CELL INJURY DEFINITIONS Flashcards

1
Q

reversible functional and morphological changes

A

Reversible cell injury

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2
Q

cell cannot recover from injury resulting in cell death (necrosis or apoptosis)

A

Irreversible cell injury

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3
Q

reduces aerobic respiration

A

Oxygen deprivation*

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4
Q

mechanical trauma, extreme temperatures, sudden changes in atmospheric pressure, radiation and electric
shock

A

Physical agents

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5
Q

glucose or salt in hypertonic concentrations (electrolyte imbalance), oxygen at toxic levels, poisons (arsenic, cyanide, etc.), environmental and air pollutants, insecticides/herbicides, recreational and therapeutic drugs

A

Chemical agents and drugs

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6
Q

bacteria, fungi, parasites, viruses

A

Infectious agents

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7
Q

injurious reactions to self-antigens (autoimmunity), inflammation

A

Immunologic reactions

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8
Q

deficiency of functional proteins (enzyme defects, accumulation of damaged DNA or misfolded proteins)

A

Genetic derangements

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9
Q

vitamin or protein-calorie deficiency, excess cholesterol

A

Nutritional imbalances

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10
Q

blebbing, blunting and loss of microvilli

A

Plasma membrane alterations

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11
Q

swelling and appearance of small amphorous densities

A

Mitochondrial changes

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12
Q

clumping of nuclear

chromatin, disaggregation of granular and fibrillar elements

A

Nuclear alterations

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13
Q

ER swelling, cellular swelling, loss of microvilli, blebs

A

Failed Na+ pumps

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14
Q

decreased glycogen, lactic acid production → acidosis

A

Increased glycolysis

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15
Q

influx of Ca2+ decreasing phospholipids in membrane

A

Failure of Ca2+ pumps

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16
Q

structural disruption of protein synthesis and lipid deposition

A

Depletion of ATP

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17
Q

occur during normal metabolic processes (mitochondrial

respiration and energy generation)

A

Reduction-oxidation (redox) reactions

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18
Q

weapons for destroying microbes and other substances

A

Produced in phagocytic leukocytes

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19
Q

vasodilator (important chemical mediator and part of inflammatory response), can act as free radical and be converted to highly reactive ONOO-

A

Nitric oxide

20
Q

condition where there are increased amounts of free radicals

A

Oxidative stress

21
Q

ischemia and certain toxins cause influx of cytosolic calcium

A

Loss of calcium homeostasis

22
Q

decreased ATP

A

ATPase

23
Q

decreased phospholipids

A

Phospholipase

24
Q

disrupt cell membrane and cytoskeletal proteins

A

Proteases

25
Q

damage nuclear chromatin

A

Endonucleases

26
Q

(↓ phospholipid synthesis, ↑ phospholipid breakdown) - contents leak into the
membrane

A

Defects in membrane permeability

27
Q

sensitive to many types of injurious stimuli (increased cytosolic Ca2+, ROS, oxygen deprivation, etc.), results in biochemical abnormalities

A

Mitochondrial damage and dysfunction

28
Q

formation of reactive oxygen species (free radicals)

A

Abnormal oxidative phosphorylation

29
Q

ischemia tends to cause more rapid and severe cell and tissue injury than does
hypoxia in the absence of ischemia because aerobic and anaerobic respiration compromised

A

Reversible ischemia (may become irreversible)

30
Q

cells proceed to die after blood flow restored; injury is paradoxically exacerbated and proceeds at an accelerated pace

  • as a consequence, reperfused tissues may sustain loss of cells in addition to the cells that are
    irreversibly damaged at the end of ischemia (contributes to tissue damage during myocardial and cerebral infarction and following therapies to restore blood flow
  • ex. myocardial infarction, stroke, organ transplantation)
A

Ischemic/reperfusion injury

31
Q

major limitation to drug therapy, liver frequent target of drug toxicity

A

Chemical (Toxic) Injury

32
Q

some chemicals injure cells directly by combining with critical molecular components

A

Direct acting chemicals

33
Q

most toxic chemicals are not biologically active in their native form but convert to
reactive toxic metabolites which then act on target molecules

A

Convert to toxic metabolites

34
Q

a single unpaired electron in an outer orbital making it

HIGHLY REACTIVE and UNSTABLE

A

Free radicals

35
Q

energy knocks electrons to outer orbitals

A

Radiation

36
Q

ex. normal respiration

A

Endogenous redox reactions

37
Q

iron (hemoglobin), copper; donate or accept electrons during intracellular reactions and catalyze
free radical formation

(ex. Fenton reaction)

A

Transition metals

38
Q

important chemical mediator (vasodilator)

A

Nitric oxide

39
Q

unsaturated fatty acids of membrane lipids attacked by O2-

A

Lipid peroxidation of membranes

40
Q

free radicals promote oxidation of AA side chains, formation of cross-linkages,
and polypeptide fragmentation;
disrupts conformation of structural proteins enhancing proteosomal degradation of
unfolded and misfolded proteins

A

Oxidative modifications of proteins

41
Q

free radicals cause single and double-stranded breaks in DNA, cross-linking of DNA strands and formation of adducts

(ex. cellular aging)

A

DNA fragmentation

42
Q

endogenous (self-produced), exogenous (supplements); block initiation of free radical formation and inactivate (scavenge) free radicals

A

Antioxidants

43
Q

inherently unstable and spontaneously decay

A

Spontaneous decay

44
Q

catalase, superoxide dismutases, glutathione peroxidase

A

Free radical scavenging enzymes

45
Q

materials from external environment taken up and degraded

A

Heterophagy

46
Q

degeneration of intracellular organelles

*Common phenomenon involved in removal of damaged or senescent organelles

A

Autophagy