etiology
refers to the underlying causes and modifying actors that are responsible for the initiation and progression of disease
Pathogenesis
mechanism of development and progression of the disease
most common casue of cell injury
hypoxia and ischemia
difference between hypoxia and ischemia
hypoxia: oxygen deficiency in tissue
ischemia: reduced blood supply -> low o2 and low nutrients + biuld up of toxic metabolics
reversible cell injury
cells return to normal function if damaging stimulus is removed
e.g. cellular swelling, fatty change
cellular swelling
in cell injury with increased permeability of p.m.
apperent at level of whole organ (difficult to see with light microscope)
causes pallor increased turhor and increased organ weight
fatty change
manifested by apperance of triglycerode containing lipid vacuoles in the cytoplasm
cell injury to ponit of no return -> apoptosis
inability to restore mitochondrial function
loss of structure and functions of the plasma membrane and intracellular membranes
loss of DNA and chromatin structural integrity
diffetrent mechanism of cell death
NECROSIS:
ischemia, exposure to toxins, infection, trauma
uncontrollable accidential cell death
APOPTOSIS:
regulated cell death
less severe cell injury
difference between apoptosis and necrosis
apoptosis also occures in healthy tissue
necrosis deff.
cell death in which cellular membranes fall appart an d cellular enzymed leat out ultimately digest the cell
three patterns of nuclear changes resulting from DNA breakdown
pyknosis
karyolysis
karyorrhexis
characterized by nuclear shrinkage and increased basophilia
-> DNA condensed into dark shrunken mass
Karyolysis
basophilia fades because of digestion of DNA by DNAse activity
pyknotic nucleus can undergo fragmentation
necrotic cells show
increased eosinophilia
-> increased binding of eosin to denatured cytoplasmic proteins and loss of basophilic ribonucleic acid in the cytoplasm
most if the types of necrosis have distinctive gross apperances EXEPT
fibirnoid necrosis which is detected only by histologic examinaton
coagulative necrosis
characteristics of infarcts (areas of necrosis caused by ischemia) in all solid organs EXEPT THE BRAIN
underlying tissue architecture is preserved for at least several days after death of cekks in the tissue
injury denatures not only structural proteins but also enzymes -> blocking proteolysis of the dead cells -> eosinophilic anucleated cells may persist for days or weeks
leukocytes are recruited -> cellular debris removed by phagocytosis
liquefactive necrosis
in focal bacterial and funfal infections
in hypxic death of cells in the CNS
dead cells are completly digested -> viscous liquid removed by phagocytes (formation of abcess)
Gangrenous necrosis
No distinctive pattern
limb that has undergone coagulative necrosis in multiple tissue layers
when bacterial infection is superimposed morphologic appearance change to liquefactive necrosis resulting in wet gangrene
Caseous necrosis
most often in foci of TCB
cheeslike -> friable yellow white appearance of the area
architecture completely obliterated and no cellular outlines
necrotic focus appears as a collection of fragmented or lysed cells with an amorphous granular pink appearance in H&Estained tissue sections
caseous necrosis is often surrounded by a collection of macrophages and other inflammatory cells; this appearance is characteristic of a nodular inflammatory lesion called a granuloma.
Fat necrosis
Focal areas of fat destruction -> release of activated pancreatic lipases
acute pancreatitis
pancreatic enzymes leak out of acinar cells and ducts and liquefy the membranes of fat cells in the peritoneum
outline of dead fat cekks can often be seen, calcium soups stain blue with H&E stains
Firinoid necrosis
in immune reactions in which complexes of antigens and antibodies are deposited in the walls of blood vessels , also in severe hypertension
Deposited immune complexes and plasma proteins that leak into the wall of damaged vessels produce a brightpink, amorphous appearance on H&E preparations called fibrinoid (fibrinlike) by pathologists
Leakage of intracellular proteins through the damaged cell membrane and ultimately into the circulation provides a means of detecting tissue-specific necrosis using blood or serum samples
Cardiac muscle-contains a unique isoform of the enzyme creatine kinase and of the contractile protein troponin
Hepatic bile duct epithelium - enzyme alkaline phosphatase
Hepatocytes - transaminases
Irreversible injury and cell death in these tissues elevate the serum levels of these proteins, which makes them clinically useful markers of tissue damage
Apoptosis deff.
Pathway of the cell death i nnwhich cells activate enzymes -> degrade the cells DNA and proteins
mechanism of apoptosis
rehǵulated by biochem. pathway controll balance of activation of caspase
mitochondrial pathway and death receptor pathway
mitochondrial pathway
responsible for apoptosis in most physiologic and pathologic situations
When mitochondrial membranes become permeable,cytochrome c leaks out into the cytoplasm, triggering caspase activation and apoptotic death.
A family of more than 20 proteins, the prototype of which is Bcl-2, controls the permeability of mitochondria.
death receptor pathway
Many cells express surface molecules, called death receptors, that trigger apoptosis
Most of these are members of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor family, which contain in their cytoplasmic regions a conserved “death domain”
The prototypic death receptors are the type TNF receptor and Fas (CD95).
clearance of apoptotic cells
by phagocytes
no inflammatory reaction
Necroptosis
initiated by engagement of TNF receptors -> receptor interacting protein (RIP) kinases are activated -> dissolution of the cell
=> features of necrosis AND apoptosis
Pyroptosis
activation of cytosolic danger sensing protein complex (inflammasome) -> activation of caspases -> productio of proinflammatory cytokines
=> Apoptosis AND inflammation
Autophagy
lysosomal digestion of the cells own components
survival mechanism during ischemia or starvation and some types of myopathies
Ischemia-reperfusion injury
restoration of blood flow to ischemic tissue can result in tissue inury because:
increased generation of ROS
influx of leukocytes and plasma proteins
Oxidative stress
cellular abnormalities that are induced by ROS
ROS produced in
phagocytic leukocytes (neutrophils and macrophages)
cell mechanisms to remove free radicals
There also are nonenzymatic and enzymatic systems, sometimes called free radical scavengers, serving to inactivate free radicals:
Superoxide - superoxide dismutase (SOD)
Hydrogen peroxide - Glutathione (GSH) peroxidases
Catalase, present in peroxisomes, catalyzes the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide
Endogenous or exogenous anti-oxidants (e.g., vitamins E, A, and C and β-carotene) may either block the formation of free radicals or scavenge them after they have formed.
Endoplasmatic reticulum stress
accumulation of misfoldeed proteins lead to apoptosis
Endoplasmatic reticulum stress caused by
abnormalities that increase the production of misfolded proteins or reduce the ability to eliminate them:
gene mutations that lead to the production of proteins that cannot fold properly
aging, which is associated with a decreased capacity to correct misfolding
infections, especially viral infections, when large amounts of microbial proteins are synthesized within cells, more than the cell can handle
increased demand for secretory proteins such as insulin in insulin-resistant states;
changes in intracellular pH and redox state.
Physiologic adaption to cell stress
responses to stimulation of hormones or endogenous chemical mediators to the demands of mechanical stress
Pathological adaption
responses to stress to modulate their structure and function to escape injury
e.g. squamous metaplasia of bronchial epithelium in smokers
hypertrophy
increase in cell size
NO NEW CELLS
can also be pathological (prostate hypertrophy due to high levels of testoterone)
hyperplasia
Increase in number of cells
physiologic (puperty breasts) and pathologic (chushings)
stiulated by growth factors
2 types of physiological hyperlpasia
hormonal ->exemplified by proliferation of glandular epi. of f. breasts during puperty
compensatory -> residual tissue grows after removal/loss of an organ
main cause of pathological hyperplasia
exessive hormonal growth factor stimulation
Atrophy
shrinkage of size of cells -> diminished function
caused by:
decreased workload
loss of innervation
diminished blood supply
inadequate nutition
loss of endocrine stimulation
aging
physiologic and pathologic
Metaplasia
change of one adult cell type tp another
replacing less stress resistant tissue with more resistant by reprogramming of stem cells (transdifferentiation)
e.g.:
rugged stratified squamous epi. instead of specialized epi. in smoker lungs
stratified squamous epi. to gastric/intestinal type columnar epi. im lower esophagus due to chonic gasrtic reflux
bone formed in to soft tiss. in foci of injury
-> The influences that induce metaplastic change in an epithelium, if persistent, may predispose to malignant transformation
main pathways of abnormal inreacellular accumulations
inadequate removal and degradation
exessive production of an andogenous substance
deposition of an abnormal exogenous material
Pathologic calcification
process in a wide variety of disease states, is the result of an abnormal deposition of calcium salts
Dystrofic calcification
calcium metabolism is normal but deposits in injured or dead tiss. (areas of necrosis)
It is virtually ubiquitous in the arterial lesions of advanced atherosclerosis.
Dystrophic calcification of the aortic valves is an important cause of aortic stenosis in elderly persons
Hypercalcemia causes
(1) increased secretion of parathyroid hormone, due to either primary parathyroid tumors or production of parathyroid hormone–related protein by other malignant tumors
(2) destruction of bone due to the effects of accelerated turnover (e.g., Paget disease), immobilization, or tumors (increased bone catabolism associated with multiple myeloma, leukemia,or diffuse skeletal metastases)
(3) vitamin D–related disorders including vitamin D intoxication and sarcoidosis (in which macrophages activate a vitamin D precursor)
(4) renal failure, in which phosphate retention leads to secondary hyperparathyroidism
metasatic calcification
can occure everywhere but mostly in intertestinal tiss of vasculature kidneys lungs and gastric mucosa
Cellular aging
telomeres shorten
cellular response to cell injury depends on
type
duration
severity
compensatory mechanisms against hypoxia and ischemia
VEGF new blood vessels
increase of glucose uptake & glycolysis
aerobic glycolysis -> warburg effect
what happens if the cell is loosing energy
Reduced activity of plasma membrane ATP- dependent sodium pumps =swelling
increase in anaerobic glycolysis= lactic acid enviroment
Detachment of ribosomes from RER and dissociation of polysomes = reduction of protein synthesis
Increase of ROS
Damage to mitochondrial and lysosomal membrane= cell death
ROS production stimulated by
radiation
enzymatic metabolism of exogenous chemicals
inflammation
reperfusion
The result of ROS injury can be
necrosis
apoptosis
necroptosis
Diseases caused by lack of essential proteins due to misfolded proteins
cystic fibrosis
familial hypercolesterolemia
Tay-sachs disease
Diseases caused induction of apoptosis due to misfolded proteins
Alzheimer
parkinson
huntington
Hypertrophy and hyperplasia can occur
together, but only in organ with cells capable of division!!
-> EXEPT
heart & skeletal muscles
metaplasia ALWAYS occurs in
pathologic setting
fatty chnage occurs in
liver
heart
skeletal muscle
kidney
fatty change caused by
toxins (alcohol)
protein malnutrition
diabetis mellitus
obesity
anoxia
Warburg effect
refers to the observation that cancer cells and rapidly proliferating normal cells tend to favor metabolism via aerobic glycolysis rather than the much more efficient oxidative phosphorylation pathway irrespective of oxygen status
Aerobic glycolysis is less efficient than oxidative phosphorylation in terms of adenosine triphosphate production (2 vs 36 molecules of ATP), but leads to the increased generation of additional metabolites (proteins, lipids, nucleic acid) needed for cell growth and divisio
diagnosed by PET scan
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