Lab2 Inflammation and Repair Images Flashcards

1
Q

What is this? What are the purple cells?

A

Acute inflammation

characterized by presence of neutrophils

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2
Q

What is this?

A

Chronic inflammation

You can see presence of lymphocytes and plasma cells

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3
Q

What is this? What are the arrows indicating?

A

Evolving pnemonia

Top arrow: edema and inflammatory cells

Bottom arrow: vascular congestion secondary to increase blood flow initially, follwed by stasis

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4
Q

What is this? What type of exudate is this?

A

Acute pneumonia as shown by neutrophils within alveolar spaces

Example of purulen exudate

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5
Q

What is the arrow point to? How would you characterize this inflammation of the pleura

A

Fibrinous pleuritis

Acute inflammation of pleura with fibrin on the surface

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6
Q

What is the arrow pointing to?

A

An ulcer

An area of mucosal loss associated with acute inflammation and necrosis

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7
Q

What is this central area called? What type of inflammation? Hint – a possible outcome of pneumonia

A

Pulmonary abscess formation

This is one possible outcome of acute inflammation

An abscess is a localize collection of pus associated with destruction of underlying normal tissue

Suppurative inflammation

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8
Q

What does this represent? And what are these cells?

A

black arrows: plasma cells with eccentric nucleus, adjacent pale area

green arrows: lymphocytes with single nucleus filling most of cell

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9
Q

What kind of cell is this?

A

Eosinophil

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10
Q

What does this show? What is the big blob in the center?

A

Granuloma comprised of epithelioid histiocytes

Giant cells [langhans type] are in center

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11
Q

What is this? How can you tell?

A

Granulation tissue

Endematous tissue and new capillaries forming

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12
Q

What type of cell is this?

A

Myofibroblast

Expresses antigens of smooth muscle

responds to agents that contract smooth muscle

responsible for wound contraction

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13
Q

What is this? What are the arrows?

A

This is the early stage of a scar

The arrows in clockwise order starting top left:

  • re-epithelialization
  • scale crust
  • granulation tissue
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14
Q

What is this?

A

This is granulation tissue

the left arrow is new blood vessel formation

The right arrow is endematous stroma

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15
Q

What is this?

A

Late scar

You can tell from the fibrosis and collagen depostion

Fewer capillaries

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16
Q

What does the arrow point to?

A

Thin new epidermis forming above a scar

Re-epithelialization

17
Q

What is this?

A

thick collagen bundles in keloid scar

18
Q

what is this

A

Keloid scar

19
Q

What type of cell does this point to?

A

Neutrophil

20
Q

What type of inflammatory cell does this show?

A

Neutrophils!

21
Q

What type of cells are these?

A

A = lymphocyte - dark stained nucleus, little cytoplasm

B = neutrophil

Lymphocyte is smaller than neutrophil

22
Q

What type of inflammatory cells here?

A

Lymphocytes

23
Q

What type of cell? How do you know?

A

plasma cell

clock-face nucleus

peri-nuclear halo = large golgi

24
Q

What type of cells do arrows point to?

A

plasma cells

25
Q

What is happening in this abnormal lung?

A
  • alveolar spaces that normally contain air are filled with cellular infiltrate
26
Q

What are the arrows pointing to in acute inflammation of the lung?

A

blood vessels dilated and backed with RBCs due to increased blood flow and vascular permeability

called congestion

27
Q

What are the pink strands the arrow is pointing to in this inflammatory response? What does it indicate?

A

Fibrin

presence of fibrin in extravascular space indicated increased vascular permeability [normally cannot get through vessel wall]

28
Q

What kind of inflammatory cells are in this infection? Acute or chronic?

A

mostly lymphocytes and plasma cells

chronic infection

29
Q

What kind of connective tissue in this infection? Why did it form?

A

Dense fibrous tissue

Fibrosis often accompanies chronic inflammation –> scar

30
Q

What do the white circle and arrows point to?

A

white circle = granuloma

green arrow = epithelioid histiocytes [macrophages]

red arrow = multinucleated giant cell

yellow arrow = lymphocytes

31
Q

What is this called? What type of necrosis? Likely cause?

A

Granuloma = Caseous necrosis

TB

32
Q

Arrows point to injured myocardial cells. Circles point to inflammatory cells. Describe the cellular changes? Type of cell death?

A

hypereosinophilic myofibers

loss of nuclei [karyolysis]

coagulative necrosis?

33
Q

Can you see any residual myocardial fibers? type of tissue? What do the arrows point to in this section of the myocardium?

A
  • no myocardial fibers

loose fibrous connective tissue containing edema + blood

  • thin walled blood vessels
34
Q

Stain of myocardium following MI with immunoperoxidase stain CD31 to mark endothelial cells [in brown]. What are the structures? What type of tissue?

A

structures are capillaries being formed

this is granulation tissue

35
Q

This appearance of the liver is a sign of what?

A

Cirrhosis