This class was created by Brainscape user Molly Fowler. Visit their profile to learn more about the creator.

Decks in this class (34)

lecture 1
What are the main causes of cell ...,
What are causes of hypoxia,
What is ischaemia what is its effect
29  cards
lecture 2
What is ami,
What is vi,
What percentage of deaths are rel...
29  cards
lecture 3
Toxic injury: Alcohol-induced disease To use alcohol as an example of: variations involved in the outcome of chemically induced cellular injury - acute and chronic inflammation does the molecule interact directly with cellular components? do metabolic products of the molecule interact with cellular components? If so - how and with what outcome? How is the molecule or its product/s distributed throughout the body? What are the cellular and molecular effects?
40  cards
lecture 4
- that the properties of the host and the infectious agent determine the pathogenic consequences of infection - properties of H. pylori that contribute to disease - properties of the host that determine the outcome of H. pylori infection - pathogenesis of disease caused by infection of the gastrointestinal tract - treatment versus cure of disease
36  cards
lecture 5
To understand the relationship between the host defences (respiratory tract), infecting organisms (bacteria, viruses, fungi), and chemicals or trauma in lung injury. The general mechanisms causing acute and chronic inflammation and changes is cells and tissues due to the host response. 1. lung defences and loss of defences 2. pneumonia syndromes 3. inflammatory responses 4. acute inflammation in the lung - bacterial pneumonia - ALI - ARDS 5. chronic inflammation features
42  cards
lecture 6
- understand the purpose of the acute inflammatory response - know the key cellular-molecular interactions occurring during the different phases of acute inflammation - understand which key mediators and which pathways induce the acute inflammatory process
39  cards
lecture 7
- to gain an understanding of the process of healing at the cellular and molecular level - to understand the interrelationships of each stage of the healing process - to be able to apply this knowledge to gain insight into the pathology of chronic disease and tissue repair
36  cards
lecture 8
What is the extracellular matrix,
What are the functions of the ecm,
What are the three stages of afte...
37  cards
lecture 9
What is a stem cell,
Where has a lot of the knowledge ...,
At which stage in development do ...
39  cards
lecture 10
diseases of white blood cells and lymph nodes - to be able to give examples of major diseases covered in the lecture involving WBCs and lymph nodes - to gain an understanding of the signs, molecular basis and treatments of major diseases involving white blood cells and lymph nodes
40  cards
lecture 11
Immune System-induced diseases 1 Overview of the immune system - innate and adaptive immunity - cells and molecules involved When the immune system fails - primary immunodeficiency (PID) - e.g. CVID, SAD
39  cards
lecture 12
- immunological tolerance -- central tolerance -- peripheral tolerance - when tolerance fails -- autoimmune diseases -- allergy
34  cards
lecture 13
arthritis: a chronic disease of the joints 1. pathology and pathophysiology of - arthritis - osteoarthritis 2. structure and function of - cartilage - type II collagen - aggrecan 3. research in action - mechanism of cartilage destruction in OA
31  cards
lecture 14
Coeliac Disease - gluten-sensitive enteropathy
26  cards
lecture 15
Ulcerative colitis and crohn's disease
29  cards
lecture 16
Reactions to Injury of the Liver - 1
37  cards
lecture 17
liver disease 2
42  cards
lecture 18
Pathology of Renal Injury 1 - normal structure and (very basic) function - general comments about renal disease -- who gets it? is it common? -- how is it diagnosed? what does it lead to? - the common and important causes of renal injury – acute and chronic
23  cards
lecture 19
pathology in renal injury 2 - that 'chronic' generally means irreversible as well (but current research on the potential reversibility of fibrosis is challenging some of that) - the common causes of chronic renal failure in Australia today (and tomorrow) and their major pathological features - that CRF presents clinically when damage is extensive
21  cards
lecture 20
Asthma to understand: - the aetiology and pathology of asthma - where asthma fits in to COPD to consider: - some of the questions relating to the aetiology of asthma 1. normal airway structure 2. asthma - definition and types 3. asthma - pathogenesis: - atopic asthma - attempts to explain: data --> hypotheses - other types of asthma 4. Asthma: morphology 5. what you should know
50  cards
lecture 21
Fibrosing Diseases of the lung - what is the significance of fibrosis in lung disease? - what is IPF? - how is it diagnosed? - what are some of the explanations for aetiology and pathogenesis? - what are the main cellular players? - how can we do research on this disease? - how could it be treated or cured?
31  cards
lecture 22
Food Allergy Future therapies
55  cards
lecture 23
What is the cns,
What is the pns,
What are key features of the brain
35  cards
lecture 24
What cell types are going to reac...,
What happens during acute neurona...,
What happens during subacute and ...
51  cards
lecture 25
What are chronic diseases,
What are acute diseases,
What are potential causes of chro...
62  cards
lecture 26
What are the three kinds of genet...,
What are aneuploidies,
What are structural abnormalities...
32  cards
lecture 27
What is the definition of muscula...,
What is the most severe and most ...,
What are symptoms of dmd
25  cards
lecture 28
What are mitochondria,
What is our power requirement at ...,
What happens if they don t work
21  cards
lecture 29
What are mitochondrial oxidative ...,
How many subunits in the complexe...,
What does mitochondrial dna look ...
23  cards
lecture 30
Objectives and outline,
What is epigenetics,
Who are some current authorities ...
19  cards
lecture 31
What to understand,
What is the story,
What is clinical information
35  cards
lecture 32
Objectives,
How have 5 year relative survival...,
What pathways are almost always a...
43  cards
lecture 33
Learning objectives,
What is the history of cancer,
What organs are affected by cancer
24  cards
lecture 34
Objectives,
What is ageing senescence,
What is stem cells and tissue hom...
25  cards

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PATH30001

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