MOD Flashcards
(227 cards)
Define aplasia
Complete failure of a specific tissue or organ to develop
Define atheroma
The accumulation of intracellular and extracellular lipid in the intima and media of large and medium sized arteries
Define atherosclerosis
The thickening and hardening of arterial walls as a consequence of atheroma
Define atrophy
Shrinkage of a tissue or organ due to an acquired decrease in size and/or number of cells
Define dysplasia
Abnormal maturation of cells within a tissue
Define hyperplasia
Increase in tissue or organ size due to increased cell numbers.
Define hypoplasia
Incomplete development of a tissue or organ
Define metaplasia
Reversible change of one DIFFERENTIATED cell type to another.
Define necrosis
Changes after cell death in living tissue
Describe the appearance of a venous thrombi?
Deep red, soft, gelatinous and a high cell count
Describe the basic structure of the collagen molecule
-Glycine every third position -3 alpha chains -Left handed triple helix -Mostly hydroxyproline and proline residues in other positions
Describe the differences in the appearance of benign and malignant tumour to the naked eye.
-Benign - grow in a confined local area and so have a pushing outer margin -Malignant - irregular outer margin and shape and may show areas of necrosis and ulceration
Describe the features of coagulative necrosis
-Histologically the structure is preserved creating “ghost outlines” -After this the tissue goes through acute inflammation and there is a mass immigration of phagocytes and neutrophil polymorphs -Increased eosinophilia of cytoplasm
Describe the features of liquefactive necrosis
-Liquefaction of tissues -Massive neutrophil immigration
Describe the macroscopic appearance of atheroma
-Fatty streak (yellow bumpy lipid deposits at the intima) -Simple plaque (irregular outline, raised white/yellow colour) -Complicated plaque (thrombosis, haemorrhage, calcification or aneurysm)
Describe the microscopic appearance of atheroma
-Early changes - proliferation of smooth muscle cells, lots of foam cells and extracellular lipids -Later changes - fibrosis, necrosis, inflammatory cells and cholesterol clefts
Describe the normal structure of an artery from inside to outside.
-Endothelium -Sub-endothelial connective tissue -Internal elastic lamina -Muscular media -External elastic lamina -Adventitia
Describe the process of angiogenesis in wound healing.
1) Endothelial proteolysis of basement membrane 2) Migration of endothelial cell via chemotaxis 3) VEGF causes endothelial proliferation 4) Endothelial maturation and tubular remodelling 5) Recruitment of periendothelial cells - become the pericytes and smooth muscle tissue of the blood vessel, they are important in maintaining the stability of the blood vessels.
Describe the systemic effects of alcohol abuse.
- Liver - alcoholic cirrhosis and acute hepatitis
- Nervous system - thiamine deficiency produces degeneration of nerve cells
- CV system - cardiac muscle degeneration causing cardiomyopathy, hypertension and arrythmias
- GI system - gastritis/pancreatitis
- Skeletal muscle - Rhabdomyolysis and chronic myopathy
For benign neoplasms which effects of the growth are the most relevant?
-Local effects -Hormonal effects
Give a physiological and pathological example of hyperplasia
-Physiological causes - proliferative endometrium, bone marrow at altitude -Pathological Causes - thyroid goitre
Give a physiological and pathological example of hypertrophy
-Physiological causes - skeletal muscle and pregnant uterus (hypertrophy + hyperplasia) -Pathological causes - ventricular cardiac muscle hypertrophy, bladder smooth muscle hypertrophy
Give an example of one physiological and one pathological role of apoptosis.
-Physiological - Web space loss in embryogenesis -Pathological - Graft versus host disease
Give five functions of the extracellular matrix.
-Supports and anchors cells -Separates tissue compartments e.g. basement membrane -Sequesters growth factors -Allows communication between cells -Facilitates cell migration