Necrosis Flashcards
What are the 3 types of nuclear changes during necrosis?
- karyolysis (nuclear membrane dissolves); nucleus becomes dark basophilic
- karypiknosis (nucleus condenses/clumps up)
- karyorrhexis (nucleus fragments and spreads out into cytoplasm)
How does infarction in different organs appear macroscopically?
Heart - yellow/white zone with red rim Lungs - Brain - white/grey?? Kidneys - ? Spleen - ?
What types of necrosis are there?
Coagulative Colliquative/liquefactive Caseous Gangrene Fibrinoid * Infarction * Fat necrosis *
What is the difference between thrombosis and embolism?
What is the pathogenesis of infarction?
- obstruction of blood vessel (artery, arteriole, venule, vein)
- Lack of blood supply = hypoxia
- Reversible cell injury (hydropic changes - build up of water in organelles = swelling)
- Irreversible cell injury (necrosis)
How can histopathologists classify infarcts?
Infarcts can be classified further by the following parameters:
- Age (is it old? is it new?)
- Colour (is it white/pale? red/hemorrhagic)
- Infection (is the infarct infected (septic)? Is the infarct not infected (bland)
What is Waxy/Zenker’s necrosis?
- Necrosis of skeletal muscles, commonly in abdominal wall and internal thigh due to infectious diseases ie. typhoid fever.
- type of coagulative necrosis
- Necrosis sites resemble a wax candle
What is the difference between coagulative and colliquative necrosis?
- Coagulative (dry) necrosis does not involve lytic enzymes vs colliquative (wet) necrosis
What is hematoidin?
- Orange pigment
- does not contain Fe
- present due to anaerobic destruction of RBCs + Hb
- doesn’t stay in cells like hemosiderin
What are the types of jaundice you know?
- hemolytic jaundice (destruction of RBCs)= deposition of hemosiderin granules; RBCs destruction may be caused by sickle cell anemia, infection, congenital blood defect. The liver is overwhelmed with so much bilirubin, that it can’t break it down = build up of unconjugated bilirubin
- obstructive jaundice/post-hepatic jaundice - liver has successfully conjugated bilirubin but it can;t get into intestine. Since this conjugated bilirubin is water soluble it enters kidenys and comes out in urine instead = green urine
- intrahepatic jaundice - liver cells can’t combine with bilirubin to remove it + it can’t leave liver and go to intestine; unconjugated and conjugated bilirubin increase in system
In hemolytic jaundice, there is an accumulation of unconjugated bilirubin. Unconjugated bilirubin is less soluble than conjugated bilirubin - what is the consequence of this?
- the unconjugated bilirubin supersaturates the plasma and may crystallise in the tissues and brain causing necrosis = kernicterus (bilirubin encephalopathy)