Cell Injury, Degeneration And Death Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the outcomes of cellular injury to cell processes

A
  • disrupted aerobic respiration/ATP synthesis in mitochondria (oxidative stress)
  • damaged cell membrane causes disrupted ion concentration (increased Ca2+)
  • enzymes and ribosomes affected causing disruption to protein synthesis and architecture
  • damage to the nucleus causes damaged DNA and disrupted DNA maintenance
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2
Q

Describe cellular features of reversible cell injury

A
  • cloudy swelling: osmotic disturbance, loss of energy-dependent Na pump resulting in Na influx and build up of intracellular metabolites
  • cytoplasmic blebs, disrupted microvilli, swollen mitochondria
  • fatty change: accumulation of lipid vacuoles in cytoplasm caused by disruption of fatty acid metabolism
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3
Q

Describe features of necrosis and the process

A
  • uncontrolled cell death
  • injury from external stimuli which is always pathological
  • elicits an inflammatory response
  • cell contents leaks from breakdown of cell membrane (lysis) which can affect surrounding environment
  • histological swelling, vacuolation and disruption of membranes and its organelles (mitochondria, lysosomes and ER)
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4
Q

Describe the nuclear changes that can take place in necrosis

A
  • karyolysis: nuclear fading due to chromatin dissolution due to actions of DNAases and RNAases
  • pyknosis: nuclear shrinkage due to condensation of DNA into shrunken basophilic mass
  • karyorrhexis: nuclear fragmentation where pyknotic nuclei membrane has ruptured
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5
Q

Describe the morphological sub-types of necrosis with examples

A
  • coagulative (firm, tissue outline retained): can be haemorrhagic (blockage of venous drainage) or gangrenous (larger area)
  • colliquitive (tissue turns to liquid losing its structure) eg. Abscesses
  • caseous (combination of coagulative and colliquitive): cheese-like appearance eg. TB
  • fat: due to action of lipases on fatty tissue
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6
Q

Describe features of apoptosis

A
  • usually physiological eg. Deletion of cell populations in embryogenesis
  • can be pathological eg. Cytotoxic T-lymphocytes in viral infection
  • controlled cell death (requires energy and has distinct pathways involved)
  • cell contents do not leak due to cell membrane remaining intact
  • no inflammatory response but can be caused by immunological mechanisms
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7
Q

Describe the process of apoptosis

A
  • cell shrinks, condensing chromatin and packaging up nucleus
  • membranes all remain intact
  • cytoplasmic blebs form and break off forming apoptotic bodies
  • bodies are phagocytosed by macrophages
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8
Q

Describe amyloid formation

A
  • localised/systemic accumulation of protein aggregates outside of cells
  • formation of beta pleated sheets from abnormal folding of protein fibrils
  • 2 types: AL (immunoglobulin light chain - B cell neoplasms) and AA (serum amyloid associated protein - prolonged chronic inflammation)
  • viewed through electron microscopy
  • can be stained by Congo red: pink or apple green under polarised light
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9
Q

Describe the different types of pathological calcification

A
  • dystrophic: deposition in abnormal tissue with normal serum calcium levels
  • metastatic: deposition in normal living tissue with raised serum calcium (commonly connective tissue of blood vessels) - can impair function
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