Atrophy
Condition where the decrease in the size of normally developed cells, tissues, or organs occurs
What are the 2 ways an organ can shrink?
- cell shrinkage
Cell deletion
Most specialized cells are removed first (gland cells before ducts), leaving stroma –> fibrotic appearance
Cell shrinkage
Each cell must trim down excess
What must occur for a cell to shrink?
Proteolysis
Autophagy
Survival mechanism during ischemia or a response to hormones
Autophagy mechanism
Autophagosome is produced –> contains dysfunctional organelles –> residual bodies –> may be retained (lipofuscin)
What are the 3 types of protein removal systems?
Ubiquitin proteasome pathway
Anything that needs to go is tagged with ubiquitin and the proteasome is the “trash can”
- usually for small protein
Chaperone mediated autophagy
Lysosomal digestion for larger proteins
Macroautophagy
Taking cellular material and putting it in a lysosome for ingestion
- ULK1 complex that makes isolation membrane out of the golgi system
What are the 10 possible etiologies for atrophy?
Decreased use/function
Inactivity or limited movement –> promotes protein catabolism (as does muscle trauma)
Physiologic
Programmed cell death of certain tissues
Cachexia
Starvation, chronic infections, cancer, uremia, burns, sepsis, fasting
Diffuse muscle wasting
Catabolism via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway
Serous atrophy of fat
Utilization
Moderate caloric restriction, can ______ lifespan
Increase
Impaired bloodflow
Chronic ischemia –> prolonged partial inadequacy of blood
Pressure
Growing tumors cause local pressure –> due to reduced bloodflow
Duct occlusion
Hormones/endocrine
Age
Reproductive organs –> muscles –> bone –> nervous system
Denervation