what is hyperplasia?
an increase in cell number, in response to an external response. Will regress on withdrawl of a stimulus
mechanism of hyperplasia?
what do areas in lymph nodes undergo in response to infection?
hyperplasia
what is hyperplastic and metaplastic tissue at risk of?
at risk of the development of cancer
what is hypertrophy?
an increase in cell size
what is atrophy?
reduction in cell size
mechanism for atrophy?
- hormones can promote/oppose atrophy
what is metaplasia?
reversible change from one mature cell type to another mature cell type
in acute inflam, what mediates vascular vasodilation?
histamine and nitric oxide
steps of binding of neutrophils to endothelial cell wall
what increases selectin expression?
histamine and thrombin
what increases endothelial cell expression of VCAM and ICAM?
TNF and IL-1
clinical features of acute inflam?
rubor, dolor, calor, tumor, loss of function
what does a neutrophil look like?
polymorph granulocyte
what is suppuration?
pus formation
when is healing by organisation favoured?
when damage goes beyond the basement membrane
process of granulation tissue formation
- collagen and smooth muscle cell deposit
what characterises chronic inflam?
presence of lymphocytes
what is a granuloma?
aggregate of epitheloid histiocytes
what is necrosis?
premature death of cells in living tissue, always pathological
what is coagulative necrosis and where is it seen?
cell death with preservation of the cell outline
seen in cardiac muscle
what is liquefactive necrosis and where is it seen?
cell death leaving behind a liquid viscous mass
seen in the brain
what is caseous necrosis and where is it seen?
granulomatous inflam with central necrosis
seen in TB
what is apoptosis?
programmed cell death in response to specific signals, requires energy