Lecture 7: Disturbances of Growth/Cellular Adaptation Flashcards
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Fractured ribs and blood in the thoracic cavity (hemothorax)
What does that mean?
- Fractured ribs and blood in the thoracic cavity (hemothorax)
What does that mean?
Rib fracture was likely due to trauma (hit by a car) resulting in bleeding into the thorax which likely caused death by not allowing the lungs to adequately inflate leading to hypoxia. If mild, blood in the thorax would be removed by phagocytosis of cellular component and lymphatic absorption of fluid components. Ribs would have healed by callus formation.
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Avulsion of nerves of the brachial plexus of the right foreleg.
What does that mean?
Avulsion of nerves of the brachial plexus of the right foreleg
Detachment of nerves of more than a few millimeters is usually irreversible. Some peripheral nerve regeneration does take place but within limits. The avulsion would have caused neurogenic atrophy to the affected muscles of the foreleg.
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Atrophy of muscles of the right foreleg
What does that mean?
- Atrophy of muscles of the right foreleg
This is due to loss of nervous supply. Neurogenic atrophy. It is potentially reversible if nerve supply can be restored. Paralysis of this limb would result.
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Unilateral agenesis of the right kidney and enlargement of left kidney
What does that mean?
- Unilateral agenesis of the right kidney and enlargement of left kidney
Congenital lack of development of the right kidney will cause compensatory hypertrophy of the opposite kidney
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Diffuse increase in thickness of endometrium with numerous small cysts
What does that mean?
- Diffuse increase in thickness of endometrium with numerous small cysts
This is cystic hyperplasia of the endometrium. It is due simplistically to increased response to progesterone. It is often accompanied by bacterial infection and inflammation. It is potentially reversible if hormone levels are restored to appropriate levels.
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Left ventricular myocardial hypertrophy
What does that mean?
- Left ventricular myocardial hypertrophy
This may be a protective or adaptative response to increased function (e.g. in athletic animals) and is reversible if there is prolonged inactivity. Hypertrophy can also occur inappropriately for a variety of causes, some idiopathic such as in cardiomyopathy.
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Serous atrophy of fat of perirenal and coronary fat
What does that mean?
- Serous atrophy of fat of perirenal and coronary fat
An indication of caloric deficiency and suggests you need to find the cause. It is reversible. There are the last fat stores to be absorbed when an animal is starving.
History: A 7 year old female coonhound had been lost during a hunting expedition. She was found dead by the side of the highway after being gone for 2 weeks.
Necropsy Findings:
- Thymic involution
What does that mean?
- Thymic involution
Normal for the age of the animal and can be reversed with growth hormone in some cases.
What are some ways that cells can accumulate an excess amount of “stuff”?
What are some ways that cells can accumulate an excess amount of “stuff”?
- Abnormal metabolism
- Defect in protein folding or transport
- Lack of an enzyme
- Ingestion of indigestible materals
Abnormal metabolism in a cell leads to…
Abnormal metabolism in a cell leads to Fatty liver.
This is most likely a systemic process, or multiple problems are going on in the animal, resulting in the altered metabolism of glycose, or lipid. That may result in the appearance of hepatic lipidosis, or glycogen degeneration of the liver.
A defect in protein folding or transport leads to…?
A defect in protein folding or transport leads to accumulation of abnormal proteins.
Example: Prion diseases. Still being worked out what’s going on there.
Basically, we know that they misfold and that’s it.
A lack of an enzyme in a cell leads to…?
A lack of an enzyme in a cell leads to lysosomal storage disease; the accumulation of endogenous materials.
There may be a lack of an enzyme, or a non-functional enzyme that doesn’t allow for the complete metabolism of the substrate. That will accumulate in the cell somewhere, often in a lysosome.
So, there’s lots of mucopolysaccharide diseases (Examples of some: Ceroid-lipofuscinosis, Krabbe Disease, Pompe Disease, Niemann-Pick), lots of lysosomal storage diseases out there. Helps to understand microbiology; you see what happens when one small organelle, one small enzyme isn’t working. Can have a disastrous effect on the cell, and thus the whole organ.
The ingestion of indigestible materials in a cell leads to…?
The ingestion of indigestible materials in a cell leads to the accumulation of exogenous materials.
Examples: Asbestos, Carbon, Silica
What is Fatty Degeneration (Fatty Change)?
Fatty Degeneration is the accumulation of a lipid within the cell, although triglycerides is a more appropriate term.
What are some ways that cells can accumulate an excess amount of “stuff”?
Abnormal metabolism - Fatty degeneration
Defect in protein folding or transport
Lack of an enzyme
Ingestion of indigestible materals
What organs are most typically affected by Fatty Degeneration?
What organs are most typically affected by Fatty Degeneration?
- Liver (Not only can the liver store lipid, it’s the organ that processes lipid. Central to lipid metabolism)
- Kidney
- Skeletal/cardiac muscle
What are some ways that cells can accumulate an excess amount of “stuff”?
Abnormal metabolism - Fatty degeneration
Defect in protein folding or transport
Lack of an enzyme
Ingestion of indigestible materals
What are the three standard routes of Fatty Degeneration of the Liver?
Three standard routes of Fatty Degeneration of the Liver:
- Excess delivery of fatty acids (FA) to liver
- Blockage of FA oxidation
- Interference with export of triglycerides