Lecture 20 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the mechanisms of intracellular accumulations?

A
  1. Inadequete removal of a normal substance secondary to defects in metabolism of packaging and transport (e.g. hepatic lipodosis)
  2. Accumulation of an abnormal endogenous substance as a result of genetic or aquired defects
  3. Failure to degrade a metabolite due to inherited enzyme deficiencies (e.g. LSD’s)
  4. Deposition and accumulation of an abnormal exogenous substance (cell has neither enzymatic machinary to degrade the substance nor ability to transport it to other sites (e.g. carbon, silica)
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2
Q

What are some examples of exogenous pigment disorders?

A
  1. Inhalation of inert carbon particles (smoke/soot) causing anthracosis - often and incidental finding
  2. Tattoo ink is an example
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3
Q

Breifly explain how this defect occurs:

A

Tyrosine is converted to melanin via the enzyme tyrosinase. This process also require copper in the tissue, hence excess copper causes accumulations of melanin (as above)

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4
Q

Briefly describe how a congenital melanin deficiency occurs (for example in an albino animal)?

A

Tyrosinase mutation (even though the precursor tyrosine is present it cannot be converted melanin)

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5
Q

Provide an example of an acquired melanin deficiency:

A
  1. Local injury (e.g. branding)
  2. Dietary copper deficiency
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6
Q

What causes the lipid peroxidation into lipofuscin?

A

Aging - “wear and tear” pigment

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7
Q

What types of cell does lipofuscin accumulate in?

A

accumulates in non-dividing cell (neurons, cardiac muscle) and in hepatocytes

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8
Q

Is the accumulation of ceroid in tissues physiological or pathological?

A

ceroid is generally pathological

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9
Q

Briefly describe the slide below and describe the process that is occuring:

A

Coarse, granular, golden-brown pigment. Haemoglobin in RBC breaks down into haemosiderin (an accumulation in tissues)

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10
Q

Provide an example of a localised cause of haemosiderin accumulation and a generalised cause of haemosiderin accumulation:

A

Localised: haemorrhage/brusing, chronic congestion e.g. lungs - heart failure cells

Generalised: haemochromatosis, red blood cell transfusions, iron supplements, haemolysis

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11
Q

What is the jaundice and what is the cause of it?

A

Yellow tissue discolouration. Caused by hyperbilirubinaemia

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12
Q

What are the three causes of hyperbilirubinaemia? (provide and example of each)

A
  1. Unconjugated - haemolytic (pre-hepatic) - haemolysis, RBC parasites, massive skeletal muscle damage/necrosis
  2. Mixed - toxic (hepatic) - hepatic necrosis
  3. Conjugated - obstructive (post-hepatic): Intrahepatic- hepatitis, drug toxicity, alcoholism, liver neolasia, extrahepatic - gall stones and pancreatitis
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13
Q

What are the four different types of photosensitivity?

A

Type 1 (primary) - photodynamic agent ingested, injected or absorbed

Type 2 (aberrant metabolism) - inherited defects in enzymes involving haeme synthesis (resulting in porphyrin accumulation)

Type 3 (secondary/ hepatogenous) - liver disease resulting in build up of phylloerythrin (a porphyrin) normally derived fro breakdown of chlorophyll by GIT microflora - normally abosrbed into the circulation and effectively excreted by liver into bile

Type 4 - idiopathic

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14
Q

What are the four different types of amyloidosis?

A

Immune/primary amyloid: plasma cell tumours > Ig light chains produced by monoclonal cells > AL amyloid (systemic)

Endocrine/inherited amyloid: Oritental cat breeds - pancreatic islet localised > islet polypeptide (localised)

Prions: prion protein (localised to CNS)

Reactive/secondary amyloid: chronic inflammation (TB, osteomyletitis, glomerulonephritis) > Macs activated > Macs release IL1 and Il2 > serum amyloid A protein made in the liver > AA amyloid

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15
Q

How does amyloidosis cause pathology?

A

Extracellular eosinophillic deposit > compress tissue > cell atrophy/death > loss of function

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16
Q

Name the process that is occuring in the tissue below:

A

AA Amyloidosis

17
Q

Relate the causes of lysosomal storage conditions to the pathology that is commonly observed:

A
  1. Genetic and congestion (autosomal reccessive) e.g. a-mannisidosis OR aquired swainsonine toxicity
  2. Defective enzyme function (e.g. a-D-mannosidase)
  3. Metabolite accumulates (e.g. oligomannoside polysaccharides)
  4. Lysosomal storage disease
  5. Distended lysosomes causes adundant foamy cytoplasm (lysosomes)
18
Q

Name the condition that is shown below:

A

Lysosomal storage disease - abundant foamy cytoplasm

19
Q

What is the cause of glycogen accumulation within tissues?

A

Abnormalities in either glucose or glycogen metabolism are generally caused by metabolic diseases e.g. diabetes mellitus, hyperadrenocorticism, glucorticoid adminisitration, alcoholism, liver diseases, genetic glycogen storage diseases

20
Q

What is the condition below?

A

Glycogen accumulation within tissues

21
Q

What is the cause of lipid accumulation within tissues?

A

Common causes include toxins, protein malnutrition, diabeties mellitus, obesity, alcohol abuse, late term pregnancy and liver disease

22
Q

What is the name of the condition within the liver below?

A

Lipidosis

23
Q

Briefly describe the pathogensis of gout:

A
  1. Impaired purine metabolism (alcoholics), high protein diets (dalmations)
  2. Uric acid/urates
  3. Deposits in joints or viscera
  4. Chronic inflammation
  5. Gout
24
Q

How does renal failure result from crystal depostion (provide the pathogenesis)?

A
  1. Oxalate rich plants, ethylene glycol
  2. Oxalate crystals
  3. Deposit within the nephron
  4. Renal failure