Week 3: Cellular Growth/Differentiation, Regeneration, & Repair Flashcards

1
Q

What type of adaptive response is characterized by:
A. Decreased cell/organ size and functional ability.
B. Reversible change from one cell type to another, often in response to irritation.
C. Abnormal proliferation of cells – change in size, shape, organization
D. Increase in cell size and functional ability due to increased synthesis of intracellular components

A

A. Atrophy
B. Metaplasia
C. Dysplasia
D. Hypertrophy

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2
Q

Give some examples of physiologic hypertrophy.

A

striated muscle for weight lifters

growth during puberty

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3
Q

What is the significance of anaplasia, what are the two chief findings of anaplasia?

A

Acquired malignant change. Total loss of differentiation as might occasionally be seen in malignant neoplasms. Increased nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio. Nucleus takes on non-recognizable shapes. Brick-like cell pattern is replaced with strange pattern, no structure.

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4
Q

Surgical intentions: Primary, Secondary, or Tertiary?
A. No suture, wound is allowed to granulate
B. Wound edges are approximated within 3-4 days
C. Suture w/in 24 hrs, approximation and eversion of skin edges is achievable
D. Intentionally kept open to allow edema/infection to resolve

A

A. Secondary
B. Tertiary
C. Primary
D. Tertiary

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5
Q

What is the difference between hypoplasia and agenesis?

A
Hypoplasia = Defective formation or incomplete development of a part 
Agenesis = Complete absence, failure of formation.
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6
Q

What Type of Stem Cell?
A. Continuously dividing (epidermis, mucosal & GI epith)
B. Never divide (nerve, cardiac, skeletal)
C. Low level of replication (hepatocytes, renal tubular epith, pancreatic acini, alveoli)

A

A. Labile
B. Permanent
C. Stable

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7
Q

What are the three stages of fracture healing?

A
  1. Procallus = provides anchorage, but no structural rigidity. blood rushes in, inflammation
  2. Fibrocartilagenous callous = subperiosteal bone, chondroid matrix
  3. Osseus callous = recruit Ca, P, woven bone, then lamellar bone (flattens) higher conc. of Ca/P than other tissue
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8
Q

What is the difference between a traumatic fracture and a pathologic fracture?

A
Traumatic = caused by injury/impact
Pathologic = created by metastatic disease, osteoporosis, etc.
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9
Q

What type of adaptive response is caused by:
A. Hormonal or antigenic stimulation.
B. Decreased use, ischemia, lack of hormonal/neural stimulation, malnutrition, aging
C. Chronic irritation
D. Organ compensating for partial loss (hepatectomy)

A

A. Hyperplasia
B. Atrophy
C. Metaplasia
D. Hyperplasia

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10
Q

Can hyperplasia and hypertrophy occur together?

A

Yes, they often do.

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11
Q

What type of heart failure (diastolic or systolic) is associated with hypertension? Explain.

A

Diastolic. With HTN, left ventricle becomes hypertrophied from pushing blood out to tissues against increased resistance. Hypertrophy of L vent. prevents it from filling properly during diastole (diastolic failure) because it can’t relax or because its wall is thick or rigid. CO is then decreased.

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12
Q

What is a bicuspid aortic valve and how does this relate to heart failure?

A

Diastolic heart failure is compounded by bicuspid aortic valve (supposed to be tricuspid) b/c creates smaller opening for blood to pass into aorta (more resistance, more stress on L ventricle)

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13
Q

Give some examples pathologic hypertrophy.

A

cardiac muscle in hypertension

hypertrophy of uterus via exogenous hormones

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