Repair and Regeneration Flashcards

1
Q

What is regeneration?

A
  • Damaged tissue returns to normal.

- Regains specialised function

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2
Q

What is repair?

A
  • The damaged cells cannot be replaced, leads to fibrosis and scarring.
  • Loss of specialised function.
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3
Q

What are liable cell populations?

A

Liable cell populations have:

1) high normal turnover
2) Active stem cell population
3) Excellent regenerative capacity

e.g. Epithelia

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4
Q

What are stable (quiescent cell populations)?

A

Stable (quiescent) cell populations have:

1) low turnover
2) Turnover can increase if needed
3) good regenerative capacity

e.g. Liver, renal tubules

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5
Q

What are permanent cell populations?

A

Permanent cell populations :

1) no turnover
2) minimal / no regenerative capacity

e.g. neurons, muscle cells (however research is being conducted in this area)

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6
Q

How is regeneration controlled?

A
  • PROLIFERATION of stem cells covering of defect (cells at edges of defect can proliferate to COVER the injury)
  • Contact INHIBITION (once a layer has formed, proliferation is switched off)
  • Controlled by growth factors, cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions.
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7
Q

What does regeneration depend on?

A
  • tissue cell kinetics and architecture

- stem cell survival

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8
Q

What is the role of myofibroblasts in granulation tissue formation?

A
  • Myofibroblasts synthesis collagen and extracellular matrix.
  • granulation tissue gains myofibrils
  • has contractile ability

WOUND CONTRACTION

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9
Q

What are the possible effects of wound contraction - give examples?

A

1) Oesophageal peptic strictures - scar tissue contracts to form a narrowing of the oesophagus&raquo_space;»swallowing problems

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10
Q

What local factors inhibit healing?

A

1) infection
2) Haematoma
3) Blood supply
4) foreign bodies

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11
Q

What systemic factors inhibit healing?

A

1) age
2) drugs
3) anaemia
4) diabetes
5) malnutrition
6) Vit C deficiency

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12
Q

What type of bone heals fractures

A

Lamellar bone

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13
Q

How does healing occur in the brain?

A

The supporting tissue in the brain is made of glial cells (not collagen + fibroblasts)

  • cyst formation
  • Gliosis rather than scarring
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