CHAPTER TWO
INFLAMMATION
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              CHAPTER TWO
• INFLAMMATION
• is a protective response which includes host
  cells, blood vessels, and proteins
• Goals are:
  - Eliminate the initial cause of cell injury
  - Remove necrotic cells and tissue
  - Initiate the process of repair
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             Inflammation
 Also a potentially harmful process
• Components of inflammation that are capable
  of destroying microbes can also injury the
  passerby normal tissue
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                  Inflamm . . .
 Components of the inflammatory
 process
- Include white blood cells and plasma proteins
 - Normally present in the blood
 - The inflammatory reaction’s goal is to bring these
   blood cells to the site of infection.
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• Inappropriate inflammatory response, when
  there are no foreign substances to fight off
  leads to autoimmunity.
• Inflammatory process must be tightly
  regulated by the immune system to avoid
  excessive tissue damage and spillover to normal
  tissue
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               Inflamm . . .
 Signs of Inflammation:
 Heat
 Redness
 Swelling
 Pain
 Loss of function
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                 Inflamm . . .
• There are two types of Inflammation:
1- Acute inflammation and
2- Chronic Inflammation
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               Inflamm. . .
• Acute Inflammation
• Main components: are vascular changes and
  cellular events
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Vascular changes      Cellular events
• Vasodilation         • Cellular recruitment and
• Vascular               activation of neutrophils
  permeability           (polymorphonuclear
• Increased adhesion     leukocytes)
  of white blood cells
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    Acute inflammation- Appendicitis
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                NEOPLASIA
• Neoplasia, which is the abnormal growth and
  proliferation of abnormal cells or abnormal
  amounts of cells due to a benign or malignant
  process.
• Neoplasia can be benign or malignant.
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                 Neoplasia
• A benign neoplasm, or a benign tumor, has
  several general characteristics, including the
  fact that:
• It does not invade or destroy the surrounding
  tissue it is growing on.
• It does not spread to other parts of the body.
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                NEOPLASIA
• It usually doesn't come back after surgical
  removal because the tumor itself has well-
  defined margins that help in its surgical
  removal.
• Typically, benign tumors grow slowly and have
  normal-looking cells and structures or are
  well-differentiated.
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• A malignant neoplasm is in general:
• Grows quickly
• May metastasize, which is when cancer cells
  spread around the body
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• May come back after surgical removal due to
  irregular margins
• Invades and destroys surrounding tissues
• Has abnormal-looking cells or structures,
  which is also called 'poorly differentiated' or
  'undifferentiated'
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•   Examples of Benign vs. Malignant Tumors
•   Some examples of benign tumors include
•   Papillomas
•   Polyps
•   Meningioma
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• Sometimes benign tumors causes death
• For instance, a meningioma that grows to be
  too large in the brain can compress
  downwards onto your brain, resulting in
  seizures and death.
• Even though the meningioma may not spread
  around the body or invade the local tissue,
  only compress it, it can still kill you.
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• Examples of malignant tumors, or cancer,
  include
• Lymphoma
• Liver cancer
• Breast cancer
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  CELL ADAPTATION, INJURY AND DEATH
• Cell Injury is the common denominator in almost
  all diseases. It is defined as:
• an alteration in cell structure or biochemical
  functioning resulting from some stress that
  exceeds the ability of the cell to compensate
  through normal physiologic adaptive
  mechanisms
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• Hypoxia – not enough oxygen to run; usually
  due to ischemia, but other causes include
  severe anemia and cyanide poisoning.
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• Chemical/Traumatic injury – Chemicals include a
  lot of toxins that act like free radicals, but in
  addition, there are specific chemicals that get in
  and screw up the organelles.
• Example: Gram positive bacteria make exotoxins
  that cause serious damage.
• Anthrax – it grows and produces toxins that
  DESTROY cell membranes. That will cause cell
  death.
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• Injury by infectious agents – most common
  form of cell injury and it happens in all kinds
  of ways.
• Viruses get in and screw up the cell’s normal
  function; bacterial toxins can sure damage
  cells. Some of the bacterial toxins act like free
  radicals.
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 A cell responds to a stress depends on:
• The degree of severity and duration of the
  injury.
• Basically, how bad is the insult and how long
  does it last?
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Cellular Response to Stress
• The normal cell has a limited range of function
  and structure, which is determined as a result
  of an attempt to keep in balance with the
  challenges presented by the environment, i.e.
  genetic
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• When the cell is in balance with its environment it is
  considered to be in a homeostatic balance or "steady
  state".
• A variety of systems protects cellular integrity
• If more excessive external stimuli occur, the cell may be
  able to adapt to the changes.
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              CELL ADAPTATION
• Within limits, most cells have the ability to adapt
  to changes in their environment by altering their
  morphology, pattern of growth, and/or metabolic
  activity.
• These adaptive responses may be part of the
  normal physiology of a cell or tissue, or they may
  represent an attempt to limit the harmful effects
  of a pathological stress.
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• Common examples include: atrophy,
  hypertrophy, hyperplasia, metaplasia and
  dysplasia.
• ATROPHY
• Cellular atrophy – decrease in cell size
• Organ atrophy – decrease in size of the organ
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• HYPERTROPHY
• increase in cell size accompanied by an increase
  in functional capacity
• Appearance:
• Cells are bigger than normal which makes the
  organ look bigger than normal
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              What causes Hypertrophy
• Physiologic hypertrophy is a normal process that
  occurs in tissues under the influence of trophic
  hormones. In late pregnancy, the mammary
  glands hypertrophy in response to prolactin
  secretion.
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• Pathologic hypertrophy occurs when an
  increase in organ workload occurs secondary to a
  disease process.
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        Hypertrophy can be a compensatory
                     process.
• When one paired organ or a portion of that
  paired organ fails, the other organ or portion
  of the organ compensate the task of the other.
• For instance: Unilateral ovariectomy of a rat.
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• The opposite ovary can undergo compensatory
  hypertrophy and secrete sufficient estrogen for
  the mouse’s needs. This is the result of the
  pituitary detecting the loss of the removed ovary
  and causing the remaining ovary to undergo
  hypertrophy to take up the slack.
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                  Hyperplasia
• Hyperplasia
• Hyperplasia takes place if the cell population is
  capable of replication; it may occur with
  hypertrophy and often in response to the same
  stimuli.
• Hyperplasia can be physiologic or pathologic
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                 Metaplasia
• Metaplasia is a reversible change in which one
  adult cell type (for example; epithelial) is
  replaced by another adult cell type.
• Epithelial metaplasia is exemplified by the
  squamous change that occurs in the
  respiratory epithelium in habitual cigarette
  smokers.
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• The normal ciliated columnar epithelial cells of
  the trachea and bronchi are focally or widely
  replaced by stratified squamous epithelial cells.
• Vitamin A deficiency may also induce squamous
  metaplasia in the respiratory epithelium.
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                  Dysplasia
• an abnormality of development; in pathology,
  alteration in size, shape, and organization of
  adult cells.
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                     NECROSIS
• The death of living cells or tissues.
 Six types of necrosis
•   Coagulative necrosis.
•   Liquefactive necrosis.
•   Caseous necrosis.
•   Fat necrosis.
•   Fibroid necrosis.
•   Gangrenous necrosis.
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             Check your breast
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             Cancer Terminology
• Cancer is classified in to two ways:
- Cancer origin and adenocarcinoma glandular
  tissue,
- Histological type
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             Histological type
•   Carcinoma
•   Sarcoma
•   Myeloma
•   Leukemia
•   Lymphoma
•   Mixed type
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                 Carcinoma
• Refers to malignant neoplasm of epithelial
  origin or cancer of internal and external lining
  of the body
• Sarcoma
- Refers cancer of supportive and connective
tissue (cartilage, muscle)
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                Myeloma
• Myeloma- Refers to blood cancer
• Lymphoma - Refers from lymphatic system
• Mixed type
• adenocarcinoma
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                ASSIGNMENT- ONE
1-Mention any disease you like and discuss the change in
morphology and function caused by the infection.
2-Organs are composed of four tissue types they are:
Epithelial, Connective, Nervous and Muscular. Discuss the
function and give one organ example of each.
3-Mention one disease and discuss the signs and symptoms
of the infection.
4-Why is important to check the breast at every month by a
woman?
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               ASSIGNMENT - TWO
1- What is cold ischemia? What is its importance?
2- What is the difference between fixed and unfixed tissue?
3- In what thickness trimming and sectioning to be cut at
Microtome? Why?
4- Discuss how to prevent cervical cancer.
5- Define Hematoxylin and Eosin. And what is the
difference between these two dyes?
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