Tissues of the body L1.2 Flashcards

1
Q

Relative sizes of human cells

A
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2
Q

Limit of resolution

A

Min distance 2 objects can be distinguished as two seperate entities

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3
Q

Light microscopy vs TEM vs SEM

A

SEM - 3D SPECIMEN
light is source, electron is source

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4
Q

State the relationship between resolution and wavelength

A

Resolution is inversely proportional to wavelength

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5
Q

Why is the practical limit of resolution different to the theoretic limit of resolution ?

A

Imperfections in lens
Therefore, practical lower than theoretical

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6
Q

Limit of resolution: LM vs EM

A
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7
Q

Conversion between micrometres and nanometres

A

1 micrometer = 10000 nanometers

1μm = 1000 nm

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8
Q

Histology of intestinal epithelium

A

ELECTRON MICROSCOPE FOR SECOND IMAGE - BLACK + WHITE, uses electrons to form image not visible light

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9
Q

What are benign samples?

A

Normal

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10
Q

What are malignant samples?

A

Cancerous

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11
Q

What are Malignancies?

A

Key characteristic histological changes

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12
Q

Clinical case scenario: You have a patient with an unusual looking mole. The differential diagnosis includes
1. An atypical benign mole
2. A seborrheic wart
3. Malignant melanoma

What would you do in this situation ?

A

We cannot tell immediately what the diagnosis is

Can tell from looking at it

If not, biopsy required

Here, I have put histology, you do not need to know at the moment, but very good for context.

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13
Q

What is Breslow thickness?

A

Measure of depth of melanoma invasion fron granular later of epidermis

The more the worse

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14
Q

State the use of periodic acid schiff (PAS)

A

Stain - stains carbs + glycoproteins megenta

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15
Q

Describe the process of performing histology

A

(From Biopsy to Microscopy):

  1. Collection (collection of tissue sample, this is biopsy)
  2. Fixation (chemical preservation of tissue)
  3. Embedding + Processing (dehydration + solidification of tissue)
  4. Sectioning (cutting solidified tissue)
  5. Staining (colouring the tissue section)
  6. Viewing / Analysis - microscopic viewing of stained tissue
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16
Q

Define biopsy

A

Removal of tissue for microscopic examination

17
Q

State examples of biopsy procedures

A
  1. Smear (cervix, buccal cavity)
  2. Currertage (endometrial lining of uterus)
  3. Direct incision (skin, mouth, larynx)
  4. Needle, brain, liver, kidney, muscle
  5. Endoscopic, lung, intestine, bladder
  6. Transvascular - heart, liver
18
Q

What are artefacts?

A

Formed during tissue processing.
Can be:

  1. Tearing of section due to nick in microtome knife egde
  2. Air bubbles formed during tissue mounting proceadure
19
Q

Describe the role of haematoxylin (H&E STAINING)

A

A basic dye
Stains acidic components of cells purple / blue colour
(e.g. nucleolus (because it contains rRNA), chromatin (because it contains DNA)
(both of these components are basophilic)

20
Q

Describe the role of eosin ((H&E STAINING))

A

Acidic dye
Stains basic components cells shades of PINK (cytoplasmic proteins, extracellularr proteins eg collgen)
(these components are eosinophilic)

21
Q

Histology of Gastric Pit of Stomach with H&E Staining

A
22
Q

What is heterochromatin?

A

Tightly packed DNA

23
Q

What is euchromatin?

A

Unravelled DNA

24
Q

What are Nissl bodies?

A

Granular areas
Site of protein synthesis

25
Q

Where are nissl bodies most abundant?

A

Large nerve cells (eg. motor neurones)

26
Q

Decribe chromatolysis

A

(chroma: colour; lysis: splitting)

Disintergration / Dispersal of Nissl Bodies following motor neurone injury