Cell Kinetics Flashcards
1
Q
Tissue and organ adaptation to injury
A
- Hyperplasia
- Metaplasia
- Dysplasia
- Desmoplasia
2
Q
Hyperplasia
A
- Tissue or organ adaptation to injury
- Increase in the number of cells due to activation of cell cycle kinetics; e.g. estrogen-induced endometrial hyperplasia; leukocyte response to cytokines released during infection
3
Q
Metaplasia
A
- Tissue and organ adaptation to injury
- substitution of epithelium type; eg. Barret’s esophagus- intestinal epithelium replaces squamous epithelium in GERD
4
Q
Dysplasia
A
- Tissue and organ adaptation to injury
- Potentially reversible mild to moderate upregulation and distortion of cell signaling w/ nuclear enlargement and cell proliferation
- Describes developmental defects: fibrous dysplasia of bone, renal dysplasia
- Also describes morphologic effects of abnormal cytogenetics w/ nuclear enlargement, increased nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio
- May serve as intraepithelial precursor lesion in the later development of malignant neoplasia
5
Q
Desmoplasia
A
- Tissue and organ adaptation to injury
- TGF activation adjacent to neoplasm w/ collagen formation (“hardness” of tumors)
6
Q
Benign Neoplasia
A
- New growth w/ focal and confined, slow, proliferation of uniform, mature cells, usually diploid w/ minimal threat to patient, who may be unaware of lesion
7
Q
Malignant Neoplasia
A
- New growth w/ rapid and disturbed proliferation of immature pleomorphic cells, usually aneuploid which invade across tissue boundaries, metastasize and usually cause morbidity (significant signs and symptoms of disease) and sometimes mortality
8
Q
Hamartoma
A
- Neoplasm-like process
- Developmental proliferation of cells native to organ e.g., hemangioma, anywhere; chondroma in lung, angiomyolipoma of kidney
9
Q
Choristoma
A
- Neoplasm-like process
- Developmental flaw; cell proliferation at ectopic sites e.g. pancreatic tissue in stomach
10
Q
Teratoma
A
- Neoplasm-like process
- Germ cell (ovary, testicle) aberration- parthenogenesis- with development of ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm in varying stages of maturation
11
Q
Ploidy vs. Cancer cell doubling time
A
- The faster the doubling time the more aneuploid you’re going to find; meaning that if the cell is turning over rapidly theres going to be a lot of mistakes in the DNA; some of the chromosomes aren’t seperating
12
Q
Goals of Cancer Treatment
A
- Inhibit cell proliferation
- Induce apoptosis
- Promote terminal differentiation of cells
13
Q
Colchicine
A
- Delays development of HCC (hepatocellular carcinoma) in patients w/ hepatitis-related cirrhosis
- Anti-inflammatory (gout, psoriasis, scleroderma, etc.) agent interacts w/ inflammatory cell microtubules interfering w/ mitosis while inhibiting leukocyte adherence, motility and chemotaxis
- 9% of treated patients developed hepatocellular carcinoma vs 29% untreated group
- Time to HCC: 222 months tx group; 150 months untx group
14
Q
Taxol (Paclitaxel)
A
- Beneficial effect on ovarian, breast and lung carcinomas through inhibition of cell proliferation
15
Q
IL-15 treatment in cancer
A
- Effective for renal cell carcinoma; directs the epithelial differentiation of renal carcinoma stem cells