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Biology of Disease Exam 1
Things to memorize
30
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Graduate
02/24/2011

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Cards

Term

 

 

 

 

 

Morphologic Diagnosis

Definition

3D ATP

 

  • Degree, duration, distribution
  • Adjective (usually for inflammation)
  • Tissue*
  • Process*

 

* MOST IMPORTANT

Term

 

 

 

 

Process

Definition

 

  • Inflammatory (-itis)
  • Degenerative (-osis, -opathy)
  • Disorders of growth (-trophy, -plasia, -oma)
  • other: genetic, metabolic, etc...
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Adjective

Definition
  • Hemorrhagic, necro-hemorrhagic
  • Suppurative or purulent (pus)
  • Fibrinous (exudative change of fibrous tissue), Fibrinopurulent
  • Sclerosing (scarring)
  • Caseous (cottage cheese)
  • granulomatous (granulomas)
  • necrotizing, fibrinonecrotic
  • Exudative (serous vs. catarrhal)
  • Proliferative
  • Emphysematous (gas bubbles in it
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Other terms for exudate

Definition

 

  • Mucopurulent
  • Fibrinopurulent
  • Non-suppurative
  • pyo-, eosinophilic-, or lympho-granulomatous
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Degree

Definition


  • Minimal
  • Mild: mild exudative changes, little discernable tissue destruction
  • Moderate: prominent vascular & cellular exudative changes, moderate tissue destruction
  • Marked
  • Severe: substantial destruction

(very subjective)

Term

 

 

 

 

 

Duration

Definition
  • Peracute: very rapid onset, lasts hours, exudative, few cells
  • Acute: onset in few hours, can last days, with cell infiltration, primarily neutrophils
  • Subacute: onset in days, can last into weeks. Exudative changes diminished. Cell infiltrate changes from neutrophilic to lymphoid cells and macrophages
  • Chronic: Onset days to weeks following injury, can last years. mononuclear intration, tissue regeneration, neovascularization and fibrosis
  • Chronic-active: recurrent bouts of active inflammation superimposed on chronic inflammation
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Etiologic Diagnosis

Definition

 

 

 

 

  • A diagnosis denoting cause with two elements: cause and tissue process (e.g. bacterial pneumonia)
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Histopathology

Definition

 

 

 

 

 

  • Tissue fixation and sectioning with H&E stain
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Histochemistry

Definition

 

  • trichrome: collagen ("fibrosis")
  • silver stains: GMS and other stain types of reticular connective tissue and some microorganisms
  • PAS: carbohydrates (includes many microbes)
  • Gram, Acid Fast, etc... (microbes)
  • etc...
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Immunohistochemistry

Definition

 

 

 

 

 

Use of an Ab to identify a specific epitope with colorimetric identification of bound Ab.

Term

 

 

 

 

 

Cellular Response and Consequences of Injury

Definition

 

  • Depends on type of cell and its physiologic state, and type, duration, and severity of injury
  • Injury at one site leadds to injury at another
  • Morphologic changes occur only after some critical system is damaged
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Causes of Cell Injury

Definition
  • Oxygen Deprivation:
    • Hypoxia/Ischemia/Infarction
  • Physical:
    • Trauma, heat, cold, ionizing radiation
  • Chemical:
    • Bacterial, plant & synthetic toxins. oxidative injury
  • Infectious
  • Immune Reactions
  • Genetic
  • Nutritional
Term

 

 

 

 

 

General Mechanisms of Cell Injury

Definition

 

  • ATP Depletion
  • Calcium
  • Membrane Permeability
  • Mitochondrial Damage
  • Oxygen & Reactive oxygen spp
Term

 

 

 

 

 

ATP Depletion

Definition

 

Results in inhibition of:

  • Membrane transport
  • Protein Synthesis
  • Lipogenesis
  • Phospholipid turnover
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Increased cytoplasmic [Ca++]

Definition

 

Results from cell injury, and activates:

  • Phospholipases
  • Proteases
  • ATPases
  • Endonucleases
Term

 

 

 

 

Membrane Permeability

Definition

Caused by:

  • Bacterial toxins, viral proteins
  • Complement, perforins
  • Chemical and physical agents

Results in:

  • ATP depletion
  • Ca++ activated phospholipases
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Mitochondrial damage

Definition

Caused by:

  • Increased calcium
  • Oxidative stress
  • Phospholipid breakdown and breakdown products

Results in:

  • Mitochondrial permeability transition, cytochrome C leakage, loss of membrane potential
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Oxygen and Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS)

Definition

Derived from:

  • normal cellular metabolism
  • inflammatory cells

Damages:

  • Membranes
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic acids
Term

 

 

 

 

Reversible injury due to hypoxia

Definition
  • ATP depletion: increase in inorganic phosphate within cell signals increase in anaerobic glycolysis, glycogen stores are depleted and pH drops
  • Lack of ATP shuts down Na-K ATPase in cell membrane: Concentration gradients diminished, so nothing compensates for protein concentration gradient, and cell begins to accumulate water via osmotic mechanisms
  • Ca-ATPases also begin shutting down; increased intracellular Ca++ slightly. Incrased osmolarity brings water in, + now enters organelles. Dilation of ER, and ribosomes detach
  • Water moves into mitochondria --> minor swelling and minimal loss of granularity
  • Cytoskeleton disperses, surface blebs and myelin figures (injured membrane) appear

 

Term

 

 

 

 

 

Cell Swelling

Definition

Names:

  • Hydropic change, Hydropic degeneration
  • Cloudy Swelling
  • Vacuolar degeneration

Microscopic Appearance: Enlarged, pale staining "glassy" or "cloudy" cytoplasm

 

Ultrastructure: Dilated organelles and cytocavitary network, esp ER

Term

 

 

 

 

 

Transition to Irreversible Injury

Definition

 

 

Same changes continue which result in 2 main morphologic events:

  • Degranulation of RER (loss of ribosomes)
  • Moderate to severe mitochondrial swelling "high amplitude swelling"

 

Term

 

 

 

 

 

Irreversible Ischemic Injury

Definition
  • Severe mitochondrial swelling
  • Massive calcium influx
  • Increased membrane permeability
  • Lysosomes leak (activation of acid hydrolases)
  • Cellular enzymes leak into extracellular space (useful for diagnosis)
  • Pyknosis (shrunken nucleus due to acid)
  • Ca++ deposits begin to form in mitochondria as the cells can't deal with all the Ca++ from ER and extracellular space
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Final Morphology due to Ischemic injury

Definition

 

  • Pyknosis or karyorrhexis (clumped nuclear debris throughout nucleus) or karyolysis (nucleus fades away as endonucleases activated by Ca++)
  • Mitochondrial mineralization and dissolution
  • Dissolution of ER
  • Dissolution of plasma membrane
  • Hyperacidophilia: proteins coagulate/denature, and open up binding site for eosin
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury

Definition
  • Continued cell death following reperfusion
  • reperfusion in low Ca++ environ or in the presence of Ca++ channel blockers results in ultrastructural changes indicative of "irreversible" cell death, but these cells can recover
  • Immediately following increase in intracellular Ca++, numerous ATPases, proteases, and phospholipases activated
  • ROS from parenchymal and infiltrating inflammatory cells
  • ROS exacerbate mitochondrial permeability transition
  • Expression of cytokines and adhesins promote inflammatory cell influx
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Fatty Change

Definition
  • Second most common type of cell injury
  • Occurs in cells which handle large amts of lipids
  • Detected as excess accumulation of intracellular lipid; "deposition injury"
  • Degree of accumulation determines whether or not cell injury occurs
  • Gross appearance: organ enlarged, friable, greasy with rounded margins with yellow orange in color. floats in formaldehyde
  • Microscopic appearance: vacuoles few and large or many and small. well demarcated, round, appear empty because lipids removed in processing. visualized with oil red-O and sudan black in frozen sections
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Cell Death

Definition

 

 

 

  • Necrosis: passive, degradative, from fatal cell injury
  • Apoptosis, pyroptosis, pyronecrosis, necroptosis, autophagy & oncosis: programmed cell death.
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Cell death & Inflammation

Definition

 

  • Necrosis, oncosis, pyroptosis, and pyronecrosis all produce inflammation
  • Apoptosis, autophagy don't
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Morphology of Apoptosis

Definition

 

  • pyknosis and karyorrhexis without karyolysis
  • increased cytoplasmic eosinophilia
  • formation of apoptotic bodies: cell fragments bounded by plasma membrane containing normal organelles and condensed nuclear fragments
Term

 

 

 

 

 

Biochemical features of apoptosis

Definition
  • Enzyme cascade resulting in protein cleavage by activated caspases
  • Protein crosslinking
  • DNA cleavage by endonucleases
  • Phagocytic recognition; phosphatidylserine and thrombospondin
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