6.4 - Lab - Muscle Pathologies Flashcards

1
Q

Describe muscle spindle morphology

A
  • Muscle fascicle composed of skeletal muscle fibers that are much smaller daimeter than normal and contain a nervous innervation
  • surrounded by a perimysium
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2
Q

what are some morphologies that occur in a myocardial infarction

A
  • waviness
  • necrosis
  • edema
  • hemorrhage
  • Pyknosis
  • Neutrophilic infiltrate
  • Macrophages
  • Granulation tissue
  • Dense Fibrous Scar tissue
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3
Q

Waviness is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A
  • most easily seen in longitudinal section
  • occurs because when an area of heart becomes non-FXNL - the first myocytes that connect to the non-working cell must work harder and thus pull with a greater-than-usual extent against the neighboring tissues they contact
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4
Q

Necrosis is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= a localized death of cell

  • localized is a key concept - compare damaged and healthy tissues in the same specimen to confirm
  • dark nuclei
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5
Q

Edema is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= cell swelling

  • intracellular water retention due to breakdown of the mechanisms that normally control osmotic pressure
  • can be very difficult to observe
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6
Q

Hemorrhage is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= release of blood into tissue - usually due to destruction of part of circulation
- would see normally “blood only” cells present in the CT of the muscle:
Basophils, RBCs, Monocytes

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7
Q

Pyknosis is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= controlled destruction of the nuclear chromatin
- when a cell senses its dying it attempts to put its chromatin a state that it will no longer be able to FXN
Morphology: tightly packed heterochromatin and hyperlobulation of the nucleus

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8
Q

Neutrophilic infiltrate is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= the accumulation of tissue neutrophils responding to the injury

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9
Q

Macrophages are a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= they are responsible for cleaning up dead tissue as much as possible
- areas of necrotic tissue that cannot be accessed by tissue macrophages will form cysts (which are rare in cardiac tissue)

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10
Q

Granulation tissue is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A

= a CT that is rich in vasculature that normally fills a wound
- this vasculature is important for brining the cells and providing the hydrated environment that will facilitate repair of the damaged area

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11
Q

Dense fibrous scar tissue is a common morphology following myocardial infarction, describe what it represents/how it happens, and any applicable morphologies you might see

A
  • represents the final resolution of a wound

- unlike the granular tissue that precedes this type of tissue –> scar tissue is largely avascular

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12
Q

What is a key difference between denervated skeletal muscle fiber compared with an innervated one

A
  • more nuclei present with the denervated tissue
  • also see a breakdown of the typical organization with less clearly delineated fascicles, and less linear structure formation thats typically seen with skeletal muscle
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