Pathoma: Cell Injury Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three causes of hypoxia (defined as the decreased O2 delivery to tissues)?

A

Ischemia (decreased blood flow to organ), hypoxemia (low paO2),

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2
Q

Describe the types of ischemia.

A

Arterial blockage (narrowing of the arteries) and venous blockage (blocking the flow of fresh blood to organ)

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3
Q

The difference between FiO2, PAO2, PaO2, and SaO2 is _______.

A

FiO2 = partial pressure of O2 in air; PAO2 = pp of O2 in alveolae; PaO2 = pp of O2 in arteries; and SaO2 = percent saturation of hemoglobin

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4
Q

Anytime the PACO2 increases, the PAO2 ______.

A

decreases

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5
Q

Define hypoxemia.

A

(n) a decrease in the partial pressure of oxygen in the blood

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6
Q

Why are those with carbon monoxide poisoning red?

A

The CO does not dissociate from hemoglobin, thus the hemoglobin remains red throughout the capillaries.

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7
Q

What is one of the first signs of carbon monoxide poisoning?

A

Headache!

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8
Q

List some oxidant stresses that might induce methemoglobinemia.

A

Sulfa and nitrate drugs

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9
Q

Classic signs of methemoglobinemia are _______.

A

cyanosis and chocolate-colored blood

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10
Q

Why does hypoxia injure cells?

A

Hypoxia leads to decreased ATP synthesis, which itself leads to (1) deficient sodium-potassium pump (water intake, cell swelling); (2) deficient calcium pumps (resulting in increased intracellular calcium, which can activate caspases); and (3) reliance on anerobic metabolism, which creates lactic acid

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11
Q

What are consequence of cell swelling?

A

Loss of microvilli (due to cell expansion), membrane blebbing (due to membrane swelling off of the cytoskeleton), and RER ribosomes popping off (because the ER also expands with cell swelling)

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12
Q

The hallmark of irreversible cell injury is ________.

A

membrane damage (this is why so many clinical tests are for intracellular enzymes; if troponin is in the peripheral blood, for example, then it means cardiomyocytes have ruptured)

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