Term
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Definition
Replacement of injured or dead tissue
Body must do this to survive |
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Term
What is the difference between regeneration and repair |
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Definition
Both are healing processes.
Regeneration: Uninjured parenchymal (functional) cells may replicate to replace injured cells if stroma (connective tissue and blood vessels) is not injured. Function is restored, no scarring, can occur if parenchymal cells can replicate.
Repair: When lost parenchymal cells cannot replicate and be replaced. Replacement by fibrous connective tissue called repair by fibrosis. Scar formation occurs with possible impairment of tissue function. |
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Term
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Definition
continously dividing
examples: bone marrow, epithelia of skin, mucosa of GI tract
these can usually replace lost cells
healing by regeneration can usually occur |
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Term
stable/quescient/facultative cells |
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Definition
replicate at slow rate
examples: most glands, liver, smooth muscle, osteoblasts, vascular endothelial cells
these can usually replace lost cells
healing by regeneration can usually occur |
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Term
permanent/nondividing cells |
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Definition
do not divide after birth
examples: neurons, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle
healing by regeneration cannot occur
healing is by repair and fibrosis |
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Term
Describe healing by repair and fibrosis |
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Definition
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tissue damage, bleeding, clot formation
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around clot, formation of exudate, which becomes organized, new blood vessels form, resulting in granulation tissue
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phagocytes eliminate clot
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fibroblasts in granulation tissue make procollagen which is organized into collagen fiber bundles outside of cell
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ECM strengthens collagen
removal of clot and replacemtn by fibrous scar tissue is called reorganization
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Term
Describe the process of revascularization/angiogenesis |
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Definition
Regeneration of blood supply to injured area, whether healing by regeneration or by repair.
endothelial cells from undamaged vessels form buds that elongate.-may contact parent vessel to form new channel
-may contact bud from another parent to form new channel
-may become isolated and degenerate.
new blood vessels are slowly modified into arterioles, venules, capillaries
healing region needs more blood vessels, after healing reabsorption of blood vessels and paler appearance of tissue
Innervation by vasomotor neurons
Lymphatic vessels similarly regenerate |
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Term
Describe the process of surface restoration for a skin or organ wound |
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Definition
zone of active mitosis of epithelial cells develops at edge of wound
these cells migrate across surface of granulation tissue or in case of minor skin abrasion, across surface of intact dermis
these cells secrete new basement membrane
after closing of gap, new cells move vertically to surface to restore normal arrangement |
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Term
Describe healing of a wound by primary intention |
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Definition
This occurs where wound is clean and edges are close together (e.g. surgical incision).
Healing by repair and fibrosis, angiogenesis and restoration occurs.
Additionally, granulation tissue appears in 2-3 days, fibroblasts in granulation tissue make procollagen organized into collagen fiber bundles outside of cell, ECM strengthens collagen, and there is realignment of collagen fibers after about 6th day, increasing strength.
Surface restoration is occurring. If a skin wound: keratinocytes of epidermis produce new keratin, which loosens scab, melanocytes of epidermis do not regenerate, scar area is pale
By 2nd week, changes in granulation tissue, fewer phagocytes, reabsorpion of blood vessels
Continued remodeling of collagen for about 3 months to maximal strength of scar, about 70-80% of normal. |
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Term
How does healing of wound by secondary intention differ from healing by primary intention? |
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Definition
Healing by secondary intention occurs with larger wounds with edges not close together or infection presence of foreign bodies in wound.
examples: Lage, dirty, or infected skin wounds, peptic ulcer in GI tract
Healing is similar to primary intention but healing is slower, much more inflammation and formation of granulation tissue, many more fibroblasts are involved to close defect.
Since wounds must contract, myofibroblasts attach to edges of wound and contract, begins 2-3 days after injury
Shape of final scar is different than original wound due to this contraction. Circular wound does not fully close. |
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Term
Describe healing of a bone fracture |
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Definition
Bone is a connective tissue, therefore, prolonged healing due to limited blood supply
Medical intervention for reduction and immobilization of fracture site.
1st stage of healing: 4-5 days after fracture
-removal of blood and debris between bone ends
-formation of granulation tissue, blood vessels, activation and migration of osteoblasts to fracture area
2nd stage of healing: occurs over next 3 weeks
-osteoblasts make collagen and cartilage, stabilizes fracture, tissue is called osteoid/soft callus
-osteoid is ossified by osteoblasts to form hard callus (healing area is now enlarged but structurally weak)
3rd stage of healing: extends over months - years
-osteoblasts and osteoclasts remodel hard callus to restore normal bone structure |
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Term
What type of tissue are cartilage and adipose tissue and how does healing occur in these tissues? |
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Definition
Connective tissue and healing is prolonged due to limited blood supply.
cartilage: healing by fibrous repair, fibroblasts of perichondrium produces scar tissue, some loss of function
adipose tissue: cells cannot divide, but precursor cells produce new adipose cells, fibrosis does not occur |
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Term
Why do epithelial tissue quickly heal by regeneration |
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Definition
Mostly made up of labile cells
examples: epithelia of epidermis, mucous membranes, respiratory surfaces, other body surfaces
Regarding respiratory/lung surfaces: epithelia can regenerate with superficial injury but fibrosis and scarring if basement membrane and ECM are damaged |
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Term
How do most grandular tissues, such as liver and kidney heal with minor injury, more extensive injury and with even more sever, sustained injury? |
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Definition
Most glands are made up of quiescent/stable cells, therefore can readily regenerate with minor injury.
More extensive injury: regeneration with some loss of normal structure and function
Severe, sustained injury:
-loss of parenchymal, stroma, ECM
-contracted scar tissue
-loss of function with irregular surface depressions
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Term
Which grandular tissue cannot heal by regeneration? |
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Definition
- Parathyroid
- Adrenal Medulla
- Posterior pituitary
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Term
How does healing occur in the brain? |
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Definition
No mitosis is possible in nervous tissue.
Replacement of damaged neurons by neuroglia called gliosis, which can block axon regeneration |
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Term
How does regeneration of peripheral nerves occur? |
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Definition
In peripheral nervous system: regeneration of cut nerve process (axon/dendrite) can occur if supporting connective tissue and Schwann cells are intact
After cut: degeneration of process and myelin sheath distal to cut, injured Schwann cells are replaced and follow original path
New sprout from process finds canal formed by Schwann cells and connective tissue, grows along this path to reinnervate muscle or other structure |
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Term
What is a traumatic neuroma |
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Definition
If larger nerve is severed and if ends remain seperated, THEN regenerating processes may grow into new scar tissue to form traumatic neuroma. |
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Term
How does healing occur in the 3 types of muscle tissue? |
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Definition
Cardiac and skeletal muscle cells: Cannot regenerate, fibrous repair with injury, possible compensation with hypertrophy
Smooth muscle cells: Some regeneration is possible, sometimes healing by fibrous repair |
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Term
List factors that may delay healing and repair |
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Definition
- large size of wound
- tension
- infection
- poor blood flow
- advanced age
- poor nutrition
- movement
- diabetes
- corticosteroid use
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Term
List 5 complications of wound healing |
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Definition
deficient scar formation: opening of healing wound
excess scar formation: exuberant granulation, keloids
contractures:large scars can interfere with movement
adhesions: union of 2 membranes that normally move freely against each other |
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Term
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Definition
"proud flesh"
too much granulation tissue |
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Term
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Definition
protrusion of irregular scar tissue from skin surface due to overproduction of collagen
excessive production or sensitivity to TGF-B
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Term
What are requirements for proper healing? |
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Definition
clearance of debris
immobility
adequate blood supply
nutrients |
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