CELL INJURY, DEATH, AND ADAPTATIO
Definitons
Pathology is a dicipline bridging clinical practic
and basic sience
To render diagnosis and guide therapy
- Identity changes in gross
- Morphology ( microscopy ) appeara
of cell tissues
The scientific focus of pathology is :
Etiology : on the cause of disease
Pathogenesis : mechanisme of its developme
and the pathways by which morphologic cha
occur
Normal homeostasis if cell adjusting structure an
function to accommodate changing demands and
extracellular stresses
Stresses or pathologic stimuli the cell can
- undergo adaptation
eg.: atrophy, hypertrophy, hyperplasia
metaplasia
- irreversible injury and ultimately dies
Two principal pattern of cell death :
1. NECROSIS, commonly coagulative necrosis
- cellular swelling
- protein denaturation
- organellar breakdown
2. APOPTOSIS, - regulated event
- programmed death
CAUSES OF CELL INJURY
1. Hypoxia :-Anemia-Ischemia-Intoxication CO2
-Aerobic oxidative respiration
2. Physical Agent :
- mechanical trauma
- extreme temprature
- radiation
- electric shock
- athmosphere pressure
3. Chemical and drugs :
- sufficiently concentrated glucose, salt, O
air pollutants
insecticides
asbestosis
ethanol
4. Microbilogy Agents
- tape worms
- rickettsia
- virus
- bacteria
- fungi
5. Immunologic Reaction
- anaphylactic reaction
- autoimmune diseases
5. Genetic Defects
- congenital Malformation
- sicle cell anemia
6. Nutritional Inbalance
- protein calori insufficiency
- vitamins defficiency
- diabetes
7. Aging
Mechanism of Cell Injury
Cellular response to injurious stimuli
depens on the : - injury type
- duration
- severity
Current Status
: ~ nutrional
~ hormonal
~ adaptibility of the cell
Intercellular systems
>
>
>
>
cell membrane integrity
aerobic respiration
protein synthesis
integrity genetic apparatus
Oxygen and oxygen derived free radicals
: ischemic and hypoxic injury
Reversible Injury
Rediced oxidative phosphorylation in mitocho
Activity Natrium Pump is reduced
Producing cellular swelling. Loss of microvilli
Glycogen depleted
Reduction in protein synthesis
Formation of cell surface blebs
Irreversible Injury
Severe vacuolization of the mitochondria
Demage of the mitochondrial matrix
Demage of plasma membrane
Swelling of lysosomes
Accumulation of amorphous calcium
Rich dentities in mitochondrial matrix
Forms and Morphology of Cell Injury
1.
2.
3.
4.
Reversible acute cell injury
Necrosis ( Cell death after irreversible injury
Cell death by suicide = Apoptosis
Subcellular alteration as a respond to chroni
persistent injury stimuli
5. Intracellular accumulations of a number of s
stances : lipid, carbohidrat, protein, as a resu
of dearangment in cell metabolism or excess
storage.
Sublethal Damage
1. Recoverable necrosis is not
2. Ultrastructural damage
to mitochondria
3. Swelling of cellular organelles ( hydrophic d
4. Fatty change is impairment of metabolism
NECROSIS
Refers to a sequence of morphologic changes
that follow cell death in living tissue
1. Intense eosinophilia of the dead cell is due t
loss of RNA and coagulation of protein.
2. Nuclei undergo phase of pyknosis, karyorhex
and karyolysis
leaving a shrunken cell devoid of nucleus
3. Protein may be liberated from the dead cell
The morphologic appearance of necrosis is
the result of two essentially processes :
1. Ensymic digestion of the cell
2. Denaturation of protein
Autolysis is a dead cell themselves by
hydrolitic enzymes
Heterolysis from the lysosomes of
invading
inflammatory cells
Morphologic Evidence of Necrosis
A Early Change
1 3 hour before changes of necrosis are
recognizable on electron microscopy
6 8 hour on light microscopy organelle
degeneration
B. Nuclear Change
Pyknosis : The chromatine clumps into co
strands
The nucleus becomes a shrunke
dense, basophilic mass
Karyorrhexis : The pyknotic nucleus break
into numerous small basoph
mass
Karyolysis : The nucleus lysis as a result
the action of lysosome deoxy
ribonucleases
C. Cytoplasmic Change
About 6 hour after cell necrosis
Cytoplasma becomes homogenous and d
`
acidophilic. Enzymatic digestion
D. Biochemical Changes
Actively transports calcium ions out of the
Tipes of Necrosis
Depends on :
1. Cells compotitions
2. Speed of necrosis
3. Type of injuries
> Coagulative Necrosis
Implies preservation of basic structural outlin
the coagulated cell or tissue for a span of da
The structural protein and the enzymatic pro
thus blocking cellular proteolysis
Coagulation necrosis is cahareteristic of hypo
death of cells in all tissue except the brain
eq. Myocardial Infarction ( occlusion of arteri
supply )
> Liquefactive or Colliquativa Necrosis
Dead tissue that appears semi liquid as a
result
of dissolution of tissue by the action of
hydrolytic enzymes
eq.: - cerebral infarction
- necrosis caused by bacterial
inf.
> Caseous Necrosis
Dead cell form an amorphous
proteinaceaus
mass, no original architecture can be seen
> Gumatous Necrosis
describes dead tissue when it is firm and rub
like caseous necrosis in the spirochetal infec
syphilis.
> Hemorrhagic Necrosis
describes dead tissue that are suffused with
extravasated red cell, when cell death is due
blockage
> Fat Necrosis
does not really necrosis. It describes focal ar
of fat destruction tipically occuring following
pancreatic injury. Or after trauma to fat for
example in the breast
Describes foci of hard yellow material seen
dead adipose tissue
> Fibrinoid Necrosis
when fibrin is deposited in damage necrotic
vessel walls in hypertension and vasculitis
> Gangrene
extensive tissue necrosis ; is complicated to
variable degree by secondary bacterial infe
APOPTOSIS
is responsible for the programmed cell deat
several important physiology processes
including :
The programmed destruction of cells during em
genesis as in implantation, organogenesis, and
developmental involution
Hormon dependent physiologic involution such
the endometrium, lactating, as in the prostate a
castration
Cell deletion in proliferating population such
intestinal crypt epithelium or cell dead in tum
Deletion of autoreactive T cell in the thymus,
cell death of cytokine starved lymphocytes
CLINICAL EFFECTS OF NECROSIS
Abnormal function
Kidney
: renal failure
Cortex in brain : muscle paralysis
Heart
: heart failure
Lung
: hemoptysis
Bacterial infection
: gangrene
Realease of contens of necrotic cells
Liver
Heart
: elevation SGOT
: creatine kinase
Systemic effects
Fever
Inflamatoir Reaction
Local effects
Hemorrhage
Ulceration
CELLULAR ADAPTATIONS OF GROWTH AND
DIFFENTIATION
Environment adaptation of the cell
1. Physiologic Adaptation
- Hormones
- Endogenous chemical mediators
2. Pathologic Adaptation
- Induction of new protein synthesis by tar
cell
Cell Injury :
Death of cells ( permanent organ injury )
Sublethal injury ( adaptation )
Adaptation of the cell :
1. Atrophy
2. Hypertrophy
3. Hyperplasia
4. Metaplasia
5. Dysplasia
6. Storage
ATROPHY
is the decrease in the size and a function of a
but are not dead
Causes of atrophy :
1. Reduced functional deman
Immobilitation in fracture
Prolonged bed rest
2. Inadequate supply of oxygen
Ischemia
3. Insufficient nutrients
Starvation
Inadequate nutritions
Chronic disease
4. Interrruption of trophic signals
The functions of many cells depend on signa
transmitted by chemical mediators
-Endocrin system
-Neuromucculator transmission
eq. Thyroid
Adrenal cortex
Ovarium
Testis
5. Persistant cell injury
Caused by chrinic inflamation
eq. - chronic gastritis
- prolonged pressure
6. Aging
Particularly in non replacating cells such br
heart.
> Senile Atrophy
The mechanism of atrophy :
decreased synthesis
increased catabolism
influenced by a number of hormones
eq. Insulin, tyroid stimulating hormon, glu
corticoids
HYPERTROPHY
Is an increase in the size of cell accompanied by
Augmented functional capacity
Hypertrophy is a response to trophic signals and
Commonly a normal procesess
I.
Physiological ( Hormonal ) hypertrophy
- in puberty an icreased production of sex h
mon
- hypertrophy breast tissue
- abnormal hormon production in cancer
II. Increased functional demands
- exercise
- pathological conditions
eq. Myocardial cell
- kidney hypertrophy on surgical removed
HYPERPLASIA
is an increase in the number of cells in an
or tissue
Hyperplasia can be :
I . Physiologic hyperplasia
- hormonal hyperplasia
- compensatory hyperplasia
II. Pathologic hyperplasia
excessive hormonal or growth factor s
lation
eq. Endometrial hyperplasia
1. Hormonal stimulation
- estrogen increased endometrium ( hyperp
- gynecomastia
2. Increased functional demand
- secondary polycytemia
- lymphocyte hyperplasia
3. Persistent Cell Injury
- chronic inflammation in the skin and the e
thelium of viscera
- hyperplasia of the bladder epithelium
METAPLASIA
is a reversible change in which one adult ce
type is replace by another adult cell type
( Metaplasia is the convertion of one differen
ted cell type of another )
It is almost invariably a response to persistent inj
and can be thought of as an adaptive mechanism
Most common is the replacment of a glandular ep
um by a squamous cell.
- Squamous metaplasia of the bronchial epit
to tobacco
- lower oesophagus by reflux acidic gastric
- endocervical metaplasia
Metaplasia is usually reversible if the stimu
removed
DYSPLASIA
cellular dysplasia refers to an alteration in the
size, shape and organization of the cellular com
ponent of a tissue
The cells an epithelium exhibit uniformity of size,
And nucleus.
Dysplasia mean is disturbed by
1. Variation in the size and shape of cells
2. Enlargment, irregularity and hyperchromatism
the nuclei.
3. Disorderly arrangement of the cells within the e
thelium
The most common in the cervix and bronchus
It is established that dysplasia is a preneopla
lession in the sense that it is a necessary sta
in the multistep cellular evolution to cancer.
Dysplasia included in the morphological classificat
the stage if intraepithelial neoplasia
CELLULAR AGING
Alterations in structure and fuction that may
to cell death, or at least diminished capacity
the cell to respond an injury
Reduced cell in :
- pleomorphic vacuolated mitochondria
- repair of chromosomal damage
Morphologic alteration in :
pleomorphic vacuolated mitochondria
decreased endoplasmic reticulum
disorted Golgi Apparatus
accumutaion of lipofuscin pigment
Cellular senescence is multifactorial :
1. The cumulative effects of extrinsic influenc
: free radical damage
2. Intrinsic molecular program of cellular agin
cell have a finite life span
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