What are the 3 stages of cellular injury?
What are the three types of aetiology?
a) environmental (bacteria, viruses, chemical)
b) genetic (inherited, acquires, auto-immune)
c) physical (mechanical, heat, UV)
What are reversible cellular responses?
What are irreversible cellular responses?
What are two examples of Hydropic Swelling and what do they look like?
What does hydropic swelling look like?
Cell Sub-structure is dilated, therefore pale and ER is disorganised.
What are three examples of inclusions?
How are accumulations and pigments categorized?
NOTE: endogenous is normally present, but there is an abnormal accumulation, whereas exogenous is not normally there.
Give an example of both intracellular and extracellular accumulations.
Intracellular:
Lysosomal Storage Disease (glycogen accumulates in lysosomes)
Extracellular:
Amyloid-myocardium = deposits of amyloid (protein stuff)
Give an example of both endogenous and exogenous pigments.
Endogenous:
Haemachromatosis (too much stored iron=haemosiderin in liver)
Exogenous:
What is steatosis?
Steatosis is the infiltration of liver cells with fat, associated with disturbance of the metabolism by, for example, alcoholism, malnutrition, pregnancy, or drug therapy.
What does abnormal mitochondria look like and what could cause it?
Mitochondria is swollen and cristae no longer well organised.
Ischaemic injury
What could cause nuclear deformities?
What are the potential effects of cell injury?
a) none
b) adaptive response
c) reversible damage
d) irreversible (lethal) damage
What changes occur during necrosis?
What are the two types (and subtypes) of microscopic changes that occur during necrosis?
What nuclear changes can occur during necrosis?
a) Pyknosis - nuclear shrinkage and condensation
b) karyorrhexis - nuclear rupture and fragmentation
c) karyolysis - disappearance
What are the changes resulting from membrane rupture and enzyme release during necrosis?
a) Intracellular:
- Digestion of organelle membranes and contents
- Denaturation of proteins
b) Extracellular:
- digestion of neighbouring cells
- inflammation response
What are macroscopic effects of necrosis?
OTHERS:
What is the most common cause of coagulative necrosis?
Ischemia. Resultant lesion is an INFARCT and the process is INFARCTION.
What is the timeline of coagulative necrosis?
What does coagulative necrosis look like?
What are the two types of coagulative necrosis and where do they occur?
What happens during colliquative necrosis?