Definitions Flashcards

1
Q

Organisation

A

Reorganising a tissue, the growth of capillaries and fibroblasts to change it from one thing to another, typically filling a cavity

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2
Q

Resolution

A

When the initiating factor is removed and the tissue is undamaged or able to regenerate

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3
Q

Repair

A

When the initiating factor is still present, the tissue is damaged and unable to regenerate

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4
Q

Healing by 1st intention

A

There is no gap between skin edges, the skin heals straight away and there is no infection

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5
Q

Healing by 2nd intention

A

There is a loss of tissue, you get granulation before a big scar forms

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6
Q

Stasis

A

A period of inactivity

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7
Q

An embolus

A

A mass of material in the vascular system. It can be lodged in a vessel and block it

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8
Q

Ischaemia

A

Lack of blood and reduction in blood flow

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9
Q

Infarction

A

When the cells have died from reduced blood flow

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10
Q

End artery supply

A

When only one artery supplies an organ

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11
Q

Congenital disorder

A

Disorders present at birth, could be developed in utero or inherited

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12
Q

Inherited disorder

A

Disorders caused by inherited genetic abnormality

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13
Q

Acquired disorders

A

Disorders caused by non-genetic environmental factors, they can be congenital (feral alcohol syndrome)

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14
Q

Hypertrophy

A

Increase in size of tissue caused by an increase in size of constituent cells

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15
Q

Hyperplasia

A

Increase in size of tissue caused by an increase in number of constituent cells

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16
Q

Atrophy

A

Decrease in size of tissue caused by a decrease in number or size of constituent cells

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17
Q

Metaplasia

A

Change in differentiation of a cell from one fully-differentiated type to a different fully-differentiated type

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18
Q

Dysplasia

A

Imprecise term for the morphological changes seen in cells in the progression to becoming cancer

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19
Q

Dermal elastosis

A

Wrinkles

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20
Q

Carcinoma in situ

A

A neoplasm that hasn’t broken through the basement membrane

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21
Q

Invasive carcinoma

A

A neoplasm that has broken through the basement membrane

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22
Q

Micro-invasive carcinoma

A

A neoplasm that has partly broken through the basement membrane

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23
Q

Tumour

A

Any abnormal swelling, including a neoplasm, inflammation, hyper trophy and hyperplasia

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24
Q

Neoplasm

A

A lesion resulting from the autonomous abnormal growth of cells, which persists after the initiating stimulus is removed. A new growth.

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25
Screening
The process of identifying apparently healthy people who may be at an increased risk of a disease or condition
26
Sensitivity
How successful was the test at identifying all those with cancer in the group studied
27
Specificity
How well did the test identify all those without cancer in the group studied
28
Clonal selection hypothesis
The body that produces lots and lots of different types of B cells and it's just luck that they fit with the bacteria
29
Primary lymphoid tissue
Where lymphocytes reach maturity (bone marrow/thymus). Also known as central lymphoid tissue
30
Secondary lymphoid tissue
Where lymphocytes are activated by antigens (spleen/lymph nodes). Also know as peripheral lymphoid tissue
31
Antimicrobial peptide
Secreted PRR that binds to the outside of a pathogen to make it easier for phagocytes to find
32
Lectins and collectins
Carbohydrate-containing proteins (secreted PRR) that bind to microbe walls, activate complement and improve phagocytosis by making the cell more obvious
33
Toll-like receptor
Cell associated (on the cell surface) PRR that binds to lipopolysaccharides and signals an immune response
34
Mannose receptor
Cell-associated PRR present on macrophages that detect fungi
35
Dectin-1
Cell associated PRR receptor present on phagocytes that detects fungi, it is more widespread that mannose receptor because it is on more cells
36
Nod-like receptor
Intracellular PRR that detects intracellular microbial pathogens
37
Hypersensitivity reaction
When an altered state of immunological responsiveness causes an inappropriate or excessive immune response
38
Rig-like receptor
Intracellular PRR that detects intracellular double-stranded viral RNA and DNA
39
PRR
Pathogen recognition receptor
40
PAMP
Pathogen associated molecular patterns
41
Natural killer cells
A lymphocyte (not phagocytic) that recognises 'altered self', kills unless they recognise a self-protein
42
Defensins
Positively charged peptides made by neutrophils. Insert into bacterial membranes and cause apoptosis of bacteria
43
Interferons
Produced by virally infected cells and T helper 1 cells. Combat viruses by interfering with cell replication and activated other immune responses
44
Cytokine
Small molecules secreted during an immune response that helps to signal and activate responding cells
45
Chemokines
Small molecules secreted during an immune response, these often signal cells to migrate to areas of inflammation
46
Perforin
Aids in delivering contents of cytotoxic T cell granules into the cytoplasm of target cell
47
Granzymes
Granules in cytotoxic T cells that are serine proteases, which activate apoptosis once in the cytoplasm of target cell
48
Granulysin
Granule in cytotoxic T cell that has anti-microbial actions and can induce apoptosis of target cell
49
Treg cells
T cells which can negatively regulate immune responses. High Treg count has bad patient prognosis
50
Natural Treg cells
Derived in the thymus, have CD4CD25 receptors
51
Adaptive Treg cells
Conventional T cells that are induced to turn into Treg cells in the periphery
52
Human leukocyte antigen
A group of proteins encoded within the MHC that the body uses to identify 'self'
53
Cancer immunosurveillance
When the immune system can recognise and destroy nascent transformed cells all the time, normal control
54
Cancer immunoediting
Tumours tend to be genetically unstable, thus the immune system can kill and also induce changes in the tumour resulting in tumour escape and recurrence
55
Tumour escape
Immune responses change tumours such that the tumours will no longer be seen by the immune system
56
Tumour evasion
Tumours change the immune response by promoting immune suppressor cells
57
Immunotherapy
Learning how to harness the immune system to kill tumours
58
Adaptive immunotherapy
Inducing an immune response against the tumour that would discriminate between the tumour and normal cells
59
Active immunotherapy
Augmentation of host immunity to tumours with cytokines and co-stimulators or vaccinations
60
Passive immunotherapy
Adaptive cellular therapy (T cells) or anti-tumour antibodies
61
Allergy
Abnormal response to harmless foreign material
62
Atopy
A tendency to develop allergies
63
Tumour necrosis factor
Proinflammatory Cytokine with many functions, it causes death, mediates inflammation, maturation of dendritic cells, activation of T helper 1 cells
64
IL-6
An inflammatory cytokine, to function naked IL-6 requires gp130 and IL-6 receptor to be displayed on a cell
65
Pharmacokinetics
Describes how the body affects the drug
66
Pharmacodynamics
Describes how the drug affects the body
67
Potency
How well the drug works, described in EC50 (concentration that gives maximal response)
68
Full agonist
An agonist that gives maximal response
69
Partial agonist
An agonist that will never give you the full response. The Emax value describes the maximal response
70
Competitive agonist
Occurs when it can give maximal response is given by both the agonist and the antagonist
71
Non-competitive antagonist
When the maximal response of the agonist is reduced
72
Affinity
How well the ligand binds to the molecule, it is shown by agonists and antagonists.
73
Efficacy
How well the ligand activates a cell, it is just shown by agonists
74
Receptor reserve
A partial agonist has no receptor reserve, even with 100% occupancy maximal response is not seen. It varies from tissue to tissue
75
Signal transduction
Receptor is activated, other things (kinases etc.) get activated, lots of different steps leading to a response (transduction cascade)
76
Allosteric modulation
An allosteric ligand binds to the allosteric site on the agonist and affects the affinity in either a positive or negative way.
77
Drug tolerance
Reduction in drug effect over time. Needs continuous, repeated, high concentration drugs
78
Drug desensitisation
Receptors become uncoupled, internalised or degraded
79
Anti-pyretic
Reduce body temperature
80
Chimeric antibodies
Mostly human but Fab region is mouse antibody
81
Humanised antibodies
Almost all human but has 3 hypervariable mouse antibody sections
82
Compliance
The extent to which the patients behaviour coincides with medical or health advice (very professional based, not patient based)
83
Pain
Unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage
84
Invasins
Invade ileal and colonic epithelial cells causing local acute inflammatory response/tissue damage
85
Virulence determinants
A product or strategy that determines a bacteria virulence
86
CDT
Cytolethal distending toxin. Arrests cell cycle, target cells swell and lyse.
87
Urease
Hydrolyses urea to generate ammonia in order to buffer gastric acid
88
Protein A
A defensive protein, binds the Fc part of antibody so it can't bind to immunological cells
89
Haemagglutinin
A sticky protein, sticking RBCs together and also to the epithelium
90
Pyogenic
Puss-forming
91
Cytotoxin
Several proteins that form a ring structure on cell membrane, causing a hole to form
92
Streptokinase
An enzyme released by strep. pyogenes, it breaks down clots that would walk off infection
93
Pre-patent period
The interval between infection of worms and the appearance of eggs in the stool
94
Nematodes
Roundworms
95
Trematodes
Flatworms, flukes
96
Cestodes
Tapeworms
97
Infectivity
The ability to become established in host, can involve adherence and immune escape
98
Virulence
The ability to cause a disease once established in a host
99
Invasiveness
The capacity of a pathogen to penetrate mucosal surfaces to reach normally sterile sites
100
Microbiome
Describes the totality of micro-organisms, their genetic element and their environmental interactions in an environment
101
Metagenomomics
Uses the genetic approach to describe the diversity of the microorganisms in an environment
102
Adhesins
Help bacteria binds to mucosal surfaces
103
Biofilms
Bacteria can stick together on a surface by secreting an extracellular polymeric substance of protein, polysaccharides and DNA
104
Superantigens
Bacteria and viruses can produce antigens that bind outside the peptide groove of the T-cell receptor, stimulating large numbers of T cells
105
Prophylaxis
Preventative healthcare
106
Kernig's sign
As you straighten out the leg you pull the meninges and it's very painful if the patient has meningitis
107
Brudzinski's neck sign
When you lift the head and the patient reflexively lifts the knees to stop the meninges stretching if the patient has meningitis
108
Septicaemia
When an infection is found in the circulating blood this is septicaemia a.k.a. Blood poisoning
109
Antimicrobial
Agents produced by microorganisms that kill or inhibit the growth of other microbes in high dilution
110
ROTI
Related organ or tissue impairment
111
End of life care
If you are likely to die in the next year
112
Medical ethics
Critical evaluations of assumptions and arguments
113
Clinical truth
Clinical truth is contextual, personal and circumstantial. The cannot ignore objective truth but it mustn't be relegated to it either
114
Deontology
Based on the belief that we have a duty of care to others. People are never treated as a mean to an end, they are the end. Tell the whole truth ignoring consequences. What would happen if everyone did this?
115
Consequentialism
Consequences are the most important thing, the way you get there isn't important
116
Virtue ethics
A good person will act in a good way
117
Cardiac failure
Failure to transport blood out of the heart
118
Absolute risk
The risk of developing or dying from a condition over a specific period of time
119
Relative risk
A comparison between different risk levels
120
Attributable risk
Proportion of total risk that is due to a particular factor
121
Number needed to treat
The number of patients who need to take the treatment for one person to benefit from it
122
BME
An umbrella term used to describe people form minority social groups who share the common experience of discrimination of inequality because of their ethnic origin, language, culture or religion
123
Population attributable fraction (PAF)
The proportion of the incidence of a disease in the exposed and non-exposed population that is due to the exposure
124
Psychosocial factors
Factors influencing psychological responses to the social environment and pathophysiological changes
125
LVSD
Heart failure due to left ventricle systolic dysfunction
126
HFPEF
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (diastolic failure)
127
Syncope
Passing out
128
Spirometry
Fill lung as much as possible, blow the air out as fast and for as long as possible
129
Obstructive lung disease
Airways diseases, long time to exhale, FEV1/FVC
130
Restrictive lung disease
Interstitial or chest wall diseases. Lung volume is small so FEV1/FVC >80%
131
Transfer co-efficient
Measure of ability of oxygen to diffuse across the alveolar membrane
132
Occupational medicine
Branch of medicine concerned with the interaction of work and health
133
Epidemiology
The study of how often and why
134
Outbreaks
2 or more linked cases
135
Epidemic
More cases in the region/country
136
Pandemic
Epidemics that span international boundaries
137
Mast cell degranulation
Release of granule contents out of the cell. They release pre-formed mediators (histamine and enzymes) and newly synthesised mediators (cysteinyl leukotrienes and prostaglandin D2)
138
Epithelial degranulation
Losing epithelium (in asthma due to toxic proteins, major basic protein and eosinophil cationic protein)
139
Orthodromic impulses
Impulses in the correct direction
140
Chvostek's sign
Tapping over the facial nerve in the region of the parotid gland causes twitching of the ipsilateral facial muscles
141
Trousseau's sign
Carpopedal spasm induced by inflation of the sphygmomanometer cuff to a level about systolic blood pressure
142
Kussmaul's respiration
Deep rapid breathing
143
Tinnel's sign
Tapping on the carpal tunnel may reproduce the pain of carpal tunnel syndrome
144
There is progressive onset of limb weakness that reaches its nadir within 4 weeks. Reflexes are lost early in the illness. There are often sensory symptoms, parasthesiae. Disability ranges from mild to very severe, with involvement of the respiratory and facial muscles. Autonomic features, such as postural hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias, ileus and bladder atony are sometimes seen
Guillian-barre syndrome
145
Fatiguability of muscle on sustained or repeated activity that improves after rest. The ocular muscles are the first to be involved in about 65% of patients. The extraocular progression of weakness usually from top down leading to difficulty in talking, chewing, swallowing and respiratory difficulties
Myasthenia gravis
146
Erythema in the involved area, with poorly demarcated margins, swelling, warmth and tenderness. There may be a low-grade fever. In erysipelas the area is raised and erythematous and sharply demarcated from normal skin
Cellulitis
147
Muscle necrosis with sever pain and tissue swelling, gas production and sepsis with rapid progression to shock
Gas gangrene
148
Blackheads, whiteheads, inflammatory papules and pustules. Maybe hypertrophic or keloidal scarring and hyperpigmentation, which occurs predominantly in patients with darker complexions
Acne
149
Well-demarcated, salmon-pink silvery scaling lesions occur on the extensor surfaces of the limbs, particularly the elbows and knees. Scalp involvement is common
Chronic plaque psoriasis
150
Red glazed non-scaly plaques confined to flexures such as the groin, natal cleft and sub-mammary areas
Flexural psoriasis
151
Psoriasis occurs most commonly in children and young adults. An explosive eruption of very small circular or oval plaques appears over the trunk about 2 weeks after a strep throat infection
Guttate
152
Itchy, erythematous scaly patches, especially in the flexures such as in front of the elbows and ankles, behind the knees and around the neck. Scratching can produce excoriations and repeated rubbing produces skin thickening with exaggerated skin markings
Atopic eczema
153
An unusual pattern of rash with clear-cut demarcation or odd-shaped areas or erythema and scaling.
Exogenous eczema
154
A shiny pearly nodule which may go on to ulcerate.
Basal cell carcinoma
155
Ill-defined nodules that ulcerate and grow rapidly.
Squamous cell carcinoma
156
Keratoconjunctivitis sicca
Dry eyes
157
Xerostomia
Dry mouth
158
Hydronephrosis
Dilation of the renal pelvis or calyces
159
Obstructive uropathy
Functional or anatomic obstruction of urine flow at any level of the urinary tract
160
Supravesical obstruction
Above the level of the bladder
161
Infravesical obstruction
Below the level of the bladder
162
Bacteriuria
The presence of bacteria in the urine, can be symptomatic or asymptomatic
163
Pyruria
Presence of leukocytes in the urine, associated with infection.
164
Define epileptic seizure
Paroxysmal event in which changes of behaviours, sensation or cognitive processes are caused by excessive, hypersynchronous neuronal discharges in the brain
165
Define syncope
Paroxysmal event in which changes in behaviour, sensation and cognitive processes are caused by an insufficient blood or oxygen supply to the brain
166
Define a non-epileptic seizure
Paroxysmal event in which changes in behaviour, sensation and cognitive function caused by mental process associated with psychosocial distress occurs
167
Spondylolisthesis
Slippage of one vertebrae over the one below
168
Spondylosis
Degenerative disc disease
169
Myelopathy
Spinal cord disease
170
Radiculopathy
Spinal nerve root disease
171
What is autoinflammatory?
Describes a group of conditions with heritable systemic inflammation syndromes without circulating autoantibodies
172
What is base excess?
The amount of acid or base required to return 1 litre of blood to 'normal' mean standard bicarbonate of 22.9mEq/L
173
Puberty
The process of physical changes through which a child's body matured into an adult body capable of sexual reproduction to enable fertilisation
174
Adrenarche
Adrenal maturation with increased adrenal androgens
175
Gonadarche
Gonadal maturation secondary to increased GnRH activity
176
Pubarche
The development of pubic hair
177
Thelarche
The development of breasts
178
Precocious puberty
Early puberty, girls before 8, boys before 9
179
Delayed puberty
Girls after 13, boys after 14