Cell Pathology 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Effects of cell death

A

• Loss of ability to divide
• Loss of normal synthetic functions
• Biochemical changes, followed by structural changes

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2
Q

Cell death characteristics in necrosis

A

-membrane blebbing
-blebs fuse and become larger
-cell membrane ruptures and releases the cells content

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3
Q

Cell death characteristics in apoptosis

A

-smell blebs form
-nucleus begins yo break apart and dna breaks into small pieces(organelles are also located in the blebs)
-the cell breaks into several apoptopic bodies;the organelles are still functioning

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4
Q

Nuclear changes in cell death

A

Pyknosis(nuclear shrinkage)
Karyolysis(nuclear fading|)
Karyorrhexis(nuclear fragmentation)

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5
Q

Necrosis

A

• Necrosis is caused by factors external to the cell or tissue e.g. infections, toxins or trauma
• It results in unregulated digestion of the cell components
• Loss of cell membrane integrity and uncontrolled release
of products of cell death brought about by autolysis • Inflammatory response in the surrounding tissue

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6
Q

Tissue Response to Necrosis

A

-Haemorrhage
-Resolution
• Site, type and extent of injury
• If cannot resolve, body attempts to repair
-Repair
• Removal of dead tissue
• Action of neutrophils and macrophages • Granulation tissue

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7
Q

Types of necrosis

A

• Coagulative necrosis
• Liquefaction (colliquative necrosis) • Caseating necrosis
• Fat necrosis
• Gangrenous necrosis

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8
Q

Coagulative necrosis

A

• Most common
• Affects solid organs
• Artery occlusion → ischaemia is most common cause(lack of blood flow)
• Firm and pale
• Cellular outline and tissue architecture maintained
• Lack of lysosomes/ injury destroys lysosomal enzymes

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9
Q

Colliquative or Liquefactive Necrosis

A

• Semi-liquid
• Degradation of cellular and extracellular components by hydrolytic enzymes
• Cystic cavities containing fluid and cell debris
• Main causes include cerebral infarction or bacterial infection
• Loss of neurones
• Many macrophages clearing cell debris

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10
Q

Caseating Necrosis

A

Soft and white – resembling cream cheese
• Unstructured protein mass
• Associated by tuberculosis

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11
Q

Fat Necrosis

A

• Hard yellow material seen in dead adipose tissue
• Pancreatitis → release of proteolytic & lypolytic enzymes
• Breast trauma → release of fatty acids → inflammatory response

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12
Q

Calcification of Necrotic Tissue

A

Dystrophic calcification
➢Large amounts of calcium enter the cell
➢Combine with phosphate to form crystals ➢Extracellular calcification can also occur

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13
Q

Gangrene

A

• Not a distinctive type of necrosis
• Describes black dead tissue
• Most common in lower limb of patients with severe atherosclerosis
• Irreversible ischaemic damage

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14
Q

Types of Gangrene

A
  1. Dry gangrene
    →Coagulative pattern of necrosis
  2. Wet gangrene
    → Gram-negative bacteria converts it to liquefactive
    necrosis
  3. Gas gangrene
    →Follows infection with gram-positive organism
    Clostridium welchii (found in the soil) →Releases toxins which produce gas
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15
Q

Dry Gangrene

A

• Coagulative necrosis from ischaemic injury
• Commonly caused by poor circulation or obstruction • Slow, gradual process
• Usually seen in smokers, diabetics, atherosclerosis

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16
Q

Wet Gangrene

A

• Largely affects moist tissues and organs • Characterized by liquefactive necrosis
• Untreated wound infections.

• Swelling and inflammation
• Blockage of blood supply
• oedematous, decayed, reddish to dark brown
• Promotes further bacterial growth necrosis and gangrene

17
Q

Gas Gangrene

A

• Clostridia are the main etiologic agent
• Invade wounds and injuries with diminished blood supply
• Release gas-producing toxins.
• Affected skin may appear greyish to purplish red
• Bubbly skin which makes a crackling sound whenever pressed

18
Q

Apoptosis

A

• Programmed cell death
• Normal process
• Energy-dependent
• Orderly packaging in membrane bound vesicles
• Vesicles phagocytosed – no inflammatory response

19
Q

Why is apoptosis important

A

-controlling cell number
-tissue remodelling
-removing damaged cells

20
Q

Necrosis summary

A

Group of cells affected
• Caused by injurious agent
• Changes due to energy deprivation
• Cells swell
• Ruptured lysosome & cell leakage
• Inflammatory response

21
Q

Apoptosis summary

A

• Single/few cells affected
• Programmed cell death
• Energy-driven
• Cells shrink
• Organelles & nuclear fragments packaged in vesicles
• No inflammatory response