39 - Cell Adaption and Stress Flashcards
1
Q
do u know
A
review
2
Q
What are the body’s innate responses to stresses?
A
3
Q
What is hypertrophy?
A
- Increase in the size (but not number) of cells
- Usually in cells incapable of division
- Physiologic versus pathologic forms
- Increased functional demand, stimulation by hormones or growth factors
Can be due to:
* Physiologic
- Hormonal stimulation (pregnancy, puberty)
* Pathologic
- Increased workload (valve dysfunction,
hypertension)
* Increased protein synthesis, upregulation of
embryonic genes
4
Q
What is hyperplasia?
A
- Increase in number (and size) of cells
- Physiologic versus pathologic forms
- Coexistence with hypertrophy
can be due to:
* Physiologic
– Hormonal stimulation (pregnancy, puberty)
* Compensatory (e.g. regeneration)
* Pathologic
- Hormonal stimulation
- Infection/Inflammation
- Chronic irritation
5
Q
What is atrophy?
A
- Decrease in the number or size of cells
results in: - Decreased metabolism
- Decreased protein synthesis
- Increased protein degradation
- Increased autophagy
- Mechanisms
- Decreased workload (disuse)
- Denervation
-Decreased blood supply (chronic) - Inadequate nutrition
- Hormonal withdrawal
- Chronic inflammation
- Localized pressure
6
Q
What is metaplasia?
A
- Replacement of one differentiated cell type by
another differentiated cell type - Toxic environment
- Loss of specialized function
- Epithelial cells (most common)
7
Q
What is dysplasia?
A
- Disordered cell growth and maturation
- May evolve from hyperplasia or metaplasia
- Risk for neoplastic transformation
8
Q
What are intracellular accumulations? How are they formed?
A
- Types of materials build up in cells:
- Lipids
- Proteins
- Carbohydrates
- Pigments
- Exogenous material
- Mechanisms
- “Normal” aging (chronic lipid peroxidation)
- Altered metabolism (increased production
or decreased breakdown) - Production of an abnormal molecule
- Impaired enzyme function
- Exogenous material
9
Q
What is abnormal (pathologic) calcification?
A
- Dystrophic – previously injured or dead tissue,
unrelated to serum calcium - Metastatic – previously normal tissue, associated with
hypercalcemia
looks like black spots i think