Cell and tissue Injury Flashcards

1
Q

steatosis

A

fatty change - abnormal retention of lipids

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2
Q

oncosis

A

hydropic change

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3
Q

Tell me about necrosis

A
often effects solid masses of tissue 
evokes an inflammatory response 
takes out cell groups 
cell membrane integrity becomes lost 
cell swelling and lysis
Dead cells are phagocytksed by inflammatory cells 
abnormal iron homeostasis
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4
Q

What are the different types of necrosis

A
coagulate 
colliquative 
caseous 
gangrenous
fibrinoid 
fat necrosis
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5
Q

What causes reduced apoptosis

A

neoplasia
autoimmune disease
virus infection

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6
Q

what causes increased apoptosis

A

neurogenrative disorders

HIV infection of T-Lymphocytes

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7
Q

what is coagulative necrosis

A

This is the most common type
coagulation of cellular proteins
initially firm but then soft

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8
Q

colliquative

A

liquefaction with formation of cystic spaces

proteolysis dominates over coagulation

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9
Q

caseous necrosis

A

TB

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10
Q

Gangrenous necrosis

A

necrosis with putrefaction (rotting)

mostly in appendages

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11
Q

fibrinoid necrosis

A

malignant hypertension

blood vessels

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12
Q

pyroptosis

A

associated with salmonella infection, is apoptosis then develops into necrosis

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13
Q

Healing

A

complete resolution

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14
Q

labile tissues

A

blood, skin, gut

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15
Q

stable tissues

A

liver, kidney

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16
Q

permanent

A

neurones, skeletal muscle

17
Q

Healing by primary intension

A

this is when minimal damage has occurred as little to no tissue has been lost: This allows regeneration of scar tissue, apposed edges of wound join by a thin layer of fibrin, ultimately replaced by collagen

18
Q

Healing by secondary intension

A

This is when there is significant tissue loss

new blood vessels are laid down along with granulation tissue

19
Q

what is granulation

A
this is an intermediate substance:
- loops of capillaries
- collagen
- inflammatory cells
organises then deposition of collagen and contraction
20
Q

How do you tell the difference between healing by primary or secondary intension

A

wound contraction in the presence of myofibriblasts

21
Q

3 steps in bone healing

A

repair
remodelling
resolution

22
Q

Wound strength

A

sutures usually removed after the end of week 1
strength increases rapidly over the next 4 weeks
by the third month 70-80% strength should be restored

23
Q

What factors effect wound healing

A
systematic:
age
nutrition
metabolic status 
circulatory status
hormones
Local:
infection
mechanical factors 
foreign bodies
size, location and type of wound
24
Q

What are signs of an abnormal wound

A
deficient scar formation 
-reopening (dehiscence)
-ulceration
excessive formation o repair components 
-keloid scar (red and raised)
formation of contractors
-exaggerated contraction 
-deformity of the wound and surrounding tissues