anemia
- Severe blood loss

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11
Q

What are the effects of impaired ATP production?

A
  • Sodium potassium ATPase pump failure (as requires ATP)
  • Sodium increases inside cell, water follows, cells burst
  • Switch to anaerobic metabolism, lactic acid buildup
  • Enzyme denaturing
  • Altered protein metabolism
  • As require energy, and if pH also low, denature of proteins
  • Increased cytosolic calcium
  • Calcium ATP-ase pump failure
    Increased intracellular calcium
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12
Q

What are the effects of increased intracellular calcium on cells?

A
  • Activates cellular enzymes eg protease, damaging membranes
  • Eg mitochondrial membrane
  • Leading to apoptosis (programmed cell death) or release of free radicals
  • Lipid peroxidation of membranes occurs
  • Chain reaction
  • Degrades lipid membrane
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13
Q

What are the consequences of membrane damage?

A
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction
  • Plasma membrane dysfunction,
  • Leakage of lysosomal enzymes into cytosol
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14
Q

How do free radicals effect the plasma membrane?

A

attack and cause lipid peroxidation

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15
Q

What causes cell swelling?

A
  • Hypoxia
  • (As ATP not produced so no ATPase so Na+ builds up so cell swells via osmosis)
  • Cell membrane damage by free radicals
  • Cell membrane injury by penetration of transmembrane complexes by eg bacterial toxins
  • Cell membrane damage by toxins inactivating ion channels or pumps
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16
Q

What can cause cellular hydropic degeneration?

A

Increased intracellular sodium and water decreased potassium

17
Q

What can cause excess lipid accumulation?

A

excessive delivery and uptake of lipids
reduced metabolism of lipids in hepatocytes
reduced export of lipids from the hepatocyte

18
Q

What is the histological appearance of lipid accumulation and hydropic change in cells?

A

lipid accumulation - clear vacuoles in the cell
hydropic - clear spaces but from the dilation of organelles.

19
Q

What are gross evidance of lipid accumulation and hydropic on organs?

A

lipids - enlarged organs presenting with yellow-brown colour and a greasy texture
hydropic - organs are enlarged but a paler colour

20
Q

What are the microscopic features of necrosis

A
  • Karyolysis - dissolution of the nucleus
  • Pyknosis - nuclear condensation (chromatin clumping
  • Karyorrhexis
21
Q

What is coagulative necrosis

A

Caused by hypoxia
Tissue looks pale and is surrounded by red areas

22
Q

What is dry gangrene

A

extremities, initial coagulative necrosis before it dehydrates and shrivels

23
Q

What is fat necrosis

A

adipose where fat is white, chalky appearance.

24
Q

What is liquedative necrosis

A

occurs in CNS from hypoxia injury - forms semi-liqued
associated with pus forming organisms

25
Q

What is wet gangrene

A

necrosis by coagulative before it is invaded by saprophytic bacteria which liquifies the dead tissue

26
Q

What is Caseous necrosis

A

Associated with infectious agents (tuberculosis commonly) soft and granular, like cottage cheese

27
Q

What is the difference between metastatic and dystrophic calcification

A

Dystrophic calcification - occurs in sites of necrosis
Metastatic calcification - disturbed calcium metabolism resulting from hypercalcaemia and deposition if calcium salts in tissues

28
Q

How are the 3 types of jaundice caused

A
  • Prehepatic icterus - excessive bilirubin production due to haemolysis
  • Hepatic Icterus - hepatocyte damage and decreased metabolism of bilirubin
  • Posthepatic (obstructive) icterus - obstruction of bile excretion (tumour)
29
Q

What is amaloydosis?

A

Extracellular deposition of proteins
- pushes apart the cells in a tissue
- commonly caused with chronic inflam/infect
less commonly associated with plasma disorder